v THE CONCORD TIMEU, ; John B. Sherriv, Editor and FHiblisatior. PUBLISHED TWICE A WCCK- VOLUME XXXIV. CONCORD, N. C MONDAY, MARCH 1. 1909. Is to handle any-business entrusted to us in such a fair and liberal manner as to make the customer's relation with this bank satisfac tory and profitable. RESOURCES, $200,000.00 CITIZENS BANK & CONCORD, A.JONES YORKE, President. M. L. MARSH, -Vice President. Farmers' We give particular attention to the business of tanners. A checking account with a bank is a convenience no farmer should be without. Our certificates of deposit bear 4 per cent, interest. Our commodious offices always at the disposal of our customers. We cordially invite the farmers to make this their Banking Home. The Concord National Bank Capital $100,000 Surplus and Undivided Profits $30,000 We.extend a cordial invitation to . Farmers to call and get a copy of our " FARMER'S ALMANAC for 1909 containing list of county officers for North Carolina and other interesting and useful information. Gotten out especially for our farmer friends. We have handed out a number, but have a few hundred still on band.' Call and get one. CABARRUS SAVINGS BANK Capital $96000.00 Surplus and Profits $40,000.00 Assets over half a million dollars. H. I. WOODHOUSE, Pres. HEADQUARTERS FOR SOUTHERNERS IN NEW YORK CITY. BROADWAY CENTRAL HOTEL, Broadway and Third Streets, New York City. Only New York Hotel Making a Specialty, of the American Plan. D ATT7C (American Plan, $2.50 Up. . IN. 1 1 HO European Plan, $1.00 Up. Our Table is the Foundation of Our Enormous usiness. Send for Comprehensive Map of New York, Free. DAN. C. WEBB, Proprietor, of Charleston, S. C. We have In our CONCORD AND KANNAPOLIS a large stock of Fertilizers, consisting of All Grades of Ammoniated Goods, Acid Phosphate, Germsn Kainit, Cotton I Seed Meal; also Nitrate of.So ) " da and Muriate of Potash. 5 See us before buying, ancl we will save you money. VHITE-M0RRIS0N-FLOV7E CO., Agents for Simpkins' Prolific Cotton Seed. If Yob Want to BOY Tn ' 11 - U Yon Want to SELL H P'UBPO TRUST COMPANY N. C. CHAS. B. WAGONER, " Cashier. JOHN FOX, Assistant Cashier. Business. 1 1 C. W. SWINK, Cashier. 3 warehouses at Is mm J9X3X2 RESTORING THE CITY OP JERICHO. wenLiclh Century Scientists Defy Joshua's - Curse of 3360 Years Ago. Will Jericho be rebuilt? They ask the question in the Holy Land, in awe. The wall of Jericho, which fell be fore Israelite forces at the blast of a ram's horn after processions of priests and people marched around them daily for seven days, are be ing1 uncovered by German archeol ogists. Joshua, the Israelite leader, pro nounced a curse on the city after its all. and invoked the curse of bod on the man who should rebuild it. Twice has his curse been defied; once in the days of King Ahab, and again under the Herods, during: the Roman occupation. Hut m both cases destruction followed fast on the heels of the haunted city. - Since the time of Emperor Ves pasian it has lain hidden and forgot ten under a plateau of shif ting sand. The German scientists, under the di rection of Prof. Sellin and Prof. Watzinger. of Berlin, are making: the third attempt to restore it. Gray-Barded Rabbis and the wise men of Israel watch the progress of the excavations with interest. The work is half done. Will the Lord al ow it to be finished ? As excavated and restored so far the walls of the old city are shown to be of remarkable thickness and strength. Over a foundation of natural rock was placed a filling of fine gravel. On this was built a sloping rubble wall 20 feet high and seven feet thick. - Crowning this was the actual fortification m clay and brick. In the ruins of the city has been bund much old pottery, which is of interest to the archeologists. Much of this is old Judaic in origin. From ater investigations it 13 hoped to classify more of it, whether Caanen- te. Israelite or Jewish. Other pot tery with the mark of Rhodes, and with Aramic inscriptions, as well as terra cotta work, has been found. The destruction of Jericho by Joshua, as told in the bible, is dated back to 1451 B.C. It was rebuilt by liel. a general of Ahab's. in 1918 B C, and destroyed again by bimon, a Roman general. Restored under Herod, it fell again before the sword of Vespian. and has remained lost ever since. ' m . -. Many a man has paid a lawyer $5 a J $20 for poorer advice! thin hit wife would willingly have given mm for nothing. An aching back is application of Sloan's This liniment takes S0 For Iip - Lame is better than sticky plasters. It penetrates without rubbing through the skin and muscu lar tissue right to the bone, quickens the blood, ' relieves congestion, and ,gives permanent as (well as temporary' relief. I j Sloan's Liniment has no equal as a remedy for Rheumatism, Neuralgia, or any pain or stiffness in the muscles or joints. Price 25c, 50c-, and $1.0Q. Dr. Earl S. Sloan, Boston, Mass., U S. A. Sloan's book on bones, eattla, sheep and poultry sent free I At I 111 1 WWMt 1 MUSICAL ENGINEERS. Charlotte Chronicle. Concord people may remember the notes of "YVhlpporwW. taat was played by a locomotive engineer on the Southern ever? time he ran bv that town. His wife lived to the north of the depot, within easy hear ing distance, and as his train came south or went north, he would man ipulate the engine whistle somewhat after the manner of the steam piano man in the circus, and the surround ing country- got in the habit of listening for the notes of the "Whip porwill." They would listen for t with almost as much Interest as the little wife for whose benefit thjy knee? the whipporwill was calling. It seema that there are other music all engineers. The Richmond Times Dispatcih tells of a locomotive driver between Danville and Richmond who signals his coming into the lat ter city by playing "Home, Sweet Home," on his whistle, and who, on leaving, plays "In the Sweet Bye and Bye. His name is Ellington and he runs engine 195. He also plays 'or people along his line. "At one place, about midway between Richmond and Danville," he says, "I never fail to blow for the benefit of an old woman, who lives in a cottage about 300 yards from the track. No matter what time I pass, there is a light burning at the window, and before I get out of sight she waves it to let me know that she has heard. I think she appreciates my thinking of her, and I know that I would be sorely disappointed -if she did not wave a response." Engineer Elling ton says that he can play other tunes than the two mentioned. "I can play the 'Old Oaken Bucket,' " he says, "but that don't mean any thing, and I can't say that I fancy it especially. Of course, I play the tunes near home for the benefit of my wife; but to play them at other places is a diversion and a pleasure, as I know that long alter 1 am Rone people will remember." And so they will.- People who lounge back in the Pullmans 300 or 400 feet be hind the engineer, miss much mel ody that is heard by the cottage dwellers along the way. How can any person risk taking somq unknown'oough remedy when Foley's Honey and Tar costs them no more ? It is a safe remedy, contains no harmful drags, and cures the most obstinate coughs and oolds. Why experiment Srtth your health?' Insist upes i.r.vi the genuine Foley's Honey and Tar, Gibson Drug Store. instantly relieved by an Liniment. the place of massage and " Pains at the waist, back, front, or side, are nearly sure proof of female trouble. Some other signs are headache, pressing down pains, irregular functions, restless ness, cold limbs, nervousness, etc These pains may be allayed, the system braced and the womanly functions regulated by the use of Willi tars; Annie Hamilton, from the grave after three and I recommend it to all YTHTE US A LETTER HOW THE TRUST ESCAPES THE NIGHT RIDERS. Uncle Remus' Maxazioe. In the dark tobacco district "Night Riding" began as the result of an economic grievance; the men who formed the Night Rider bands believed that they were striking at the Tobacco Trust In reality the Trust has been injured but very little. The "hill billies" the neigh bors of the Night Rider who refus ed to join the association formed to fight the Trust have suffered the greatest direct property loss. A much larger indirect loss is borne by the inhabitants of the affected communities as a whole. Property values of all kinds have natural ly decreased. B usiness stagnates. Whether the increase in the price of tobacco is sufficient to offset all this indirect loss to the general com munity, even in a material way, as a permanent proposition, is extreme ly doubtful. But it is evident that no degree of gain, affecting the product of any one class of people, in any country, can possibly be large enough to bal ance the other losses, not material, resulting from the Night Rider law lessness. For if the duly elected au thorities of the counties affected permit organized lawlessness to take the place of law, what have we but a concrete instance of that decay of republican institutions which Macau ley prophesied for America so many years ago? ..." A rather lengthy chapter might be written on the effect which the persistence of the conditions is sure to have upon the rising generation. The Youths are furnished with a school in which to learn the funda mental principles of citizenship, to say the least, when they observe and outrage and murder go unpunished, and are told that the outlaws arc immune from interference on the Dart-of the officers of the law be cause the proper officials do not care to jeopardize their chances for re election. The conditions in the affected counties of lennessee should be a warning to the people of the cotton Droducing states. Already in half a dozen widely scattered districts Night Riders have appeared, in the cotton country, in imitation of those in the tobacco districts. The leaders of the Farmers' Union, the powerful organization of cotton growers, have verv wisely made occasion publicly. to- condemn Night Riding. They cannot be too persistent or tooem- phatic in these warnings, r or if the conditions which have prevailed in the twenty-odd counties of the dark tobacco district in Tennessee and Kentucky weie to spread through out the vast cotton country of the (Jarolinas. Georgia, Alabama, Miss issippi, Louisiana, Arkansas and Texas with all the attendant cir cumstances of midnight terror, ar son, feud and murder not only would fifteen million of people have a little taste of hell on earth, but the development of the entire South would be set back a good ten years before the flame could be got under control. The Farmers' Union has done more for the cotton planters, operating under the laws of the land, than the Night Riders of the Tobacco District have done for the tobacco planters with all their reckless criminality. They Will Make Good. Charlotte Observer. 26th. Chief of Police T. M. Christenbury yesterday transported youthful Bob Harris to the Stonewall Jackson Training School near Concord, where he will be kept for a period of nomi nally 30 days, but really more or less indeterminate, it being desired to turn him out a first-class article. Bob did notftappear to think much of the place, declaring it looked too lonesome for him, after having en joyed the freedom of a city's streets and alleys from time immemorial. Chief Christenbury stated that there were about 15 boys there at the time, clean looking and apparently content, "Those folks are going to make good," he added. , Tne Lurid Glow of Doom was seen in the red face, hands and boay of the little son of H. M. Adams, of Henrietta, Pa. His awful plight from eczema had, for five years, defied all remedies and baffled the best doctors, who said the poisoned blood had affec ted his longs and nothing could save him. "Bat," writes his mother, "seven bottlea of Electric Bitters completely cared him." For Eruptions, Eczema, Salt Rheum, Sores and all Blood Dis orders and Rheumatism, Electric Bit ters is supreme. Only 60c. Guaranteed by All Druggists. I - " Itch cur 3d in 30 minutes by Wool ford's Sfnitary Lotionr Never fails. Sold by M. I. Marsh, druggist. of af dm of Stetsonville; Wis.7 writes: . "Cardui saved me (3) doctors had failed to help suffering women." Forsale at Writ. tody for fn copy of rrioabU 64-pwa m.trM ihcm. kcr1b. your yptcns, ttin asm. nd rpy will Ladies Advtavy Dtpt, Tha Qatfooa Madtdna Co - CUWPT101 OH THE fXRM. Mare Farm Jevrmai. There is only one way to the hearts of men the way of our own heart. Test the seed cfTt. We told how on page 7 of the January issue. Some men who love their aesra really afraid they will find it out. Let us all know oar own minds; everybody ought certainly to know this much. Just one furrow plowed through a field that is soaked with water will hurry the process of doing a good many days. About that boy of jours: Are you going to make the farm interest ing to him this year by giving him a real stake in the stock and crops ? Now mind this : Make two sow ings of clover seed, one now and one early in April, line half red. other half alsike. Dj not miss the alsike. While it may not be advisable to spread manure on a side-hilt field when the ground is frozen, it is well enough to Bpread it on a plowed field that is nearly level. Trusting to memory till night, be fore you set down money paid out, is dangerous. Do it right off. Carry a little book in your pocket an J use it whenever there i anything to make a minute of. This is the season of the year for farm auctions. There is always a great temptation to buy things at such places ; just because of the ex citement of the moment. But don't be led into getting stuff that you have no use for. It Is simply a waste of money. c . The first spring days make us all uneasy to get out on the land to work ; but, fellow farmers, we can gain time and be sure of better crops by just sitting still until the earth is dry enough to work. There is no surer way to spoil land than to work it when it is too wet. When you haul off the rubbish in the spring: do not dump it by the roadside. Haul it into some old mossy, brakv pasture and burn it up. Pile up the combustible material by itself. Dijr a whole somewhere in the pasture and bury the old tin cans, old pails, etc., out of sight. Before going down into a well, test the purity of the air by lowering a lighted candle or lantern. If the lisrht burns dimly or iroes out, the poisonous carbonic acid gas "damps" can be driven out by igniting a quan tity of turpentine and sawdust or kerosene and rags, in a kettle, and lowering it to the surface of the wa ter; and then, later, pour several bucketfuls of water into the well from the top Test again with the lantern, and note the improvement We want Our Folks to be on the safe Bide. STOMACH AGONY. Abolish the Cause, and Misery and Dis tress of Indigestion Will Vanish. Can indigestion be cured ? Hundreds of thousand of people who suffer from belching gas ; biliousness, sour stomach, fullness, nausea, shortness of breath, bad taste in month, fonl breatb, ner vousness and other distressing symp toms, are asking themselves that ques tion daily. And if these same doubting dyspeptics could only read the thousands of sincere liters from people wbq,once suff red as bad as they do now, but who have been auickly and permanently cured by the use of Mi-o-na, the mighty dyspepsia remedy that cur.'s by removing tbe cause, they would go to Gibson Drug Store this very day and tret a large box of Mi-o-na tablets. The price ftf Mi-o-ra tablets is only 50 cent, and Gibson Drug Store guar an tees them to en indigestion, or montybiick. ' . Thin or lean or scra-vney people will find in Mi-c-na a ranker of flesh . and blood, became it causes tbe stomach to extract more nutrit Lous mutter from tbe food. - The defence now has its innings in the Cooper murder trial at Nashville According to young Robin Cooper who did the killing, he and papa (Col. Cooper) were on the street with the most peaceable intentions in the world. Col. Cooper started toward Carmack to have a friendly talk whereupon Carmack, for some ap parently unknown reason, opened fire on voune Cooper. This so as tonished the young man that Car mack hackput a bulletin his shoulder and one through his sleeve before he pulled his pistol, and be did this re luctantly of course and only to save his own life. It's all as plain as the nose on vour face. They had about as well stop the trial now. States- ville Landmark. The enly pleasure some people seem to have isrsltting over a slow ' ffte and counting their troubles. ? . : me. It is a good medicine all druggists, in $1 bottles. : Bo far Won. ba Mot ia pUtrn ml . Chattanoosa. Taaa. MftflnlAa kkwi a rm cosa oop. Oat ttu&ri s4 Un4kt Eedds to tk Acre at aa bbaaioj Cast at 126 000 Mr. F-litort: Lait Srrlr.r I a. kvted a pirce of gray ur4an4 :with rrd clay yhoil on mhlch I had tnsW u, luK-l tf corn tr acr In Oa thfa I put seven two-hon UmU of stable manure to the acr; I then turrd land lth to-hora plow. cro-brfking ir with a one-horse plow. After breakftJg the second ume 1 laid eft the rows six feet wide. "T! St a a . i ncn i i-eaacM out with turn phw. eav ing a fire-Inch balk. V hn ready to plant 1 brt.ke mil balk with scooter and f flowed In the bottom of this furrow with a isie plow with the wine taken off. Dion I ridged on this furrow with half-hovrl UH goinjr deeper. 1 planted on this ridge, dropping one grain in a place every four or? five inches. This was Annl 13th. ; When corn waa amall I ran around it with harrow. Then 1 ran a fur row in the center of the middle which was a ' high bed. and bedded to the furrow with turnpiow, throw ing airi irorn corn. This left corn on the clay with very little, soil around it, 1 then thinned the corn to six inches in the drill. I did : not work corn again until growth had been so retarded and the stalk to hard that it did not Rrow too large. xepricnce and judgment are re quired to know just how much the stalk should be stunted. When 1 was convinced that mv corn had' been sufficiently humiliated oegan to mane the ear. I ran .a . around with 10-inch sweep when corn was about 12 inches high. -In lew days I put :O0 pounds of mixed fertilizers to the acre containing cot tonseed meal, 10 percent, phosphoric acid and kainit in equal parts. This was the firt fertilizer used at all. put mis uown in tne old aween furrow on both aides of every other middle and covered by breaking out with .turn plow. One week later treated me otner middle tne same way. In a few days 1 aided corn in first middle with 1G inch sweep and put 150 pounds nitrate of soda in this furrow, covered with one furrow with tumplow; sowed peas broadcast in this middle, at the rate of 11 bushels per acre, finished breaking out with turnpiow. In a few days I sided corn with the other middle with same sweep; sowed peat and broke out as before. This laid-by my corn with good bed and plenty or dirt around the stalk. fVil f m mm . a a inis was Juiy vtn when corn was just bunching for tassel. This fa! gathered 121 bushels per acre Expense on corn was $26. leaving i clear gain of $95, not including fod der and peas. O. r. II ILL. Cherokee Co., S. C. Prof. H. A. Howell, of Havana, Cobs, Rec ommends Chamberlain's Cough L. Remedy. As long ago at I can remember my mother was a faithful user and friend of Chamberlaln'a Oough UmJy, '. bat never in mj life have I realised Its troe value nntil now," writes Prof. II. A. Howell, of Howell's American School, Havana. Cnba. "On thn night of JETeb- rnary 3rd our baby was taken sick with a severe cold : tbe next dav was worse and tbe following night bis condition was desperate. He could not lie down and it was necessary to have him in the arms every moment. Kren then his breathing was difficult. I did not think he would live nntil morning. At last thought of my mother's remedy, Cham beil&in s tjongn Ketnedy, whlcn we gave, and it afforded prompt relief,: and now three davs latr. he has folly re covered. Under the drcnmatancei would not hesitate a moment In saying that Chamberlain's Oough Remedy, and that onlr. saved tbe life of our dear lit tle boy." Porsale by All Pra-ggisU. Mobs Rife la Three Stales. ' An attack by a negro on an unpro tected woman in Ottumwa, Iowa, aroused the spirit of mob violence and scenes resembling the Spring field race riots were threatened This attack, following the murder o Clara Rosen two weeks ago, presum ably by a negro, brought the negro- rjhobia smrit to a bead. A mob of 3.000 attacked tne ureea Quarter In South Omaha and 00 buildings were wrecked, in revenge for the murder of a policeman. In Dayton, Ohio, Uie scene or re cent crimes against women, an at tack on a woman, who was accom panied by her husband, nearly pre cipitated mob violence. Hear Death Ia Big Pond. It was a thrilling experience to Mrs. Ida Soper to face death. "For years severe lunz trouble gave me intense suffering. she writes, "and several times nearly caused mr death. All remedies failed and doctors said I incurable. Then Dr Klng'a New Dia braccbt Quick relief and a core so Dermanent that I have not been troubled in twelve years." Mrs. Soper I ves in Big Pond. Pa. It works won ders in coughs and colds, sore longs, hemorrhages, 1 grippe, asthma, croup, whoocinar coueh and all bronchial af rwirns. SOc and-- 100. Trial bottle free. Guaranteed by All Druggists. As Advertised. I nurchssed a bottle of Chamber lain Cl iin. Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy, and found it to be all claimed for it in tbe advertisements. Three of the family have need it witb good results ia sum ' mer complaint II E. Howe, publisher of the Press. Hiehlaad. Wl. For sale by AllDruggiata coto rat urns cut t tMrateOv fWottnt JL'ttt ttart fca aarCK??. Waiter Grr Newrn . i SalUbury tat w rrtaraf fftwti (114 It t.1 hre h tx-nl U.vjtr ' k.4ir.g afur fcU mlrr, Wr. ?w. man has recer.tJr lwr mate Mri' drat frf the t'nkift V-jf t rut afJ lul. Thrw Mr-t Ut Ua vulred for snme rears bt !$ JdU hare twn tiukis'.cl a.4 t , tfAr.itj: again. f. Nwman as fall f his trloe bubbling r-vr ih cfttinurn at the wotvWrful gM f.nds rw lin& mavle. lie la on!r wri.irff the L'rvion '&rtr mln at nrcM -afJ re-opened this but a wr v, Th . nchneat of the ore tifte t4f-n ., ,t ia fabulous, ajvl If the vrirwi retinue to produce auch ta!o the mlw wjl (land pre-emifeM!f im the richest guld mi twa i)f !ie WO! id. The wealth contained in the, earth at this mining town, dating Wit ta : ante-bullum days when It at m ita glory, is untold. M r N mn atakra hit reputation on the trtrrt aM Uture rrhe of theae mire. He sayi In talking of the operation now n proccaa In the l nkn trtr nne,; n ,No. 1. abaft, the latt ttcted elarht years ago, an I the flrt abut down. copper vein 8 fret . wtlc has been discovered, tsrawig in addition ta copper $ In gild and al ounce in silver pr tn. At the IMU fvt lel a vein lenlnches wide, hat tern struck Containing 2,Ti m rld per ton. At a IT0 foot level, a rew vein four feet wide, la virgin ground, ha been discovered, that produces I.1 13,-73 In gold bcaides copper. This vrin can be traced through tbe entire ridge embracing the Kurrka. tiold 111 and union mine a dmtanre uf acme mile. In No. 7 abaft a four f- t eni.iwr vein has len rrachet this-hear in addition Ui cop(er $1 in ird and two ounce of ailver per tort. The new Ulsmore concentration mill has been bull nar tht ahaft. Mr. Newman aays the f.bjection.' that, have been advanced akalnt North Carolina mines arc that ll ore lacked depth -that it grvw gra uui nrmm in mtiA: ava it ku viiv ui iwv This he says he has dixpraved by developing the richest vein in the Union mine which widens as It guea downward Mr. Newman U Urm in his belief that his mines t Cu! 1 Mill are among the world's grt-a'.rat Khl treasure hounea and he will witho!. no money to develop them to fie fullest extent. COMMON SENSE' N Laail most ln!!l-nt toila to bm enff Bterfa: fore Ir. plrrce's modSctrw-t. tha tnakt irl print eyrry lr,rraOIr.t entering hen nwin tha botlia rp prs and att lurt,rrw-tnw yrxlrroaih, Ing in fsvor. Tba eor IVrro'S inallr1we It or are callr g position of I to everybody; lr i-rr britx 4 V""i rrrr 1 i !r', rrrr lr ." it ti) y-j fM L'l i'V tii "!. Hunt r'(iy ui uiae oi it s Kkt n4xjttinal prira-ipie etiratu-trirora na tl ra forest root, by aiart j.mrra original with Dr. lt-r-, and wiiSftnt ih dm of a drop of slhol, tr.l-rrEtxl aiut chemically pure g!ycr!rii twine of- In stead In eitractlng and pmrtg thm euratlre virtues rii!!ng in tha rbrt employed, thca medlrlnre sra mVttlf free from the ot j iln of Jolt s l.srm by creating an sppotiu for m'.ihrr aN eoholio berersges or hsl!t format dror. Eiam.no tha formula on IJ.'ir bottla wrapter tha in a in to l y ; Dr. Plerc. and ywi Wl f.nd tbt tu" Oolden Medical IHarovery.' V fti, blood-partner, stiniS' h tonic sol UjJ regulator the nrxlu-lna wli!-h. h!. rv t racommendnd to cur ronumir'n In It , advanced stagtw(oo mallei r will l'Jit;ij yet dcs cvr all thuoe catrrhl eitill lions of bead and threat,' w-ak Umvh, torpid liver and Lrotw IsUi trotil.'.f artk ionir and htg-m-etiuitU, hlrh. If !' Wt"d or baiiy treti lead up Uf ailr finally termlnaui In cwifnj'Uft. Take tha "OoUlm lnil)rl Inienrerj in Urn and It It not I'kvlj t d ;-tont J'oo U only yon giva It a ti'rty A air trial. Itnrt eff-t mira'i.- It won't do snp(rnaturl tM'r. R exerclMi your tni l"r sr5 ra-v r Ui tu tie for a ranal.l letijriii of tltr U r I . IU full berwflta. The lnjfrilfnU cf l-i h Dr. Ilerce's milrlf r w.ijhi! hta tha onooallfiM fil'rwinuf t T tit medical leader tt-r than anv immici of lay, or non-pmf'Wonal. t-tim'f.l. They ara not riven iwf Ui l enrl-. mentnl with Init ara "!'! l y 'A oaU4 la aaadJclnas at raaawtatla pric Electric Laundry! Itear City Hall. City office: Opposite St. Cloud Hotel. Quick service, best quality of work. Collar, Cuff and . Flat Work unexcelled, 1 W. S. BINGHAM - Hanagef Barn for rent at t4 ' per. month. H (hresV alalia, well, tic Mrm. l. i Lilly. Old newt para for ! at Til office at the follow Ing'prlwa cents; 100 for 15 cents; V or Tub Tmi : 23 for 5 centa per loo. Houae for rent Oo Marsh atret, n-r Union. Fine neighborhood. Two story, al x rooma. City watr. iMCxWa frt. Price f 10 m month. Apply to J. B. Sherrili. -j I ineaci k it It that wl KJkO I 1 JNO. K. PATTEESON & CO.