V, ffHETJBSPAYt OCTOBER 1st, 1914. EST STORIES OF, iTS OUT Picturesque and Dramatic Scenes on Europe's Battlefields. ft r ANY a ParaSTaPb in the war b neUS from abroad Is a story X JL in itself telling -of dauntless courage in battle, and many a tumorous incident relieves the grim t,jrt ire of the awful conflict. -The most romantic, dramatic and j.j.jua ut euusode that modern war can bbu.v." says a uaval lieutenant in de scribing an episode in the Helgoland j IIi-s letter reads, as follows: . Tlie Defender, having sunk an ene Ey, lowered a whaler to pick up her swimming survivors. Before the whal er jrut back 'an enemy's cruiser came uj and chased the Defender, and thus hle ahaudoned her whaler. - ' Imagiu2 their feelings alone in an opeu boat without food, twenty-five miles from the nearest land and that land the enemy's fortress, with noth ing but fog and foes around them! "Suddenly a swirl alongside and up. If you please, pops "bis .Britannic maj esty's submarine E-4, opens his con ninu' tower, takes them all on board, shuts up again, dives and brings them borne 250 miles!" Small Boy Saves Family. Theodore Taperzer, nine years . old, of I'hiladdphia arrived at the offices of tin1 American relief committee in Loudon-in charge of a Hungarian wid ow a;.d ber six children, whom he had brought all the way from Budapest. From the Hungarian capital this boy had acted as guide and interpreter of the fatherless family. Taperzer, who had been visiting rel atives in Hungary, started to come out alone. At the railroad station in Budapest he met a family whose fa ther, now dead, had been a natural ized American citizen. He took the Hungarian mother and her children undk-r his care. On his arrival -in Lon don the boy drew a draft on his father in rhiladelpbia, which was promptly honored by the relief committee. He then acted as interpreter for the wid ow whiie she told her story and se cured aid from the committee, after which he attended to the securing of steamship passage for his charges. Peat of lone Swordsman. George Andre. France's foremost all aruuud athlete, has been decorated ith the military .medal and promoted to be a sergeant, according to the Offi cial Gazette, for a great feat Of gal lantry. Andre, who holds the hundred me ters world's record, while -fighting in Lorraine with a company was sur rounded by a large German detach ment. The athlete, sweeping his heavy sword around his head like a flail. Blew many Germans who were gather ed around the standard. He. captured the standard and re rained the French lines at his sprint er's gait under a hail of bullets. Twenty Against 200. La Libert. of Paris relates an inci dent on the battlefield at Compiegne ! in which a French lieutenant and nine teen cuirassiers attacked 200 dragoons of the German imperial guard and dashed right through them. They con tinued the tight in the streets of ttemy and finally reached Paris after a se ries of hairbreath escapes. Three of the nineteen were killed, and five were m'ido prisoners. The others passed through tile German lines in disguise. The party' had dismounted at a farm outside Rerhy at 10 o'clock at .night hen they were cut off by a squadron of the imperial guard. The lieutenant consulted his men. and all agreed to try to break through the enemy. The guard gave way before their impetu ous cries, and the fight was continued tn the streets of Ilemy, where thirty f the enemy were slain. Escaped In Disguise. fortunately the little band got sep flrated. One entered a bouse and con doled himself behind a pile of wood. Another, after dismounting and killing three of the opponents, jumped over a ?ardeu wall and hid- The others got into other houses. ' in all cases the fugitives put on civilian clothes and remained hidden for lw days while the Germans kept searching for them. The lieutenant as found In a marsh with two ribs broken Mild Ma chmiMor nt nf lointi He as taken into a factory and was dressed as an overseer, and eventually, th the help of safe conduct, the hole eleven passed through the'ene- i "ne and got to Paris. in a trench outside the village of anteuiHe-Haudouin four dead Ger man soldiers were found sitting with Paying cards in their hands. A shell burst over them and killed ail during a game of pinochle, "Snowstorm of Shells." . 'It was a snowstorm of shells' one w r Said of a recent engagement, ye went forward, however. A shell e11 a few paces from me and threw Dp a great column of earth,- which ered me, getting into my eyes and Tjuth. Then we came under the ma rine gun fire. This. was really terrl We seemed to be in a furnace. Jnc bullets screamed by and made earful ravages. The dead and wound- THE BIG WAR OF THE ORD Humorous Side .Lights on Great Struggle Found In the News. rnr? ded horses wulch struggled and screamed in agony. But in .p of all we held on. 1 do not think we were afraid at all," - Bravery Under Fire. n In the orders of the day made public areBSUX nUa,erous y tnZ1 .hillps f the Secl bat talion of riflemen during the battle ran out under fire to his captain, who was mortally wounded, and brought him in Private Philips went eight times to the firing line under violent shelling to giv water to the wounded, and he also as sisted bis commandant to rally riflemen dispersed by the enemy's fire. Of all the wounded patients the best, say the doctors in the military hospi tals in Paris, are the Turkos. There is no limit to the pain they can endure. Spartan Women. Among the victims of the battle of Gumbiuuen were the two grandsons of the famousJlussian journalist. Katkoff. It is related that when Mme. Kat koff was told her sous had fallen her first words were: "Have we won the battle?" Told yes. she said: Then I don't regret my sons' death, since they were useful to their coun try." Ignaz Reising and his wife, Sophie Reising, peasants residing in Geisel bach, Bavaria, sent their six sons and three sons-in-law into the war. When the soldiers went out somebody asked their mother why she did not cry like the other women present "I wait till l have real cause for that." she swered. an Mrs. Vanderbilt Washes Dishes. A caller at the American Red Cross hospital In Paris found Mrs. W. K. Vandcrbilt washing dishes in the scul lery. No work if too trivial for the so ciety leader, Paris reports, and her name is blessed in the Red Cross world. A .wounded Prussian officer was tak en to n IVtrograd hospital, where a nurse carefully dressed his wounds. The following day he ascertained that the - nurse was - none other than the grand duchess Olga Alexandrovan, the czar's sister. ; It is reported from Kiev that Prin cess Helena Georgievna, duchess of Aleuchtenburg, and Princess Marina Petrovna have entered the hospitals at Pokroysky convent at Kiev and start ed work among the wounded. Tried to Eat Boots. Scores of wounded Germans are ar riving at Dieppe from Senlis. Many of them were a week in the field with out food. One poor fellow said they had eaten grass and even attempted to eat their straps and boots. They had no emergency rations and were nearly mad with thirst. Oddities In the -War News. The Austriaus report that Russians have done great execution with ma chine guns mounted in trees, which Is a novelty In the style of mounting guns. , Two Americans arrived at Ostend battered and haggard, but wherever they met Germans the waving of the big American passport secured them politeness, they declared. At Sottegehem they came upon some German officers in a wayside tavern. A lieutenant called for a song in Eng lish. One of the Americans obliged with "You Made Me Love You, I Didn't Want to Do It." The lieutenant then said, "It you come from Brussels you must be hun gry." The officer disappeared and return ed with arms laden with ten pounds of butter and a hundred eggs. The United States diplomatic service, now a sort of handy man for all 'na tions in Europe, has been asked by a circus agency to find "Teddy Bobs," a Briton, in Germany. If the fact he Is eight feet tall and lame in the left leg does not aid in finding him, it is expected his appetite will, for he Is one of the most prodigious eaters in Europe, and if not found will aid his country by reducing Germany's food supply. Germans Sob ; French Stoics. There Is one marked difference, whol ly psychological, between the German and the French wounded, who are con stantly arriving at Bordeaux, writes-a correspondent Physically there Is little difference between the German wounded soldier being carried by t and his wounded i-orh sTitaconlst in a nearby cot the bullet or shrapnel has torn the Ger man's flesh no more cruelly tnan it nas torn the Frenchman. But almost all the German prisoners nfferln2 extremely from nervous ..honcHnn. Therefore the popular opinion of the outlander of the charac teristics of the two Is wholly reversed. The French wounded, Instead of hnwtnff sisms of nervous excitement are comparatively calm, whereas the reminded among the Germans, aespue their reputed stoicism, spend the great er part of their waking hours sobbing piteously. ; MRY Arnt IRtl C C lc nmrMmiM ... . " . . i .. ' "" 1 1 ' ri "" ' ' ' " 11 1,1 I i:hu r h u vk-v uwat luxate tvnjL will not sm MAKE GAINS SAY WILL BREAK THROUGH ALLIES LIKES IN A WEEK. War Office at Berlin Says That Every Effort to Penetrate German Line is Repulsed. One German Subma rine Sank Three British C misers in 47 Minutes. Resistance of Allies is Slowly Weakening, So Berlin Claims. Many Doctors and Nurses Killed, Berlin, Sept. 20. The war office states, that every effort to Kne trate the German right wing of bat tle on the Ainse lias been repulsed. The German forces continue to mako gains along the Meuse river. Tlu state of the sicfie of Przemysl indi cates that the Russian siege guns ar disabled..1 The government insists that only one submarine in action sunk three British cruisers and that the action lasted only forty-seven minutes." It is reported by high officials that the Germans will eertainy break through "the allies Mines at the battle on the Ainse within u week. The resistance of the Allies is slowly weakening at several joinis. Many wounded on both sides are dying be cause there are scraeely any doctors ct the front, the wounded say. All have to stay in the trenches, half fill ed with water, and the wounded can only be collected at night. Then tlio slightest noise brings the deadly shot of the rapid fire guns and cannon on that locality of the lines. This is the reason many doctors and nurses have been killed. GENERAL ARTILLERY DUEL Decisive Stages Not Reached at Any Point of the Battle Lines. Berlin, Sept. 29. The war office announces that the fighting in the battle along the Aisne is again settled down to a general artillery duel with frequent assaults at vital points. It is not apparent that decisive stages have been reached in any points along the battle line. Reports from the east show that the fighting continues in Galicia, with Russians repulsed at points where they had assumed the offensive. Przemysl still holds out, according to a war office statement; The Mecklenburg and Cabarrus Bap tist Association. Charity and Children Kannapolis, the new and vigorous little city that sprang up like Jonah's gourd, but unlike the gourd has come to stay, was highly favored last week. The Mecklenburg and Cabarrus as sociation and the Concord Presbytery met on the same day which was Tues day the 15th, and transacted their businesss'in the Baptist and Presby terian churches respectively. The Mecklenburg Cabarrus is one of or best bodies, and heretofore has been remarkable for the large num ber busy business mei of Char lotte that have attended its session. We regretted to find the 'representa tion from that city not so large this time. It may be that the war in Eu rope is responcible; what ever it was we hope to see at the next session more of the men of the Fjrst church. The record of the past year was rood, and the snirit of progress was in the air. Of course the First Church of Charlote made the greatest showing in membership and money, but it is by far the richest church in the body. It reported 1102 members and $24,000 given "to all objects. But the smaller churches have done well and it is not surprising, for they are led bv wise and strong pastors who'are thoroughly consecrated. The ministry of this association is un- commonly able. j Two or three notable addresses were delivered. One of these "was by Dr Vines on Home Missions. It was an exceedingly lucid explosion of the perils "that confront the South and the marvelous opportunity now open- before us. Dr. Vines is a most en gaging speaker, and we are not at all surprised that multitudes throng his ministry. Another adress that was exception ally fine was that by Dr. E. W. Sikes of Wake Forest college on education. We have no doubt the brethren en joyed other addresses equally as fine as these, for there were many men of ability there, but it fa append to be the good fortune of the writer to hear these two speakers. Kannapolis is a mill town of some 4000 people. The Baptists have a beautiful house of worship and a Beeker is the pastor and his people are delighted with him. We are sorry that our limited time prevented our attending any of the sessions of the Presbytery out; hope the brethren had as good as time as the Baptists, and we nave no doubt they had that very thing. Bethpage Presbyterian Church. There will be all day services at the Presbyterian Church Sunday, Oc tober 4th. Rally service to begin at 10 A. m., and preaching service ai l:0 pm. Communion to follow. OLYNN TOR GOVERNOR la New Yerk Primary f cr All FarU Yesterday OrtiziziUcz' Cizii dates Led Strcrxly. 'Xew York, Se. ..lotenuir Martin II. Glynn and P;trict Attor Per Charle' S. Whitman ef tM,. ing fur the Iferrxr!tc and I.Vpjuli r.n g-jWrnatorial mtt.init'uti re pcthr!y jtortlr aftrr tr-idctrLt to night when half New York rity ard a few Mattered jM"!a:e rt-turri hid been compiled. K. M. !aeti jwrt mat leadin- Williara SaUer by tnly a slight margin for the lrvrgrrJ swve nomination. James W. Gerard l. J the lead for the I rrweratif Sen atorial nomination, arid William I, ('aider a ahead in the -UefmUieaa rare. Tammany Hall aWrted that Gov ernor U!ynn would earrv greater New York by 73.M0. Ah the i tolls did not until. 0 fVloefc the eount was late in connin in. In jsinie eountry di$!rir: it "was said that the total would nt In known until late tomorrow. In the Dernoeratie eotiteM fVr I'niU ed States Senator' Tanie W. Gerard, American audja-sndir. to Germany, was running - ahead of Franklin !. Roosevelt, '.assistant .heeretary of the navy, by abut four and a half to one. . In the Republican primaries for Governor. Charles S. Whitman, dis trict attorney of New York county, was lending ,Th Hcdres by nearly five to one. Harvey !. Hintnan ran considerably behind Hedges. Representative William M. Cidd'-r, ot Brooklyn, led .lames . nis- worth, Jr.. by nearly the t- one for the Republican nomination for United States Senator and I)vid Jayne Hill had received only altotit one-eighth us many votes as Wadsworth. PROBABLE CHANGES AS THE RESULT OF THE WAR Great Britain Will Take Over the German Colonies.-France to Get! Alsace-Lorraine. Ixndon, Sept. 29. Austin West, staff correspondent of -the Daily Chronicle in discussing iossible changes of frontiers when the war is over, has the following to say under a Milan date line: a '"As for likely changes in the map of the world at the end of the war, I think it probable that Great Britain will take over the German colonies, giving Spain and Portugal a share therein, as a reward for their neutral ity. "Russia will limit her demands to Galicia, at the same time netting guar antees for the entire Independence of the four Balkan States. Since Russia has no interest in the Adriatic problem, and moreover, cherishes a warm friendship with Italy, she will not offer protectorate over Albania In addition, there will be a rectifica tion of Italy's northern frontiers on a national racial basis. "I think France will resume pos session of Alsace-Lorraine and the Palatinate while Austria will remain a German State and form a part of the Germanic Confederation. "This wjll raise the question wheth er the. German EmTeror shall be mere ly King of Prussia or also King of Austria. It seenr? to be quit" un likely that the United States will in tervene, and if 'Sweden should assert herself on behalf of Germany she would find fcer action paralvzed that of Norwav and Denmark." bv The Irish Wanted to Fight London, Sent. 29. An instance of ! V) nTP onTiniio Tricli " cz-iltioi-c o ro 4v rrr . fo the f ront Ppf entIy at Chelsea Barracks, where the Irish Guards were quartered. Late one evening some one spread the rumor that the Irish Guards were to be transferred to one of the army depots. That evening was one of the wildest known at Chelsea Barracks. Then came the announcement that the ru- mor was true. Imediatelv the Irish: Guards set up the cry, "We want to go to the front. Our place is in France. We won't go to any depots.' For more tbn an hour the yelling kept up. Then the officers made speeches telling the men to be patient that they soon would be off for the scene of fighting. Even after these promises a force of mount ed police was established about the Barracks to insure peace and quiet. Rowan's work house which is really A . a reformatory is now neanng com pletion and the commissioner hops to begin using it by the first of Novem ber. It is located at the county home and the inmates of the workhouse youthful prisoners and women senten ced by the county and Superior courts will he used in working the large farm which has heretofore been run in connection with the county home. Germans Drob Bombs on Children, Killing Eleven. London, Sept. 29, 2:50 a. m.--The operators of-a German Zeppelin dirig ible dropped a bomb into a school house at Bielostok, Russia, yesterday, killing 11 children, according to a dispatch from Petrograd to the Morn ing Post. . General humidity held his ground almost as stubbornly as the Belgians have been holding theirs against the Germans. presidency or iccaco Re a Cariiiau fst OZau st?l or Yxe 1 Vnt fcf Mrtif! wa reeehoJ ,i ti-e S4!f Iwrt! e.al arst at fl,jb-iaifia City, Tiil ? wfy. datrh tW r; ! ttz vLljt-. j Nv 31--:i W.A. Ion froa iie interior of UU kvra rf !lsi:4 ft. t. Villa rr toll zimt IWfcral Oax34- AAt.w A raa atstWIty aitrt wh'i f tUt FIlss. ?aj H-fal adjatttct f lie diSrtdi .between th two !rader That pml uzrit&T aiii.Lel to Yilia a-iratjre w 1a? itjlf1; mm fl!nweI wWJf the deHrsttf f. .VnrraI mna" tUt ho womld ERUssrn imsT pay S6.C0O.CCH) RANSOM Demanded by tre Germans fcr Ear jomastcr Max. Ostrnd. Sept. J"J.-Bra thy wa rdere! to j.iv f,0CtffKrt. wtirH Germans demand-! uj'n Tct3jatin a ransm for BargW&i.!er Mat. The Bnnr,mater" wa re am when e offeml Brusels bondt in stead of gold as payment beeauM? gold was not obtainable Tie Burpatter was committed ! jail -until m tm!-i lion in gold is paid. The Battle of Mens. Ixmdon, Sept, 23. A wounded non commissioned oft.'eer, of -the iVmjt'i dours, whose regiment left Wembley Bark a week before the fighting le gan, .has written the following let ter to a friend, lescrlbing the fir days battle which beran at Mon an lastwl through August 2G; ".We hf to braflftfr sev eral cavalry attacks as well a in- f&ntry, and when the trouble cern-; ed to be over the -Germans played on us with shrapnel just like turning on u fire hose. Several of our officers were hit on Wednesday. Heavy ar tillery German cavalry charged i with drawn sabres, and we only had a minutes warning "to prepare to receive cavalry." "We left our entrenchments, nn'l rallying in groups, emptied our mag azines into them as they drew near. Men and horoses fell in confused heaps. It was a terrible sight. Still, on they came. They -brought tbeir naked sabres to the engagement, and we could distinctly hear their words of command made in that piere:ng high tone of voice which the Gerrmrs affect. The enemy had a terrible death roll before their . fruit ps charge was completed, a thick line of dead and wounded marking the ground over which they had charged. We shot the wounded horses, to put them out of their misery, whilst our ambulances set to work to render aid to the wounded. Our Red Cross rr.en make no distinction. Friend and fo pet the same medical treatment .and that's where we score over the Ger mans. If they had been Uhlans we should not have spared them, as we owe them a grndre for rounding up some Tommies who were bathinT. They took their clothes away and tied the men to trees. We swore to give them a warm time whenever we met them.,, Big Fight Is On Today For Ohio Dry Amendment. Cleveland, O., Sept. 25. The .cam. was formally opened here today whet; "wet" and "dry" speakers clashed in a joint debate before the City Club of Cleveland. Thirty thousand dollars has been raised to .conduct tfce temperance ngm ing in Cleveland and Cuyhoga eonn- ties alone. In nearly every county in the state both factions have their cen tral coramitte with ward and pre cinct captains to eanvaf s every vote.. Although both "wet" and "dry' forces declare te fight in non-political, Gov. Cox, Dernoeratie candidate for re-election is said to have "wet" tendencies while his Progressive oppo a stand on the quest ionshrdloetao nent. James R. Garfield, has joined the "dry?." The Republican plat form hefused to take a stand, on the rrnestion. hut Congressman Frank B. Willis, candidate for Coveroor, is known to have strong "dry" spm pathies. School Notice. , White Hall School and West Con cord School, both in district No. 4, township eleven, will open on Mon day, October 12. All patrons are re quested to enter their., children en the first dav if possible. Another room has been added at White Hall and an additional teacher employed, thus providing for another grade of high school work. . COMMITTEE. Rev. J. B. Moose left Tuesday for Chicago, UL, to enter the Luth eran Theological Seminary. Mrs. and Mrs. J. Locke Erwin ere visitii? relatives in Baltimore. Woae ft candidate if Villa wbM 1 L. Nf ,;n tfst; Car, N1 give- a almilar pnrrie acd a!l toi. I crk N Yr,k U O itary leaders were eliainatI a Tre, tt1 N!f ,,V V AlUx -v idential ibilitie, 1?.. " OWntiw - j I arsr Car, Greets Wf I Mtt! paign io auu a Miic-"C ti-i. . amendment to unio s wumuuhuu 1,,iin' the erenerai elections in om-:i n sotmmf iuilay Arnv: tf Truz aj -Cmerl i ru rm sT 4f ta$ 4Nmsai f .v? t a?- fed j at X.4 : Jfeftn3 t cf CiarUtU l tit? wf tit. tHilr. I m a ! ' r? .;mAl i'It Draw. rey; Pi sir.; Can IUr?r Car. Yofi r4 Sw Or!eat fiet4, Cf. ri BtHxaa Prawifc f'ut Ro,fu. Ojn Setia ar,4 Unatij eefMRf Car, New Yrk ja NV tV leas; Ou Car WaIift;tAa't Jlc jot cry; Pullxaa Barr Car Ct r in ttot?tnTr. Pirns? Taf ?U i at CVnrd tely tvrmwtgxr uuth f Atlart SV 11 10:10 a m Padr, IrU for O.arlctte, Athta aaj ir.!rri- Sat., l,fl . it : m n. m.-pai!r: Utlfe4 Matra fat mingham and Nrw- Orlcar;. Bantau draw in room lectin- ear. New ior to .ew Ot!ean an ! Binsb;?. fcafR. day eoaec aLijyrti u Nefw Orjeana. Pining car icrrice No. 11 8:1.1 p m.leal iro n Richmond to Charlotte. No. 4.10:45 p. n Daily, for Au lanta. iVJlxan Venice. Raleigh U Atlanta, day eoachen WaiMnstoa U -Atlanta. Northbound. No. nCV-ll-.M ft. ' m. Daily, Bir mingham Special for Wa;trsrton an4 New York. Pallman drawing rtrw sleeping car, oWrvtion eara t New Yor. Pay eoatbet t Waahirr ton. Pullman to Richmond. No.-44 7:43 a. m. -Daily, Wat for Washington. Sleejer Atlanta U Raleigh, No. 3o 11:00 a. m.-U. S. Fait Mail, for Wathington and fWnta North. Pullman drawing room sleep ing cars New Orlana and Binnir ham to New York. Pining ear wrr ice. No. 4f 3:42 p. m. Daily, local for Greensboro. No. 12 C:4. p. m. Daily, local for Danville and RicbTond. Vulh man ferrice between Cbarlottn ar,! Richmond, Aahcville and NorffJk. Train second 3S 9;01 p. m. New York and New Orl'an I.imiteI. Samt equipment ai second 37. Stop at Concord only to discharge pauensrri from south of Atlanta. No. 3210:23 p. m. Paily, South ern 'a Southeastern Limite! for Waafc ington, New York and points north. Pullman drawing room aleeiang ear for New York, day coaehe to Wath ington. Dining car ncrric. No. 14 10u33 a. m. Charlotte. U Richmond Daily, local for Richmond. No. 8 4:13 a. m. Daily, local fcr Danville, Richmond and intcrmcdiatt points. Train Firat 3$ S:03 p. m. Alan ta Special. Same equipment at frt 37. NOTICE OF NT3W REGISTRATION Notice i hereby giren that tle County Board of Election at a mee. ing held on Scptembet 7, 1914, uaar- ly adapted a revolution ord?r- a new regiitration of all eIcetor raid Cabarrui county in and for each voting precinct in said county, all electors of aaid county are there fore notified and requited to regit ter again with the registrar in bit election precinct, and all c Ice tort upon the "Permanent Roll of Rcgi. tered Voters" on file with the Clerk of the Superior Court and Secretary of State are hereby admed to ob tain certificates from faid rlerk n order to register anew for the Stat, dif triet and county election to b held November 3, 1914. This September S. 1914. COUNTY BOARD OP ELECTIONS IL JL Caldron, Chiteia. C. A. Isenhour, Stcretaxy, 9-td. NORFOLK SOUTHERN RAILROAD Schedule Elective Jnse 11. 1914, No. 32 leave Charlotte 4:50 p. ra, Leave Star 8:03 p. m arriving Aahe boro 9d0 p. ra. No. 32 connects at Star with No. 73 arriving Jackson Springs 9:12 p. n. and Aberdeen 10:00 p m. No. 71 leave Aiheboro t5 a. n. arriving Charlotte 11:45 a. tx No. 70 leave Aberdeen 0:35 a. ta. Leave Jackson Springs 7.23 a. m. eon atcting at Star for Charlotte. J. F. inTCHELL, T. P. A- Will sell fcr $SG0 or exchange f r city property or a farm, one $1405 Reo 5-passenger touring ear, com plete, in gool condition. Has ran onlv about SOOmiles. See Jno. K. Pattarson. 31-tf. Visiting Cards handiomely printed in feript or Old English (shaded or plain), 50 for 10 cents, at The Times-Tribuce oHice. tf. i