I Vivertising Brings Success. !
As 2a Advertising Medium
,; t , I UIVK t
n lvrtine ii.tljp(iOl.D
j I.i:.w",m shown by its well T
TWGoia JUaf ataa! at the head e(
.3ir H lfil;iilv''r(iHiimc)lu(nn T
aewspaperata tauseetfoa
iV SENSIBLE BUSINESS MEN J
w
of tMiaaoM
Ik
1 r t (Mfitinn to upend
ifood moiny where no
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The mot 1dein&elx4 i 1
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Sitis&cdca ml frtSt to Thzslnxj
TfiiD R. MANNING, PnbIisSe?."J
O abolin a, Carolina, Heaven 's Blessings Attend tTto
ISDSSCIIPTIOI JUCClll.
VOL. XX.
HENDERSON, N. C THURSDAY, JUNE 6, 1901.
NO. 25.
11!.
oo nm
is ,-ls bad as too little for the
jrirl. It is very easy for her to
nivl this is especially dangerous
critical period of a young girl's
:; she crosses the line of woman
hood. It is not an
g'"
a'
uncommon thing to
lay the foundation
for years of after
misery by neglect of
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tions at the first
"change of life."
The use of Dr.
Pierce's Favorite
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ity, but it gives
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It is the best medi
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because it cures the
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manently. ' Favorite Prescrip
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It cannot dieagree.
with the most deli
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"For a number of
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v 'i!.!-." writes Miss Ajfnes McC'.owne,
!: ii.li v!rirt, Washington, D. C. "I tried
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: m:k- 1 had not used your 4 Favorite
; week before I Wfran to feel
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-. ! ::inl is improving every day."
f-y.
of
Yrr-
lrii :
It:
.V!.
rp. .
t:
K.'
i'ii rcc's Common Sense Medical
r, in paper covers, is sent free on
; i if 21 one-cent stamps to pay
tf mailing only. Address Dr.
i u rce, Buffalo, N. Y.
"DAVE'S PLACE,"
i site S. A. I j. Station.)
European Hotel, Restaurant
and Lunch Counter.
M. iN Served at all Hours Day cr Night
Fnrnislied Rooms. Comfortable Beds.
Kt tiling strictly first-class. An orderly,
well kept place.
c- SALOONS
K-jua I t. any in the State, stocked with
nothing but the very Best and Purest
gotxl-i money can buy.
'IM-. bi-inif the urip season we have all
kinds f iumi-diehts for relieving same.
FINE CKiAKS AND TOBACCOS.
POOL KOO.MS IN CONNECTION.
HENRY T. POWELL,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
HK.NUlCnsON, - IV. c
;! ice in Voung & Tucker building.
C. A. Coggeshall, M. D.,
Physician and Surgeon,
IIKNDEUSON, N. C.
:! ,. in Cooper Opera House Duilding.
tw" Phone No. 70.
H. H. BASS,
Physician and Surgeon,
HENDERSON, N. C.
l-e7 ftice over Dorsey's Drug Store,
jyt. t S. HAKIMS,
DENTIST,
HKNDERSON,
N. C.
t-iT"03;ee over K. (i. Davis store. Main
Jtret.t. lan.l-a.
Henry Perry,
- -Insurance.-
A si;, inline of hoth Life and Fire foim
iatnrs i. resented. Policies issued and
f'-'i- l.vc.'.i Ui oest advantaee.
"e' Curt House.
FRANCIS A. MACON,
Dental Surgeon,
Office, Young & Tucker Building,
Under Telephone Exchange.
'! o,- hours y ,. M. to 1 P. M. 3 to 6 P. M.
i -i.icnce Phone 88; office Phone 25.
r-tiniates furnished when deired. No
ciiare for examination.
JAMES V. HART & CO.,
Boot and Slum Makers,
' -0 ath:i m Uuililing, Montgomery street.
HENDERSON, N- C.
Work ixuarantcfd. Hepuiring a ipe
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f !ui- solicited.
A GJlon of PURE LINSEED OIL mixed
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HAMM AK PAIXT CO., St. Loui,Mo.
Sold and guaranteed br
JAS. A. O'NEIL & SON,
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lltU,
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WATCH NORTH CAROLINA
THE OLD NORTH STATE AT THE CHARLES
TON EXPOSITION.
Will be Represented by a Com pre
hensive and Creditable Exhibit of
Our Vat and Varied Resources -Interesting
Article Devoted to North
Carolina Published in the June
Number of the Exposition flagazine
Also Printed in Attractive Folder
Form for General Distribution.
(UaleiKh Pot.)
'J'he Old North State at the South
Cai-olina Inter-State and West Indian
Exposition at Charleston, S. I)., De
cember 1, 1901, to June 1, 1902, is the
subject of a highly interesting and
handsomely illustrated article in the
June number of the Exposition Maga
zine. The same article is also printed
in a very attractive folder form for
general distribution throughout the
country, and is calculated to accom
plish a vaat amount of good in bring
ing to the attention of the people the
country over the resources and ad
vantages of the State. The article
contains excellent cuts of Gor. C. 1$.
Aycock, Commissioner of Agriculture
S. L. Patterson, State (ieologist Jos.
A. Holmes, Secretary of Agriculture
T. K. Hr mier and William Dunn, Esq.,
aud Col. F. A. Olds, commissioners
from North Carolina to the Exposi
tion and A. Cannon, Esq., member of
the North Carolina Board of Agricul
ture. There is also a fine full page il
lustration showing an interior view of
Curator H. II. Brimley's laboratory
and work shop in the North Carolina
State Museum, views of Biltmore
estate, views of Swannanoa liver and
other Western North Carolina scen
ery. The article is so exceptionally well
prepared and comprehensive that it is
well worth reproducing in the Post.
It is given below:
NOItTII CAKOUXA AT CHAKLKSTON EX
POSITION'. At the last session of the Lejrisla
ture of North Carolina, a resolution
was adopted declaring that it would
promote the industrial prosperity of
the State to be properly represented
at Buffalo and Charleston, and re
questing the State Department of Agri
culture to make an exhibit at the two
Expositions. It was found that the
time for preparation was so short
that it would not be practicable to
prepare for an exhibit at Buffalo, but
the wish of the Legislature will be
carried out at Charleston, and carried
out in such a way as to reflect credit
upon the State. North Carolina is
one of the richest States in the Union,
and will make the exhibit at Charles
ton fully representative of its vast
natural resources and manufactured
products. It is claimed, and claimed
with good cause, that North Carolina
is the "most progressive, most desir
able and most healthful of the South
Atlantic States as a place of residence.
Her homogeneous, hospitable popula
tion, her conservative laws, light tax
ation, salubrious and temperate
climate and the great possibilities of
her natural and improved conditions
also present inviting fields to the in
vestor or to the home seeker."
For the purpose of carrying out the
wish of the Legislature, the Governor
of North Carolina appointed Commis
sioners to represent the State at the
Exposition in Charleston as follows:
(Jen. Julian S. Carr, of Durham ;Thad
H. Manning, of Henderson; W. L.
Hill, of Warsaw; Wm. Dunn, of New
Berne; Col. F. A. Olds, of Raleigh;
Hon. A. Cannon, of Horse Shoe: S. P.
Kavenel, Jr., of Highlands; Osmond
Barringer, of Charlotte; W. C. Heath,
of Monroe; E. K. Proctor, Jr. of Lum
berton. At the meeting of the State Commis
sion held at Raleigh, an executive
committee of five members was ap
pointed to collect and prepare a State
exhibit for the Exposition at Charles
ton. This committee consists of the
Hon. Charles B. Aycock, Governor,
chairman ex-otlcio; the Hon. S. L.
Patterson, State Commissioner of
Agriculture: J. A. Holmes, State Geol
ogist; the Hon. Wm. Dunn, member
of the State Board of Agriculture, and
the Hon. T. K. Bruner. Secretary of
the Department of Agriculture. In
selecting the Commissioners for the
State aud the members of the execu
tive committee, Governor Aycock suc
ceeded admirably in providing for
representation' from all parts of the
State and for every industry in the
State. The collection and installa
tion of the North Carolina exhibit
has been placed in the hands of the
most competent exposition men to be
found in the South. The exhibit will
be under the immediate direction of
the North Carolina Board of Agricul
ture, which has reduced the business
of exhibit making to a line art, as the
record which North Carolina has
made at all the great expositions that
have been held since the Vienna Ex
position of 1S73, abundantly testify.
The executive officer of the Board
of Agriculture is the Hon. S. L. Pat
terson, who is noted for his aggres
sive conservatism and who, because
of his sterling honesty of purpose and
wide range of executive ability is
rightly regarded as an ideal officer.
The Secretary of the Board, Mr. T. K.
Bruner, has had wider experience in
exposition work than any man in
North Carolina, and but lew men in
the country have accomplished so
much. For nearly twenty years his
ideas have been illustrated at most of
the great expositions in which North
Carolina has taken part. 1 rol. J. a
Holmes, the State Geologist, it is
said, "is known to and knows more
people than any man in North Caro-
t lin tmlav. and his association with
: any exhibit would ensure its success
I nriihnnt nt hsr orn gran tea.'1 The Other
member of the executive committee
is the Hon. Wm. Dunn, of New Berne,
who represents the great trucking
industry of the Eastern part of the
State, and has been for a number of
years the head of the New Berne Fish,
Oyster and Game Fair, which stands
by itself among the fairs of the United
States. With such a working Com
mittee as this, supplemented by the
Governor of the State and the splendid
resources of the Department of Agri
culture, there can be no question that
the North Carolina State exhibit at
the Exposition in Charleston will be
the most complete and the richest
made by any Southern State.
the great and varied resources of
the State, ranging as they do from
the colossal fisheries and truck farms
of the coast region to the rich mines
and towering hard-wood forests of
the mountains, make the possibilities
of a North Carolina exhibit second to
none, whenever the State chooses to
stir itself. Agriculturally there is
perhaps no State in the Union whose
products are more diversified than'
those of North Carolina. The moist, i
warm airs of the Southeast make the1
conditions under which the cultiva
tion of rice becomes possible and
profitable, while the crops of buck
wheat and barley flourish on the steep
mountain slopes of the Blue Ridge
and the Smokies. With so wide a
range as this and with all the inter
mediate temperate zone crops, the
grains and the grasses, the clovers.
the textiles, the tobaccos in the great
est variety, an agricultural exhibit is
assured that will surprise those who
live in a less favored land. The apple
crop of the Western part of the State
will be snown as natural apples
fresh from the cellars of the mountain
growers and this part of the exhibit
will be changed from time to time, so
that it will be more perfect than any
apple show ever made in thi3 coun
try. Western North Carolina apples
were awarded fifteen prizes at the
World's Fair in Paris last year. Other
fruits of the State, of which there is a
great variety, will be exhibited in
preserved form, the experience of the
officers of the Agricultural Depart
ment enabling them to present an ex
hibit in keeping with the importance
of horticulture in the State.
The forests of North Carolina have
for many years been one of the chief
sources of revenue to the people of
that State. The value of their pro
ducts, including domestic fuel, tim
ber for construction and such by
products as turpentine aud its derivi
ties, aggregates more than $25,000,
000 a year. These forests extend
from the sea level in the Eastern and
Southeastern parts of the State to
altitudes of 6.G00 feet along the State's
Western borders. The richness of the
forests of the State is not approached
by that of any other State or terri
tory in this country, and in the
variety of hard-woods or conifers
North Carolina is not surpassed by
any region in temperate climates of
equal area. Twenty-four kinds of
oaks are to be found in the State,
eight kinds of hickories, all the maples
of the Eastern United States, all the
lindens, all of the American magno
lias, three of the birches, eight of the
pines, both species of hemlock and
the balsam fir, three of the elms, six
of the arborescent speoies of plum
and cherry, and three of pyrus (apple).
Not less than twenty trees reach in
North Carolina the greatest size they
attain. The State is careful of its
forests, and upon the Biltmore estate
a department of forestry has under its
charge about 110,000 acres of wood
land. The Board of Agriculture will
send to the Exposition at Charles
ton the finest collection of timbers it
has ever made, to represent the mer
chantable or commercial forests of
the State. This collection will con
sist of sections four inches thick, cut
from the heart of the timber and pol
ished; also disks cut across the tree,
in this way showing both grains of
the wood. By this method of prepar
ing the wood exhibit the possibilities
of the dressed timber for tine interior
work will be shown, while the unfin
ished lower half 'of the several ex
hibits will show the natural wood.
Accompanying this exhibit there will
be a large collection of officinal or
medicinal plants, barks, berries, etc.,
of which tons are annually marketed
in the State. To each of the speci
mens will be attached a label with a
small map of the State, colored to
show the distribution of the species
to which it belongs.
The annual product of the mines of
gold, silver and copper is valued at
about 130,000,000. The silver pro
duction is small. The value of the
gold output is great, the productive
gold region of the State embracing
from eight to ten thousand square
miles in the middle and Western
counties. Iu this part of the exhibit
made at the Exposition in Charleston
the Department of Agriculture will
present an immense array of gold
ores, comprising all the classes found
in the State, from the free gold to the
most complex ores, such as pyrite,
auriferous pyrite and chalcopyrite,
arsenopyrite, shales, quartzes, etc.,
and also silver in many forms.
A magnilicent collection will be
made of highly colored copper ores,
including boruite, cuprite, copper
glance, corbonates, peacock ore, etc.
There will also be a large collection
of the North Carolina iron ores and of
the economic minerals such as talc,
zircon, monazite, kaolin, mica, etc.
In addition to these splendid exhibits
there will also be a large collection
of several hundred native gems, gold
nuggets, silver nuggets, copper nug
gets, etc.
The fishing industry of North Caro
lina ranks as one of the most impor
tant business enterprises of the State,
and in the coast country is of greater
value than any other branch of trade.
The commercial fisheries display
made by North Carolina at other ex
positions has been one of the most in
teresting features of the State's ex
hibit, and the exhibit to be made at
the Exposition in Charleston will be
even better than the exhibits made at
previous great expositions. The
marine fauna of the State is very rich
and varied, including as it does many
of the species more associated with
Florida in name, such as the red snap
per, pompano and tarpon, while the
life North of Hatteras inclndes
many of the fishes that are supposed
to be found only in more Northern
waters, The oysters from Neuse
River, Stump Sound, Grey Sound and
Pamlico Sound, the clams and escal
lops, the crabs, soft-shell crabs and
shrimps, will all add interest to its
display, while the great fresh water
and sea fisheries will be exploited by
means of monnted specimens in great
variety, samples of appliances and
nets and a fine array of handsome and
life-like photographs taken on the
beaches and boats and among the
workers themselves. In addition to
these attractive features of the North
Carolina exhibit, there will be a dis
play of the game birds and animals
mounted among their natural sur
roundings, and also a concise and
practical exhibit of the fauna of the
State in its general aspects, as well as
in its economic relationships to agri
culture and horticulture. This ex
hibit will include a series of all ani
mals, birds and insects in their rela
tion to the farming and fruit growing
industry of the State.
The South Carolina Inter-State and
West Indian Exposition at Charleston
has been projected upon the broadest
lines and is intended primarily for
the purpose of displaying the marvel
lous progress that has been made by
the Southern States in the last quar
ter of a century. Twenty States have
already provided for exhibits at this
exposition. The Expositition Com
pany was organized under a charter
granted by the State of South Caro
lina, with a capital stock of $250,000
and resources amounting to $1,250,
000. The exposition grounds contain
160 acres. The number of the main
exposition buildings is eleven. The
grounds have been divided into two
sections. The Court of Palaces,
around which the main buildings of
the exposition will be grouped, will
be 1,200 feet in length and over 900
feet in width. This Court of Palaces
will contain 1,650.000 square feet, as
compared with 480,000 square feet at
the Trans-Mississippi Exposition,
720,000 square feet at Paris, 563,000
square feet at Chicago and 1,530,000
square feet at Buffalo. The exposi
tion grounds have a frontage of more
than 2,000 on the Ashley river, and
are reached by trolley cars, l'ailway
trains and ships coming in directly
from the ocean, from Boston and New
York. Twenty-two acres of the ex
position grounds have been set apart
for the Midway attractions, and the
applications that have already been
made for space show that every inch
of room in the buildings will be taken
and every foot of ground occupied.
The attendance upon the Exposition
at Charleston cannot fall below one
million and a half, the railroad? hav
ing made the most favorable conces
sions in behalf of the enterprise. The
opportunity that will be presented to
North Carolina at this Exposition for
the advertisement of its resources
and for the attraction of outside capi
tal and desirable heme-seekers cannot
be over estimated.
HE CARETH.
What can it mean? Is it aught to Him
That the nights are long and the days are
dim?
Can He be touched by the griefs I bear.
Which sadden the heart and whiten the
hair?
About His thrones are eternal calm.
And strong, glad music and happy psalm.'.
And bliss un muffled by any strife
How can He care for my little life?
And yet, 1 want Him to care for me,
While 1 live in this world where the sor
rows be;
When the lights b9 down from the path I
take;
When strength is feeble, and friends for
sake; When love and muiic. that once did
bless,
Have left me to silence and loneliness.
And my life long changes to silent
prayers
Then my heart cries out for a God who
cares.
When shadows hang over the whole day
long.
And my spirit is bowed with shame and
wrong.
When I am not good, and the deeper shade
Of conscious sin makes my heart afraid,
And the busy world has too much to do
To stay its course to help roe through,
And 1 long for a Saviour can it be
That the God of the universe cares for
me?
Oh, wonderful story of deathless love.
Eacli child is dear to that heart above;
He fights for me when 1 cannot fight.
He comforts me in the gloom of night,
He lifts the burden, for He is strong.
He stills the sigh and awakens the song;
The sorrow that brought me down, He
And loves and pardons because He cares.
Let all who are sad take heart again,
We are not alone in our hours of pain;
Our Father stoops from His throiie above
To soothe and guide us with His love;
He leaves us not when the storm is high.
And we have safety, for He is nigh.
Can it be trouble which he doth share?
Oh, rest in peaee, for Um Lord does care.
EDUCATION AND SUCCESS.
We are amazed at the statement
made by Prof. M. C. S. Noble, of the
University, in delivering the diplomas
to the members of the graduating
class of the Graded School of this city
last Friday night, that out of every
10,000 men who do not go to college
one rises or attains reputation, while
out of every 40 college men one
achieves success. This indicates, said
the speaker, that the college man is
250 times better off than the man who
has not received a college education.
The figures are eloquent, and as Prof.
Noble is careful in his statements we
may not doubt their substantial ac
curacy. They should stimulate every
boy to to get an education if possible,
and every father to exert every means
in his power, including the exercise
of self-denial, to educate his sons if
they will consent to be educated. The
failure of a professional man, in any
particular, to have enjoyed the bene
fits of an education at college is well-
nigh deadly, and a man in any of the
higher vocations of life it is a fearful
handicap. This is increasingly the
case as population increases, civiliza
tion advances and cempetition grows
sharper. It is trite to say that a
young man can begin life with no
capital so certain to stay with him
and to be so useful to him as a finish
ed education, but it is eminently true,
and the older the world grows the
more emphatic becomes the truth.
Charlotte Observer.
The horsey girl doesn't mind the
rain.
NOTED INDIAN CHIEFS.
CHILDREN OF THE PLAINS FORM PIC
TURESQUE ATTRACTION
At the Paa-Americaa Exposition
Oeronlmo, Shot-in-the-Eye, Ameri
can Horse, Red Cloud, Painted Horse
Exhibit of Indian Bureau in the
Government Building A Jaunt
Through the Old North State Agri
cultural Exhibit from Louisiana
Minerals from Missouri, 6x.
(Special Correspondence of the Gold Leaf.)
; Buffalo, N. Y., June 6, '01.
The American Indian in full war
paint and feathers is one of the most
savagely, picturesque figures in the
world. In a few more generations,
the advance of civilization will make
it impossible to realize that the terri
tory, now embraced by the United
States, belonged to the tribes repre
sented among America's Aborigines.
And yet, today, the visitor to the
Pan-American Exposition, catches an
expression on the faces of such old
Chieftains as Geronimo, Shot-in-the-Eye,
American Horse, Painted Horse,
Red Cloud, and others which makes
him feel that if these former lords of
soil bad the slightest hope of success
they would put on war paint and
feathers for a far more congenial occa
sion than to give variety to the pro
grams of an Exposition. Geronimo
is yet a prisoner-of-war on account of
the strategy and war-like spirit he
displayed in his last notable campaign
against .the pale faces, but he is
allowed great liberty and mingles
freely and unshackled with his brother
chiefs when the "Indian Congress"
meets at expositions. By the way,
this feature in the United States ex
hibit at the Paris Exposition would
have been a tremendous hit. Many
questions were asked about the Amer
ican Indian by foreigners, and in point
of savage appearance, strong, char
acteristic faces on which cruel lines
have been indelibly traced, he com
pares most favorably with the large
and varied collection from Africa,
Asia, and remote islands of unfre
quented seas.
Chief Shot-in-the-Eye is a friend of
Ceronimo. He gets his name from
the fact that his eye was shot out of
his head at the Battle of Big Horn
where gallant Custer and his com
mand lost their lives in 1874. He
claims that he was a friend of Chief
Yellow-Hair (as Custer was called)
and took no part in the battle, watch
ing it as a non-combatant, until he
lost his eye. This so enraged him
that he seized the rifle of a dead
Indian and rushed into the thickest
of the light! Shot-in-the-Eye states
also with apparent sincerity that be
saw General Custer take his revolver,
place it to his temple and blow out
his own brains when he was left the
only pale face alive on the field of the
massacre! However true or false
this may be, nothing has caused the
Sioux to vary the statement through
all these years. Beyond this, he
stubbornly refuses to give any de
tails of the fight.
Chief American Horse is the trust
ed diplomat of the Indians. He is in
trusted with all the official dealings
with the Great Father (the President)
and has secured valuable lands for
the Indians by representations he
has made to the Government. The
tribes look up to him with great rev
ereuce and as diplomacy is an un
usual trait among the "Red Skins"
they attribute his gift in this direc
tion to supernatural origin.
Chief Painted Horse, though eighty
eight years old, is as active as the
youngest brave on the grounds. He
has led many an expedition against
the pale faces and was for years inex
orable in his hatred of them. It is
said that when he killed them he al
ways cut the hearts from the body of
his victim and ate it to show how he
despised them! Now, when he rides
his pony, as it were to "grace a vic
tor's triumph," his sullen face is a
psychological study.
Chief Red Cloud was a friend and
comrade of the victorious Sitting Bull
and counselled him against the tight
at Wounded Knee in the campaign of
'OO-'Ol, in which battle Sitting Bull
was killed. Red Cloud is so called
because when he was on the war
path, he and his warriors wore red
blankets, which in the distance gave
them the appearance of a great red
cloud.
Winona, the daughter of Chief
Crazy Horse, the famous Indian strat
egist who led General Howard on a
2000 mile march in 1878, is at the Ex
position. She is said to be the most
expert rifle shot in the world. Un
like the average Indian squaw her
accomplishments are not those of
peace.
The exhibit of the Indian Bureau
in the United States Government
Buildings at the Pan-American Expo
sition gains an especial interest and
value after seeing these old Chief
tains scarred with the wounds of
many battles, this woman who knows
how" to fight, the younger braves,
who read and write, draw and paint,
and are skilledin all the arts of
peace, graduates of Indian schools,
etc. This exhibit was installed by
Miss Alice Fletcher who knows more
of Indian life and character than any
other woman in the United States.
The exhibit shows both her knowl
edge of the subject and her artistic
appreciation of Indian character. She
is the staunch friend of the Red Man
and has published an interesting book
in which she includes many legends,
traditions, religions, folk songs and
folk lore of a number of tribes. At
the entrance to the exhibit is a case
of Indian relics which antedate the
discovery of America. To the initiated
these are full of meaning. Then the
evolution of the Indian under the in
fluence of civilization is told in the
systematic installation until the final
group, enclosed in beautiful grill
work, shows the educated Indian to
be an artist, poet, scholar and author!
Walter Page, Esq., the accomplish
ed editor of the World's Work, former
ly of the Fonim and Atlantic Monthly,
has organized a party to walk through
me most romantic parts of the moan
tains of North Carolina this summer.
The expedition is to be in charge of
nis brothers, Messrs. Henry and
Junius Page, of North Carolina. The
party consists of Mr. Walter Page s
two sons, Ralph, now at Harvard Uni
ersity, and five other Harvard
students, and Arthur, a younger son
wno is going to a technical school in
Lawrenceville, New York, and three
class mates. An old darkey, "Uncle
Isaac," an ex-slave in the Page family.
will drive a pair of strong mules to a
wagon which is to contain tents, pro
visions, etc. A negro local chef will
accompany them. The party, fifteen
in number, will go by rail to some
town at the foot of the Blue Ridge
Mountains and then tramp lor thirty
days taking in Asheville, Hot Springs,
Rutherfordton, Chimney Rock, Blow
ing Rock, Linville, and other points
full of similar interest and beauty.
Mr. Page expects to get great benefit
from this vacation spent among the
splendid mountains in the isothermal
belt of his native State. The Univer
sity boys too, will enjoy every minute
of the jaunt and return to their
studies with renewed vigor.
The Daughters of the American
Revolution will meet in Buffalo on
Friday, June 14. Great publicity has
been given to the error that the day
for the meeting of the Daughters of
the Revolution at the Pan-American
Exposition was June 17th. On this
day the Daughters of the Revolution
meet here. Equal publicity should
be given to the correction of this
error, as many Daughters are writing
letters to the Buffalo Regent inquiring
as to the change of date. When the
Congress of the Daughters of the
American Revolution accepted the in
vitation extended to them in Wash
ington City by Mrs. John Miller Hor
ton. Chairman of the Committee on
Entertainments and Ceremonies, the
Director-General of the Pan-American
Exposition decided on June 14, or
Flag Day. This date has never been
changed. Arragements have been
made to make Hotel Kenilworth head
quarters for the Daughters while in
Buffalo, and a Committee from the
Buffalo Chapter will be very glad to
attend to any matters connected with
securing rooms by addressing the
Buffalo Chapter, in care of the Kenil
worth. The exercises of the day will
be held in the Temple of Music and
will consist of an address of welcome
by Mrs. M. N. Thompson, Regent of
the Buffalo Chapter, and an address
by Mrs. Chas. Fairbanks, President
General of the National Society of the
D. A. R., on a subject of "Patriotism
in the Americans." Other addresses
will follow with patriotic music suit
able for the occasion. A celebrated
organist from Boston will preside at
the largest organ in this country,
and Sousa's tine military band will
also furnish suitable music. The in
vocation will be made by the Right
Rev. William D. Walker, Bishop of
Western New York.
At the close of the exercises a re
ception will be given by the Board of
Women Managers of the Pan-American
Exposition to all the visitors.
There will be grand electrical illumi
nations in the evening. Mrs. Chas.
W. Fairbank will have a reception
given in her honor on Wednesday,
June 12th, at the residence of Mrs.
John Miller Horton, Vice-Regent of
the Buffalo Chapter, and all the visit
ing Daughters of the American Revo
lution will be cordially welcome.
Mrs. Horton is a most charming
hostess and a social leader in Buffalo.
She has recently been elected a mem
ber of the Committee on the "Conti
nental Hall" to be built in Washing
ton by the Daughters.
Mrs. Hollenberg is the Commis
sioner from Arkansas and has won
many friends already by her charm
of manner and tact. Her commission
signed Jefferson Davis, that being the
name of the Governor of Arkansas,
provoked a smile from the clerks
when her credentials were presented
as many of them did not know that
there was a politician of that name
now prominent in the South.
In the Louisiana exhibit in the ,
Agriculture Building, King Cotton j
occupies the most conspicuous place.
Forty varieties of seed and sixty of
lint cotton are shown. The different
varieties are displayed in miniature
bales. Several full sized bales as
they are prepared for shipment are
also shown. Cotton 6eed is shown in
a large number of jars: cotton seed
oil in tall glass bottles. The seed u
also shown after undergoing different
commercial processes. The cotton
seed cake, which is a product after
the oil is pressed out, is also exhibit
ed. This cake when ground makes
cotton seed meal which is used as
feed for cattle and as a fertilizer.
Sulphur and rock salt are shown in
the exhibit, the former of 99 purity
and the latter 98. Both the rock
salts are from the fields of Louisiana
which contain an inexhaustible
amount of these products. An in
teresting feature is an illustration of
the products of fat pine. A piece of
the wood is shown together with its
products. Turpentine, tar, tar oil.
creosote, pyroligneous acid, wood
alcohol and charcoal. The charred
remains of the wood after these pro
ducts have been extracted is shown
beside the natural wood.
A striking feature of the exhibit is
a sweet potato weighing 122 pounds.
Thirty-five varieties of sweet potatoes
are seen. Extremely large pecan
nuts in eleven varieties are displayed.
Along one end of the exhibit bales of
moss are piled, one bale showing the
moss as taken from the tree and
others showing the prepared product,
and the finished moss ready for use
by the upholsterer. Twenty-two
kinds of hay, some of being the fam
ous alfalfa variety, are shown in
model bales, twelve varieties ef wheat
in jars and fire of oats. An exhibit
that will be most interesting to
smokers is one of perique tobacco
and cigars. Raw tobacco, and cigars
in boxes, are snown tn consiaeraoie
quantities.
! Palmetto from the Louisiana
swamps is used with decorative effect
tipon the walls and palmetto bats are
shown in the cases. Rice of all
varieties and prepared in all sorts of
ways is shown in glass jars. A fine
collection of wax fruits and vegetables
showing all the products of the Stale
occupy cases in the center of the ex
hibit. A map showing the extent of
oyster culture is hung on the walls,
and a number of jars containing
canned and pickled oysters are ex
hibited. Tobacco sauce is the feature
of another case. A miniature sugar
manufacturing apparatus is a most
interesting exhibit. It consists of a
filter press, a clarifying evaporating
and vacum pan and the apparatus
that separates the sugar from the
molasses. Sugar of all grades is ex
hibited in glass jars and molasses is
shown in tall bottles.
Missouri's exhibit in the Mines
Building is an instructive illustration
of the mineral resources of the State.
Zinc and lead comprise the most
features of the exhibit. A full line
of the ores just as they came of the
ground is shown. The minerals are
also shown in different stages of
preparation for commercial uses.
rigs of lead ready for shipment are
piled up on one side of the entrance
to the exhibit and lead and zinc in
other commercial forms are shown.
Various crystalizations of South
Missouri minerals, including calcite,
dolomite, galena (lead) and barite
occupy one case, and a rare and ex
tremely hne collection of crrstaliza- 1
tions of zinc occupies another and ,
attracts much attention. Granite '
building blocks said to be equal, if j
not superior to the Scotch granite,
are shown. Kaolin, from which china
ware is made, is shown with the ware
made from it. A large disc of tri poll
from which gravity filters are made
is an interesting exhibit.
Many samples of lead ores from
Joplin, Southwest Missouri, are ex
hibited. Another interesting exhibit
from the same place consists of white
lead, caught from the fumes of a lead
furnace. Ibis lead is ground with
oil and made into paint. Joplin is
the only place except Bristol, Eng
land, in which this process of utiliz
ing the lead fumes is in vogue. In a
portico of the Mines Building, Mis
souri has an exhibit consisting of a
fifteen hundred pound specimen of
zinc and several others weighing in
the vicinity of 1,000 pounds. At
least six tons of ore are included in
this portion of the exhibit.
CHARLES EDWARD LLOYD.
"THE REAL LINCOLN."
"The Real Lincoln" is the title of a
singularly interesting pamphlet of C5
pages, written by Dr. Charles L. C.
Minor, of Baltimore, and edited by
Miss Kate Mason Rowland, the dis
tinguished historian. In the pages of
this incisive booklet is also found a
brief study of the late President Lin
coln by Hon. Lyon G. Tyler, presi
dent of William and Mary College.
Virginia. The author writes with no
intention of stirring up bad feeling or
arousing sectional animosities. Pres
ident Lincoln has been given an ex
alted place in history. By means of
his admirers and eulogists he has
been depicted as the greatest of Amer
icans. What were the real attributes
of this extraordinary man? This is
the question which Dr. Minor under
takes to answer, upon the authority
of Mr. Lincoln's biographers and con
temporaries. Every statement which 1
is made about the ex-President is
drawn from Northern sources. The
reader is therefore enabled to form a
conception of the kind of man "the
real Lincoln" was from the the testi
mony of his friends and intimate as
sociates. If the portrait which Dr.
Minor draws is not an attractive one
or an heroic one, it should be borne in
mind that the colors are supplied by
Mr. Lincoln's most eulogistic bio
graphers, by Republican leaders of the
war period and by modern historians
like McClare, Schouler, Rhodes,
Ropes and Ida Tarbell. The pam
phlet is absolutely free of bitterness.
It presents Mr. Lincoln in a very dif
ferent light from that in which he is
portrayed by his admirers, but every
statement which is made by the
author is based upon evidence and
authority which cannot be question
ed. This modest little pamphlet
reveals wide research by its author.
It is a valuable addition to the his
tory of the Civil War period, because
it presents a life-like portrait of "the
real Lincoln," and not the idealized
Lincoln with whom the public of
recent years is most familiar. The
pamphlet is published by the Everett
a'liiey (company, Kicbmond, V a. -Baltimore
Sun.
Love Your Business.
A man ran no more be successful
in a business be does not like than
can a man be happy with a wife he
does not love.
Enthusiasm is the power which im
pel men onward in any and every
vocation. Without it men are leth
argic. They will drift. But to pull
against tbe tide they are as unable as
they are unwilling.
Drifting, however, does not win the
race, either in business or aoquatic
events.
There must be the long pull, tbe
strong pull, and the pull with
vigor.
Men in business today have no
easy task. There is a great deal to
discourage and very little to en
courage. There are foee within and
foes without to contend against.
Under such conditions it is no
wonder so many fail altogether or eke
a mere existence.
The antidote for despair is enthusi
asm and the germ of enthusiasm is
love for. or pleasure in that business
or vocation in which you are em
barked. Therefore, if you would succeed get
in lore with your business.
Some men never get too old to talk
baseball.
HUMORS, boils, pimple and all
eruption are due to impure blood,
and by purifying the blood with
Hood's Sarsaparilla trvy are CURED.
(Gatioinrlk)
Tre caus; exists In the bbod. In
what causes Inflammation of the
mucous membrane.
It is therefore impossible to cure
the disease by local applications.
It Is positively dangerous to neglect
it. because It always affects the stom
ach and deranges the genera! health,
and Is likely to develop into consump
tion . Mmnr hive been radically and pvnuaacatlr
cortd by Hood' Karaaparilla. It rUaaae lb
btood and hat a pvraUar aluratlr aad tonic
fftet. K. Loo. California Jwaetfca. Iowa.
wrlti: "I had eatarrh thrto rears. kt mr
appetite and eonid not aleop. My bead pained
ma and I felt bad all over. I took Hood'a
Sanaparilla and now bare a ruod appetite,
sleep well, and have no symptoms of catarrb.
Ncod'a GcroapsriUa
Promises to cure and keeps the prom
ise. It is better not to put off treat
ment buy Hood's today.
HAWKINS & CO.,
- TINNERS AND . .
U STEAM FITTERS.
We do everything in our line from
Steam Fitting to Coffee Pot Mending
on short notice at moderate prices.
ROOFING AND GUTTERING
A specialty. Best quality galvanized
iron and tin used in our work. Stove
pipes, elbows and repairing of all
kinds. Sole agents for
"Perfection" Roof & Iron Paint
Your patronage solicited. Satisfac
tion as to work and price or uo pav.
Montgomery St, Op. Cooper's Warehouse
EAGLE
EEMEDIES
THEY WORK WONDERS!
THE MALARIA AND FEVER
REMEDY CURES ALL
KINDS OF FEVERS.
COLD AND CONSTIPATION REMEDIES
-ARE OF CJREAT VALUE IN EVERY
HOUSEHOLD.
MALARIA, as CTS. COLI. as CTS.
CONSTIPATION. 10 CTS.
Enclose price t WM. flAYERHOFER,
3700 Third Ave., New York.
Children
are kept strong and well; weak aa4
puny ittUe folks are tna4e viforooe
by tne uee of that famous rn4r-
FREY'S
VERMIFUGE
CorrocU ail disorders of tke stomach,
rtpels wuraaa. etc. Palatable aad
prMiMre In action. Bottle by snail, Xo.
sc. . m. 'hit, ai
eMieMtercwe tnutM
I tm CHldHKtrTEJt'tf atXOLidl
ttSiwiMM. Tefceeeetaen "W
rsii aliMIHin ead I lils
.y r ftmt ttrmmm m mm 4. m
iaHraiJA,l
ra.
Mow! y
Fill the bottle with HIRES.
Urlnkltitoiv. Every glaae-
ful contributes to rood
ticullU. 1'urlfles
the Mood, (leers
tbe complexion,
makes rosy
checks. Make
l! nt home. I .
Stations V Cbariee
wnts. Vx E. Hires
Daatara, TL jflE Ceaieaay,
write fur fT-itM HUWete.
big offer. rSSfiSl ft.
Itfke
r3
ran
UasaaeMar
HAIR BAL8AH
Cj Cfmm aa UmmuTmy JkeJ beta
J Prim IM hnl I'MBL
I J Telle te Usui ler
i 5'3 inc. Dfgggs
Every IVca
Is interested aad saeaM knew
afaea Urn weaderfat
MAJtVTL WMriiaej SN-ay
IHaaWAMM. flaw lif
nt
If be cannut sov4t the
ABVBL. aeeaet ae
eta, bat ssnd suuiip far II
1lrMeii boot-watoa.lt fftes
fell santealareaaid dirv-ucm ta.
rataabte to HWlhM. MASttri. c..
NOTICE.
IHAVEUALIFIEU IS THE SUJfEK
lor Court of Vance County as Adminis
trator of tbe estate of Rebecca Hawkins,
deceased, and hereby notify all peraoD
bar lot; claims egaimt said deceased to
present tbem to n before May 10th. 1902.
or this notice will be pleaded In bar f
their recovery. Tbonc Indebted to said
estate will please make in mediate pay.
ment.
Henderson. N. C, May 14. 1901.
GRANT YV. HAWKINS,
Administrator of Rebecca Hawkins, de
ceased. nANNER OA LVfT
the most healing salve In the werM.