If Vou Read
The Democrat, you don't need
other newspaper. It's all here.
One Dollar a year. : :
Established 1899
A Whole Family
In Dairying
The Dutch Dairy Farm Making
Good in Catavba
MR. JNO. LUTZ AND SONS
Father, 2 Sons, and 2 Sons-in-
Law Bringing up 1,(100 Acres
of Land by Raising Cows
—Selling Butter at 30c.
A chain of dairy farms linked
together by family ties! That
is exactly what the noted Dutch
Dairy Farm of Catawba county
is.
You have heard of many, kinds
of chains —a chain of mountains,
a chain of daisies when you
were a little child; a chain of
mountains when you studied
geography; a chain of gold links
to hold a watch in your vest
button hole; a chain of circum
stances, when you studied history
- but you never be|«re heard of
a chain of dairy farlls.
Right in the . forefront of
agriculture, not only for Cataw
ba county but for North Car
olina is the Dutch Dairy Farm.
And what it is doing to the land
-to 1,000 acres of Catawba coun
ty soil—would make glad the
heart of Clarence Foe, Prof:
Massey, Dr. Tait Butler and the
rest of that fine bunch of farm*
professors dowtf at Raleigh who
are working on the knottiest of
agricultural problems on the Pro
gressive Farmer blackboard.
A PATRIARCH AT THE PLOW.
Mr. John B. Lutz is one of Ca
tawba's patriarchs at the plow.
He has long been one of the best
farmers in the Valley—one of the
thriftiest, one of the hardest
working, one of the most suc
cessful, one of the most far
sighted, one of the most God
fearing. They say that Mr. Lutz
has made some money in his day
but he always put it into dirt.
It was land for Lutz every time
—land for Lutz. "Old Man Lutz
will be land poor all his life", was
sometimes said.
Mr. Lutz was one of the farm
ers who first realized the abso
lute necessity of stock raising to
bring: up land. As he kept ad
ding to his land holdings he was
mean time raising a fine, old
time family, giving them the
best education possible. But of
even greater value to them was
the training under his eye.
HENRY LUTZ RE ADS PAPERS.
His first step was to give his
oldest son, Henry P. Lutz, charge
of the farm. Henry Lutz has
been one of the first men in the
state to catch step with the new
agriculture. He is an omnivo
rous reader. When * you try to
get people to take your paper
>ou are often met with the state
ment: "We are taking more
papers than we can read." Hen- j
ry Lutz never says this. Hej
takes tho biggest batch of pa-,
pers in the county outside of a
newspaper office exchange list,
and he has the reputation of
reading everything of import
ance in them.
Henry Lutz made a success of
his father's farm, especially the
dairy part of it, and then the
elder Lutz decided to back UD
his children in a unique scheme
of making a series of dairy
farms out of his 1000 acres.
There was quite a study over a
name, but finally the Dutch Dai
ry farm was decided upon. T his
farm is run by the father, his
sons and two sons-in-law, Messrs.
H. P. Lutz, W. Raymond Lutz,
Avery L. Baker and Lewis H.
Seitz.
THE LAND COMING UP.
The Democrat paid a visit to
Mr. Lutz's farm recently, and
though it is only three years
that he has been managing his
part of the system —115 acres—
the land is already coming up.
A splendid little orchard is be
ginning to bear. A peep into a
brick sweet potato house revealed
scores of bushels of sweet yam-'
waiting for the demands of the
market. Yonder was the acre
patch of corn being raised by
HICKORY PRODUCE MARKET.
Corrected weekly by Whitener &
Martin.
Hens, per lb 12c
Spring Chickens, per lb 17c
Turkeys, per lb 12 l-2c
Eggs, per doz 17c
Butter per lb 15 to 25
Creamery Butter 30c
Apples, rooking 25 to 50c bu
Sweet Potatoes 2.25 acr
Irish Potatoes (new) 60c a bu
Cabbage, per lb 3-4 c
Cherries 25c per gal
THE HICKORY DEMOCRAT
Mr. Lutz's boy, who is a con
testant in the corn prize contest.
It was at the supper table that
one found out what it means to
live on an up-to-date dairy farm,
Mrs. Lutz's table was simply
crowded with good things to eat,
and in the middle was a plate of
the richest, yellowest butter that
would do honor to a slice of
bread on the king of England's
table.
Mr. Lutz has a herd of 110
cows with about 60 milkers. His
"butter bred" bull which he
bought of Mr. R. L. Shuford is of
the great Sultan family. The dam
of this bull has a record of 679
pounds of butter a year; his
granddam of 635 and his great
granddam of over 600.
BREEDING FOR THE BUTTER COW.
"I am breeding for the butter
cow," said Mr. Lutz. From his
milkers Mr. Lutz is averaging
about a pound of butter each a
day. Before the creamery
started he was shipping to Ral
eigh, Greensboro and Rocky
Mount, getting 30 cents net. The
Creamery retains the customers
of its contributors.
The skim milk and buttermilk
is fed to Poland China hogs, and
these contribute to the annual
supply of meat, while many
are sold. The breeding of fine
stock by the Catawba farmers is
doing marvels in bringing up the
general breed of stock all over
the county.
The only thing Mr. Lutz buys
on his farm is some grain and
some concentrates like cotton
seed in order to secure the prop
er amount of protein needed for
his cows. He is beginning to
plant alfalfa, pea hay, soy beans,
clover, vetches, in short legumes,
which will enable him eventually
to do away with buying so much
grain. He sold $1,400 worth of
butter last year and spent half
of the amount for feed. He will
gradually work away from this
expenditure.
WILL HAVE A SALE SOON.
Mr. Lutz is figuring on having
a sale of cows before many
months to follow the purchase of
three or four thoroughbreds
which he wants to add to his
herdf Only this week Mr. Lutz
bought a fine heifer and sold 3
bull ealves. for $2OO.
Mr. Lutz is a graduate of Le
cojr College and married Miss |
SSrah KiHian, daughter of Squire
S. E. Killian, of Hickory. They
have five children.
Mr. Raymond Lutz married Miss
Bessie Bost and they have three
children.
Mr. Ottis Lutz who remains on
the farm with his father married
Miss Essie Propst and has two
children.
Mr. Seitz married Miss Alice
Lutz and they have six children.
Mr. Baker married Miss Ida
Lutz and they have three chil
dren.
Nineteen children in the fami
ly connection to drive the cows
home from the pastures at milk
ing time! And all of them will
grow up experts in the science of
dairy farming!
There is no prettier picture in
Catawba county than Miss Annie
Lee Lutz turning the crank of the
separator. The Democrat would
like to have one to frame.
Six cows have given over 60
pounds of butter per month, and
as high as 79 1-2 pounds; 7 cows
from 400 to 496 pounds per year.
All mature cows not making 300
pounds have gone to the butcher;
5 cows have records of 40 to 45
pounds of milk per day; 26 cows
have records of over 30 pounds
of milk per day. One 2-year old
heifer has given 350 pounds of
butter in 10 months. Another
over 800 pounds of milk in a
month.
Most Popular Colored Pastor.
A voting contest was given bv
the Busy Workers' Club No. 4.
of Mt. Pisgah A. M. E. church,
at the Masonic hall Monday night
June 20th, to the end that the
pastor receiving the largest num
ber of votes would be awareed a
nice hat for a prize. The ballot
ing was as follows: Rev. C. M.
Rice, pastor Baptist church, 5
votes; Rev. A. G. Jenkins, pas
tor M. E. church, 32 votes; Rev.
C. A. Stroud, pastor A. M. E.
church, 48 votes; Rev. C. W.
Simmons, pastor A. M. E. Zion
church, 110 votes.
Quite a large crowd was in
attendance, and gave enthusias
tic applause when the result was
j announced.
Otis Moodv who has been in
Wake Forest, was at home visit
ing relatives and friends Sunday
and Monday.
Children Cry
FOR FLETCHER'S
C AS TORIA
HICKORY, N. C., THURSDAY. JUNE 23. 1910.
$60,000 for a
Public Building
Bill Carrying Tbis Amount for
Hickory Reported
A WIRE FROM MR. WEBB
This Sum is More than is al
lowed any City of the Same
Size in the Union—The
Site Purchased
Dr. Nicholson, pres r dent of the
Chamber of Commerce, received
a wire from Representative E.Y.
Webb Monday which read as fol
lows:
"Public building bill reported.
The amount Hickory gets, $60,-
000, is more than allowed any
other town of its size in the
Union. The district gets nearly
half of the amount allowed the
entire state."
This news is extremely grati
fying. The fact that the bill has
been favor? bly reported with
$60,000 recommended for Hick
ory means that the battle is over
half fought. The site is already
purchased, and this in itself
makes certain the placing here
of a public building.
CONFEDERATE RECORD
Prof. G. W. Hahn will Collect
Data for County History.
Dear Comrades:
If some one of our survivers
does not take the matter in hand
and publish in permanent book
form and as correctly as it is pos
sible to be done at this late day,
the last one of us shall have
passed beyond the River, and our
posterity shall never know the
privations and valor o2 their an
cestors. We are fully aware of
the difficulties of a correct rec
ord; hence we appeal to every
old soldier to give us data.
Now, in order to get the his
tory as correct as possible we
must have the cooperation of the
Old Soldiers. We want data,
reminiscences or any fact of the
war known only by the individual
soldier. We want to give a
record of man who en
listed in Catawba, his then
home. AH over tne county we
find men who enlisted and of
whose fate we have no record.
And I venture to say there is
not a living veteran today, who
has not one or more reminiscences
to send in. I have, and I know
Gus. Little of Caldwell has; and
it is so with every one.
We mean to give an historical
sketch of Catawba in *6l ver
sus an historical sketch of
1910, to show the veteran has
not only been true to his county
in times of peril; but that he has
been an active factor in the up
lift of the grand old county, in
every laudable enterprise since.
The original roster of the 12
companies which were made up
in the county. The fate of ev
ery member of every company.
Then we want the rosters of each
company, who returned alive. A
biographical sketch of every
such soldier, his vocation, etc.
And we propose to insert a cut
of each living soldier who will
pay for the engraving and send
his photo, taken at wholesale
prices, 50 cents.
In short, we mean to make a cred
itable memorial book worthy to
contain the names of Catawba's
heroes. In order to avoid
financial loss, we most cor
dially invite the business men
of the county to come to our
rescue with an ad., if only an
inch of perpendicular space. We
are conscious that our posterity
would honor the man or firm who
would honor the memorial edition
of their ancestors with financial
aid. Respectfully submitted,
Geo. W. Hahn.
Whitten, Are You Guilty of
This?
Marion Progress.
All the people "Pack Square"
in Asheville.
We little wonder that T. R. is
lionized—we gnu he'd bee.
Bob Glen's latest remarks at
Cleveland, 0., were .evidently
colored.
R. J. Lawrence went Monday
to Gastonia where he will repre
sent the Monitor Sad Iron Co.,
of Big Prairies, O.
Would you have better health, more
strength, clearer skin, stronger nerves,
more elastic step? Use Hollister's
Rocky Mountain Tea, the great vege
sable regulator and tcnic. Oae 35c
package makes 105 cups tea. Moser
& Latz,
I
COMMENT
ANOTHER GOOD MAN
GONE-WEST.
Mr. H. E. C. Bryant, "Red
Buck,'' resigns as Washington
correspondent of the Charlotte
Observer to accept a position on
the Missoulian, a.t Missoula,
Mont. The Missoulian is an influ
ential paper and is the organ
of United States Senator Joseph
M. Dixon, himself a North Caro
linian and a graduate of Guilford
College.
No one will be sorrier to sea
Buck" go away fronil
"down home" than the editer of
the Demccrat, who used to help
him nights with liis English es
says at the UniverSfty of
Carolina, and who gave him his
first steer in journalism when he
was sent to handle Shem
well-Payne homicide at Lexing
ton. Buck's handwriting was a
cross between that of Horace
Greeley and Gen. Rufus Barrin
ger, with an Arabic face and a
Hebraic punctuation, We were
the only man in the print shop
who could decipher it, having
found the Rosetta stone key in
the hell-box. Buck bought a
typewriter after we left to hold
his job.
Write to us, Buck, about the
wild, wooly west—provided,
however, you have your type
writer with you.
No two men probably in the
county did as much to get the
special tax for good roads as
Messrs. R. L. Shuford and John
W. Robinson. They worked day
in and day out, when others
were discouraged or indifferent.
The Democrat would like to see
these two men on the Democrat
ic ticket for county commission
ers. They are two of t.ie lead
ing business farmers of Cataw
ba and would add much strength
to the ticket.
Catawba this year asks of a
district where she has - long help
ed to honor her neighbor coun
ties' sons a favor for one of her
own sons, Mr. E. B. Cline, the
able young member of the Hick
ory bar. The central location of
this city, the fitness of the aspi
rant, the debt of the district in
the past to the county, all de
mand the judgship for us this
time.
When Mr. J. P. Caldwell first
went from Spatesville to Char
lotte Editor John B. Hussey of
the Hici.ory Carolina Eagle
wrote: "When the Dutch go to
Charlotte, Joe, you must look af
ter them." The Dutch are going
to Charlotte on July 14, and this
is merely to remind that Char
lotte newspaper bunch to look
after them.
We would like to know if it
were Joe Patten or Bruce Nabors
who read the proof for the
Charlotte News of President
Roosevelt's letter to the Edin
borough World's Missionary
Conference in which is printed a
reference to "the Epistle of
Judea."
Samuel W. Allerton, a Chicago
millionaire ranchman snd bank
er, has quit the Republican party
in disgust over Taft. He would
like to vote for Judson Harmon
on a safe platform.
The Weeks bill establishing
an Forest Reserve
will probably come to a vote
this week or next- The Democrat
hopes every tar heel Congress
man will vote for it.
Mr. Neal Clark brought the
Democrat in the first fine roast
ingears of the season. Who can
beat it?
Kept the King at Home
"For the last year we have kept
the King of all laxatives—Dr. King's
New Life Tills —in our home and they
have proved a blessing to all our fami -
ly," writes Paul Mathulka, 01 Buffalo,
jN. Y. Easy, but sure remedy for all
, Stomach, Liver and Kidney troubles.
Only 25c at C. M. Shuford, Moser &
i Lutz, Grimes Drug Co.
i The Ivey Mill's
Biggest Shipment
Sends oat 84 Bales, averaging.
1700 Yards Each ...
LARGEST 1-DAY ORDER
A 14-year old Girl Weaver
Who Weighs 229 Pounds-
Movements of People in
West Hickory
Correspondence of The Democrat.
West Hickory, June 20. —The
Ivey Mill has started up again
after one weeks rest and the
hands who were away visiting
have about all returned to work.
On last Tuesday the Ivey Mill
sold and shipped 84 bales of cloth,
the bales averaging about 1700
yds. each. The overseer says
that is the largest order that has
ever been shipped in one day
since the mill has been runing.
Rev. J. G. Garth preached at
the graded school house in West
Hickory last Sunday evening.
There was a large crowd out to
hear him.
Mr. H. T. Canipe who had
been living at the mill for some
time moved to the city of Hick
ory one day last week.
Mr. Ross Triplet and wife of
this place went to visit the fam
ily of H. F. Keever Sunday.
Mr. Mack Travis and wife of
Brookford were here Sunday
visiting Mrs. Travis' father, Mr.
Jeff Holler. -
The young people of west
Hickory had a singing at Mrs.
Lowmans Saturday evening.
There was a large number of
voung people present.
Miss Lilly Null from Newton
has been here several days visit
ing the family of Mr. Lawson
Simms.
There is at present a girl in the
Ivey Mill learning to weave who
is only 14 years old and tips the
scales at 229 pounds. The over
seer think 3 she will be quite a
large weaver when she gets
learned up.
Jim Burns and Garland
Miller who have been working at
Mortimer for sometime came
home on a visit last week. They
are going back in a few days.
Vance Miller and Roy Bum
garner, of this place, went to
Asheville last week to work on
the railroad.
Mr. Guy Rowe and wife of
Asheville have been here several
days tnis week visiting Mr,
Rowe's mother, Mrs. B. C. Clon
inger.
Rev. Peter Buff has completed
his new dwelling near the mill
and moved in one day last week, i
Politics has been very quiet
around the Ivey Mill so far.
Everybody seems to be to buisy
to talk politics.
Starns-Wilson.
Married in Icard township,
Burke county, on the 19th inst.,
at the residence of H. A. Adams,
the officiating magistrate, Mr.
Ray Wilson to Miss Julia Ellis
Starns, both of Catawba county.
The Primaries
The Democratic primaries will
be held this week. It looks as if
all the county officers except
sheriff will be decided in the pri
maries. The next sheriff will
doubtless have to be named in the
convention.
The voting on county candi
dates in all the precincts except
Newton and Hickory will begin
at 2 p. m. and continue till 6:30
p. m. In Newton and Hickory,
the voting will begin at 6 a. m.
and close at 6 p. m.
At four o'clock, meetings will
be held to appoint delegates to
the county convention.
The candidates for sheriff are:
J. H. C, Huitt, R, Lee Hewitt, J.
P. Burns, P. P. Jones and L. H,
Phillips. All have done hard pre
liminary work and all will get a
, good vote in the primaries.
The Democratic executive com
mitte asks each of the eight
1 townships to recommend a suita
ble candidate for county commis
sioner, and in this way five good
men, it is believed, will be se
cured. The composition of the
1 next board of county commission
-5
r Lame shoulder is almost invariably
- caused by rheumatism of the muscles
, and yields quickly to the free applica
-1 tion of Chamberlain's Liniment. This
. liniment is not only prompt and effec
: tual, but in no way disagreeable to use.
I Sold by Grimes Drug Co.
Democrat and Press, Consolidated 1905
ers is vitally important in view
of the fact that the fund from
the road tax is to be expended by
the next board. This will be
something over $12,000, and
should be spent according to a
definite plan. Only the choicest
men of broad minds should be
selected for this place.
Money for Hickory-Lenoir
Road
Mr, J. M. Allred, of Granite
Falls, was in the city Saturday.
In about an hours personal
work he. got about $l5O
from leading business men
for the Caldwell Good
Roads Association whose purpose
it is to put in good shape the
Hickory-Lenoir road. He says
the Lenoir business men have
come across handsomely, Geo. F.
Harper got ten $lO subscribers
in an hours work, and said he be
lieved he could guarantee anoth
er ten. The Democrat will take
your name for this good enter
prise.
From $6OO to $lOOO is needed.
M. Abee surveyed a 4 and 4 1-2
percent grade there once. This
grade at the branch on the Cald
well side runs off to the right of
the old road for a thousand feet
or so, coming back in at the top
of the hill.
Rhodehiss is making a strong
effort to get the road which in
that case would go out from here
by Penelope. The association is
said to be considering the liberal
offer of the mill town.
State News.
Supt. C. L. Coon, of the Wil
son Graded Schools, was elected
president of the Teacher's as
sembly at Asheville. Other offi
cers are; Dr. E. C. Brooks of
Trinity College, vice president,
and R. D. W. Connor, of Raleigh,
re-elected secretary and treasur
er. The executive committee,
Superintendent Coon, Dr. Brooks
and Mr. Connor, ex-officio; Miss
Mary O. Graham, of Charlotte,
member of the practice school
faculty at the State Normal Col
lege; Superintendent F. P. Hall
of Gaston county; Miss Edith
Royster, assistant superintendent
of the Wake county schools; R.
L. Moore, president Mars Hill
College; A. E. Woltz, bursar of
University of North Carolina,and
H, R. Smith superintendent of
'the Greenville public schools.
'-The legislative slate in Meck
lenburg is this: For the Senate
—Mr. H. N. Pharr of Charlotte.
For the House—Messrs. W. C.
Dowd of Charlotte, W. G. Mc-
Laughlin of Sharon, and W. A.
Grier of Steele Creek.
The life of Retf. Brantley York,
D. D., long President of York
Institute in Alexander county,
is to be published by the Trinity
College Historical Society at $1
per copy.
The Statesvilie Landmark
having stated that there was a
rumor current that one of the
Democratic candidates for con
gress in the eighth district had
once voted for Blackburn, all the
candidates have come forth with
denials. Neither Murphy,of Row
an ;Cald well, of Iredell ;Gwaltney.
of Alexander, nor Doughton,
of Alleghany, are guilty, though
Doughton, was the man refered
to in the rumor.
Miss Mary Lillington, daugh
ter of Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Hardin,
of Boone, was married to Mr.
Edgar Shull, of Elizabethton,
Tenn., on June 15th by Dr. T. E.
Weaver.
Miss Estelle Wolfe Entertains
Miss Estelle Wolfe entertained
a number of her friends Tuesday
evening, June 14, at her home on
Thirteenth street in honor of
Miss Mary Hoover of Monroe. A
short while after the young peo
ple arrived, Mrs. Dr. Dr. Wolfe
passed around cards. A contest
was written on these cards.
The questions were to be an
swered, and the articles forming
the answers found somewhere in
the room. Misses McComb,
Fields and Kirkpatrick, and Mr.
Charlie Dellinger answered all of
the questions, and drew straws
as to which would get the prize.
Miss Kirkpatrick drew the
, longest straw, and was awarded
a letter-opener. After this re
freshments were served. De
; lightful music was furnished by
■ Miss Essie Robinson. Mr. W.
■ L. Wolfe and Mrs. Dr. Wolfe
[ furnished violin music, Dr. Wolfe
• picked the guitar and Miss Es
s telle Wolfe accompanied them on
■ the piano. After thoroughly en
- joying themselves, the guests de
r parted through one of the hard
-5 est rains of the season.
5 Children Cry
FOR FLETCHER'S
CASTORI A
The Democrat
Gives the news of Hickory and the
Catawba Valley in full. The news
of the world in brief.
The Wedding of
A Doll Couple
Hiss Ellen Stnart Menzies' Unique
Birthday Party
CUTTING OF THE CAKE
__
Miss Dolly Dimble and Mr. W.
Dalrvmple United in Matri
mony-Witnessed by a jolly
Lot of Dollies and Girlies
' 'Miss Ellen Stuart Menzies re
quests your presence at the mar
riage of her doli Miss Dollie
Dimple to Mr. Wm. Dalrymple
at 5 o'clock, June 18, 1910. 825,
13th. Street."
In answer to this alluring invi
tation a merry young party gath
ered Saturday at the beautiful
home of Mr. and Mrs. K. C. Men
zies. Every little girlie brought
her little dolly, and these all be
came attendants at the pretty
doll wedding. The bay window
in the parlor was prettily decor
ated in white and green and
tiny candles shed a soft glow
over the scene.
The cermony was performed
by the Rev. John Knox, who
looked like the Little Minister in
his clerical garb. The ring bearer
was Miss May Dimple, who car
ried the ring in the center of a
white daisy.
The bride's costume was of
white silk en train and she car
ried a shower bouquet of daisies
and ferns. She never looked
sweeter in her life. Her veil was
caught up with a wreath of tiny
daisies. The groom wore a tail
or mad 6 dress suit of broadcloth
made to order in his home town
of Philadelphia, and looked hand
some in it.
Mrs. W. B. Menzies played
Lohengrin as the bridal couple
entered. The presents were most
dainty and appropriate, consist
ing of doll furniture for house
and kitchen, doll dresses and the
like.
When the bride's cake was cut
James Whitener got the ring,
Alice Cilley the dime and Cath
erine Hardin the button The
marriage occurred on the birth
day of Miss Ellen Stuart, and
the following children enjoyed
the unique and sprightly birth
day party: Misses Mary Doll,
Mary Murphy, James Whitener,
Janie Menzies, Elizabeth Coun
cil, Robert Menzies, Sadie Men
zies, Katherine Menzies, Mar
garet Bruns, Alice and Louise
Cilley, Nancy Worth Sherrill,
Aggie Shuford, Mary Blount
Martin, Mary Rogers Shuford,
Louise and Nancy Hall, Cather
ine Hardin, Janie Patrick, Char
lotte Garth and Clarissa Aber
nethy.
Ice cream that had the deli
cious flavor of barber-pole stick
candy was served by the super
intending grown-ups. Photogra
pher Hardin got some good pic
tures of the little folks.
Stops earache in two minutes; -
toothache or pain or burn or
scald in five minutes; hoarseness,
one hour; muscleache, two hours;
sore throat, twelve hours—Dr.
Thomas' Electric Oil, monarch
over pain.
National Farmers' Union to
Meet in Charlotte
Ex-Congressman A. C. Shu
ford, of Newton; National secre
tary; Dr. H. Q. Alexander, pres
ident of the state organization,
and the Greater Charlotte Club
have landed for Charlotte the
next convention of the National
Farmers' Union. President Bar
rett writes that he will be pres
ent.
There are 300 delegates. The
convention will be held the first
week in September, beginning on
Tuesday, the 6th, and continu
ing through Friday. It is esti
mated that at least 1,000 dele
gates and visitors will be brought
to the city for the convention.
The Catawba Dutch will go
down in full force. There are no
more wide awake farmers in the
country.
ARRIVAL OF TRAINS
SOUTHERN RAILWAY
No. 21 going West 4:30 p. m.
11 " " 11:30 a.m.
"35 " " 11:21 p.m.
12 44 East.;... .".5:30 p. m.
" 22 " 44 10:57 a. m.
36 " " 9:54 a.m.
C. & N. W. RAILWAY
No. 10 going North 11:55 a. m.'
9 " South 2:55 p. m
Mixed train going N0rth...8:35 p. m,
44 " 44 South 8:40 a. m^