If he Strawberry tCrop in " Eastern Nortli Carolina - Shipment Larger Than Us ui! and More Than a Mil lion Dollars Poured Into the Pockets of the Farmers ' "5 '-'Wilmington, N. C May 25. Special. .To date the car load Shipments of straw berries In regrigerator cars have been about 1,812 jcars, with express shipments reaching about 54,668 crates, against 1, 119 cars and 41,259 crates last year. Be ginning April 10th there has been a steady movement from eastern Caro- Hna, moving from 25 to 125 car loads 1 day from this territory. In the dis tribution1 these shipments have covered - nil the leading cities and towns of the northern. New England, arid middle 1 jvestern states, and While ; prices were fiot so high in the beginning of the ship- ; ping season as have been known in past . years, nevertheless the general aver age has been , well nigh if not quite up to the standard, and the aggregate volume has been fully 25 if not 85 per cent, ahead of any previous year. Up to this wrltlpg not less than 500,000 crates have gone forward out of this territory, yielding the -growers a i aet sum of more than $1,125,000 and each ,is.y shipments continue. Berries will go forward in car load lots for at- least ft week or two longer. The crown ber- . ries are now on the move and they are ' delicious, bringing good prices. In some sections a few of the grow ers report the outlook brightening for a 'second crop to follow close on the heels jf the present crop. Should it turn out that this section will produce two crops of strawberries every year, then the people of this section will have discovered a bonanza for a fact. The : Fruit Growers' Journal has had ac counts of Innumerable growers clearing on an average of from $100 to $250 on an acre In berries this season, and if that is to be doubled the farmers of east ' Carolina should be the most prosperous ; and independent people on the globe. Potatoes, beans, peas, huckleberries ; and blackberries are now moving to the .'markets in considerable quantities and the prices are very satisfactory. Unlets all signs fail, the first day of June will find the berry and vegetable growers with more ready cash than they have .had-before in years. . - i Several car loads of strawberries have been shipped this season from -points along the Seaboard Air Line be tween "Wilmington and Hamlet, and "f rom the same terrotory next year ship- ; ments will be fully 100 per cent, in ex cess of this year. GUILFORD COLLEGE , . . Class Day Baccalaureate : Sermon Annual Concert ; Guilford College, N. C, May 25. Spe cial. The; class day exercises came off . this afternoon in the presence of the senior class and a few invited friends. The exercises were all that the class could wish for." The prophecy certainly showed the great imagination of the prophets, Messrs. - Charles M. Short, Hugh P. Leak and Miss Ida Millis. Mr. Irvin Blanchard,' Miss .Delia Rai ford and Miss Flora Harding were the historians. They gave a complete his tory of the present class, interwoven with many lively jokes. The poem by Mr. R. W. McColloch was second to none that has ever been produced at Guilford ollege. After this entertainment refreshments were ' served in the lunch room. The .baccalaureate sermon by Rev. W. T. Doggett of Danville, Va., drew a large prowd of visitors to Guilford's '-- peaceful roof Sunday, The-isermon was full of -high thought and happy reli gious teaching, and was delivered with plain, imaffected force. The speaker's text was from the 127th Psalm ""Ex cept the Lord build the house, they " labor in vain ''that .build it; except the Lord keep the city, the . watchmen wakath but in vain." f The commencement musical was II ore Ti Ewdy-toSerTO Cereal maKes good health an heirloom. Sweat, crisp flukes of wheat and malt. A Dyapaptlo No Lontftr. n'foni f8?" lnls L Watson, was a great ?v, l. m todigertaon. He purchased from me a package of orc two or three months aeo and hna mntinn n.inn vzi elac, d ha. nothadtbe 6l:ghtisT symprom oTthe disease to given In Memorial -Hall Saturday eva ning be.'ore a larg audlenc. Tne an trtainrr.ent ws very refreshing to the wetry student who had Jus; finished his esnmUi.-aions, as well as to the visitor. The program, prepared under the supervision of Miss Lena O. Wat- SOU, niUSlltl Jliauu'-iu.i " " ,1 . : - .t 1 ' , rr 4uot rlcht t 1 1 n-n a weu ren- -, :-., fVio phle ani Wa3 well icvci,rv;u tjj - audience. 1 The members of the present gradu ating class of Guilford College are Mr. Charles L. Holton, Yadkinville, N. C, president; Miss Dlia Raiford, Zuni, Va., secretary; Mr. Philip D. M. Lord, Biddeford." Me., marshal; Mr. Irvin T. Blanchard, Woodland, N. C. ; Miss Ma ria Edgeworth, Conley, Va.; JUiss Flora Harding, Farmington, N. C; Hugh P. Leak. Kernersvllle, N. C; Mr. RI Wil liam McCulloch, May wood, N. C; Miss Ida Eleanore Millis, Guilford College, iST. C-; Mr. Charles McCoy Short, Greensboro, N. C; Mr.: Edgar Thomas Snipes, Menola, N. C, "DEAR OLD FRANKLIN" ; A Former Resident Returns After Long Absence Henderson, N. C.May 25. Special. After a lapse of many years, the writer was privileged a, few days ago to . visit , -T f death and taxes, but that is not alto Changes were marvelous. Neat comfort-; uc 111 . -v.,. th. gether true. Dr. King's New Discovery face of the country, indicating thrift, t- Z " have disappeared, but some remain at r'J" P n' I? Jiv Old Cobb's cross roads.. Old Midway. once the scene of joyous life is not re- .cognizable-companions and teacher gone, anu uui.inv ku u icu w Fields are opened ' where . once stood noble forests; then in turn, fields once in cultivation are covered with pines. Strange, new faces appeared on every hand, and one to the maner born stood as a stranger and alone on his own na tive heathl How sad are the changes in life, yet how true. But; such is life, and such are its vicissitudes. They sadden the heart , and teach man that earth is not his home. TqNone reared in rural life surrounded bjiturdy, hon est associations, how different from the atmosphere of cities., Tliere does not breath a better population dear old Franklin holds. than - SERMON TO WAKE FOREST SENIORS Commencement Begins With an Able Discourse-Events on Today's- Progam Wake Forest, N. C, May 25. Special. Wake Forest commencement began Sunday evening with the baccalaureate world today is the same as that which sermon by Dr. E. C. DargaH, of the existed in the day of the Roman em Southern Baptist Theological Seminary Pire. Bishon Gailoii pointed out the of Louisville, Ky. His subject was An dangers manifested by the spirit in eo Appeal for a Consecrated Life, from cial and commercial, life, in literature Rom. 12: 1 "I beseech you. therefore, and education. He j-eferred tp & speech brethren, by the mercies of God. to . delivered at the Southern Educational present your bodies a living sacrifice, ; conference In Richmond, when the or holy, acceptable to God, which is your , ator ma&nified ,the mind above all el ; reasonable service." He discussed the;niakin& the goul Jtg supplement. Tnig ground of the appeal which he mad, ldoctirin m sh Gallor declaredi wa3 to consist first, in a logical ground. ; the - folded in the first eleven chapters of Romans; second, in a hopeful ground, the mercies of God; third, in the char acter of the man who made the appeal. He next discussed the meaning of the appeal. To present your bodies a living Deputy Sheriff McLeod of RobesOh sacrifice means not to present the county brought Henry Marlow, a white corpse, but the body with the soul lnn'ian to the state's prison yesterday to It to God. Everything a man has should serve a fifteen-year term for the slay be consecrated to God a clean body, a pure soul, his yotihg manhood, all his capacities of mind and body. Sacrifice means separation, to set apart for God's use. Finally, the preacher dis cussed the justification of the appeal. Service and worship are all that we can give to God in return for His mer- in. vr-b is rauonai; it is ap-v. at 5:30. Every member is urgently re proved by the reason; it is the highest ! quested to .be present. Jim Dumps provided for his heirs That 'VForce" might be forever theirs. "I can't do better with my wealth," He said, "than to Insure them health, Clear brain, good muscle, nerve and vim I N And Force' gives these," quoth "Sunny Jim.- P9 iju3i.ru W.OOP." THF. PST: TUESDAY, thir.T that can be done with ourselves. It lifts Us from things degrading ana mala us what we never could become onr-Vea God cannot worship Him ir, but the whole creation praises God. Shrill net we? The .-rrr-an was forcibly delivered, wjus Vrors in. the personality of tne cpeaker, the logic of its .-.development, iuid its intense spirituality. ; ,to be counted as a part-of the com mencement, although not -on the pro gram, is the excellent sermon on mis sions In China preached Sunday morn v Missinnnrv R. T. Bryan. He riisrnsspd the oolitical, commercial, so- , . . rini nr r-alio-iniin asnpets OI tne '-ii'- co mioctinn anrl found In ail nop nosi ouestion. and iouna .in i n for great progress in the future of mis sions. - Devotional meetings of fifteen min utes are' held every morning. Monday morning the meeting was conducted by Mr. Bryan. ' Tuesday morning the ven erable Dr. Skinner will lead. These meetings are characterized by a sweet spirituality which, indeed, seems to per-. vade everything and everybody at Wake Forest just now. Besides, every body seems intensely in earnest. The public need not be surprised to hear that some great things have been undertaken for the college. The trus tees hold their -first meeting this after noon. The address before the law class was delivered at 8 p. m. by Hon. Wil liam W..Kitchin. The features for Tuesday are the lit erary address at 11 a. m. by Rev. .R. P. Johnson, -of Fifth Avenue Baptist church, New York; the alumni address at 8 p. m. by Editor J. W. Bailey, and immediately after the alumni banquet. A Snre Tiling It is said that nothing is sure except for consumption is a sure cure for alll; lung and throat troubles. can testify to that-Mrs C. B. Van . ghepherdton, SSVest Virginia, "JW -"I had a of bronchi- t f(jr & tricd everytning j q Qne botUe 6f .. Digcovery then cur. . ahonito if, fnllihl for ed me absolutely." It's croup, ' whooping cough, grip, pneumo nia and consumption. Try it. It's guaranteed by all druggists. Trial bot tles free. Regular sizes 50c, $1." SPIBIT OF THE ; WORLD '- s - . . Bishep Gail of s . Magnificent Discourse Sunday Evening Bishop Thos..P. Gailbr of Tennessee preached a magnificent sermon Sunday night in Christ church, before a large congregation. Within the chancel with Bishop Gailor were Bishop Cheshire, Rev. Dr. Marshall, Rev. Dr. Bratton, Rev. Dr. Pittehger and Rev. Dr. Holmes or Columbia, s. cM .The music wau 'grand, especially the offertory by Mrs. Charles McKimmon, Mrs. "; Ashley L. Baker, Mr. Theo. Hudson and "Mr. Sher wood Haywood, accompanied by Mary W. Johnson on the violirir -r' -" Bishop Gailor's subject Was "Our Faith that overcometh the wbfld." He gave a strong picture of the spirit of the world which is very antagonistic to the spirit of Christ. The spirit of the vigorously that tjie mind was but a part of the. soul. B ro u sh t to the Pen 5 ing of another white man. ' Associated Charities A special meeting of the general com mittee of the Associated Charities will be held this (Tuesday) afternoon in the 26 1903 At our Serge Cults. w,, or black Serge summer wear is yet S Sixty-second Commence ment of St. Mory's School Powerful Baccaiuareate Ser mon by Bishop Nailor of Tennessee Subject, Re latien of Religion to Our Life A Grand Concert Last Night. Commencement Week Program The sixtv-second annual commence ment f St. Mary's School began Sun day morning, iwith a baccalaureate sermon of great ability and wonderful power by Rt. Rev. Thos. F. Gailor. bishop of Tennessee. Iast night there was a superbly ren dered grand concert. Other feautres of the program for commencement week will be: Today at 4.30 p. m. Alumnae meet ing. - - - ' ' Tonight at S.15 o'clock Class feven- Inp . ; . Wednesday, 4 p m. Meeting of the board of trustees. Wednesday, 4 to 10 p m. Art ex- hibit - - ' . - - i Wednesday. 8 p. m. Grand concert. Thursday, 11 a. m. Literary exercises in the parlor, followed by graduating exercises in St. Mary's chapel. The students who will receive diplo mas are Annie Webb Cheshire, Mary Day Faison, Eliza Moore Gregory, Julia Hamlet Harris, Mary Fenwood Hender 6.)i Marietta Belo Holman, Mary Hol tfji Hunter, i Katherlne DeRosse Meares, Annie Gales Root, Mary Allen Short, Florence Jackson Thomas, Mary Wood Winston. . The. sermon Sunda morning was in St. Mary's chaapel and was heard by a congregation: that filled the church to overflowing, j Every one was delight ed, pronouncing it a masterful discourse delivered with j eloquence and a; deep spiritual fervor. The subject chosen by Bishop Gailor was "The relation of Religion to our life," 'the text, being fromyDeut. 32:47. Bishop Gailor de clared the text the words of Moses I to show the supremacy of God's love ar.d the value of religionnot a vain thing but one of the deepest and truest of all realities, ministering to the mind of the whole man all that touches the nature of mai in its completeness. To ignore Lreligion, declared the bishop, is to make your manhood and womanhood dwarfed and- narrow.- ' : .' . What a beautiful, splendid thing is life, declared Bishop Gailor in announc ing his subjectl You students here in this beautiful home of culture can but respond to its joy and hopefulness. He discussed in an eloquent and compre hensive manner the meaning, - signiflT seance, value and measure of life, draw ing the conclusion that It does not make life more toerable to preach the theory of despair, that the fact of life is the fact of sin and that the deepest and truest yearning of life is the yearn ing for salvation. That no intellectu al development can save the race. That the real satisfaction of living is in the txet. This life: Is a school time during which our capacity is developed which it will take all eternity to complete and satisfy. Bishop Gailor's closing charge to the students was especially beautiful and appropriate. He said: "So, my friends, I come from Tennes see at the bidding of my dear friend and former pupil, the principal of this school, to say this word to you. I am happy that I came. I have found more even than I expected in the shrdludlu shrdlu and atmbsphere of this splendid schooL- And what better "subject could I choose than tie one of which I have spoken the relation of religion to our life. ' ' j - ' "I have tried to show how impossible it is to interpret life by the conditions, the limitations of the present time and that, only in our Lord Jesus Christ do we find the revelation of what life is: 'The law of God is not a vain thing, because it is your life. and 'This is life eternal to j know Thee, the only true God and Jesus Christ, whom thou hast sent. That eternal life begins 'here and now. We do not have to die to find. it. Beneath the superficial crust of th$ unrealities, the untruths, the 4Prbr accidental and confusing cir No suit holds its popularity with no many men as the . .. .i M .iiful. ' all - round suit for Suit. A better, coo.er, vr , " -r-rioo' rhanees can be. unknown. . Endless changes .1 w believ- trousers in white duck, or ezvw Serge Suits on the market. We know it and . We Qudran Al' the late cuts and kinks, and brand splinter new. suits as low as $6. $7.5D. $10. and 515. Plenty separate unUned coats in double or single breasted. ?3 t- $5. :r- Plenty of everything to keen you cool and comfortable during the hot sum. mer days. TAKE A LOOK. ,: BERWANGER, The One-Price Clothier. cumstances, the seeming wrongs and contradictions of the world, as we see it now. It Is possible by His power to penetrate to the great facts and prin ciples of- the eternal and everlasting order. To fashion our lives by these principles, to harmonize them' with these facts, to lift every faculty of mind and soul out-of the narrowing, bewildering and deceiving shadows of mere selfish Interest and to stand with Chris.t upon the sunlit heights of God's larger world this Is the true meaning and value and motive of education; this is the measure and interpretation of human life.' "'For life, with all ,it yields of joy .' and woe, .; And hope and fear, ... Is just our chance b' the prize of learn- : Jng love. How love might be, hath been Indeed, and Is; sAnd that we hold thenceforth to the .uttermost -Such prize despite the : envy of the world, And, having gained truth, keep truth: that is- all. n 'I say 'the acknowledgment of God V. ' in it .:. ; ' .,. .. ', , Accepted by thy reason solves for thee AH questions in the earth and out of It, And has so far-advanced thee to be wise. .. " v " , ; "This Is the deepest thought In our religion, the lif,e of love, the life in Christ, the life eternal,- which trans figures and consecrates the results of all righteous effort ' and consummates the achievements of all human knowl edge. To you, who are about to leave this school, I may say this home of truth arid culture, I . pray that this thought may be a helpful and hopeful inspiration in the days that are to come. In your truest joys, as in your deepest griefs-f or -all men and women have joys and grief3 may this be the sure and steadfast anchor of comfort and peace. Death and sorrow are the accidents of time; but life abides. '1 came. said the Holy One, : the Perfect One, 'that ye might have life and that ye might have it more abndantly.' "And as the years pass, and you are compelled again and again to face that ancient mystery of uncertainty and de feat, which speaks . to ;us from - e very injustice, every wrong, even- failure of noble hope and1 every grave of vanished love, there Is but one answer: This life is:- the beginning; yonder is the end. The law of God is not a vain thing to us, because it is our life." . Ctneert UifMsht "A large and fashionable audience assembled in the chapel last night at;d ehjos'ed immensely a- superb concert in which many of the most gifted stu dents were the participants. It was a most creditable affair, sustaining the enviable reputation of the fine oil school as an institution for the train ing and cultivation of young woman. The program folFows: PART I. ; Priest's March, from Athalia Men delssohn. Misses - Thomas, Venable, Brevard and Means. Song "O, Stars so Pure" Bischoff. Marie Stewart Phlnlzy. Reading "The Whiter Cowl" James Lane Allan. Mary Norcott Broadfoot. Song "The Lass of Norwich Town," Violin Obllgato Bullard. May Lee Montague. i Valse Chromatlque Godard. Julia Haughton. Song "Rosalie de Koven. . Katha rine Spach. T. H. BRIGGS & SONS, Raleigh, N. C BUCK'S STOjES AND RANGES - 1 ' .Look ! made with '- have the extra best Tarant ell a For v lol i n Ren t s , h . na Hampton. Mfn- . Song "Grass and Roses," Violin Ob ligato Barlett.' Mary Holton llui.t PART II. ; Song "O, Loving Heart" Gottsca'.k. Miss Marshall. Splnnelied Joseffy. May Lee Mon tague. .'. , . Reading "Mars 'Chan" Thomas N!. fon Page. Mildred DransfleM Tilton.. Song "Mid the .Hush of th;. rom.'" Violin-' Obliga to Temple. Margn;et Longfellow Sanborn. (a) Polonaise For Violin, Alard. (I) Ferpetuumu Mobile For VicHn, Cui. Margoret Rosalie DuBose. . Tarantella Duo, Raff. Julii Harl j and Bessie Woodard. Part Song The Gypsies Schumann. Chorus. Quick Arrrat J. A. Gallinger of Verbena, Ala., war twice in the hospital from a: severe ras of piles causing 24 tumors. After doc tors and all remedies failed, liuekien 'j Arnica Salve quickly arrested further Inflammation and cured hini. It con quers aches and kills pain. 25c :t til druggists '" Graded Schools for Kenly Capt.- John Duckett, chief clerk lii th off.ee' of the state superintendent of public Instruction, received a triejrr"an late last, night from W. A. Harper, at Kenly, - N. " C, saying, "Graded prhno! special tax " was carried today by : a handsome -majority." , Several 'state officers, includirg: Gov. ernor A3rcock and1 State Superintend ent Joyner, made speeches at Kenly for this election, and the news of Ictorj is very gratifying to them. Mr, G. W. Blacknall Here . Mr. George W. Blacknall, a Raleigh boy and a son of the late lamented Dr. Blacknall, has moved here Nvith .!'. family from Waterbury, Conn., when, he has been living. Mr. 31arkihiil has accepted a position as traveling sales man for Stephen G. 'Condlt of New York, manufacturer of well kno brands of clear Havana cigars. M" Blacknall has a host of friend? in Hai eigh who rejoice over his-return t''tlV place of his nativity, and corttriat'iiata the company that has secured hi ser vices. Mr. A. D. Hobgood has retur,nd Durham, after 'a visit to Mr., K. F Knott. . $500 Reward Washington, ,D. C... May C5th, l1 Whereas, at' or near Raleigh, in state of North Carolina, on Tu's the 13th day of May, 190?,, 'S.-.'J: Railway Company's mail train, kn as No. 136, was derailed, by t'ho !' ' ous placing of spike or other cV.-ti tion on the track by which si I v. was wrecked and many persosai -n ries received . by passenegr? ::, i ployees, and rkllway .equipiri' Tit dv. damaged; - Now, therefore," in consideration "the premises arid th atthe ' enforw1- of r.t of the laws may be aided in ! '' said felony and for the protvi-t the public in the future, the r Railway Company4 hereby off?:; jir.g ward of - - FIVE HUNDRED DOLLARS I to be paid for and upon the arr-;-" proper conviction of the party " . ties who did this act. c. 11. ackhh General Manager Southern Company. ri is that its prices are rlg-ht. goods are right, its va rlty large, and there-is no oppo: nlty to question its method? doing business. We offer lOOO Boxes Ball Brothers' Fruit Jars ' A 10 Barrels Jelly Glasses Johnson's Floor Wa x.