The Progressive Farmer, February 18, 1002. Miscellaneous. jjCELZCTURK WORK IN THE EAST. .... Lecturer Bala Beporti rrogreii in SUrtin ana ueauion touuuH. wrresPondence of The Projcresslve Farmer. r reionad Kooersonviue, m juamn aunty, January 16th, and spent a . A lw,pk in lecture wors among me Urniera and brethren of the county. I found them (as moat all North 'Carolinians are) a very kind and ;renprn9 people. eriainiy tne brethren did more than we could really expect of them, to make our visit pleasant to us. I will ever Pleasantly remember the kindness iad hospitality of brethren W. S. Vick, Smith, Keel, Marion Green, Roebuck and other brethren too numerous to mention. We should have been pleased to have visited a jew other places in the county, but 03r time was too short. We left the w0rk there in good and safe hands. Bro. W". 8. Viok will organize or re organize Sub- Alliances at any place jeered. We may expect, and I am assured, that Martin will be repre sented at our State meeting this year. " On Friday, the 24th ult., I entered tfi began work in this, Beaufort scanty. Have since met twelve ap pointments that the brethren had made for me. Have organized one new Sab-Allianoe,Swain's Land,with a goodly number of the best farmers of that section The attendance was good at most all the appointments, even in the rainy days of last week. At the close of my lecture last Wednesday at Aurora the request vras made that we hold a session at night for the reception of old and members, which we did. The result was the receiving of 11 mem bers, three of them by initiation. I found the brotherhood in this county in better condition than I expected, and it is expeoted that the organiza tion will take on renewed growth. I Lave certainly been kindly enter tained and cared for in this county, izd wish to hereby express my thankfulness for the same. I will go from here to Currituok county to engage in lecture work there. "Some Things All of us Should Think About," written by Mr. D. L Gore, in last week's Progressive IiiiER, is timely, interesting and toniotive. , We hope he will write often ; and, by the way, if we have been correotly informed, Mr. Gore is originally from "our Harry Farm er's" county, Columbus. J. C. Bain, Lecturer N. C. F. 8. Alliance. TEY GOOD ROADS BENEFIT THE FAR HER. Financially speaking, good roads oald ba of no inconsiderable ad vantage to the farmer : 1st, the oost cf road transportation will decrease t certain times of the year. 2d, There -will be a wider ohoce of time to market the produoe and a wider choice of market places. 3d, Perish able crop? can be more extensively raised. ih, Prices will be more nearly uniform over the oounty. Sth, There will be no greit rush of railroad work, at different seasons c year. Bat in the eyes of the agricultural people the arguments as to the great financial gains from stone roads are not founded on faot ; the major argu ments with the farmer to day are social questions. 1. Good roads will mate possible the centralization of the rami school system which is now receiving attention with the farmer. They will facilitate rural mail delivery, and to my personal knowl edge I know that at the present time is, with the farmer of Illinois, one oi the strongest arguments in favor of better roads. 3 Highways iil change in appearance ; the sani ary conditions of the farm will im Prove, and it will bring to us a 2her degree of civilization. Fred R- Crane. 1 DESTITUTE FOR MACADAM ON COUN TRY ROADS. hilo for macadamizing purposes P3rP;'es on country roads burnt oSiio.j i not quite so durable as i jT'- jf the best grades of rock, it s many advantages to offset this "ii-jrtcoming, Blight aa it is. The Pc. of producing burnt gumbo e'lres practically no capital or great skill to carry on. The most lnury labor and a little common " e on the part of one person, as erser, can produce the best of.re !t Of course, the road should Properly graded and crowned be putting on the gumbo road ta L A face of burnt clay, six ght inches in thickness, is com- monly sufficient for good, results ; or ten inohes in particularly places, where unusual conditions exist or traffic is especially heavy. By selecting for improvement the heaviest parts of the road first, since the worst stretohes are often caused by the very heavy material that makes the best grade of road metal, - and systematically working under intelligent guidance, five years would find every principal highway in a oounty as passable the year around as a paved city street, and at very little more coat than is now usually squandered on "working the roads." The county surveyor could easily superintend the whole work for his district ; and, with local over seers as head burners, he coula soon produce as good a system of high ways as any one oould wish for. Onoe properly prepared, two men oould easily keep the roads of a whole county always in good repair. With no more expenditure of money and effort than is now put on the country roads, ballasting with burnt clay would produoe in a dozen years a system of highways equal to any of those for which France has so long been famous. A burnt gumbo road is never muddy, for that property is lost in the burning- The surface of the road is hard and smooth. As a speedway for bicycles and automo biles it is ideal. For carriages and heavy wagons it has no superior. Ne vegetation can grow on it. It is practically free from dust, after the highway system has been well devel oped, so that mud is not brought in from the tributary roada. More over, the warm red highways con trast pleasingly against the green landsoape at those seasons of the year when country drives are most enjoy able. From "Burnt Clay for Roads in the West," by Charles Rollin Keyes, in the American Monthly Re view of Reviews for January. THE TARIFF CBISIS IN CONGRESS. The event of the week in Congrees was the vote in the Ways and Means Committee cf the House of Repre sentatives upon the Baboook amend ment to the tax reduction bill. This amendment put upon the free list the important iron and steel produots whioh this country is now selling abroad in large quantities. The list includes all structural steel and iron, hoiler plates, steel rails, and nearly every steel product in the form used as raw material by our manufactur ers of maohinery and implements. The faot that our manufacturers can sell these goods abroad, after paying for transportation, at as low a price as foreigners can make in their own markets, is assumed to in dicate that our manufacturers can sell to our countrymen as cheaply as foreigners could sell them if our tariff were removed. The bill would not guarantee that our manufac turers should sell as cheaply at home as abroad, but merely 'that they should not charge at home more than their price abroad plus the oost of shipping the goods back to this country. This amendment came within one vote of being adopted by the Committee, as the other Republi can member from the Northwest, Mr. Tawney, of Minnesota, supported Mr Babcock, and they had of oourse the united support of the Democrats. Mr. Baboook says that the fight is not over yet,and that he will bring his amendment before the House, where it is more popular than in the Ways and Means Committee. This claim we may well believe, as most of the members of the Ways and Means Committee are noted for their strong protectionist leanings. It is certain that the amendment would have the support of the oountry at large for in Amerioa's 'committee of the whole' there are not nine Republi cans to six Democrats, as on the Ways and a Means Committee, but only nine Republicans to eight Dem ocrats, and measure supported by all Democrats and even one fourth of the Republicans has an over whelming majority. New York Outlook, 15th. Your paper is always a welcome visitor in our home, we think it the best weekly in the State. G. T. Pate, Scotland Co , N. C. TO CURE A COLO IN ORE DAY Take Laxatire Bromo Quinine Tablets. All druggists refund the money If It fails to cure E. W. Grove's signature is on each box. 25c. RU1? Dear Subscriber : I C that quite a number of our subscribers R in arrears. Please C U'r label & F-U-R-l please renew B 4 U C the sun go down again, and greatly oblige U'r Sin C R wellwisher, The Bus. Mgr. CORRECT TABLE OF BUBAL SCHOOL LIBBABIES BY COUNTIES. The writer had to leave the office before reading the proof of the article on rural school libraries published last week, and we notice that there were a few errors in it. Caswell oounty should have been credited with one library, Catawba with five. Tyrrell has none as yet. Five more libraries were established last week two in Moore, three in Forsyth. The following carefully correoted table, therefore, -shows the exact number of libraries in each oounty that have to date received the State aid provided by law : A lamance 6 Johnston ....... Alexander. ..... Jones.. ..;...... Alleghany 4 Lenoir 6 Anson 6 Ldnooln 4 Ashe 1 MoDowell , Beaufort 6 Macon 2 Bertie 6 Madison 6 Bladen.... 1 Martin Brunswick 1 Meoklenburg ... 2 Bunoombe Mitohell Burke Montgomery . . . Cabarrus 6 Moore 4 Caldwell 3 Nash 6 Camden N Hanover Carteret Northampton... 6 Caswell 1 Onslow 5 Catawba 5 Orange 6 Chatham 6 Pamlico 1 Cherokee 1 Pasquotank 6 Chowan 4 Pender . Clay Perquimans.... .3 Cleveland 6 Person 1 Columbus 2 Pitt .6 Ctavtn 6 Polk .1 Cumberland 4 Randolph ... . . . 6 Currituok N Riohmond. ... .12 Dare Robeson .4 Davidson 2 Rockingham .... 6 Davie . . '. Rowan . 4 Duplin 6 Rutherford 6 Durham. 6 Sampson Edgeoombe 4 Sootland Forsyth 6 Stanly. 6 Franklin 4 Stokes 6 Gaston 2 Surry... Gates 3 Swain Graham Transylvania. . . 3 Granville 4 Tyrrell Greene a Union .6 Ouilford 6 Vance Halifax Wake 6 Harnett 4 Warren .6 Haywood Washington 6 Henderson c Watauga 2 Hertford 1 Wayne 6 Hyde 4 Wilkes 4 Iredell a Wilson .6' Jackson Yadkin Yanoey "Nothing to Compare With It." Whites ville, N. Y., Jan. 5, '98. The Lawrence-Williams Co., Cleve land, O. : I still use ''Gombault's Caustic Bal sam and oould not get along without it. I some times buy in Elinira and some of our druggist here. There is nothing to compare with it, in my belief. I. B. WILEY, V. S. We do not make a praotioe of de voting muoh spaoe in our reading columns to our advertisers. We take pains, before allowing them to buy space of us, to find out that they are considered reliable, and after they have used our space for some time we get to know, through our readers, something of their product and of the manufacturer, breeder or adver tiser himself. Many a person or oompany has ad vertised with us for two or three months, ,then dropped out and was never heard of again ; while others commence modestly have an article of merit to start with, find a general demand for it, it fills the bill, year after year the article is improved by their experience, it is sold reason ably and they continue with us without interruption. It is always safe to patronize this class of advertisers. You are pretty sure of a fair deal, because they can not afford to do otherwise. An instance: The Page Woven Wire Fence Co., Adrian, Michigan, have used our columns continuously for over ten years ; they have estab lished themselves in the confidence of our readers, and they oould never have done so if there had not been real merit in their fenoes. Their business has doubled up year after year,until (we are oredibly informed) they use the entire output of wire of their extensive steel mill, at Mones sen, Pennsylvania, in their own fences. They do not claim to sell fenoe the chepest, but they do claim that since they make their own steel and wire they have a wire especially adapted for fenoing purposes, and one that will sustain the special features in Page Fenoes. The Page Fenoe Company have an enviable reputation among our read ers. " THE LIVES OF DISTINGUISHED NORTH CAROLINIANS." Biographies, Portraits and Best Known 8peecb.es of iavia, Macon, Murphy, Gaston, Badger, Swain, Baffin, Braggr, Graham, Moore, Pettierew, Pender, Kamsettr, Grimes and Kill. A Handsoms Boo of 600 pages. Price. S2. With The Progressive farmer one year, $2.75. Address all orders to THE PROGRESSIVE FARMER, HALEIGH, N. C. KIDNEY TROUBLE, LAME ' BACK AND RHEUMATISM CURED BY SWAMP-ROOT. To Prove what the Great Kidney Remedy, Swamp-Root, wilr do for YOU, Every Reader of The Progressive Farmer May Have a Sample Bottle Sent Free by Mail. Among the many famous cures of Swamp-Root, reported in The Progressive Farmer, the 6ne we publish this week for the benefit of our readers, speaks in the highest terms of the wonderful curative properties of this great kidney remedy. T. F. MCIIUGH. Taooma, Wash , Nov. 29th, 1901 DR. KILMER & CO., Binghamton, N. Y. Qenttemen : It gives me great pleasure to add my testimonial to that of hundreds of others regard ing the wonderful curative proper ties or Swamp Root. I had a lame back three years ago before leaving North Dakota for the coast. Soon after my arrival in the Puget Sound oountry it became very muoh worse. I felt certain that ' the coast climate had given me acute rheumatism and came to the conclusion that I oould not live in this climate LMer 1 be came convinced that what I really had was kidney trouble, and that the I J) J ; :- Jcw s Yv)j x t - - iv - sv"" ."4if.. ft , - t tr!l'1Z: ill : HZ Editorial Note. Swamp-Root has been tested in so .many ways, and has proven so successful in every case, that a special arrangement has been made by which all readers of The already tried it may have a sample bottle sent absolutely free by mail Alsoa book telling all about Swamp Root and, containing many of the thousands upon thousands of testimonial letters received from men and wom,en who owe their good health, ful curative properties of Swamp-Root. In writing, be sure and mention reading this generous cffer in the Raleigh Progressive Farmer when send ihg your address to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y. If you are already convinced that Swarap-Root is wnat you need, you oan purchase the regular fifty-cent and one-dollar size bottle at the drng stores everywhere. Don't make any mistake, but remember the name, Swamp-Root, Dr. Kilmer's Swamp Root, and the address, Binghamton, N. Y. 'TOR ri-.-.4lri E 'Tj-.-i a,-41 ',il.5 Works on either standing timber or stumps. Will pull an ordinary Grub in minutes. Makes a clean sweep of Two Acres at a Sitting. A man, a boy and a horse can operate it. No heavy chains or rods to handle. The crop on a few acres the first year will pay for the Machine. Send postal card for Illust'd yA.do.rcs3 UUne Urox.Jor tifittiaud I'uuy Catalog.) fclLNE MFG. GO., 8788th St., Koniaoutb, III. A RTHIDGE&'IN ALL O A L I B E P O ' from .22 to .50 loaded vith either Black or Smokeless Powdtf a 'always give entire satisfaction. They are made and loaded in A modem manner, by exact machinery operated by skilled experts. THEY SHOOT WHERE YOU HOLD ALWAYS ASK FOR THEF1 TWh. iobbers prices on Carriages, harness and other fMJya Iiorse accessories. s quoted dealers - . - J You Get it! the largest Btock i.ln. n.nnv rpinrnM (j and see how much COLUUSCrTIGE & HARNESS CO. Offer Extra Special. UON W J. BRYAN, twice candidate for the Presidency, has many warm admirers and well-wishing friends in North Carolina who no doubt take or would like to subscribe for a paper owned and edited by Mr. Bryan. THE COMMONER ls That Paper. The subscription price is only $1.00 per year. By special arrangement we are authorized to take subscriptions as follows : The Commoner alone per year $1 00 . The Progressive Farmer alone per year 1.00 The Commoner Toqether one year 51 fj The Progressive Farmer -v . MhUU This Atmlies to new or renewal subscriptions for either paper. Your sub .rintlonT will be. entered or extended on both mailinglTsts on receipt pf l 35 J Send all SdS? gRlng nwneand address plainly written, to , : : " THE PROGRESSIVE FARMER, Raleigh, VN. C. rheumatism was due to my kidney trouble. The lameness in my baok increased rapidly and I hnd other symptons which indicated that I would soon be prostrated unless I obtained' relief quickly. Noticing your offr of a sample bottle of Swamp Root, free, I had a friend write for one and began taking it immediately. Within three weeks the lameness in my bank began to disappear. During that fall and winter, I took three one dollar bot tles of Sramp-Root with the result that I beoame completely cured , I no longer have pains in my baok and oan exercise violently without telling any bad effects. I have recommended Swamp-Root to sev eral of my acquaintances who were similarly affeoted and without ex ception they have been greatly bene fited by its use 701 E. St, South. Lame baok is only one symptom of kidney trouble one of many and is Nature's timely warning to show you that the the traok of health is not clear. If these danger signal are un heeded, more serious results are sure io follow; Bright's Disease, whioh is the worst form of kidney trou ble, may steal upon you. The great kidney remedy, Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, is used in the leading hospitals, recommended by physicians in their private practice, and is taken by doctors themselves who have kidney ailments, because they recognize in it the greatest and most successful remedy for kidney, liver and bladder troubles. Progressive Farmer who have not in fact their very lives to the wonder t-. t-i 7 1 tr. J3L raciurj ukujt-b arc profits are eliminated. XS. ho Profits ti in the world of high IC Kpnii for catalogue 3 yon will Rave. Shipment from Colnmbns. to nearest office SSgsf fta? Sj 1 HW (TTXt Fruit Trees at Wholesale Prices Cu out and nse the below liat, with number of trees wanted in serted against eaoh variety. Ad dress all orders to T. B. PARKER, HILLSBORO, N. O. NEW AND RARE APPLES .... Pride of North Carolina .... Yellow Transparent Lnte's Great Keeper Esther. .... Angels Favorite . . . .Shannon! .... Arkansas Blaot Cofifey's Seedling .... Albemarle Pippin .... Mammoth Black Twig .... Paragon Gragg . , . .Rebel I Johns' F. Winter Catawba's Favor SELECT APPLES ' .... May . . . . Red June Summer Rose . . . .Early Harvest . . . . Astraohan Yellow June J .. . .Early Ripe Summer Queen Summer P'rm'n Maryland .'. . .Maiden Blush Horse Red Cheese .... Sine Qua Non . . . . Buckingham Baltimore Red . . . .Bonnm Merit j Gloria Mundi Golden Russett Harper's Seedling ... .Sherrill ....Ed ward a .... Stevenson's Winter Blackburn . . . .Wine Sap Vandever Keener Seedling Hall Seedling Limbertwig, Red Limbertwig, Royal Mississippi . . . : Vi' ginia Beauty Gully J Ben Davis . . . .Shookley J Yates - Nasemond Beauty Golden Winter .... Yadkin Beauty Niokajaok . . .North Carolina Keeper Red Beitigheimer Delaware Red Winter. CRAB APPLES Red Siberian Transcendent NEW AND RARE PEACHES V ..Sneed Triumph .... Admiral Dewey Greensboro .. . .Huitt . . . .Matthews Beauty Elberta .... Everbearing Emma Belle of Georgia .... Carman . . . . Bokara, No. ,3 Anne's Perfection : ....Gordon . SELECT PEACHES , .... Amsden . . .. Alexander Beatrioe . . f . Early Louise Early Bivers Flaters St. John George IV Foster Red Rareripe Crawford's Early Crawford's Late Chinese Cling O. M. Free O. M. Cling Gen. Green Wonderful ... .Indian Health Cling Stump of the World . . . Steady Pioquit's Late . . .Eaton's Golden v Scott's October PEARS Wilder Early . . . .Early Harvest .Clapp's Favorite . . . . Linooln Coreless . . . . Japan Golden Russet Koonce I . . . Seokel LeConte I .;..Garber Kieffer I . Duchess . . . Beauty .Vermont cherries ....May Duke , . . . . Early Riohmond Dyehouse Governor Wood . . . .Reine Hartense Windsor . . .Centennial Yellow Sp&nix! . Montmorenoi . . Blaok Tartarian Blaok Eagle Ostheime MULBERRIES . . . .Downing Everbearing Blaok English White English apricots Moorpark J Russian Royal OOOSEBERBIES Downing I Houghton Pearl STRAWBERRIES Excelsior I Sharpless . ...Miohall's Early Grady's Late j Shuokless Lady Thompson Brandy wine Clyde Bismarck SHADE TREES Silver Maple Carolina Poplar EVERGREENS Norway Spruce Col. Blue Spruce Arbor Vitre Am'n ... Arbor Vitre Pyr'd'l Magnolia Gran. ROSES . . . Crimson Rambler . . . Marechal Neil . . .The Bride . . . Souv. de Malmais'n . . . Marie Guillot . . . Perie de Jar din ... La France . . . American Beauty . . . President Carnot ...Gen. Jacqueminot . . . Madam Masson PLUMS- ; , .Wild Goose f .i. .Abundance . . . Reiser's Japan . . .German Prune Bur bank . . . Green Gage Damson . . .Satsuma . . . .Washington m