m mm jol KatahUshe 187S KKuilihed Is Two Sections, Trj Tuesday and, Friday, at Journal Build SC-60 CraTen Street "' ' - CHASXI8 L. STETIJf , : EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. Official Pa par of New Ban ana ' Craven Comity, -v--- -'' " SUBSCRIPTION : RATES. Two Months.. ., . ...... ..I if Tore Montha.. ...... I! x Months.. .. .. .. M ; twelve Months.. .... .. . k I.N ONLY IN ADVANCE. . To Journal la cnly sent on pay-ln-advance barla. 8utacrlbera will ; re eelva notice of expiration of their sub scriptions and an Immediate response V notice wu oe appreciated by the JiurnaL v '". Advertising ratea furnished upon application at the office, or upon ta llrr by mai1 ' : imteied at the Postotflce, New Bern, K. C aa aecond-lau matter. New Bern, N.C. August, 22. 1911. QUIET BUT MOST IMPOETAJSfT LOCAL I5TSTITUTION. The local cry for factories and undustries, and the establishment of new trading firms, the coming of new local investors, the demand for a greater chamber of com merce, all find enthusiasts to pat forth their claims and merits. But in this city, during all tfie summer days and nights, there has been a local institution quietly and thoroughly pursuing its course, profitable enjoyment and entertainment to many citizens, young and old, who have been un able to leave the city for a season of pleasure at some resort. This local institution, is the Circulating Library. The history of this lib rary is known to every one, local ly. It has been maintained all the time at the personal sacrifice of a few, mostly women, for the benefit of the community at large, Its help has been passed unnotic ed by the crowd, tho the crowd has received its benefits without full appreciation, that its litera ture was the kind that went to promote and encourage the local educational work,at the same time gave entertainment of the best kind to many who could not, unless thro such a source as the Circula ting Library, have enjoyed read ing periodicals and books during the hot season, when every physi cal and mental faculty was keenly alive to such enjoyment as good reading. The Circulating Library should have its enthusiasts who both cry aloud its virtues and contribute towards its support, and get oth-j ers to contribute, and thus both relieve and help the small number J who are now and have been its staunch' supporters and financial backers. There is no local institu tion that is more worthy of suc cessful support than the Circulat ing Library. There is no local institution that will yield snch importrnt returns to this com munity as the Circulating Library. DEATH Iff TWENTIETH CEN TUEY SPOBT. The shocking deaths in the re cent aviation meet in Chicago, all in the name of sport, recalls those early days when men and women looked on the Roman sports, re garding human sacrifice as the perfection of the game. "There were hia young barbarians all - " at play, - ' There was their Dacian mother, he tbeir aire, ' Butchered to make a Roman holiday." v !. . , Ro in the Chicago aviation meet, young wives watched their hus bands fall . to their death, while the crowds looked on, startled and terrified no doubt, but still looked at the men, who protesting in ma king their flights during the gale of wind that prevailed, yet could not refuse because of the possible taint of cowardice that a refusal might mean. No bird man can let such a stigma as that rest upon his name, and so the press reports tell of flights and falls in the lake and on' the land, with broken limbs, lost lives and narrow es capes, all in the name of twentieth century sport J The science of aviation, the risks attendant upon air fifghta sro legitimate, when practiced to farther the phases that are neces f :iry to ditscovir the resources cf 1' vyt f'T air, that may to 8p!.' ? r ki:: 1. I "l will .',' ' v ' ' ', l;:$t'- r E Children Cry The Kind Yoq Have Always in use for over SO years, and has $&2sJ?Li sonal fr All Counterfeits, Imitations and "Just-as-good" are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children Experience against Experiment. What is CASTOR I A Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance Its ago is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Peverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and "Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Panacea Tho Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears the The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years THZ CENTAUR COMPANY, 7 ' MURRAY STRt tT. NrW YORK CITY. flights before crowded grandstands of people are simply made to amuse, with a kind of entertain ment because of its needless that is morally wrong. risk, State of Ohio, City of Toledo, Lucas County, ss. Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is senior partner of the firm of F J. Cheney & Co., doing business in the city of Toledo, County and Stat aforesaid, and that said firm wiL pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every case of catarrh that cannot he cured by the useof Hall's Catarrh Cure. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscrib ed in my presence, this 6th day of December, A. D. 1886. (Seal) A: W. GLEASON. Notary Public Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken inter nally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for 'testimonials free. F. J. CHENEY & CO.,Toledo, 0. Sold by all Druggists, 75c. Take Hall's Family Pills for con stipation. When the Operator Says "Line Busy." When the operator gives you the "busy" report it does not neceesarily mean that some one is talking over the telephone called. The line may be busy when there is no one in office or house, when there is no possible way for the uie way lor me f in use. ope is tryirl telephone to be actuary It may be that noire eall the same telephone, or any coelse call at the same time toe operator would gel the "husy ' sig nal and ao report Oftentimes servants nee tbe telephone or answer calls when no member of the family is at home, and in such cases the "busy" report is given. The line is "busy" on a duplex sta tion if eitner telephone on the line is in use. The line is "busy" on a straight line telephone when the extension sta tion is in use. The "busy" report ia a source of an noyance to many telephone users who do not understand that the line can be busy if any one is trying to get the number, even if it ia known that there ia nobody at home. . We'd like to have you bear , these things in mind, particularly during theee bot montha, when all of us are annoyed by the heat and easily exasperated. We are taking proper precautions to make our service aa near Derfrct possible. Our operators are co operar 1 ting with us. We'd like your co-operation, too. home telephone & telegraph company; women; .Women of tho kigbett type, women of superior education and refinement, , whose discernment as J judgment jive weight and force to their opinions, highly rrxise tho wcrlcrfrJ corrective til crriCve prcpertiei of Cham. I :. V$ vlc-adi and Liver Tab Lli. Hrcr;'.3-ttiemafiyftaj:ei cf r: -i'a L'e, frca r'rHooj. tie trinlt cf rc'.lrr- I !3 lis j ye-n, tlrre r)t r err ' . C re n.,;i,a c 'i T" it; for Fletcher's m va Bought, and which has been : has borne the signature of J been made under his per' supervision since its Infancy. Signature of Value of Fat The popular view of the close con nection between fat aud good nature and 'weight aud balauce is not wholly without rational foundation. Fat un pleasant and stodgy as it ia. Is one! the nuist valuable tissues In tbe bu iimn body, aud ny man who reduces bis share of it below a certain reason able level not only takes the smooth edire off his temper and balance off his powers of judgment, but exposes all of his higher tissues, notably tbe mus cular, nervous and secreting, to dan ger of both starvation and 4isease. A moderate cushion of fat Is one of the best buffers and bucklers against the "slings and arrows of outrageous for tune." whether in the form of disease germs or in strains upon endurance. The in .tii who makes himself Into' a lean and hungry Cassius even with tbe best of Intentions is very apt to get bimseif into a state of both mind and body where he is more fit for treason, stratagem and spoils than for comfort wholesomeness and a long, happy life. Dr. Woods Hutchinson in Outing. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA Dr. Wiley concluded his testimony before the House Investigating Com mittee, LIFE SAVED AT DEATH'S DOOR. "I never felt bo near my grave,' writes W. R, Patterson, of Wellington, Tex., as when a frightful cough and lung trouble pulled me down to 100 pound?, in spite of doctor's treatment f jr two years. My father, mother and two sisters died ' of consumption, and that I am alive today ia due solely to Dr. King's New Discovery, which eom- pletelv cured rr is f .a letelv cured me. r; coughs', "colds, 'laKrilipe.'asthmar croup, and all throat and lung troubles. 60e 1.00. Trial bottle free. Guaranteed by all druggist. A Boston Street . ' " It was one of the older conductor breaking In a new recruit who had shown that be was not particularly quick to catch an Idea. The car came to Webster street, and tbe older con ductor whispered the name to the re cruit The latter did not understand, and the conductor, losing patience, said, "Webster Webster's dictionary. And the passengers were amazed to bear tbe new man bawl out "Web ster's dictionary." Boston Post SEEMED TO GIVE HIM A NEW , STOMACH. "I suffered intensely after eating and no medicine or treatment 1 tried seemed to do any good," writes H. M. Young peters. Editor of Tbe Sun. Lake View. Ohio. "The first few doses of Chamb erlain' S tomach an 1 Li ver Tablets gave tie seemed to give me a new stomach ant perfectly good health." For sale by all Deale.'s. A Wig and a TragooV. It is Just as well that our enthusiasm for oriental curiosities should be tem pered by discretion. ' Eastern antlqnt ties may be picturesque and with alt tbe charm of mystery, but at the same time they may have a history that. If known, would consign tbem to tbe stove wltbont benefit of clergy. Here la a story bearing upon tbe point and with its obvious moral. A young and extremely pretty girl went to a fancy dress ball In Chinese costume. The triumph of ber. makeup waa a reef oriental wig. and she wort It proudly. Borne time after a atrange mark apt peared on ber forehead, and thla wan treated as a trifling skin affection. Bui It refused to disappear; in fact It grew larger, and then the specialist waa consulted. It waa leprosy. Argonaut Cuts and bruises may be healed in sbout one-third the time required by the ususl treatment by applying U.m herlnin's Liniment, it is ao an (.:;-? ic and causes such iniuriea to hnl t h- ut itiitium'ion. 1 1 i!i lli:!n.i'!it it' r ' v- c f f t ' Si IT PETRIFIED TREES. . The Stone Forest" One of California's ; Natural Wonders. California, among many other natural wonders, con talus a . "stone forest" Tbls ia located in Sonoma county, only a few, miles from the tittle, resort of CaUstoga Springs. This "forest" con sists of a great many pe trifled trees, all of which are prostrate. j In respect to the great number of petrified trees and their Immense sise. the California "stone forest" surpasses that of Arizona., Strange to say, very little ia known about these wonder ful. Sonoma county - petrifactions ao far as the general public ia concerned Many of these trees are of enormous stae. The famous ''Queen of the For est" la a prehistoric redwood about eighty feet long and nearly twelve feet in diameter. It has been broken in several places, and these breaks are as clean aa if cut off- with a saw, A tree has grown up through one of the breaks and has attained quite a large aice. Another giant tree known aa the "Mon arch" Ilea near by, which Is almost ninety feet Jong and ia without a break. This tree is a fir, and averages ten feet in diameter. Not far away is another giant son of the forest a red wood that ia about sixty feet long and nine feet in diameter. This tree is broken Into, many hundreds of pieces, yet it retains lta shape almost perfect ly. Scattered about for the area of several acres are many other pieces of petrifaction. So perfect baa been the transmutation into stone that tbe grain of the wood still remains very, clear, and the variety of the tree may be eas ily determined. Scientific American. THE OLD LIBERTY BELL History of This Relle of the Revolu tionary Patriots. Overvigorous ringing of the old Lib erty bell many years ago on the occa sion of the celebration of the Declara tion of Independence waa what put the crack In it and forever destroyed lta resonant tone. It was cast by I'ass & Stow la Philadelphia and hung In the belfry of the now historic state house in lower Chestnut street early in June, 1753. It contains .2,080 pounds of metal. Near tbe top of the bell were cast the words "Proclaim Liberty Through out All tbe Land Onto Ail the Inhabit ants Thereof." Prophetic of its des tiny, this gave It the name Liberty bell. When the British army marched on Philadelphia in 1777 the bell waa tak en down by patriots and carried off In the night to Alientown In order that It might not fall Into the hands of the enemy. In 1781 it was returned to tbe tower of tbe statehouse. For more than half a hundred years thereafter the bell was rung and hon ored on Independence day every year before tbe crack appeared In it An effort was made to restore lta tone by sawing tbe crack wider, but this prov ed of no avail. The bell was finally removed from tbe tower to a lower story of the statehouse and used only on extraordinary; occasions. Subse quently it was rigged up on Its origi nal timbers In the vestibule. In 1893 It was exhibited at tbe Columbian ex position in Chicago. 8hakepeara aa an Actor. Shakespeare once played tbe ghost In bis own "Hamlet." A younger brother of the dramatist in describing the event said that be wore "a long beard and appeared so weak and drooping and unable to walk that he was forced to- be supported and car ried by another person to a table, at which he waa seated among some company." . ' .In "Aa Ton Like It" Avon's bard assumed the role of Adam, the old servant in whom waa represented "tbe constant service of 'tbe antique world" and wbo waa "not for the fashions pt titem timet." Famous Gretna Qieen. Iwous for tffcr msrriaaes. F Green, Scotland became fa- cvfebratlon of irregular marrlagea. For many years the aver age number, was 600. The ceremony consisted only of an admission, before witness, by the couple that they were husband and wife, thla being sufficient to constitute a valid marriage. After this the officiating functionary (fot many years a blacksmith), together with two witnesses, signed the mar riage certificate. t , ' Whit He Wanted. The doctor stood at the bedside and looked gravely down at the Invalid. "I cannot bide from you the fact that you are very ill." be said "la there any one you would Ilka to see 7 "Tea." aald tha aufferer faintly. ' i "Wbolaitf , "Another doctor." , " ' ; . Ne Obstruotion. In tha course of a trial at Water bury. Conn., the examiner waa trying to get tbe topography of tbe country and the relative situation of objects. The witness waa asked. "Which way does tbe road run past your bouse?" Tbe reply : waa, "Both ways, your honor, up and down." Case and Com ment'" . . '; ,. T Touohing Him. Visitor I saw your husband In tbe crowd In town today. In fact he was so close that I could have touched him. Hostess That's ' strange. At home be is so close that nobody can touch hlml , - " ' Acta of Kindness. If every one did an act pt dally kindness to bin nHghbor and refused to do any uuklndnpns half tbe sorrow of tbls world would be lifted and dis appear. Ian Maclaren. ' President Taf t vetoed the Farmers' Free List bil! and the house failed to pass it over the veto. A well known De Moines woman af- tr safTerinir miie'-alily for two nsvt from bowel efirrmlaint. wss cured by one do ef Chamberlain's Colic. Cliol "ra aid Diarrhoea Uomwly. For sale by all Dealers. r C x) r A FAMOUS DWARF.' : Borulwaskl. the Pole, Was Handsome, - v 8oholariy and Witty. -r; j A notable dwarf, wbo had a long mm of life over parts of two centu ries be waa born in 1739 and died In 1837 waa . Borulwaskl, the - Pole, of whose debut an Interesting tale la told. As a boy of fifteen, when be waa just on Inch higher than a two foot rule,, Borulwaskl was presented to the Empress Maria Theresa, who waa so charmed by bis good looks and grace that aba seated him on her lap and gave him a hearty kiss. To tbe queen's question as to what be con sidered the -most Interesting sight In Vienna tha dwarf replied, "What I now behold, so little a man on the lap of so great a lady.". This speech ren dered tha little fellow a great favor Ite. . ; '- - ; He became a special favorite of Stanislaus II., wbo took him to Eng land and introduced blm to George QL, and for more than half a century Borulwaskl made bis home at the English court This dwarf, wbo at his tallest was a yard and three Inches, had a sister whose bead just reached ber big broth er's shoulders. Borulwaskl was not only a handsome and courtly man, but a scholar of repute. He lived in five reigns, and when be died, lacking only two , years of reaching the century mark, he was laid to rest In Dunham, side by side with the Folstamar 8tephen Kembie. Princes at Sohool. Dr. Marks tells some amusing sto ries of the early days of the school in Burma of which be was for so many years the head. Shortly after the school was opened King Thebaw said, "Will you teach some of my sons?" "Certainly," said Dr. Marks. "Whnt ages do you like them at?" Dr. Marks replied, "From twelve to fourteen." The king said, "Bring all my sons be tween twelve and fourteen to me." Nine princes came In. Four came to school the next day, each riding on an elephant aud with two gold umbrel las. Each also was escorted, by forty soldiers. Afterward the whole nine came, so there were nine princes, nine' elephants, eighteen gold umbrellas and 360 soldiers. Tbe elephants stayed outside, but when the princes came Into the schoolroom all the other boys threw themselves flat down on their faces on the ground. It was forbid den for any one to stand or sit in the presence of princes. Dr. Murks found this state of things very Inconvenient and the royal etiquette at school was at his request considerably abated. London Globe. Tho Old Man Reformed. "I've a sight o' sons thirteen al together," remarked a prosperous old farmer, "and all of. 'em's done me credit save thetbree eldest, who sowed wild oats at n pretty rapid rate and then came home and saddled my shoul ders with the harvest "Well. I own 1 was glad to see 'em back, and I feasted 'era nnd petted 'em and set 'em on thoir legs again, only to see em skedaddle off afresh when tbinps had slowed down with all the cash they could lay tinnds on. "That thereabouts sickened me. so 1 called the rest of 'em. together and said: " , "There's ten of yon left, and if any of you"'ud like to follow t'other three I won't try to stop you. Bui understand tbU. thofigh there may be a few more prodigal sons there'll be no more fntted calves. I've killed tb last of 'em.' "And." continued the old man tri nmpbantly. "I've bad trouble wl' none of 'em slnfe." Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA The Stephenson election investiga.' ting committee decided to: begin hear' ings at Milwaukee October 2. 's TORTURED FOR 15 YfeARSi by a cure-defying stomach trouble tha' baffled doctors, and resisted all reme dies he tried. John W. Modder, of Mod dersville. Mich, seemed doome'i. He had to sell his farm and give up work Hi neighbors said, "he can't liv n.uch longer." "Whatever I a be distrfsteo me." he wrote, "til I tried Elctri Bitters, which worked such winders for me that I can now tat tl.it pri i could not take for years Its surely a grand remedy for - stomach trouble," Just a good for the liver and kidneys! Every bottle guaranteed. Only 50c. at all druggiata. - . Johnnie Knew. A teacher in an uptown school was giving her small charges a lesson lu politeness tbe other day. "Now, when." said she. "should you say "Excuse me, please?'" There was a moment's silence, then a very small boy put up bis band. ' "Well. Johnnler . .. - "Please, ma'am, you should say 'Ex cuse me, please.' when you sneeze at th' table und don't turn sway your bead quick enough." -Cleveland l'inln Dealer. . ... . ,-. An ordinary eaae of diarrhoea ean, as a rule, be cured by a single dore of Chambcrlain'a Colic, Cholera and Diar rhoea Remedy. Thla remedy has no superior for bowel complaints. For taia by all Dealers. The International ' Typographical Union at San Francisco passed a reso utioa putting Chinse laundries and res taurants under the ban. .' . mr.M:::COUGM i... r . t . IIC'J - r f early Railroad Pliers. When the first passenger railroad ever built was opened in England In 1823 the train traveled from one end of the line to the other, a distance of twelve miles, in two hours. And Wood, one of the best known writers on the subject of railroads at that day, wrote as follows:; .; '.'.. s. ''.' . "Nothing can do more harm to tha adoption of railways than tha promul gation of such nonsense as that we shall see locomotives traveling at the rate of twelve mllea an hour." Today, with locomotives traveling at the rate of seventy-five miles an hour, one can look at Wood's warning with a feeling of amusement.' In 1829 a locomotive was Introduced In this coun try, aud in the following year Peter Cooper experimented With a locomotive on the B. and O. railroad. . The flues of tbe boiler were made from gun bar rels. The boiler was about the siie of a flour barrel . ' Cooper related with considerable satisfaction, how on tha trial trip of this engine he passed a gray horse attached to a wagon, New York World. . .. :- Big Poker Stakes. Many stories of big poker games among the western cattlemen In the early days have been told, but this story of the' game with probably -the greatest stakes is really true. Two well known cattlemen of southwestern Kansas, one of whom is now a promi nent business man in Kansas City, started to' move their herds to the pastures of Wyoming. Each herd con tained more than a thousand head of cattle; t When they came to the cross ing of tbe Arkansas river near Coo lide they found a flood on. They were unable to cross for two or three days. To while away the time the two men engaged in a poker game. When tbe flood finally . subsided so that tbe cattle could proceed one of the cattlemen said to bis son, wbo was helping to drive, "Just turn my herd over to our neighbor and we will go. back .home." He had bet and lost not ouly all the money be bad, but all of tbe herd of cattle. Kansas. City Journal. Moving Troops by Rail. "Let us suppose it became necessary to send the eutlre national guard of New York out of the state, bow long would It take' tbe railroads to handle them?" was asked a railroad official iu New York. "Twenty -four hours, easy," was the instant reply. "This Is under war conditions, remember, which means that everything gives way to tbe movement of troops and their equip ment. Tbe railroads of America can handle men and war material of all kinds, including everything from horses aud men to Cannon and rations, much faster than they can be assem bled and delivered to us. In fact un der war conditions tbe railroads are prepared to do their part quicker and better, with more certainty and better speed, than any other part of tbe ma chinery, commercial or military. In America." Railroad Man's Magazine. Black Fridays. - In England the term Black Friday was first applied to Dec. 6, 1745, the day on which news reached London that' the pretender, Charles Edward, had reached Derby. . Again on May 11, 1800, when the failure of a large Eng lish discounting institution brought on a most disastrous panic, the day was called Black Friday. On the day of the suspension the Bank of England raised the rate of discount 0 per cent Wild speculation in gold in New York mid other cities culminated In a mone tary crash on Sept 16, 1875, that swept thousands of firms and Individuals Into financial ruin and caused a commercial depression that extended Into the eight ies of the last century; hence the origin of tbe term Black Friday in the United States. , To Make Red Ink. Red Ink Is easily made by amateurs wbo follow this recipe: Get a one ounce bottle and see that It Is perfect ly clean aud dry. riace In it one tea spoonful of aqua ammonia, gam arable tho siie of two pens and add six cralns of carmine. . Fill up tbe bottle with clear soft water, and after stand ing a little wbllu It will be fit for use. . She Thought of "Him. -Rho Oh. Mr. Borem, how do you do? I was talking to Mrs. Neidore lust now, and I couldn't help thinking of you. He And was she discussing me? She Not exactly. She waa com menting on tbe weather and just ed me if . I could Imagine anything more tiresome and disagreeables-Philadelphia Tress. . . - , . Ons Advantage. ' 1 ' "So you have adopted a ' baby to raise." we ask of onr friend. ."Well. It may torn out all right but don't you think you are taking chances V "Not a chance." he answers. "No matter how many bad" habits tbe child may develop, my wife csn't say be in herits any of tbem from my side of tbe bouse." life, r Tho Tie That Binds. : ' "I hove a cook now that took a col lege course In domestic science last summer." : .., "You seem enthusiastic, Mabel." . "Yes; I find we belong tolhe same secret society." Washington Herald. Rtpartoe. ' He (during tbe spat) Well, if you want to know it I married you for your money. She I wish I could tell as easllv 'What I married ypu for-Kx-change. - .- j.,.. . If Ignorance were only - bliss the world would be much happier. Mans field. The Senate paused tha Flood-Smith Statehood resolution with the ArixoDS judiciary re all eliminated. ' Buy it now. Now is the time to buy a bottle of Chamherlhin's Colic, Chol era and Diarrhoea Remedy,' It is 1 mint cpi t iin to be neede d before the summer is over. This reme !y has no superior. For Bule by all Dealers. - f ., . I t i HARDWARE Aim Building Ma terial Paints; Oils Varnishes American Field Fence L lew Vera, I. IV HENRY'S Prescriptions from all physicians, Quickly and Ac curately filled. Also a full line of Choice Toilet articles. ? ' Pharmacy . PHONE 173 , : FRESH SUPPLY WHITMAN'S CANDY y PHONE 66. FOR SALE ! Big Mammoth Soja Beans, Oats, Hay, - Cron, Brand, : Ship Stuff, Beet Pulp, Dis tillers Grain, which is the : highest in Proteids of any feed sold ; on this market, and produces milk in quan tities. . : BURRUS CO. 81 33 Middle St." - New Bern, N. Oj Phone 184. INSTITUTE- rOK BOTS. SMYaar. tmtr lot Cnllf, for Burtnoi, fo U, I !! Ckriitfea lilinM. I'M . mm4 "Ood'. Cmmxn U ftotlillta tt th. Bin. SMC Santtln Hit atuitanU Kkoterthlt. Horn .ritm n lUM, pWix-li-VM tt JUMTlaul mlnhood l.rtlll.4. AUlMK.ii tft. lamMn.tkl.a!koollanlnlilla(kOT to aa ?m tor. li..MmMl, LLsLlBW.rWNWa Ml It THE NORTH CAROLINA Slate jinl and Industrial Maintained by tho State for the Women of North Carolina! Five regular Courses, leading to-Degrees. Special Courses for ...... i. teachers. Free tuition to those who agree to become teachers in the State. Fall Session begins September 13. J91I. For catalogue and other information address JULIUS I. FOUST, President, -Greensboro, ' ; N. C. THE XOTRII CAROLINA COLLEGE OF A9R1GLTII"E A"D l:eeed8 ms: r TBI STATI'S LN'SUSTSIAL C0LLXCX Four-year courses In Agriculture; in Civil, Electrical, and Mechanical Engineering; in Industrial Chemistry; in Cotton Manufacturing and Dyeing. Two-year courses In Mechanic Arts and in Textile Art One-year coure in Agriculture. Those courses are both practical and scientific. Eiaminatinns for ailmi.'.nlon aie hclJ at all cour.ty anaU on Ju'y 13. For Ci.' J--? "'-" DAVIS Pin

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