"i I A v ft o VOL. X, NO 27 REIDS V1LLE, N. C SEPTEMBE R 2, 189S. SI PER YEA1 ri kil . . ( s Hardly compares in importance to our line of Paint, Artists', Clothes, Hair, Flesh, Face, Tooth, Nail AND ALL KINDS OF BRUSHES. We make prices which mak? quick sales. See our line at special prices. SAPP, the Leading Druggist AND SODAWATER MANi. Joo.W. ... " , - " . '. - 1 j Vi J 1 P h? J a j L preman of the Ford tin shop for the past 10 years, : is WITH S R. Q. Gladstone, in ' - -. - We make any kind of Flue you want an1 can guarantee Flues tp fit. ALL SIZES OF SHEET IRON IN STOCK. pall and examine our stock a nV for showing stock. All orders filled any CALL ON HE AT R. G. GLADSTONE S TIN SHOP , r. m i J. T. CARTER, Craghead St. All Kinds of machine work and j Most Complete Tlachine 1 in this 4 fy, . Orders solicited and satisfaction LUM Maanfacturers and wholesale dealers Sail, , blin Is, framing, d'-ors, shingles, l. IIeavr3' timber and factory bills i dried. liefore placing y ur orders Machine PITTS & BAIN, Successors to Wm. Love. VVar p'phontf charges on meps-ges from Lealvsville, pray. Wentworth, Ileidsvillc PEACE INSTITUTE, A ramoiiH Kelioel for Very pBn!c school of which I hae any knowledge." Illustrated; catalogue free to all who at'plj. i ; ,ee my', .Of T!ew Coods Era. H. CARTLAND, THE UP-TO-DATE j GREENSBORO TAILOR A pretty, new and nobby ings, Pants and Vests are pr ces are reasonable at all Gosh, That's a Dandy! ' xi ' : r -1 : ;' r J ' ' " : -''' "- tho man from "Srjeekunk" say?, when lie sees the rich and creamy foam that rises on a glass of our pure Draft Deer an our fine old I English Ale, and t.i.stc its delicious flavor. As a strengthening and toning beverage tlicre i nothing likea glass of our pure liigh grade Lager Heer, Ales and Belfast Stt.ut, Try, it. ' . E G Newcomb dj. Nat. Bank -y Greensboro, IN. C. Clark as the 5ame iGapacity get prices before buying. No charge day in the week. a- Xk PROPRIETOR, ft Danville, Va. I i -repairing promptly i executed. Shop and j Foundry section. s ! guaranteed on all work. in flooring.ceihng.siding, mouldings laths and all kinds of building rna- a specialty. AH .dressed lumber write us for prices : Raleigh. N. C. 2 thorough hii1 or liiftli RraUe. J AS. UISWIUIHE, !. d, I'rincipai. s-amples r- now On Hand.- - s . " line of goods for Suit always on hand and his times. Shops I yoyNyoAysvyx B E R ! A Sweet Scented Specimen. i Rocky Mt. Argroiiaat. Among tho flotsam and jetsam washed on our shores by the waves of the unspeakable fusion, confu sion crowd who now disgrace North Carolina "J udge" Spencer B. Adams shines out as a ,4gem of purest ray serene.' It would take a tough one to disgrace the party who placed this sweet specimen on the Superior court bench, but we think that hon or (?) can be claimed by Adams. ; In his recent . charge of the grand jury at Columbus court this unspeakable creature told the grand jury at Co lumbus court that rape was merely a minor offence, a lesser one than seduction.- Can this - country descend anv lower in the depths! Can this poor old State drink deeper of the water of humiliation? The Bible says: "Whom the liord loveth He chas teneth." Then He surely must lore I the State of North Carolina, fori His hand has been very heavy on i lately., ' . . " ,, To Issue A Large Campaljn Paper. ' About the 10th of September we propose to issue a large campaign paper, fully illustrated, and con taining a complete review of negro rule in North Carolina and of the maladministration of public affairs under the present regime. It will be the strongest paper ever issued in the advocacy of white man's government. There will be 50,000 copies issued, alldwiug an average of 500 to each county, and they will be sent di rectly to the county chairman : for distribution, - ; Tbe chairman of each county is requested to begin at once and pro cure the names of 500 voters to whom they will Bend these papers; and he is turther requested to pre pare in advance the stamped wrap pers and have everything in readi ness to send the papers out. The cost will be small to each county and the money should be raised at once to pay this postage. It is sug gested that Democrats in every township shall send at once a list of names to the county chairmen, Capt. S. A. Ashe will assist in pre paring this paper. i F. M. Simmoxs. Ch'm'n. r Vance on the Negro. Zeb Vance,in a memorable speech in the United States Senate before his death, January 30th, 1890, in speaking of the negro as a cit'zen and office-holder in the South, he said: . - "Since their admission to citizen ship they have been elected to both branches of Congress and have oc cupied almost every position under Scate authority. They have con trolled entire states, counties and municipalities and in every instance their rule was marked by failure and ruin. It was a War ? against property, intelligence and respecta bility. : The few years of their mis rule in the south will be forever remembered in our history for their corruption, retrogression and will constitute a damnable blot on those who authorized it, and who looked on with complacency so long as the thieves were Republicans, the victims were Democrats." Ox ford Public Ledger. Indoors and Out. "My health was very poor and I suffered from dizzy spells, rheuma tism and weak nerves. I did not care to live in such Ja condition. Hood's Sarsaparilla has changed all this. -It has completely cured me and I am now able to work hard indoors and out." Mrs. John A. Lively. Dallas, West Virginia. Hood's Pills are the favorite fam ily cathartic. Easy ' to take, easy to operate. 25c. , Tuesday, Nov. 8th, the Date of Election. There appears to be some misap prehension as to . the time of the election this fall. ; For the benefit of any who may be in doubt or who rn'iy le laboring under a mistaken idea we would state that the law provides that the election shall oc cur on the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November not on the first Tuesday.although it would be the first Tuesday in any year except when, as it does this year, the first day of the month is on Tuesday. To boil this down the election this year will occur on Tuesday, November 8th. Winston Sentinel. 0 THE EXCELLENCE OF SYRUP OF FIGS is due not only to the originality and simplicity of the combination, but also to the care and skill with which it is manufactured by scientific processes known to the California Fig Sykup Co. only, and we wish to impress upon all the importance of purchasing the true and original remedy. As the genuine Syrup of Figs is manufactured by the California Fig Svkup Co. only, a knowledge of that fact will assist one in avoiding the worthless imitations manufactured by other par ties. The high standing of the Cali fobnia Fig Strup Co. with the medi cal profession, and the satisfaction which the genuine Syrup of Figs has given to millions of families, makes the name of the Company a guaranty of .the excellence of its remedy. It is far in advance of all other laxatives, as it acts on the kidneys, liver and bowels without irritating or weaken ing them, and it does not gripe nor nauseate. In order to get its beneficial effects, please remember the name of the Company California fig syrup co. SAN FLlS CISCO, CaL LOUISVILLE, Kr, JiEW TOKK K.T Judge Adams at Home. Milton Herald. We blush to comment upon these two charges, and are sorry that BU'h language originated from a judicial bench. We refrain com ment on the first clause that "nine times out of ten if you chase down the fellows who " are going about trying to stir up race prejudice you will find them sleeping .with a ne gro woman," only to say that it was a willful and maliciously false charge upon the-purity, virtue and intelligence of our State; for such compose the thousands who are working for white supremacy in our country. But as to the charge that rape was a lesser crime than seduction, but for the seriousness of the state ment afld consetiuences involved, it would be ; ridiculous aS it is, it not only shows depravity, but a lack of the. first' principles of law and equity; While we are no lawyer, yet common sense teaches us that in the case of seduction the seducet". and the seducer Hre always on the same moral level ; and, further, that the seducer is as apt to be the wo man as the man, and m all ca es the seduced is a party to the xirime. But the origin and the act of rape lies only in the polluted mind and brutal power of the fiend, which may, . and more often, does, mani fest itself against the most unsus pecting - victim. It is a hell-born desire, . created by lustful passion and enforced by brute "strength against purity and helplessness regardless of the submission of its victim. And is just as apt to take as its victim yom wife, your daugh ter or your sister, as 'ti3 a depraved wretch. Away with such teaching. A school boy who could interpret law no better than this ought to be expelled from the primary class, and the judge who wculd not, ought to be driven from the bench as un fit to deliver a charge to an intelli gent and virtuos jury; : The Spanish Language. Winston Journal. It is remarkable how the schools of the United States 1. a ve neglected bpanish. it is the language of Mex ico, our next door neighbor, with whom we have had for many years large dnd increasing commercial re lations. The extent of the trade relations that Winston has with Mexico and Cuba too, is quite larare. the Salem Iron Works sells a great aeai or macninery, engines and cof fee hullers, and Winston tobacco i3 well known m Mexico and South American countries. it seems strange that the importance of a Knowledge or the Spanish language has not been recognized by our ed ucators long ago. ."-.- The Salem Academy has been teaching it for years to the girls and we see that the Normal College at ureensooro, nas added Spanish to its course of study, but Spanish to a girl H an accomplishment, and v ill do . almost as much practical good for commercial purposes as the regulation by-the United States government, whereby Spanish has been taught at West "Point, to the soldiers who are not supposed to travel, while at Annapolis, the naval officers who frequently visit Spanish speaking countries have hot been instructed at all. Our assured control of Porto Rico and the certainty that we will exert: a controlling influence in Cuba has opened our eyes to the necessity for the popular study of Spanish. -There are at present few-persons in the United States, even among those we call highly educated who know; anything about it. When Cervera's letter to the Hobson f m- ily reached Greensboro, Ala., there was not a person in that cultivated community who could read it. Had it been written in Latin, French. Greek or Hebrew no difficulty would have been found in having it translated. - The school of Atlanta has ordered Spanish to.be taught in the princi pal public schools, and on account of Winston's especial interest in Spanish speaking countries, the Journal suggests to Superintendent Blair that a course in Spanish be added to the Graded School corri culum. ' - . Obituary. Mrs. Lessie Williamson Lambeth quietly fell asleep, at the home of her husband, J." E. Lambeth, Au gust I7th, 1898. . At the early age of six years old she was distinguished among her schoolmates by the remai kable genius she displayed, and endeared to them by her winning ways.sweet disposition and warmth of heart, was thus - early the ' admiration of her companions and the pride of her home "circle.? At the time of which I write her home was in the country. In her heart the influence of religious associations took early and deep root and the transcript of this lieart, at tne time of which 1 write, is an evidence that they had given an elevated and a healthy tone to a character-which otherwise might have been morbid and unfit ted for domestic life. From this early age I have watch ed the hallowing and subduing in fluence of an unaffected trust in a Heavenly Father and an apprecia tion of the realities of life which ever preserved her through the very painful changes of six homes. Even more closely did I scrutinize her after her entrance into her fifth home amid the attractions and f aci nations of a gay city life at the age of seventeen. Sixteen months ago was added to her the sacred trust of wife and mother, : and that claim and the claim of dependent childhood, with nervous prostrations, all the while almost entirely, and of necessity debarred attention to religious exr ercise as well as social commune. To those who knew her, best and loved her most I can only say we should . more willingly give her back to God, feeling reconciled that we have one more agent in the courts of Heaven. , A Friend. The rolling wheel gathers the punctures. The Korai is tbe highest grade bakiag powder fcaawa. Ac tea I teats show it goea . tUr4 1 artier Utaa say ether bratf. 4a fa Absoluts: l-ur roy At. imm roweca eo mew vomt. Department of Law Postponed. The , trusti es of Trinity College College have not been able to ar range for the department of law, as they desired. - It is the purpose or the trustees to organize a law school on a broad basis, and to employ only the best talent in the law fac ulty. The Executive Committee has done everything It could to carry out the wishes of the trustees, but has not been able to do so, and they therefore think it best to postpone the organisation of this department to another year, and hence they make this announcement to the public. Respectfully, E. J. Pabrish, Ch'm'n; Executive Committee. What tbe War Will Have Cost the laitcd States. Kevtev of Reviews. . ' The maintenance of garrisons in the indefinite future, after the con ditions of peace have been perma nently fixed, may not be charges ble directly as a part of the cost of the war, but will be one of its ne cessary consequences. It will be interesting to consider the probable amount of both actual war expen ses and garrison expenses up to the present fiscal year on June 30, 1890. It will then have been determined whether the Philippine Islands are to. remain in the permanent posses sion of the United States, and it will be time to charge garrison ser vice in our new dependencies and the increase of the navy to the per manent cost of the new" foreign policy which may then have been adopted. If the direct war expen ditures were $91,000,000 at the close of July an i will be $25,000,000 more at the close of August, it is proba ble that they will have increased by $15,000,000 more during the two months of September and October. This will make the direct cost of the war lasting for less than four months, but involving heavy expen rturs for more than six months $161,000,000. The charges for ganison service for the eight in'mths from the close of October to the close of June can not yet be stated with precision, te cause the President has not yet de termined how large a garrison wiil be required, in any of the former Spanish colonies. It is a reasonable estimate, however, that 25,000 men at least will be required in each of the three leading colonies perhaps a few less in the peaceful island of Porto Rko and a few more in Cuba or the Philippines. Nearly all of this force will be in excess of the former strength of the regular ar my, : which will be returned to it frontier and coast stations. A part of the service will be performed by the Regular army because of the in crease of its membership from 25, 0C 0 i o 6 1,000 men," but the net in crease1 of force above the old peace establishment will probably be 75, 000 men and may be greater. The navy will also oe considerably in creased over the peace footing of a year ago and will call for larger ex penditures for officers, men, coal, and incidental equipment. It -i is hardly probable that these expen- i tses, including those for the civil government of the colonies, can be Icept much within $15,000,000 per month. For eight months this would add $120,000,000 to the amount already charged to the di rect cost of the war, and would make its incidental cost up to June 30, 1899, $281,000,000. It may be cut a little below this, but in any case will hardly fall below $250, 000,000. - . ' A man has to have pluck to make a suc cess of any calling. A man must have the backbone to take knock-down blows and get up again and again and fight on. Pluck and stamina are largely a question of good health. It only takes one knock down blow to finish a man with a headache. It only takes a small setback to disconcert a nervous and shaky man. A bilious, head achy man goes into bankruptcy at the firBt embarrassment. A nervous man who does not sleep at night and gets up shaky in the morning gives up the battle of business at the first discouragements - Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery is the best of all health-makers and health-keepers. It snakes pure, rich blood. It forces out all impurities and disease germs. It does not make any difference what the disease may be called, so long as it has its inception in improper or insufficient nourishment this great medicine will cure it. It may be called dyspepsia, kidney disease, 'liver complaint," skin or blood diseaseor nerv us prostration all these have the same starting point. The "Golden Medical Dis covery" reaches that point It will cure these diseases absolutely. None of them can retain their hold on the system when the arteries are filled with rich, pure blood. " I am 54 years old," writes Mr. P. O. Bledaoe, of Leeavvlle, Henry Co., Mo. " For 5 J suffered from torpid liver, constipation and indi gestion which severely affected my nerves. Hav ing to make my living by hard work, I would keep on until I would havt to give up. Some times my friends would pick me up and carry me to bed. What little sleep I could get was tortured with horrible dreams. I took six bottles of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. It relieved the paim la my back and betweea my ahouldera. tmccd in t nerves, and to-day Z am a wed man." . . o . They're Cftfilftjf Back. Concord Standard. We are greatly encouraged" with the news that all over the county where there are Populists the Dem crats will make appreciable gains. The Populists are beginning to see their greit mistake and are getting themselves right. Many will come straight into the Democratic con vention,' others will vote the ticket, and some that have been rather ve hement in their advocacy will take little interest in the election. It seems to beo all over the State. Any w;hy not ? Surely it is enough. - . 9 A Few Bright Ones. Augusta (Oa ) Herald. Perhaps. August! may be "sprin ting for a record. What Americans, Like. Dewey for President is being talked a great deal just how. No one knows how he stands on the financial plank but all know that he is a level-headed man, and a hard hitter. That is what Americans like. " Not In It. It may have been no ticed that; those who started in to fight the War over again were not in it during tho actual hostilities. It Was a Frost. The Philippines may be warm enough, but Aguinal do has met with a severe frost. Why Doesn't Het Dewey should come home and find out what the people did to Hobson. Lost Its Voice. Even Weyler's typewriter has lost its voice. Not Invited. Camafa did not surrender, but he was not asked to do so. , - J2L When they put a man in jail, he cannot follow his natural inclina tions. He cannot eat what he wants to he is limited to a very ifrugal diet. Islt not equally true of a dyspepti For all of the real en joymenthe gets out of life, he might aswell be in jail. He cannot eat what Jie likes, nor enough He suffers much, gets little sympathy. At first, perhaps a little heaviness in the stomach, a little sourness, windy belchings and heartburn ; headaches and biliousness and a foul taste in the mouth in tbe morning Chronic constipation is almost inevitable, and means that the body js holding poisonous, im pure matter that should be gotten rid of . The poison is being reab sorbed into tbe blood and the whole body. Impurity in the blood may lead to almost a.y disease. Consti pation is the start of it all. Dr. Pierce's rPleasant Pellets cure con stipation,; cure it so it stays cured. No other remedy in the world will do that. a Send 21 cents in one-cent stamps to World's Dispensary Medical As sociation Buffalo, N. Y., and re ceive Dr. Pierce's 1008 page Com mon ese ; Medical Adviser, illus trated. , The Retura Movement. Charlotte Observer. Here are two very helpful and pleasant items irom our Monroe contemporaries of last week. The first is from The Enquirer: "Since last Tuesday we have add ed ten Populists to our list of con verts. Welcome, gentlemen, to the old Democratic party. Such a turn in g back has not been known since 1876. It is a daily occurrence for men to come in and voluntarily an nounce that they are done with Populism, Radicalism and f usion."" The next is from The Journal: ; "Esquire M. L. Flow who left the Democratic party four years aco, informs us that he has come back to his old love to stay. He says the doss and ring rule of fusion is too much for him. Mr. Flow has been perhaps the most- intelligent and best posted Populist m the county. He has for a long time been corres pondent in Monroe for Our Home, but has sent m bis resignation." I;Our Home which is to all inlents and purposes a Republican paper is one of those which have been clamoring for the name of a Popu- lst wno n as returned to the Demo cratic party.- It has the-name of one. . above, and it will be rather embarrassing to it to explain that he is a member of its own staff. Pointed Paragraphs. Chicago News. Brilliant lies dazzle more eyes than gems of truth. " Some things in moderation are worse than others in excess. Some men resemble dice easily rattled but hard to shake. Nothing curdles the milk of hu man kindness like indifference. . There are times when the brave deserve immunity' from :he fair. IThere is nothing quite so unin terestingtas a human phonograph. A homelike hotel is the ki: d the average man tries to avoid. The road to happiness and the road to misery frequently run par allel. - : . : . You cap often judge a woman's character? by the men Bhe doesn't know. The wife who chases her husband with a poker rules him with a rod of. iron,. :,',-' The good luck of their friends worries - ome people more than anythinglse. Some men have a delicate sense of humor and the humor of others is senseless. s A man in love loses his self- possession in trying to pet posses ion of another, Practice makes perfect. - The older a woman is the better she should carry her age. A girl's frame of mind Las less to do with her reflections than the frame that holds her mirror. - Some men are so energetic in attempting to take things philosoph ically that they become prema turely sotired. ' There are some problems beyond the scope of the human mind, and wise is the man who is wiling to let it go at that. That Negro Editorial. . The following is from a letter received by the Wilmington Star from one of the prominent and re liable citizens of Duplin county: 'In GoldiSboro, on Wednesday, the 21th inst., I overheard a negro poli tician say to other negroes that the editorial in the Daily Record of the 15th would cost the fusionists 25. 000 to 30.000 votes in the coming election." . August by the Sad Sea-Side. Sweet August, sloppiest month of all the year, why do you vex us with these antics queer? Can health and plenty cheer the laboring swain so long as you pour down such seas of rain? Dear lovely 6howers of innocence and ease at length have lost their ancient power to please, and no man can now loiter o'er the green unless he takes a heavy can vas screen. No more the village train, from labor free, lead up their sports beneath the spreading tree, but in their sheltered cots, with words profane, unite to scold the "weather man" in vain. Kind Au gust, gladly wtiuld we sit and stew beneath your old-time skies of clear, hot blue! Give ear, sweet month; have pity as we pray we are too rich on forty floods a day I Win ston Journal. A Business Proposition. We think no business man can question the fact that it is practical common sense fpr the business men of a town to patronize home people when at all jioesible. "United we stand, divided we fall,-" is just as applicable to a community as to a nat on. '.- We say that the principle is right in all cases; but when it comes to patronizing a newspaper which is working in season and out of season for the benefit of a town and the upbuilding of its business interests,' it looks as if a failure to do so is the very height of folly. A well patronized newspaper can do very . much better work than one that has not the support of its citizens. A live town is known by the support it gives its local paper. Rocky Mount Argonaut. Cycrnf Dint's. Don't sit erect; it is too good for your health.' Don't try to knock a street car over with your bicycle until you've practiced on pedestrians. Don't take the other man's bike when leaving. It may be . a better make than yours; but it's safer to take your own. If in a race , a rider falls in front of you, don't stop to be graceful in dismounting. Get off the best way you can without losing time. Don't use cyclometers if you want to preserve your temper and integ rity. Don t come down a steep hill without a break, you may break your head. Don't be nervous when you meet a young lady acquaintance. Smile confidently, take off your cap with either hand, or both, and choose a soft place to fall. Don't ride at less than thirty miles an hour if you are passing a horse and carriage. It is so re freshing to the nerves of the horse, if the animal is a little high spirited. . The Romance of War. A young soldier who was wheel ing a barrow full of earth at one of the camps the other day said: "I tell you, I have lost all my brilliant ideas about the romance of war." What a pity it is that any one ever gets such ideas. A soldier in war times is a dirty, tired, half sick man who rarely gets an opportun ity to take off. his clothes, who sleeps in wet. clothes or a ditch, who -a -a 1 wal ks ana waiKS ana wants in route step and without music in hot weather in blinding dust who drinks fouled water and eats ever lasting beans, and who finds rest in a hospital or in a trench. . Some times he comes home, and like all people who have been through troublesome experiences, likes to talk about them. It sounds quite heroic but the man who goes out to war with the notion that he is to enjoy the romance of it is going to be fooled. Only those who sit at home and read about the battlfcs get any of the romance. The fight ing men get the realty. There is a vast difference between the two. : Miraculous Benefit RECEIVED FROM Dr. Miles' New Heart Cure ELI P. BABCOCK, of Avoca. N. Y., a veteran of the 3rd N. Y. Artillery and for thirty years of the Babcock & Munsel Carriage Co.,' of Auburn, says: MI write to express my gratitude for the mirao lous benefit received from Dr. Miles' Heart Cure. I suffered for years, as result of army life, from sciatica which affected my heart In the worst form, my limbs swelled from the ankles up. I bloated until 1 was unable to button my clothing; had sharp pains about the heart, smothering spells and shortness of breath. For three months I was unable to lie down, and all the sleep I got was in an arm chair. I was treated by the best doctors but gradually grew worse. About a year ago I commenced taking Dr. Miles' New Heart Cure and It saved my Ufa as if by a miracle." f 1JI wucs muiijuiua are Bold by all drug gists under a positive guarantee, first bottle benefits or money re funded. Book on dis eases of the heart and f nerves free. Address, - D3. 111LE3 MEDICAL. CO., LULart, 1- Nurseries Grows ali Idn !" Fruit and Ornnni Trees, Vines, Plnnt, AH tlie new ami rare kit. ' fruits, such a the wonderful Greensboro Pc::cl SNEED, TRIUnPIf, and many more new and rare ki;; ; All tho leading kinds of A- Pear, Plum, Cherry, and Nut Lc iri trees, small Iruits, etc., etc. Ify want to plant anything in the nzy Fruit or Ornamental Trees, Vi:. 5 c Plants write to Q. L. ANTHONY PROPRIETOR. Vandalia, N. C. Near Green L ra Southern -Bailvr THE . . . STANDARD RAILWAY OF TflE SOUTH. The Direot Line to All Points. TEXAS, CALIFORNIA, FLORIDA, CUBA AND PORTO RICO Strictly FIRST-CLASS Equip. ment on all Through and Lo cal Trains; Pullman Palace Sleeping Cars on all Night Trains ; Fast and Safe Sched ules. Travel by the Southern an 1 you are assured a Safe, Com fortable and Expeditious Jour ney. Apply to Ticket Amenta for Tlm Tat.!.-n, Kales and Ueoeral Information. or ad Ire- K, L. VERNON, F. R.DAKET, T. H. A., C. J'.iT, A.. Charlotte, K. C. Auhevlile, ?'. C. No Trouble to Answer yueHtloim. FRANK 8 HANSON. J.M.CLXl', 8a V. f . den. Man. Traf . Man. W. A. TUi'.K, O.P. A. Waahing-ton. V. C. M G FITE'i: STABLE0, Scales Street, Formerly King's Stables, Fine turnouts, speedy horses and careful drivers. Open at all hours. Terms Reasonable We are aho prepard to do all kinds of hauling Patronage solicited., n o FITZ, PROP. One Minuts. It will take you just about one minute to read what wo want to tell you hero. You all know our reputation for Belling First-CIaco Ghocc AT LOWEST PRICED. We have an assortment of ladies' black and tan colored Oxford Ties. We want to close them out, so down the price goes. Please call and see them before sizen are broken and remember that Lower Prices Await You. T700TT0N BROS. Iteidsville, N. C, July 7, ICC 3. Oak Ridge Institiito, Nearly 50 Years of Con tinuous Succcrs. 279 Students Lr.ct The largest and best cqu'j vate fitting school in the to r lish.the Classics. !Iat!.;: 1 keeping. Short-Land, Typewriting, lerrr.src-. catalogue, ad d res 3 J A 1 LI II 1 r n '.rr (t-