LAND 5ALE
Fyvlrfii-rfth i.w-r ( f.l r. i'""" "
a iked f Trust H. ul.'d 10 m l.y K O
? Jnirr. of dat January Ib. ' duly
with. ! Khali, at, tb cmirt boie door iu tlm
town of W entworlli.itl I'oon.o"
MoiHlsy. the lSlli dayof Jul.f, 1001,
Wtl for ranh to tbe lilKhrM i.inurr.
tract
Hiikatoa.-h.-Kli.iit Miiiii;UiirB.iiinr"..
Je..iih-i''"- r"' ,r,l." u,r."f,.r
to aladiaon hy ay of Klliuactc.n bM
wi.h th road imrt h XI I I . MM; ' "
' r to Hurw...l ,.h.t.-rs; 1 ! h
it-4 went Hi 1-OI.-8 to Hi.' Avory Bakr im
I lilt" oak; tliei.- north Sit 1 II ea.t I'"'' , !
X urwiNHl:' th.-m- south. 4M
IMS a.irHH . uior
May, Wi
ll. K. N-UTT.Trut',.
LAND SALE.
Ky virtu.' of an or.l.-r of III" 'ii"'H; r court
of ko. kinKhan. fonnty North ''" ';
aperial .re.Mlim.' iitH.l J. W. sal r n M,
Adm'r. of T, J. Mnllfy. h'i-iimMl, vh. (lilca O.
Mot ky arid otn.-rs, I will, on :
Tuesday, tlic I'Jth day of July, VM,
In front, of th Hank of K-I.IhvIII, In th
town of KeltlHvl I". N O.. ,vm to ali at
vax.Ui-. auction to lh Mwh.-al hlddder ;a ll of
land In sahl county. a.ljolninK tho lamls f
Mr A. K. Montgomery and othura, on lh
Kant I1 of KaMl. Mark.-t . Htreot III ald lowii.
lH.undd f-'"1"": H-cH"l"lt point
,rkPd In th Kt tu front of lh hrl. k
dwpllliiK formerly .icmniicd hy l
... . 1,. tlil'lll't- Si Itll II II Ht
ltHtat
ffHl tO
Htahl lot;thenc KhI I' fent to MM A. K
MontKOtliery'H Hue; thence North. IIM feet
with hT lln to HUke; theiictf Weal, IM J"
to atake;theiiC Kouth 21 feel; lhonc WchI
m feet to the l.e!"""'. containing one half
of an acre, more or lexB, and ticlutftne
lot of land lai'l olf to InlfHtatH aa IiIm home
Hlead KXemi-tion. .Suhject, however, to the
dower rlrht of Mrs. Mary S. ftlulley, wnlow
of InleHtatH. Terma ckhIi.
. Tli Id June Hlh. l!l4. . , ,
' i. W. HATTKKPI KI.J, Adm'r
0 of T.J. Motley, ilcc(!iH(Ml,
ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE.
1 ltnvl ft Hllintll iMtratlon unon the eHtatw
t' rv H. Hutclieron, deceased, having
Indued to In a iinderHltfiied from th Hiiii;nor
court, of Rockingham county, notice (a
hurehy iflveu to all: jitirnoiiB linlettd to Bald
catatw to imike Immedlalw imyment. and all
thwlr recovery Ttna in in nay m
law W. J. HIirvHKKSON Adm'r.
Mra. Mary H. HutcliHraou, de.o'J
ISTotico
Hinf nnalltlwd n Administrator on tlifl
em Hie il Jullft l.ynn. deceaMed. notlcn la
licrehy kWcii to all iierHona ln,lehtd to aald
pBtalB to m in" forward and Bettle the aanie
at once, and all jmrBoiia havlnn claiina aalnt,
..dM aita to ureHenl t hem to the under-
luiioit tor i.Rvinent on or hefore the 17th
day "'of JuiiA,' lnft, or thla notice will he
Kiemu.l in liar of tlictr recovery.. Thla the
Vi.h it,., i .ii.na l4. I.. J. LYNN.
A.lmlii'Hlrainr of Julia Lynn, dee'd,
' Hotl & Rcld, Attorneya.
NOTICE.
roil ki:i.st:k ok k:in.
1 hereby announce myself a candidate fo
the nomination for KeitlHterof UeedH, suhjeel
to the action of the lieinneratlo county con-
ventlon. i have -been a life-Mine resident i
N.w Iteiliel towiiBhin. and all thla time
loval Democrat. If liomiiinted and elected I
will discharge the duties of t lie oltlce faithful
l it mid to t he tieMt, of uiy ahlllty.
A. Ham Uarrult.
U.oii, N.C.lVUy 18.
; I hereby aiinoiince mvaelf a candidate to
the .nomination oi HeKlster of Deeds of
Hottklntrham conn ty, nii hjlecl, tu the act Ion of
the re Hilar imcratii) rliiirlea ami con
vent Inn. Mr re.'iinl as a iiarty man ib a
open hook and th 1 dutte of the oltlce will h
illncharKed faithfully If 1 aui uouiinated an
tilecteil. J I- UL.ivr.it
K.r 0.1, Madison.
To the Di'iiioiirallt! .voter of lltxtkliiKham
i'ihi nl v: I take IhlH linM li"(l nf Hliiioiiiniill
mysHit a amtltatH fur olllce of Ht'KiKtor el
IMimIh lor Kuc.kiiiKliHiii county, ii lijt'ct to th
(M'.tloii of the coiiveiilion. If noiiioiatcd and
eloirleil you kIhiII Imvf ho fmilt to II lid With
ruy adlnliilHtratiuii of the olllce
UHiiit'.lfullv. el.
U. W.MWtTl.N
MadlHOii. May 1. IsHU.
FEMALE
WEAKNESS
Ml-a Oongremi Ht.
FuMXANn, .vIaimh, Oot. 17, U01.
I oontttdnr Wiuu of Curd u I nuprior
to ha doutor'a modluluo I ever utei
Mil I know whereof 1 xpeuk. I uf
tomd fur nine iiumtliB with Buppremed
inmrutioii wlmih ooniiiletely proi
krtttiodiua. Puins would utioot liirouKh
tay biwk and niili.i itud I would hav
bilniliuii httdi;bn. My liiuba would
await u mid 1 would fuel o weak I
oould not Btaiul up. I naturally felt
duooui'Ked lor I umimed to be beyond
the help of phymmaiiH, but Wine of
Onrdul omue a a Uod-Mund to me. I
felt a ohaiiKU for the butUir within a
week. After nineteen day treatment
I uienatruMted without aufferlnK the
anouiea I uauallydld and aoon became
reffulkr and without pain. Wine of
Crdul ia aimply wonderful and I wink
that all anffering wouieu knew of tu
food qualities.
Treaiurar, Portland Eoouuuiio Loagua
Terioilical hnailachrs h'll of fe
rn alo wuaknoNH. Wino of Cunlui
curpa permammtly iiiiutwn out of
every twenty casi'8 of irri'Kulur
nienscu, bcarintf down fr.iun or
any female weakmws. If yon are
disoouraptod and diK-tora huve
failud, that in thu Uest reason in
the world you should try Wine of
Cardui now. KiimmhT that
httadacheu mean fi'malu wfaknoss.
Sncure a 11.00 hottln of W ine of
Cardui today.
V
V
Went wort It towiiliii..BijiMin..R ...
R ii Kel.l J. V. Iiisley. ' It MttrhHI and
at two'whiU aks. Av-ry BakWn lliu. outh
Wlel Ml .lea to a hirko-T Ml-liM
(I m... .. nf
., Ul IIU II 111 Itlt Ml ,..'.
nmmrrn. hhm
oerBOiis holilInK cihiuih aKin"i. bi'i "
!,rent theul to th iiiid.THl(fiirt for iaymint,
duly irovet., on or hefora Ihn .Wih of Junn.
m, or thla tiollce will l. pleiided In har of
Nuilce la h're,liv iilven that, "Millcatlon
will he made by the Board of comity Com
xi tHHioiiera of Knckliiffhnm county for the
Vil-iion of Charles (sIiwmIm, cuuvlctud of lar-
couy l yebruary tHr'"j .Thcalbh.c.b.0
too cm
I. IK 1
Continued from first page.
of liquor out of the State except iu in
oniorated towns, readily cOnncluding
hat what nine-tenths of .the State al
ady enjoyed and demanded, was
ood for the other tenth. It wisely
onsidered that the appetites of men
not being under the control of lejtisla-
ion, they would obtain liquor to a
moro or less extent. It therefore pro-
ided that liquor could be maimfact-
red and sold in the towns, but even
icfo it could only l done by iwrmis-
of the towns. The
for the passage i
" - i
Watts law, and the reason
which ouplit to satisfy and will finally
satisfy every right thiukiiiK man was
n. io.iiif.iftiirn and sale of
LflUb mi'. 7 I
innor in the country was a constant
..... nnA rtxrr I
menace to ino ihwi, ijui;h u' n" i
rder of the country. Tho towns and
ities maintain a police forco and thus
, ,. , nnA tmL't, rliol...... it... fivth.tiiu.iu nr il lnw Kiitr. in th,1
are enauieu w nuiu mm
An,..i.,rt frnm ilrtnikciinesH. There
VJICI Hwniup, f'MH
is no riolice force iu tho country and
i.a e.h in not rirotuired to ltiaintaiii (
I 1, I'UIW " ..." V ' J -
Thero is no greater menace to
the nuiet and cood order oi any com-
inanity tlian a whiskey still and a bar
room. No man w ill deny this. We
....... ni.topo.t ntwui mi educational
... . ,1
.,.....w...i.r in th s Stat winch Is seeK-1 1
,,t. rmlv to oiHUi the door of the I
- :
' " . . . , .
.,..l-,l liiinun to werv child. lUt t,0
nv-mn r nvwv v v - j ........ , , . .
H.rsuado and influence every child to
liter that school house. There art
men Who nave seen a scmnn uumim
...i i .
in a town close by a bar room or a
uiiil but, no man has ever vet seen a
school grow up and prosper 'by the
side of a whiskey still or a bar room in
tho . country. The Legislature there
fore was confronted with the question
whether they should open and main
tain school houses in tho country for
children, or whiskey stills and bars
for tho men. The Legislature mado
itH r-hnl and tho neonlo will ratify it
at the imiIIs. In my judgment this act
u nnn of t.hn best evor passed by any
Legislature. The conditions justified
it The riemftiitls oi toe TOOiuo re
quired it and the results have proven
beneficial. With the passage of the
years it will be found to have boon a
most effective agency in the cause of
teiuiHsranco
Ono other thing which tho Kepubh
cans attack is the management of the
Atlantic & North Carolina Railroad
I wish to Bay emphatically in connoc
tion with this matter that the Atlantic
& North Carolina railroad has been
better conducted under the present ad
ministration and ia: in better condition
Mmn ever heforo'in its history. The
receipts of tho road have nearly doubl
od under the present management. The
mud hod is in excellent repair. The
rolling stock was never in so good con
dit ion. Tho facilities for transacting
tho business of the road have been
greatly increased. Tho road earuod
last year $75,829.17 over and above 'all
oiieratiiig oxponsoB and , fixed charges.
The earnings in excess ot those ex
ponsos and charges have for several
years boon put into tho betterment of
tho road. In pursuing this policy the
manatroiuont has beeii awaro that it
to roap, hut for the final Rood of all
, ' !n Tbn kMpU
has pcrHoverd in tho work. Tho stock
to-day is worth and wiling for twice
as much aR it was tho day that I was
inaugurated as Governor of the State
It was not bringing more than a." at
that tiino, d is today selling readily
at I50. An investment of 25 three
years ago would today bring a man
$.')(), an annual increase of 8iJ 13 per
..,.... Wl.tli (In. utiM.lt in flin SrHitlinrn
the
Atlanta fWr. T.inn ftnrl the Penn-
sylvania railroadH has been steadily
dec.liniiiB. that of tho Atlantio &
North Carolina has kion steadily ad
vancing! While tlie interest of the
State and the private stockholders has
thus been subserved by doubling tho
value of their stock, tho service to the
people along the line and to thoso hav
ing occasion to use tho road, has been
in every way of the liost. - Every com
mercial traveler who has been travel-
(lw Mfiilo fnr tho liiwh ton voilfN
mi t.i ..... i. '.n,wit.fni
will ltoar test i 'tion v to tho wonderful
liinirnviiniiiMl', nf tho Atlimtio North
VlltUitun avwv nVMu -.,v
years. Every ahipiwr along the lino
of, the road is plaesed with the dis
,mt1 aint tho orcolliinco nf the Horvio.e
performed. During my entire term of
ofllcolhave received no complaint
from any stockholder nor from any
director of any wrong doing concern
ing tin road. The only complaint
ever mado to mo by a stockholder was
to tho effect that I would not agree to
lease the road at a figuro below what
I considered its true valuo. Less
than twp yours ago the highest offer for
tho road was por cent. Today I
have throo oifors averaging more than
5 per cent., and I am satisfied that the
road can ho leased at from 5 to fi ior
cent, as soon as it comes completely
into the Control of the stockholders
again. If these undeniable facts show
iu iMiwuagumuiiU-Xor;uptiou.jQLincni:
cienoy, then what must be said of the
management of the Southern, the At
lantio Coast Line and the Peunsylva
ui systems? -",
Early .i in litis year whilo,proiosi
tions to lease were being considered hy
me, upon application of a person who
was not a stockholder and wl)o never
had been a stocklder, hut who entered
into a contract to purchase stock in a
road which he alleged was bein mis
managod and to pay moro than twice
as much for it as had ever been paid
for 'any of its stock, this valuable
projierty in which the State owns two
thirds of the stock, was thrown into
the hands of a receiver by a Federal
court without notice. An investi;a
tion into the facts of t he case lefore
the Chief Justice of North Carolina,
at my instance, resulted in showing
that the plaintiff did not own tht
stock on which ho based his suit; that
he had never owned any stock anil
that ho had this contract to purchasi
made the stock at twice its then
value. Of course this suit was djs
missed and the road restored to its
owners. Subsequently another bill
was tiled in the nanie of a former
stockholder who at the tinio of tiling
.
. .1 i A iinf r.fi,irnl liiu otnob
mu nm m .....
Ho claimed to own only thirty-seven
shares, which even at ir, would not
ij .
Circuit Court of tho United MatoB. 1
unused an ettort to hunuvie to pur
iiise his stock, but no oeciinoa to
consider any proposition for it pur
'. . . .
cnase. no woum nun. j m.
stock in a road in which ho alleged
the management was bad. inefficient
nd lawless! The difference between
ti:..nl,l. in, f nnil Ciiir iirU Wad
111,11 a v-j"- "".
... , , . . , . . , . t l.
men jrougni ins suit oouue i.u
t...i
ciminu ui "j
brought h,s alter he nad lose co.unn
. .. - - . . ,
ot it. i iiey were lMHii pujipcis iu mi:
n . ml I . 1 . l ...... S il.
hands of some man or some men seek
ing to despoil the State of her proper
ty. The road is again in tho hands of
the people to whom the law commits
it. A hearing will lie heard of the
matter in the Circuit Court of Aptwals
in October. In the meantime, it. may
as well no understood, inai una no
1 ' 1 1 .1 i. 1. A 1.1 ' . .1
ministration will deal with tho road
. i j . ' i ..... j ; i. ; i...
as with a trust, cnargeti as ii is vy
tho Legislature with tho duty of pro
tecting tho State interests. If when
"o roan is uiiauv rehioinu no
owners, a i roiHm .iu.i iu iwuw, wm
secured and in sufficient sum to just
ify it should be made, a louse of the
road, will be consurn mated. I have
always been willing to lease the road
whenever I could secure a proposition,
safeguarding the State, the private
stockholders and the interest of the
people of Me section through whicl
the road runs.
I cannot be driven into a lease, yor
Will tho iiooplo of North Carolina
submit to having their property rights
imperilled by tho attacks of competing
interests, of free booting expeditions,
of disapiKiintod bidders, or of politi
cal enemies. One of the largest stock
holders in the road and a director o
it, is a leading Republican, a compe
tent business man, the Collector of In
ternal Revenuo for the Eastern Dis
trict of North Carolina, Mr. E. C
Duncan. Ono of tho stockholders who
attended the last annual meeting, and
voted to approve the report of the
president and other officers showing
the transactions of the past years is
Mr. Dan Patrick, a leading Republi
can , of Greeno county and a former
prosident of tho road. I mention
the names of these gentlemen as show
ing that there could not be any possi-
uumapvl, or cIho thc-Ho men have hocu
very derelict in thoir duty in failing
to imint out wherein and .directing
my attention to it.
Tho charges of mismanagement hav
ing been repeatedly made in tho pub
lic press, I doomed it my duty to ap
point a committee to thoroughly in
vestigate the conduct of the road.
That committee was composed of as
u"' l"H l""uu 14,1,1 ' "
tho State contains within her borders.
Their report has been published.
Thero is nothing in it showing the
slightest dishonesty. There is in the
roxrt the clearest evidene of a differ-
enco of business judgment as to the
projior conduct of tho road. It is jhis
sible that the road could have boon
hotter managed. Indeed am sure that
it would have been better if some
things had boon left undone and if
soino things loft undone had been
doue, but wo must judge tho work of
I ' ....
men by the sum total of thoir actions
-by
tho wisdom which tl.ey have
i, as well as by tho mistakes
which they have made, and taking all
this into consideration, it is mauifest
'at ft liro'!y hi ,,B tloublwl its
' thin the last five years and
doubled the market valuo of its stock
within the last throe years, is cor
taiuly better managed than tho bnsi
lies of the average business man of the
State and has boon bettor managed
than can be ordinarily expected from
public service
I have thought it needful to say this
much concerning the doings of my ad
ministration. I trust that yon will
now ixrnut mo to say something of
tho effect of them.
I declarod in my siwech of accept-
hnco th vi the adoption of tho
Constitutional Amendment "wo wil
have poaco in tho laud." "There will
ho rehCIlaliTr"froiu lKiTITIcaniif
ternoss and race antagonism, Indus
try will have a great outburst. We
will have intellectual freedom. Public
- i question will stand or fall in the
BREWED OF THE
Finest Halt and Hops,
and the purest of water, by skilled
breweis . ot the widest practical and
scientifical xperience, and ia the tnrst
to dstc equipped brewery.
Analyzed by Eminent
Authorities
and pronounced by llieni to tic pure
and wholesome. Hecoiumctuled by
hioli medical authorities as a tonic.
Our motto is,
NOT HOW CHEAP WE
BREW BEER, BUT
HOW GOOD."
We solicit mail orders in jiackayes
from two dozen pints . up. All cor re
fpomleiice promptly attended to. Write
Tor sotnenir lead pencil. .
The Virginia Brewing
Company,
ROANOKE, VIRGINIA.
court of reason and not of passion. We
shall forget the asjierites of those i
years and shall go forward into the
twentieth century a united people,
striving in zeal and in generous rival
ry for the material, intellectual and
moral upbuilding of the State. May an
era of good feeling among us ho the
outcome of this contest."
Thero are those among us who fear
that these predictions have not been
fulfilled. These doubters are looking
uixrn the surface of things. They do
not look at the great underlying truth.
They declare that bitterness is more
rifo than ever before ; that the era of
good feeling lias not come; that critic
ism is more severe than ever ; that-free
dom of speech is not permissible. They
havo .mistaken apoearanoo for fact.
There is bitterness between individ
uals. 'There is strife and enmity be
tween some people. There is of course
a reckless criticism. Our people had
been so Ion restraiiiedjiy the necessity-
of staying united iu order to face
tho danger of negro control of the
Slate that, when they first gained their
freedom under tho Constitutional
Amendment they naturally felt callod
upon to exhibit thoir freedom from re
straint by frequent, and often undue
criticism. Newspapers which would
in the old days have unhesitatingly
sustained my administration at every
point, havo criticised it with much
severity and ..sometimes,, as I think,
with much injustice. Speeches and
publications which heretofore would
have attracted universal approval or
universal condemnation, according to
the side that they were on, havo mot
with a divided support and a divided
criticism. Controversies have grown
large about small thugs.- Personalitcs
have frequently taken the place of tho
discusion of great problems. All of
these things have been done in asser
tion of our new born freedom. They
aro ever the first fruits of liberty of
speech. They mark the beginning of
real liberty, which will hereafter .bo
restrained 'by-judgment. They show
that the minds of our people aro ac
tive ; that they are alert even in fault
finding. They can be destructionists,
but this is tho beginning of tho con
servative power as well. It wo pull
down now, wo shall build hereafter. If
wo critieiso without restraint now, wo
shall in the future learn that effective
'.riticisin is that only which is based
on fact and then only to bo indulged
in for the.corrfc.tiou of evil and for
tho purpose of turning men toward
better things. This bitterness and
this strife has not reached tho great
body of tho people. They havo gone
about their work undisturbed by fault
finding and the asperities of discussion.
Thoy havo found industry the best
outlet for 2 their superabundance of
energy and they are bringing to pass
a wonderful day iu this State. Truly,
as I predicted, there has been a great
outburst of industry.
At tho time of tho taking of tho
census in HUH) there wero lil cotton
mills in this Stato. Since then 89
more havo been erected. In li)00 those
mills had 1,13:3,433 spindles; since
then 8(i!l,20U more have been put iu.
In MOO thero were 25,41!'.) looms; since
then 21,001 looms havo been added. In
l'.KXl there was invested in cotton
mills in this State $2r,810,4o.'j ; nineo
then 18,2liO,000 have been added to
tho investment. Wo havo addod CO per
cent, to our numlier of mills; 75 per
cent, to our number of spindles; 84
er cent, to our numlier of looms ; 70
jicr cent, to the capital invested. The
number of epniloyeos in tho cotton and
woollen mills increased from 88,fi37 iu
UKX) to 50,324 in 1003 a fiuo thing in
this is that the increase shows 400
moro men than women.
For tho three years of 181)7, 18'.I8 and
ISDOTulO corporations wero formed in
tho State. For the years li)01, 1902 and
1D03, 1,87(? were added. For tho first
three years the 510 corporations were
capitalized at 112,043,080. For tho
CAN
last .three years' the 1,270 corporations
were capitalized at $100,3-11,850. These
figures almost pass belief, but they are
a simple presentation of tho real facts
of the business revival in this State.
Other industries, notably the manu
facture of furniture and other articles
of wood, have fully kept pace, if not
outstripped that of cotton manufactur
ing. Agriculture has had wonderful
growth. .Cotton has again .-become
kng. Large jxirtions of the East havo
been converted into market gardens
for the populous cities of the North.
A negro tenant in mv county, Wayne,
recently declared that he had made
$3,(500 on .strawberries, after paying
his rents, and then added, "You see I
couldn't afford to bo Governor."
a gentleman writing to me recently
from Newborn, opposing the lease of
the Atlantic & North Carolina rail
road, declares that a new day has
dawned in that section. That men
feel
secure in their property, safe in1
J il. . .. .
their - business, and have
uuMiiiTOM, aim nave uierciore.
tnrnod their attention to business and
that the whole Eastern section will
soon become a garden out of which the
Atlantic & North Carolina railroad
shall grow rich. This feeling of secu
rity covers the State. This wonderful
investment of capital in largo busi
ness enterprises, with a full knowl
edge of our tax laws, of our assess
ments, of our needs, of our purpose to
care for the weak and afflicted, and to
educate the young proves conclu
sively that the business men of North
Carolina realize the benefit of good
government and the profit to be found
in an educated people. In view of all
these facts I cordially invite every
North Carolinian to become a Demo
crat.
There are those who say that we
ought to have two parties in tho
State. The time may como when this
will bo true ; it will certainly come if
the party in power proves unfaithful
to its trust and bocomes corrupt or in
efficient; but for tho present, with an
honest and courageous administration
of tho laws, with a constant though
for the needs of the weak, with a due
respect to the rights of the strong,
with an earnest endeavor to serve all
to the uplifting of the whole State
the Democratic party is alone suffic
iont. WTe need a united people. We
need the combined effort of every
North Carolinian. We need tho
strength which comos from belioving
alike. But I am no advocate of com
pelling belief. I would not chock free
dom of spcoch. I would sot no limit
to the. utterances of the press, save
the limit which the law sots, that of
speaking tho truth. But, having
spoken the truths having printed tho
truth, I would have all our people to
believe . in .the. possibilities of North
Carolina ; in tiie strength of her men ;
tho purity of her women, and their
power to accomplish as much as can
bo done anywhere on tho earth by any
people I would have thorn to be
como dissatisfied with small things;
to he anxious for higher and bettor
things ; to yearn after real greatness ;
to seek after knowledge; to do the
right thing iu order that they may bo
what they ought. I would have tho
strong to bear the burdens of tho weak
and to lift up the weak and!inake them
strong- teaciiing men evervwhere that
real strengtn consists not in serving
ourselves, but In doing lor others
1 see the dav coming when this
State shall sit down at the common
table of the Union an equal sister
with all the others gathered there
equal in wealth; equal in , high tier
f ormance ; equal in noble ideals.
Nothing short of this ought to satisfy
us ana to attain this I let us ever hope.
I thank you, gentlemen of the con
vention, for tho courtesy you have ex-
tennott mo in permitting me to say
these things. I know that the choice
which you shall make to-day will be
a worthy oueI..Tbo StatCwWilL..be,Jn
good hands and I shall return to the
life of a private citizen forever grate-
tut to tne people or this State for the
honor which they have done me and
for the considerate courtesy which
if.. :'ff ' '"'
they have ever shown mo.
Dr. W. H. Wakefield,
Chaklotte, N. C,
Can be con su Red ia hi oSice at
No. 320 North Tryon str -t except
on eachWcdaenlav and Thursday.
Watch fur announcement of Lis
visits Ui Reidsville.
Practice- limiiei! i-i Kyi, K.ir. N'i
and Tliriiii -
A. D. 1V1E,
A-ttornov " at - Law
Will pruclu e in iociihghaui and
adjoiniiiii :! ulk s. Special attcn
lion ii M-n It. tin- collection of claims
All corresponileme iromptl ans.
wered. Address : Leausville, N. 0.
FOLEY'S
KIDNEY CURE
Will euro any case of Kidney
or Bladder disease that is not
beyond the reach of medicine.
GIVEN UP TO DIE.
B. Spi'flRol. 1204 H. Viri?iui St., Evansvillft.
Ind., writos : "For over (our yours I wa troubled
with a kidtitiy Htul blmlder alToction. I lost HbsIi
andwaaiiualilatowork. Threoiliysiciaus failed
to help me aud 1 was iriveo nr to dio. Foley l
Kidney Cure was KWionimeiidml and tho nrss
bottle avo mo Rroat relief arid after takiuff tho
Becoiul bottle 1 was eutiroly curud.''
Two Sizes 50 Cents and $1.00
Reidsville
Review,
d mi-Weekly. $1.00 Per Year
IT CONTAINS UOICC
Town INews,
County News,
State News,
National News
And better reading
than any paper printed
in Rockingham county
...-.
It keeps you posted all the time,
It is the bes t family paper, it
publishes the news of society, ibu
coming and going of the peor.le,
the news of all classes, and repoite
of every important event in jta
. .. , . . .. H i
territory, r rom weeK to ween u
gives twice as much Rockingham
news as any paper published, xhti
explains its popularity I
"S :.: , i. ,
'lit A
, mil
THREE TO THE VALUE OF OTHEHS
ONE THIRD EASIER;
ONE THIRD FAbTEK
The only sewing machine ttut
does not fail in any point. Kotaty
motion and Ball Bearings make it
the lightest ruuniug machine inthe
world. Agents wanted in unoccu
pied teiritory. Send for circulars
and terms.
VVHEELERfoss WILSON MITU. CO
Atlanta, Ua.
For Sale by WOT W .,
J.
April 25 to November 30, 1904
Excursion Tickets Sold Daily
Saaton Tlckat. Sixty Day Tlckata
and Fifteen Uay Tlckeia
THROUGH PULLMAN SLEEPERS
CAFE DIN1NO CARS
fn SAj?
THE
Norfolk and Western Railway
Offers to visitors to the
Louisiana Purchasi Exposition
St Louis, Mo.
Excursion Tlokets
: VIA
CINCINNATI, OHIO,
-.. oa '.-
COLUMBUS, OHIO.
Puilm n Sleepers are operated dally ta
both the above cltlea, and Batata
gers can take their choice.
Rates, Schedule, and additional Informa
tki Jiiratinca upon application
Agents of the Company, ar
W. B. Bevlll, M. F. Brar,
0n' ffryger Agt. ' . Trar. Pass. Aft.
VNOKE, VIKO.INIA.
- ziA fcf m lSIMPk,E5T
Jill
WORLD'S FAIR