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VOL
Tlr7 nuinunnir nctfn
1 rns r . im n m in hii
i iiHiii i i II I ai ai sr m a maw mm i a as
I f woman Swindler Ends In
iw Lr I -
Columbus reniioRiwry.
. rinsnoial Transactions
d.r lis'"'- :
ioberlift (Ohio) Bank.
mlnmJ'jc. Ohio. Mrs. Cassle L.
. , i:.-7 in llio Star A Peniton.
W- ... X .
Oban' was sentenced on
Ink 2, l00"' t0 ten y111 the
C li a via tViA wlfA
rt' 1 1 l." h nisi WBirinii itr
-leveland- She rame into public no
ire in 1SQ- wlren l5er B,nR ch.Un
r swindles came to light. How rauth
v cot was never learned, but it went
H into the thousands. Her bor
tiinff? from the Oberlin National
Unt for "hich p'-e8idtt c T. Beck
ritn was indicted, caused the failure
She ira? refoonaible also for the in-
idmenf of Cashtw H. B. Spenr, of
he First National Banic, or ;onneaut,
)hio.
AH of Mrs Chftdwick's borro'ving
fas done on $3,000,003 of bogus se
writiep which wore supposed to be
leposited in the Warlo Park Bank, of
ttn-aco. with which Ira Reynolds waa
vjnnecten Many pratBi$ltt men
-tere swii'-dled by her, Pittsburg be
ke the field of many ft her biggest
theuier.
Who Mr?. Chad wick wag. cauaed
asertet! that she was tb" notorious
At Ohio State Penltentftnr.
VAVT STATEMENT BY tft
MRS CHAD WICK WITHHELD
Pittsburjr, Pa. With the death of
rs. Cassie Cbaolwick every ejloit
rill be made to keep from the public
icr statement regarding money she
rocurel from Pittsburg millionaires,
jtrticalarly J. W. Friend. The state
Wnt was made in connection whh the
tuit of Mrs William J. Jutte against
f'riend and F. N. Hofstott for th re
;overv of securities valued at mow
ian 11,000,000.
, Mrs. Chad wick's deposition was or
ved sealed by Judge Skater, but
in. Jatte appealed the case, and it
vis ordered opened for use before
ie Superior Court. That would
Bftan it tilRaee v anrl ITrlan t unil
Jlhers were trying their best to pre
vent it. With Mrs. Chadwick dead
4erc wonld Ye no way to further ex
tiain her allegations.
It is said Mrs. Chadwick secured
jom Pittsburgers as much as 1800,
)0(. including $280,000 from Friend,
DI E TO PROHIBITION.
corgi a and South Carolina in One
Kevcr.ue-CoUectipn District.
. Washington, t, C. Prohibition
las reduced the internal revenue col
wctions in the South to such an ex
tent that it has een derided to re
luce the number ot collection dis
tricts. Georgia and South Carolina are o
e- consolidated in one collection dis
trict and Micah Jenkins, the collector
it Columbia, S. C, will, do all the
urork. The Georgia collector will be
lismissed. After January 3 Georgia
will be -dry," but in half of South
Carolina liquors will be sold under
the dispensary laws.
Oklahoma and Arkansas also are
likely to be consolidated into dne col
lection district with the collector in
Arkansas. Three-fourths of thft
State is; ilry" ai d the internal rev
enue collections have largely fallen
off.
NEW JlOClvEFBLUSR GIFT.
000 More From Him
Chicacro John Ti. Rock
vt tne L'niversuy or unicago svpr
m to erect the memorial library tnat
university will dedicate to WtM
'Rainey Harper, first president of
institution" ! I
Thi gift raa;kes fr. Rockefeller's
gifts to the university new ag-
ffegar.e ;28,00C,00O.
Oirard College is said to be the
Jcon i wealjtbieat school in the United
gtes, with 121,495,072; Leland
Pinford Junior University, third,
th lift. 000.000- Harvard, fourth.
"!" iy,C36,025; Columbia, fifth.
i KVNOLDS BANK FAILS,
eyiudds Being the Man Who Took
Yankee School Ma'ams to Alaska.
Boston. The Reynolds Bank at
al(i -f-, Alaska, headed by H. D. Key
of Boston, shares of which are
ned by many people throughout
ew England, has failed, according
:? dispatch from Seattle. It h
JuKht that $700, 00) will cover all
-res neld in New England.
Jiie Reynolds enternrises in Alaska
Jvo been widely exploited in Ne
'"'gland. PStnotnlW in oVk.-aW
ha
jwiool circles, sbast year Reynolo
to"red clrgymen and .professional
w Alaska to see what they wert
trivu iai i ui icaiucib,
Taft Welcomed in China.
secretary Taft was warmly wel-
ruii'ea at Shanrh k nu. a
r..
dinnp, f0eign merchants, and at a
Polinv " a ayeecn on America s
i-ry's hlovv;ard ChiDa and this coun
X1IJU
LOOTED FRENCH CHURCHES
Wealthy Robbers Exposed by
Theft of Historic Cope.
ReveUtions of Scandal and Murder
Stolen Works of Art Sold in Eng.
land and United States.
Tails, France. Astonishment
amounting to consternation has been
caused ny the arrest at Clermont
Ferrand ot a wealthy barrel manu
facturer named Antoine Thomas, with
hie mother and brother. The imme
diate charge against them is stealing
a historic cope from the church at
Blanaac, Department o Haute
vienne. masitag discoveries made in con
nection with the theft, threaten a vast
scandal. Thomas was a rich and re
spected local magnate to the public,
but it seems that privately he was a
practitioner of illegal operations, and
even, it is alleged, a murderer. The
whole country is now ringing with
the story.
In Thomas' house the police found
an array of deadly poisons, a blood
stained stiletto, illegal surgical in
struments and a mass of correspond
ence implicating some of the best
known families in France. Numer
ous Paris art dealers, some of them
millionaires, are shown to have had
dealings with Thomas as receivers ot
stolen ' goods. Tbey had agents in
England end the United States, and
had formed a great conspiracy for
the theft and sale of priceless relics
secured from French churches.
It is stated that Thomas alone re
alized from thefts the sum of $400.
000. His mother and brother Fran
cois were arrested on October 5.
Thomas himself, who has returned to
Clermont-Ferrand from London,
where he sold a stolen reliquary for
$10,0.00, surrendered to a magis
trate. He fully confessed the syste
matic theft el-works of art, but was
horrified to learn of the poisons and
corresnondence seised. , ..
He told the Magistrate that he was
without remorse so far as his dealings
in works ot art were concerned, but
the arrest of his mother and brother,
who were innocent, and the possible
implication of a married lady whom
he had adored for years impelled him
to. surrender. Her love letters, found
in the house, would involve her rain.
He implored the Magistrate to con
ceal the lady s name.
He further tdld the Magistrate that
he did not care a straw about the
other women, whose guilt was proved
by the correspondence, adding: "Put
they belong to a world you dare not
asperse and when you know all you
will be glad to liberate me to avoid a
frightful scandal."
Thomas ascribes his betrayal to a
rich Parisjintiquary, to whom he re
fused to sell the cope. He rends his
alleged accomplices in theft merci
lessly. He says tnat one or inese
wealthy men proposed two years ago
the plan of procuring Church treas
ures.
Many priests believed that the sep
aration law would render them abso
lutely destitute, as the Government
had Inventoried all the Church valua
bles... The scheme was to offer the
oriests money to hand over their
chief treasures and substitute cheap
replicas furnished by Thomas and his
friends. It worked excellently, and
scores of supposed Church treasures
Thomas says, will be found upon ex
amination to be not genuine.
I Move than thirty priests surren
dered historic objects in the first fort
night the scheme was worked. The
most valuable objects, however, could
not. be dunlicated, and the Paris deal
ers proposed that they be stolen. To
this Thomas consented. y
riearrlhas various successful
aids, the nroceads of which were
ittsnnseifl of in London, wherel
Thomas, accompanied by a friend
named Faure. took them. He sayr
..'that a London agent who bought a-
reliquary stolen atAmbazac.acted for
:u American purchaser wno is await-
iug its delivery.
FOOTBALL STAR LOSES LEG.
Mike" Barrett's Misfortune May In
flnpiipp Suarthmore in Athletics, i
Philadelnhia. -t-News has reached.
here that may influence the decision
of the authorities of Swartkmore on
the problem of withdrawing from in
tercollegiate athletics or rejecting
the $1,000,000 bequest of Miss
Jeanes, which is based on this condi-
tipn. . .
A letter from the West says that
Charles P. t "Mike") Barrett, swartn-
niore's star half back in 1905 and
190K. has. had his right leg ampu
tated as a result cf blood poisoning
following an in:ury tp nis1 anee re
ceived in last year s swarthmorc-An-
URGES THE SCARLET LETTER.
Chicago ,i Pastor Would Brand Men
whn Paiici Wnmpn to Drink.
VI HV MW ww '
Chicago. Rev. Frederick E. Hop-
trinQ tnirt a congregation, whicn
jammed the Pilgrim Congregational
man rtrhn Q sVr ft W O TT1 all tO drink.
The address was a continuation of bis
crusade against wom8ir armjung iu
restau-ants and elsewhere ,Mr public.
"The man who insists unon a wom
an ArTtrinar afr sP has Sa'd She
'thought she shouldn't' this citiz-tfj
should be ostac'sed by society, ine
churJh ard the p-tbVc at la'g should
onmnol him to war the sea' let lettei
jr pinned on hlF breast, for be is a
debauche, a aevii.;
COLUMBUS, N. C, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 17
STORM ON ATLANTIC COAST I
Most Vloleiit Gale in Thirty-five
Tears Causes Great Damage.
Many Vessels Driven A show am1
Crewe Arc Saved by Heroic Ef
forts Rig Crop Loss.
Boston, Mass. Enormous nronertv
damage and loss ot life are reported
as the result of the southerly , gale
which swept over New England. It
was the worst storm of the season,
and. at some places the wind was the
most furious in years. Shipping was
scattered with heavy damage through
out the entire extent of the New Eng-
cease, urees and wire were
blown down, pedestrians were in
jured in the cities and late crops and
nni in tne interior suffered loss.
Two men lost their lives at Fall
River and Henry A. Smith, a motor
man, was killed in Maiden by a live
wire which was blown in front of his
car.
The results of the storm to New
England's shipping are: The barge
Bessie J., from Edgewater, N. J., sunk
at ner moorings In Fall River, Cap
tain Allen W. Robbins and William
McComber. drowned: the steamer
Warren, of the Enterprise line, in th
same harbor, dragged anchor and
went ashore; she will be pulled off
with little damage; the Stanles Coal
Company's crane, in Fall River,
blown over; damage 150,000.
WAVES DASHED OVER
TROLLEY CARS
Newport, R. 1 The severest storm
In years broke upon Newport just be
fore daylight. The wind blew seventy
miles an hour and tore down tele
graph and telephone wires, drove
small boats into the dbeks with moor
ings broken and did much damage to
trees and buildings. At Island Park.
In Portsmouth, several small cottages
were blown over into the Sacconet
River, though, fortunately, they were
rescued.
Windows were battened in and
flower beds, of which Newport boasts,
were thrashed out and ruined. The
surf at Easton's Beach and along the
shore ran very high. At the beach it
ran over the seawall and dashed
against the trolley cars, leaving sea
weed en their roofs. Along the cliffs
the sea dashed high up onto the
walks r.nd hundreds went to the bluff
to see the glorious picture.
The wind greatly damaged the
trees on the summer estates, snap
ping off many limbs. On the grounds
of Mr. John Thompson Spencer much
damage was done.
HEAVY WINDSTORM
RIPS UP NEW YORK
New York City. A forty-eight
mile gale hit New York. While it
lasted it surely did blow. From one
end of the city to the other rame
reports of horses and wagons blown
about and trees falling with disas
trous effects to houses and fences.
In the harbor the river craft stayed
at their piers, their skippers not dar
ing to face the high wind.
It also rained some, the Weather
Bureau records showing a fall of .68
inch.
In Manhattan and Harlem the
principal damage was in shattered
plate-glass windows, broken signs
and flooded cellars. Ii the harbor
shipping was practically at a stand
still. . y
The gale also did much damage on
the campus of Columbia university,
"the tin roof of the Wilde Observatory
in the grove being blown away, ana
the telescope left exposed to the fury
of the gale. After the storm tne tei
escape was examined and round tp ue
very little damaged. In the grove
five of the largest trees were up
rooted. :
In New Jersey the stcry was tne
oo mo in Katei'EOn one UUUse yas
hlown away and another turned com
pletely around on its foundations,
while trees, shrubbery and lawns
were ruined and shutters, windows
and signs smashed.
STORM CAUSES TRAIN
WRECK IN PENNSYLVANIA
Pottstown. ' Pa The high wind
was resnonsible for a railroad wrecK
on the Perkiomen branch of the Phil
aAAiTihia and Reading Railway. I
tree was blown across the track and
a train of four cars, all crowaea, ran
into it.
The locomotive plunged down an
embankment into the erKiomen
Creek, and the cars hung on tne eag3
of the embankment. Edward J. Mil
ler, fireman of the locomotive, le
celved fatal injuries, and the engine
driver, M. L. Gelssenhainer, sustajneu
a broken., leg.
HOUSES BLOWN INTO
RIVER IN SEAFOaD
Seaford, Del. In a cycloue which
struck Seaford, trees were uprooted
and roofs of houses blown off. Ou
the water front many nousus wec
blown into the river. Many tnouBana
dollars' damage was done and noth
ing like it wai. ever seen here before.
People were terroj Stricken and many
of them Injured.
HEAVY PROPERTY LOSS
! MORTED-TOOM LEEDS
Leeds, Ala. A tornado that struck
this section caused the death of about
fifteen persons, who were hit by fall
ing trees and timbers. The damage
to property was enormous. t "
"EFORMATORY IS NOT LOCATED
Trustees of Proposed State Reforma
tory Hold Lengthy Meeting at
Giiensboro But Come to No Defi
nite Action.
Greensboro, Special. The board of
trustees of the Stonewall .Taek-nii
Manual Training and Industrial
school were in session here from 8 :30
o'clock until after midnight for the
purple of adopting a set of by-laws
and selecting a site for the proposed
referaaatory for North Carolina. Nine
out e the fourteen members of the
board were present. Propositions were
neard from a number of towns in the
State, seeking to induce the board to
locale with them, among: them Con
cord. . Statesviile and Greensboro
Alter considering the nrooosition
it was decided to leave the matter to
the acting and auditmsr committee
with power to act. It is thought the
site W4H be located within the next 00
days.
Bonds Carry at Newbern.
Nfcwbern, Special. ? The special
election held here Tuesday for a bond
issue of $50,000 for street improve
ment was carried by an overwhelming
majority. The vote was light, but the
result was unequivocally in favor of
betfer streets; The provisions of the
ordinance adopted were relative to
sidewalks, but it is believed that an
appropriation will be .made in the fu
ture providing for the future pave
ment of streets. The majority was
333 votes. The campaign was very
quiet.. Many citizens realizing the im
portance ot the step regard this as
the step toward a substantial munici
pal improvement. There is great re
joicing. New Enterprises.
A charter , is granted the Lattimore
Lumber Company, of Cleveland coun
ty, capital stock $25,000, J. P. Latti
more and others stockholders.
The Citizens' Life Insurance Com
pany, of Jventuck', a new company,
applies for admission into North
Carolina. The commissioner of Insur
ance says that a new company, a mu
tual life, is being organized at Fay-
etteville and will apply for license
aod ch&rle in a few days.
The Highlands Realty & Improve
ment Co., of Keidsville, gets a charter,
the amount of capital stock bein'
$50,000, Fred A. Silver, of Greens
boro, being the principal stockholder.
Another is to be the Marshijlburg
Hunting Company of Tarborot to hold
lands for hunting, fishing, etc.; to
sell erame and fish, operate steam-
boats, etc; capital stock $25,000.
A company with the old name oi
Rose-O-Lowe Medical Company, of
Charlotte, gets a charter, and will
manufacture A. Thies-German Salve,
the capital stock being $25,000, th
stockholders being A. Thies, E. A
Thies, and W. L. Wohlford, the latter
of Winston-Salem. ;
State Items.
Ruoerintendent Goodwin, of th-3
State school for deaf mutes at Mor
ganton, reports that 212 pupils arc
alreadv present and that there are
daily arrivals. A very close watch is
kept to see that the deaf mute child
ren come into school, as for these
there is a compulsory law, while this
is not in existence so far as the blind
are concerned and hence there are at
the very least 100 white blind child
ren who are getting no education
whatever, though the State has made
every provision for them.
The United States government
sends M. O. Eldridge, of the good
roads department, to this State,
where he will do special work. I
and a number of other experts have
been in the coungressional district in
Georgia of which Savannah is the
centre, conducting meetings, thes
covering forestry, plant industry, soil
tests, good roads, etc.
Smithfield Goes Forward.
Smithfield, Special The town com-
misi oners appointed N. M. Lawrence,
V ftrsntham and E. H. Brooks a
mmmm
committee to investigate into the cost
of installing electric lights, water and
sewerage and they were authorized io
employ a civil engineer to survey and
nlnt the town estimate the cost of
jiv i
Putting in these systems. It begins
to look as if Smithfield will soon get
out cf her old rut and move forward.
Gate City Votes Bonds.
Greensboro, Special. The quietest
election ever known in Greensboto
was neld here when the citizens were
ealled uobn to vote on the issue
honds amounting to $125,000 to pay
off the floating indebtedness of the
eitv. The election was easily carried,
there being only 8 votes cast against
the issuing of the bonds. So slight
urns the interest manifested in the
own that onlv 518 out of the 2,000
qualified vpters registered, and 339 of
these east their votes in favor of ths
bond issue, while it required only 261
votes to carry the election.
Price, SLOP
, 1907.
NEWST GLEANINGS.
Germany has a treasury surplus.
Canada was still a seller ot Can
adian Pacific.
Kansas is now moving for a two-
cent fare law.
The taste for bull fighting is grow
ing in France.
Polar explorers report that there
is no land north of Alaska
Greece, for the third time, will es
tablish a legation in Washington.
American built automobiles are
successfully invading principal Euro
pean centres.
Leading agriculturists of England
are against the embargo on cattle
from America.
London, indeed all England, as well
as the Continent, has been affected
by the erase over the game diabolo.
London, England, is preparing a
scheme of emigration to relieve Brit
ish distress that may affect America.
The Mexican Ambassador to the
United States- -attaches great im
portance to Secretary Root's visit to
Mexico.
Crowds paraded in the streets of
Paris to express their indignation
over the escape of Soleillant from the
guillotine.
Wrecked, condemned or posted by
Lloyds as missing, the sailing vessel
is vast disappearing from the face
of the waters.
A Russo-Chlnesu telegraph conven
tion signed at Pekin restores to China
all her former rights to lines in Rus
sian Manchuria. ,
President Roosevelt, In a speech at
St. Louis, declared himself in favor of
Government control of all interstate
industrial corporations and their!
products.
Major Henry B. Hersey, chief in
spector of the Weather Bureau, ad
vocated the establishing of a war bal
loon department by the Government.
' Lacked Mentality.
Harold's mother was a devout fol
lower of mental science. The two
were crossing a field while in the
country, and when the lad saw a goat
in the distance tee sheldecb himself in
stinctively behind his parent's skirt.
"Harold, I'm ashamed of you," she
told him. "Don't you know there is
no such a thing as pain and that
the goat can't hurt you?"
-Y-yes," he admitted ttaddly. "I
know it and you know it, but the goat
don't know it." Kansas City Times.
TEN YEAR8 OF PAIN.
Unable to Do Even Housework Be
cause of Kidney Troubles.
Mrs. Margaret Emmerich, of Clin
ton St., Napoleon, O., says: "For
fifteen years I was a great sufferer
from kidney trou-
JtT, bles. My back pained
m me terribly. Every
jfl mr turn or move caused
pains. My eyesight
p. was poor, dark spots
f J onnoornl KafnFA vna
'WAS'' and I had dizzy
spells. For ten years
could not do housework, and for
two years did not get out of the
house. The kidney secretions were
irregular, and doctors were not help
ing me. Doan's Kidney Pills brought
me quick relief, and final! y. cured ma
They saved my life."
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box.
Foster-Mil burn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
BELOW any other
DO HOT
EM
. or on on kind of terms,
i log-nes illustrating and
bicycles, oia patterns ana
PRICES and wonderful
nriiTJS
BIT" n to
i direct to rider with no middlemen's profits.
ME- XHIR OH APPROVAL -without a cent deposit. Pay the
I US
allow IO Days, Free Trial and make other liberal terms which no
house in the world will do. You will learn everything and get mud
, able information by simply writing us a postal.
rkvrrv mm
rw
We need a AfcflsM
to make money to suitable
lQ en DiiNnTliRg.DRnnc tidcco n ly
FliUiVVI vnviviiis I HVVI IlllaiVa i
'a .80
MA . .
4
Wo WIN Sett
"WOflT LET
IV OUT THE AIR
(CASH WITH ORDER 4.. 55)
NO MORE TROUBLE FROM PUNCTURES.
Result of k vears experience m tire
making. No dinger from THORNS.
S8.50
To tt
TU5, rIN. i avna or uiyioj.
Serious punctures, like intentional knife cuts, can
be vulcanised like any otner wt.
Two Hundred Thousand pairs now tn actual
Snorty-five Thoosand pairs sold last year,
ft Made in all sizes. It is
with a special quality of rubber, which never
-.v-t olinwinr the air to escape, we nave
that theirures have only been pomped u.r tmce
an ordinary tire, the puncuire rcsiwg uuaiiiira "s """'"JT" ",.JV',a Ki-'7
Jreoared I ablT" on tne treaa. laai noioiBgDiu kiimuuu tumraomy icu wnra numg an tuuaan
L igft roads is overcome by the patent "Basket Weave" tread which prevents aU air from w ing
saueezed out between the tire and tne roau mus overcoming an suction, i ne regular price of tuese
tires is 18 v per pair, but for advertising purposes we are making a special factory price to the rider
of onlv YlSd per pair. AU orders shipped same day letter is received. We ship C.O.D. on approval.
Yon oo nox pay a -u , y . jrrri7
Will SHOW a rata Ul0UUfc Ul 5 WUl
FULL CASB WITH. UKUE.K ana enclose
3H WITH ORDER and enclose
dated brass
elated brass hand pump ana two Sampson metai puncture ciosers on iuu paw oraers t,mese metsi
r . . t in n( ifitMitimul ktiif rats nr him mthMl TIbpm tt 1 iptiii nl
puncture closers
mincturc cio1 w- w.
rr7nR if for anv reason thev are
w ore nerfectlv reliable and money sent to
Banker. Express or Freight Agent or the Editor of this paper about us. If you order a pair of
these tires, you will find that they wiU nde easier, run faster, wear better, last longer and look
finer than any tire you have ever used or seen at any pnee. "Ve know that you will be so wel 1 pleased
that when you want a bicycle vou will give us -jour order. We want ftn to send us a small trial
ance. hence this remarkable tire offer,
order at aatx, nence ullt-np-wheels, saddles, pedals, parts and repairs, and
GQASTER BHA nOj everything in the bicycle line are sold by us at half the usual
rTehamdhv dealers and repair men. Write for our big SUNDRY catalogue.
lll JJL-m . -ilijre butrite us a postal today.DO NOl THlrfk OF BUYING s
DO rrOT WWJXiF bicycle or a pair of tires from anyone until you know the new an
wonderfnl offers we are making. R only costs a postal to learn everything. Write it 10 W.
MEC CYCLE C0RP1MY, Dept. "J L" C H ICIfiC? ILU,
Per Year in Advance.
NO..
BABY WASTED TO SKELEHHt
In Torments With Terrible
Face and Bod v Tore at
Cured by Cuticura.
'My little son, when about a
a half old, began to have sores
on his face. They began to co
arms, then on other parts of his
then one came on his chest.
the others. Still be srew worn
end of about a year and a half of
he grew so bad I had to tie hk
cloths at night to keen him from
in the sores and tearin the flh
to be a mere skeleton and was hardbr
j. ii ..... "
to wik. i sent to the drug store
a cake of Cuticura Soap and a box
cura Ointment, and at the end of
two months the sores were all wd
has never had any sores of any kind
and 1 can sincerelv m that l
the Cuticura Remedies my precious
would have died from those terrible
1 used only one cake of Soap and
three boxes of Ointment. Mrs.
Sheldon, R. F. D., Ne.l, Wood vine,
pril 22. 1906."
Five Haters Suspended.
Wake Forest, Special. At a
ing of the faculty of Wake
College lucMiay afternoon five
dent, three sophomores and two jea
iors, wen suspended lor thirty dava
k mi
ror hazing. The charge brought
against them was making
dance. There is considerable
ment among the students on
ion of iLe faculty and many nf tha
boys are thinking of leaving.
Asheville, N. 0., Votes "Dry.
Asheville, N. C, SpeeiaL-
vuie has "gone dry" and
tionists are wildly enthusiastic.
veidict of the people was rendered
language plain. They literally
the city clean and sent the
its death beneath an avalanehe of
votes. The prohibitionists
every voting precinct in the eity
won by a majority of 348. The
test was one of the most wildly
citing and withal novel and
la i elections in the history of the eity.
22
warn
TELEPH01
Area NecessBy
in the Country
Home.
The farther vou are scinaeed
from town to railroad station, the
more the telenbone will save
time and horse flesh. No man 1
a right to compel one of the fanaV
to he in agony for hours while lie
drives to town for the doctor. Tel
ephone and save half the sul
Uur free Book tells how to or
ganize, build and operate tele
phone lines and systems.
Instruments sold on thirty days
trial to responsible parties.
TIE CADIZ ELECTBtC CO.,
201 CCC Build!, Cafe,
ILL rr WILL COST YOf
write for our biz FREE BICYCLE
showing the most complete line of 1
BICYCLES, TIRES and SUNDRIES at
manufacturer or dealer in the world.
BUY A BICYCLE SZ.
until you have received our complete
describing every kind of high-grade ai
latest mooeis, ana learn ot our remai
new offers made possible by selling
Aamnt in every town and can offer an
young men who apply at once.
A.SO
CAC-
use. over
ft) east ridihg.
lively and easy riding, very durable and Used
becomes porous and which closes up small punctures
nunoreas oi letters irom satisnea customers
or twice in c whole season. They weigh no more than
u -.TLTu IZTu.LI -a u ,
IW" - "? m.iuj yi iv-c lV I jmii 1 u ,uukuu
tnis aavprcisemeni. we win biso sena one motet
una advertisement, we will also sena one nickel
j r. " - -
not satisfactory cu examination
us is as safe as in a bank. Ask your Postmaster.
body.aav
At tb
eta
ESI
ecS
aiaiia
i fnw
? Notice the thick rubber tread
"A" and puneture strips""
and "D," also Hsu trfp "B"
to prevent rim cutting. This
tire wiU owtlast any otfaw