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jl rrwiuus I Libby' I II Vienna Sausage la distinctly different from any other uuugt jroo ever tasted. Just try on* can and it it sure to became meal-time necessity, to be served at frequent intervals. Ubby*m Wonwa SaoMgO just auits for breakfast, is fine for luncheon and satisfies at (dinner or supper. Like all of Libby's Food Products h is carefully cooked and prepared, ready Sto-serve, in Ubby*m Oi'mmt 111 Whil0 Kttohom- the I cleanest, most scientific kitchen in I the world. . | Other popular, ready-to-serr* Libby Pur* Booda are:? Ooofcorf Ooraerf Ommf VomiLomf rvwortfad MUk Write for free booklet,?"How 11 ! to make Good Thing* to Eat". II Insist on Llbby*? at your II grocers. I LOtby, MoMmM A Ubby I OMorqo [I II m {Classified Advertisements) BDCCATIOHAL 1 /^LAKEMONT Coi.lcgb. Hickory. N.C. GlrU' I V/ School. Healthful Location. Experienced Teachers. Moderate Hates. J.L.Mubpht. l'rea. X Ray Curls. This discovery of another remarkable property of the X-rays was announced last night by the chairman of the education committee of the | London county council. Many children in the council's 1 schools had been treated for scalp ! troubles with X-rays, and it had been noticed, he said, that amongst the beneficial results of the treatment j was this?that it made tlieir h?ir ? curl. ; The chairman even produced photographs of curly-haired children ( ? whose curls were the product of the j X-Rays, and these were handed for t inspection to the members. If the curls so produced are at ail { permanent, this discovery will be r hailed with delight by those ladies who at present have to depend on unsightly curl papers and the dis- a CDmfert of the hot curling tongs ro produce u "natural wave" in the 1 hair. In the future we may expect that 11 an X-ray apparatus will become part * of the equipment of every upto-date ladies' hairdresser, and that with the fashionable lady the X-ray wave will supercede the Marcel wave. Yet, despite this, the parents of 11 the children treated in the council's ' schools are inclined to think the ^ treatment injurious, said the chair- 1 man last night. In fact, it had prov- * -ed generally beneficial. Win your way by yielding to the < tide.?Pcpe. | 1 1 "" " Charms Chi I Deligl : POStl I ' - r;.r; ^ >T 1 o ? jm<?w ?? ??*f w*? mw> omw B I' ?; " UN QUI PliEAMJRK TRIP. Ckarloltn Ubvtrtrr Mil Ohronlel* to Op?r?i? PallMM Kxrartluo Ower New Mallroad. A unique fininkn to be opmUd by the Otorrrtr Cc mpany. of Charlotte, overtba new Carolina. OUncbfleld A Ohio railroad through the mountains of North Carolina and Tennesace and Into the heart of the Clin hlleld coal fields In Virginia. The train, made up of solid Pullman Sleepers and dining cars, will leaee Charlotte on the morning of July IS foe. Panic. Vs., going by way of Johnson City. Tenn.. and will be gone for 8 days, covering a total distance of 874 miles. The trip will c?rry the excursionists through seme of the most beautiful nstuial scenery In America and orer a new railroad that has been built st a greater cost per mile than any other road In the country. The fare for the round trip Including pullman. sleeper and meals for the entire trip is only 111, which Is less than the straight passenger fare alone on regular trains OTer the route. TBiw raxs To give those who desire to earn a free trip. The Observer offers a trip fr* for securing new stt scrlbers to either of their publications: 8 yearly for The Pally Observer. 18 yearly for The Evening Chronicle. #4 year 1/ for The Semi-Weekly ? 'bserver. This is The Observer Ca's enterprise and W the first of the kind ever handled from this part of the country. The trip will Ire high class iu every way snd will be personally conducted by The Observer's representatives. btoi<* will be made along the route, thus giving tho>e on the train an opportunity to see this Interesting country, which they could not sec on a regular train. Write for further Information, 'inn Observer Compart. Charlotte, N.C. Do VOU liaVC anv fuel Hoe nonil f??. ? your little carriage that baby rode? If not, there may be a poor woman near you who would be very thankful for it. She will give her little r>-?* n ride in it, and it will do them all good. So. 28-'09. rstterine Recommended for Eczema, Ringworm, Old Sores, Risings, Etc. Morvin. Ala., August 1, 1001. f. T. Shuptrlne, Savannah, da. Dear Sir:?I received your Tetterlne all 3. K I hav? used It for Kcmema and Tetter, Ringworms, old sores and risings tnd oan gladly recommend It as a sure H cure. Tours truly, J. It PeBride. Tetterlne cures Eczema, Tetter. Ring Worm. Ground Itch, Itching Pile*. intent's Bore Head. Pimples, Bolls, Rough Scaly Patches on the race. Old Itching Sores, Dandruff. Cankered Scalp, BunIons. Corna Chilblains and every form of Skin Disease. Tetterlne 60c; Tetterlne s< Soap 16c. Your druggist, or by mail from p the manufacturer. The 9himirir? _ Savannah, Q* ' ^ SOUTHERN EXPANSION. J] C( Increased Exports of Manufactures, e as Well as Raw Materials. 1* Disinterested observation of eonditions in the South serves to confirm si the conclusions reached as to the re- j"1 o: markable economic transformation s< going on in that section. Everything goes to show the wonderful develojiraent that has come to the people of tl the South. It was as inevitable that the new beliefs and aspirations tl should find expression through the |j Southern Senators and Representatives in Congress as that day should accompany the rising progress of the j iun. The South has been almost tt wholly an agricultural region, and ^ its farming industries in the past lave been confined to a few staples, gi The new South sees not only the ex- j" ension of agriculture through still rreater production of cotton, tobac 'o, rice aiul sugar, but an almost endess variety of articles contributing ? o the profits of the growers. To this s to be added t he pain of manufacuring, constantly going forward to nore extraordinary attainments and vonderfullv helped by the abundance ^ nd cheapness of materials like iron ^ ire, ooal, and lumber in elose proxmity. to Expansion of production in tlie nanner indicated must result in ex- wi >ansion of markets for the things *r produced. The South is supplying its va lome needs to an extent never known >efore, and by domestic interchange ontributing to the general welfare d? nuc.h more directly than when, in the to dden times, the chief beneficiaries *c vere a comparatively few planters, 't is now seeking other markets. Its ?xports are no longer to be wholly aw materials for the manufactures * )f other lands. It has manufactures )f its own and will seek customers therefor.?Troy Times. m _ In -? O] hi ildren ' >ts Old Fnlka ! \l . tl / M e: oasties 1 a . 11 n ii The crisp, delicious. ' S golden-brown food, t: 0 made of Indian Corn " M n u A tempting, toaeing ^ ta?te distinctly differ- ' ^ ent?all it's own. ^ -Tfc. T.?t. lk(?" j; % SoM Oy Qncn. C ^ Pap?sr pica., 10c. / * 'A Partem Owml Co., U4. jj 7 r ? r W. ' WW-.MiRWl OVEW I ' .#C# ^ v. i ^ ? ^ ' - - ?Cartoon by 'noted educator urges i dds Spice to Study, Professor PalDt Knowledge ol Social Life-Warns filvpn lln tn Rnnlr* Un?? D? vtiwu v|i iw uuuno iuiidi ipv# nam Boston, Mass. ? Professor George lerbert Palmer, of Harvard, slxtyjvon years old, twice wed and reorted to be contemplating a third enture In matrimony, his next bride ) be a Wellesley professor, has come >rward with the statement that a litis flirting, properly conducted, of ouree, is not only advisable, but ven imperative, for the average col!ge boy and girl. "Flirting is the surest road toward le proper knowledge of social life," lys the professor, who has the dlsnctlon of being the oldest member t the Harvard faculty, and whose >cond wife, Alice Freeman Palmer, as president of Wellesley College om 1881 to 1887. "I think the girls of Radcliffe and 10 hnva nf Mnrwof/I .? *?? *?iu UU ? \'IC VUU UiUtU t their time to study. They actually ury themselves iu their books, and ie result is that when they get irough college they don't know a ling about social lite. "They should mingle a little frivoly with their studies ? in other ords, they should flirt a little. Were to advise the boys of Harvard or ie girls of Radcliffe. I would tell lem to go around and see things ore- than they do. "I am always reminded of. a girl aduate of Radcliffe, who studied so ird that she got the reputation of sing over-studious. She never went lywhere. While the other girts LADCLIFFE GIRLS ARE can Coles 'Won't Discuss Profess Down on You 11 if C< Boston,Mass.?"Flirt by all means, little ilirting now and then is good r one, and if done in the proper ay is absolutely harmless"?advice Professor George Herbert Palmer Radcliffe girls. Miss Coles, the dean of Radcliffe, as asked her opinion of this advice om the oldest member of the Har,rd faculty. "Oh. I can't discuss it?I can't talk tout it at all." Sitting near by was a pretty stusnt, and the reporter raised his hat * her. The girl smiled and the tung man queried: KILLS SELF WHEN elephonc Girl TakrH Acid Afte Error?Chief Didn't Know f" Was to Man "Wti Philadelphia, Pa.?Insulting rearkB addressed to a girl employed i the Bell telephone exchange here id a reprimand from the chief jerator when she told the man who ad insulted her by wire what she lought of him, caused her to commit licide by drinking carbolic acid. She as MIbs Elizabeth Monk, seventeen sars old, of No. 1522 Passayunk venue. When the chief operator jprimanded Miss Monk the chief did ot understand the situation, and lought the girl was flirting. Miss [onk, when called upon afterward to tplain her conduct, experienced no ifllculty in clearing herself of the nputation which had been cast upon er. Notwithstanding that, she went ome, determined to die rather than ice her comrades in the exchange, lefore she drank the acid she wrote note. Ih it she called attention to he fact that she had been reptilanded publicly by her chief for actig as any girl should do when inalted by a man. "I am too ashamed to go back and ;co the other girls," she wrote. Rather than have the stigma of beig a flirt cast upon me, I shall kill lyself." Miss Monk was almost dead when he was discovered. In the hope of avlng her life she was hurrisd to the iethodlst Episcopal Hospital, where he died an hour afterward without egalning consciousness. Before the I rouble arose in the exchange she had kmdactor's Stealings Ran From $2.SO to $11.06 a Day. Brooklyn, N. T.?Judge Dike senraced Frederick Lehefeld, who had een convicted of pilfering from the trooklyn Rapid Transit Company rblle working as a conductor, to not ms than two and a half years or lore than five years in Sing Sing. The defendant, it was shown, kept memorandum book carrying an aeount of his stealings or profits from he company, which varied from 3.1# to |ll.#S,a day daring his polod of service. k , _ . T COME. \ \ y J k Hi > ?; : j i. u- fr l~l~" ' 1 " wl C. R. Macau ley, in the New York World. CI COLLEGE GIRLS TO FURT. ed er, of Harvard, Thinks?Gives Proper Li Radcllffe Girls?Too Kuch Time inj n ITn k.. U^.,1 ril-ll lit J c up ujr naru runuiij AiiKrwaru. th were having a good time she re- eo mained In her room studying. She tri was graduated with high honors, and when I was bidding her good-bye I told her that she had a task before v her. "She thought I would say some- m< thing in regard to work, but, contrary tej to her anticipations, I told her that at she would have to dirt good and hard ci) to make up for ?ost time, and she said ar that she would. vy "Of course, it makes a good deal of . difference who does the flirting, Cl' where and with whom. "The time, the place and the boy and girl have a Le good deal to do with it. If all could du see the tired-out boys and girls that I gj, see. all would, I know, admit that a little bit of flirting now and then would be a real vacation for them. c" "I have three lectures a week at fkti Radcliffe, and it is surprising how ag many young girls are letting the very W? best part of their lives go by without having the least bit of enjoyment. . ? ? - - ?' ~ iiicie arc iuuuy uoys nere ai Harvard who do not know what social life Pa means. They study from the time they enter school until they graduate. "Of course, there are some who do nothing but fool away their time; I ? do not mean to say that that Is what I uphold, for It Is not. What I mean is to mix things up a bit, sprinkle a gT: little flirting Into the studies. One sa! can have a little of both and still Qr come out all right at the end." ^ fr< FORBIDDEN TO FLIRT ro< tal ior Palmer'* Advice, Bat Swoops Oil mple Who Try Xt. fr( "What do you think about a little Th flirting now and then?" jn "Well. 1 don't know. I have been thinking"? .. That is far as the girl got when 1 the dean swooped down on the couple. aw "Here, this is not right. You must fici not talk to the girls here. I cannot allow It," she said, excitedly. "Then you do not believe Professor Palmer?Is that It?" asked the re- . porter. "You know 1 was just tryiwa his advice." Pa "Well. I don't say I believe ft or I don't believe it, but you must not he talk to our girls." CALLED A FLIRT. <1 Di r Reprimand?Blamed TbrouKh Operator's Htiarp Retort , 10 Insulted Her. 8*1< made all arrangements for her vacntlon, and had told friends that ad- Lc vancement had been promised to her. clc A man called for a number and q endeavored to engage Miss Monk in conversation while she was getting it for him. She replied courteously until he began to make insulting re- be marks to her. Miss Monk resented C. them at once. She told him he ought uf to be ashamed of himself, and that he had better go about his business. "u To compel him to do so she cut him off on the wire. tic It Is asserted the girl's chief did tin not understand the situation and rei heard only a few of the words she had uttered. Their import was misconstrued. uYour language is a violation of the rules of the office, and you will be called upon for an explanation to- tw morrow morning," it is asserted the chief operator said. "You know it is against the rules to hold a conversetion in business hours." firMiss Monk endeavored to explain, at but her explanation was not accepted, ca She was directed to go "to the front" jj, in the mnrnlnf* k .. ? i?o long night on duty in the exchange she brooded over the trouble. When JP* morning finally came she "went to Oj the front" and told of the Insults to bo which she had been subjected. by "Your explanation is perfectly sat- fpt Isfactory, Miss Monk," she was In- ? I formed. "Report for duty as usual ~1 this afternooft." ?" State Health Department Men Inspecting Summer Resorts. Albany, N. Y.?Inspectors of the State Department of Health are mak- 110 lng the annual tour of the various th summer resorts la the State to gather wi information relative to sanitary con- e], dltions. Particular attention is paid to methods of garbage disposal, use ^ of cesspools, water supply and ventll- ^ ation of buildings. When violations to Iof the law are found, owners of the I Fi property are eeapeUed to make I ma improvements. Summer resorts in I q, the whole State will toe inspected. v ^vF ?IU CATCB_LEON LING Uaf McCaflary Feels Reasonably Owtain Thai Elsie 8i#eTs Morder* Will Be Apprehended. New York, Special. ? Inspector cCafferty, rjfriff of the New Yorl tective bureau, has given ou a first authentie statement 01 a murder of Elsie Sigel that ha: en made by the police since th< scovery of the girl's bo^y on Jun< I in a trunk in the bedroom of Leoi ng, an Americanized Chinaman, ii i Eighth avenue chop sucy restau nt. "We shall catch the murderer,' ie inspector said. "Delay does no tar that although it chafes us. Tin hole comfcry is one vast rat-traj ith every exit guarded. "The girl was killed between 1< clock in the morning and noon o; ine 0 and we believe Leon Ling i: e man who did it with Chung Sing s intimate, and possibly others, ai >ssible accomplices. We have Chunj ng. From his room in Eighth aven !, Leon Ling was thought to hav< me straight to Washington and ther< nt the 'Dcn't worry' telegram sign 1 'Elsio' received on the night o; e murder by the Sigel family. It is dellnitely and clearly estab ihed tV.at the trunk was cartet om the Hfghth avenue house ii hich the "body was found to i linese laundry at No. 370 West 12( reet and thence to Newark, N. J. ience it was returned to the roon Leon Ling, where it was discover It has been shown, too, tha ng was personally busied in mov g the trunk about. It seems clear that to have been a( e various places mentioned Lin| uld not have spared the time for j ip to Washington. Those receiving m and the trunk all showed sus cious forkr.owledge of his coming "No other murder that I can re eratei has attracted such wide in rest or such enthusiastic cooper ion on the part of police of othei :ics. All the forces of the country e working as one great machine e have flfty men of our own in th? :ios of the East. ' The only possible ship on wliid (on conld have left the country ii e to arrive in Yokohama July 3 ic will be watched." All the Chinese laundries in th< y, which are operated by four comnies in the name of individual runners, received notices in Chines* irning employes mat tney iiiusl ve nothing to do with white women yond business over the counter, oe in of dismissal. Brandenburg Out and In. New York, Special. ? Althougl oughton Brandenburg was acquit1 here Tuesday of the charge ol and larceny in connection with the le of an alleged spurious letter ol over Cleveland to The New Yorli mes he had only a few minutes ol ?edom. Before leaving the court am, he was re-arrested and will be ten to St. Louis next week lor trial a charge of fraudulently eutieinjj >m the child's parents his stepson ie minimum penalty for this offense Missouri is 20 years' imprisonint. The author was taken back t< e tombs in default of $5,000 bail, t< 'ait the arrival of the Missouri ofers. After Train Robbers. Winnipeg, Manitoba, Special.?Beitive Draper, of Spokane, with a ck of bloodhounds ,has traced th< nadian-Pacilio train bandits thai Id up an express truin last week al imloops into an old mining tunnel Red Gulch, 6 miles east of Ash>ft, British Columbia. Detective aper has sent for help,, as the twe >n trapped are heavily armed ami ow flght. One of the robbers was killed bj instable Rucker Tuesday. He wort >thes bought in Spokane. H. Hix Appointed General Ma nag er Seaboard Air Line. Bntlimore, Special.?C. H. HLx hat en appointed general manager, and R. Capps, freight traffic manage] the Scahoard Air Line with headarters in Portsmouth, Va. Thest portant changes in the organize>n, as announced officially, follow e recent resignations of W. A. Gar tt, and L. Sevier, both of theii icea having been abolished. Royster's Body Recovered. Columbia, S. C., Special.?Aftei o days of hard work, dragging d diving in the canal, the body ol ung Arthur L. Royster was discov ed about 8 o'clock Tuesday nighl the Gervais street gates of th< nal, having passed almost the en e length of thf canal, nearly thret iles, since he was drowned Mondaj srning. The body was taken t< tford on the early morning Seaard train Wednesday, aecompaniec ' his brother, Tom, who arrivec icsday morning, a delegation ol nsons ami n company of friends anc 'ice associates. Judge Overrule? Motion. AsheviUe, N. C., Special.?"I d( t find anything wrong whatever ir e manner in which this grand jurj ib drawn, summoned and empan ?d," spoke Judge Newman fron e bench in United States District >urt Tuesday morning in referrinf the motion of defendants in thi rat National Bank of Ashevilli napiracy and spa has element eases t? iash the bill of indietment. ' 'Vv \ * .?!" ,f> J f ==' l ' Mow Old la Biddy? t English authorities hold that there i is no certain test of age in fowls. 3 But they admit that, in general, the e spurs both of hens and cocks will dise tlnguish a two-year-old bird, i There are exceptions, however, in 1 which really young birds develop oldlooking spurs, while really secondyear birds preserve the short, rounded , spurs of a cockerel. The texture of the legs is a guide, to some extent, and so are the <^fel^8 cacy and freshness of the skin of tbf * J face and comb, but still an occasional hen will preserve her youthful ap' pearance to a startling degree. ^ The skin of the body is a better s test, as It becomes coarser and dry? er-looking with age. s Formerly the wing feathers were B ; considered an absolute test as be tween a pullet and a hen. even after ** a the long practice of early breeding a had made the moulting of early pul- ^ . lets quite common, f An Austrian authority says that a pullet will show rose-colored veins . on the surface of the skin, under the j wings*. Thbre will also be long silky hairs j growing there. After a year old j these hairs disappear, as also do the veins, and the skin grows white and 1 velnless. 1 It is more difficult to judge the age " of water fowls than of other poultry, ' partly from the absence of spurs, ' partly from greater longer''v, and partly because the water kec.>s their legs soft and fresh. ! Dnrkfl waHHIp mnro hoovlltr o? ! grow older, and after two or three ! years they acquire a depression down the breast. An abdominal pouch of consider- H . able size indicates great age in geese. Turkeys up to a year old are said ** to have black feet, which grow pink t up to three years of age, when they , gradually turn gray and dull. Age in pigeons is often told by the J color of the breast. In squabs, the flesh looks whitish as seen through i the skin, but becomes more and more ! purplish as the bird grows older. Poultry in Sliuping Boards. ; The weight placed on the top of > the chicken is used to give a compact | appearance. This may be an iron 01 . brick. If chickens are hung by legi P after being plucked It spoils theii . | appearance. Plan used by Ontaric | I Experiment Station. ii i uys *cr tapniize. ' A capon bears the same relation to ' a rooster as a steer to a bull, and at bull meat is not equal to steer meat, so are roosters not equal to capons. When cockerels become capons they cease to grow combs and wattles. do not crow and fight, grow much faster and finer flesh and bring more money than ordinary chickens. If a cock weighs ten pounds, a - capon will weigh fifteen, and bring i three to four times the price, one > hundred and twenty-five dollars often t being paid for 100 capons. I It certainly pays to caponize surI plus cockerels. A set of tools, with . full instructions foi using, costs , 12.50, and only ordinary skill is ret quired. * For caponizing, cockerels must be less than six weeks old and weigh a "* , pound or more. r d ' Favorite G?*<c. A flock of well-bred Toulouse geese. These are about the best geese r for average farm conditions. Incubator Chicks. A Chicks must be kept clean either r ?uh *? ? t ? mm uruH ur in a Drooaer. to clean < r tjjem every day is not too often. The f neat from the brooder makes drop* pings produce foul air, as do hens t when brooding chicks. Give no fee<l_/ ^ > until the clutch is at. least thirty-six / . hours old. They do not need it for,,^|4 . the yolk absorbed just before hatch, ing provides them until that age. ? , Leave them in the incubator or under hens until ready to give the first feed, ^ I which should be fine gravel or sand on the bottom of the coop or brooder. ^ , They will eat quite a lot of it, and it . provides the gizzard with grit to grind food. Points About Poultry. The yolk of the egg spoils mnch 0 > quicker than the white. > It must not be forgotten that food ^ ! flavors the flesh as well as the egg. If not on free range, have good 4 1 yard for exercise and have this yard L Umed and plowed at least once a year. M I A French naturalist asserts that i the use of pounded garlic with the- 4 ? usual food has been made to cqb> pletely eradieate the gapes among 4 pheasants In Europe.