University of South Carolina Libraries
Change of Name. There is a family named Pennen living in the north of England whose | original name was Purvis. Two hun- ( \ dred years ago Frank Purvis turned i pirate and was killed fighting on his ship. The family then decided to relinquish the name of Purvis and take that cf Fennen and ever since the eldest i?on of the family on attaining his majority signs a pledge that he mill not resume the name of Purvis. The pledge has been handed down from father to son and bears some . fifty signatures. News of the Day. .JiM? A Kansas jury nas given a veruiti for $400 damages to a man whose neighbor called him "a Kansas jackass." The other man has appealed the case on the ground that it is not slanderous to the average man to call < him after a jackass who has the ad- 1 vantage of a Kansas training. The San Francisco Chronicle says: "'The Legislature of Hawaii, running riot in the full flush of youth, supply- 1 tug us with scandal after scandal, i Money, of course, is the source of the evil and time and prison bars the , remedy. When the Territory become! older we may expect much of it, as it woo vnnnv." Xiao's Cure is the best medicine we ever used lor all affections of throat and lungs.?Wk. O. Ekdslky, Vanburen, Ind., Feb. 10, 1900. Electric railways kill 100 persons a month. The New* and Courier.A landmark of the Palmetto State is the Charleston News and Courier. Through the years of war and pea- e. through periods of prosperity and adversity, the News and Cou. iler has stood for the welfare of its State a d section and has won for itself a place in the hearts and homes of its readers tb&t could be filled by no other publication? ^ Tfnrr Coughing "I was given up to die with quick consumption. I then began to use Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. I uu^ivvwu ?l vhwvj ?uu ?iu4 mvw ?m perfect health."?Chas. E. Hartman, Gibbsttrwn, N. Y. It's too risky, playing with your cough. The first thing you know it will be down deep in your lungs and the play will be over. Begin early with Ayer's Cherry Pectoral and stop the cough. Three slses: tic., nourh tor ui ordinary ?aid; Me., jut right for bronchitis. hoaraeBm. hard colds, etc.; ft. nott eoaoamlcal for chronic cases and to keep on band. J. C. ATE* CO., Lowall, MaM. atoKoitoiioacoi|oitoito?to^o?oaeoi|o I (mm Indigestion, ? o y Effoeta f?u lweill- % * ataly. O ^ W. Sand 50c. at Drugstore* J OfcOfcOhOfcOfcOfcOfcOfcOfcOfcOfcOilOM .EVERY Mill HIS OWN DOCTOR. nfri. Haas n loo Ayers, a. M., K.D. a Till is a noil ValualUo Book Car the Household, teaching aill g dM the eaally-dUtlngulmbed - fcaptouef dinerent Dweaeea. I be Cmm< and Means of Pre I _ i wanting roch DUeaars, and the I / V . latptert Remedies wnlcn will al- -f elate oe care. |J m Rages, Profusely Illustrated. . "f The Book le written In plala Kh, ? tiujd.jr Kngliab. and is free ' Croat (he technical terms wnlon ) reader bom Doctor Books so MS** \ aataeieu to the generality of 7J I r readers. Thia Bosk is la- , _ If if (j traded te br ?l herrlw In _ * J1 U Jr the Family, .ad Is no worded V A as to tie readily understood oy all #V , XLTtVMa rOHTPAlO. I Roatagr Stamps Taken. ' IT''/1 \ 1 i Mot only does tnis Book coo- I { L 1 ^ Oh ?o much laformation Kela- -<5: { Al \ 1 tlra u> Disease, but eery proper dfc \\M V glees a Otnnpiece Analysis of I I) \l> I ' rarythlag pertaining to Coon. * I W4 ? Alp. Marriage and the Produo 1 Mm I <* aad tearing of Healthy ? FhasiUee,u> ether with VsUoabie I Mecapes an . Prescript ion*, Kg- I BV plana Uoo .. ,.<> tan teal Practice, I V CorreccuM- 0rdinM7Herba.de I J Coat- mt latxx. K IT* * ?w?l\ I J ? pyNi.V.rnjr CAU? ^ A*n wr? 7T. WKAVEKVILLK, N. C. Eight miles from AsheYll e. We want jou to here onr catalog. Address. MARVIN A. YQ8T. rnrr a beautiful rKrr souvenir of 11l/l( l0ui5burg college and a Picture of the Oreen Hill House Where the First Conference of the M. E. Church was held In 1785. Address WET ALLEW. ?*c.. I/)Uiautnu. n. t: Medical college of Virginia. Established 1838. ^.DftsrtmtntR of Medicine, Dentistry end I'hirmwf. The Sixtr-*ixth ,<ee too wilt commence September 29. 19J3. Tui? t'on fees end living expenses are moderate. For announcement end further information, address. Christopher Tompklu*, X. D., Dean, Hlchurond, Virginia. So. 32. ti? Tft TK)VV A?DRDKOOMwUv 11/ tJ0l RFNTforentire se?Mon Y V^'ofNlSKMOXTflSat Piedmont High School, One of the he^t Preparatory Schools in North Carol'nt. A^le Faculty. Mountain rconery, Healthinl C!im ?te. ressioa opeus oug. lo o. Write to W , D. Bl'UNR, Latvndalc.N.C. : > Hie French Wuy of Looking; After Roads. JktOJC. EXTOXE is a pretty little ^ town with n marked Eng- j O |1/| O H?h tinge to Its colony. It ? 7( MX. has a fine quay, not unlike (', thp Promenade des Aug- . lais at Nice, but smaller. Owing to * the way the mountains curve around the town it is said to have the mildest climate on the Itiviera. Here we take s the Ibwer Cornielie Road to return to j Nice by way of Monte Carlo and Monaco. This road is livelier than the ( upper road, being much more tre- j quented. American farmers and other t road users will smile to know that this j magnificent highway runs for a couple ^ of hundred miles along the coast; that t it is guarded with stone parapets prac- j tically ail the way; that in particularly bad places the parapets are crowned with iron fences about three feet high; that it is carried over gullies and 1 streams on magnificent stone bridges as good as those of the railways in our country; that at times it pierces the 1 spurs of the mountains with long and * lofty tunnels; incredible as it may ' seem, they have bored tunnels through * the solid rock for a wagon road; as if f to flout the practical American they J have sometimes cut the rocky portal 5 of the tunnel into ornamental shapes. * Fancy spending such an amount of ' money on a mere wagon road! Fancy ' boring tunnels for It to run through 1 solid rock! Above all, fancy making * ornamental doors to the tunnel! 1 There are other things about the Cor- ' niche Road that excite the contempt of 1 the practical American mind. As a 1 national highway it is under the MIn- ' lster of Roads and Bridges, one of the 1 French Cabinet officers. Like all the ^ national highways, it is divided into f sections of a few hundred kilometres. 1 Each section is in charge of a section 1 man, who spends his entire time patrol- 1 Ing the road and mendinc it ns soon as f a break appears. He has all the neces- 1 sary tools, while along the roadside are * little piles of brt)ken rock, pulverized * to different degrees of fineness, with ( which to repair breaks at once. He is ( like a street sweeper on a city block. ' and on the block beyond him there is a ; man to attend to the next section. As ' I saw these poor purblind Frenchmen ( carefully mending little holes In the ( road ? holes which we would leave 1 alone until they developed Into gullies 1 and then "mend them next winter"?I 1 oould not but feel proud of the supe- s rior methods of my country. Another piece of French folly was ! this: Every half-mile we would encoun- 1 ter a small two-wheeled sprinkling ' cart about the size of a barrel, drawn * by a lad. This at once provokes Amer- { ieans to roars of laughter: it is such small business and so ridiculous, don't 1 you know, to sprinkle a road 200 miles 1 long with a sprinkler the size of a bar- ( rel. True, this barrel was stamped ' "Villefranche," which is a little town. 1 and further back there was one stamped "Mentone," which is also not a large place. All along the road there 1 are many barrels. But we do belter in 1 our country. When the roads near a small town need sprinkling, the super- 1 visors try to raise the money?and fail. ' They try to buy a big sprinkllng^cart ' which, with the horses and all. costs 1 about $2000?and fail. Then the eitl- 1 zens try to raise the money by sub- * scriptlon?and fall. Then the county 1 papers take it up and try to raise the 1 money?and fall. Then all hands be- J moan the lack of public spirit, and go to work to pet the sprinkling cart?and 1 fail. Here the small towns get ipriuk- 1 ling carts and do it by hand. It's true I the operator Is only an eighteen-year- 1 old boy, but in many of the small ' towns of our country the same boy ' would be loafing round the corner gro- 1 eery chewing tobacco. However, a ' two-horse sprinkling cart Is a more ' Imposing sight; perhaps the American way Is the better way.?The Argonaut. Good Rotdi Movements. j The movement for good roads has j gained strength slowly, but steadily. , It holds what it gains, and goes for- j ward. In the New England States , good roads are strong adjuncts of nat- ] ural scenery, attracting people from a , distance to drive among the hills and j valleys, leaving money for entertain- < ment and carrying away pleasant ree- i ollections. New Jersey has made a j good start in road construction. Fenn- i sylvania has taken up the work, and at ] the session of the Legislature just , closed $0.500,000 was appropriated for | roadmaking. There the State pays ? two-tHlrds of the total cost, so that i more than $8,000,000 is in sight for use t on the highways of the State this year, j In this State a little has been done in j a good many places. The towns in several counties have stretches of improved highways, aggregating many miles, but lacking connection for a { thoroughfare across the State in any j direction. This is the aim of the league ( for good roads, and is strongly favored ? throughout the State. It received ree- j nenition in the last Republican State } platform, being there linked inseparably with canal improvement. The two are parted by the Cana! Referendum bill, but, whatever the fate of the latter. good roads will not be lost sight of. Appropriations aggregating $1,000,000 to pay the State's share of projected improvements are carried in the supply bill of this year. The proposition to commit the Stale to a $50,000,000 loan in behalf of the reform had popular approval to a degree not shown for any other public enterprise in years. An Eastern paper, treating of good s roads, savs: "\Ve are inclined to be- s - - * ' ere that the hundred's of millions ' rliich the State of New York proposes r> invest in the construction of a 1000- ( on barge canal, if judiciously applied o the genera! improvement of the lighways. would henetit the commerce ml industries of its people, as a whole, uore tlian the eaual will do." We lave no doubt of it. The eaual may erve as a good market road for the irodttets of the West; the farmers of Cow York w.nit Rood roads for tlieinelves. They and the dwellers In cities md villages want thein for their muuaJ advantage, to save time and wear ind tear, to promote ease in hauling, omfort In riding, economy iu transacttig the road business of a great comuonwealth. The people will decide vhether they will devote a huudred uiilion to the advantage of a few. the ante people who are awake to the lighway needs o* the many. They will lot permit the latter to he side-tracked ?r shut out. Every mile of good road s incentive and warrant for more, and lltlmately the State will l?e gridironed >.v good highways, meeting tlie like imirovements of its neighbors at the borler lines and uniting links in national ligliways.?Elmira (X. Y.) Advertiser. ENGLAND AND BRITAIN. The Prevailing Confusion Concerning These Two Names. It ought to be as easy?aud it is surey as important?says the Scottish Xaioualist, to do justice to the nou-Engish parts ol' the United Kingdom and lie empire, as to the non-Prussian states in the German Confederation. Prussia is the "predominant partner" u German}* as England is in Britain; Prussia is also the seat of the German iot*ernment. But no one, even in Berin, ever thinks of saying "Prussia" vheu he means Germany, or finds the east difficulty in using the imperial mine (and doing so invariably! when he empire and not Prussia alone is >eing referred to. English people, in heir references to Germany, are equaly careful and accurate. You never led them speaking of "Prussia and France" when they mean Germany ind France, and yet you find them alnost habitually speaking of "England ind France" when they mean Britain md France. The Prussians in this respect are wiser. They know that If iny attempt were made to substitute he Prussian name for that of Germany 11 feeling and friction would imnieliately ensue between them" and the ither German States. But they realize ;oo well the value of a united name, ind the unity and strength that it jelps to secure, to adopt so foolish a course, and English people would not inly show a higher sense of honor than it present, but more'justice and more (visdoin, if they followed Prussia's example. Even as it is, in speaking of iny of our colonies, they follow the very rule which they culpably neglect n speaking of the United Kingdom and :he empire. They never call a colony l)y the name of any one of its parts, ?ven the most important. They never :all Australia by the name of either Victoria or New South Wales. They never call Canada by tne name 01 Quebec, or Ontario, though the 6eat of govjrnment Is there. When the Domlnlou s spoken of, Jt gets, invariably, the name that applies to the whole of it. The same wise rule followed at home tvould secure invariably the united name for the United Kingdom and the mperial terms for imperial afTnirs. Some English people seem under the mpression that the Scotch can fairly t>e classed as English since they speak the English language. But the use of :he English language (so-called) does not turn a people Into English people nr their country into a part of England. English is the language of the L'nlted States of America, but the United States are no part of England. N'ew Yorkers, Kentuekians and Callrorninns all speak English, but are not, therefore, English people. The negroes of Georgia and Alabama also speak English, but they are not therefore Englishmen. There is a perfectly :-lear distinction between English people and English-speaking people?between being English and using w&t is ?alled the English language. Force of liable. The force of habit was very forcibly illustrated by an incident at the pumpng station of the water works at Enid. :V tank stand just outside the building s kept full of water for the accommodation of passers-by and the neighborHood stock. A cow accustomed to drink at this tank came for her mornng drink. The valley was covered with water and stood within two or :hree inches of the top of the tank, but :he cow went over the waste of waters :o the tank. Twice she stuck in the uud and appeared to be in danger of drowning, but by perseverance she inally reached the objective point. \fter drinking long and copiously she urned about and slowly made her way :o land, apparently satisfied that she lad done the only available thing to ind water.?Enid tQkla.) Eagle. The Frivolous Kitchener. Gossip from India grows more feversh about Lord Kitchener. The man of rou from the South Afrlcaa veldt has entered with surprising zest into the tmuseiuent of Anglo-Indira society. ;Ie has attached a ballroom to his leadquarters. He has melted down lumeroug trophies, caskets, cups and vhat uot to make a gold and silver liuner service, which is vastly adaired. There Is even a rumor, which ve distrust, that he has joined an amiteur dramatic club. As for matriuony, the commander-in-chief is already engaged by report to many lalles. and Ave are forced to remind the niblic that, under British Ioaa*. polycainv is forbidden ei'en in England.? ^ondon Chronicle. The hustler converts other people's tumbling blocks into his stepping | tones. ' household patters Cleansing Oilcloth*. To freshen Ihe oilcloth, wring a soft eloth out of clear warm water, dip one corner of it in kerosene, rub first with the wet cloth, then with the oiled corner. Use no soap.?The Household Ledger. To PMttnrlM Milk. Any housewife can "pasteurize" milk, making it sterile, if she cares to go to a little trouble. Place a pan of cold water on the stove and put the vessel containing the milk into this pan. Just as soon as the water comes to a boll take it off. Add a pinch of baking soda to the hot milk, the proportion being a little less than half a teaspoonful to the quart. If the milk is sweet it will remain so for twenty-four hours even in the hottest weather if put in a stoppered bottle. Physicians recommend this method of treating milk for the use of babies in summer.?New York Press. A Smntner Playroom. Wherever there is an available piece of ground attached to a house, a temporary room may be erected for 'not m'aiuer iiurpusts. ru IUIU uie ^ruuuu four poles where the corners of the room are to be; connect the tops by pieces of scantling; the walls and roof are made of India or Chinese matting. Erect a pole in the centre of the room extending two feet out of the top, over which the matting is stretched, thus giving to it a tent-like appearance. The rough wood sides can be hidden by cheap cotton draperies. The furniture of this summer house consists of a table, a few lounging chairs and a hammock. The occupant's taste and ingenuity would dictate any further furnishing or decoration, but the simple room as described is a delightfully airy, comfortable haven from the heat of stuffy rooms and thick walls.?American Queen. ^ Whitening White Paint. White paint is cool and clean and fresh-looking and it is the most suitable thing for summer cottage rooms, but it has its disadvantages. One of them is that it must be constantly looked after, as it shows up every spot and speck. To clean paint that has become dirty, procure a basin of warm water, a saucerful of whitening, and a flannel. Dip the flannel in the water, squeeze it nearly dry. take up as much whitening as will adhere to it, uuu appiy 10 uie paimeu sunace. Very gentle rubbing will remove any grease or dirt. Rinse over with clean water, and dry with a soft chamois leather. Paint cleaned In this way will look as well as the day it was laid on. White stairs show up black in the crevices in a most annoying manner if not dusted very carefully. A little whitening dipped on a rag and rubbed over, after all possible dust has been got rid of, remedies this defect.?New York Commercial Advertiser. . . RECIPES . Currant-and Raspberry Sherbet?Boil a quart of water and a pint of sugar twenty minutes. Add a te-aspoonful of gelatine, softened in cold water and strain. When cold, add a cup and a half of currant juice and half a cup of red raspberry juice and freeze as usual. Strawberry Cream?Mix half a cup of sugar, a cup of strawberry pulp, aud a pint of double creain. Beat with an egg-beater until solid to the bottom of the bowl, or use a "whipchuru," and take off the froth as it rises. Serve, thoroughly chilled, In glasses or in meringue shells. Rice and Cheese?Rice may be cooked with cheese making u dish equal to macaroni. Boil and drain the rice and place it In a buttered bak? ing dish In alternative layers with grated cheese. Sprinkle the top thickly with bread crumbs, dot the butter, moisten with milk and bake in a quick oven. Mustard Cream Dressing?Stir together one cupful of milk, yolks or three eggs, one tablespoonful of mustard, one tablespoonful of sugar, two tablespoonfuls of melted butter and two level tablespoonfuls of cornstarch; add to this one cupful of hot vinegar; cook in a double boiler until it thickens; if too thick when cold add cold milk or cream. Vegetarian Cutlets?Prepare mashed potatoes as for the table; grate a medium-sized onion, and fry it brown in just enough butter to brown. Mix with the potatoes. For six potatoes takes a dozen tiny new carrots and five very small white turnips, boil separately in salted water, chop fine; add to the potatoes with a few finely shredded boiled string beans, a little parsley and salt and pepper to taste. Form into flat, oblong shapes, dip in beaten egg and bread crumbs and fry in deep hot fat. Serve with brown or tomato sauce. Asparagus'"" With Black ButterWash the asparagus thoroughly. Cut the stalks to uniform length, leaving a little of the tough portion by which the stalks may be handled. Scrape the scales front the lower part of the stalk or pare off the skin. Tie in small bundles very compactly and cook in boiling salted water until tender, but not too soft, from flfteen to thirty minutes. Remove with u skimmer and drain. Then dispose on a hot dish, one with a perforated rack of some sort being preferred. Serve at the same time little dishes of "black butter," into which the stalks may be dipped while eating. . - FTT8 permanently cured.No Ota or nerrooa- A neas after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. *2trial bottle andtreatiaefree Dr. R. H. Kusa, Ltd., 9S1 Arch 8t., Phlla.,P.i Thermometers used by physicists show a change of a millionth of a degree. ? . Ladles Can Wear Shoes One size smaller after using Allen's Foot Ease, a powder. n manes ugui ur new ruuca easy. Cures swollen, hot, sweating, aching feet, ingrowing nails, corna and bunions. At all druggists and shoe stores, 25c. Don't accept any substitute. Trial package Fbke by mail. Address, Allen S. Olmsted, LeBov, N.Y. The art of glyptics, engraving on precious tones, is being revived in France. Mrs.Wlaslow'a Soothlng3yrup for ohlldrei teething,soften the gums, reduces Inflammation,allays pain,cures wind colic. 25c. abottle Italy has 95,701 acres of orange and lemon groves containing 16,739,907 frees. The Raleigh .Horning Post. Among the young and rigorous dallies of the South none are superior to tbe Baleigh Morning Post. Taklog tbe full press service of the famous Laffan Bureau, the same as used by the New York Sun, the Post has j special facilities for giving all the news all f. the time. Its staff of correspondents would ? be difficult to match The editorial depart- ? ment is conducted on able and progressive lines. Liver Pills ( That's what you need; something to cure your biliousness, and regulate your bowels. You ? need Ayer's Pills. Vegetable; * gently laxative. J Want your moustache or beard ; a beautiful brown or rich black? Use f BUCKINGHAM'S DYE ; nm cm. o? ommnigm ua a. r. mix a co., sa??pa, k. a. ( INSOMNIA "i hsve bees aclnf Caaeareta for Ib?oihd<s. with which I have been afflicted foroter twenty jeara, ml I e?n say that Caaeareta have (Ivan me mora I relief than any other remedy i have ever tried. I snail cervaiuij rrcuaiincuu lunu w uij imam m being all tbey ire repreiented." Thoa. Glllard, Kit la. I1L f Bowals ^ ynocidi plr> WwyVW rVwir CANDY C ATLANTIC Pleaaent, Palatable. Potent. Taate Good. Do Good, Herer Sicken. Weaken or Gripe, lie. tic. He. Merer old in balk. The gknnlne tablet (tamped CCC. Qoaranteed to care or your money back. 8terlla( Remedy Co., Chicago or *.Y. 597 AMMALSALEe TEIHUJOI MIES < Endowed Colleges h3 Correlated Schools I *?<1.Wt7nOTV *7" *wJ tfrU not toottlut ? 1? 5Lt* laetltatleee un4rr on* manaorcu*Ua" ?? K> off* the beet Save Time and Money < Por partlcnlars, addree^ stating age aad aex o< Hndent. Chancellor WM. W. SMITH, A.M., LUD College Park, Lynchburg, Va. Inline PAUPCO Absolutely palnleea. J?? bu"r uB"ben, knife No platt-r.MoacMe. \oil?ui[li!n(Alie Write and state caa* folly and ret my "Pinion md price for a ears. Dr. ncott Maeon.Box 10, l*ry Bridge, Va. 9^ySvSvSvSySv2vI^vSvSv2VSt | Littleton Fen H oj One of the moat prosperous sch y standard of scholarship, located at a y and with a large patronage from M Jersey to Florida?an Institution the A We will ta'ce a limited number ol a Board and Full Literar > per term os conditions made Icoown ^ REV. J. n. RHODES _ qlaremon; wtlvc courses . INTELLIGENCE, FIDEOTV I A.re control!In .: principle! witi Faculty a nd? 1 *CHOl)L, vVayueshv*. Virginia, and ha the South. Write for catiluguo. JA.IIKi _? Pj? Factory Loaded Smok< I It's not sentiment ? it's not I most intelligent and successfi |5 Factory Loaded Shotgun Sh fe give. It's their entire reliabilil I uniform shooting. Winchest | ed with smokeless powder, ar the market. Winchester " R< I smokeless powder are cheap i Try either of these brands ar. Be sure to get Winchest W| THE SHELLS THE CI 1 JUST THE BOOK CONDENSED ENCYCLOPEDIA OP traata lpoa about arary enbjaet under tfca an. aad will ba aaat, poaipald, far Sta. la atarapa. pot ===? AN ENGYC trill altar ay for Plata Index, aa that It may ba 6 CJ ?% la a lick mine of valuable h* ifi E"k Litereetlnp manner, and la tUBeatbaemail ena of FIFTY CENTS ?bv prove of lnoaicolabia benefit to tboea wboaa ads trill alaa ba faxad of rreat ?alae to ibnee wko < baaoaaaaisad. BOOK PU3LISH1MO H 4 Millions of U.M.C. Shot Shells are sold each year. They are made in the largest cartridge <5 factory in the world. TbeUNION METALLIC OHTRIDRE CO. BRIDOXPORT, CONN. YoardttUr mpoaitqasst t * , Rips n s Tabulesare ^the best dyspepsia Vp^l^^HRmedicine ever made. hundred millions M of them have been sold in the United States in a single v ^ year. Every Illness irislng from a disordered stomach is elieved or cured by their use. So \1 'ommon is it that diseases originate !rom the stomach it may be safely aa? jerted there is no condition of ill lealth that will not be benefited or 'j? *ured by the occasional use of Ripans j I'abules. Physicians know them and _ .-jj speak highly of them. All druggists ?eii thpm. The five-cent package is *<1 enough for an ordinary occasion, and ' -! :he Family Bottle, sixty cents, contains \V> i household supply for a year. One generally gives relief within twenty *.t minutes. 8a 82. ,/?fl ISAWMILLSSkI 1 with Hege'e Unlverxel Leg Beams,&ectllln-H ear, Simultaneous Set Works and the Hea-H oock-Ktng Variable Feed Worka are uiiex-B oelled for accukact, simplicity, dveabii.-B ..4 ITT AND BASK OP OPKKATIOIf. Write for fullH . descriptive circulars. Manufacturedbythe? >)Jj CprojSsyl Jf Removes all swelling ia 8 to a* P / dayi; effect* a permanent cm* A hi y> tote days. Trial treatmcat . ^ ./jftfc. given free. Ncthlngcsn be fairer Kural Write Dr. H. M. 0reel's SMI ?I^J , mw Specialist*. Bex B. AttSAta7ia? * $ : -JH nillPCD CURED WITHOUT CUTTING, .AnbCn A New Vegetable Remedy. WCure Guaranteed is Every Cm Treated. -V NATIONAL CANCER MEDICINE COMPANY. A\t Austell Bulldiaa, Atlanta, Ga. the Blood Cool, ItSTllil/lSfc the Brain Clear, QjLEUjflJUf the Liver ActiveUsed by AmtricaD -9Qtelvlti2^ Physicians for nearly 0 THE TARRANT CO.. ??a ss4 *1. SI Jay St. Nsw Tort. At Dragslsls or by m?< , \ QJ la time. Bold by druotxts. M fl fp i iiiiiTi ^1"^ l2vIv2vIv2v2v5V?*?^??? iale College | 9 ' - : 5 ools la the South, with a high H very popular Summer Resort, \ five states, extending from New / -* it is doing a great work. A . $ I pupils, including a y Tuition for $52.90 & 4 on spplication to j\ J i, A. fl., Pres., Littleton. N. C. \ r COLLEGE, 9HICKORY, N. CJ eeort. Pure mountain air and water, life, under leflnlnc Infloeucat t : 4 r>f study. Raise moat Reasonable. J Zonscrvaiory* J* X?ornamu iiM.ua, 2ne.. and Lei pete, Char.) Write for A A. J. BOLIN, A. President. ' Enthusiasm. Courtesy,' ;| of tbe F ISHBITBNR AIViITART re male for it it reputation 'hroofbout A. risHBCBNU. A. B.. Principal. ' ' gB BSTBk elcss Powder Shells. |3hHk1 the price ? that makes the il shots shoot Winchester ells. It's the results they iy, evenness of pattern and er "Leader" shells,load- MMBi e the best loaded sheila on rpeater" shells loaded with it price but not in quality. jj d you will be well pleased. H |H er Factory Loaded shells. H S 1AHPIONS SHOOT, feg-glftjafl YOU WANTS UNIVERSAL KNOWLEDGE, as? ltoocuiaa M pafoa, yrofoaoiy llltutratrd. ital mu of oLirar. Wfcm raadlac m donb* !LOPEDIAE?E 1 70*. It baa a con . ^ referred to oatHy. ThW bony W EJf Cf m lnJor?atiom. praMatod to aa well worth to ?oy om macy :b w. aafc tor It. A otutly of thin book wlQ loattoa ha. bo.a aefWcted, wbll. th? vo aiwa -a a not readily s*anun4 thy kaowl-djl tba# IMS E. 134 Lsonard St*. N. Y/CJt*. - ' i