The Lincoln home journal. (Lincolnton, GA.) 189?-19??, October 13, 1898, Image 4

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ind Soldier. HR>s.” mg dismounted ar When ho is Igjpou. IgA of his horse or IprTnfantry, armed with a Funshakable Robs is im belief that lose on earth is to show ■«try how to march. a but cocky gait, his gen¬ ii legs, his usually vague ■ the Infantry officer coin- 3 talking ’about, the fact pole garrison roars with ■iis jaunty assurance, only ■stead of weakening Bobs If, which, by the way, is ired by his artillery officer, it comes to fighting as in fobs is all right, He seems that-his . 30-bore rifle is a 3.2 ■Hnnon and proceeds with artil ryV©ash [licit and confidence. All of may be part of the explanation ; the hurried retreat of the 3,000 laniards when a battalion of the bird Artillery, fighting as infantry, f.nt into action at Cavite in support I our men holding the trenches.- |w York World. Beauty la Blood Deep. blood means a clean skin. No yH without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar c * ean y° ur Wood and keep it clean, by rinif up the lazy liver and driving all im from the body. Begin to-day to that pimples, sickly bilious boils, complexion blotches, blackheads, by taking for ten cents. All drug satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 00c. common laborer in tho Philippines ro¬ es ten cents a day. •So. 39 Ho-To-Bao tor Fifty Cents. tobacco habit cure, makes weax Vi strong, blood pure- 60c, *1- All druggists. ®grs. hing, Winslow’sSoothingSyrup softens the gums, reducing torchildren inflama .allays pain,cures wind colic. 3ac. a botta. ^ood Blood akes Health Hood’s Sarsaparilla makes good 1. That is why it cures so many m ises and makes so many people feel 9 jr than ever before. If you don’t feel m are half sick, tirpd, worn out, you Jbe made well by taking pod’s Sarsaparilla America’s Greatest Medicine. 88 *S Pills cure all Liver Ills. 25 cents. W Quite a Simple Matter. kins 11 is the factotum of au artist has made some noise in the world 11s quite as important a personage, Hs own estimation, as his master, ■day a lady called op. the artist in gjabsence i|'d of the latter and was re by Jinkins. Star me,” she cried, glancing first Bp incomplete picture and then at ■i&^y-djjd^Be.it'i-s very much like ris me,” said Jilkins, with a sn [r air. “I sits for all his old at.” men. ’s what he’s specially good fgp must be a very useful person to [employer,” observed the visitor. J’ou jially think good that old Mr. men?” Blank, R. A., is at bs. -Cos why. Cos he’s got noth ji lies, do! I order his frames, his wash colors his set his palettes, mix Lit here for him to look at. How la help being good? He’s got noth Blo but shove the paint on!” m LETTEBS FB0M E. Green and Mrs. Harry Hardy. |ie E. Grp:ex, Denmark, Iowa, [to Mrs. I’inkham: lad been sick at my monthly 1 for seven years, and tried everything I ever heard of, but ft any benefit. Was troubled ftekaehe, l.rs headache, pains in the and dizziness. Through my | wniis''Vegetable I was induced to Compound, try Lydia and E. [done me so much good. I am rand and well ” Harby Hardy, Riverside, Iowa, to Mrs. Pinkham the story of niggle with serious ovarian trou Irl the benefit she received from HHHof Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege raSfcinpound. |w This is her letter: thankful I am that I took ^’Ipydicine. japurA with inflammation I was troubled of the for ovaries, womb was also very was in constant misery. I had gjWrouble, was short of breath and Spffi : ot walk five blocks to save my very much with my d headache all the time, was ^ enstruations were irregular ■ , 1, had a bad discharge and _|d with bloating. I was a ■ ^^Kpatmcnts, ^ . Had but doctored still and was no . Vali advised by one of my write to you. I have now [secondbottle etable Compound, of Mrs. and Pink am —Ivery jffi way. I am able to do work and can walk nearly pothout fatigue; something I [neen able to do for over two Your medicine has done m* ■-f jod. than all the doctors.” . of the ostrich twenty i-h wing I white plumes grow to matu I months. while In those the male of the these fe I e, -cm or gray. T COSTS $i\ rtfa all it costs and tra cost of good 4c. —worth' “HOCK from the s.c. r GOOD ROADS NOTEa S&aieieieiefeieKiieief^ Function of the Road [Service. The function of a pavement or road j surface is very imperfectly under- j stood, even in seotions where stone roads have been in use for long jiper- j iods. It is commonly supposed that a wet spot or bog will become dry if j filled in; that a good road may be made anywhere, simply by making a shallow trench of the desired width and filling it with stone, and that the surface of a stone road needs to be “protected” from wear by covering it with loose screenings, sod, earth, or any old stuff that is handy in hot weather. To these erroneous notions are due many failures to get durability and satisfaction from attempts at road building. The importance til drain¬ age is not fully appreciated in most sections, but it is at the bottom of successful road construction, and neither permanence nor economy is possible if it is not amply provided for. A wet spot must be thoroughly drained before a road is carried over it, or it will always be wet, at least in the wet season, no matter what else is done to it. Water under a road bed is as fatal to the life of the road as water in a man’s lungs is fatal to his existence. The not uncommon practice of allow¬ ing a roadway to be lower than its sides makes it little better than a mere drain, for water settles on the sur¬ face, quickly softens it - and prepares it to be cut up by every passing vehicle. A raised and crowned road¬ bed which will shed water readily is arched essential. A dry of base stone, with capable a jilightly of cover shedding the rain, is requisite for a dry, permanent structure. The stone roadway is not only to serve as a roof for the natural base beneath, but is to take the wear of traffic, and not to be covered with other material as a “protection” to it. In places where earth is used for “binding” purposes, and little regular attention is paid to the roads and sprinkling is not done in dry weather, the road surface breaks up rapidly .under the influence of the sun. It is then that it has heaped upon it, to “protect” it, quantities of fine screen¬ ings, or earth and stones, and some¬ times even clay and sod from the gut¬ ters. The result is a poor road, for months, unworthy of the name “macadam.” If complete drainage is secured at the outset, the road crowned and sys¬ tematically cared for, with sprinkling in dry weather, and is thoroughly rolled as laid, without the use of clay to bind it, it will perform its functions satisfactorily and prove a valuable in¬ vestment of lasting worth.—L. A. W. Bulletin. Farmers Can Make Good Roads* John Gilmer Speed, writing on “How to Have Good Country Roads,” in tho Ladies’ Home Journal, pro proses “that in each county there be founded a Road Improvement Asso¬ ciation, which shall have a one or two days’ meeting in the autumn of each year. To the membership and to the meetings all the farmers should be in¬ vited, while all those in the country acting as road overseers, or road su¬ pervisors, should be urged especially to attend. At these meetings special, definite, practical instruction should be given in maintaining and repairing dirt roads. Competent men to give such instruction can be secured with¬ out cost to such societies, for the United States Department of Agricul¬ ture has a Road Bureau, and this bur¬ eau will always supply a competent in¬ structor to tell the people just exactly what they need, and how to do the work as it should be done.” Mr. Speed also urges that school children be interested in the work and taught the rudiments of road-building and road-keeping. To Make Better Roads Possible. The electors of Arkansas will vote at the next general election, on an amendment to the State constitution designed to provide for local option in road improvements. If the electors in any county vote in favor of a public road tax at the general election for State and county officers, then the county court shall have power to levy, in addition to the county tax, an amount not exceeding three mills on the dollar on all taxable property as a “Couuiy Road Tax,” to be used ex¬ clusively for building and repairing roads and bridges of the county. Notes of the Crusade. A sample half-m'ile of good roads is about to be constructed on the Fork and Kingsville road, in Baltimore County, Maryland. Stone roads on which earth or clay has been used for “binding” pur¬ poses get very muddy with every rain. They should be cleaned and scraped while wet, as the mud can best be re¬ moved at such times. The series of practical articles on “The Yalut of Good Roads and How to Make Them,” lately contributed to the press by D. F. Magee, of Lan¬ caster, Penn., are about to appear in pamphlet form. They contain much valuable matter. !^:It is proposed in North Carolina that narrow tires be taxed on heavy vehicles, one-and-a-quarter inch to pay $4.00 annually, and the amount to be decreased down to five-inch, which should pay fifty oents, while six-inch and wider ones would not be taxed at all. State Highway Commissioner Mc¬ Donald, of Connecticut, says that the roads now being built or improved in that State are very satisfactory, and he predicts that in a few years the State will have a system of highways quite up to the standard of New Jersey’s, United wiiioh, he says, is the finest in the States. FIRES THE DYNAMITE GUNS. Uent. John Gardiner Quinby, Ord¬ nance Officer .of the Vesuvius. Lieut. John Gardner Qulnby, who fired the dynamite guns on the Vesu¬ vius at the recent bombardment of ope of the forts at Santiago, is the senior lieutenant and ordnance officer of the dynamite cruiser. He was born In Rochester, N. Y„ In 1860, and is a son of Brig. Gen. I. F. Quinby, who was a classmate of Gen. U. S. Grant at West Point. Lieut. Quinby was appointed to Annapolis by President Grant in 1874. and was graduated third in bis class. He was the youngest member of the class, being only 14 years old when appdinted. After leaving Anna¬ polis he was assigned to the Richmond as an ensign, and served on her when she carried Gen. Grant on his trip around the world. He next served on the Lancaster, and from 1885 to 1887 was instructor in applied mathematics at Annapolis. His next service x^as on odi J) tm A m / Wr y LIEUT. JOHN GARDNER QUINBY. a cruise as Junior lieutenant on the echoolship Jamestown, and then he was detailed to the receiving ship Franklin, at the Norfolk navy yard. For three years succeeding this he was in charge of the Government hydro¬ graphic office at Norfolk, after which he took a course of study in high ex¬ plosives at the Naval War College at Newport. He is recognized as a torpe¬ do expert and was assigned to the Ve¬ suvius on account of his expert knowl¬ edge of the handli ng of high explosives. Stenkiewicz’s Method, of Work. Sionktewicz's method of making a book is as follows: He works out a de¬ tailed plan, and writes it down careful¬ ly. He fixes this in his head, and fats it “seethe and ferment” there, as he says. When ready to begin work, be di¬ vides his time, not into cb.ys, but weeks. During the first week > produces a certain amount, the see: r.d week a sim¬ ilar amount, and so on, week after week. He writes without correction, and never copies, producing just one manuscript—the one which be sends to the printer. Each week’s work contin¬ ues that of the preceding week. Though the pla/n of the book is elaborated care¬ fully in advance, this plan is not fol¬ lowed strictly; from the “seething and fermenting” in his head changes are suggested to the authoT, and he makes them. He has no secretary, amanuen¬ sis, copyist, or assistant. To write such books as ho does with¬ out copying or correcting, to create workslikethe trilogy and “Quo VadisT” by a series of efforts, each one of which gives a finished part, and each part be¬ ing a seamless and flawless continua¬ tion of the preceding, till the last, to¬ gether with all the others, forms a com¬ plete, unbroken whole, is perhaps the most amassing tour de force in literary experience. Sienkiewics employs no man or woman to help him. He makes all literary researches himself; visits and studies the places which he needs to see; and when writing in Switzer¬ land, Italy, Fiance, or other countries, takes with him oil the books he re¬ quires, and shuts himself In with them during working hours, which for him are from eight ot nine till lunch at one o’clock, and then a couple of hours lifter on. He never writes after dinner in the evening, and has so ordered his “works and days” that he needs no assistance. --Century. The Rush For Gold. From ihe Times , Bluffs, III. The rush of sold seekers to the Klondike brings thrilling memories to tho “forty niners” still alive, of the time when they girdled tho continent, of faced the terrors of the great American desert on the journey tell to the laud of gold. These pioneers be heeded some experiences which should by gold seekers of to-day. Constant expo¬ sure and faulty diet killed large numbers while nearly all the survivors were afflicted € with disease, many of a rs them with rheuma¬ tism. Such a sufferer —- was Adam Mt Va n gundy, who now re AX t sides at . . Bluffs, III., yfi -<r where he hag ii been justice of the peace MrWWKV/j an< * was tk® 'Mil II DU* 1 first dent ot presi- the board of trustees. In “A Forty-niner.’’ a recent in terviewhe said: “I had been a sufferer of rheumatism for a number of years and the pain at times was very intense. I tried all the proprie¬ tary medicines I could think or hear of, but received no relief. “I finally placed my case with several physicians and doctored with them for some time, but they failed to do me any good. Finally, with my hopes of relief nearly exhausted I read an article regard¬ ing Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale Peo¬ ple, which induced me to try them. I was anxious to get rid of the terrible disease and bought two boxes of the pills. I began using them about March, 1897. After I had taken two boxes I was campletety cured, and the pain has never returned. I think It is the best modiotne I have ever taken, and am witling at any time to 3ign my name to any testimony setting forth its good merits. (Signed) Adam Yanoundy. Subscribed and sworn to before me, this 29th day of September, A. D. 1897. Franklin C. Funk, Notary Public. Mr. Vangundy’s statement ought to be --egarded as the criterion of the good merits 'these fills. What better proof could a psrsoa want than the above facts. i 1 aim n i i «m t 5 ’s 1 if i *i*r it ife r *» I I SVS I I L i: rfr J lyv.vi ssf^ to ' UP*=S I S jj-i ro VS? *,* ->• » «** I 03 V I 1 R 5 I I l iir I // F // I s I /!' t I / I S .& f 1 *- fit miJkp ®f s i --i r A i i Most people appreciate a good thing at a fair price, s I I but some few will only have the things that cost the $ I most The money. Ivory is the favorite soap of most people. Some % % I few want the high-priced toilet soaps and think they must f be better because they cost more. No soap is more care¬ I % fully made, or is made of better materials, than Ivory Soap. I i as A good WORD as the OF * Ivory’;" WARNING.—There they ARE NOT, are many but like white all soaps, counterfeits, each represented lack the peculiar to be " just and i % remarkable qualities of the genuine. Ask for^Ivory " Soap and insist upon getting it. i Cfepjiigbt, 1808, by Tho Procter 4 Gamble Co., Cincinnati Ant Funerals. Lucy L. Veri-Ill, describing her stud¬ ies of ants, in Popular Science News, tells about tbe ant funerals which she has witnessed. When an ant dies, she says, about thirty of its surviving comrades gather about it and two of thorn carry tbe body, while the others go along in a straggling procession. Having found a spot to their liking, the ants scratch a little hole in the earth, put the dead ant in It and theu cover up the body. Afterward they return in procession to their home, the ant-llill. “I have seen this cere¬ mony performed again and again,” says the writer, “but the ants will never bury an ant from another com¬ munity; a stranger is always devoured instead.” This story is not more won¬ derful than many others that observ¬ ers of the doings of ants have record ed. Chinese farmers use pigs in place of horses. Don't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Tear Life Away. To quit tobaeoo easily and forever, be mag¬ netic, full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To Bac, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. AH druggists, OOo or SI. Cure guaran¬ teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York. One pound of phosphorus is sufficient to tip 1,000,000 matches. Lyon & Co's “Pick Leaf“ lie Smoking Tobacco gives the consumers very best Tobacco they can get. 2 ounces for 10 cents. It is fast winningits way to public favor. Try it. Germany imports poultry to the value of $28,000,000 a year. Educate Yonr Boweli With Caacarete. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation refund forever. tOc, 23c. It C.C, C. fail, druggists money. Petroleum has been discovered in three lo¬ calities in Algeria. To Cure a Cold in One Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All Druggists refund money if it fails to cure. 25c. Eggs have been selling for 25 cents apiece in Havana. To Cure Constipation Forever. Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10c or 250. HCC.G fail to cure, druggists refund money. Wine forms 48 per cent, of Spain’s general exports. Free to mothers: a box of DR. MOFFETT’S Tebthika (TEETHING POWDERS) will he sent f roa to any Mother writing Dr. C. J. Moffett, St. Louis, Mo., giving name of Drug¬ gists not keeping them. Teethina Aids Digestion, Regulates the Bowels and makes teething easy. There are women car conductors in Chile. I could not get along always without Piso’s cure for Consumption. Needham, It Mass., cures.—Mrs. October 22, E. C. Moulton, 1894. Fits permanently first day’s cured. of No Dr. fits Kline’B or nervous¬ Great ness after use N erve Restorer. $3 trial bottle and treatise free Dr. R. H. Kline, Ltd,, 931 arch St. Phila. Pa. Protect Your Ideas By Letters Patent. The firm of Vowles & Burns, Patent Attor¬ ney?, No. 237 Broadway. N. Y., whose adver vertisement will appear in our nextlssue, pro¬ cure patents either on cash or easy install¬ ments. Write for terms. Sales negotiated. There is more Catarrh in this section of the countrv than all other diseases put together, and until the last few years was supposed to be incurable. Fora great many years doctors pronounced it a local disease and prescribed local remedies, and by constantly pronounced failing it to cure with local treatment, in¬ curable. Science has proven catarrh to be a constitutional disease and therefore requires constitutional treatment,. Hall’s Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co.. Toledo, Ohio, is the only, constitutional cure on the market. It Is taken internally in doses from 10 blood drops and to a teaspoonful. surfaces Itacts of the directly on the muqous dollars sys¬ tem. They offer one hundred for any case It fails to cure. Send for Chenpy circulars and tes tlmonials. Address F. J. at CO., To¬ ledo, 0. Sold by Druggists, Pills 75c. the best. Hall’s Family are At Your Door! »»8«99e@0®®»» Huntersville, N. C., Aug. 9, 1898. About two years ago a hard lump rose on roy leg and finally became bqttles a running sore. Alter the use of several of Mrs. Joe Person’s Remedy it got R« perfeotly ptfully. well. 5 WIL LIAMS. A. J. FRtEf win fa. mail WINSTON jmn free CIGAR < han&ome CO., WlaatW.NX. «t«*»-wiad DRO Send PS book YKESHSTSMB ol testimomftta and 10 day*’ cages. for treatment Free. Pr.H.H.GEEEfif’B 8< 0KB. Atlanta, Ga. ‘‘I have gone 14 days at a time without a movement of the boweli, not being able to move them except by using hot water injections. iue In Chronic constipation for seven years placed this terrible condition; during that time I did ev¬ erything I heard of but never found (iny relief; such was my case until I began using CASCARETS, I now have from one to three passages a day, and if I was rich I would give $100.00 for each movement; it is such a relief." Aylmer L. Hunt, 1689 Russell St., Detroit, Mich. eSSSgl . TRADE MARK REGISTERED Pleasant, Palatable, Potent, Taste Good. Do Good, Never Sicken, Weaken, or Gripe, 10c, 30c, 60c. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... StsrllDg Earned? Company, CMeogo, Montreal, New York. 322 goiLERpEEf^YEfP ERFECT wm a® 0DUCED. P And very LOW PRICES. Large stock. Also PIPE, VALVES and FITTINGS. EN¬ GINES, BOILERS, AlILLS and REPAIRS. Lombard IronWorks AUGUSTA, GA. & Supply 1 r Co., TTTANTED—Case of bad health that RT-P-A-N-8 Vr will not benefit. Send 6 cts. and to Ripans testimonials. Chemical Co., NewYork, for 10 samples 1000 TfV ordering goods or making enquiries of ad Xvertlsers It will be to your advantage to So. men¬ 38 tion this paper. 6 % GOLD BONDS Payable semi-annually at tbe Globe Trust Co., Chicago, Ill. These bonds are a first mort¬ gage upon the entire plant, including buildings, land and other property of an Industrial Company located close to Chi cago. has been estab¬ The Company is well lished for many years, known and doing a large and increasing business. The officers of the Company are men of high reputation, and esteemed for their honesty business ability. They have made so great a success of this business that the bonds of this Company are rarely ever offered for sale. A few of these bonds came in to our hands during the hard times from parties who had purchased them several years ago. We offer them in issues of $100.00 each for $80.00 and accrued interest. For security and a large interest rate these Industrial Bonds are recommended as being among tbe best. .< First-class bonds and securities of ail kinds bough’t and sold. Kendall & Whitteok, Bankers and Brokers, 52 Exchange Place, New York. THE COUPEfi MARBLE WORKS. ESTABLISHED 1848. 159-163 Bank S*., Norfolk, V*. JL Monuments? Gravestones, Granite. Cemetery Work In Marble and Low prices quoted on work delivered at any point in the South. W hen writ¬ ing please state age of deceased ana 1 Unit as to price. FREE. DESIGNS BICYCLIST FRIEND -HI Bicyclists Have You Seen It? LIQUID PISTOL o 50 jp|§U^ a c ' 9 K ^< M X CO ®aT tes o ° s 'AMMONIA 1 WATER, ? *** COLOGNE, i ^ ^ OR 05010 OTHER c© r , It is a weapon which protects travelers bicyclists against; .against vicious doge and foot-pads; -rottr bers and toughs; homes other against situations, thieves and tramps, and is ada ipted kill to many injure; it is perfectly safe to It does not or handle; makes no noise or smoke; breaks no law pistol. and creates no lasting regrets, as does the bullet, It simply give and. undivided amply protects, attention by to compelling himself the for foe to awhile instead of to the intended victim. It is the only real weapon which protects dnd also makes fun, laughter and lots of it; it 5 hoots, will not once, but many times without, in reloading; time of danger, and al¬ protect bv its appearance though loaded only witbMiquid. It does not get out of order; is durable, handsome, and with nickel full plated. Sent boxed and iS post-paid by mail dired fcions how to use HE»0«3® in 2c. Postage Stamps, Post-office Money Order, or Express Money Order. As to our reliability, refer to R. ft. Dun’s or Bradstreet’s mercantile agencies. NEW YORK UNION SUPPLY CO., 135 Leonard Street, New i ork City* Mere It Is I nr YOU GIVE THEM HELP. You cannot do this unless you understand them and know how to cater to their requirements* and you cannot spend years and dollars learning acquired by ex¬ perience, so you must buy the knowledge by others. We offer this to you for only 25 cents. YOU WANT THEffl TO PAY THEIR OWN WAY even If you merely keep them as a diversion. In or der to hondle Fowls judiciously, you must know something about them. To meet this want we are me: (oily who 25 put ©. twenty-five years. It was written by a man all his ihind, and time, and money to making a sue* cess of Chicken raising—not as a pastime, bxit as a business—and if you will profit by his twenty-nye annually* years’ work, you can save many Chicks and make your Fowls earn dollars for you. The point is, that you must be able to detect trouble in the Poultry Yard as soon as it appears, apd know how to remedy it. This book will teach you. It tells how to detect and cure disease; to feed for eggs and also for fattening; whieh fowls tp save breeding purposes; and everything, indeed, profitable. y6u should know dn this subject tp make dents it Sent postpaid for twenty-five in stamps. Book Publishing Housp 134 Leoh/.rs St.. N. Y. City. EDUCATIOIVAI-. *• -*vv.<sw OSBORNE’S wudinedd &■ r Aiiffiista, Ga. Actual business. No text books* Short time. Cheap board- Seed for oatalogoo. 11 Buys a six months’ scholarship. U before Oct. I. Write at once to CHARLOTTE COMMERCIAL COL¬ LEGE, CHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA. Send for Catalogue of COLUMBIA FEMALE COLLEGE and see what is being done to educate Women on a curriculum equal to best male colleges In the beautiful capital of South Carolina. Modern appointments. Able Faculty of Spec¬ ialists. Terms low. Opens Sept 28. JOHN A. RICE, A. ML, B. Pres. Stiayer’s 215 Baltimore St.» Baltimore, KSiSSS UI<1. 1 , E. mrP F" rC bSi I I Scholarships For Bright Students. Offered for Other sec SC HOLARS HIPS) SASH; halul, Typewriting, Graduate Bookkeeping, Tuition Refunded. Etc. Situation Mail for every or Courses Cheap. 7th Year. Write us to-day. S/ivE runs ai>. OEEO WHEAT FOR SALE! . o O ©Q©0OS®O a a From the greatest crop over grown in tha South. r l kree varieties: Fulcastor, a bearded wheat; Red May and White Clausen, both smooth or beardless! Wheat is now very free from cockle seed and broken of seed grain, wheai, being We fal superior to the usual run will, however, reclean the wheat when de¬ sired, taking out almost every well cockle seed and pieces of broken grain as as any inferior grain there may be in it. Wheat as it now ia price S1.00 per bushel, recleaned wheat $1.15 per bushel. including These prices sacks. are Each both on sack cars at Charlotte, bushels. Send' In orders con¬ at tains two wish the best your seed once if you to secure order. wheat on the market. Terms: Cash with Charlotte Oil & Fertilizer Co,, or Fred Oliver, CHARLOTTE, N. C nou8ly The Best illustratedf BOOK price t°h" #3), e W free 4 M” to anybody sending two annual subscriptions FRANCISCO. at $1 each to Overland, the Overland 5o» Monthly. SAN Sample Pf-SO'S cu RE FOR bUKti UrttHt ALL tLot rAILSi „ Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use in time. Sold by druggists. . ga'c-Ts: 2 saw ;