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Why Not Buy the best? They cost no more. Cortland vehicles are made of the best material, best finish an! painted on this market. It has required ; thirty-five years ofjpractical experience in manufacturing high-grade vehicle to attain their high standard of excellence. We sell the Guil ford and Chase City Buggies, the best buggies manufactured in ' North Carolina. GET OUR PRICES KEARNEY (SL SONS f ("Yellow Front,") 203 PARRISH STREET, German and Pearl Millet, Teosinte, Field Peas, So ja Beans, Navy Beans. All kinds of Seed for the Field. Call to See Us I C E. KING & SONS Three Registered Druggists. 224 West Main Street, - Phone 106 gsfem (Schedule in Effect Nov. 25, 1906.) DCKHAM DIVISION. Is Sun Duly Ex Sua Daily p.m a.ni. m.in. p..m 5:15 7:00 Lv Durham Ar 9:15 9:30 7:07 8:29 Lv Roxboro Ar 7:3a 6:00 8:00 9:01 Lv Denmston Ar 6:53 7:27 8:28 9:24 Lv S'th Boston Ar 6:25 7:05 8:45 9:39 Lv Houston Ar 6:09 6:49 11:50 12:15 Ar Lynchburg Lv 3:00 4:15 WEsTBOCND-LEAVE LYKCHBCBGDAIX.Y. 2:30 p. in. The St. Louis Express Pullman sleeper, Roanoke to Colum bus, Bluefield to Cincinnati, also for Radford, Bristol. Kncxville, Chatta nooga and intL mediate points. Pullman Sleeper Roanoke to Knoxville. 7:00 a. in. For Roanoke, Rockv Mount, Winston Salem, Radford, Bristol, Bluefield, Norton, Welch. 5:30 p. m. Daily for RoanoVe. EAST BOPSD LEAVE I.VNCBBCSC. 3:35 p. m. Daily for Faxmviile, Rich mond, Petersburg and Norfolk Parlor Car. 2:50 a. m. For Petersburg. Rich mond and Norfolk. Pal! man sleeper to .-sorioiK. Also rmiman sleeper between Lvnchbnrg and Richmond. 8.50 a.m. Daily for Farmville, Peters burg. Richmond and Norfolk. Winston Salem Division. Leave Ro anoke 5:1s P. ra., except Sunday, foi Wiustou-Salem and intermediate station wmm 1 and 9-20 a. m. daily for tame stations and Charlotte, N. C. North Carolina Divisions. Leave Pn liski 6:10 a. tn. daily, except Sunday for Betty Baker and 8:!s a. tn. daily, :x eept Sunday, for Galax and Fries. CMnch Valley Division. Leave Blue field 9:15 daily, 9:25 p. m. for Norton. M. F. BRAGG, Trav. Paw. Agt. W. B. BEVILL. G. P. A., Poanoke, Va., Gen. Office, Roaooke.Va. Southern Railway IS EFFECT ATXCST 6, 1 905. This condensed schedule is published as information, and is subject to change without notice to the public: Trains leave Durham, N. C. 3:30 a. m. No. 111 westiwund daily for Greenboro and local points, connecting at GrreanWo with i kinda Kxprcia for Charlotte, Columbia, .Savannah and Jack sonville, alo with the Washington and Southwestern Limited, solid Pullman train, for Atlanta, Jiirmingham, Mem phis, Montgomery, Mobile, and points south. 3 40 a. m.( No. 112, eatbouttd, daily for Gal iioro and local station, connect ing at Goldaboro with Atlantic Coast Line for Wilmington, Tarboro and Nor folk, and with Atlantic North Carolina Railway for Kinaton and New Bern. 7:00 a. tn., No. 162, mixed, Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays for Keysville and local stations, 9 a. m., No. 108, eastbouad, daily for Goldsboro and local stations, con setting at Selma for Wilaon, Rocky Mount, Norfolk nd Eastern North Caro lina points. 9 4. w.. No. 116. daily for Oxford. Chastity, Keyvi!nd Richmond and local poinU. Handles through coach between Raleigh, 1 Durham and Rich mond. I low a. m No. lo?, westbound, daily, ! for Greenaboro and local stations, con-! netting at Greensboro with U. S Fast Mail for Washington and New York and ! points North; close connection with train for Charlotte and local stations, alo for Winton-Silem. $ t$p. m No. irt. eatVuad, daily, for GoidaWo and kcal points. 4 30 p. m., No. 135, westbound, daily, ! i-jt Greenslwro and local stations, con necting at Grerflnlioro with train No. 2 for Charbitte. Columbia. Savannah and Jacksonville. Pullman sleeper and first tlaM Jay coach Wahtngton to Jackson viile without tbanee. Alo connects Hh trai No. 3$. U. S. Fat Mail, fot Atlanta and all points South an J Swuth wet. 4 4$ p. w , No. 174. miied. daily ex cept Sunday, for Keysville and local stations. 6 4$ p. iw., No. If 8, daily for Raleigh aad i'al ptuts. JoimB. Graham, Agent, Durham, N. C R Vko. T. P. A., Charlotte, N, C BEFOREI BUYING - - DURHAM, N. C. The Great Summer Feed for Your STOCK! SEABOARD AIR LINE RAILWAY. The Exposition Line to Norfolk 111! Hampton Roads, Norfolk, Ya. APRIL 26 TO NOV. 30 Special Low Rates from Dnrliain Round trip season tickets, 8 25 " 6o-lay tickets, 7 50 " lo-day tickets, 680 " coach excur tickets, 4 00 Coach excursion rate sold day prior to opening aaie ana on eacn Tuesday thereafter, limited seven days and eri dorsed "Not Good in Sleeping, Pullman and Parlor Cars." Other tickets go on sale April 19th, and cootiuue until close of exposition. For rates from other points apply to your nearest seanoara agent, or repre sentatives named below. Unexcelled Passenger Serrlce via SEABOARD I LI RY. Watch for announcement of Improved OCOCIIUICS. For information and literature address C. If. GATTIS. Traveling Passenger Agent, Raleigh, N. C R. L. MONTGOMERY, Agent, Durham. N. C. To Bicycle Riders You are invite! to call and see the many improvement is the modern bicycle. The style and makes of my line will pleaie you. Call and inpect them. A few second-hand wheels at a bargain. My repair shop is well equipped and your work will xe promptly done. H. A, GASKINS (NEAR FIVE POINTS) Durham, - - - N. C. Notice of Administration Having this day qualified as adminis trator Of the .state of W. B. Harris, de ceased, late of Durham county, N. C this is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to exhibit them to the undersigned on or before tbr- 2d day of April, fA, or this notice will be pk-ad in liar of their recovery. All per sons iB'lebted to said estate will please make immediate payment. This 2d day of April, 1307.- V.. F. OAK BARD, Administrator, THE SUNDAY-SCHOOL. Lesson XIII. Second Quarter, For June 30, 1907. THE INTERNATIONAL SERIES. Text of the Lsaaon, I Cor. x, 23-31 Memory Vtrse, 31 Golden Tsxt, Rom. xiv, 21 Commentary Prepared by Rv. D. M. Stearna. JCopyricfat, 1907, by American Pma Aaociittoa. une letter was written to those who were "In Christ Jesus" .waiting for the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ" (chapter I. 2, 7), and the closing words are, "If any men love not the Lord Jesus Christ let blm be accursed; the Lord coroeth" (xvl, 22). The letter opens with n assurance to the faith fulness of God. who calls unto the fel lowship of His Son Jesus Christ our Lora ana enas witn tne exhortatloa, "Watch ye; stand fast In the faith; quit you like men: be atrons" IL 8; rvi lav Some of these people had been thieves ana drunkards and worse, but were now washed, sanctified. Justified and temples of the Holy Ghost through the precious blood of Chrlat (vL 9-11, lu, 20). The epistle' was written to re mind them of their former lost and helpless condition, their redemption through a crucified and risen Christ, the resurrection glory that awaited them In the kingdom, and In view of all this to walk In love, steadfast, us movable, always abounding In the work of the Lord (chapters xlii and XT, CS). .. Our lesson Is taken from the section of the epistle which concerns the be liever's attitude In reference to thing offered to Idols and bis conduct toward those who still worshiped idols (chap tern vill tj xi. Inclusive). The believer, the child of God. given to Christ out of the world. Is still left' In the world that through him the world may see and know and believe in the Lord Jesus Christ (John xvll. 20-23). The one great tjuestSoa, therefore, for the believer is: How enn my life tell most powerfully for Christ how can the life of Jesus be made manifest In me? (II Cor. Iv. 11.) The section of the epistle selected for our lesson is a summary of this Important matter, be ginning with the statement that while it may be perfectly lawful for me to do tuauy things it may not be expedi ent for me to do tbein. Inasmuch as lib erty on my part might not help others. The lesson closes with the saying that as believers we are not to seek our own proSL but tho orofit of others. that they may be saved, or. as it is set rortn la the closing words of the pre vious cbaDter. we are so to kwr un der, bruise, beat black and blue our body or sin. the self, the old man in ns. for the gospel's sake, that we may by all means save some (Ix 13-27). If v, e do otherwise we may find our Uvea tanproved at the Judgment seat of Christ and see our works cast awsy. butued vp and we ourselves saved as by firs (chapter IlL 13-15: II Cor. . 9, 10). The opening verses of our lesaon chapter tell us of many in Israel who having bees redeemed from Ezrnt fail ed to enter the promised land because or nnbelier and Idolatry, not that we are to think of tbeu as lost but as cut off from present privileges here. even as in chapter xi. 30. we rend of believers at Corinth who were sick and dying because of sinful lives when they ought to have been glorifying God. The matter of eating this or not eating that is comparatively a trifling matter, inasmuch as it is not what w eat or drink that necessarily dc-Oles us. see uarx vu. i, vj. Note al Col. IL ML 17. The life of child of God is one of nerfprt fr. dom to enjoy the riches and fullness f bis Father's borne, but in such a way as to make others want to belong to the same family. Our esilmr ami drinking and all our conduct before men should be after such a fashion as would lead othen to want to know our Cod. Glorifying God means mak ing Him so glorious In the eyes of oth ers that tbey shall be drawn to Him nd becomeHls children. Take any kind of a sinner such aa la described In chapter H 9. 10. and there is not a single thing that God aaha or expects of such tn the way of reform to make nim a child or God. All such are dead In trespasses and sins and can no more do a thing to save themselves than dead Lazarus could do to get out of that tomb, but the same word that rave Lazarus life can and will Hr life to any dead sinner. "Hear and your soul shall live." "Tie gift of God is eternal lire." "Look onto me and be saved. "As many as received nim to them gave He the risht or mt to become the sons of God" t i 3; xlv. 22; flora. vL 23; John L 12). The way or salvation for the sinner through Jesus Christ and His finished work is most plain, but the great hindrance Is the selfish, self seeking, self indulgent, worldly, domineering. un-Cbrtatllke life that so many live who are ctlled hr Ills name. Temperance meana self enntmi tr renunciation, following Him who pleased Himself, never sought His own will or Uls own glory, but came to glorify God and to seek and sart the lost When onr one ambition is to please Htm, to magnify Him. to si let Illm live lo ns that people shall be attracted to Illm because of us, then wa anau nave learned the meaning of temperance. This will not I accom plished by any amount of effort onr part or even by strlriua or agotil. mg. wit iy so beholding film that the glory .f His life shall I rctirmlii.! In tir by tbo asm spirit who dwelt Is Kim ni r.r. ill, : r. Ci. Ki at r.i, 11 20; liom. vL 11, 13. "Nothing that you will believe, but he was at the bottom of a plot to get me flogged for nothing. He had bribed two of the men to steal those saddles that you see and put it on me, but I followed them and bad got your prop erty back when at the gate here" "I'll stop hla ties!" said ' Nat and staggered to bis feet, but? the doctor pinned him by the arm., "You will not! . You will leave him to me." said the father sternly. He was the stronger man. The son stood quelled. -We know they're Ilea," the doctor added. "All convicts are liars. Have any two men been out of the huts tonight Robertsr "Not oue. sir out of the huts, I can swear to that How this oue escaped me" "It makes no matter," snld Dr. 8ul llvan. gripping his son's arm stllL "The saddles are not the point I saw the blow and shall Inquire Into noth ing else. The blow, you ruffian, you shall answer for tomorrow before the nearest magistrate. Now take blm away. Clap blm In the heaviest irons we've got Come, make baste! Let me see blm In front of me!" So Tom was led off. unresisting still, but scornfully silent now, between watchman and overseer, and the father stalked and the son slouched behind. t CHAPTER XVIII. TnE nearest magistrate was an Anglo-Indian of the name of Strachan, another employer of convict labor on a large scale and a disciplinarian second only to Dr. Sullivan himself. The two were close friends and Indispensable to each other In certain ways. Both, In fact were magistrates, but no magistrate was competent to deal Judicially with his own offending convicts, and thus an Interchange of mutual favors was kept up between the pair. They would meet on Mondays at the courthouse situated midway between their respective strongholds, and at this courthouse Dr. Fultlvan would oblige Mr. 8rrachan by sentencing any servant of the latter to as mauy lashes as his master like J, while Mr. Strachan was only too glml to do the aame for Dr. Sullivan. So great was the mu tual convenience that either potentate was delighted to bold a special in quiry In any exceptional ease to oblige the other, and one was held according ly In the forenoon following Tom's as sault upon bis master's "on. A mounted mensenser was dispatch ed to Mr. Stracbau. who nt back word that he would lie at the court house as noon after 12 o'clock as pos sible. And he arrived within a few minutes of Dr. Sullivan, bis red beard ed overseer and the culprit, who bad spent the night in honvy irons, which be still wore. The doctor led his brother magis trate aside, and Tom. raising his lack luster eyes for once, watched tbetn walking arm In arm In the sunlight for several minutes before entering the conrthonte. Glnser stood by and told the constables the kind of man Tom was. Tom heard him without a word or a took. The constables agreed that whatever elae be waa. h i evidently a Bulky brute. . Tom heard mem, too, but sat doggedly in the strong sunlight with sullen eyes opon the two magistrates, whom he Instinc tively knew to be deciding his fate before the case began. Not a .word bad be spoken since the irons had hmn Clamped ujwn Lis limbs and clasped aoout nis soul. Not a word did he speak In the Jus tice room within. Ills attention, how ever, waa enuazed at the outset hv th extremely moderate tone in which the charge was preferred against him. Dr. nuiiivan, put on Ms oath, gave a per fectly true account of what he had himself seen and heard in the small hours of that morulna. II even ai. mltted, in resimuse to a question from the bench, his impression that his son was the first to raise a band and add ed of his own accord a hope that that circumstance would tit taken Into due consideration on bis servant's behalf. Tom could hardly believe bis ears. II was still Lmt in wonder at this ex traordinary Intercession on the part of Dr. Sullivan, of all men. when Mr. Strachan addressed him In a tone no less clement and benign. "Ton are charged," said he. "with a very grave offense, which you do not attempt to di-ny. In the ordinary ft as comxcK&j Cameras n KodaKs o semtas roa ftelsssleaal sail awtar fatts trssHn f i Carrj t FR Una f KODAKS ni SUPPLIES Wa Da the Qalcttit. Cataatit 4 Beat rrlntinfaad DvsUla tOrWrite for Booklet and prices. We can aav you ootn time and money Tie Dmta Ploto Sspplj Co. Ofsorltsr.0. DCIHAM.II.C. at tO YEARS' VlXfERlENCf TRSOC MH a gnvon tMr)n( ttHt n4 nrMna . atl ir a.nin '" n,n It mm UhM m ii,filo fpnttnhlf pnlKM.M. (nmmnmrr .i..i.,rlj.smfl. siliOfsoCI tm -inl mil If. ll tm7 f. "!,!' umt, , I'Mxata uam tbnnvh Mm a i"L fat.l, Scisitiinc Jtoriean. 'ra' i na vtstum. O, t Kb Waliiate fv I ' V) CHOLERA AND GAPE And all other ills in Chickens and other Fowls cured by Yearby's Poultry Powder rT TRY A PACKAGE tt ' PURE AND FRESH DRUGS TROMPT ATTENTION TO MAIL ORDERS. Yearby's Drugstores l EDGEM0NT and DURHAM. N. C. THE NORTH CAROLINA State Normal and Industrial College. Regular Courses leading lo degrees of Bachelor oi Pcdigorr, Bachelor of Aro, Bachelor ol Sdeoce, and a new course Poard. laundry, tuition, and fees for use free tuition students, fu. THE NORMAL DEPARTMENT gives thorough instruction in the subjects taught in the schools and colleges, and special pedagogical training for the profes sion of teaching. Teachers ami Graduate of other colleges are offered a one-year special course in Pedagogy and allied subjects, THE COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT offers oractkal inatrurtinn in graphy, Typewriting, Book-keeping and other business subjects. THE DEPARTMENT OP MANUAL ARTS AND DOMESTIC SCIENCE pro vide instruction in Manuel Training and in such subjects as relate directly to the home and family. THE MUSIC DEPARTMENT, in addition to the degree course, offers a certi ficate course in vocal and instrumental music. To secure Iioard in the dormitories, all free-tuition applications should be made before July la. The fall term opens September 18, 1907. rur catalogue ami oucr lntormaiion, aKCftsftattfiaifftfaafftt(fif(f(i((Cr USE . I m 11EGIGIYI .FOR I LIGHT I HEAT m POWER! a We Sell Evety thing Electtical : : i DurhamTraction Co. I PHONE 271. ROOM MiaaastsaiaatftMtittMtM1tt Notice of Administration The undersigned Having qualified aa adm oistrator of II. B. Iete?, deceaaed. hereby gives notice to all persons holding claims agsinst said ute to present the same to kirn o or before May ' l.loog, or this notice will b pJeade.f in bs? of recovery. All person indebted to said estate will come fornanl and pay tip. This jot of April, o7. VJ P G. P. LEWTER, Administrator Cameras aa KodaRs pi rn.ua roa rVtlsssieaai m4 lattew resrasher Wi Cirri t fiO LlonftCSAUin. SUPPLIES r.tfVaM 0,tll" CksaMal Bait mating ta Qnthpmi WrWrito for frnWet fcnd J He Darham Ploto Sopplj Co. There Are Few Men Who are judges of clothing values. The garmenta may fit you, or the pattern may strike your fancy, but the safe plan is to buy your clothes from a reliable dealer and of a reliablo make. We have clothes that are "made right, at the right price" made by S P E R O, MICHAEL & SO N and bear their tabeL We would like to show you our large assortment of Spring and Summer Suits. LA. m leading to the' dtgrc of Batcbelor of Mime of teat books, etc.. I?a a mr v, autiress. J. I. FOUST, PaKSiDKST, Gkr.Kxsnoao. . c. 10, WRIGHT BLDO. m m MAGAZINE HEADERS ICSItT VIOAZIlt fpJnrill-i va aa4awUCalsasl sllaksFafUea. . CAXZBA CSAfT Wad sack BMaafk sse iNtMN l A bast $1.00 snat mi aaMtws sad praiiiiiaail mi atistasraphira, SOAO OF A TB0UI1VO W0VSZ1 a baa 4 7) pasas, eaaSaasW 120 eatond Bkotpli fo.7S rtw'7e span ia CaUoraia . aadONgoe. TaSal . . . $325 All for . . . $1.50 Kiiim si srdari te BV1SIT ifiaizivs sum vFpe.,iVr.o. DCSHAM.If.C. ?