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07-July£ 11 T I O N 5t e r * s Ltional > n a r y Throuel»o'»* |w W o r d s Dcftr.Itlons i.r f ’ C dircct IwV.T.HAKRIS I Unitc-l bt-itc*1 of KJucat.on, corps fl ..ialiJls ai;J 236J Paeea rations ver for Home. Offlc«. A V I E ,.a f D ictionary |,:•^Vnrf^aa^a I hr«»»». ' 1-, ci»»> ia w*«. IS IS E P E R S liwiwo CAng. m w n o s s wmM sr. lRiss.AJent JOKE.VA. Ill CAUOl.lNA iKCSTRiAL CCLLB5?. ■triHi. ' *1 0 1 ) In * 1 4 0 ; Ills Ilf llif Sliili'?16". J iiieiiil>ers. I'rartire |c>» I'i Hll'lllt II ‘iMiire l.i.aril in . ■ r.!l fr«.-tuitiim ap- iiiil 1m- Hiiiile lipfcre liiil! OIH'IW Jv-p^iu-- iin it C il fr o m ii]iHriit Ifai'heis • and uilior inftji- ^ui.ics 1). M cItkr, (irsenslxiro, X. J ti» rail iiroiniJ ainl |.-,ti>ck of 9l;itioii('rv. lacVet lleailR, l!ill |icnts and Tugs, jriii- i>lir«. I’riufS itabon- Kimbroug'h, I n anu Smr.EON. Ir South of Hotel Oarie I v iu .r: Lr trade. C-jili .on |e Celebrated LLB, X. C., ^\^3DyESDAY, JULY 24, 1901; THE DAVIE RECORD. m I 1 G 0 L U M 3 U & ' PIANOS. It Sl:ind:ird overrwwli- 1Inn jiiaktTS art. :J0 ! liii-t* ofaUiitbcrniak&-. | Jicily factory jirices. | Hamlin iBiirflett & Organs, I); in iiHisic wil,| at j Iriee otiiei-s <-liar^e, on I I yen. \\ c lijvi- never] Ilk!. WrUi! tiiihiy [)3IO-\T MI'si<’ CO. '■Vill-liii;. <• X .> l'LP.l.J<=nV.n KVi:ilY W KliXKSDAV. K . ir. ilO K lU S , - - E O lT O ll. TKnjrs UK .srlist^Hir-TioN • One coiiy, Oni- Ycr.v, . ?1 mi Due copy, Six Mxntiifl. fm/ One COLT, Thicc.Months- - o-, |_____________________________ j ^'■as iissigued to the McAdoo House blit having rereivwl iiu V. PKKSS -VSSOCIATIOX. The Ifoi'th Carolina Kditors met iti Crfcciisboro July ]OtU and lltli, and 1)} invitation were guest.s of tlie city of Greensboro. The three hotels, The Guilford ITonse, JIc- Adoo Ilojse and Hotel Clegg were the stopping places assigned to the The editor of the Record invitation from JIr. J..M . Jlillifcan, we loade onr houie at his hospitable hou. 3. Jfo one eould have been better en­ tertained than 'n ere we, and we shall al-.viiyg remember with pleas­ ure our stay in tlie Cate City on Snnimit aveniie with onr friend Millikau and his plca.s-iut family vrho exerLOd every eifort to make pijmi of oiirjonr.sojourn i>leii.sant. The people ii remarkable THE BAlTl.]-: (iUOUXD COM- ^A ^Y . . IViiloi- Cireeiihboro lleciifrl, ' Allow me throngU yoni- cnhilnSiS to con;;ratiiiate Uie eo?n].any on the siu'c<?f.s of the colelii-alion of *he-Ithjust passed. l’roviileuo<; sniilcil iipon ns as usnal :;nd we were blessicil v.iih a gieat, bright, be:ii;tiful Kiininu;r'H liny, ‘ U is a fact that ."iia.'C the iisce annual ceichrations the fourth o t' of Oreca-iboro are .. ..................... tioiMJt ;i Kliower Isjte ju Ihe uftei'M , iKxmljisvywu’ aiHUt mill on the exteiuTea toiirUi in pvevioiisly to which ' lUeiu the Irecdom of the city, time we lintl (k^oriniiHMl not fcu {They feuMted ns ou the best the celebi-ite on that day. If we were | <4ty could alTord. and even pre- \ 1 a r <'"H'led the soda fountains <mdv.oiilu piously O'ucliide that the i , ‘ ' , , ' , . . . .■2>>ds aii.l go,ii-s.-;es of battle lields, | uf cool drinUs at liist'.irii! etc., had I'avored j u'Ji' disposal. TJie druggists we till se who worshipped devoutly a l; found to be nice, clever aud up-to- ihch Khrinesf. I date aud s e n d n.« the bast in the.ov.., nor .\yrni k ad. rc.s.ed ns j , JUO?fc Jiofcptablv: liii Uusno \v:*s * ^ , appropriat.-, his n. istr r oxcellenl; i '‘S^i Keely h i.s lu iin r .e r a ilm ir u b lt; u l iI h i s w h ic U i s d o ii g bo m u c h Bpctn^li I fo r x jo o r H n fo r tm iiite h u m a n it y 51r. iicasJey pive MS an histori-; pv^.ided us with palm leaf faun c.-. |Y ,eru.;nK 0dw i<l.,nu,h ^ 1 111 labor aud rcsearcn and that I w illpri.vea vaiiiablc aenr.i.sitiou | " to our Kattle Gioiiiid litcrataie. | to Greeus^wo. The growth of The shrat t;-lks uf i’lofessors I Grecusboro Is not reinarkable when lioltaiid Jlcivcr were of <-oursc! there aud mingled iipproii.-iate, snaimvand most en-i' ... liiiaiuingaudaU vienl well uuder!''>t“Mr. l-'orbis’ luanageinoiit. j ^pinted people, aud have seen I'or the first tHine ill onr liistory j with what concert of action, and we unveiled two ^.iiiiiile mouu-: how hariucniously its people pnll together ibr its uiibiiilding. The stranger finds u hearty, cordial ttcleoine v. ilhin licr gates. She welc.oiiies those who come there to help l iiiVd her up; the sojourner is made to feel at home within her borders. To her citizens, Greens boro is the niecoa of the state, and progress is her v.atchword W ith such conditions, its no wonder uieut-s with tiieii- !,.i-,in/e in.scrip-I tioiis in one day. < )ne of these coininenMralt’b t.lic i:».^t battle of f hel.'cvoiutionaiy v.ar fonght with­ in the fstate*.' iiui'der in {t’eptem-* lier, JT:>l,ain; thy other the hand- Himie Coliuiiai (Mlniaii with its four large tablets, fur i'.it; X. rHi <.'aro Una’s history !'i-o;:i .May J771 to A jiril IH h . 177<.i— the most heroic Jieriod of the Slate’s liistory. Wo h.iie aei er ha>i a mure en­ joyable day at the JJattle Ground at she has grown, aud today her uoi* oue iislieroi <)d aau t ^ , • , • , x «offtherosinii,. the.c was nniver-! brighter than ever before, sal regit-l al the e,iiroM-ed absence I aHhon,gli within the past 10 years of Jiuljje HU'l MrM. »v.*hc‘udc. 'iV jshehas j^rown Iroiu a towu of many Ilf IKS it Uie one sliadMW I ijyu(.2j00i) people to a city of ot the othervi-ise perfectly .joyous ^,.,., ^ ^ <luv, a»(] iJiav the cliapluin earn-; , n- i i • est /ntiyer for 1 he ,1 iidgc’s recovery . ednesday evening fromjiis- Horc anil coutiiiae I afliie- liouB be speedily jjraiile i. Kiicoiirageii by p.ist s:i(fe.ssc.^, brethren, itt us pre.s.s onward with I'cnewed /:eai to the lull accom­ plishment ot oni great ainl patriot­ ic mission. .-Xiiiong iiiaiiy that ought to be here tiie inure moiin- nients are es.sential to the comple­ tion of the seri-is. V. e reed a jnoiiument to General Greene, who here praeiiealiy }r-*-i!:ed onr li’ner- t ies aud oi'.e to oiiT'“rfous of i..ib eity. the carriages, buggies aud hacks were brought oat, aud the editors were ilriveii over the city in charge of the enterlainiueut committee, aud its Hchoolc, colleges, factories and other business establishments pointed out, and on Thursday eve­ ning au engine and three cars were phiced at our disposal, aud xe were taken out to (he Guilford liattle Ground, with MaJ. Jos. .Moorcht^ifl in chai’ge, and no bet- can Uevolulioii. In thi.'i she urged Ihe erection at Guilford 15-attle Gmpud of a ccuet.jpe to Greene. V m ly this is “ the field of his fame” and v.e appeal to patriots everywhere and especially to the Society of the Ciuciuiiati of Khode Island lo aid in thi.i noble cause. ivas their llrst president and we trust they will honor him here. We have eommeiiiorated here the history of the State from 1776 to 17S3, wheu peace was declareil. The Dolouial column just erected celebrate, amoug other most honor oi-able events, the (ii-st victoiy of the Kavolutionary Avar at Moore’s Creek in 177(>; it celebrates the first battle of the war at Alamance in 1771 and now lets ceiebrate the glorious deeds of our ‘Sons of Liberty”—the AVilmington “Tea Tarty” of 1065-66—“the first out­ break of the w;u.” lu his most interesting and in­ structive Tales and Traditions of the Lower Cape Fear Mr. James Sprunt thus entitles their heroic conduct, aud we thank him for the phrase. It is simply a justice done North Carolina. Yours truly, J o seph M. MoiiHHE.iD, V-Pres. Guilford IJattle Ground Company. SHE DIDX’T WEAB A MASK. But her beauty was completely hidden b.v sores, blotches and pim­ ples till she used Hncklen’s Arnica Salve. Then they vanished as will all Eruptions, Fever Sorea, •lioils, Tjloers, Carbuncles and Fel­ ons from its use. Infallible for Cuts, Corns, Burns, Scalds and Piles Cure guaranteed which is hallov.ed ground to every true patriot aud North Carolinian, for here it was that Geueral Na­ thaniel Greene gave battle to Con- wallis, and with a raw militia and a few regiilar.s he dealt him such a blow that Ihe British had to re­ treat and it was no doubt one of the most decisive blows given the British, and shortly thereafter the surrender at Yorktown followed. Several beautiful granite momi- ments have been erected, and the Iwues of some of the bravest of the brave lie sleeping on “ fames eter­ nal camping ground.” The Mu­ seum contains many portraits and rare relics aud every true son of the old state should, if i>ossible, visit this memoi'able battle field, and from now on, we should make it a part of our duty to urge Con­ gress to make an appropriation sufficient to erect a splendid monu- meut commemorative of one of the greatest Ijattles of the Bevolution- ary war—the battle of Guilford Court House, .and one of its great­ est Generals—Geueral Nathaniel Green. Our hats off to the good and progressive people of the Gate City of North Carolina. May they live long, and may prosper­ ity eoutinue to heap its richest blessings ujKin them. I C. C. Sanford’s. DeWitt’s Witch Hazel Salve should bt promptly applied to cuts, burns audecalds. It soothes and quickly heal« the the injured part. There _. are worthless counterfeits, be sure to 25c. at I get DeWitfs, G. C. Sanford, M. A.; Foster.- THE The American practical and fiuanc: our “proud bird of freedoi a money bringer one hen is w<J all the eagles—other than gold-^ in the United States. In proof wheieof the Southern Merchant submits the figures which follow: According to Uncle Sam’s re­ ports there were in the vicinity of 260.000.000 chicks and 30,000,000 hens and other fowl in this coun­ try in 1800. A t the rate of in­ crease between ISSOand 1890 there should be about 430,000,000 chicks now. Just supposing, according to statistics, two-fifths of them are laying heiis. They should lay 18,- 000,000,000 eggs. Take the ex­ port price at 10 cents a dozen aud the egg crop would yield pretty close to Si23t»,000,000. Toultry sold would amount to ?170,000,000 aud the hen industry would re- ,present ?420,000,000. Call it •?400,000,000. Take the other big iiidusti ies of the country from the year book of the Ueiiartmeut of Agriculture up to January 1, IBOO. Here is what it shows: i;5,6Gr>,.‘J07 horses, valued at §511,07-1,813. 15,090,115 milch cows, valued at $171,233,935. 38,601,631 pigs, valued at #170,- 100,713. 39,111,543 sheep, valued at$70,- 697,5.30. 2.134,214 mules, valued at $95,- 067.000. For the year endiug January 1 , 1800, there was harvested in the United States: 1,924,j S3,.^50 bushels of corn valued at $352,023,428 607,514,870 bushels of wheat val­ ued at?392,770,310. 10,897,857 bales of cotton val­ ued at $319,491,412. So yoD see the business lien ranks a good second among the harvested crops—and the country imports hundreds of thousands of eggs from foreign countries which should be produced at home.— \ViuBton Journal. NUMBER 16. IFOR THE PARTY OF PROGRESS. Aside from any special ijolicies it m iy advocate and however valu­ able or wise these policies may be, the republican party today has a claim to considei-atiou than which none could be great-er. It is the party of construction, of hopeful­ ness, of faith in the future and of words iu the present. It appeals to those vital forces in humanity that give it courage and carry it forward to achievenieut. To it must turn all those who would have au outlook for the future and who would use their mauhood to advance toward accomplishment, for so bereft ot practical plans are its opponents that nothiug but ne­ gation and destruction is to be found in the measures they advo­ cate. The administration has faced events in the last five years that would havp utterly discouraged men not sustained by a wholesome optimism aud carried forward by practical wisdom born of exper­ ience. These events might well have brought disaster and faUiue upon the nation; but they have been turned to benefit not only for this nation but for those with whom we were brought into con­ tact. Nothing but the strong pow­ er that comes from steady faith and hope and from kindly practi­ cal wisdom could have led the coun­ try out of hard times and through the maze of complications into which it was thrust by foreign war. Men with fads aud hobbies iu their heads, men with discon­ tent and pessimism in their hearts, men with lack of faith iu the spirit of our people as a whole, could never have faced the events of the recent past nor can such face the future. Such men can lead no­ where for they have not the ele­ ment of leadership. They may e.-jcite discontent with the present but they point no way out. It is the men and measures that affirm, that consti-nct, which appeal to the spirit of true progress. Such men appeal to the strength and not to the weakness of their fellow men, and to them men who bave power to move forward will join themselves because hopefulness, activity and progress are better than discontent, criticism and ne­ gation.—Raleigh Post. If the people of North Carolina have ever been free to think and vote as they think why was the constitutional amendment adop- tedf If onr memory is not at fault one of the arguments used was thnt a fter its adoption the people Avould be at liberty to divide on political quc.stions.—Durham Her­ ald. That .was rc-ally the main argument in favor cf the amend­ ment, as everybody knows who heard democratic orators and read democratic newspapers last year. But the demagogues who know that freedom of thought and action means thtir uudoiug are sparing no effort to becloud the issne and to make the people believe that the adoptiou of the amendment amounted to nothing.—Statesville Landmark. A man at Mountain Grove, Mo., takes 58 newspapers. He is a school teacher aud uses the papers as text books. “I wish to truthfully state to yi and the readers of these few linesthat your Kodol Dj-spepsi.l Curequestion, the beat and o _ cure for dyspepsia that I have ever isonly come in contact with and I have used many other preparations. John Beam West Middlesex, Pa. No prepara­tion equals Kodol Dyspepsia Cure' as it contains all the natural digestants. It will digest all kinds of food and can’t help but do you g-ood. G, C, San­ford, M.- A.- Foster. PRESIDENT, nt re­ will set on fo Four south® ing diseiussed m' Uefltly in this are Charles T. Yerkes late republican candidate ernor of Kentucky and at pi commissioner of internal reveiiu^ H. Clay Evans of Tennessee, com­ missioner of pensions; ^nator Pritchard of North Carolina, and Senator Scott of West Virginia. Some of the most influential north­ ern republicans believe th.at it is important to de-sectioualize Iheir party aud that the nominatiou of a southern man for vice president would have a marked elfcct iu that direction. The southern delega­ tion iu lh<i uc.xt republican nation­ al convention will probably exert a very strong and pos.sibly a con­ trolling influence in the selection of the party's candidate for vice- president.—Atlanta Journal. We cannot say anything against the other gentlemen mentioned above, but it gives us great pleas­ ure to endorse Senator J. C. Pritch­ ard for second place on the ticket. No better selection could be made. A man of the people, one who has risen by hard licks to one of the highest places in the state. He has made a name as U. S. Senator of which any man should be proud, and if a Southern man is to be named, give us J. C. Pritchard and North Carolina will cast its electoral vote for the nominees of Ihe Republican party. A t the present writing, says an exchange, we have no desire to hurl ourselves into Abraham’s bosom, but if we ever did so, we |ildn’t lean against a donble- ^gun and pull the trig- Neither would ;ith an ama« meal ion of on strive tothlP ity to in-int, about people, as we'1 and then calmly await tB W ATER W h e e l s . ■■ ■" r f - Ml- ^ It will bfe to the interest of ev^ry riser of water pdwer to investigate oni^ DODBLi TORBlNi fAT^R fH lE y ^^^ving remark^bie power siii4il_<}tiailtity of spliiidia t^ianioiiiais in proof of our Idvr prices At pr&eht oii these laters. THERE LS NO FREEDOM THOUGirr IN NORTH ■ CAROLINA. OF A POOPv JIILLIONAIRE Lately starved in London bec.iuse he could not digest his food. Ear­ ly use of Dr, King’s New Lii6 Pills would have saved him. They strengthen the stomach, aid diges­ tion, promote a.ssimilation, im­ prove appetite: Price 25c, Mon­ ey back if not s.'itisficd. ^ Id by C. C. Sanford, Druggist. c: The drought in the west is play­ ing havoc with the corn in Kansas. You can never cure di-spepSia by dieting. What your body needs is plenty of good food properly dig-es- ted. Then if your Htemacli will not diffest it, Kodol Dyspepsia Cure will. It contains all of the natural difres* tanta hence must dlijest every class of food and no prepare it that nature can use it in nourishinft- the body and replacing the wasted tissues, thus irivin-f life, health, strength, ambit­ion. pure blood and good healthy ap­petite. C, C. Sanford. M. A. Foster. By B. N. Duke moving his citi­ zenship to Niw York state cuts this stiite out of $17,000 state and county taxes. He says: “I will maka my home in New York bnt my heart will be in North CarO' Una aud 1 will not forget the asy­ lum and other worthy charities.” —Salisbury Sun. The piles that annoy you so will be quickly and permauentlv healed if YOU u,ie DeWitt’s Witch Hazel Salve. Beware of wnrthle.'is couutcrfeita. C. C. Sanford, M. A. Foster. IT DAZZLES THE AVORLD. No Discovery in medicine has ever created one quarter of the ex­ citement tliat has been caused by Dr. King’s New Discovery for Consumption. It’s severest tests have been on hopeless victims of Consumptiou, Pneumonia, Hemor­ rhage, Pleurisy and Bronchitis, thousands of whom it has ie.stored to perfect health. For Conghs, Colds, Asthma, Croup, Hay Fever, Hoarsncss aud Whooping Cough it is the quickest, surest cure iu the world. It is sold by C. C. San­ ford, who guarantees satisfaction or refund money. Large bottles 50c. and ¥1.00. Trial bottles Irec. AYCOCK GRASS. While at Moorehead City week before last, we were amused at a conversation between E.x-Goyem'or Jarvis and Mr. Washington Duke of Durham. Mr. Duke, like our selves had noticed the grassy con­ dition of the crops down east, and remarked to Gov. Jarvis that the Democrats had run the niggers out and that the “Aycock Grass” was taking them, and its a fact; the worse looking crops we have over seen. Much of the land has been thrown out of cultivatioh. These eastern people will have to go into the live stock business. 'Thous­ ands of cattle could be raised down there on that fine grass. WHITE 3IAN TURN­ ED YELLOW. Great consternation was felt by the friends of M. A. Hogarty of Lexington, Ky., when they saw he was turning yellow. His iskin slowly elianged color, also his eyes and he suftered terribly. His ma­ lady was Yellow Jaundice. He was ti-eated by the best doctors, but without benefit. Then he was advised to try Electric Bitters, the wonderful Stomach and Liver remedy, and he writes: “After taking two bottles I was whooly cured.” A trial proves its match- Iras merit for all Stomach, Liver , and Kidney troubles. ■ Only 25c, ; Sfild by C. C, iSaoiford, Druggist, 5 p r i n m e r 25c. Lawns going at iSc.if ii ii inc.U ti 12 ie.n it il 10 10c.(I il ii ■S 7Ci ii it li 5 lOc. White Duck for - - . . . You will find a nice line of these goods to select from-. Yours aniiona to please. A tla n tic C ity CAPE MAY, OCEAN CITY, SM ISLE CITY, AVALON, ANGLE- SEA, WILDWOOD. HOLLY BfiACa, N. J. __________________________'-T',, vag l®-SPECIAL EXCURSIONS, -®t Via NORFOLK & WESTERN RAILWAY In connection with the PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD, June 20, July 5 and 18, Aujfust 1> 15, and 29, and September 12,1901. Excursion tickets will be sold only for Trains Nos. 4 and 28 on dates of ex­cursions, good ou all regular trains north of HagerstO'vn, except Penn­sylvania Limited, and valid to return leaving the seashore and Fhiladel- ~ihia within sixteen days, including ,te of excursion. A stop over of ten days will be al­lowed at Philadelphia on the going trip, if passengers deposit their tick­ets with the Ticket Agent at Broad Street Station, Philadelphia, imme­ diately on arrival. For Sale by E. E. HUNT, JR. Call at H unt’s Store. N okth Carolin.a. 1 In Superior Court. Davik County. F. JI. Phillips, j A,T.Giant, CSC. etal Charles Howard, HOHCE of RESALE et al J Pursuant to an order made by A. T. Grant. Clerk Superior Court, Davie county, in above entitled cause, I will resell at public auc­ tion at court house door in Mocks- ville, ou Monday the 5th day of June, 1901, the follomng lands situated in Davie couniy, Shady Grove township, near Blxby, and bounded as follows, to-wit: Be­ ginning at a post oak, Charlie El liott’s and Tom Howard’s corner, N. 16 chs to a pine, Chas. Elliott’s and Allen’s corner, E. 41 chs, 75 Iks to a stake or stone, on the bank of a branch, Massey’s corner, S. 31 chs and 25 Iks to a dogwood,, E, 22 chs and 72 Iks to a stake, S. 15 chs and 77 Iks to a stake, tte begin­ ning corner of the Jenkins’ tract, W . 16 chs and 75 Iks to a hickory sapling on the John Obrion old tract, S. 13 chs 25 Iks to a stone, Obrion’s corner, W . 14 chs to a dogwood sprout, Bogan Haywood’s corner, W . 27 chs aud 50 Iks to a sweet gum, 20 Iks to a post oak, the beginniug corner,containin 154 acres, 71 poJes more or less. See old book 4, page 375. Terms of sale:—$75.00 of pur­ chase money to be paid in cash, balance on six mouths credit se­ cured by bond with approved se­ curity, with interest from date. Title reserve<l until purchase money is paid in full. June 27th, 1901. „ C. A. Hal,!,, Com, By JAwr. Si e 'Vajbt, Atty. Pa'sdengers for Atlantic City luay use trains from Broad Street Station, Philadelphia, via tHc DELAWARE RIVER BRIDGE ROtJ'tE The Onlv All-Rail Line. Pasaengera for tne other points above named will use regular trains from Market Street Wharf, Phila. W. B. BEVILL, Gen. Pass. Agent. M. F. BRAGG, Trav. Pass. Afft. E.B.HCNT. EXPERIENCED BARBER. Sharp Razors. Clean Towels Jure Dandruff Cure. Money re funded if not satisfactory. ; ground and Concaved. Shop on Main Street, Weant iBlock. Give me a trial. Send ns yonr order for job vork if yon want good work at low prices. Give nd a trhil order. m m }toOUaiBU.6.asdFoN!ga PateoUandTi TKTM. Fsi«ft UnoM orcc oB*re4 t PATSK7 lAWYlM 07 *• Y*AM*----------- MTTin. U*dent« charges. •S -C . A . S N O W & CO .! PATENT LAWYERS, 0|V.U.8.M«tl)Hln, M »AJ>Sr(«icaB8. 1.^1 noticcs -will be charged for as f(dlowsr 93.00 notice for $2.50; *2.50 notices for $2.00; $o^Oanotic«B fol SOUTHERN RAILWAY. T H E . . ; dTANDAED RAILWAY O FTH ESO O Tii. l i e Direct Line tc all Points; Te x a s,’ CALIFORNIA; FLORIDA,' CUBA AND PORTO BlCd. Strictly Piist Class Equips ment on all Through rfnd Lt- cal Traiiis; Pnllman Sleeping Ciusoiiall Night Trains; Past imd Sale ischednlcs; Travel by the .Sonthcrfi ainl you are (Msnred a Sale, Com­fortable aiid an JjlzpeUitioa^ </ouraey. Apply to Tickrt Affents for Time Tit; bles. Hates and General Infor­mation, or address R. L. vi^proN , Charlotte N; fc; F. R. DARBYl C. P. &T. A. Asheville N.C. NO TROUBLE TO ANSWER QDERTION S H. HAEDWICK, fi. P. k ' V 4 .S H IN a T 0 N , B C 60 YEARS' EXPfiRIENCe P a t e n t s CoPY^Mt^&C, AnyoB* WQ<lln« a skatcfa Btid descrinUra may onl*lr ascertain oar optnlnn free whether aa tpteial fioeiM, wltboat cbnr«e, in Um.Sdentific mtvim. AliaadwriWjnJnrtratwl weekly. lA w at ^ calatioa of 0B7.B^ntlBc Journal. T&rnifi, 93 2Wj_foarmonura«91. SoMbyBll ncwsd^Miers.' t Offlce. h s ^ B U W ashington, r Greensboro Nurseries^ GBEENSBGSO, N, C.. look out for the Greensboro' and Coitett’s Southern Early peacitelt and remember thali wfire tBtrtaucea by the» OtMntboro N nrs^es, and that wlfett yMi want the besf tf fiaittf of aH IdMsy addres# your oif<tef tor JO H S A. YOTINO, SreSnabow',-».•«'/ - l/oldinf a Great JHee(inf on the Pa cific Coast. AUNY GATHER AT SAN F8ANCISC0 Congralulntory Me5sages Read Froii The Presldeat, the Vice Prcs:den( and Many Governors. San Francisco. 0al., Spccial.—The fljia !u(ei-uat’o « ^ convention of the Kjiuorth Lon^d was Thdi.i day under tJj/o most auspicious condi­ tions. JT^tf^w'cather was ideal aud the /^aftPiuianco equalled the most sangviino expectations of all. The scene at the Mechanics' Pavilion, where the prin­ cipal exercises of the day were held, was one not soon to be I'orgotten. Never in its history has the spacious interior of the pavilion presented a more impressive spcctacie. Every un­ sightly Inch of wall was hidden hy tasteful decoi^tions. Great voiuni of music from huaian throats accompaniment of the Stanj Inspired a feeling of miration and homj had virtually and land^ ‘ delcj Conditions Have ^en Favorable tn Most Sections. The weather during the past week was favorable for crops throughout a large portion of the western dis­ trict, and along the northern border of the State until Saturday. The most important feature was the develop­ ment of two storms oa the North Carolina coast The first was con­ fined to the Immediate coast aud caused heavy rains In the east on the Sth. and some damage to crops by high northeast winds. A local very heavy and damaging rain also occur- rcd on that date over several western (ountles. chiefly Davie, Lincoln, ;.5ocklenburg, Catawba and Iredell. The scrond storm started near Wil­ mington Friday 12th, and the rain area gradually spread over the entire State, bringing on the average abofat three laches of precipitation, causing freshets In the riven temperature during the about normal, and maxim were of sunshi;In MINISTERS TO AGREE Upon the Eisposifion of the Province r. of Manchuria. SETTLING CHINESE OUfSTIO.NS. The Part Which Russia Claims Now Open-Compllcatlons Are Ulcely to Result. THROUGHOUT THE COUNTRY. Washington, D. C.. Specil.—It isj derstood to bo the desire of^ the great powers that ^ of Manchuria shojim'aicieis at^ tcraina Tlie South. An order nas been received for 100,- 000 tons of Tennessee and Kentucky coal to be shipped to Venice. The Alabama Constitutional Conven­ tion voted not to change the present Jury system. Senator Bacon, of Georj number of members sailed from Brookl ENGINEERS fiO nf IT soutM n industrial Serious Trouble in the ,' Minin ne Are Thrown fment—Eight Hour ded. \’ash Rev. A. C. I^da, led tlio ^Howyd Street ^ Lo vast Interior oi ""Pavilion, capable of Tver 15,000 people, was r a mass of humanity, the convention proper was JTed to order at 2: SO o’clock by Rov. nomas Filben, of Paciflc Grove, not a vacant placo was to be seen from the grand organ to the farthest gal­ lery of chairs. After a servicc of song, led by Robert Husband and par- Wpated in by the chorus of the 2.000 iolces, the general secretary, Rov. ^Jos. F. Berry, Tcad a number of con­ gratulatory messages from prominent men throughout the Union. Presi­ dent McKinley, in his mousase, said: •*I have much pleasure in sending to the International Epworth Leasuo Couv«ntlon, assembled at San Fran cisco, my hearty congratulations upon the fcood work the great body of Chris­ tian men and women, which it rcnio- Ecurc, has accomplished in the past, any my earnest wish that even grcai.e:* success will crown the future efforts of the League.” VIcc President Roosevelt worded his message as follows: “My heartiest greetings, pb'1 may good luck attend the Epworth League in its efforts for social and civic right­eousness." Other communications were from Governors Mci^illin. of Tennessee; Shaw, of Iowa; Durbin, of Indiana; Pates, of Illinois; Bliss, of Michigan; Dockery, of Missouri; Stanley, of Kansas, and Van Sant, of Minnesota. Alt were received v.ith chcers, those from th3 President and Vice Presi­ dent aro;j?ins the audience to great cnthnsiasin. Tlie c'.t;aiug o;cpicises at the Me- chanico 'Pavilion vcrc presided over by Rollo Watt. The first address was by Rev. Chas. I’a:*aid Mitchell, who r-poke oji 'The Vjiijg People’s Move­ment in t.he Nineteenth Century.” “The Youn?; Fecpic's Movement in the Twentieth Century” was dis­ cussed by Rev. G. W. Kirby, of Mon­ treal, Canada. T. J3. Hutchison, of Napa. Cal.. spoke on ‘•Methodism in the* Twentieth Century.” At the Alhambra Theatre tonight, Rev. A. C. Crews, of Toronto, Canada, presided. Tlie young peoples movement was dis»?;issed b> Rev. Alonzo Monk, cf Knoxville. *3 enn.. and Rev. M. S. Hughes, of Kansas City. Rev. E. E. Scott, of Vancouver, B. C., spoke on “The Methodist in the Twentieth Centurj'.’* Rev. T. N. Ivey, of Raleigh, N. C., was chairman of the Metropolitan Temple meeting. Addresses v.-ere de­livered by Rev. W. C. Millard, of Yonkers. N. Y.; Rev. John II. Cleman, o: Glen Falls. N. Y., and Prof. Collins IJenny. uf Koshville. Tenn. There will fte morning, afternoon and evening gatherings to-mOrrow at cach of tho» four meeting places of the League. Im- ^re do- countles. a, and there ing on a second _ ^nd curing are pro­in the east; and top- , ^ral in the central portion, and sweet potatoes are good. ^hin« wheat continues; a little leat left in shock was damaged by cxcesslve moisture. Field peas are growing nicely. Some hay was saved during tho week, and meadows are in f:no condition, but the work now awaits drier weather. Grapes appear to bo rotting badly, and the rainfall has been too much for melons; melons are ripening and some arc coming into market. The general outlook for crops continue unpromising. Six Orowned In the Surf. Savannah. Ga.. Special.—The Heb:ew Gamahl Hasad held its annual picnic at Hatifski Beach Sunday. Between 3 and 4 o’clock in the afternoon a number of tlie pirnickers went into the ocean for a surf bath. A strong southeast wind was blowing and the tide was at flocd. Fifty yards off shore is a shoal. Be- tv.-een the shoal and shore Is a slice. The party was bathing o i the shoal. Finding the tide getting rather high. Ihe bathers concluded to go nearer shore. Almost at once they founi themselves in the sluice, over their heads with mountainous waves pound­ ing and a sweeping current running. Several sfarfed across, and six were drowned. The dead are: Mrs. Ab3 Dick- steln. aged S3; Annie Kronstadt, aje:! 10; Ida Kronstadt, aged 36; Leah Sil- versicin, aged 17; Ann'e Horrowitz. r.ped 13. and Isaac Zacht, aged 22. The L'OiUes of the unfortunates were swept oi!t to sea. Mrs. Dickstein’s corpse was found floating in the surf an hour after the tragedy, but the others arc miss­ ing. State n*-‘st Pay Liquor Tax. Philadelphia, Special.—A Washing­ ton special to The Record says: The Commissioner of Internal Revenue is expected to decide that the State of South Carolina is wrong in its conten­ tion against the right of the Federal government to tax South Carolina Sta^ liquor dispensary. Commlssio'ier Yei-kers ^ > » Ui^-it is understood, after several conferences with Attor­ ney General Knox, that South Carolina has no power under the constitution to exempt dispensaries from the opera­ tion of the Federal internal revenue l a w .___________________ Disease Killing Georgia Cotton. Valdosta, Ga., Special.—W. A. Or­ ton, an assistant patrol of the Depart­ ment of Agriculture, at Washington, who has been here for a week Investi­ gating a disease which has been kill­ ing cotton, says the disease Is caused by fungus in the soil which clogs the vessels in the stalk and causes the plant to wilt. He says when the fungus once gets into the soil it will live as long as cotton is planted upon that BOU. A BoUIc Trust. Wheeling. Vv. Va.. Special.—The lat­ est combination to be formed is of flint glass bottle-makc-rs. There are about 50 makers of glass bottles In the Unit­ ed States, and every one was brought Into the combination held at a meeting in Chicago, July 11. The capitalization Is $30,000,000. The officers elected are: F. G. Park, of this city; G. W. Yost, of Bellalre; F. W. Breen, of Indiana, treasurer; J. G. M. Porter, of Chicago, secretary. The fact of the combination has been kept a profound secret. The imme^ate effect of the combination was an advance of prices. Lieut. Ramsay Dead. Manila. By Cable.—Lieutenant Charles R. Ramsay, of the Twenty- first Infantry, who was wounded in the engagement near Lipa. province of Ba- tangas early last month, is dead. Tho {’cath is also announced of Solomon Massey, formerly a lieutenant of artil­ lery. who v/as recently appointed pur­ chasing Bgent of the insular govern* ment. Negroes Hang a Negro. Montgomery. Ala.. Special.—A mob of negroes. at Courtland. Monday, hanged Alex Herman, a negro, who v.*as charged with killing Sallie Swoope. When the officers took Her­man to the train on the way to Tua- cumbia to be placed In jail for safe­keeping. the negroes held the train, took the prisoner off and hanged him, afterwards riddling his body with bul* lets. Herman made a confession. TELEGRAPHIC TERSITIES. A Shefldeld dispatch says: “The shareholders of Wm. Jessop & Sons, limited, steel manufacturers at a meeting, approved a scheme for the f stahlishment of steel works at Wash­ington. Pa., and the formation of a subsidiary company under the laws of Pennsylvania.” Chekib Bey. the new Turkish Mla- ieter. has arrived in Washington. The Charleston. S. C.. Mining and Manufacturing Company, of Charles­ton, a large fertilizer concern, has filed notice with the Secretary of the State of an increase in its capital stock from $1,000,000 to $3,000,000. It is said the fertilizer trust has a hand in this move. There is said to be a deficit of $225,- 267 in the funds of the endowment rank, Knights of Pythias. The International Christian En­deavor Convention at Cincinnati end­ed. A violent storm is raging in HaiU and Santo Domingo. Young Fook, a Chinaman, supposetl to have been crazy, was lynched in California, after running amurir a knife. It is reported that Lord Rosebery will marry the Duchess of Albany. Lord Roberts has decided to dis­ pense with sword, lance and bayonet exercises for British Army recruits. A mass meeting in Guild Hall, Lon­ don, indorsed the government’s war policy. Commandant Marais, a “Cape rebel,” was hanged at Middleburg,Transvaal. The British cruisers Minerva and Hyacinth, which are testing types of naval boilers, arrived at Gibraltar. Through trains from Moscov/ to Stretensk, Siberia, are now' running. French miners voted in favor of a general strike. Arab stokers on a plague ship at Marseilles refused to submit to in­oculation with virus. The Federal party In the Philippines has indorsed demonstrations against the friars. Governor Allen, of Porto Rico, will confer with President McKinley before deciding about resigning. Representative • De A rm on^ may try to secure the minority nomjfe^tioD as Speaker of the House. the had re- with China and ako by ■ram stating that a !mation was about to is- Ishing Nu Chwang as a Rus- >rt As to tho i»TOit that Rus- will proclaim Nu Chv;ang to be a Russian port, it is rcii-eS out in ot- Bcial diplomatic Quarters tiiat Nu Cliwang is a treaty l.ort, end as suca Is open to the commerce of the world, under the existing larift regulations witU Ciiina. and foreign merchants have tho right to trade and to conduct there Tbcso rights of trade could not Da divested, m the opinion ol diplomatic officials, by a Russian proclamation unless the pow­ ers had previously given assent. Thus tar there has been no request Irom Russia or China for any change in the status of Nu Chwans as one of the treaty ports. in a spirit -nhich has aroused tho Iteenest admiration of the State De­ partment, the -Tapanese government has met the difficulty growing out of tho preference of her reauest for an increase ot her Indemnity, owing to depreciation la selliag prices of Ja­ panese bonds, by withdrawing that re­ quest. The result is a substant al loss to Japan. She asked ongmally tor 523,000,000. This figure was more moderate than any of .the powers which took any prominent part in thc Chinese campaign and represen.eti the barest expense of the undertaK- ing. It was Oxed upon the idea that the payment was to be made m casii by China, Confederated with tho bond payment the Japanese asked that tho allowance be Increased to 527,000,000 in bonds to make good the loss she would BUtter through the sale of tho bonds. As soon as some of the other nations found that the allotment as originally fixed was in danger of bo ing uistnrbed they came in wuli increased demands and thus it is that Japau, finding that insistence upon her demand would blockade the ne­ gotiations at this phase, .has with­ drawn her request tor the present at least It is safe to assume that tho United States government will do what it can to secure compensation tor Japan. Mr. Kockhlll, our spccial commis­ sioner at Pekin, has been instructen to give the assent of the United States to the proposition to Increase the Chinese customs dues in order to pro­ vide means for the payment oJ the international indemnity. Our govern­ ment is still opposed to this project and the instruction is sent only in deference to the universal wish tor a speedy conclusion of the negotia tions at Pekin. It is learned that the hitch in these negotiations, the most baffling that has yet occurred, is due entirely to Uie issue rai.?ed as to the increase of customs.________ Killed By Lightning. Tallahassee, Fla., Special.—Advices received here state that in the coun­ try near this city a heavy storm pre­ vailed and loss of life and property resulted. Lightning struck the houso of Capt. A. C. Spiller, awl did con- eJderable damage. John Henderson, colored, who was near, was knocked renseless, his shoes being torn from Jiis feet. He will probably recover. A lionse occupied by a colored family near this place was completely wreck­ ed One of the girl children was In­ stantly killed while lowering the wln- Pow, and one of the male inmates was alfeo badly shocked that he died dur­ ing the night. On the plantation of tJeneral Patrick Houston, two colored v/omen in the house of ono of the ten­ ants were Insttintly killed. The Dry Goods ilsrket New York, Special.—A quiet market in all departments has been reported Heavy brown sheetings and drills are firm in i>rice in all leading makes. Bleached cottons rule steady through­ out. Coarse colored goods are in gen­ erally light supply and firm. - Print cloths are dull and unchanged. Prints and ginghams are quiet. Men’s wear woolens and worsteds are quiet and little ohown for spring. Dress goods are dull and irregular. Keller, of Ar- •ek vindication Ot 'by Mrs. T. G. Bar- l^ons were killed In a Lake ^ U road collision near OKVeland, Another demonstration was made against tho pay chairs in Madison Square Park, New York. Twenty passengers were injured by a shifting engine “sidewiplng” a Penn­ sylvania express train at Columbus, Ohio. • For the week ending July 6 there were 989 deaths ?n Greater New York due to heat. Stockholders of the C.\mbridge Steel Company voted unanimously to sell their property and assats to the Sone- maugh Steel Company. Attorney Frederick D. White, son of Ambassador lo Germany Andrey D. White, committed suicide at Syracuse, N. Y. Secretary of the Treasury Gage last week bought $289,050 short-term bonds. Secretary of Staie Hay returned to Washington. D. C., for a brief stay. Massachusetts Republicans will re­ nominate Governor Crane for a third term. Presbyterian In Mexico have organ­ ized Independently of the Church in the United States. The Pardon Board of Minnesota will act on the cases of Cole and James Younger. Retail grocers of New York State are in session at Buffalo to organize a protective association. An exploding tank at the Williams­ burg. N. Y.. branch of the Standard Oil Company injured five man. Importations of precious stones for the past year at New York amounted to $21,910,053. over $3,000,000 more thaa In any other year. Foreign. A hot wave has been prevailing in London. Prominent English Liberals at a cop; forcnce voted to sustain Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman as leader. Princc Christian of Denmark will visit the United States iu the coming spring. The Duke of Tetuan stated in tho Senate at Madrid that Spain had rc- fu.sed several times to sell Cuba to the United States. Riots at Seville, Spain, •were sup* pressed by cavalry. The Argentine Government has re­ quested the Chamber of Deputies to re­ ject the debt unification scheme. The storms in Haiti have ru;n®d crops in the southern part of the island. It is rumored at San Juan that Dr. J. H .Hollander, secretary of Porto Rico, will resign. The Cuban Constitutional Conven­ tion rejected the preliminary draft oi an election law for the island. A Cape Town dispatch states thnt Boers have burned the public buildingi at Murraysburg, Cape Colon. Fire at the Glasgow Kxhibltlon de­ stroyed a block of tea rooms. A special embassy from Morocco has arrived in*Berlin. Count Stanislaus de Castellans, brother of C.yunt Boni de Castellano, was married in Paris to Miss Terry. Plague in virulent form has broken out at Amoy ,China. Rear-Admiral Crowninshield comes forward with the claim that he wrote Uie order to De' y to capture or de« stroy the Spanisiu fleet at Manila. ilkosbarre. Pa., Special.—The itrike order of President Mullahy, of the Stationary Firemen's Association of Pennsylvania, directing the men to strike for an eight hour day, was obeyed by the men. Nine hundred members of the organization in this section of the State refused to go to work. Most of the strikers are em­ ployed as flren»en at the coal mines and their failaro to report for duty caused nearly all the collieries in the northern anthracite region to sus­ pend operations, throwing out cf work, it is estimated, 30,000 men and boy.=3. Come of the Individual coal operators •oncedcd the demands of their em­ ployes on condition that the short hour day was not to hold If the men •mployed by the big companies did hot get the same concessions. The big coal companies, however, refused to make any concessions. The officials claimed that the demands of the fire­ men were unreasonable; that they had received a 10 per cent, increase when the wages of the miners were raised, and thac their demands made upon the companies was equal to a 20 per cent, advance. The strikers held a meeting in this citj' shortly before noon. Reports were received from all the districts and they showed that the strike from Pittston to Shickshinny in this (Luzerne) county were general, and that the coal companies were unable to s^ccnre new men to take the places of the strikers, although It was claim­ ed they had made desperate efforts to do so. The best they could do, it was said, was to press tho firemen and fire bosses into the service. This was done at a great many of the mines. Somebody had to do it. because there was danger of great damage being done by v.ratcr and the accumulation of gas. Most of tho large companies were successful In getting a sufficient number of men to keep the pumps running. Other small companies were not so fort>:nato. T h ey were left en­ tirely helpless when the firemen quiet For Cumherland River. Washington. D. C., Special.—The United States army engineers aro tr.ins:nittlng their annual reports to the War Department. Lieutenant Colonel M. B. Adams, who is in charge of tho river and harbor v/ork in the Nashville, Tenn.. district, ia iris annual report to the Secretary of War recoramenils an apprnpriation cf $1,. 714.500 for the Cumberland river below Nashville. H« estimates that this amount (which Is sufficient to com­ plete the existing project) can be prof­ itably expended during the fiscal year endin? June 30. 1503. For the Cum­ berland river above Nashville he re­ commend an appropriation of 51,203,- 710. Jt» Manofacturing:. r on tfi«<umltur« man- o In the South, by Mr. E. M, ,_____,g, o t High Point, N. C., fur- ihes the following interesting InfoW mation: “Permit me to give a few facU in sard to the manufacture of fumltui* In High Point, N . C., as I «ni mor« famllla • with the factorica of that place, and as it is a repreaentativa Southern manufacturing town. Tha 3rst factorjr there, the Higli Point Fur- oltura Company, began work in 188D. They first made cheap chamber suits. Now there are 33 factories, one tor every 130 people, Thomasvllie, serca miles from High Point, has 13, which manufacture every article of furniture which man needs from the time he Ueg <n his cradle until he sleeps at laat in jIs coKd within his windowless pal­ ace. It would be tedious to mention th® name of the different factories u d their managers and the various m icles of furniture manufactured, ^’hich Include everything that is need' sd for use and ornament in a modem IwelHng, business house or office. These goods are shipped to every State >f the Union and to some foreign iouQtrles. "Tie factories have been uniformly ind remarkably successful. Regular dividends ranging from 10 to 25 per :ent. per annum have been paid in aearly all cases. Stock sells at a good ;remium without exception. Not ♦lO,- '00 worth cf stock Is owned out of ;own and none outside erf the State \Iany stockholders are young men and Joys now at work at the benches. All abor employed is white with the ex- septlon of a few negroes who drive Irays and handle lumber about the rards. Aa air of thrift, cleanliness lad prosperity pervades the entire own. There Is nothing about the vork that Is degrading mentally, mor- illy or physically. It is no uncom­ uon thing for the sons ot the richest nen In the town to begin by turning a athe by the side of men who support Jicir famiJies on $1 a day or less. The rumitnrp factory has made High Point A-hat it is to-day, and already It m widely known as a furniture manu- acturing tov/n. M. BRYAN TALKS Aboul tlie Aclioa of llie Ohio D*®** cratic Conventioa. Llmestont^ Ho.slery Msll. The Limestone Hosiery Mills 1« the •errect title of the new knitting plant innouneed last week as contracted for It Athens, Ala. This company has ef- ,'ected permanent organization with J. W. Frost, president; Robert L. Heti- Iricks. secretary-treasurer. and P. W. iendrlcks, manager. The building Ipntraeted for will be 30x60 feet in lize, of brick, two stories high, and vUl cost about $2500. The dally ca­ pacity of tho plf.nt will be 200 dozen )alrs of children’s and misses’ hose,, jmployes will number fifty, and th^ bvestmcnt of capital will be $15,0C0. niscellaneous. Demands Granted. Rochester, N. Y., Special.—After nearly nine weeks of idleness the striking laborers engaged in munici­ pal contract work resumed Thursday. Nine bosses signed the agreement, only two contractors remaining out. The men are granted 20 cents an hour for an eight-hour day v/ork and time and a half for over time and double time on holidays. Th3 Nicaragua Treaty. London, By Cable.—Lord Pannce- fote, British ambassador to the Unitcrl States, made the foIlov.ing statement to a representative of the Associated Press: “I am having a conference with the Marquis of Lansdowno not only about Nicaragua, but also with regard to half a dozen treaties pend­ ing between Great Britain and the United States. These are chiefly con­cerned wltff" V^’^cst Indian reciprocity aiTangements.” Lord Pauncefote said he hofed an agreement regarding the Nicaraguan Canal could be arrived at \ before Congress meets. Andrew D. White United States Am­ bassador to Germany, will resign next year. Messrs. Hudson & Awtrey of La Grange, Ga., have received contract to lulld the forty-t.ur ftve-reom cjttf '?r, tnnounced last week as to be ereciid by the Unity Cotton anils. Messrs. J. A. Yates, Louis Minor ind J. H. Fowle, mentioned last we:k IS organizing knitting mill in Bir- mlngJiam, Ala., have asked for char­ ter for the Birmingham Hosiery Mills. The La Grange (Texas) Cotton and Dll Manufacturing Company has been incorporated, with capital stock of >50,000, for the manufacture of cotton, cottonseed oil, flax, flaxseed, soap and loap stock. The incorporators are Messrs. John Schumacher, Henry C. Schumacher, C. J. von Rosenberg, H. Amborg and F. J. Reynolds. The Spalding Cotton Mill of Griffin, Ga., has declared an annual dividend of 7 per cent. This company has just elosed Us first year of operations; it operates 9,000 ring spindles and 300 fcroad looms. The Rossville, (Ga.) Hosiery Mills Intends making some decided impi^uvtr- ments. Adjacent lands havo been bought and additional buildings will be contracted for soon. It is believed that considerable new machinery will be installed, and that some new pro* ducts will be introduced. The government cootraict recently referred to as given to the Bibb Manu­ facturing Co., of Macon, Ga., for fui- fillraent at Its Columbus (Ga.) branch, now biiildlng, amounts to about $15,- OOO. The contract calls for 80.0TI3 pounds of twine such as Is used by the postal service in tying packages of letters together. The supply is for one year from July 1. The Clermont Mills of New Berns. N. C., P. H. Pelletier, • proprietor, in­ tends td reorganize as-a siock company abd eniarge and Improve the plant for knitting. U is proposed^ to^iOfTest at I A French MlnL<;1er Shot At. Paris. By Cable.—P. Biud u, Minis­ ter of Public Wor.vs, was shot at while driving to a cabinet meeting at the Elysee Palace by a woman, who was accompanied by a tea-year-old child. M. Baudin was not hit and p;o?coded to the Elysoe Palace. The woman wa« arrested and gave her name a.^ Ol^ews- ky, and said she lived at Nanterre. Mmo. Olzewsky appears, according to ilater accounts, to have fired her p.stoi In the air when M. B.iudln's carr'ag? was passing. She said she thought M. Delcasse, Minister of Foreign Affaiis. was in the carriage and firad it to cal’ attention to a grievance. Her grievan-e w^as based upon the fact that 1896 her husband. Count Olzwsky. was inve g'e 1 from Nice across Ihe frontier to the Italian territory, where he was arrested in false denudation, as a spy. North Carolinian Murdered. Cleveland, Miss., Special.—Loucius Reed, manager of the W. L. Pearman plantation. WdS shot and killed Tues­ day by Charles Phillips, a negro em­ ployed on the farm. Reed met Phillipa eating at a lunch stand during th« morning and told him he should be at work. Words passed between them ani Phillips shot Reed tvrice, one ball pars­ ing through the heart. Phillips escaped and it is believed he is in hiding in the can brakes mar here. The citizens are highly wrought up over the murder and if the negro is captured, it ia bsIieveJ he will be lynched. Posses with b'.cod- hounds are searching for the fugitive. Reed came here from North Carolina and stood well In the community. on Aim For Jacksonville. Plans are on foot to have a cotton 111 mill running in this city by about Hctobor I.**. The mill, which is to ba suilt by Tcnne.'^ee capitalists, will b« cnown as the tlorida Cotton Oil Mill, it Avill bo a very largo plant, with the .•apacity of crushing 100 tons of seed I day. It will give employment to be- .wecn 75 and 100 heads of families, oater on cottages for these mill hands ?;ill probably be built. The stock is |100,C00.—Jacksnvillc Metropolis. SAYS IT MADE A GREAT MIST^ By Lugglns His Name Into It* !>«•>'’ erations-DecIares the Money Ques­ tion Is Not Dead. Indus^nal Miscellany. It is stated that a paper mill for Uilizing the fiber from cottonseed mils is about to be located at Hons, ion, Texas. Parlies from Mississippi fcave visited that city, and are looking >ver the ground, .and are well pleasei r.’ith the situation for such an ent«.*« •»rise. A plant with capaoiC ^ Sfty ;on.<i a day may be established at Jost of $35,COO. On the Chattahoochee and tributary rivers during tho year ending June 30 Kcamboats carrlrd 320.000 tons ot relght, an increar.e of f'O.OOO tons com* pared with the preceding year. Seven Killed By a Mob. St. Ix)uls, Spccial.—A special to the Globe-Democrat from Cordova, Mex-cj, says: A train on the Vera Cruz & Pacific Railroad was attacked 7’rjceni- by a large force of armed men at Tierrablanca, a small station. Seven men on the train were killed. As soon as the news of the attack re.iched Cordova a force of rurals was sent to the scene and is now In pursuit cf tbg mob. The cause of t^ie attack Is noc known here. It Is said to have b3ea made by men who were formerly em­ ployed in the construction of the road. le a s t ^0,000 a d d itio n a l Moulders Qain Victory. Chicago, Special.—Important vic­ tories wore gained by members of tho Iron Moulders’ Union, eight firms signing the agreement. One cf the eight concerns was the American Tin Can Company, known as the “tin can trust.” Of the 12,000 moulders who struck Monday over 300 have already returned to worL at the advance de­ manded when the strike was ordered The leccnt suicide of von Minckewitz. the former chess champion, in a fit of in­ sanity, following so soon after the death of Steinitz also from insanity and the similar ending of Morphy some years ago has drawn renewed attention to the disastrous eflrects the inordinate grati­ fication of the chess passion may pro­ duce. Most of these great players give themselves up absolutely to their chos­ en form of mental dissipation, and un­ less the mind is powerfully constituted the result is a mental wreck. Textile Notes. The first b*!le of Tox.\s cotton lold in Nov/ York at nine cent* a ^und. Col. J. L. Power Is endeavoring te organize a $100,000 cotton factory com­ pany at Jackson, Miss. The Itasca (Texas) Cotton Manufac- ^lring Co.. nov/ building mill, has in- •reascd capital frMn $100,000 to $150,- 100. It is reported that the Woodstock Cotton Mills. Anniston, Ala., has pla* eed orders for additional machinery. This plant was completed recently, ba. Ing built for 5,000 spindles. It Is^sald Andrew Carnegie still hHs $280,000,000 to give away in public ben­ efactions. The National Council of Educators adopted the report of the National Uni­ versity Committee that no bill yet of- fered in Congress is practicable. C^rl Jansen, suyposed to be insane, murdered a womap and is said to have horribly mutilated a little girl in Den­ ver, c:oi. "What is believed to have been Father Marquette's crucifix was unearthed at Frankfort, Mich. President T. J. Shaer, of the Amalga­ mated Association of Iron, Steel and Tin Workers, says the strikers at the trust mills will accept no compromise.Speculation v/as causer In London by a visit which Lord Rosebery, who js hailed as the coming leader of the im­ perialistic Liberals, paid to King El« ward VII. The ship Laos, which has arrived at Marseilles from Yokahama, has 13 cases of plague on board. Many simultaneous meetings marked the sessions of the International Chris­ tian Endearvor Society in C.ncinnati. Four trainloads of Epworth League members left Philadtlphia for Sa« Francisco. The Norwegian bark Hanna was wrecked off Newfoundland by the steamer Cambrian, all of her crew b> ing saved. After being reprimanded by his father for betting on horse races, Eu­ gene Benning, 16 years old, of St. Lou­ is, Mo., killed himself. Captain C. D. Sigsbee, chief InteUi* gence officer of the navy, snffering from erysipelas, is not so dangerously ill as at first thought. The feat of a French submarine boat in attaching a torpedo to the hull of a warabtp !s dlscotmtad by Rear-AdmU«) IT elviU e. Lincoln, Neb., Special.—In lended comment on the platform adopt­ ed by the Ohio Democratic convention, jW.J.Bryan criticises the convention for Its failure to confirm the Kansas City platform and for what he regards aa Jie weakness of some of the planks it did adopt. Mr. Bryan insists that the- convention made a mistake in making: himself an issue, and says: “Mr. Bryan is not a candidate for any office, and a mention of him roighi have been construed by some as an endorsement of him for office. The vott should have been upon the naked prop-^ osltion to endorse the platform of last; year and then no one could have excus­ ed his abandonment of Democratic principles by the pleading of his dislike for Mr. Bryan.” Referring to the platform fie contin­ ues; “The convention not only failed but refused to endorse or reaffirm th« Kansas City platform, and from the manner In which the gold element hat rejoiced over this feature of the con­ vention, one would suppose that the main object of the convention was not to write a new platform, but to repu­ diate the one upon which the laat na« tlonal campaign was fought. “The gold paper*! assume that th« convention refused to adopt the Kas.- sas City platform because it contained a «IIver plank. If so. It would hav« been more courageous to have declared openly for the gold standerd. If the gold standard is good it ought to have been endorsed--If bad, it ought to have been denouced. To ignore the subject entirely was inexcusable. The money question is not yet out of politics. Every session of Congress will have to deal with it Republicans declare that It Is dead, bift they keep working at ____________________ .. . Long Drought Broken. Kansas City, Specail.—A portion of the drought-stricken Southwest has been r,elieved by rain during the past 24 hours. Much good ia s already re­ sulted to crops and as there are pros­ pects of more rain, it Is believed that many thousands of dollars will be saved the farmers on stock and crops." Nevertheless, much greater quantities of rain must come before a lasting benefit shall be done. In the por­ tions of central and western Missouri, weitern Kansas and the Territories, still untouched by rain, conditions re­ main unchanged, the temperature ranging from 98 to 106, the latter at Hutchison, Kan. The rains, which come at the end of a drought of from four to eight weeks’ duration, covered southwestern Missouri and took in the southeastern corner of Kansas. These rains, while good, were not sut- flcient to place the burned crops out of danger. During the day a heavy rain fell in the vicinity of Coireyvllle, Eldorado and Wichita Kan. At C oSey ville, the people held a jubilee on tho streets during the rain. Blue Rldgc Railroad Sold. Atlanta, Ga., Special.—A , The Journal from Anderson, S. C., says: “The Blue Ridge Railroad was sold at auction here to Fairfax Har­ rison, of Washington, D. C., and B. I- Abbey, of Columbia, S. C., for $100,000, the upset prices. The purchasers ar<9 directors of the Southern Railway, but they declare the road will be reorgani­ sed as a separate system. The sa o was made under a decree of tho Un> ted States Court. ' -i To Carry on Strike. Y’oungstown, O., Special.—The Amalgamated Association will levy au assessment on the Amalgamated mem­ bers employed by tho Republic Iron and Steel Company, and the indepen­ dent bar iron plants, 50,000 men alto­ gether, for the support of the strike against the United States Steel Cor­ poration. This will give a fund ot nearly $65,000 a month. The associa­ tion has in Its treasury some $300,000 for tho purpose of carrying on the strike. an ex- —1 m adopt- ivention. nUon isas C it iH ^ B I igards aa \ n SOUTHERN: Tim, M Jnrt, at i in EfTeof I ^^OnTHBOCNp. \;-Uhnrlwt.>a.Kv i Summorril'tj... ‘ I B raoehrilH . ... " .. Sr'njfclKirj*.... KtnKvill^*..... Auifnsia.TjNi. A ik e n .............'Tre,if„a ......JohiHioa A pJ^oiniiihia. "'I... ** K .v k H m . . , : t’.i:irlofte .... A r . ^ in ilic “ A r. Kic h iiiy n i . A r. W ashjll-h^u Ph}!ad.Jl|,U ui. Y o rk . ... L v. C ojum hia . A r. ^pH rtnnllU l•l:., AKh«‘villu . h n o T v il't*.. t l i~>n_‘*?naa’T 7 .'.A r. -r. I),. Lv. ITv; I'in rin u a t! . .. Cv. Kn >xriri- ..." AsWvill**. .. - •* .‘■ iK irianhun;.A r. ( . . Lv. \..rka':i.K.U'| ’* Billimoj-i' . ■ L r. W n.'il«'i:t'fi ’■ •• . “ O lu-t- r *• W um slh.r*Ar. Cv. t:Jo’aa^o'i.......*■ TTont'm .........At. Ar. ..Ar ..C ilmnVim ’■ - KinuTili*- “ Oran^Tfi'iir.;. . " Snniwrvi'l'- .^T. t'Viar'''.’'‘’I L\. '•• Htm'kvi,-. Exrollrnr 1 'n. ritin ami N«‘ *• V o i . y u i ' i ' l • .irv\ '' a. .1' • • lOffji ■ n u .l \ r..-r. pars.H*Tvt'r:tl ;>,• I -iOK ,taronfr = ••oati.wi U. »■.• W.ll.T.V'ro-. Innocent Lives Saved. Washington, D. C., Special.—It is now apparent from mail reports which have just reached the State Depart­ ment from China, that it was solely through the moderation and humanity exercised by the Unitd States repre­ sentatives at Pekin by the President’s direction in the early negotiations for a settlement of the Boxer trouble, that a number of innocent lives were not sacrificed. United States Consul-General James G. Stowe, at Capt Town, has resigng.1. Tobacco Men Organize. Richmond, Va., Special.—The Rich­ mond tobacco trades held a meeting Monday and took the first step in a movement looking to the formation of National Tobacco Association. Pro­ vision was made for the appointment of a committee of twelve Influential members to correspond with other to­ bacco men over the entire country, with a view to securing their co-opera- tlon and inviting them to send repre­ sentatives to a convention of tobacco men to be held In this city next au­ tumn. when the organization of a na' tlonal body will be effected. Epworth League Convention. San Francisco, Special.—President McKinley has sent word through Ses- retary Cortelyou tfrat he will be pleas­ ed to extend his greetings to meBTOlfr'. of the Epworth League on the opening of their national convention in thii city. He Is also expected to touch u button which wil sound the first nota of "America” on the grand organ Iq the pavillion. THE S!CM H ow to D etect a I S tJ “ T.ilkii'K a!'( 5i’ 1 ,mc In iiiIm'I ot . i ’who \v;k c.iukIm ’city while ai hi-. i| <an cx-trca'nry i paper m niicy ihis iK-n'i i-t ill I and it sctni> know li‘«|i;f *'x conntcrlV iiin'' '!: it.” H ero tlu* | note from h i' pi>. •crisp, hr »«i| le tie r •'C ' im «!n corncr. R il “Ndsv.” ihf th i snppovi. tlM-rl o i Inrnlffi!, P cp a n in tn J . Kii“ \v ly h it Sl.ntr< liiH'. A inl ticcil ilin n i atn \ <*nc o f tiK-m o.'iil n ify.” T h e cx-trea .iiryj porter a I'n iteil : cd that the n j)r.rtt| four ol' it-f 53JI. Iliea ;h«- in sta n tly : " I he ; AVhcn t'»* III)! w;i liv e H ua> i*' H .ilf a «i:h<'J and w hen the in last foitr fij-iir'-- [ w as .^l)Ie n H. w hat letter u -.iil< l| In 0.1011 ea.-e llie C, orl). “ T h e e\f)lH n aii*| cx-ofiicial. "It figures o f tlir II m atter w iiai ^ v id e them 1-v i have cith er a r< ii 3. If the rem .u.J o n th e hill w ill [ w ill he H; ii i- and if it i' x i l | “ 'J'hi' '<nr taken hy the « - tcrfeiter'^. V .. w licther a hill i' that test, i piece for a onr m atter ho-.v pi r k | letters chr| n-1 . niaind‘T oht;j:: friir fiKiire'* of 1 AV;c- y»rh • S »> il A railroad bi i f R iv er, n ear K a te S h e lle y K: w h o 20 y e a rs tra in from d e s tr l th^'n a Rirl o f l ‘. | m o th er’s eotm - ta w a n ensin«- d u rin g a r n g in g l tprn. s h e sp oil a l ;o M oin gon a. tc f saved a p a s s e n l :tjg th e ill- f a t | g.'ave. T h e sid] m edal fo r her Dft*n relebratofil and. a s a la s iin l r o ic d eed, it h a | th e stru ctu re B tru ction th o T h e orator's f | tn ia lly cont.-; ipcech. ~1 /\ SOUTHERN RAILW AY -----------^* * ^ v v /\ x , I D T ?n 1 _______I ,he Ohio Deniit- hvenlion. , grfai mistake h m e In to U i I’''**" th e .M oney Q u « ' Ip .'t'ia l.— In a*-! ex- 1 rho platform adopt* luvratN'vi’nvmtioD. I s :;ip . .m veiitii’n for^ jtr.jj !ht' liansas C’it>I Nviiar !u’ regards a? - ;i<‘ <>f plank? il f: an that t:i? . nii^rakv ia mabins lir .J says:a rjiJillfiaro f ’t ■ 'ntina of hisi might I •• J by 5.100 as ao i n : f.'r ctiice. T h e vol.^. I np.in tJje nakod prop- ? thi' pl.-;;f.ir:u nf last *:■■' t\iuld havo t^voits- M Tit of ivniorratic fp , ni.iin.? of h;s ilU'like fif piatu'rni iie o.'nt:n- •n nj: only failei i:i or roaffirm ihe J! *r:i3. and from th; !!.t- poM element hai :? f-^auiro of tho ivn- J suppose t.’jar the •. •nvonticn was a 'I arforni. br.i i-> repu- r. which the last H3* . ?.as fought.Ip-v ass'inxc that tbi ro adopt tiic Kaa- ! bii'2i;5e 31 rontajned' If s.\ it wouhl hare Tii.zoous to have d crh rei P.'M stan'tl-.'rJ. If the ?oo i it oiifrht t ^ hav« • ba<K it oiicht ro have I. To ignore the sabjeri | r \r;i5:ib:<?. Th-? n in e? y-’t out of palitirs. ' Crii?re?s u-’ll have i<j ppjibJjcans declare that they JirC'p 'working a; Eisteiti Timo a^ Othor Pomts. >----SSi^gljfj^EITi-ct June SWh. IWl. I'onTHBonstt. ... ^ '. Rl»u-kvUlo ... ......yolambia . 1225p 3o0u 41Si) ASIA) iNo.w!Dailjl \ S ^ ~ :il-Ja .. 4a5a . (»1-iii’..rr-TtL—.. .......................... ftSWl) a ^ ^ r .; ; ; ; ; ; ; : ; : : i a IS :;;™ | l « i - J-V. Tremoa ............. •! i i «w;i....... Ar. Ohapiott'c......... REGARDING /REVISION POSITIVE STAI . T0R taken by SENA .LUNGER. '. .........:::::::::: i : u ^ : ' si.Vrfi 2 03p'_0 ! |l)r o u g i:t B r o k e n . a;'..— A p ortion o f kvn S o m h v o ft h a s I >.y ra iu d u rin g th e p a st i‘ h goo(J "hAs alrea d y ro- . s an-! a s th e r e are pro?- • rain, it Is belio'-cd th a t fn'':s c i dollars will be iners on stock ana crops, much greater quantitios | i coRje l.’C'i'ore a la.sting be done. In the por- |ral and wpstern Missouri, .'^as and the Territories. n by raiu. <on‘litions re- |.;ic--5. the ivniperaturo • to I'";, th-' iatter at I :.an. The rains. v.*hioii 1 ••n<i of a drought of from it weekis' duration, covered Missouri and took in tf'«rn < OTiicr of Kansas. v h ilo g o od . v.*ere nnc 5c;i- lls c f . The burn ed crop s ou t Iju rin g th e day a h ea v y I th e v ic in ity o f C offeyvU le. ^ id W ic h ita K an. A t CofTey le o p le iicl-'i a ju b ilee o n tho li n g tiie rain . J R iJ p c R ailn ^ ad S o ld . J c a .. S p ‘.r ;a ’.— A |n ; from A n d c r sm . S. C.. n iu o R i i? » R a ilro a d vras § c n o n h<Tc to F a irfa x H ar- -h in gron . P . C - and B. I.. :u m b ;a. S. C .. f.^r I T h e p u n h a -sers a-*? ; th e Fop.thern R a ilw a y , b it re t.he read v ill bo r'-orgarl- ..-.’ TC ?y=Tf^ni. T h e s \ o und^T a d ecree o i th o Un:» C ):irt.________________ To C arry o n S tr ik e . ■ o w n . O .. S p e c ia l.— T h e l i e d A sso c ia tio n wj]J lev y au I t on th e .\c:a lg a m a to 'i Tn?m- lo y e d by th e R ep u b lic iron C om p an y, a n d th e in d ep m - iron p la n ts. 50.000 m en ab o - th e su p p o r t o f th o stril-:** I’nilG d S ta te s St^ cl Tor- T h is w ill g iv e a fund ot -'-O a m o n th . TJie a?«ocia- I n its tr e a su r y so m e $20'‘|.000 |:jr p o s € o f c a r ry itig c a th e f nocent Lives Saved. . gton. D. C.. Special.—It / I |r<»nt from mail reports which r^'ached tbo State Depart- Im China, that it -was solely |h c moderation and humanity by tho Vnitd States repre- Js at F’okin by the PreBidonfs in the early negotiations for #*nt of the Boxer trouble, that r of innocent lives were not J States Consul'General James I, at Capt Town, has rcsign^i. robacco Alen Organize. ■ ond, Va.. Special.—The Rich- Ibacco trades held a meeting I and took the first step in a nt looking to the formation of nal Tobacco Association. Pro- las made for the appointment imittee of twelve influential ; to correspond with other to- over the entire country, [riew to securing their co-opera- , inviting them to send repre- trs to a convention of tobacco be held in this city next au- Rhen the organization of a na' tody will bfe effected. vorth League Convention. Francisco, Special.—President Iley has sent word through Ses- T Cortelyou tbat he will b e pleas* l-xtend his greetiifgs to meT“ J Epworth I^eague on the opening iu- national convention In thli I He Is also expected to touch u which wil sound the first not3 luierica” on the grand organ in Ivlllion. Ar. OtocianaTi..............fiWL'l TTTi----------------Ar. LtHitfyilli." ------ T^nJvTT. • —-« a -h.'! ‘Ku.xrXd.a) Uaily^DiiilySOUTH BDU.VIi. £v. LocisTi>U‘ ... AshfvllJft..... hpartonbnrj: •ro:»n ......•»:aa! oi5p 215j)l cani £Ie Oppose* Tariff Tlnkerlncr of All Sorto W hether by Diriwt I,egI«Ialion or bj Spc€ial Treaties For the Fromotloo of Forcl;^ Trade. Senator t;allingcr, of Xcw Haiup- filiiro, M ho Iras during his entire public t:ircer becu oue of tlie most persist­ ent aud ;ible advocates of thi* tariff policy of the hopubliean party, M*as I’ccciitly asked his opiuion as to the present agitation for a repeal of cer­ tain tariff duties and the modiflca- tlon of the Dingley tariff through the ratillcatlon of the reciprocity treaties negotiated by Mr. Kasson. The Sena- tur s reply ^ns as follows: ___ h.*Mp|iai.Vif|.......CO>p! :i5Ua!.......n 2 * ,.....nriop II i.sil...... Cy. K r w Viifjti t'ji.K.k» . Pmladi'lphia‘ Rilfiinoi'o.......Lr. vrBshi'trf i ^ S^>. R y > .1^-. Hifhtiiond ” 7 “ T • Lt. Daoviilo...... .............. Lv. Cbniiotio ................. " o iS i® '” ............•■■-■■■••i " l u loijp i:;::;: Cotnmhta. (BiilpSt....... ' - - ^TColmubiH.TL'I D.r.iJ>>Ua.Ht«n.......... ‘ Tronton........Ar. Aiken .......A t. CTninito%i!!o.............Ar. Anguiit.n........................... Ev. OoIunihiH i<o. iiv7 " KinjnilU* ..........prnriKebury. .............Branrbrii'e............" Snnimprrillf ..........Ar. i?h.nrtf»Ton.........................,7{q:>< ; minr ;;;;; Lv. Oplunilim «5x). Kv.Y..r...|ri4>. 1 Iwij I 4 SWpiT 3 nil •:ui» f.52;* aif. "Sen65«n S0rp|^4^ 1 .A-i 2.-5VJI,4J2i>, 3 4ia......4S..I...... 4h*l 5r*raj.......... B!ackviti<>" Barrsirrli......“ eavanr.ah ... , Ar. Jack«Kiarin«» (I iaui>, 27&I- ' "n-' 3o:«: , siee^in^ Car Scrvico. E s c e llo a t d a U . v ,vervi.t^ Ik tw .- ii Flondn ajul v V-.; tc K on.anm ri k:-Xcv.- Ywk .m i Et-Drn^rinj^.i'.j'ii srars A ttp c stn i.n d V..-.V V o rk . 'P u llm n u (’ r u « f :7-room 3U*oin:iff«-arsl.K)!wci-!i p.jn Tam:si..T;. -k- ■ PHl-»u.iisWs'jn-r<-;T*5 Ik- wm-ii Chjir-.T. :•?; 1 lb«'bjiioiirlaT..U*V.r::.lSt.»-u .'.o-fo;k T> i v- cars bof..-,.. a fhar.uit.; sin,I Snvn 'Mnii. Ti.-'-.ncl.pQlJina?^ uiawi:»eTo'*jr. i f . S «W»Ufc' T.7’'t<-r y->rk an t lil-:i aTi'U;:«?..*-• r*' {‘n'l iJi- ori'j-id. Uu ia-^ cars MT\o rjl au-nj.» i-'irouro l^^iMrnnn ?<.«■••;!- iOR rar.'sliot’kVi'.-n .1arl;aKivii:<» and Ooi«i:ih:a. rariMitc dnilv 1k-.wi*c ovlJ;oanilCjii«-jn-oali, >na FKAKK S. S. H.JI.'.amvJC'K.Tfc»rdV-P.i:(-;.r>.iIsr., ti.su.I'hh. a-h., • W. It. TALOE. J5. W. H “NT.As't UMi. I’a'.’i. Ae’t.. D!r. A-t't..Atlnmn.tra. Cliuru-->ioa. >■ O. THE SIGN OF THE hOUI?. How to Detect a Counterfeit Bill In* stantly. “Talkitig a!)cut counterfeiters pul: .tnc in mind of one. a notorious rascal, 'who was caught not long ago in thii •city while at his ucfartoits trade,” said <an ex-treasury oliicial rcccntl)*. “The papei money this man produced 'vas ab* polutcly perfect in every detail but one. and it 5ccms strange that a uKin o£ his knowledge and expcricncc of the art ol counterfeiting should have overlooked it.” Here the speaker look a one doUai note from his pocket. It was new and crisp, and he pointed out a diminutive letter ‘‘C’ on the right under the bilPj nui^cr and anotJier down in the oihct corner. "Now,” the cx-official continued. ‘‘I don't suppose there are ninety-nine men out of a hundred, outside the Treasury Department, kttow v.-hat these fceming* ly unnecesiiar}' letters arc on the United State.<; bills. And even if they had ticed them I am willing to bet that not one of them could tell what they sig­nify.” The ex-treasnrj- man handed the re­ porter a United State.*; note and request­ ed that the reporter read to him the last four figures of its number, which were 5321. 'i'hen the ex-oflicial .said, almost instantly: •‘'fhc letter on that bill is B. cWhen the bill was examined the diminu­ tive B was found on it iji two places. Half a dozen other bills were produced, and when the trca«ur>' man was told the last four figures of their numbers, he was able to tell, with lightning rapidity, what letter would be found on each bill. In eadi ca»e the letter was cither A, B, C or D. “The explanation is simple.” said the cx-official. "If you take the last four figures of the number on any bjll, no matter what its denomination, and di­ vide them by four, you will, of coarsc, have cither a remainder of zero, i, 2 or- 3. If the remainder is zero, the letter on the bill will he A . If it is i, the letter will be B; if it is 2, the letter will be C, and if it is 3, the letter will be D. “This is one of the many precautions taken by the government against coun­ terfeiters. You can tell instantly whether a bill is bad or good by making that test. I wouldn’t give a five-ccnt piece for a one-thousand-doUar bill, no matter bow perfect it seemed, if its little letters did not correspond with the re­ mainder obtained by dividing the last four figures of its number by four.”— Kciu York Ccmmcrcial Adz'crtisi'r. B ridge Xaraed for a Heroine. A railroad bridge across the -Des tliver. near Boone, la., is to be called Kate Shelley Bridge, after a heroine who 20 years ago saved a passen^::r train from destruction there. She then a girl of 16 and was seated in her mother’s cottage when one night she saw an engine fall through a bridge during a raging flood. Lighting a lan­ tern, she sped away through the storm io Moingooa, told of the d is^ er and saved a passenger train from follow­ ing the 111-fatcd engine to a watery grave. The state of Iowa gave her a medal for her bravery, her name has been celebrated in poetry and prose, and. as a lasting monument to her he­ roic deed, it has been decided to name the structure now in process of con­ struction the Kate Shelley Bridge. The orator's biil for sei vices rendered t5ually contains several figures of ipeech. JEXATOi: QALLI>'OES, OF >-£W EAMrSHmB. Tho Democratic party in its econ­ omic bliuduoss and polllb'al pcrvor- >Uy is consistent in :i<lvocs\tlns the i-atilicatlou of the Ire.itlos iu question and cnactmont of legislation such as has boon unwisely proposed by Ucpre- s;i*ntative Babcock. That party is wedded to the doctrine of free trade, and seems <iulte wllliiisj to repeat the c.xporlment of industrial disaster and wrctchedue.«s that has conic to this country r.iienover a low tariff law has bc^'M placed on the statute books; but l:ow any llcpubl!«??m or ICoptiblicau newspaper can a<lvocate that policy suri*as-'?cs luy conipveheusion. It wouUl pecm as tbo^U the sorrow and ^;ii1fcjin’^ incident upon of tho AVilson Tariff bill Is rcccut enough to be fresh in ihe minds of our I'CopU', and that all classes would in- jifinctively sin-iuk from a rei>etition of sncii fully. But many seem to have fovsottetv these dark days, and even >-.')mc Kepublicaos have succuinbcd to the .‘^IreJi voice of free trade. For one 1 nni rtbsolulely j'.tid unqualifiedly Oj)- lio.'Ji-d to any ch.'iufre lu the* oxistin:^ tariff laws of the United States. Un­ der them the country has had fotu' years of unexampled prosperity, aud I do not propose to be a party to any proposition that looks to the repeal or liiodlfication of exlstiu.!? statues. 1 be­ lieve it will be a crime against humani­ ty to follow the lead of those who are agitatlug for au abandonment of pro­ tection and a return to practical free trade. The proposed treaty with the Argen- r»nt‘ Ucpublie reduces the dnUe.s on wool twenty per cent., and if ratlJied will inevitably strike a death blow to the wool Industry of this cotmtry ns severe and disastrous as that which lesultcd froui President Cleveland's advocac.v of free wool. The wool-pro- duciug States should rise In mighty ])rotest against this proposition, and pve tlie matter its eternal qulctu.s. The proposed treaty with Franco deals « heavy blow to certain lines of manu­ facturing iu the United States, and. so far as I can perceive, every one of the treaties agreed to by ^Ir. Kasson is inimical to American iiltevests attd ought to be rejected by the J^enate. As for the Babcock proposition, that is too absurd for siTious discusslou. The man who claims that trusts are created by tarilr logisJation has c^r- laiuly not given serious thou.glit to tho proposition, and the legislator who !>ellevcs that trusts can be destroyed by repcaliug the duties on certain classes of goods sliould join a Uinder- garten class iu (‘con<»mics. unless the ])roposlrion is to ilestroy the trust by ilesTn'yiuj: tlu' iudusvry, tints elosini; American wcrksliops and bringing dis­ aster to the mechanics and laboring men of thl.^ <'ouniry. The njan who sav.---d off the limb of the tive ou which he .irot rid of Ihe limb, bur his bruises Jiud broken boues reminded him for a long time of the lolly of the undertaking. The Republican party came Into power because of Its advocacy of pro- tectiuu, aitd wheu the party abandons that policy it will go ou,-; of po*.ver, and deservedly so. Just now there arr evi­ dences of timidity and Yeirogrcisloi>, in some <iuar!crs. liur I feel con!i<leut tliat wb.en the hour of trial comes the party will remain true to Its tradition­ al ptdicy. aud that tho Kasson reci- j-.rocity treaties and the Ba'bcock free trade j)rbi)osilIou will alike be relc- -atr.d to th‘.‘ tomb of forgotten tilings, 'j'he duty of the Republican party is j»iain. ami woe bn to the man wiio at­ tempts to strlUo down protection in this country. .Senator Ciallinger is noted for his plain, ontspok-en way of stating his views. You s’.lways Unow’ just w^bere he statids. A little more than a year ago in a public spcech he said, regard­ ing the movement to reniovc the duties from paper and pulp: Yoti cannot sclect a single industry for slaughter without Imporiliug the whole system of protection. If pro­ tection Is Avithheld from one industry it must be withheld froni all. That warning was heeded. The bill .iu, question was never pressed for pas- ■'sage. To-day so influential a news­ paper as tlie San I'ranolsco Chroni­ cle is snyiug in reference to tho Kas- son schcme of reciprocity treaties: If the orange growers of California and the hosiery operatives of New England (and of Xev/^ York, Xew 3ev- sev^ Pennsylvania and other States, it mi"bt be added) are to lose tbeh* just m'oteetlon, they will endeavor to see to it that no one else is protected at their expense. ^ These things are -worth thinking about. They should engage the serious consideration of revislonarles and re- ciprocators. Let Ihc Tariff Alone. The majority sentiment of the Re­ publican party is decidedly against any revision of the protective tariff of 1807. The present unparalleled pros­ perity of the country dates from the election ot President McKinley In 18S)(; and the enactment into law’ of .the protective tariff o f known ns the Dingley law. It can l^.said with­ out fear of contradiction iftit this Jle- publiean -tariff turned the tld'» of nsV-, tional adversity and hard times, and rescued the cotmtry from dire distress. The Democratic party predicted that the tariff of 1S97 avouUI be a dismal failure; that under its provisions this country cottld not increase its export trade and foreign commerce. Both predictions have proved a failure. Foiled in their attempts to discredit the tarff and to make free silver and “luMtarism” vital Issues, the Demo­ cratic party undertake.s to argue that trusts are au outgrowth of the tariff, and that therefore the protective tariff on all trust made goods must be placed on the free list. Such a policy wotild bo dangerous, for it would de­ stroy all domestic Independent con­ cerns aud place the products more firmly than ever In the control of trusts. The policy under which the country has prospered — the bridge over which the people have traversed to success—must not be destroyed. If the tariff is meddled with present pro.sperlty will disappear. I>et the tariff alone.—Kalamazoo Telegraph. Stray Shots. His sacrifice is the seed of our salva­ tion. Peace with God gives power with men. God’s providence is proof of His presence. I ITS permanently cured. No Bta ornervou<»- nesa after flrst day’s use ot Dr. Kline’s Great Xerro Best orer. trial bottle and treatise free Dr. H. H. Klise, Ltd.. A rcliSt., P tila. I’n The golf pj.iycr doesn't alwav.3 know ••Mt lie is driving at. Mrs. Soothing Syrup forcH ildrsi teething, softS ikt^ gums, reducas inflamma- tlon.aJIaya pain, ctTR^gwindc^c. 25ia botsl* Seventy-three j)er c ^ ilS .^ ships entcr- in;? B ritish porta fly the natKWiftlflas* PiEo’B Cure for Consuuiptioa ip anin?5f#jik-? medicine for foujhs and colda.—X. W. S a u d e ^ Ocenn Grove, N. J., Fab. 17, 1000. Ocean Btcamers can ascend the St. Law­rence R iver 9S(J miles. W. H. Griftln, Jack.son, Michlprftn, irrites: "Suffered with Catarrh for fifteen years. Hall’t* Catarrh Cure cured m e.” gold by D niggitti, 75c. A vessel going from M ontreal to Port •■\rthur has to ascend 600 feet. ny tlie TarliT Is XeedciY. This country was never more pros­ perous than it Is right now uuder the Dingley tariff, and as tho prosperiry began as soon as the Dingley tariff •was pa.«sed. and as there had been nc prosperity under the tariff it displaced it is fair to attribute a large share 01 the existing prosperity to the Dingley tariff. There are trusts in (treat Brit­ ain. where there is no protective tariff, and the biggest trust, so called, in tlii.s country, the Standard Oil Coinpany, has no tariff protection. The trusts do not need thy tariff in order to exist, but the Independent manufacturers, in order to maintain their competition with the trusts, do need the tariff pro­ tection. The larger share of exi.stiuj; labor troubles is due to tho demagogic ti­ rades against trusts in which Demo- ^•ratiFpapeTs^^M^KijdjWlg now In tho same fashion that they luveigTJiu! be;, fore the days of trusts against ‘’rob­ ber barous.’’ The people are not op­ pressed .«o far by the exactiims o?' t!:e protected trusts or of the tarift. There is not a single article, the product of protected industry, well eslablisbcjl In this country, wiiicli is not cheaper to-day than it was before tho proiec- tlve duty was imposcil. — Louisville Commercial. The power of the State to require fishways in dams across streams is ;held in State ex rel Remley vs. Meek. (Iowa,) ol L. R. A., 414. to extend to a navigable stream that flows beyond the ;i)ounds of the State, if tho dam do''? ^ot affect inter-communicatlon be- ,tween the States. New W eave Mill. Aetna Cotton Mills, now building at Union, S. €., has decided to Install looms when the mill structure Is com pleted, the first intention having been to manufacture only yarns. Tho spin­ dles will number 10,000 and the loom? 300. W. H. Sartor is president. Cnren Eczciutt, Itch-n? Ham<i borne women who are not naturally pretty m ake up for it :n other ways. .Sc« advt. B. B. B. (Botanic Bloo*\ Balm) cures all skin eruptions, itching humorH, eczema, wntcry blistera, scabs, scalcs. foateriu? sores, boil*, carbuncles; heak every Boro by giving a healthy blood supply to the fkin. Ctuaa old, deep-seated caseK aftor all else fails. Drug- gwte, $1. Describe symptoms and t»R tm ''nt sent free and prepaid by writing Dr. tiillam , 12 Mitchell street, Atlanta, Ga. The people who think they have all tho trouble in the world are really suffering from vivid imajrinations. •NAM Fadzlehs Dyes are fast to sun- i;pt.r^ a a h iiig and rubbing. Sold by all drug- giats. G reat the completed c e n s u s T lte ”'’- " P°P' uiation of about 42,000,1 One way of giving the prof«sio^l^|L ^^' gar a chance to rise in the w orld is t o ^ him a good blowing up. radl«>« C a n U*«nr Ono sizo sniaWer after using A l en*g Frtnt. Ea<»e. a powder for the feet. Itfmakes ti'shc or new Rhops cn.sy. Cures Bwoilen',hot, sweat- eching feet. in;n'f>winjj naili:.l corns nnd bnnioiui. At all drngrists and b'coe stores, 2.^c. Trial pnckago FJtEE bv mail. AddiCis Adt)i\ S. Olmsted. I.0 Toy, N. Y. The beppar doesn't have to be weighed in the balance to bo found w anting. CAPUD IN E 1 1 F o r IIR A D A n iK S t [ttUil F1*:VKI{S. V I Taken with Qiiintce it prevents Xor- O if vousawia and .\i'h.'n(r aud j-**lieves tho X I Fover, AT ALf. DlltJO STO IJEr ® ©♦O^ :>^04 04 CX 0 4 0 4 O SOUTHESK COSSERVATORY .\H nninrhr.«Tnui;ht .t«lvauu'):«*< uiicz- a . w . BRYA.M'. ni KH \.vt. .v.r..ninBi TOH. <*T&e n»nce (hat ma<1c West i'oint faaoos.**MclLHENriY’S TABASCO. DAViDSON, N. C. For t\vo-third« of a contury D a rld M a has '»4H-nttnii« i amnni; ^un'J)erB • ollego* :or tlie tliurmuSiaes^ o' tt-i irainlog, th# aMt> :ty ct- Its ra uttr. and th» atm '^pfaere of ni'>r;il ty an i Imnor on i 't ■ amnnn. ft ioritM jln*atti‘ntl»>n of er.-ry :‘Jtrr*nt wh*» wl»h*« • uive 111* son .t t ’jor.v.i U c »l or «o •n t‘fle rdii-.-atloa c .udaclv^ tohii{Ui:>t clinr;n-ti>r.For Lataun-.ue*, t to., a tdresa HENRY LOUIS SMITH, ' | PRESIDENT, Iteal F o r <ho Itci%vcln. No matter what aiLn yon, headacho fo a--------------------------1 cancer, you will nexer ket well untl\ yonv:. of SMITHDE.VL'3 BcsrxEss COLLBOE ' IjowcIb arc pnt right. C’AStiABRTs help nature, ---------------------------------- cure yon without a gripo or pain, produce................ I easy natural movementB.\ cost .vou.just iO ccnti? to Rt.irt getting yoar health baci. Cah- CARETS Candy Cathartic, the genuine', put uu in metal boxes, every tablet ha« C. C. C’, stamped oti it. Beware 01? inutationa. Orc.nt liritaiii biiy^ oboiit 11,000 tons of Oermna toys annually. A cln-nlar addressed to voters sta­ ting generally and iinauallnedly that a candidate for re-c!cctloa to the Le';- i-slature has championed measures op- Iiosed to the moral Interests of f.i.'i community, v/hrn this is stated as a fact, and not as a mere opinion or i.i- ference drawn from any specified ar:« is Iicld In Eikhott -s. Gilbert. (Mass.) >>1 L. R .A., to be. 'vlien untrue, libel­ lous per se, and not privileged. Does iaughing cnuse dimples, or do dimpic.s cnii.se iniiehins? Arc T hey UaigicsT At the 3ferr.r of Enropc. Furthermore, our occaii-borno cnin nuTce, lu the absence of .Vmerican ships in which to transport if, is at the mon-y of Europe. An outbreak of war, the turning looso of a licet of commerce <leslroyers by the enemies of Great Britain, would put au instant {’♦•op to American exports: becau.‘“o wc arc depeudent upon British ships for tho major part of our ocean iranspor- tatlou. Sound considerations of jjub- llc policy, not the pc(runiary Interc.ats o! any group of American capitalists, are behind the proposed legislation to aid In building up Amerlcjin deep water shipping. The interests of for­ eign shipowners are largely behind the opposition to that measure. — Se.ittlc Post-lnlelllgcncer. H a ir F a lls I . “ I tried Ayer’s Hair Vigoj to i ^ st^fi?^Jia[r from falling. One- half a boltle'curedSBfi..”^ . J. C. Baxter, BraidwoodT^)j«^ Ayer’s Hair Vigor is { certainly the most eco­ nomical preparation of its kind on the market. A little of it goes a long way.' It doesn’t take much of it to stop falling of the hair, make the hair grow, and restore color to gray h air. JI.OO o MIIc. ah tmsbli- If your drug::L«t cannot snnpiv yon, j . send us ono dj’llnr nnd wo will expressi ' Is the oldest and only busii ing its huildlnff—a gwnd new one. ■ ■ ^ tlcme college in Va. own- ite. Novacttlons. ^ -- —....................................e c p in g .S h o rtlin u d ,Typpv.ritJi:p.'I>enma.i5bip, Telcgrapbvi &C.Ladies & ReutTcmeii. IJookkeo] pev.Titi Leadinil.eadine business ecJIwa south oftht Potomac river. —P^ilu. .SUHoera/<Aft. Acidres.s,G. M . rtmithdeal. President. Hichnv,nd, Va. FEMALE COLLEGE, X O r E L S K W H K R H . is there such an ideal of CIIRISriAN KDUCAZTION. Lecture Courso, Ltbrarv. App«rntn.-. (Jni,- ln«ts, Flrst-cJo!»s. J{ook-K«.’pSng, Shorthand. , Slu.^Je. I y ju a iM ittre . B e s u r e o n d g ir o th o n a m e^ --------n e a re st e x p re ss oflioo. A d d re ss, J . C. A Y iiR CO ., L o w o ll, M ass. L iv e r P ills That’s what you need; some­ thing to cure your bilious­ ness and give you a good digestion. Ayer’s Pills arc liver pills. They cure con­ stipation and biliousness. Gently laxative, ah W ant j:m«r tnniH rarlie o r lie:irtl a b eau tifu l l>r«iwn o r rf<-h ? TIipii use BUCKINGHAM’S D Y E M ers oxFoiWifc^* T h e bcM dinrlpllitod llior»ii;;hly (^iiitrnnot e e d . Actual Results are tbs £r«^t Argnments. For t’atiJosrue addreRs Foiietclcd 1S.S1. > J . r. IfOKM<:ie. YMN^VALTrY~iisTlTUTE, € I B00NV5LLE, N. C. Fall Term opens Aug- W. WH. A school for bntli spxaj. lAv-iltUfiilijTiloeatsU in ono uf »he b««t secsi»m« oT N. « . S'u ssiidents fi'.»ni -4 i;oi»nt:c» la i ?>tates. .^xpi*.iisc-s only Sii.M) for tho ter>u. »wit> for illu-trHtei cata l«HUc. R , i:?. 13'^MSN, Principal. $15to S30/10 agents “ PER W EEK S SELLING ! CRAM’S POPULAR ATLAS ! IT. .s. AXI> iKew mniiB-N>F <‘ensiiH; Now Statlf»tl<-a—Moat po)>nliir nn<l vnlujiWn -work ov*'r nfioroA. ; ^nJ<-ki*st priler Jsoaed in 1« ycarfs. i:»cliiBiV6 ^•.errllory. Low i rici'. LH'oral terms ,iiuiniixs I'lnu.issn.st; l u .. Atlanta. t;a. i A n d Cleanse tlie Scalp o f C i Scales, and Dandruff b y Shampoos w ith 2 ? ;Z ^ v :-A T ATE SPRING, ^ enr.TJii* iuo-iri>e)Si;bcrnl >.............PcAott la <li<> t'uioo. Kleeirl--J.ifcttts. St>-niii • Heat. Waur Wcirks. \V/»fer fure- lti«iJt{i'stl'iti. J)rRi>t>}>.la. uii'i ;ill iruublt'S nr tlic J.lvpr, Siniii.iciiJJo'.velH niwl KUfneys. niu-iimatlsm uiiU , IUou>i Dl»casi-.«. Writ** Inr i’ainiililct. TIIO N . T O .tlM N S O X , 4 )w iirr A: IV o p r. I TAir. SPKINU. ti:kni:rsek “Ev/nisi;ovEHY:*iT.« :I'U 'ijf I I ontck relsrfand cuntn w o n tHook nt te^nmoniiU iiHil 1 () «ln.v«'InMitiUijub 'Wt-C. I>r. S. H. OKESN'SEOHS. X«x £. AtUBiA.u«. : DO Y O U SH O O T ?; If you do you should send your name and address on a postal card for a W I N C i l E a T E R G U N C A T A L O G U E . 'i T 'S F R E E ,it illustrates and (describes all tiie different Winchester Hifles^ Shotguns and Ammunition, and cootains muell valuable Information. Send at oncc to the Winchester Repeating Ari7>8 Cc..Nev/ Have.n, Conn. And lig h t d ressin gs w ith CUTICURA, p u rest of em ollien ts and g rea test of sk in cures. T his trea tm en t at once stop s faU ing hair, rem oves cru sts, scalcs, and dandruff, sooth es irritated, itch in g surfaces, stimu!atc-.-5 th e hair follicles, supplies th e roots w ith enerjcy and nourishm ent, and njak es th e hair grow upon a sw eet, w h ole­ som e, h ealtiiy scalp w h en a ’l else fa ils. M i l l i o n s o f W o m e n T TSE CUTICURA SOAP, assisted by Cuticora Ointment, the w great s'dn ci:rc, for preserving-, purifying^, and beautliyin; the skin, for dcansin? the .'calp of crusts, scales and dan­ druff, and the stopping of faliinj heir, for softening:, whiteninp, and soothinij red, rougli, and son hand^for baby ra^es, itching5, and chafings, in the form of baths for annoying irritations and inflammations, or too free or offensive perspiration, in the form of vfashcs for ulcerative weafcncsrc.-; and many sanative, antiseptic purposes which readily sujjest ti'-cmrelvc' to women and mothers, and for all the purposes of the tcilct, aath, and nursery. No amount of persuasion can ind-jce those who have once used these p-rcat skin purifiers and bcautif jers to use any others. CXJTI- CURA SOAP combines in ONE SOAP at ONE PfilCE, the BEST skin and compksion so:>p, luc BEST toilet and ba£y soap in the world. Complato External and Intarr::^! Treatment for Every Humour, “ C'ousl.^UnK o f f^i’T tr i'n \ to rlcariFO th e Bkln o f c r j8t« a n d J w a le s a n d Fofton th e Ut'.« ’K<-sied ru U rle , C tm e u ttA O Im t u c k t. io 4 U i-t:n!tlv aJIav Ut lil:»<, i;:.l:»n>iii:itl«n, a n d IrritaU o n , a n d soolbe ^ a n d lita l, a n d C trri' TUA K>j >«i.v k n t, to cool a n d cieaaM - Ut« T H E S E T SiNOl.H Sk tIs o fte n ptifllelcnt to c a r e ili«inoi> ttbvtnr. with loF.‘»ot hair, 1 Bicuv A .SoNS,27- . . P ro r-s.. B o sto n , U . S . A . © tte iir a i 5 E T inc. liiiTiiiiiatini: siiin, scalp, and blooc) timnonrB.ilr, when air«‘Ise fails Syid H r.,-j-^nit tl.e world. lirltlstJ Depot: F. Nbw. 1,27--2S, Charterhou^s Sq., Lou-l.u. 1'<jXTVU Duvo JCiD CU£M. COSP„ 8(d« Tfo Time For lilxpcrimcnts. When we are well oft it is a ffood time to quit experiments. The results of the Wllson-(4orman act are a little too fresh in tha memory of the people. The reduction In the average tariff by this act was comparatively small, yet it was bijj enough to paralyze Industry ami inaujrurate a linancial panic that it has taken several years to recover from. Let well enough alone.—Lincoln (Neb.) Journal. Ono more evidence uf rrosperity. The promptness of the Grand Army posts In paying their dues indicates that the orgaulisatlon was never In a more prosperous condition than this year, when the roll of the assistant adjutant-geueral shows that all but four or tive small posts have met their obligations—a condition without pre­ cedent iu the history of the orgaul^a- tion.—Indianapolis Journal. In the face of slander American loco­ motives can still blow their own whis­ tles. I'rcfftd-nt Lnubet 1« ForslTlDg. President Loubet of France is a man -vho bears no malice. When a mem­ ber of the nobility smote him on the head with a stick as he wjs peacefully -litting in the race course at Auteuil the courts sentenced the cowardlj' of­ fender to two years’ imprisonment. The president wished to pardon the culprit at a very early stage of his Imprisonment, but the ministry repre- sented that, hov.’ever lightly M. Lou­ bet, the man, might regard the ofien:e. it was against public policy that the r.SEailant and insulter of M. Loubet, the president, should e.=-c2pe with a nominal punishment. Canada has granted railroad subsidies up to date amounting to $88,884,557 and 39-7-5.I30 acres of land. The provinces have also granted $31,310,170 and th« municipalities $15,884,542, making 3 grand total of $136,079,269 of public money in addition to the laud. Of this amount the Canadian Pacific’s share oi the Dominion subsidy amounted to $62.- 742,816 in money and 25,000.000 acres ol land. ]£GICAL COLLEGE OF VIRGINIA, I K '< to l> IU !if> < 1 l8 3 S .. . I I he '-ixty-fourtb session will commeae* iKt. Ucpartmeot of WeJtcto*. foif[ j«-nr-* tees $5>.a»pcr»«-iial'>n. I>epa'iI ••iiij-itry. ihr. e yc-ar« coume. fc«i «n.00 p«r I J)os.arfnte.u of Muumaey. i»n ye*ri e>nm«. r*• .(MiKrr.-u'flduu. l'orrur:herparttcniar«M<lC«tlo«ue niMrrw. CaRISTUFHER TOMPKINS, H D., Deu,BICII.110.\D , VA. ED U C A TE forBUSINESS . . . -KX I.\«Trt^ RV. .\hlKh«!l»^sRu.Mn«-KH Tr*lnliiK s<-ho(»l for Soy* a <ilrU. .v«-ar. lte« P(|ulumeatt: of erwy-t..lJ« r. i-.)urws rlectlvp an-| umijrace X.atbemsOei, ml.M, Civil Hin<lnir. Iaw. liook-iTi'i'flutf. ivn Sh'irihtn<t. TypoWrJUM a ■ * ‘ ladbook ud « HEDICAL DEPARTM^»iJ T'liiane University of lonislMS./■'ct4ii(i/'i2 til n'-u> Oraaiurtff. i It- a'WmUiia'B 5;t t>r*cti s»^iii*tMictioo. both in wbpI*lal.irat.isip^ ardalinu«i» -t h- Bpiiii])rn»iiirUlS*m'^'^ q i.ult-a. I;n-i» »<-c...,ii,K,T.T, iaihe*rew Char ir Un*. , irn Wilt. !M.: |.*t.,.r.liian- utUr {|p.«W.JIH rn ■> f.»-n <J*. j »t til- bedaiiln 01 flw ^ek.1J.» next s 1 8 3 S . IOREENSBORO FEMALE COLLEGE, I u G i t K K N ’S H O K O , N. C. Litorarv and Business C.'ursoii. Sebnola of ; Art and Elooutiwj. Literarv Cootmar. 1 all liviai; oxpuQses $201 par y^r.' Fall i fs^lon ljt-;;in!^ Kept. lltn. 1501. ra(alosu6 ; 0:1 ar.pUcatioQ. Daan I'sacock. Prcj’t. FOR COLORED STUDENTS OF BOTH SEXElii ST. .ilUGUSTiNE’S SCHOOL, RALKECiH, r. ro;trsip(«‘,\ortn'.*l«Iiidn«<r'«]4 Train*f ik:e Scltoul for urHca.a Jloii'h. I'tu-'Oftf- ”-nT wt.rk thnlr w»j »k4 ca •; • lv}.r..*MrU.'>rl. r.nr/>*n'r5. i'ft.tfl ig. Ortcaiar- t.n<ler the.ri.^o.Mair,.aroh. Sift«i.p y to U »t. A. B. Uuktcr. E^.({i^e4,^Vocd Manors. RR. Cn MacliiQi*a and othnr MacblDerr,MaDUfacturedbrth* _S » la m I r o u 1¥<rrks« V.CW ^ VKE DAVIE EECOED. ftrOCKSA'ILI-E, - - • J:. II . 3iOfildS> • KDiTOR. WOCKSVJLI--?, N. c., .Tuia* 24, 1901. EN’fknED AT THE POST OFFIC£ AT ?(OClfSVILL.K. N . C ., AS SECOND CLASS MATI’ER, May 12tu, 1809. Amvsl »nH tepirturc of Trains. - rSoL-TII Bound—Daily cxccjit Sunday. Leave Mocksville..............12:42 p m V, Leave Mocksville.............. 0:08 p m ' No r th D o tsD . Lesc^e Mocksville............. 7:20amfjcavc Mocksviilc..............11:27 a m MocksnUo I'roduco Market. CorrccUd by Williams &'rAndersoE Proiluco iu good demand Corn, per ................................. Wheat, per tm........................... Oats, perbu.............................. Peas, per bii............................. liacon per pound............. • Liacon, Western..... ................ Hams............... ......................... If you want a nice sewing ma- cliine, call on the Editor, lie can suit you in prices. Mr. Andrew Saiii who lived near Dalins, died Saturday even- inR. He was about 60 yeai-s old, and leaves a wife aud oute daugh­ ter, who have our sympathy in tbeir loss. Come around and look at our spring and summer Eamples. you want a tailor madfi, up-to-date suit, come arouud to the i)ostoftice. We learn through the Times- Merciiry that Miss Mamie Clement of Mocksville. has been elcctcd sis one ot the teacheiBin the Hickory graded schools. The school is for­ tunate in securing the services of Miss Clement,./lion .on I will sell at public aiMsii, a good July a7th, 1901, fot, to s.itisfy work- one-horse waa^fe'doue on said wagon, man S; A. Micki;v. just leai'ned that our 1®/ friend, Dr. Ben Anderison who for- merly lived here was recently mar- jqI ried to Miss Ivy Shugart of Boon- Baptist Picnic. Annual Simda.r School and Or­phanage Picnic will be Held at tbe Usual place in Mocksville, N. C., on July 2.5th, 1901. The annual address will be delivered by Kev. W. M. Vines, of AsheVilic, X. V, aud short addresses by other gen­ tlemen present. Music, will be fnruished by the Union county baud and a chapter of childreu from the Thoitiasville Orphanage. If iKeduced rates have beeu obtained from all the points near by. Din ner, 23c. Usual refreshments. All for the benefit of the Orphans. Let all come aud help a good ctiuse E. Fkost, Chain; ^D eW itt’s E. D, C- Pope De.-id. Last Thursday evening Mir Pope was stacking wheat and had just got off the stack aud started home across the field leading a horse, when he was stcicken by lightuiug killing him instantly. It knoekcil the hoi-se down, but did it no ser­ ious damage* Mr. Pope was about 41 yeais old. aud leaves a \y ' and three children. He w good citizen, and his dea(*^V. h)ss to the cimmuuitj*jf^" *'f’» lived. Our s i - - ^ » y « to the wii dren G o o d s ! N e w Have j cued up at the Match 7Hbnse, d s ! a full Uilfe DKY the little chil Chickens.................... 12i lOOAL MOTES AUD INCIDENTS J. H. Hailey left for Savannah, <!2., la.st week, ^11 job work spot cash, before it COice. _Picuic 01. yCPUtoDflice. Kico uew line of straw liats aud raps at AVilliams & Anderson’s. Miss Annie Hobson spent sev­ eral days iu town last week visit- :ing ma- If yon want a nice cliiuc, call on the Editor. The Boss cracked his whip some time ago, and there was no longer :ii;y doubt about the result. >'i.-e white colored aud Polka <liiL lawns afSVilliams & Ander­ son’s. See ad of E. E. Hunt, Jr. If yon want a bicycle, or auv kind of ni|iiiiiB for a bicycle, call on ‘•Puny.” Dimities, solid and striped diini- lirs, iwicales and curtain goods at ■\Viiliams & Anderson’s. W. A. Itoyal, Deputy Marshal paid us .a visit last week. We are always glad to see our Yadkin friends. See sale of the McCnlloch prop- trly at Fork Church, Monday, August 5th. The Masonic pienie for the bene- /it of the Oxford Orphan Asylum will lie held Thursday, Aug. 8th at Clement Grove. (Jjc-at big line of 4 cent calico. Hlioe.s and slippers from 75 cents up. at Williams & Anderson’s. IJcv. J, M. Dowuum, Editor of the Times, has been elected prin cipal of the graded school at East •Bend, Yadkin county. .Sul;scribe for the Eecord and keep posted on what is happening ill J oiir county. Frank Strond and Fred Booe attended Children’s Day at Salem church Sunday aud report a large ««wd aud pIcHfy of rations. . l2tol.i ville, Yadkin county. Our best wishes Ben, tor a long, happy, prosperous married life, AVe are in receipt of a catalogue of Cool Spring Academy under the management of Prol. John F Mit­ chell. From what w’e hear this is a splendid school, located in a healthy locality surrounded by a good law abiding people. It is reported hero that Cal. Monday shot Will King in Virgin­ ia a few days ago. They were working on the big cotton mill be- i in town ing ei-ected bj Winstou parties iu crUnclc Sam’s Grayson county. King is not dan- gerousl.v wounded, so it is repor­ ted. The fonndaliou for the bank building has been laid, and the work would be goiug ou rapidly, | but the brick gave out Inst week, j It’s a reflection onr town that brick shippe<l in here, when there is suek fine brick clay right here and wood in abun­ dance. The colored Lodge of Odd Fel­ lows assisted in laying the corner stone of a new coloretl Methodist church Saturday at Bethany uesir Farmington- Quite a number of the colored folks attended from Mocksville. We think some of our eastern fnends have solved the labor prob­ lem. Ou our trip recently we no­ ticed gangs of geese tarued in the grassy cotton patches. If they can le.am the geese how to culti vate and then pick the cotton, its iareirell “nigger.” Prof. J. D, Hodges was elected county Superintendent of schools for Davie. The legislature wtu- ally elects these ofiBcers. Home and the people's rule is one of the Democratic cardinal piinciples, you know. Go to Ealeigh to see who looks after oiu- sehools. One man power and the Boss, Do yon see! The people of Da vie had no say In the matter of who should run the schools. The Boss carried or sent the names of those he wanted down to ihe Simmons legislature and they went through. Person­ ally, we like the gentlemen com­ posing the board of Education, and we wish them success iu the man­ agement of the schools in Davie county. Those famous littlejjijompel j'our liver Little Early Riserg,^their dut3’, thus giv- and bowels rich blood to recu])er-inff you Krtir body. Easy to take. Never ate v<npe, C. C.’ Sanford, M A. Foster. Col. John If. iVcbsfer makes a vile attack on the Supreme Coili t, Dr. Kilgoand Gen. Carr iu his is­ sue of the 18th. Has Josephus divided his mantle before death with this ex-Spcaker who flirted with the Eepublicans a few years ago! The Ee(X)rd seems to be pained over the fact that the fair ones brighten its office so seldom. If they do go at all it must be to see the devil aud they come to the Times office first to get ice that they may keep cool while nciir his toriid form.—Davie Times, Kotat all pained. Brother. M'e are oppo.sed to woman suft'rage in all shapes and forms. So long jis the Editor of the Times and his devil are selling'ice so close by, the torrid rcgiou will be iu uo im­ minent danger of getting too hot. It is easier to keep well than ffet cured. DeWltt’a Little Early Risers taken now and then, will ahvaj's keep your bowels in perfect order. They never "ripe but proinote an easy gfen- tle action. C. C. Sadford, AI. A. l^os- ter. Blair Lefler Dead. Mr. and Mrs. John Leller, of Ephesus, lost their little girl, Blair last Friday night. The remains were laid to rest ai Liberty Satur­day evening. To the gncf-striek en parents we extend our svinpi- thy. Our trip to Mooreheiid was pleasant with the exception of the raiu which kepf us iu the hotel most of the time. ‘•I am indebted to One Minute Cou^h Cure for my present good health and my life. I was treated in vain by doc­tors for luD|f trouble followinjr la ffrippe. I took One Minute Cou^h (v’ure and recovered my health.'* Mr. E. 11. Wise, Madison, Ga. V. C. San­ford, M. A. Foster, Uosolutioiis of Respect. Whereas, it has i)leased an all­ wise and mysterious Providence to remove from among ns, our wor- Keep iis cool aud continue to sell j thy brother. Prince Stockton, Sen- ice, aud we will not envy you the ior of Mocksville Lodge, S'. 1.34 A. visit of the fairest of the fair. The Governor seems to have lost sight of the machine in a portion of his appoiutmeuti of directors of the If. U. Eailroad. H. G. Ohat-_ ham, the new presideu^^,,^ _ gressive business 1’™'turer of mauufac-id witllal a good Kurfees Items. Charlie Granger was in our vi- eiiiity last Sunday. A number from our borg atten­ ded Children’s Day at Salem Sun­ day. Fred Booe and Tom Hendris of Ephesus were in this vicinity Sun­ day. Boone Ijames of Cooleemee was in onr berg Sunday. Miss Bertha Linville, of Mocks ville spent last week with Miss Maggie Stouestreet. Mr. aud Mrs. M. L. Godby, of County Line, visited here last Sat urday aud Sunday. There will be preaching at Jeri­ cho next Sunday at 11 a. m, at night. Success to the Becord. SOIJJIKE Bot. If you want one of the best reap­ ers and mowers on the market, c-all around aud get our prices on IJie Buckeye. Saturday, Aug. 3rd, the Order ot the Suir of Bethlehem holds its annnal^onic at Footeville, Yad- rcounly. ''Everjljedj—iavited. I'ianos .^85 to $550. Organs S35 to ^>325, warranted. PiEDMoST Music Co.Winston, N. C. Hon. Speucer Blackburn, Con- giessman elect from tlie 8th, and Mr. J. A- Lillington, of Yadkin, speut Wednesday night in the city. The celebrated Wissner & Leek- erliug Pianos. PiBDJiOKT Music Co. Winston, N. C. ; Dou’t forget the Baptist Orphan- i ,agc picnic io be held at the Bap- ■ list Arbor tomorrow. Your chil­ dren may be orphans some day, and ueed help. Come out and aid a good cause. . -Tlie Ma.“onic picnic will be held at Clement Grove Thursday, Aug. 8th, iu the interest of the Oxford Orphanage. JS good and worthy eatiKc which appeals to (he charity ai!!! in:ii:aKi(3- of ns all. t&- Advauce News. Joe Kimbrough was in towi day. Jacob Hanes-iJT Mocksville was iu tow;n today. Editor Morris spent Tuesday iu town on busiiiess. J. L. Hilton has three children very low with typhoid fever. Miss Sallie Sue Ellis is visiting friends in Lexington this week. Bud Peebles, of Lexington was in town Sunday on important business. Prof. A. T. Delop sings at Elba- ville today and will sing at this place tomorrow. J. F. Smithdeal and Lee Crews returned from the White Sulphur Springs last week. Mrs. Estelle Hanes is visiting Mrs. W, A. Leonard at this place. Misses Mamie Poindexter and Florence Shutt returned fiom High PoiDt last woek where they have been visiting friends and relatives. The trustees of the Advance •High School met last Saturday and deeted Prof. John Minor as principal for tne coming year. Prof. Minor has had five yeais of experience in teaching and we feel safe in saying, that he will teach a good school. Slick A bad complexion generally results from inactive liver and bowels. In all such cases, DeWitt’s Little Early Risers produce gratifying results. C. C.Sanford, M. A. Foster. Ephesus Items. Mrs. Amanda Wall is on tlie sick list. I Mr. J. C. Giles visited at Cherry Hill Sunday evening. Miss Jessie Click, of Hickory is visiting her aunt, Mrs. W. E. Kurfees near here. Mr. Albert McClami’och aud sis­ ter, Miss Sallie, of Cana, spent Sunday hero with relatives. Our little friend Blair Lefler died Friday night. Dear lit'jj Blair was loved by all Tjho lOTewn her. She was a devotei and' lov­ ing daughter to her pareuts and to the bereaved family we extend our kipdest sympathy, for we all ^ve lost a dear little friend. Best wishes for the dear old Ee- card, Kentucky Beli.e. F. & A. M., into the great im- kuown eternity, Therefore be it re­ solved. I s tT h ^ iu t . . . , ^ we are most forcibly ad­ monished of the uncertainty of life, aud the certainty of death, and that we should be ready aud waiting for w'e know not how soon nor ho'.v hurriedly the summons may come which shall bid us to hasten before the Judge; the Su- prome Rulei of time aud eteriiiiy. 2nd, That in the death of Broth er Stockton, we as Masons have lost a worthy and faithful brothei, the Church a valued member, the county a good law .abiding citizeu, aud in respect to his memory we wear the usual badge of mourning for thirty days. 3rd, That we extend to the be­ reaved family our most heai-tfelt sympathy in their sad afHiction, 4th, That a page of our minute book be devoted to his memory, aud and that these resolutions be spread upon the same. That a copy be fnruished by the Secre­ tary to the family of the deceased, and a copy to the Io(»l papers and the Orphan’s Friend for publica­ tion. H. C. Meroney, W, A. Owens,Z. N. ASDHRfiON. <iObDS, FAN'CY AXD heavy GrtOCKiilliS ol' illl kinds. aies Ziegler Sloes A Specialty Have had a numl)er of yeai-s experience in the Merchandise bnsinesfj, aud think I know how to look iifter the w:»uts and needs of the people. O ^ L L A R O U N S A a d M y S t o c k of goods at the March House on Depot Street, Eilst of Court House. E«5pectfnlly, L * O ls m e m t, jrockBville, X. O U R I C E W I L L S E I E P T O I 7 CQOJa. Our prices are iu reach of all. Our shipments are prompt OUR ICE PURE. We respectfully solicit your business for ICE AXD COAL. C. n . THOMAS & CO. ■-----K. C :|j0 B K o d o l Dyspepsia Cure Digests what you eat. It artificially digests the food aDd aids J^ature jd strengthening and recon­ structing the exhausted digestive or- sans. ItistlielatestdiscoTcreddigest- ant and tonic. Ko other preparation can approach it in efficiency. It in* stantly relieves and permanently cures Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Heartburn, Flatulence, Sour Stomach, Ifausea, Sick Headache, Oastralgia, Crampsand all other results of imperfect digestion. Frlce90c.andfl. Lar^eslzecontatnsSKtimes smaUslze. Book all about dyspepsiamalledfieo Prepared by E, C. OeWITT 4 CO.. CljJa^k' c. c.Sanford; M. A. Foster, NOTICE! MORE VOLUNTEERS WANTED To cut aud deliver at our Mill, Mocks-ville, for Spot Cash Hickory, Oak, Poplar AM woods Pine. Hickory Bot less than 8 inches small eud by the inch or $6 per cord wood measure; Hickory, large, any length, red or white per 100, SOc. log measure. White Oak butt cuts 70g. per 100 feet, balance to limbs 60c.Bed “ “ “ 60c. '• “ “ “ “ 50c. Ttlnplr 'SOp Post Oak large sound 60c’. “ “ “ “ “ W .Poplar, clean yellow 70c. “ Clean white, 50c. not less than 18 in. small end. First of Sept. is early enough to cut Hickory. Lengths: Oak, butt cuts, butt 4} and 9 feet up to 16. Poplar, 12 feet ouly. Hickory, large 6 feet and up. Hickory, small 3i, 6 aud 9. We will pay the highest cash prices to iiarties having no means of delivering their timber, by the 100 feet on the stump or by the lump according to where located; will furnish one 4 horse log wagon free to haul to our miU logs that cannot be hauled on ordinary wagon. . We will do custom sawing at the usual prices for cash or in exchange for white oak or one half for the other, measured in the log. In order to save lumber, we will put iu a side edger or trimmer. We have no ob­ jections to sound knots in the oak so long as you deliver the whole tree. You will then avoid leaving so mnch of the body of the tree to rot in the woods. This has reference to sound oak onl.y. AH timber will be measured at the mill in the log by Scribners & Doyls rule. W . S i BON. DO YOU? Do you want to loan, or bor­ row, or invest! Do you want to keep yoiir ac­ count at the best plarel The People’s National Bank, of \Vinston-Saleni, X. C,, de­ sires to serve you. It Wants You X to know ihiit it is the Uoiteil Y States (Joveriimeut Deposi- tory for this section aud that it will do for you anything that any conservative insti­ tution can do. John W. Frie.s, Piesident, Win. M. Blair, V. P., T. A. Wilson, Cashier. Write today. FOR SALE About n.i acres of land ajoining the C«K)lceuife cotton mills, well timbemi and watered. Call on or address.E, II, Morris jrocksville N. O. If you want a nice Hot of job printing done, call on the Eecoid Mocksville, X. C. Job printing of all kinds done with neatness aud dispatch. All work guaranteed. MOETGAGE ciALE. By virtue of the powera contain­ed in a certain mortgage executed Oct. 23, 1899 by J. W. Mcl’ulloh and wife, E. E., to C, G. Bailey, and in default of payment of same, I will sell at the court-house door in Mocksville, K O, on Monday, August the 5th, 1901, at 12 o’clock m, at public outcry to tlie highest bidder for cash, the lands describ­ ed in said mortgage, (for dtscrip- tion see Book 7, page 520, Eegis- ters office, MockBville, N C,) lying in and near Fork Church, Fulton township, Davie county, N C. Lot No 1, Beginning at a stone on edge ot public road, thence S 58° E 7 poles to a stone, corner of Academy lot line, thence S 7 poles to a stone in Academy lot line, N 58° W 7 poles to a stone, thence N 7 poles to the beginning, con­ taining 49 poles more or less. 2ud lot. Beginning at a stone, D V Davis cx)rner, S 5° W 12 poles to a stone, E 7 poles to a stone iu Academy lot line, thence If 8 poles to a stone, \V 3° X 6 poles and 20 Iks to a stone, the beginning, cou- taining 78 i^oles more or less. Lot Xo 3. beginning at a stone on south side of branch, J J Davis corner, S' 27 jwles to a stone, E12° N 26 poles to a stone at graveyard, S 4° E 25 poles to a stone, W 7 poles to a stone, N 45 links to a stone, W15° N 5 poles to a stone, S 19° W 10 poles to a stone, W 10° N 11 poles to dogwood, W 13° S20 poles to a stone, S 50 poles to the branch, thence up branch 17 poles and 16 links to b^nniug, con­ taining 10 acres more or less. This July 2nd, 1901, E. H, Mobkis, C, G. Bailey, Attorney, Mortgagee. If you are not already a sulwcri- bev to the Eecord, this is au invi­ tation for you to become one. TOMfiSTOHM. If you need anything like Tombstones Tab­ lets or monuments call o n CtAUDE MIIiLElt. North Wilkesboro, If.G. JUST IS3UED N W e d i t i o n Webster^s JU Int ernaUonal D i c t i o n a r y New P l a t * S T hroughout 25 ,000 N e w W o rd s P hrases and D cflnlflons ^ Prepared undrr the direct iUperviaionofV/.T. HARRIS Ph.D., I.L.D., Unitea St«;ca Cororoisiionef JSducattO'.. assiatcd by a large corpa of coni{*et«m sp e c ia lists andeditor. K leh B lndinss. a 2364 SOOO Illustration* BeUer Than Ever fof H croo.l School, and Oittco. 70LUME HI. I r-HS D A V IE R El E. H. MOjriavS, TERMS OF SL*ItSCnTI»TI’.| Ope copy, One Vcur. Ofle Six Month-;, .)oe copy. Three Month‘S - W e ul3« piiblifcli W ebster’. Ct)Ileei«ie Dictionsiyw ith G lo isa rv o fS eo iti* l* W ord* aw Jl'hrs**!*. '• c iM s’tJ* qn:t!ity, cJaS'i Best For The South. I l l . . j] ff. Wood’s SeedsWoods--‘"a* * special refer- m I enee. to their Tiirnio -X U l I I I U Boll ftnd cUnuite* and give the results sod satisfaction everywhere.If your mer­chant does not sell Wood’s Seeds write for Special Price-list. Circniar giving pric^A and Infonna* tfon about Turnip Seeds, CrtasM Clover, Late Seed PoUtaM. Q trm m Seeds. nuiet. Baekwheat and all ;Seeds, m ailed on reqaeat. T. W. WOOD & SONS, Seedsmen, - Richmond, Va. WOOD’S JALL CATAIrOGUS iJmed In Augnal. tells all about CrtasM ClovV. Winter VetelMS, Raps, Rnat Preirf and WlntcrOats,Seed Wheats, Grasiss, i and Clever Seeds.VageUbla Seeds for FaU 1__Hyaciatlu, TnOpa, ate. Catalogue mailed free. Write for it. KXCURSION B A T E S VIA NORFOLK* WESTEKN RAIL­ WAY. Fttn-American lizpoHition Mav 1st to Oct. 3Ut, 1901, The Xorfolk & AVestern Bailway will sell excur­sion Tickets to Buffalo, May 1st to September 30th, 1901, S p riin ic ii p .tr > , « c . n l l« .lh b o o k , se n t o n a p p lic tti.j,. G.aC.MERRIAM CO. Publishers Springfield, Maas. V<*< T H R O U O H S agP E R S , K o r f o l k CLOSE Wi TomFROM SrLoifis^jW W .B .B E V IL U eoeidl •ROANOKE; THE NOETll i:AEO STATE KORMAL AUD IMD-STRIAL Literary. Chi.‘isiral Scieiitilic, Coiii^ mercial Indiistri: 1, Pedagogical, , Mtisii al. Annual expen!«s 8100 to *140; for non-resideuts (if the State fl60. Faculty of 30 members. Practice and Observation t:^ohu4.1 of about 2ri0 pupils. To secure board iu the dormitories all free-tiiition ap­ plications should be July 15th. Session opens lier 19th. I’orrespoudeiice in those desiring compet and stenographcis.For Catalogue and- mation addressPrea. Cii.iRi.w, list. Gri EPWOETH LEAGUE COSTEN- TlOIf, San Francisco, Cal. Cheap Excursion Tickets via the Norfolk & Western Railway, July 5th to the 12th, goo<l until Au­ gust 31, 1901. W,.B. BEVILL, G. P. A. Boanoke, Va,i Dou’t forget to call examine our stock of Envelopes, Piicket Hi Hea(;B, Stateiuents and ' ____te<l ou short notice. Prices reas able. Dr. M. D Kimbrongh, h P h y s i c i a n AND S u r g e o n . f ' iil Office first ioor South of Hotel Davie MOJKSVIL1.K N. C. A good Jfo. 33 breer,b-Ur.iiliii^ rifle lor sale or trade. HilMjh the Editor. n iti Buy The Celebrated WMEfiF LECKERLING PIANOS. The highest Sliiiulnrd ever reach­ ed in the Piano iuiikcr.s art. 20 years in advance ofall ol her makes. Sold at strictly factory prices. The world renowned Mason & Hamlin Organs, Holler, Bnrdett & Sterling Organs, Everything iu music sold at about half price othei-s chargc, on ciJA w roK i) Thoatfcul; ma^icon !>rl president of Trir.il;,- ( 'nl'l Jlr. Crawford, on ’.n,. days ago w:w an We have read the ;: count o! it, and wc t’,ai:k gnage used by I>r. ICii;.,!! :is is being n.scd aliii;*. J < othcra with ivfirci'i ;: ^•’lers an'l nir;i. A\’i; /binitting to ^■Jin preai-hcrs. Tlir’y :i! rivilcf;cil i'.ikI w lire :iIlo'vciI a I’oiwitic;. ' by rcii-soa of Ihfir cai'ili’: make them Ilie man: giving jltter.ince to sciilii‘1 becoming :Uitl on i> diHirnlly. V c ■ Kilgo is i’r.i:i;; a Trinity, an.l lls | th?.peaiii;t 1’ upsjiniuch U'ciiii;; : , au l t!;e \V'*‘ .1 • tliat poli.'ics i ;;'i anyi.i iliroci'.y v.itii is n ) dou! 1 1 -ll iitiliii' • iiitt.'jrn of ilio ’.v:ir \;au it niiule on liini i'.ir I| t!ie j>r.)of (if oi'.t. c ’t fonnd in the I'.vt ui I'li' agaiii.-t Dr. Kiijv '>.v .’ii Josephna !)ai;iel;>, .b'lin 1 Rter anil tln-ir ilk. Wc I . wass:iid that l>r. Kill Ki|.:nd nioni^y ih;mi, iiii'-l ! fiiifficiciit to I'i’.l tl;e i> fry iK,liLiii:ins I'U i'i'^ preacher '>1' -.'.’iv ^\ver vule.l i ‘. i this st;ile f:'r ll-.f • ■ that aii or^i'.Mi/.wl . be<-ii li> drivR I'.’; | risin !u:ri. U’.i : di.s;;ra''Pf'i! yet we wi’ir iTiii'-i.'-''! ^'1 ago I'V tii’e .if <’'!r fr ie n d s fo r s-i.-.iih; lli:U 110 I're o d '* :u •»! Carolina.” \\ l-i! a i!i:in t*' tliinU li<’ L-it-pcj-s.-i-wie ........ gives ail thimirhts. V.'e <l‘> !">t bnt slmrr dishiMc-i' ville to fii'il ail ' ■■ ■■ bad fi»r one ol iis pressiont»t lit:*-’ destriKlion of |iriv:!(| T h e 'V ii U u >Jall^s < i ; | stou attumlil'-’'! | vised iis liiHii.e-.-: ii. E c p u b lic a iiH , ;’!"1 pers. ll ilirtciis--''-d der advisci'i'!:!■ 4iotifyiii;ctl'e Hon. Sj.l bnrn to leave >'> in-l"'! cause he is a li’opnlMif tbat a picture for Hh j North Carol inn; Congress to bo unlj ilis home liy an ori;a’.)| the “\\ liiie White used to embled of piirily, ye.j iiitoiice it i.’onceaii'.li folds ptiliiieal rol'-fiu "ehistio uegenevacy. aiises; where •.iml "ii end? “Whatsnever I 'that shall he a!so i the Winston l’ai)e| lawlessness of t’.e :i‘ at Eepubli«iiis, a'* iij them for the lav. hi I own land. llerau.^ do wrong is no cxcn| ing the 3ame thing days ago, a rcspcetal was dynamited ini county but fortuii eaped with her lifel the roon in whii’li hulled through th^ ' breastpin she wore! was found in a tixj surprised at suc| not the gallant cock ride over > .Carolina last yead Red-shirts, anue| and Winchester temi8 to suit you. W’e liave iieveF^''. '^xample oi la'vii been undersold. W rite today for ^ eicmlidate for G< ■ v |: catalog autt prices. PJKl>MOXT MUSIC CO.lUiT ri'^eil tb u t ’wiag in iiw It > 1 3 u e d K. V/ I T I O N l i i o n a j >nar-y | T lirr h v W o r d s ; DA-iniri^na “ :m . D a v i e 5 thrrc: (\..T . HAKKIS I :..rgc rorfS of 23 W Cr^rr for !vr.n^ DAVIE RECORD. j graceful proceedings are a reflec­ tion upon ns ami our stiitc, aud ive must rill Hie st;;le of it, or we can­ not longer asic fl'eeaicn to cast their lot M ilh us. Stop it. iB '.iS J iK D ;;v !:r .v W'.'.u m c s d a v . T’lOUiClii,- UDlTOr:. I ^ TEDMS OF SUIJSCniPTlON ‘ opy, One Year, , Six Mf)nths. , Tljrco Months - {AWlX;Tn>-KtL(JO. r-'Ctioi'siT ^ \ t-i™ ■■ IMas^. — sni-: DIDX’T \\TEAB A MASK. ISnl her Vie.inty -ivas completely 1 on I hidilei! h.v sores, blotches anil piui- ples li!l she used BncJilcn’s Arnica Siilvc. Then tliey vi;uis!ioil as will all EniptWns, ycver bores, iJoil<, I'lcers, ('arbtiiiCle-S iintl Fel­ ons iioin ils n'^"'. Inlallible for ,, I Outs. (.Virus, lJurr.s, Scalils andt:id; niiu:eon Dr. Kil-o, ^ Cure ^niaraulccd. a5c. itof Trir.iiy <'ol!pi;r;. by c. c. Sanfor<rs. J'.rforJ, ou ll;? traii! a few ------------------------- I was an ■.niCortnnaieafiair. ^ ve;vJ the r.cwspappv r.c- I it, and ne tl.ii;!; the Ian at I n o w IT (iUES. ]{y a spwia! act of the It ^is’a- Unrc the Male took upon iiiielf tlie :cd by l;r. Ki'co vas siicli j j^.yuicnt of the e.xpenses, lawyers’ Bnj; u.sod alinii. t d;illy Ijy | ic“s, c!i'., iu t!ie cases of the rsg s- I'SCHEFERr, ^vith rcfircnca 1« newspa- nd nipa. ^Vr: ai-c-opposed (o littin;.' io iin\varn;nic:l a>tacks earhcrs. Tliey are uot a clasK. mid while l!'.ey (IIo«e;l a con.-.iderablc !afit-;(!e Sjisoii of 'heir caiiin-', it Should x^fahi HiJJ i iGQLi VONsm'i iwJh. lUGtTealRiss./ I N O K E .V A . i ll ( .AUoXlX ' ■Nn iN! ■ SIRIAl COLLESi. Scici.tillc, <;<I1U- I. ]‘cda"osical, , It^i'^i-al. •i;«rs ifldO to $1-10; iheistalc^lOO. Iinenibers. Piactice inn SchiK'l of about Ti) <pcnre boartl in - > a'il frefc-tuition ap- nhi be muiie i.efore^ s.'»n opens inviteil competent i( llllClri. (rue and oiher ■S.S iKi.Fji I). :.r.' t!r(/cusl)nr- irars of election indicted in tlic Icderal courts for refiisiiigrCjiistra- tlou to iie;>:roe.s for the t-lecliou of Anjiust, i!)00, on the franchise aiaeiidiucnl to tlie constitution. 'J’oday t»ie state i.s.su<.d warrants in payment *>t these exx>cn:5es .5i;>5.20 to .loini . 'Xl.Ohip.'eon aiifi 00.30 , . Mo if. L VVati};h, I'oth ofWinstou- ithem the more carelnl m ; Salcnu ^Sl.ti5 to H. (>. Foy and WO : utterance to seuliinentj'. un- jto Attorney-ticneral Gilmer,— Sniog aiid calciilated to In-ingj Halciyli Disjaluii. difiirnlfy. V-'c tiiink Dr. | V.'e call the attention of our go is I’oi:!^ a prost work at | rcader.s to the above items. This nity, and its uuf.irlnnate that:shows where tUe liaid earned tpeanat >-.o!ilici;ti.'.-i iiave stirred i money of the pc;)ijle is going, so much tceiii'.}; ajiainst him • Men wlio openly and flagrantly . the <'oilc;;;'. SVe ilo not say j viohitcd the !a'.v, an;l their oaths piili.'ii-s i-.:d anychii." to do ■ are rte!eii-.leJ at tiie cxiseense of HiVcctiy with ti.i.H !. Imt there j the iwoplo of tiirt sU'.te wiio pay i n I doul.t i .I polili-'S is at tlie;tJsos. It is bein;; rninored that ottoKi of (li6 w:!r \i iiii ii if.iii becii j the apjvopriatioH for .••cJiooJ.i i;iay |-nia<le on him f.tr some time, and !liot Ijc fortlieomir.j;, that other ap- 'tV.e proof of oni^ contention isj propriations have to lie met first. TETTE. The Davie Eecord has from the start had the ui)buildiug of oiir town, county aud state for one of its chief objects. Knowing aud Ijelicving that Xorth Carolina is one of the best states of the Uuion, aud that with a good government, aud by properly placing the great resoarces of our state before the people, good people and capita! would naturally be attracted to our seetiou. The building tip of our town county and slate depends largely upon ourselves. We have got to act toward each other iu a manuer that people from other sections will know that should they come among us they will be treated with consideration, aud like civilized and enlightened eliristian people should treat each other. The man or set of men who are more desirious of promot­ ing a selfish, partizan ambition, wlio care more for i)arty than they do for country, town or state, Ciin and do uioie harm to their town and count,y than all else combined. As long iiH they are in control, aud the spleen and venom they fo-ster and cultivate goes forth, the better element vviio stand idly by, aud by their silence and indifference virtually endorse them, the con­ servative people and press may urge aud invite, but to no purpose. The poison grows, spreads, aud like some vile putrilying carcass, impregnates the whole atmosphere and spreads to every nook and cor ner with its deadly effect, such people—the pity it is—are to be found in almost every locality, but aCESVILLB, If. C., WEDNESDAY, JULY 31. lOOli XC.MJJKU 17. " O la a r o e S t B r o s ^ ARTISTIC WOOD ik :: Jolers ol Grafts^» S , "..M Tiles, MAfTELS AND FIREPLACE GOODS Dont’t know everything, neither do they try to do everythin' Their business is the making, buying and selling of W A T E R W H E E L S . It will be to the iutercst of every user of water power investigate our They also make a specialty of Tile Floors, Vestibules, Bath Rooms, Lavatorie.s—in fact, all kinds of tile work done and guaran­ teed in every manner. If you should need either Mantels, Grates or Tiles ol Any Kini please write them. They will snpply you at a very low cost considering the goods they furnish. Send for Catalogue Ifo. 13 if you are interested. 221 So-.ith Elm St.GREENSBORO. N. C. found iu the fuct of t*K* madej Vou poor men Vt'iio have cbiklien against ]>r. hy Ciiirk, j fducatc. wcri'. told diii'iBff th e: they arc overshado^ved Josephua Daniels, John H- \Veli- fvter and tbWr ilk. U'ft lu-IieTC it A was 8;iid that ]X»*. Kilg i vrufi a tso’md money man, and that whs to i*i:t tl:e i>ct:y, Hniall fry poULiciauw on hi«? tnii). Xo jVreac'hcror any prominorice hn;f i.Ver voiod i H-jnocraey iji this stale for liie \y.t.ri liiiny \e:’.r.s. that aii or;»aMi/{*d attem pt has uui aud disfrjM chis'jd. If you v.ere lool» ish ono«i;,h to bavu !>elieved it and vo-icd fo (h'sfrandiiso your own sous, y<ni will have yoursdvts to il;nnc (Jov. AyciKjk T/ill no doubt teil jron 'u Juit he is to do for bef-n made to drivft lihn ont an«]' the edu(!ation of the poor hoys ou ram hijt;. it’d a deploiv-bie. aj Aiiyusl ihe blii. y et his le^^iyla- disjri-aoof-tl of 5;tT;^ir.s, and ' tnre raiised his salary *1,000 per yet we wcro L'nticiwd a few day?, jjninnra and made four jiow Judie- hy ave wf (.MJt- hil di.strich-^ with ionr jio.v Judges friends for that “ 'Micre was ■ at a salury of 82,.';00eiidi. ilead, iioFreedoiiiof Tlton^^lit in Xorlli j reiiot-t and see wlierc you (.'aroliua.” A\'h:it <^i»td d<»e8 il do j Hrc fcoin^. Think f;jr yuurBcIvos n a man to Ihiuk ijs he plf isca, if hejji^‘1 'wt as freciaon. Angust campaif^n that schools j the better element. There are would be provided, aud tliat no [some of these kind very close to i boy should bo alh>\ved to grow up I Mocksville and occasionally they b«?fore 11)08 in ignorance aud 1)0! get in some of their little work K l*t to fall arour ' .sto, k of siHti |ra«i;et Heads, 111? and Tags, lotice. Trices rt K i m b r o u g h , ' Ku Sr KiifXJs. or h of Hotel Davie t -; VI x. c. fo. ;;2 brwh-liKidiiijf.' <-r trade. i^all-^i le C e le b r a t e d i f i i . PIANOS. ft Standard everretich- .11(1 Makers art. 20 ■ice ofall other makes, o.ly factory prices. cnoK ne;l l&Kamlio Burdett & S Oiians. ng iu uiusic sold at price otiiei-s charge, on yon. We have ne\T?^ W rite t<.d;iy for priies. lOMO.VT .MUSIC CO. e ! b'lVi-iited if be :’!res.‘iu nvprfv'sioo to his thoughts. V.'e do not jiave to go but a sliiirr <iiR(ii:ic<‘ /roiii jlfocics- viiie to tifi.i an «:r;4:’:i:7,alioo winch bad for osie o! ifs <;i.je<'ts tlse sup- pres-siou of free iJunigtit aud tlie destrnction of private !>rope.i(y. The White Man's (,'lr.b of '\Viu- su-.n attcniptc<l it iu LSOS. It :id- ^ isetl its Inisiiie-.-! men to l'o\coit liepuljlicans, and Kei^-ilslicau pa I'ei-s. It discussed and had un­ der advi.se:iip:;t ttie r;.ie;,tion o ' notifying the lion. Spencer Hiacl;- barn to leave Winston. AVhy. be­ cause he is a Ifepntiliean. Is not that a picture for th« gixls in old .^forth t'aroiina; a aindidate for Congress to be orderetl to leave liis home bj'an orgaui?.;it!onknown as the “ Wlii'.e Man’s Club.” White used to be cousidered an einbled of purity, yet in lliis in­ stance it couceaSed be;ieath its folds political rottenness aud anar­ chistic degeneracy. The qnesticu arises; -where aud v/lien is this IT DAZZI.I^J Tin-: w or.L D . Xo Discovery in ineditine has ever creaiei! one ((tn’.rter ol the ex­ citement that liius been cnnscd by !)r. Mine’s Nev.' iJisco^ery for I'lnis-.innition. It’s severesl: tests liave been on luipeless victims of ('o!ismn;ition, Pnoanioni.T, Uemor- rhage, I’lenrisy and Broncliilis, tlioiisamls of whoiii it has je.stored to p'-rfe' t healtli. For Coughs, Cohis, Asthma, Croup, liay Fever, lIo;ii-sne:-s aud V.'Jiooping Cough it is the quickest, surest cure in the ^ rld . IL IS sold by C. (5. San- who ga.iranteess:itisfaetionor refnnil money. Large liottles ottc. and ?^I..OO. Trial bottles tree. end? “ Whatsoever a man sowoth that shall he also reap.” iSonie of rhe Winston papers herald the lawlessness of tlie north aud west at Kepublicans, as if tliat excused them for the talessness in oar own land. Jiecanse other states do wrong is no excuse for ta do­ ing the 3ame thing. O nly a few days ago, a respectable ladys house ■ras dynamited in Slontgoinery c-ounty but fortunately she es- aped with her life. A trank in ■ he room In which she slept was .^Biled through the bottse, and a jreastpin she wore the day befere, •ras found in a tree. Is any one stirprised at sueh criinest Did •lot the gallant and peerless Ay- ^ock ride over sections of North Carolina last year with a gang of Red-shlrts, armed with shot guns aud Winchesters. W tth such an c\ample of lawlessness set by the ■ -niiidate for Governor, is any one t'.: '. J ri'sed that lawlessness is fol- O'^.ag in his wake. Such dis- L IT T L E X liS S . Xo one in Moclcsville is tinder any obligations to give the IJecord their job work, but we appreciate the patronage we do get. Thei-e arc some kinds of work we cannot do, aud we don't .-Lsk it, but we run a plant here, aud spend our money with the busiu&ss people, and we think ju.stice and goodbus- to i iness methods should appeal to ns nil t« stand toget lier and aid each other in every effort made iu bci- Italf of our town and vicinity. Onr columns are open free to all, religious, charitable and educa­ tional works, and when any money is to be spent for i>rinting, we think home folks should stand by ejich other rather than go out of the county to have it doue. The Masonic picnic management goes to Winston for all its printing, yet we would be deaonnced if we excluded them aud were to dis­ play the littleness which ehaiae- terizes certain ones in its manage ment. Little folks do little things they can’t help it. T ie Masonic picnic is a worthy institution, and for the sake of the fatherless or­ phans, w'e will help it all we can. De'Witt’s Witch Hazel Salve shouia bt promptly applied to cuta, burns andscalds. It soothes and quickly ticals the the injured part. There are wortlitess counterfeits, be sure .to' set DeWitt's. C. C.-Sanford, M. A. Foater.' to the detriment of the town. The good people shof.ld see to it that they arc given a wide berth. One rotten ai)ple lends its odor to the whole lot, and the sooner its got­ ten rid of the better lor ti;e bal­ ance. Keep your eyes open and you can easil}' spot t hese deadly venomous reptiles. 4.1’OOlt JIILLIONAIUE Lately starved in London because he could not digest liis food. Ear­ ly use of Dr. King’s New Life Fills would have saved him. They strengthen the .stomach, aid diges­ tion. i>romote as-siinilation, im­ prove appetite: Price 25c, Mon­ ey back il'not satisfied. Sold by G. C. Sanford, Dniggist. LIVE STOCK FOK THE SOUTH. I’rogressive Farmer. The m orel think of the matter the nioie fully I am convinced that the salvation of the farmer of the southerti Appalachian region, and, for that matter, of the South generally, depends upon more stock aud better stock- Here in East Tennessee we have a soil, a climate and a topography which as a whole is uot favorable to the production of grain on a large scale, but which is admirably a- dapifsd to the production of beef aud mutton, butter and cheese, bacon and poultry, with plenty of fruit as a side line; yet the major­ ity of otir farmers depend on coru and wheat for their support; and the hirgcr p;irt of the stock we ha\ e is of a very poor quality. Any one wiio takes the trotible to compare the number and average value of the livestock iu leva and W'isconain with tliat in Georgia and Tenness'ee (States w-ith about the same population) will not won­ der at the greater ijrosperity of the aSTorthern farmer.—E. K. Mil­ ler, Moriistown, Tenu. DOUBLE elaiins. wheels. W rite for G. T. GLASGOW C u t P r i c e s o n a l t S p r i n g a n d S u m = * m e r G o o d s . Evidently no effort has been spared to make The Ladies Home Journal for August a positive boon to its readei'S during these warm nddsummer days. Its light, read­ able articlei, briglit stories, clever poems, charming music, and nu­ merous l)eautiful ilhi.strations af­ ford the easiest and pleasantest kind of entertainment ior leisure hours Enchanting views of the lovely scenery in the Eugadine I Valley and among the Swiss aud ' Italian lakes, as w-ell as such de­ lightful articles as ‘-The Singuig 'Village of Germauy” aud “ W’'hat Girl-Life iu Italy Means,” allure the thoughts to foreign lands, while they are timely suggestions about “ The Picnic Basket,” “ Keeping a House Cool iu the Dog Days,” and “Sea Side Toys and How to Make Them.” Otii- er thoroughly interesting contri­ butions are “ The First W hite I5a- by Born in the Northwe.st,” “ My Boarding School for Girls,” and the usual serial and department articles. By The Ccrtis Publish­ ing Company, Philadelphia. Cue dollar a year; ten cents a copy. WHJ.TE JIAX TUIiN- EU YELLOW. Crreat consternation was felt by the friends of M. A. llogarty of Leviiigton, Ky,, when they Siiw he was turning yellow. His skin slowly changed color, also his eyes and he suflered terriliiy. ills ma­ lady was Yellow Jaundice. He v.-as treated by the best doctors, but; without benefit. Then he was advised to try Electric Bittera, the wonderful Stomach and Liver remedy, and he writes: “ After takiug two bottles I \v;is whooly cured.” A trial proves its match­ less merit for all Stomach, Liver and Ividney troubles. Only 25c. !. C. Sanford, Druggist. A aoOD CHOICE is more imperative Iq soleetine a bicycle than hi clioosing any othct Implement or tcIUcJo of erort or j plt’aiore. Safety aud comfort de- j peud upoa it. Any B1CVU0 is a safe choice Cliainless, $60 Chain, $50 to $35 Its etrong outside reinforcements * sfre:ipth«i tiie fromewoaderfully, oud ila* Finooih ruiiuing bcfcriugs roako KAMBLER riding th eeaty ^ of oUier wbeel owners. r>on't Decide WIthoat MeingBamWeiB,orBendfor i ourcatfilog. It U free F o r S a l e b y E . E . H U N T , J R . Call at IIuDt’s Store. 20 centfj, 15 “ m “ 10 » CoDie around and look at oar spring and summer samples. If yon want a tailor raarle, up-to-date suit, come around to tlie x^ostofiice. “I wish to truthfull}' state to you and the readers of these few lines that vour Kodol Dyspepsia Cure is without question, the best and only cure for dj’^spepsia that X have ever come in contact with and I have used manv other preparations. John Beam West Middlesex, Pa. No prepara­tion equals Kodol Dyspepsia C*ure as it contains all the natural dijrestants. It will digest all kinds of food and can’t help but do you good. C, C. San­ ford, M. A. Poster. There are more marders com­ mitted than are ever published in the papers—mnrders committecl by the tongue. The power of deadly poisoQ 18 iu it.—Augast Ladies^ Home Journal. It is easier to keep well than gtet cured. DeWitt’s Little Early Risers taken now and then, will alwaj's keep your bowels in perfect order. They never gripe but promote an easy gen­tle action. C. O. Sadford, M. A. Fos­ter. Solid quactities of integrity, of thoroughness, should outweigh iu a girl’s estimation of a man mere superficial cleverness and bril­ liancy.—Ladies Home .Tourual.- Since the Ohio Democratic con­ vention which dropped Bryan, free silver and the Kansas City platform, the Statesville Land­ mark says it is gieatly enjoying watching the ultra Bryanites trim their sails to the wind. The Dem­ ocratic crawfish movement at the present moment is oue of vast pro portions, too. ................................ b i o l Oyspepsla Cure D ig e s ts v ih s A y o a e a t . It artlJJciiillydsgest.^i the food and aids ^'Taturo in Ptrcngthening and recon- etructing tljo exhausted fligestive or­ gans. Jt istlielate.-5fcdiscovered digest- ant and tunic. No other preparatiou can appror4Ch it. in etiiciency. It in­stantly relieves and permaDsntly cures Dyspepsia, Indigestion, ileartbum, Flatulence, Sour Stomach, >iausea, Sick ITcadachc, Gastvalgia, Crnmps and ail otlierresultj of imperfect digestion. PrlceMc. and?l. Larsrc size contains 2K times gmallsixo. Book all alxjutdyspop^ihiDiHiiedfrtitf Prepared by E C. DeW'TT a CO.. C. C. Sanford; M. A. Foster^ No rth Cauot.ix a l In Superior Court. Da v ie Co u x t y. j F. 31. Phillips, I et al Charles Howard, etal A.T.Grant, CSC. HOnOE of RESALE - Pursuant to an order made by ir is not"as' 'tUffieulti^'^- tlraut. Cleric Superior Court, a thing aa manj" might suppose to drop a “peerless leader.—Obser­ ver. You can never cure dyspepsia by dieting. ^Vhat your body needs is plenty of good food properly dige-i- ted. Then if your stomach will not digest it, Kodol Dyspepsia Cure will, It contain.s all of the natural digesj tants hence must digest every class of food and so prepare it that nature can use it in nourishing the body and replacing the wasted tissues, thus givjnglife, health, strength, ambit­ion, pure blood and good healthy ap­petite. C. C. Sanfoi'd. M. A. Foster. Davie couutj^ iu above entitled cause, I will rejell at public ane- tion at court house door iu Jlocks- ville, on Monday the 5tB day of Aug-. the following lauds situated iu Davie county, fjhady Grove township, near Bixby, and bounded as follows, to-W'it: Jie- giuuiug at a post oak, Charlie K1 liott’s and Tom Howard’s corner, X. 16 chs to a pine, Cha.s. Elliott’s and Allen’s corner, E. 41. ch^ 75 Iks to a stake or stone, on the bank of a branch, Massey’s cornei-, .S. .31 chs aud 'Jn Iks to a dogwood, E. 22 ehs aud 72 Iks to a stake, S. I.*; chs The killing of two Italians and .'and 77 Iks to a stake, the beglii- the wounding of a third at Erwin, uing corner of the Jenkins’ tract, i Miss., Wednesday night whilej W. IG chs aud 75 Iks to a hickory j they were asleep, was a cowardly ' sapling ou the John Obrion old proceeding. W hatever their of-1 tract, S. 13 chs 25 Iks to a stone. 10c. W hite Duck for - - . . . You will find a nice line of tlicse goods to select from.' Yours anxious to please, j . B A I T Y . A tla n tic C ity CAPE MAY, OCEAN CITY, SEA ISLE CITY, AVALON, ANGLE- SEA, WILDWOOD. HOLLY BEACH, N. J. fi^^SPECIAL KXCUl^SIONS,-^ Via NORFOLK & WESTERN RAILWAY in connectiou with the PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD, June 20j July 5 and 18, August 1, 15, and 29, and September 12,1901. Excursion tickets v/ill be sold only for cur.sions, good on all regular trainsTrain.s? Nos. 4 and 28 on dates of ex­ north of' Hagerstown, except Penn'sylvania Limited, and valid to return leaving the sea«hore and Philadel­phia within sixteen days, including date of excursion. A stop over of ten daj's will be al­lowed at Philadelphia on the going trip, if passengers deposit their tick­ets with the Ticket Agent at Broad Street Station, I’hiladelphia. imme­diately on arrival. Passengers for Atlantic City may use trains from Broad Street Station, Philadelphia, via the DELEWARE RIVER BRIDGE ROUTE The Only All-Rail Line. Passengers for tne other points above named will use regular trains from Market Street Wharf, Phila. W. B. BEVILL, Gen. Pass. Agent. M. F. BRAGG, Trav. Pass. Agt. E . B . M N T . EXPERIENCED BARBEft. |Shari> Razors. Clean Towelsk are Dandrufl: Cure. Money re-g funded if not satisfactory. g jflazors ground and Concaved. ^ Shop on Sfain Street, Weant S Block. Give me a trial. 6 r jr ^ je r jr M T jir jr 'ja r jtr jir js r ji^ . Send us your order for joI> work if you want good w'ork at low prices. Give us a trial order. fence, they should uot have been dealt with in a lawless manner and with such cmvardly and brulal lawlessness as shooting them in their unsuBpceting sleep. The Italian government wiU, 6f course, want an indemnity, and, undei' the cii'cumstancca, can ask for it with good grace.—Observer. “I am indebted to One Minute Couph Cure for uiy jjresent good, tieaith and my life. I was treated in vain doc­tors for lung trouble following la grippe. I. took One Minute Cough Cure and recoveted my liealth.” M r.. E. H'.-Wise.-MSdlson, Qa. C, C. San-J^, ford. M. .\;Po.ster, Obrion’s corner, W . 14 chs ta a dogwood sprout, Bogan Haywood’s corner, AV. 27 chs aud DO Iks to a sweet gnni, 20 Iks to a post oat, the lieginning corner,eontainin 1.^1 acr^, 71 poles more or less. S^e old book 4, page 37.’>. Terms of Jiale:—¥75.00 of piir- ch^e money to be paid in ciish, balance ou six months credit se­ cured by bond witli approved se curity, with interest; from date. Title reserved uiitil piirchaije money is paid in full. Junc3,th, lot- i?2.00; OrCES. r»Jre#t terms ......OPATENT I.AWTSM OF -98 T6&U* PEACTIC£.( i)»errifB. itodentfl chMgw. \rrc . A . SNOW & co.jPATENT LAWVEns, X Opp. 1). s. ?al3nt OHlcn, WAStHKSTOH, 0. d i LEGAL NOTICES. Legal notices will bo ctiarged for as follows: ¥3.00 notice for B y JacoU’Sie w a k t, A tty.- ■-?5.00 notices for $4.f!0'.- SOUTHERN RAILWAY; T H E , STA>.'DAED RAILWAY OF THE SOUTH.' The Direct Lino tc all Points. TEXAS,! CALIFORIflA, FLORIDA, . CUBA AJfD rORTO EICO. Strictly First Class Equip* ment on all Through and Ll- cal Trains. Pnl’raan Sleeping Car.i oaall Kight Trains. Fast and Sale «che<lnles. Travel i>y tlio Southern and yon are assured a Safe, C«)nt^ fortable und an Exiied{tlou>« •Toiiruey. Apply to Ticket Ageota for Time Ta\ blerf, luite^s and 6 c-neral.Infor- maliou, or addrens R. L. VERNON,T. P. A.Cliarlotte N. C. F. R. DARBYl C. I'. &T. A. , Asheville KC, HO TROUBLE TO ANSWER QUESTION S H. HARDWICK, G. P. A' V4.SHINGTON. DC 60 YEARS*r EXPERIENCE Any oneiieadlDK a ekct«h and rte«rlrU(ia^«>. q n tc k ); asc-^rtiim n n r otHoJoii frey whelh*;!' an- UivOTtlrtfi is probably p«eutA h)o. ro im nniilcs- tionsR trlctlyn'iiaclentiiil. riunabf> o)ionrftl«nic se n t free. U M utt fo r socui-lnit I'M lonu.P.-itontd taX cn throu»/b M unn i Co. recelT*' tfiteiuX TiotUe, w ilb o u t cb«iv». Ui Uia Saendfic Jfittericam A bflndanm cJy illa^ trated w ceW f. iJin ro st cnlatlun o f finy M ieniltlc Joum aJ. T erm a. 93 y- Tcnr: fotfriTJor.tli^ *1 Hoia • MUNNSCaB raaclx Office. ( ycnr :_fotfr ir.or.tlui, Hold by all ite w « Jo al« n I. & # 8t« Washington. Greensboro Nurseries,' GKEUJS'SCOHO, i\, tl.,’ Look out for the GreensUiro and Connet’s Southern Early pcaehM and' reiheuiber that these were introduced b j the Gre’ntboro Xiirseries^ and that whc^n you want the be.st of fruits of all kind*-, address your order to jb//y A. YOUXG, GroerJthoi^o, X. C ' FOSBURGH’SRELEASE Acquitted on the Char;e of Murderia; His Sister PEOPLE PLEASEi) WITH VERDICT Roseola Very Ssnsational Trial In Which Voung Fosbergh Stood Charged With the flurder of His Sister. Special.—The trial >sburgh for the ly, was A LIVELY SCRAP. Dr. Kllgo and Mr. R. B. Crawford Come to Blows, Durham, Special.—Passengers . who came in on the morning train from Greensboro Monday brought the news of a “scrap” that occurred on the train. The parties ImpUcated in the fight were Dr. John C. Kilgo, president oi Trinity College, and Mr. R. B. Crawford, a well-known hardware merchant of Winston-Salem. Mr. Crawford was seen at the residence of his father-in-law, Rev. Alexander Walker, and asked ab:ut the mattar. He said that during the meeting of college men in Greensboro some weeks ago Dr. Kilgo. In a speech, grossly in­sulted the good name of his father. Rev. L. W. Crawford, editor of The North Carolira Christian Advccite, ind he (Et B. Crawford) wrote Dr. king If h:s speech had been •d in The Raleigh :o replied by re­asons 1ft ^ Judge ’"immediateiy court his honorf jur>’ and directed ^ verdict of acquittal be ^or the defendant Judge Stevens '‘Foreman and gentlemen: Dur iSfg six days we have listened to a painful recital of one of the saddest tragedies ever presented to a jury. A beautiful girl’ just budding into wo­manhood was shot down and her brother has been accused of the crime. The government has endeav­ ored to prove first that the girl was oot shot by burglars; second, it has endeavored to exclude all other mem- « bers of the family from the affair, ana third, to prove that the shot was fired by her brother. Robert S. Kosburgh.“The trial has proceeded some­what in the form of an inquest an; has been tried with great pains on part of tae government and dc Tense. There has been a jji^irc obtain proof and so £ evidence has been intorouced and ad­mitted without ol)jr5Suon which might have been .excluded under the strict rule oWff^ law. I tliink I ought also to-say tc you that it is due to the Y^hief of pollcc who has stood behind.‘ this pro£<*cution. that in view of the Dourt, he has tried to do his duty with a single eye to ascertaining the Now. Mr. Foreman, and gen- Llembrr. a* rnction has been made that this case be taken from the jury and It becomes my duty to say to j'ou thai In the opinion of the court, the gov- Brnmcnt has not furnished proof sufll 2ient to sustain a verdict of guilty against the defendant, and. therefore, under the direction of the court, in the indictment of Robert S. Fos burgh, for killing his sister you will return a verdict of not guilty.”As the ;udge concluded his remarks the people in the court room began clapping -heir hands, but the judge immediately ordered that the applause be suppressed and this was done l)y the court officers. The defendant stood while the foreman of the jury replied to the question: “What is your verdict?” The reply w^as, “Not guil­ty.”The defendant was then formally aischarge l by order of the court. Judge Stevens then dismissed the fury, but before doing so, he thanked them warmly for their services and :ongratulsited them because they had not shirked the responsibility that fell upon them. Immediately after this, the Foshburgh family was given an opportunity to leave the court chamber in advance of the rest of the people and they did so. passing down i private stairway. They proceeded at once to the Wendell House, w^here 1 reception was held and where hun ireds of peoi>le took advantage of the opportunity to shake hands with young Robert Foshburgh.As S003 as the jury was dismissea the foreman called them together in his private room and for the first lime there was a conference as to what the jurors believed. Without exception they declared that they would have returned a verdict of not guilty within 35 minutes, even had they not been instnicted by the court Bursting of a Shell. Washington, D. C.. Special.—The Deparim*?nt has received a report from Captain McCalla concerning the bursting of a shell in one of the 13- inch guDs in tho after turret of the Kcarsarge. while that «hip was enga- . ged in target practice with the North Atlantic squadron, off Newport Tlis shell broke up in the gun, which was slightly scratched. The injuries sus­ tained by tho big gun are located at a point about seven feet from the muz­zle. At this point the lands are de­ formed lor a distance of 6 inches. Those lands are the portions of tho surface of the gun tube lying between the grooves that make the rifiiag of the gun. Kansas Drought Brckea Topeka, Kan., Special—General rains ihruiish;;ut Kansas have caused an ef- -?tual break in 'ISe' dr'Olghr * The rains came too late to be of material benefit to the corn, but will result in plenty cf stock water and giving new life to ;he pastures. The rain in To­ peka lasted an hour. Other localities report precipitation from light showers to heavy rains of 2% inches fall. In many places rain is still falling and lndicati<*ns are for heavy downfall. Hnnt riay Succeed Allen. Washington. Special.—Governor A! ien, of Port Rico, arrived here Mon­ day from Canton, where he saw the President and advised his concerning the action of the Legislature of Port® Rico, upon which the Pres'.denfs free trade proclamation will be based. It is believed Governor Allen will re'.ln- Quiah his office when that proclamation Is issuec' in which event the nomina­ tion Qf Wm. II. Hunt, of Montaaa, at present secretary of-4he island to the government. Is believed to be probable. What China Will Pay. Pekin, By Cable.—The ministers of ihe powere after Friday’s meeting dis­patched d note to the China peace com­ missioners accepting the recent Chin- 5se offer, which was in anticipation of the ministers'4>lan for the payment of <50,000,0(0 taels in indemnity at 4 per cent interest. The total payments of principal and interest wIU be 1,000,001 came freensboro, 'the second-class 'Ugo was seated and m in a courteous man- be was not angry and had no I. of having a personal encounter, and stated to Dr. Kllgo that his letter was very unsatisfactory. Dr. Kllgo replied that his (Crawford’s) letter was also unsatisfactory to him. Mr. Crawford then said to Dr. Kilgo that his attack on his father in the ciore- said speech was unwarranted and cow­ardly. Kilgo retorted: “You are the biggest coward In tho State,” where­upon Mr. Crawford struck Dr. Kllgo and several blows were passed before they could be separated by the pwsen- gers. They did not hurt each other beyond a few slight bruises, and Mr. Cmwford expressed sincere regret over t-.e occurrence, but felt that to be called yi coward was an Insult which should be resented then and there.Dr. Kilgo was asked for a statement about the matter.Mj. Orawford Is a graduate of Trin- '!tj''Colleg'e and .is well-known here. He l3 a prominent business fflafi In Win­ ston-Salem, where he'"has resided for several years. He also is prominent in church circles, holding several official positions in Grace Methodist church.of his town. The Elks in Milwaukee. Milwaukee, Special.—Trains and steamer lines brought about 15,030 Elks to the city and a large number will ar­ rive laler. The all-absorbing topic cf interest centers in the election of the nest exalted ruler. Supporters ot the active candldales, Charles E. Pickett, of Iowa, and Judge John C. Nethaway, of Minn., make large claims, each fac­tion declaring their man will be elect- ed. INQIIRY IS ORDERED final Outcome of tlie Sampson-Schley Controversy. AN INVESTIGATION IS TO FOLLOW Admiral Dewey Will Likely Preside Over the Court That Will Pass Upon the Merits of the Controversy. A Cass of Plsgue. New York. Spccial.—When the Ger­man steamer Hohenfels arrived in port from Calcutta, she was held at quar­antine to undergo the customaiy d's- infection. On examination of the crew a Cinnglez was found to be ill and he was removed to Swinhume Island for invostlgatiou as to the nature of his complaint. The stcainer will be he’.d until the result of a test is completed, which will probably be several days, Consuls Appointed. Washington. Special.-The President Mondoy made the following appoint­ ments: Richard L. Sprague, of Massa­ chusetts. consul at Gibraltar, Spain; Edward A. Creevy, of Connecticut, c:n- sul at Glauohau, Saxony; Samuel Smith, of New Jersey, consul at MoS' cow, Russia; R. S. Reynolds, of Hitt, Illinois, third secretary of the Uniteii States embassy at Paris, France. The Dry Goods Harket. New York, Special.—There has been poor attendance of buyers in the cotton goods division and business has been indifferent again.' There has not been any change in the tone of th'5 market and prices are maintained in all departments, including print clo.hs. Tho American Woo'en Company open­ ed new' lines of light weight piece dyes t 5 to 12% cents per yard lower than a year ago. Told In Paragraphs. K woman’s well-formed arm and a silk dress were found in a thicket near Homestead, Pa. Endeavors continue to be made for organization of the $100,000 cottos factory company proposed at Ut.lo Rock, Ark. Messrs. Louis Koers,.Du­rand Whipple, I.K>uis Rhoton, W. P. Field, M. P. Foster and Nathan Drey­fus are interested.It is proposed at Withita Falls, Tex., to crjnnlze a stock company for tho erection of a $100,000 cotton factory. Local Investors are prepared to take half of the required capital if compe tent parties can be induced to sub­ scribe the other half and take actlvc part in managing the plant A altr» will be donated for the plant's build ing. W. C. Sherrod can be addressed for information. It is announced that practical silk weavers intend to establish a mill In Hagferstown. Md. It is said that capi­tal has been subscribed for the pur­ chase of six looms, and ’that a new building will be erected. The naanes of thoio Interested are not known as yet Schoolhouse Demolished. Waycross, Special. —The school house at Manor, in W'^are county, was struck by lightning last week and al­most completely wrecked. The bolt sti uck the top cf the building, tore off almost one end, and knocking two blocks from beneath the structure, one of which was torn into sulinters. Fif­teen minutes before the building was struck the school had been dismlss'^il and ninety pupils and two teach:ri had just left for their homes. An Old Check. Winston-Salem, Special.—An old “hcck has been received by Shepherd and Norfleet, one of Winston’s hard­ ware firms. The remarkable feature is that the bank held the amount of money called for. “ihe check was written on April 14, 1888, and .was given by Gilmer, Wilson and Co., who were at that time running the old Orinoco warehouse, to Dr. James JUckerson, of Ronda. Wilkes county, tho amount being $18.15. The check was misplaced, but the warehouse left the amouflt in th« bapk. Washington, D. C., Special.—Secre- tary Long Wednesday morning recelv. od a letter from Rear Admiral calling attention to the egi^tCisms against him which are,^<f6ntained in Maclay's History^-tfie Navy and th( innuendoes which have appeared in the press for several days, and stating IhAi, in his opinion, the time had now come to take such action ^ would bring the entire matter under the clear and calm review of h’a brothers in arms. He asked that the Department take such action a.s was deemed best to accomplish this purpose. He alao requested that whatever action be ta­ ken should occur in Washington, where his papers and data are stored. The Secretary immediately decided to comply with Admiral Schlcy’s request and dictated a letter to tho rear admi­ ral, saying that under iho circumstan­ ces he heartily approved of his action and tijat the Department would pro­ ceed at once in accordance with his re­ quest. Admiral Schley's letter is as follows: “Great Ntck, Long Island, N. Y., July 22, 1901. "Sir: Within the past few days a se­ ries of press comments have been sent to me from various parts of tho coun­ try of a book entitled ‘The History of the Navy,’ written by one Edgar Stan­ ton Maclay. “From these reviews It appears that this edition is a third volume of tho said history extended to include the late war with Spain, which the two first volumes did not contain, and were in use as text-books at the Naval Academy. “2. From excerpts quoted in some re- views, in which tho pa?e and para­ graph are given, there Is such perver­ sion of facts, misconstruction of inten­ tion, such intemperate abuse and dc- famartion of myself as subjects Mr. Maclay to action in civil law. W^hile I admit tho right of fair criticism of every public officer, I must protest against the low flings and abusive lan­ guage of this violent, partisan oppo­ nent, who has Infused into the pages of his book so much of the mal!co of unfairness as to make it unworthy tho nanie of history, or of use in any rep­ utable institution of the country. “3. I have refrained heretofore from all comment upon the innuendoes of enemies muttered or murmured in se­ cret and therefore with safety to them- selves. I think the time has now come to take such action as may bring this entire matter under discussion under the clearer and calmer review of my brothers in alms,and to this end I ask such action at the hands of the De­ partment as it may deem best to ae- compllsh this purpose. "4. But I would express the request In this conncction that whatever the action may be that it occur in Wash­ington where most of tny papers and data are stored. *'Very respectfully."W. S. SCHLEY, “Rear Admiral U. S. N. “To the Secretary of the Navy, Washington. D. C.” Secretary Long replied to Admiral Schley as follows: “Navy Department, Washington, July 24. "Sir: I am In receipt of yours of the 22nd inst., with reference to the crlt- islcsm upon you in connection with the Spanish-Amerlcaa war, and heartily approve of your action, under the cir­ cumstances, in asking at.the hands of this Department such action as may bring this entire matter under discus­ sion under the cler^rer and calmer re­view of my brothers in arms.’ The De­ partment will at once proceed in ac­ cordance with your request “Very respectfully, ‘ JOHN D. LONG. Rear Admiral W. S. Schley, IT. S. N.” Secretary Long acted without cjn- sultation with auy one and without communicating the request of Admiral Schley to the President He then call­ ed into his office R2ar Admiral Crowni-nshield and Captain Cpwles, chief and assistant, respectively, of tho Bureau of Navigation, also Judge Ad­ vocate General Lemly, Who has charge of formalities of naval courts. He also sent for Admiral Dewey. Although Rear Admiral Schley did not ask specifically for a court of inquiry, but left the action to be taken to the judgment of the Department, tho Sec­retary decided that such a court would be the best means of making the invei- tigatlon which the rear admiral had requested the three bureau officers were called In for the purpose of dis­cussing the mode cf procedure in such cases. After his conference with Ad­ miral Dewey, who had respoaded im­mediately to the Secretary's request for an interview, the Secretary said that he had not had time to decide upon the composition of the court but In response to a question as to wh€iho? Admii’al Dewey would serve upon a court, If requested'to do so, the Secre­ tary said: “Admiral Dewey will do his duty.” Although no positive declard- tion has been given on this point, it is assumed about the Na>*y Department that Admiral Dewey will be president of the court which will inquire into the whole controversy concerning Ad­ miral Schley’s actions durinj the Spanish war.______________ Belgian Alinlster to Retire. Brussels, By Cable.—Cojnt de Llch- tervelde. Belgian Minister to tho Unit­ed States, will retire from the pest at his own request. He will be succeeded by Baron Monoheur, Belgian Minister to Mexico, who-in turn will be succeed­ ed by Viscount de Beughem de Hou- -them. Councillor to the Belgian Lsga- tion in London. A HOUSE DYNAMITED. A Lady Occupant In a Serious Condi­ tion as a Result. Albemarle, Special.—A dastardly crime was committed at Nall’s post- office, Montgomery county, twdvo miles from here Tuesday night. Th« house where Mrs. M. A. Smith was sleeping was blown up by dynamite and the occupant severely injured. Mrs^ Smith owns considerable property ^ her home place consists of th re^ - One of them is a large then a smaller h o u ^ ji^ fo r a sleep­ing room and a^g^^ one used as a kitchen an^pjflj^g room. It was In the smallepi-i^I^i^e that Mrs. Smith was ,^.ng. Between the houss of 12 and '^’clcck a terrifict explos'.ofn was hea-d and timbers were flying in every direc­tion. Three joints of dynamite were placed under the house, but cs fate would have it. In the corner where Mrs.' Smith’s bed stood, no dynamite wai placed. The lady is not injured exter­ nally but the shock she received has caused her to take her bed. Another bed in the house was blown throufh tho roof; a trunk was knocked through a table and a brooch which she had worn the day before was found up a tree in the yard, whither It was blown by the explosion. Her nelce from Mont­gomery. Ala., was in the larger hous3 and was awakened by the screams of Mrs. Smith.Mrs. Smith w’as postmaster at Nall’s and the government at Washington has been wired to send an inspector at once to look Into the mMter. Mrs. Smith ;s quite a noted character in Stanly and Montgomery, being a woman of much wisdom and business sagacity. She has doubtless several enemies and suspicion }s pointed quite strongly to some ol them as the perpetrators of this das­tardly crime. The communitj’ Is consid­erably aroused over the occurrence and it is to be hoped that the guilty pir- ties may be brought to justice. SOUTHERN INDUSTRIAL The American Bar Association meets at Denver, Col., August 21 to 23, Rich­ ard C. Dale, of Philadelphia, being one of the speak^a. Tar Heel Notes. Superintendent Mann, of tho peni­tentiary, says: “I am doing every­thing possible to avoid having to bor­row any money to pull us through this year. I expect that during August we will rebuild the dyke at the “Cale­donia” farm on the Roanoke, which was so badly damaged by the great May freshet. There are numerous ■gaps, the largest 1,500 feet If can get enough labor we may be able to make tho repairs during August.” There la an Inquiry In regard to cer­tain admissions and non-admissions to the insane asylums. Two recent occurrences have brought the matter to a head. An indigent insane wo man was refused admission to an asylum, on the ground that there was not room. At about the same time an inebriate, a pay patient was ad­mitted. There are grave complaints of difficulties in securing the admis­sion of Indigent persons. The State Authorities say in no uncertain tone ^hat preference must be givea to in- digents. Commissioner of Agriculture Patter­son has prepared a list of farmers’ institutes to be held In various pied­mont and western counties during Au­gust. He intends to attend all most of them. He will be aided in the work of conducting them by Prof. Burkett tho new professor of agri­culture; State Chemist Kilgoro . and Prof. W. F. Massey, the station horti­culturist The dates of these insti- .tutes are: King’s, Stokes county, Au- g\ist 10th; Elkin. 13th; Yadklnville, 14th; Farmington. 15 and 16th: Mooresville. 17th; Stanly Creek, Gas­ton county. 19th; Llncolnton, 20th and 21st; Newton, 22nd; Hendersonville, ^3rd and 24th; Brevard, 26th; Colum- )bus, Polk county( 28th; Rutherford, 29th; Shelby, 30th. A Narrow Escape. • Durham, Special.—Wednesday morn­ing there came near being a serious accident at the Erwin Cotton Mills, in West Durham. The cylinder head, which w'eighs about 75 or 100 pounds, flew out of the dye house engine and landed out in the village, about 150 yards distant. Just before the acci­ dent occurred Mr. T. M. Booker, w’-ho is employed in the engine room, passed the place where the piece of iron landed and had it struck him it would have killed him. This accident caused the closing down of the dye­ ing department, the beaming and slashing department and the weaving room. manu- :t being Everything Prospering. •A special from Birmingham, Ala., to the AtlanU (Constitution says: There Is no cause for any fecial complaint in this ^strict, the facturing intej at full g mills are glv large force ;-iuo..uw the steel rolling mills will be manufacturing a supply of steel. There are more blast furnaces in operation now‘than were running two weeks ago, and the pig iron production of the state is g^eate^ by inore than a hundred tons of iron a day than a month ago. There are indications that the de­ mand for pig Iron will be better in the ,iL-ar future, while some Improvement is noted in the coal mart There are but three mines in the state where there are differences between capii-. and labor and less than 800 men ar3 affected in all of them. There ara more than ten thousand mincra at work, while the railroads are doing a heavier traffic in this district both passenger and freight, than this tini>; last year. The various industries, such as foundries and machlae s.iops. woodworking esiablishments and others are doing wi?ll and are giving steady employment to a large comple­ ment of men, all told. Some heavy payrolls ai’e being experienced in this district aud mucn money is going on deposit in the banks of Birmingham auu those in the suburbs. Georgia Banks. Macon, Ga.. Special.—State Treas­urer R. E. Park completed an Investi­gation of five State banks In this city and in an Interview afterwards stated: “The banks of Georgia, 1 find, are in better condition than they have been at any time In their history. This is attributed to 'improved business con­ditions throughout the country. A large number of merchants. I am told, have doubled their previous order? for the fall trade.” To Punish Lynchers. Rome, By CaJ>le.—In accordance with instructions from Washington, the American charge d’affaires here has informed Signor Prinett, the Italian Minister of Foreign Affairs, that the Federal government will take every legal means to secure the punishment of the lynchers of the Italians in Mis­ sissippi. In this connection the minis­ ter has expressed his full confidence that those most guilty of the lynchings will be sought out by competent au­ thorities. He also said he felt sure the criminals would not go unpunished a? happened in some preceding cases. After six weeks’ Idleness because o! a strike, the Colorado Smelter, at Butte, Mont., starts up, the men get­ting an eight-hour day with 10 hours' pay. The steel strike is expected soon to close the last remaining mail of the American Steel Hoop Company. The United Mine Workers decided not to support the strking stationary engineers in Pennsylvania. Hon. William J. Bryan, in an article in the Commoner, says that If a can­didate for President is chosen from the South it will not weaken him. The Saxon Mills, of Spartanburg, S. C., a new plant that was completed several months ago, received its last consignment of machinery last week. The entire equipment of lO.COO spin­ dles and 300 looms Is now In posltiou and operating. This Is a >$200,000 in­ vestment. The Manetta Mills of Edgemoor, (P. 0. at Lando)j S. C., is arranging to secure charter for a railroad. This railroad is to>-be constructed a distance of tvo and one-quarter miles, from Lando to Edgemoor, and will be used for hauling the mill’a merchaadlft>% «to. A New Cotton nill. West Point, Ga., Is just^ proul of a new cotton mill which has been erec­ ted at a cost of $110,000. It has a Cor­liss engine of SOU-horsepower and two bwleis o£ 200 horsepower eaf;h. it has 5,152 spinning spinuic-s trust'%s. One quality of thread ouiy Is made. Its present capacity is 850 pounds per day. '1 he employes OLCUpy well-constructed houses built by compan>‘. The mill is located ju?.t wiinout the corporate limits southws?t of the city, between the Southern anJ the Illinois Central raUroads. w.tn which is connected by switch on a piece oi gi-ouiia c.miaiaing ou acr.-=. The mill owns its own electi'lc light­ing system. This mill ships a carload about once a week, principally to Phil­ adelphia. The yarn is of a very fine quality and is used for fine curuii’i ginghams and kindred fabrics. Com­mission merchants prenounce this mil! the second of the kind, as well as !■ quality of thread, iu the United St^iics. Tha Oil Fever. A dispatch from Falmouth. Ky.. says: “The oil fever has struck this county and everyone is talking oil. Several years ago home capitalists sunk a well about fifteen hundred feet aim SLruc.v a aa’ons; Ujw of £as, buf. for lack of capital the v.'ell was never cased nor bored deeper. Some years afterward au Eastern cumpauy borco close to the home well, but pluiTgt(« up at midnight and never let the people know wh::t they struck, hut the n‘x* day one fould smell the gas for miles.” A dispatch from Somerset, Ky., says “another well has come in”—a 20D bii’- rel well. It is 840 feet deep. Anotn?*- one on Coney creek Is expected next wtek. Willlamstown, Ky., r9ports a number of active young business m u are anticipating the boring of wells within the city limits and that oil has been found in divers parts of the coun­ try. Fine oil prospects are also repor. ted In Hancock county. A $52,000 Cotton Hill at Graham. A mill for the manufacture of coarse yarns will bo built at Graham, N. C. This announcement has just been made, and Messrs. J. H. White and brother arc the projectors and own­ ers of the intended plant Arrange­ ments are about completed for the erection of the necessary building, which will cost $12,000, and the ma­ chinery plant complete will cost $40.- 000. The spindles will number 2,500, and later, after the enterprise is iu operation, looms will be installed. To DoubleTlilT, It is announced that the Harmony Grovo (Ga.) Mills will double Its plant of 41G0 ring spindles and 150 looms, which has been capitalized at $100,- £00. Contracts for erecting the neces- s.iry additional buildings and for the installation of the required machin­ery will be arranged in the near fu­ture. It is stated that the funds for this enlargement will be entirely sup­plied from the company’s surplus fund. Textile Notes. The Sidney Cotton Mills of Graham, N. C.. operating 108 looms, has ordered and Is" installing more machinery. A Norfolk (Va.) real estate firm is negotiating for the establishment of a large knitting mill at Norfolk-on-the- Roads. The Easley (S. C.) Cotton Mills will increase capital stock from $200,000 to $250,000, presumably for improve­ ments. A movement for establishing a knit­ting mill is on foot at Leesburg, Ga., and it is probable that C. H. Beazley will be interested. A movement is on foot at Aberdeen, Miss., for the organization of a cotton mill company and Hamp E. Reynolds is interested. The Centreville (Miss.) Delinting Co. has in view the ultimate erection of a cotton factory In connection with other industries. Tho Business Men’s Club of San An­tonio, Texas, will endeavor to secure the organization of a company to build a cotton factory. The Sutro Cotton Mill at Yorkville, S. C., will be put In operation soon. The recent purchasers of the plant were the bondholders, and they will organize a new ‘company, capitalized at $30,000, to operate the 5,000 spind­les now in -place. S. M. McNeel rep­resented the bondholders at the sale.The Elizabeth Cotton Mills of At­lanta, Ga., recently completed with 5.000 ring spindles, is reported as to add looms and manufacture brown sheetings. " The Smithfield (N. C.) Cotton Mills is nearing completion, and will be ready for operation soon. This $100.- 000 plant will turn 5,000 spindles and looms to suit The Clover (S. C.) Cotton Manufac- turnlng Co., operating 10,000 ring spin­dles, has declared a dividend of 10 per cent and passed an amount to surplus fund. The plant is capitalized at $1.?0,00Q. Additional spindles to the number ot 2«600 viU be ingtalled. IE Tlic re r&rtlie iHiite ilderal moist 111 fav IpWMcorrespondc-- !^„a^tare generally ie and indicate con- ti crops by excessive sUgbt^HC3 The chief ob- Farmers hardly again be-cultivate crops, ^Mch have come very foul; bottomins o f l a n d s by heav> rain^^ Rowland COJ.S “ ““Jd ne*;The temperature averagea u r nJrm\l‘ or" sUgbtly betow » d there were no extremes, the amoun of sunshine was deficientCrops bave been very iured by the abundant rainfall entirely prevented plowing, and obi g- ed many farmers to v.hile very grassy. On cu stiff. Impervious clay soils som. wliat oetter conditions Prev^' “ j} nhero ciillivated such crops look weii aud proniise fair yields tuges of sn.all farms which are more casilv kept clear appear under such adverse condition as have Prevailed linrinK the present season. In a lew northeastern counties Gates) aud generally in the valleys west of the Blue Ridge conditions have been favorable, though rain is needed in Swain, Cherokee and adjoining counties.The general condition of cotton Is not promising anywhere in the State and the abandonment of grassy fields continues; however, where _Properly cultivated cotton is doing fairly w®*** though generally making too much weed, and not fruiting rapidly; cotton is shedding forms badly In many lo­calities; in some counties on the east­ ern slope of the Blue Ridge the crop seems to be blooming and forming fruit more freely; but for the State at large the consensus of opinion is that the crop Is very inferior.Much corn on bottom lands was de­stroyed by freshets; on uplands the crop looks fairly well, though some is turning yellow; the weather has been too wet to finish laying by in good order. Cutting and curing to­bacco is processing slowly, with some good cures reported; It Is large enough to cut In central counties which will be done as soon as the rains cease: some tobacco is poor and has sUrted second growth. Wheat and spring oats in shock have been Injured by rains, aud much of the crop which was housed while damp has moulded considerably. Sweet po­ tatoes. peanuts, field peas and rice are still doing well, though the growth of grass and weeds Is threatening. Melons and cucumbers are rotlng. Some water melons are ripe. Fruit Is also decaying, especially grapes. Hay making has been Interrupted, and many meadows need cutting. Trans* planting strawberries Is underway. Tar Heel Notes. Mr. Geo. F. Moorefleld, who is em- plement store, was badly hurt at the depot last Wednesday about noon. Mr. Moorefield and several other parties were engaged in unloading a large threshing machine from a fiat car. In rolling It over the car the machine be­came unmanageable and ran partly over Mr. Mooiefield, inflicting pain­ful. but not fatal injuries. The thre.sher was a heavy one. weighing two or three thousand pounds. One of the wheels partly passed over Mr. Moorefield’s shoulder and side of the body, tearing the flesh and badly bruising him. The machine narrowly mis'sed his neck.—Davidson Dis patch. Under the law the State will aid as many as six free libraries In a coun­ ty at rural public schools. The State Superintendent of Public Instruction is informed that so far the following counties have provided for the six libraries: Bertie. Wake. Anson. Guil- ■ford. Union. Nash. Beaufort Durham. Jrcdell and Rutherford. Durham has provided for IS, but under the law the State cannot aid more than 6. Wilson ^nd Warren have each provided for 4, Rowan 3. Gaston. Onslow and Greene 2 each. Buncombo. Watauga, Bruns­wick, Duplin. Lincoln. Columbus, Orange, Franklin. Mecklenburg, Cald­well. Bladen and Henderson 1 each. All this of course is a mere beginning. The total which the State is called ob to aid is S0. _____ Telegraphic Biiefs. The 'Longshoremen’s National Union, in session at Toledo, 0., has ro elected President D. J. Keefer. Fifteen millions were added Satur day to the capital of the Colorado Fuel and Iron Company, of Denver, Col. A round white pearl, weighing 101 grains, was taken from a Mississippi River clam noar Prairie du Chien. WIs"SVhen asked for a match by James Buckley, Levi Brandaw, colored, shot him fatally at Hudson. N. Y. Saturday’s temperature wag the hot' tc*t ever recorded in July In Milwau­ kee. The government thermometer at Milwaukee showed 102. The torpedo boat Stringham left Wilmington, Del., for Newport, R. I., for a trial trip under (k>vemmont di­rection. A pardon has been granted former State Treasurer Joseph Bartley, of Nebraska, after eervlng 4^ months of his 20-year term of embeszlement The International Epworth League Convention was opened in San Fran­cisco, with about 25,000 delegates in at- t^idasee. .The Rcckinghani Company of Spray, N. C., has been incorporated with cap­ ital stock of $100,000. and privilege of increase to $100,000, for the purpoce of dealing In lands, mineral rights, water rights, etc., and it is'beliet-ed thft company Intends to undsrtak«j some important water-power develop­ments. Messrs. J. S. McAlister. W. R. Walker and A. E. Millner are the in­corporators. Governor Stone, of Penniylvania, has vetoed appropriation bills carry­ing about $2.250.0C0. Mr. Billy Boy’ln calls attention to the most remarkable base C '.11 team in the state. They are called the Cary Red Shirts and every member of the team is a son of Mr. Jim Jones, except one, the captain, and Mr. Jones fills that place himself. Mr. Jones is the father of 23 children, 18 of them boys, so he has enough ma­ terial to select a crack nine and does not use the same pitcher every day. Mr. Jones captains the team and plays soccmd bas^. while the’ youngest player Is snort stop.—Raleigh Times. The trial of Rol>ert S. Fosburgh In tonn^tion with the death of his sister. Hay-Fosburg, last August waa begunFittSlMd*" flee of tliTTBISt Garret Company, In the business dlstri^u«.r sii people, killing one, probably f» tally wounding another and more oi less seriously wounding four others He was hlmsell finally killed by ofr fleers who tried to overpower blnu The victims: John R. Garrett, ageJ 40 junior member of the firm of tbs R<ibert Garrett Lumber Companj' died at hospital; Michael Kelly, aged 50, died after being taken to the po­ lice station. Injured: Dr. Cbarlea McGee, aged 30, shot In back nd prob- ably fatally wounded; Police Sergeant \ Wm. Dodge, shot in neck, wound serious; Michael McDonald, detective, shot in leg. slight; Jos. Falthger, po llceman. shot in hand, wound slight. Kelly had lived in Leavenworth for years and at different times had en- gaeed in minor business enterprises, lie was arrested and adjudged in- sane, Garrett and four others testify­ ing against him. After a Jrear in the Topeka asylum, Kelly w«« released. He had been acting Queerly again and had declared, that he would kill the five men who sent him to the asylum. For two weeks he has been practicing shooting with a revolver daily at the Fort Leavenworth range. Soon after 12 o’clcok Wednesday he appeared at Garrett's office and with­ out warning shot Garrett as he sat at his desk. Garrett fell to the floor and Kelly d'Sliberately fired four more shoU into the prostrate form. Leaving his victim for dead, Kelly ran to the rear of the company’s lumber yard and began reloading his revolver. Present­ ly he returned to the office to find Dr McGee, who had been attracted by the shooting, bending over Garrett Level­ ling his revolver, Kelly took aim a* the physician and fired. The bullel struck McGee iu the spine, and h» toppled over near where Garrett lay.. Then followed an exciting street fight between the madman and offi­ cers who came upon the scene. Kelly, flourishing his revolver, dashed through the lumber yard. He met Ike Healer, a laborer, and shot him in the hand. A tew yards further od he encountered Sergeant Dodge. Tho two exchanged shots as they ran. One bullet from Kelly's revolver struck Dodge in the neck, but not before that officer had shot him in the shoul­der. Kelly kept running and was soon confronted ♦ by Detective Mo Donald and Officer Flather. McDon­ald dropped Kelly with a bullet in the aeck. Doage raised his revolver, bul it failed to work and catching up wifj the murderer, he crushed his skull with the weapon. Kelly was carrlei; to the station In an unconscious con­dition. He died soon after his ar rival there.Garrett did not regain consciousness and died an hour after being taken to tho hospital. Dr. McGee is still sut foring seriously and it is believed he cannot recover. Dodge's wound is not considered fatal, while the wounds of the others are slight Seaboard Strike Settled, Norfolk, Special.—The Seaboard Ail I>!ne machinists’ strike was settle; Tuesday on the hour basis. Porstmouti Ri.hmond, Raleigh, Hamlet, Monroe and Abbeville mechanics get 27V4 ccnli per hour and all other points 30 csnts fThe apprenticeship system is to ti regulated. James O’Connell, president ' / —y/nn»l Ravrj / V f‘7 Point:<. 1 At If Stth. 1K>1. UaUj|Dail.^ < )......... 8 0Tiu| 7 4.’)lj ih(bo .R y )---12i>pl2ail U ..........................le........................41A> * >4............................. . ^ > A I'J on. 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RnuxvUlo........................., I AM heviUo..................................1 7or«i jip o rto n b n rK • • ...................ilOIlwt G > ! m p b ia................................... 0U6p :>l KlTp I).’•Dp I I I Ni*wYorklFu.k.tt).PhiJndolp'hi.i ......BaHiraoro................Wawhi'Kt'n ^>. Ry *_ K ich m o u ti_________Difo\ ■ ... cyjni............jWa._lBldKSt ib in, U .K .. I o n ......................... ■CvUle.................«!a... - ■ • ibin is*4>.'k.v». ..mu ................ebarp.................hville............ u T v illo.................. ......... ibii (Sv. Kt.)..'.............oil..................... ah ...........k nvillf* 9 lui k| 0 41:v Ilf10 ‘>11 .iuAiimi - won -I i.v-’i’ ipyi»rj- ,1 5-Bv U4^i« I oH'.l- ,4 IP I Sloepin:; Cnr Sorvicl le n t <laily . onA N ew Y ork.33 a n d S fW Y ork niiil U raw inB -nx»ni slii'inuK *"i, ta unci N rvv \o r k .iJ»-vpin(r.’arsb»MW«H>nF«*rl 1| > ar;»nnah. W ashiH R t»H iii n n irrt b f iw r n i l ..iiojui an< H ’funrJi>flo »n«l S*-- f (. Iv irlo ttf find w. :K a n d :y>—I . 'I - m a n tlraw inK -i\x>in butTc'- ■ •n JefkH onvin** nnd I 8lw ? in x c « rs « a n il C h-nri.'tt.* a u d s fKTVi* aU nn-als **nn»nt«. 1 1 carH .Iai*knonTiii«’ outt* d a lly iH 'tw voii Ju e lc + ia v iltl I.TiJi AshrnlU-. I A N K 8 .H A N X 0 S , S .I 1 .1 I .I h ir< lV -P .S H ™ .-«8r.. j* h in ? to n . U 1- „ 17 .H .T A M 1 K .t Gee. Pnss. l>iv. I i Atlanlii.Un- ‘ PROMINENT PEOPj of the International Machinists, cam? to Portsmouth for a conference with the above result Wrecked By An Explo.iion. Sfockholm, Sweden, By Cable.—.\n exposition of petroleum on boartl ihe American schooner, Louise Aileliii<>. which left Philtidelphia. April 21. f >r Stockholm, resulted In the death oi Captain Orr, ten members of tl:« schooner’s crew and four Swe;Iish nis toms officials. Two of the crew wme saved. The explosioin set the s ho'-n''! afire and the blazing petroleum engulf­ ed the vessel and those on board. The Constitution Wins. New London, Conn., Special.—In a fine southwest breeze over the :^0-mile course from New Haven Breakwat<-i- to Sarah’s Lodge, at the mouth (»f No'v London harbor, the Constitution again showed what a superb racing craft she Is in light weather and sraootii water. She beat the Columbia eight minutes and twenty-three secondc-. fairly and squarely. There were no fiukes, the wind holding true an I steady with the exception of a shift of a couple of points after two-thirds cf the distance had been covered. Th'' Ureeze at no time was of s«ifi''lcn: strength to raise a single whitecap on the waves. First Bale at Galveston. Galveston, Special.—The first hale of the new crop to be received at Galveston arrived Wednesday from Bee county, and was sold at auction on the Galveston exchange at c^’nts a pound. The bale weighe i 5^*** pounds and classed good middling. It was shipped to Liverpool by the steamer Iran, to be resold. Inte-nal Revenue Receipt.*;. Washington. D. C.. Special.—Th«> m- nual preliminary repoit of Commis­ sioner of Internal Revenue Yerkpr.^s. fo.* the fiscal, year ended June 30. shows that receipts from all souri- s . Internal revenue for the year agg'^Jv. * ed 1306,871,069. an Increase of *561 over the receipt.? ior the fiscal > '2 ended June 30, 190«. t-'ccretery cf Agriculture '^Vilfon hii le' ««ed to reappoint “Farn'cr l^‘*n as head of the New York Weather Bureau._________________ Brief Alention. An order to cut municipal expjns’s fias been given in every department a. Chicago, 111. All saloons in Fort Scott, Kan., hive been ordered closed and the manda e has been obeyed. Two oil plants at Albermarle. N. C-. have been sold to the Cotton Seed Oil Trust for $62,000. Secretary of W’ar Root returned to Washington, D, C., to meH Govern T All->n, »Yillinm K. VaiuK-i >ilt V n aio r T honins Ifl.ralccl h i s ix ly -o i.u 'h n . | llovernor William 1'. •' w aJits th e o lli'v nil. Secretary of the ItiU-ri' i| siK-mling his va.-nlioii 1 New ^ •uuswiik. I I’rosidonl ComiuM-s. <if ill 5’oderation <>f is if it a mount.'‘ii rc{n-:si. Tho l>uke of installed as Masons, to .sucnvd Count AthdliH-l .^U-rnli* irlan lijjhtov for ilu* at rnanlcbir;;. is ou a Austin iJobsou. tiu* i signed from Jhr I'." :ind wilt n‘ci‘ivc :ai aiMitij finm the t’l ) •’II- r Lord ItolKTls has wrilt'l Miss .Mary Cusns I calls Coiiot-al olj soMiers of auv Thcodoiv the .\mal;;auialrd .\ssn<-i| Stool and Tin \Vork»-rs. f Pitlsburg. IVun., and years old. It is ruinorpil that : races Sir Thoni:is Lii'i his couucciion wiili world and will proliuM| ^ turf for a tliausf. rrofcssor Kni.<t !l:n* nnturalisi. will ,t:iv»? uji 1<| Univorsity of professor of Z«»'l<)^'.v snto the condiiiuu of his born in IS-’M. General l-'itzhn.irli i fpi?nds lhat lu; will settle down n‘-»r k engage in a hasiurss 'character.'’ FurJht-r tl cliues to expUnii. RAMS’HORN bI 3 the only '-ure f«>r • i , The danger of mot in that they art- ^re slippery. ■ The man who is lil ppection of his n(*ich| ^eak on introspeci; ' The herat of lov.* ^ t will bring God | pf our facilities. ' We are almost im l| those who d'*ny ih« I■ themselves aloncl [ The man who canrij f his own follies wl ally out of all wisdl I There is one habitl ng with your handH pat is, keeping yoif [ They who plan to IW s only conteplatrl lever permitted to iJ I According to tliel ieeping saint heavJ ilcked place, for • • - .:arri’t^ |ir..-s s ilislri'-i- -u '’ Ji>3C . p n ’i’H'’''' I t li.T an.I m'"-'’1 . four oth.'M - l i ’lv kilK-il >->■ '''■ him I K. afo I til.' It'"' "f I i.miuT c-.-m pany l „ l.a.'l K olly. a i;« l I ' ink.-n U' !l"' I"*' I c .i - n r . CliarK-a |m i„ 1-n. k n.i p r o lv .«' :>orpo,inc lU.'K. l,-P ,in a U ;. lU -t.-rtivi-. I; J .if. K Jl'.hs.T . r » l r.3.1. "omu! fligt"- : i.,'avi>iiw orth (nr l- o m tim .'f ’.W'l ^nl.’r p r isc s. aa .l a;ij>"lf'’^; H!ir OlllC"S U 'Slify- Aflt-r a V'-'ar |i ; ,' . l v "'US roU 'aseJ. M .: qiKH-rly ap aiii a n d | i i ho "OiiM I:'" *'*® ■ v.im to tU c a sy lu m . ;-as I'.'oii p ra cticln !; vi.Iv.-r J a ily a ; th o rar.i:.'- W o .ln o sd a y lie I r o ti s ortu'O o n .l 'vitii- : O arrelt a s Uo sa t , :, :t I'l'Il to th e floor .u clv firoJ fo u r •• ,<iraU' iorm . L e a v in g _ . a .i. Ivrtly r a n to th e. J n ,n V ^ lu m b e r ya rd am S I g h is re v o lv e r . P r e se n t- l u ih c o S c e to fin d D r. ; i-. i-n a ttr a c te d I'T th e ilia o v er G a rrett. L ev e l- I v e r . K elly to o k a im a« an d fircJ . T h e b u lle t -.u th o sp in e , a n d bt" f iu 'a r w h er e G a r r e tt la y - • |.\e 'a a n e x c itin g str e e t th e niadm -an a n d o® - . upon th e s c e n e . K e lly . I his revolver, dashed lumber yard. He a laborer, and Ebot him V f.nv var.ls lurther oo ■, 'i .:.'rgeant Dodge. The , .r<hots as they ran. One SellVs revolver strttC-K- . rnerk, but not before I had shot him in the shoul- ' k e p t n u in '.n g a n d -ivae bv n e t e c t iv e M e- ' o S c e r ' r ia th e r . M cD on - ■ K ellv "■''b a b u lle t in tn c ■ i- e r a ise d h is r e v o lv e r , but 1 w ork an .i c a tc h in g u p w !t.. ■ er er h e c r u sh e d h is sk u l. V .'apon. K e'.ly w a s c a r r ie i. iMU ia an u n c o n s c io u s con- . d ied so o n ai'ter h is a r j'l'i.l n ot r e s a in c o n s c io u s n e s f J a n h i.u r a lte r b e in g “ l i - a l D r. M cG ee is s t ill Buf I r io u s lv an d it is b e lie v e d he T - o v e r . D o d g e's w o u n d is ;.red la ia l. w h ile th e w o u n d s .ors ar..- slig h t. LiboarJ Strike Sstlled. Spe.-ia;.—The Seabjard Ail hinists' s;ril:e was setf.e: J- on the hour basis. Porstmout! Ir 1, Ualeizh. Ilainlet, Mcnrtx I.evillf moohanlcs get iTVa ccn'.:I and all olhor points 30 e^nis J.prentic'eshin system is to ti I. ' James O’Connell, president I !n!--rnal;onal Machinists, cam- Itsmouth for a conference witt l.ve result. _____ I recked By An ExplosliSS^ Lholm. Sweden. By Cable.—An J.;on of petroleum on board the I an schooner. Louise Adelaide,J left Phiiadelnhla, April 24, for lolm . ros-'ltcd in the death ol Orr ten members of tti = crow and four Swedish cus- ■officials. Two of the crew- we.e 1 Ti.e explosioin set the s-hocn-i tn.i the blazing petroleum enguU- V ves..^“l and those on board. ^ I The Constitution Wins. X London. Conn.. Spccial.—In a lonthw-cst breeze wer the 39-mile Ic from New- Haven Breakwater Irah s Lodge, at the mouth of New lea harbor, the Constitution again led what a superb racing croS^ §,= in light weather and smooth Ir She beat the Columbia eight l-es and twenty-three seconds, I- and squarely. There were n^ ' . the wind holding true anJ ■ Iv with the exception ot a shift o. Iiipie ot points after two-thirds cl Idistance had been covere^ Tne Ize at no time was of sufficic . % ,h to raise a single whiiecap on avcs. ________ I First Bale at QaWeston. lalvcston. Special.—The first bale I ,e new crop to be received at ■ veston arrived Wednesday I county, and was sold at auction ■the Galveston exchange at 15 cen I: ,und. The bale weighed »•< liLds and classed good middling. I.s sh ip p ed to L iv erp o o l by m e lazier Iran, to b e resold^J Intc r.al Revenue ivashin.qtun. D. C.. Spec a . |a : preliminary repo.t ° jo.-Iner of Internal Revenue Verker |e fiscal year ended June io-As lhat receipts fiom al grceat- i-rn al revenue for I,I over the receipt-' .0. the Iced June 30. 190'’. I Fccr<:tary cf Agricultnro^^>|:,°pu„n I , • .w l to reappoint ta rn Iv heal of the New York liureau._____ —------— Dricf/-Hentioo. , I An order to cat ™“”‘^g-jrtaient a: 1,s been given in every depart® , f l.it-ago. III. ^jve i .MI saloons in Fort Scott. nianda « : I -en ordered closed and the m ^ las been obeyed. ^ TWO oil plants at Albermarle , |l.av. been sold to the Cotton 1 1: list for $C2,oOO. .p.umed <0 iI Ecerctary of War ^ Govern I <I a.,hington, D. C., to m«-t lAIl'n. 30W[':i4dp 2 ft 4i2p. 3 4 52o\<. 4 2.*>a rt-lipl S57n jSOp, ;twi, U '4:>h'Tiw . l-JOp 2.Vin .laapi Horn . 4 aUa .■TM) and W—Now York and Florida Ex- [•iiiff cars _ ... Pullm an drawinrf- . -otr cars In’iwoen P«>rt TomiKt. Jox*k- tbavannnh. Wa*ibinRtoinind Vpw York, tt sleeping oiirti l»*i\v»**-n Ohnrlottr niid ianel riuirlctte nml Norfolk. Diuing ./een Ch:irl<»f:e nnd Savannah.^ aud U . S. Fast Thronsrhodraw-inKTonm Imffor K!<v.*'>ingcarsbo- “ and Now York and Pull­er cars l>ol\v«'«-n Auausta andChar- :iud Riel nd. Dininc ;1 tJH'ais enro'ife. Pullman sleep- w«*«.n Ja<-k««jnvillo and Columlna. J J- ]K«t \vv*v u Jitrlwm viHe and Ciociu- ibfvilie. UAiJXOir, ts. n . H AKDWICK, ■’.& K f U .I ig r ., G e n . PaH . A g t..1. D. C. AVashingfon. D. C.U )E . R . W . U C S T ,*nR-:. Ap’t., Dir. P:»v5. Ag't.. itHr<.-»a. O>srli-.s;on. rt. 0._ OMINENT PEOPLE. ___ K. Vnudei Jilt w ill race in Thoiins C. rialt lias just 111 bir'uday. r William I). Jolks, of Al- auts the oUicc for anollier jry of tlio In(crior IIi(oIicocU Ills vncntiuu salmon lishiug , nmswick. Dl (•oiuporp. of llio American ot Labor, is reeuperalius pntaiu ictrcat. uke of CoiinanslJt has hocn t as Gr.nid Master of British pto suceccU Edward VII. FAd<?ll»crt .jtcrn'.jcrg. the Aus­trian fighter fcr the Koeir, captured at raardrl>i>rg, is ou a visit to the Bitea Stales. Anslln Dohsmi. the poet, has re­signed from the Briti^:h Hoard of Trade nnd will roci*iv<‘ au additioual peusiou from the C15..U. ; I.onl Uobcrts lias written a letter to Mifs Mary Cusiis Jav, in which he calls General I-ce ‘•one of the greatest solilicrs of any age.” Theodore J. Shaffer, President of the Amalgajuatcd Association of Iron, Steel and Tin Workers, was born in I’ittsburg, Penn., and is forty-five years old. It is rumonul that after the cup ra<*es Sir Thomas Upton will sever lii.s conncciion with tlie yachting world and will probably lake to the turf for a change. Professor Ernst Haeckel, the famous naturalist, will give up lecturing at the I’niversity of .lena, whore he has been Professor of Zoolo}:y Since 3805. owing to the condition of his health. 11c was boi'u iu 1S34. (icneral Fitzhugh Lc3 hns told Ills frleuds that Jc will soon retire and Fcttlo down near Kichniond. Va., and engage In a business “of an Industrial .character.” Further than this he de­clines to explain. RAMS’ HORN BLASTS ^ WO fools’ beadsworse than ('y ——^ 19 Every conver­sion is a miracle. Simplicity is tho sign of serious­ ness. Friends are not good kept in vine­ gar.Emulation is a cure for envy. The giving hinQ is the only cure for the grasping hea:t. The dangf-r of ambition’s paths lies not in that they are steep but that they are slippery The man who is keenest oa the in- cpo?tioD of his neighbors is usua.ly weak on int.rcspection. The hera: of love is the cnly lei383 that will bring God within the focus cf our facilities. We are almost inclined to ajres with those who deny the soul if they speak for themselves alone. The man who cannot get wisdom out I oJ his OTi-n follies will get nothing but felly cut of all wisdom. There is one habit worse th.A wallt- [ Jng with your hands in your pockels, I that is, kesping your heart there. They wh> plan to give God their last I da>‘s only ( onteplate an insult they are I never permiited to perpetrate. According to the measure of the I ^fr-piag s',int heaven must be a very I ^i'.ked place, for tlier« are no tears I tiiere. THE AMEBICAN MARKED INCREASE IN ^ FLOC C en in . F o r 1001 S how i ^ NumtMr Owned An<l Head Orer the Splendid iM t Tenr. la view of the present low price oL Wool throughout the world, the lowest known for many years, and the great prostration now prevailing in the wool and sheep Industry io every eountry, except the United States. It is interest­ ing to know how the American sheep farmer fares. He fares best among all bis competitors, very much the boRt. His Industry has not been ruined; far from it. He is infinitely: bettor off than are the sheep and wool, producers of the rest of creation.; Vastly better off he Is than during the; disastrous free wool period of 1804-97 and the succeeding two years of home market overstocked with for' eign wools brought here free of duty., So great was the glut of foreign wool under the Wilson tariff law that it was not until 1000 that our domestic grow‘J ers began to feel the benefit of the duty on wool restored by the Dingley tariff. Even now there Is on hand a' considerable quantity of the free wool- that was rushed In during the closing months of the Wilson law. A year ago the sheep census of the American Protective Tariff League showed some, surprising results. Con­ trasted with the free-wool period of ISOG the census for 1900 showed a gain of 73.44 per cent iu the total number of sheep owned and a gain of 121.50 per cent. In average value per head. But this was before the bottom dropped out of the world's wool mar­kets. Since then the great slump in wool values has taken place. Have American flocks decreased, and has their value . ^r head declined along with the sheep of Australia, South America and other wool produc­ ing countries? Decidedly not. On the contrary, the sheep census of 1001, just comnieted by the American Protective Tarlli Ijcague, shows: N u m ber of States reporting.......... 40 X u m b e r of reporU received.......... 707 Sheep owned, M arch, 1901..............1,464.781Siicep owned, M arch, 1900..............1,2M,738 Gain for 1901................................ Percentage of gain for 1900.......... It Is found that against an average value of $:j.00 per head In March. 1900, the average value for March, 1001, was $4.04, an increase of fourteen cents p?r head, or 3.59 per cent. It would appear that the American sheep raiser has a marked advantage over the flock master.s of the rest of the world. First, he has In his favor a protective tariff which fixes an Ir­ reducible minimum of market value for his fieeces. Unless the foreign grower sells his wool for nothing, he cannot competc with the domestic grower in the American market. The Dingley tariff takes care of that. Sec- oad, the average value per head of American sheep Is kept up by the enormous demand for mutton and lambs for food purposes. The Ameri­ can wage earner, when busily em­ ployed at high wages, as he has been for three or four years past and now is. consumes from three to thirty times more meat than the other wage earn­ ers of the world. He Is fond of good mutton and juicy ‘ imb, and he is a tremendous consumer of these meats. In fact, he is the best customer the American butcher has. It Is not the. rich people, but the wage earners, that keep the butcher shops going. It is. no longer possible, as It was in 1800;, under Wilson tariff free wool, to buy; a good sheep for fifty cents. That daj-^ has passed, and will come no more a» long as the tariff on wool protects the. wool grower while the tariff on all^ lines of production makes times good, wages high and the consuming capac-; ity of 70.000.000 people three to thlrt.v times greater than the consuming ca­ pacity of tho rest of the people ou •earth.Condensed Into a form easily read and understood, the sheep census of the American Protective Tariff League for 1901 is as follows: N o . N o . of sheep owned ini ,of M arch,M arch, ^ stale. Renorts. 1900.1901. • A r iz o n a ................ 4 37,500 32,500 Arkansas . . . . ... 2 263 530 (.'alifornia............ 7 27,015 30.470 Colorado . . . . .,. 9 70,624 70,030 Connecticut .. .,. 3 35 97 Idaho ................... 0 133,100 194,300 Illinois ................ 6 509 501 In d i a n a............... 59 8,351 7,C16 Indian Ter........... 2 D4 , 155 Io w a ..................... 8 268 ■/ 1,029 Kansas ................ . 8 3,813 ' 4,367 K e n t u c k y........... 55 1,712 . 1,043 L o u isia n a............ 1 V 10 M i r y l a n d............ 6 ? 156 f 302 M ic h ig a n............. 49 4,309 . 4,102 Minnesota .. ... 4 616 935 Mississippi .. .. . 1 2,000 2,300 5fissoun ...• ... c 70 4,033 5,646 M ontana ............. 83 481,520 530,010Nebraska............... 12 5,815 6,460Xevada ................ 1 7,000 7,000 N e w M exico.. . . 9 32,400 52,710 N e w Y o r k........... 17 1.054 1,279 N orth Carolina. . 28 1,223 1.051 .Vorth Dakota . . 20 31,236 32,747 Ohio ...................... 29 24,929 25.735O k l a h o m a........... 5 4,950 6,760 Oregon ................ 32 25,159 28,917 I’ennsylvania. . . 4 882 974 South Carolina.. 1 31 71 South Dakota .. . 17 29,533 37,378Tennessee............. 1 172 98 Texas ................... 25 58,587 37,378Utah ..................... 15 99.925 115,725 V e r m o n t ............. 4 625 a r Virginia................. 5 135 36 Wr.shington .. . . 14 24,027 32,71W c it ^ irginia . . 53 3.785 3." V\‘isconsin .. ... 4 238 271 \ V y jtn in g............ 28 129,102 154,505 707 1,256,738 1,464,781 N u m b er of States reporting....................40 N u m b er of reports received..................707N um ber. Value. Shcon owned in M arch, 1901.........................1,464,781 $4.04 SJicep owned in M arch, ICOO . :...................1,256,738 3.90 Gain for M arch, 1901. 208.043 $0.14 rerceutage of -gain for m i ........................... 0.1655 (M330 tot bat suggest Usei, It means that the Phlladelpl zation.^the largest and most inflii^ o: its kind In the United States, Is uiT alterably opposed to tariff tinkering In any and all forms, whether by out­ right alteration of the schedules or by a scheme of special trade treaties which calls for a reduction of duties on competitive products. At a largely attended meeting of the Manufactur­ ers* Club of Philadelphia, held on the evening of June 17, 1901, the following fesolntlons. previously adopted by the Board of Directors, were by a imanl- mous vote ratified by the club as a whole: Whereas, The great and acknowl­ edged prosperity which this country enjoys to-day Is directly traceable to the protective s.vstem under which our r^.'enues are raised and our Industries have been developed and the condi­ tions created which have given us a commanding position in thu -world’s trade; and Whereas, This country by popular vote has many times and very recently recorded itself in favor of the protec­ tive principle, so that this is no longer a mooted question; and Whereas, Such imperfections as are inseparable from any tariff law are more apparent tlian real, inasmuch as any tariff schedule which may seem to be excessive or unnecessary be­ comes inoperative when the necessity for protection ceases, thus automati­ cally removing the bui'don; and Whereas, The disa.'strous experience caused by the agitation for tariff re­ vision prior to and during 3894 Is slill fresh in.our minds; therefore, be it • Resolved. That the Manufacturers* Club of Philadelphia deprecates any attempt to revive tariff legislation as a menace to our continued prosperity; ind Resolved. That should the alteration of any part of the tariff schedules seem necessary In the judgment of the Industrial CommI.'sion now investigat­ ing the subject, the same should be taken out of politics and be made the subject of careful revision by a non­ partisan tariff commi.*jsion; and Resolved, That in adhrring to the principle of reciprocity as originally formulated iu the Ilepulilican plat­ form of 1900. to wit: “We favor Ihe associated policy of reciproclly so di­rected as to open our markets ou fav­ orable terms for what we do not our­ selves produce, in return for free for­ eign markets,” and as expressed in <‘xisting laws operating through the tariff, which provides for coneessious on articles not jn'oduccd by ourselves in exchange for like conccs.^ions on our domestic products, having iu view tlie preservation of the integrity of our home markets, we have a valuable means for the expansion of our world trade without injury to our industries. The whole o.uestloa of tariff and reciprocity Is contained in these reso­ lutions, In them the attitude of the great body of industrial leader.s throughout the United States is. we believe, accurately defined. There •<hall be no tariff tinkering on tlie dis­ honest plea that the trust evil may be thereby remedied, or for any other rea­son now apparent. There shall bo no experiments In the line of foreign trade expansion which lake from any domes­ tic industry the measure of protection guaranteed by the tariff law as it now stands; no displacement of American labor, no decrease of employment and wages through the increased admis­ sion of foreign made goods competing with goods of a like character now being successfully produced in this country. Sound Republican doctrine, sound protection, sound patriotism, sound practical, business common- sense! Sees Kvcry F in s U U Oirn. G reatest C01 The population of the world is about 3,000,000.000; of the United States, 77,- 000,000, or about one twentieth. Yet we consume about one-third of the whole world’s products. Why? Be­ cause we do forty-nine fiftieths of our pwn work, make big money and live like lords. -The Kind VVho Mean Well.” It may be true that there is no such thing as luck, yet there are some folks who manage to succeed in spite of their very earnest efforts.— i’rw. l‘’lnancial Sut>reinaoj.Another step iu the progress of the United States toward its destined posi­ tion at the head of creditor nations is Indicated by the taking for this money market of the whole Issue of a loan negotiated by the city of Frankfort. The amount is not so very great, ^J,750,(X)0, but It is the first time that the whole issue of a long term bond of a German munlcipalKyhas been placed in New York. Money is cheaper here than there, and a portion of the large current indebtedness of Europe to the United States for manufactured goods, as well as food and raw materials, will be settled for by this bond issue in place of money.-^’hlcago Public Pol­ ity. _______________^ The “Historical Novel.” Since life does not come to him, he goes rather dispiritedly in pursuit of .life; instead of writing of what he has isecn, he strains his eyes to see some­ thing that he may write about, no mat­ ter what. If we take, for example, th^ historical novel which for some years past has been so much in fashion, it would seem, judging of course from in­ ternal evidence, only, that the novelist begins by selecting his epoch; he then procures the best hundred and fift>- books on the subject, and reads them carefully, notebook in hand; when he has learned the names of the principal personages of the time, and has jotted down turns of speech and specimens of costume appropriate to an archer or a highwayman or a damsel in distres?. he adds a suitable proportion of scenery and dialogue and if possible a plot; anU so the thing is done,—Macmf//a/s’s Magasine, * Com; Jesse Ptf Lucius Reed, was lynched. Good rains are reported 1: crn Kansas and Western Mlssoui For stabbing her love to death7 Julia Trabes, colored, has been sen lenced to death at Louisville, Ky. United States Boundary Oommls- cioner Cunningham was drowned !□ the Rio Grand River, near El Paso, Tex. Three companies of Virginia’s Na­tional Guard have gone into camp at the Pan-American Exposition, at Buf« falo., N. y. T h e N o rth . Machinists at Peoria, 111., have de­ clared their strike off. Dying at the age of 104’, Mrs. Mary Burroughs, of Marysville, 0., left 28a descendants. In New York 30,000 garment work* crv went on strike. A head-on collision on the Big Four road near Crawfordsville, 111., killing one man and injured two. Francis Schlatter, “Divine Healer,” r.'as fined ?10 in Washington, D. C., for vagrancy. An Injunction against strikers was asked by the Variety Iron Workers, of Cleveland, 0. , For spanking a monkey when It bit a child, Tony Roslana, of Newtown, L. I., was fined for cruelty. The First National Bank and the National B-ank of the Republic, botli of New York, will probably consolidate. Governor Odell, of New York, will inspect all the State’s canals anJ waterways before recommnding legiS' lation. A deadlock in the Board of Educa­ tion of Moimt Verno, N. Y., has been caused by attempts to find a site for the Carnegie library. A man claiming to be Senator Han­ na’s son, but who is an impostor, was arrested in WashingtoB, D. C., for sv/inldlng jowc’ers. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Lehr saileJ from Paris for New York. M. Fournier, who won the Parls- Berlin automobile race, will come to Buffalo, N. Y. Efforts are being made to extend the steel strike to the tube works at McKeesport, Pennsylvania. Sunday the hottest day ever re­ corded in r.r cdons of the Middle West, l>i6- tharmomcier registering as high >i5 315 (ivgrecs In places. The steamer Humboldt has rcachel Seattle. Wash., with ?250,0C0 in gold from the Klondike. Foreign. The man under arrest at St. Auna des Monte. Quebec, believed to be Blandin, the murderer is some other person. The strike situation in the mining district at Rossland. B. C., affejt'ng 1200 men. is unchanged. The cause of the recent fire in Sul­tan Abdul Hamid's harem, at Constan­tinople. is found to have been due to nn intrigue against one of the ladles there. Admiral Count Loguin Heyden, who served nearly £0 years in the Russian Navy, is dead. Count Leo Tolstoi has rallied from his attack of fever. Dismounted British infantry officers will hereafter carry carblncs Instead of swords. Czar Nicholas has relaxed the rigor of some of the Russian press restric- tions.Ministerialist gains marked the French elections to the councils-gen- eral. Mme. Schmahl, of Paris, has start­ed a crusade for abolishing the kitch* en in homes. niscellaneous. At the age of four-score years Philip Dietrich is to be tried for murder at Nome.Gold and silver jewelry valued at $223,413 v.'as imported into the Philip­ pines during 3900. Floating on her back. Miss Cora Beckwith, of Buffalo, N. Y., will try to pass through the Whirlpool Rapids of Niagara River. A stamp duty of $250,000 was paid to the British Treasury on Carnegie’s $10,000,000 gift to the Scottish univer­ sities. The Window Glass Trust is worried by the organization of many co-op­ erative plants. It ly said the city of Chicago faces bankruptcy because It is conducted under an antiquated charter.feiiator Har.na. it is reported, hac cor.Folidated In pr.)iicrties In the Mas;l. Ion bituminous coal district.It is estimated that the estate of Jacob S. Rogers will lose its Identity under the management of the Metro­politan Museum of Art. The bodies of the Misses Colburn, who, with their father and two oth­ ers, were drowned by the capsizing of a_yacht, have been recovered. Mrs. Robert Fosburgh enacted a pathetic scene at the grave of her daughter, whom her son is accused of shooting. Mrs. Kruger, wife of President Paul Kruger, died of pneumonia at Pre­ toria. About 30 West Point caaets were prostrated by heat and fatigue while attending General Butterfield’s fun­ eral- The collateral inheritance tax on Pierre Lorillard's beQuest of ^ncocas tarm to Mrs. Lily Barnes Allien may swell New Jersey's treasury to the ex­ tent of }60,000. Dr. Gilles de la Tourette, a noted French specialist on mental diseases, has been sent to an insane asylum. Two hundred girts are out of work b« closing of the package coffee dc- paJiLient of the Wool»on SpJo» Ck>., H Toledo, 0. - • h ^underspindles......oration. The ^ now l),000 spindles ^ Work is progressing constniction of the Aloxani*.^(Ala.) Mills, previously announ^^™^ to be a 10,000 spindle plant To^ walls of the main building are about up, two stories high, and the machin­ery will be placed as soon as the strucure Is In readiness. The Invest­ment will he $200,000. Work, is progressing rapidly on the construction of the Elizabeth Mills at Charlotte. N. C. The mill building is under roof and will be completed next week. The company expects to begin operations by October unless unfor- seen delay arises. The spindles (ring) will number 8,000. \ complete mill town Is being established as a result of this enterprise. The Nantucket Mills of Spray. N. C., announced recently its intention to increase capital from $150,000 to $250 000. This action has since been taken and the funds are being ex­pended for extensive Improvements. The mill building has been enlarged and additional spindles have been or­ dered A ll S o rts . The armv quavtermarrter’s dppir^ ment calls "for bids on 1.000,00) yar,U of cotton khaki, subject to an iticroi£c ot 100 por cent, bills to be submiitcl bctoro nnon o[ August 15. This citef- tually disposes of reparts tbTit the d!-- partmcnt is to Eubstitutc kiiaki-cuiorid Ilanncl for the cotton material. It is understood, however, that spcciftci- tions on the near contract have been changed and now call for a perspira- tlon-proof fabric. Polly Pinktights—“The tenor's vo.‘ C is going back on him. Eon t you think he seems rather thrna;y? F.inny Footlights—“On the contrary he s?ems (jultG chesty.” “When Jack proposed lb me,” Remarked the maiden trim,“The boy was all at sea.” And j'Ct she landed him! Sc4advt. otSanTiiDEAi-'w Uusine^h Coi-i-i:c*t: The man who loses liia temper loses his friends. ________________ It roqiiiros no oxperienco ilyo with I’ut- KAM Fadbi,ks.s Dvks. Simply boiliiiR your roo«1r in the dye is nil lliat is n<'CfBs.iry. SoM by n)i drnqgiKtB. The new .Metropi»lit;jn J’liilway of l*;iris now caiTie.s a tlai^y average of ll.”.(KX) pas- own ^ for you, fol your head is a Ayer’s Hair V i^ advance will prevent the splitting. If the splitting has begun, it will stop it. tl.N lbolltc. All dittislil,. If your drncgist cannot sapply yon, Bcnd us one diiiiar nn«l we win express yon a bottle. Bo suro andj»ive the name of your nearest exi^ess office. Artdres*. J. C. AYER CO., Lowell, Mwa. Sick Headache? Food doesn’tAppetite pc :d?' digest well? loor? Bowels constipated? Tonme coated? It’s your liver! Ayer’s Pills are liver pills; they cure dys­pepsia, biliousness. 2Sc. All drugebts. YACKIN VALLEY INSTIT BOONVILLE, N. C. BUCKINGHAiiA’SDYE^i;ik^»e 3«o»o«o»o »o »c<'Om:'»o>o*o «o « 1 C A P U D IN E I 2 F o r lIK A n A f’IiK S 1 5 an d I*'KVKIiS. 5 * Tnken with Q'llnfEO it j«rev**iit.s N*ar- C 9 voi;sn« «s and A<‘hinjf nud rHliinvH tfco 1 t Kovor. A T A L L i)K i;asr01lE :> S ♦ >^04<>404>>KX a^040f040404C Is the oldest and only bnsinesscollegein Va. own­ing Its building—a grand new one. N o v.ncatioiis. Ladies & seutlemcu. BookkeepinK.SUortljaml, TiTJewriting,-' Pcumauiibsp, Telegraphv, iic., ‘ Leading business.college south ot the'Patomse river.”—AiiVrt. S/fHojrrapXrr. Address, G . M . S n iith d e a l.J ‘rcsi< Irnt. X ich m o n il. Vo- The Aineri.'an quail lias been success­ fully acclimatizcd in .‘^woden. r< ad i« 'N ( 'n i l \V < > ar Slio<*« line m e smaller nfior rsin ; AUcn't* Foot- luwc, a powder fov »ho fee}. It makes or new fihoes easy, l.'ures B'n-ollen. hot. sweat­ing, aching inj?rowing nails, corns and bnnionp. At all drngiistB an<l fihoc pfr.nH, 25r. Trial package FllE E by mail. AdurCi J AJbn S. Olmsted, Le Boy, N. Y.___ The lirst porcelain factory in America was established in I’hiladclpliia. U cat F o r ilic ISowrlN. ?ro m atter wbat ails you. hcadanbo to n rancor, yon will never get well until your Lowels aro put right, (.'ascahkts liolp untnro. (uro Tou >v"ithont a gripo or pain, prodncc easy natnral movementn. cont you jnat iO cento to start getting yonr health back. Tap- CAHRTS Candy Catliartie. the genuine, put tip in metal boxe«i, every tablet ha.n C. C. C. stamped on it. Beware of imitations. Actions speak louder than v.ord?, and actors loxider than either FITS permanently eure<l. No fllsi or nervous­ ness after first dav’s use of P r. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. trial bottle and tre.'vtiaa free U r.B .Il.KLTKg. Ltd.. 181 Arch St.. Pbilo. I’a T he m an w ho shaves himself is ahvayd getting in a scrape. SOZODONT for the TEETH 2S c ,.AY,FEVER E SEND rOR • i s , , FREE TRIAL BOniE A0SSE23 D R .T A F tT S E .I3 0 ^S T _N .Y C lT Y UORNER MILITARY SCHOOL, ■ I OXFUIID, N. r. The be»1 d ln clp liiied N cboul and th eiiiu * t IborociKlily Seliortim <;uurun*lee<l. Aciual Resalls are llie Eest Argumeols. Fur afJdrT*si FoiiitdcU 1851. )• jr. r, lIO K M at. F.ill To-m opoas Au4-n. 13»l. A scbo<il fnr both sfxe*. hwalt ifaliy l'>Mt-« I In one of ihe bo-it Kp^.lonn «»f .N. iiT students fr»m -4 count i‘h in i ^t.'lteH. Kxp;Mtse-t uuly $ll.<0 for loniu <>rit) I>;r iUu>t .ite 1 u.ita-1 k'uo K. IT. IIOKN, Prinrlpal. Atlanta College of Pharmacy. Wi*ll cq u ip p ^'d l.abornti»rl<w . pxc**HeHt T o.i'h»r.< . >i m*.* D lsptM isiry. w h-'re hun<lre<l» of p :e*-rl]> tinn« liy thi* l» £ t |>h.v8U*lanH n ro < iln lly 'b y Ihn s n u li'u t'i. M UihM itso b ta i t III ea In fu rn o .ju n n - w ell na tiio lo J . th n > rftlrn l n a tu re . T li« m « ri4.r.> u r» :rn » lu n to » tb n n »*» ••an k u |‘iI--. l>U. «!»•;«».'K. I’A W S K , I'nyuo'd C ueii.l'- il I..-11) *ratorj-, U if.ni U . A tla n m . OF VIRGINIA,IStHbiUlieit IK3S.1 he • iitv-fourth sus^Ion «iU e»»mmen'*« ik'IoUt Int. ij.i. Ui*i)iirtnion’''ff >«» f*iarjoar'** MirRP. t*n. rull'lrv. Ihtvi' yfuf< o«*urBC. foes $65.i»rMf PU; till**!!!.................."- .........................'Uanuwy. t.^o jtc.irt c-ir^ .0* !• j«-I ■!», Kor fur.hiT purtlcularsn '“‘ckrI S hE^ T0HFKIN3, H D., Dean,V*. I— CO III m mi Ki’gincs, Wo« d 11 *nert», R. i<. Cr»8'-tie 3 \incliiaes aud O ther Machlaery, g M anut-ctured by th • 5.S:ilem Iron Work*, Sniem. N.C. ' TATE SPRING, ---Jt Iti Ilix KIcfirif l.it'htK. M«*nmUiiicr Works, \\nirr • iirr» In >ii.1)VK-»'|> :.i. .>■> i .fit » i-r in*-J<iu<M.r, ai»i KiiiniMK, Ulii-uuintUin iiiiilHltH»i 1 iH-a» ^. WrlH- s.r r.iin|-Mi-t. T llO *. O w ner A: X*ropr. TA1 E SI'IU M J. TESNE-'SKE. WANTED rot tbeA G E N T S Brohard Sssh Losk and Prohard Door HoldsrAftlvft work*K .«.vvrywliLTa c*n e:im Wff money; HlwnyH a lor wur tfootis.i ri'-MS ivnn.«, tree V«»r5<-ataiuj> iSriUtisu. IMK ISlt«II.Utl> ro..^ Sialiwu “ O.” I'UlladoluUi*!. A’a. FEMALE COLLEGE, SO I' KtSKW IIKUK Is thoro such an ideal ot C IIU IST IA .N KD U CA TIO .N . Lecture Coor.se. Library. Apparntn.s, Cat>- ioet.H. Firat-ola.«3. Byoi-Keepli»g, Shortbiiud, Art, Mu.cic. •imch ro ll'r an<l rurxii w ont »>oo»ol to tiiuoiumlsana | O P r r f . Dr. H. a . QUEER SBOXa. fox B. **Tlie .'««aro thni made Wrft Tolnt rnBOn»«** HclLHENNY’S TABASCO. SC&LES aniirxntewLAVrltoforrri-w. JKSSK MAIil^E.H Vo S til., Ii.»i.TiU'mr. Ml*. usEesRTwas'cuRE.’!; FOR COLORED STUDENTS OF BOTH SEXES. ST. .AUGUSTINE’S SCHOOL, RAL12ICII, N. r. ColIeslatryNornialyliidualrlali T fbId* lnK.<«rli»ol for NurKe*. $6.00aM nnih. Stti'^ent'* m ay irn rk tb e lr and K<i tn SiKht-fek-honl. C arp rn irj:. Prliitlnif. OrlcKlay. intt. U nctcrthcE pl*c «iarC hurcli. aSth V«*ar. hSr ();italnRU«. sppi}- lu H e r . A . B . U u a irr .K ftlrlcli. .V C-.« IThampson’t Eye WatarLION COFFEE A LUXURY WITHIN THE REACH OF ALL! “ TIib Handwriting on flie Wall.” V /atch our next advertisem en t. The hand that traccs on the wall Tho&e words of import frrcat^ Confers a boon on one and aU By mentioning the d.ntc. September fir't wi!l surely be Red-letter day indeed, W hen the new Premjum List we see By the I.icn guaranteed. • T is best to bear the date in mind. So that it won't be missed. The day cn which we first shalJ find The latest Premium List O f useful presents rich and rare. For adult and for young, For L I O X C O F F E E drinkers share \Mio have his praises sung. September first your grocer ask. For Lion’s latest List; If he’s without, 'tis briefest task To WTile us and insist. Inclose a two-cent stamp, and w j The List will .send to you. You reap a big reward, you see, .A n d Hf-c have to do. Just try a package of LION C O F F E E and you will understand the reason of its popularity. W O O L SO N S P IC E C O ., TO L ED O , O HIO. • i ': 9 12i 10 . 12tolS fTckens........................ 12^ LOCAL aOTES ANB IHCIDBHTS lands uear resold Monday, at the Court House door, you want a nice little farm tliis will be a good opportuulty. Subscribe for the Kccord aud keep posted on what is happening in jour county. ■\Vork h.as been delayed abont a\veekonthe bank building on account of brick A car load of biick came Friday, and work will All ,io j w ort spot cash, before it I goon be resumed. leaves the oBite.Eev. C. S. Cashwell, once pastor W . Kurfc-es, of King, Stokes church here, but now of JIarion, attended the Bap­ tist picnic here Thursday, and ynade a short aud api>ropriate ad­ dress. _------■ Mrs. FoarlTcanic over from Wiu- ston last Wednesday to attend the coiVuty, T-ibited relatives and friends near Moctsville recently. SU-aw hats anda few more shoes wc are selling at cost at AVlUiaiaa & Andersuu’s. S. F. Shore allendeil ' the Bap- ------------- - ^ DWU iOQb »f Kv ---- tist picnic at thjs jtKacc last Thurs- j ijndside of her father, Mr. .Tohn •lay. ' Lindsay, at South liiver. Mr. I,aTrn5 and dimities selling at re- Lindsay is qnite sick, we are sorry ^luced prrccs at williams & Auder-1 to hear, sill’s-. A. C. Dalton, of (‘■ireensboro, is visiting relatives in t«>vn for sev- fraiddays... .®ce sale of the McCulloch prop­ erly at Fork Church, Monday, August 5th. Vhe r'la-sonic picnic for the bene­ fit (.f the Oxford Orphan Asylum will le held Thursday, Aug. 8th at Clcnieut Gro.'e. 3 pennies at 6c. per y.ard, also a ;iic« line of heavy dress goods at It illiams & Anderson’s. .^del.ne Kerr, colored, of W ash­ ington, U. C., is visiting her old ficma iu Mocksville. If yo’i want one of the best reap­ ers and mowers on the market, c.ill around and get our prices on ihc- Buokeye. Tlie Masonic picnic will be held at (Jlenient Grove Thursday, Aug. Sth, iu the interest of the Oxford Orphanage. A good and worthy canse which appeals to the charity aud humanity of us all. r au.is?il85 to 85.90. Organs to *125, warranted. Piedmont M raic Co. Winston, N. C. Miss Mary Kennedy of Hons- fonville, is visiting Mi-a. E. M. Drtltou for a few days. A lin ; line of calico, and cloth­ ing for men and boys at little prices at Williams & Anderson’s. Mrs. T. E. Douthit of Bower vis­ ited Mrs. E. H. Mon-is last week a&d atti'nded the Baptist picnic. .Myon want a nice sewing ma- eliine, call on the Editor. Miss "Bessie Stoner left last Thursday evening to spend a few Weeks with her father in Ashe­ ville, A niee line of fresh candies jnst li-eceived at Williams & Anderson’s. The protracted meeting at Cen ter, unlerthe management of Eev. , Lcci Sanctiiic3tionist,-continued all of last week. Old papers for sale at 10 cents per hiuidred at the Eecord ofljce, Mr S. A, Woodruff brought in the liist load of watermelons last Satnrdiy. They sold rapidly at B. E. Hnnt’s. Some of our friends remembered Its in a manner that we very much appreciated last week, we hope Others will do likewise, for which Siey will have our thauks. Mrs.- Foard passed through Mocksville Monday on her way home, and informed us that her father, Mr. John Liudsay, of South Eivcr is much better. Brer John B. Webster, in his issue cf the 25th, jumps on the Hon. J. P. Caldwell, of the Char­ lotte Observer, with both feet. ■\ve presume Bro. .Caldwell will not lose any sleep over the i>eifor- njanre. / ’•■sitive characters in this life aic- generally yelped after by file nipatives, but are never tfwioBS’y hurt. fourth mmission on Ti(i al! mail deposi • ^depot or mailed ou the im deprives him of that uiucli of his compensation. The Gov­ ernment has furnished us a lettci box and wc are conferring with the Eailroad authoritie.i with ref crence to erecting the box at the depot. If we do this we will have to collect the mail at our own ex pense from the box, and this avc propo.se to do with iu a few min­ utes of the arrival of each train, and di.spatch the mail proniptlj . We are doing our best to give the public good service, and we trust it will be properly appreciated by fair treatment to n.s. We c-innot build up onr town, nor can we in­ duce people t-,) se-ttle among us if wc display litt leness and nai rov. min- dedness toward those who liie here and are doing their part to Imild up the town. We will await the result of this matter. See W. n . Leonard’s ncAV ad in this i.ssue. Mr. Leonard is an ex- pcsieneed Optician, and when our friends go to Winston, aud need anything iu the Jewellers line and want their eyes examined aud glasses fitted call ou him. Bev. Geo. C. Clement, col. from Louisville, Ky., has been visiting his parents at this place. George is pastor of one of the Louisville Methodist churches. H eisagrad- uate of Livingston College, and a son of Eev. A. T. Clement ot this place. All who have beeu contributing milk to the Masonic Picnic will please remember the 8th of Aug­ ust as the day. We will call on you morsing and evening of that day lor same. Please make ar­ rangements to spare us all you possibly can. Wo need it. Eefreshment Committee. ‘ See McClamroch Bros, ad in this issue. They are Uavie coun­ ty boys and are doing a good bus­ iness at Greensboro. We visited their store room while in Greens­ boro and examined some of their beautiful mantels. If you are go­ ing to build and need anything in their line, call on or write them. The Post-ofilee department has fornished us with a Letter Box to erect at the depot. As soon as we get the permission of the Eailroad (fempauy to erect it, we will put it up aud the mail will be taken from the box just before the ar­ rival of each train and mailed promptly. W ill Woodruff come down on th 3 train from the mountains be­ yond Old Fort on last Tuesday morning and broke out with small pox that evening. He is at Mar tha Brown's, colored, near Lib­ erty, this side otCooleemee, Every precaution should be takeu to pre­ vent the spread of this disease in Davie. W e would suggest that the town authorities require all business I houses iu town to put all melon rinds in a box, and have them re- moved every day. Harry Lyons tells US that he will collect them up ac no expense to the town This is necessary to the protection of the health of the people of the town. W hai about it, gentlement They should not be thrown oat on the streets to lie around and rot. “Snow Ball” bought two pos­ tage stamps Saturday morning and we handed them out to him. He pushed them back, aud informed us that they would do him no good unless they were wrapped up. We informed him that he could wrap them up himself, that we were no store keeper. Well, said Snovr, “ I thought yon was a ‘pofe cAtjGnEl!.” ’ If any one wants to know what a ‘'P&fe caugheb” is we refer them to Snow Ball-. n o w TO OBTAlIf KU- EAL UELIXKEY EOUTES. The following letter from Sena­ tor Pritchard regarding applica­ tions for rural free delivery is self- explanatory; Marshall, JT. C. Jnly 25, '01. Editor of the Gazelle: In response to a number of in- qniries which I have received of late in regard to the cstablislinieiit of free rural delivery routes, I have to say that I have ali eiidy recommended the establialimoat of a number tliroiighout the state, and that the delay incident to the establishment of the.se lines is due to the lack of proper maps and of h- er information. I would suggest that any community which inav dq/iire the establishment of a free rur.al d'»livery route shonld secure a petition, and have a map of tiio proposed route prepared, and transmit the same to me for my endorsement iu order thac epeecly action niav be had in regard to the same. Will you kindly publish this no­ tice, iu order that the people may be fully advised as to how to se­ cure the establishment of a free rural delivery in the different cora- inuuities iu onr state. J. C. ParrcHAKi). If our people want to take ad­ vantage of the rural free delivery service, the abi>ve letter of Sen­ ator Pritchard’s poifits the way to start it up. We should have sev­ eral of these routes running out from Mocksville, but our friends in the country have got to take hold of it, and push it. We are willing to aid them all wc can. W hat about it? Shall we have them! Advance Jiews. The Fork Church lawyer was in town today. O, M. March started today for West Virginia. W . A. Bailey is . suffering with rheumatism. Eoyal March is suffering with inflamatory rheumatism. Daniel Potts, of Arkansas, is in I our town on a visit to kinsfolk. i Success to the Eecord. H ustler. A C A S E IN POINT. The idea tliat glaa.>!es are iiulie- comiiig is disproved every day by the appearance of many haDdsoiiie and distinguished persons. We fit frames to faces, and furnish properly ground lenses, so that our glasses are never a detriment to the appearance, wh ile they add immensely to the com­ fort aud correctness of your vision. W. II. LEONARD, Optician, Winston, X, C. JOHNSON -STO.\E. Tuesday evening at 8 o’clock, Mr. F. M. Johnson was united in inavriage to Mrs. Lizzie Stone, at the residence of Jlr. O. H. Spen­ cer, the bride's father. Mr. John­ son is a popular cleric at J. L. Clement’s store, and the bride is the v. idow of the late Uev. Thom­ as Stone, of the S'. C. Conference. We extend our heartiest congrat- uhitions, wishing them a long hai» py married life. id s! ?, a fall lino Rh'V iGEOCKKIi-Bofall Linds. !^ iesler Sfioes A Specialtj Have had a number of ye.ars experience iu the Merchandi.se busiuess, and think I know how to look after tho wants and needs of the people. A H O m f D And ■ E x a m ia © M y S t e o k of goods at tbc irarcli House on Depot Street, Eiist of Conrt House. I^o.s^}ec•tr^ny, J " . L . G l e m s a t , Mocksville, N. C. o I r i g e w S S S E E P Y O U G O O I .. Onr prices are in reach of all. Our .shipments are prompt OUR ICE PURE. AVe rc-spectfiilly solicit your business for ICE AND COAL. C . n . T H O M A S & C O . w in .?t o n -s a l e;j i, n . c I. KS5-—lV-‘ I r s - .t Ne-,v Flai® 3 T hrcu£i> ^«^ 2 3 ,0 0 0 N e w ’tVo-ftt.-, P h r a s e s t-r.-j D e H n a l o o s P r= i;arcd ‘iV . s u p e rv is io n o :W . F h D ., I - U D . i U n i t e d l . t t t e s C o n i r o is s io .- ic / c f li d u = u i o n , \asE.stsJ ty c corps o:cowfCterA opecialiS.S a*ut editors. R i c h IS in J ln g s . ^ 2 ’ “ '^ P a 3 « s 30C*J lU uotra'.Ioi.a B etter T han Kvei* fo r Horiic, Scbocl, M ii Ofiic*. V.c uTwi ^ ^ , W e b a te rs C o’leg iate D ictio n aryrvithli...s>..rvofS^»u..tiWordspa, li™'»cs. , n qti->lity.st:coniloa£»t:tbtTe« i Snechnen paK* s, etc. of book< seut on applitfJ»»>n. G.6C.MERRIAM CO. PuJblish«rs SpHnsfieid, Maas. M. u. ok s-.tsci:' : co^y, Cv.e Vvir. Tlstco ‘ • THROUGH S lS E P tH S . The piles that annor you ho will be quickly and penuanently healed if you iwe DeWiLta W itca lla'/.cl Salve. Ucware of wurthles.s counterfeits. C. (J. Sanford, M. A. Foster. ^COTICE OLD SOl,DTBKS. ( ■ol. I’anl 1>. Means, of Concord, X. C., will bo in Jlocksville on Thursday, Sth day of Anijupt, (the day of the Picnic) aud requests oach member otCajit. W . E. IJooe’s company to meet him here that day. lie has beuu appoiutcd-to write tlie Listory of tliat Company aud of its lueiiiliers, iu the civil war, and he has to send the his­ tory ill by the 1st of September in order to net it in Judge Clarke’s book. This is to notify each mem­ ber of the company lo meet him here that day. ^ We solicit the work of the ? ^ 'fe merchants and'lnisiness men »^t of the county. AVe have a nice stock of& b^ JTote Heads, h ^ %S Bill Heads, ^ ^ Statements, ^ 3 §le Euvelones. ft S ■ §^ Shippiiifr Tags, ^ i r j i^ And in fact, aiiyihinj; you ^ ^ need, and are preiiared to ^ I do Fli:ST CLA.‘3S work on | ^ .SlIOKTNOTlOa at reas- N ^ onable priecs. ^^ NCall ou or write to us for ^ These famous little pills, DeW itfs Little Early Risers compel your liver aud bowels to do their duty, thn-y giv­ ing you pure, rich blood to recuper­ ate your body. Easy to take. Never jfripe, C. C. Sanford, M A . Foster. XOTICE. There will be a lecture ou “ Old Jlan Cannot,” by Black Sam Joues, on Monday night, August 5th, at A. M. E. Zion church at 8:30 p. m. This is the most witty, funniest, laughing lecture you ever heard. Como white and col­ ored. Proceeds for the church. Reserved seats for whites. Ed- mission, ] 0 cents. A badcomplexioa (generally results from inactive liver and bowels. In all such cases, DeWitt's Little Early Risers produce jrratifyin{f results. C. C.Sanford. M. A. Foster. REPOET OF BAPTIST PfCSIC. Eeceipts: B y ' Gate Dinner “ Eefreshiuents “ Collection Dr. Vines, of A.sheville delivered the addreSij at the Baptist picnic last week, wo did not hear him, but understand he delivered a very fine address. Tlie U.ivie Educational Union will hold their annual picnic at Clement Grove, Saturday Aug. 10. SOTICE! To W alter Hunt; / Take notice that on Saturday the 10th day of August, 1901, at tne Court House door in Mocks- ville, Davie county. If. 0., I will sell at public auction for cash, one one horee wogon, the property of the said W alter Hunt to pay . a debt of Two dollars and fifty cents and the costs ofkeeping and sell ­ ing the said property and for al­ tering and repairing the said wag­ on at the request of the said W al­ ter Hunt^ owner. This lu ly 26, 1901-. S. A. Mickey, Mechanic. Total, S 28.40. 71 80 57 -12 10 97 $108 59. DO YOn? Do you want to loau, or bor­ row, or iuvcstl Do you want to keep your ac­ count at the best placc? The People's Xatiiuial IJank, of Winstou-Salem, X. de­ sires to servo \'ou. It Waits You 9 r« ff|!3BD®S3 a.'JI3a KOHFaiK TO G01-l*^Si'S. CLOSE CONNECIMS ' WMDEmiGiiMim i. jsu n r udge iV. I.'. O'. . i-gc to 111-,- V. y o:l I'.lc Hi!i, i--'- !ii-s:;ti.>ii. \ e c<»py iL ■ i-ei: udi^e lid jiri’V M'-i-- ii: 'rl-ii: •- uui! i ..uity.Jomp.u-iii" tiio cr. i • slays ! .o.leust:-; w .tb 1 there arc only t>.o l.e s;iiii: • “ .V. ilii (fM iiili.;-. ;i '- :;re our ;■ -.:t K u ..-; to trial by jiM-y. - \!i’ Uo.lliiuj; tiiU • • - .iiy U Uutt ’I’'. iii«y wouiUii'b ion}i *AD«1 li i llieta ami XlvAv luxt- i .Disci-ssiii;; t:'-e ‘ii of muilloi', ;tii J lUrtrLl liie ho Lituie '•iri: ; ■ WuuL I*- ihnt. W:!!ir J iiie.. i ' X tolcilow iliiititis ihc ITidfct'd ■ Slates (lovermnuut J)epusi- tory for thi.s ^'0<-lion aiul tliafc it will do for yon aMytliiiiij that aio' coiwcrvalivc lusti- :jutiou can do, ,T(»hn W . Frie?, rrosidcnt, AViii. U, Y. i\, T. A. Wilsson. ( 'ashior. AV x*i to lod uy. W. B. BEViLL,GcncraI -ROANOKE.VA. rOil SALE I5^ in our liue. Address, prices on anything you want .\b.!ui I7."i af-res of laud a joining the Coolccnirc cjjtton mills, well limbci'ed and watered. Call on or address.' E. It, Jlorris Mocksville N. C. M O itisisji srito u i> . Blocksville; N. C If you are uot already a sul-srri- ber to the Kcct)rd, this is an invi- tatitin for voii to become one. If you want a nice lot of job printing done, call ou the Kecoid, Mocksville, X. (.5. Job printing of all kinds done with ueiitnessand dispatch. All work guaranteed. T B M B S feilS . K you need anything like Tombstones Tab­ lets or Monuments call o n CI-.AUOKMILLEK. Korth Wilkesboro, K.C. TlllO XOKTli rA i:0 ;.iJ:A STATE liCRMAL ASD IKDl'STUUL COLLEGE. Literary, ('ia^'^ii al, ?■< ii'ntil’C, Com- niercial l:idii.si.t-ial. iV-iia^oi;iral. Musical. Annuiil e.Ti>Cii.scs ^ilOO to for non-residents of tbeState ' Faculty of :;o memben-i. Praclu’fcfe aud (;lnervatiou School of abtiut ‘2.10 pupils. To secure board ii the diumitories all free-tiiition ap , plicalions should be made I'efori .Iiily l.-»th. Session opeils a!pSiTir bcr li)i li. ' tlorrc.^ponder.ce iin ilotl fioni those ilesiring cmnpcteiit lOi‘i-h.i.s and stenngni]il!eirt. For Caialogiie aud other ir.f-'r mation addre.‘^s i : Pies. Cii.Mii.ns n. MclVi;!:, I ij ll-,st.(.Iroeiisboro, X. I' Disbursements: To Band “ Hev. Vines “ “ CashweU “ Supplies “ Labor '■ Check for Orphanage $ 25 00 6 00 4 20 2 1 86 C 10 105 43 Total, $ 168 .09 TiVe netted a little more than one- fifth more than last two years. we. the undersigned desire to return thanks to all that, helped us to make such splendid success of the picnic of 1901. Although the crowd was smaller, yet tbe net profits to the Orphanage is more than usual as above shown, and especially to the funny man that made us the funny speeches. E. F rost, Chairman, w. F. Mbbrel,!,, Sec. L. G. Hosn, Treas. A passenger train was wrecked on the Southern , near Marshall Saturday morning. The engineer by the name of watson, was killed. No one else lost theii' lile.- aiORTGAGE isAl.B. By virtue of the powei-s contain- ' ed iu a certain mortgage cxecutcd ; Oct. 23, :S99 by J. W . JIct>.illoh ! and wife, R. E., to C, G. Bailey, | and in default of payment of same, I will sell at the court-house door in Mocksville, X C, on M onday,! August the Sth, 1901, at 12 o’clock m. at public outcry to the highe.«t bidder for cash, the lands describ-, ed iu said mortgage, (for descrip- { tion see Book 7, page 520, Eegis- ■ t«rs office, Mocksville, JT C,) lying in and near Fork Church, Fultdi township, Davie connty, N C. , Lot K o 1, Beginning at a stone ou edge of public road, thence S 58° h 7 poles to a stone, corner of Academy lot liue, thence S 7 poles | to a stone in Academy lot line,' If .')8° W 7 poles to a stone, thence. S 7 poJes to the beginning, con­ taining -to poles more or less. | 2nd iot. Beginning at a stoue, D V Davis corner, S 5° W 12 poles to a stone, E T poles to a stone in Academy lot line, thence X S poles [ to a stoue, \\ ;i° X (»pole.-i aud 20 Iks to a stone, the beginning, cou- taiuiug 78 poles more or less, io t Xo 3, beginning at a stoue on south side of branch, J J Davis corner, X 27 poles to a stone. E 12° X 26 poles to a stone at graveyard, X 4° E 25 poles to a stone, W 7 poles to a stone, X 45 links to a stoue, W 15° X 5 poles to a stoue, S 19° W 10 poles to a stone, W 10° X 1 1 poles to dogwood, W 13° S20 poles to a stone, S 50 poles to the branch, thence uj) brancli 17 poles aud 16 links to beginning, con­ taining 10 acres more or less. This July 3ud, 1901. E. H . Mouris, C, G. Baii-ET, Attorney. - Mortgagee.- Best For The South. W ood’s T u rn ip Seeds. Wood’s Seeds are growu anti selected with special refer­ence to their ftdaptability to our Jroullierii soil and climate and pive the best results aud Batisfnction everywhere. If’your mer­ chant does not sell Wood’s Seeds write for Special Price-list. Circular Rivinfj prlcpi* and informa­tion ob*ml Turnip Seed#, Crtmaoo Clover, l^te Seed Potatoes, O e rn u ^ nillet, Buckwheat and ail i^eMiiUoaDlc Seedd.iiiJtiiedon request. T. W. WOOD & SONS, Seedsmen, - Richmond, ,Va. W O O D ’S F A L L C A T A L O G U B liihQcd In Auinist. ii‘Hs all al>ou6 Crimaon Clover, Winter Vetches, Rape, Rust Pro'>f and Winter OaU,Seed Wheats. Grasses, and Clover 5eeds.Vesetable Seeds far FoU Plentlog. Hyacinths, Tulips, etc. Catalo ^c mailed free. Write for it. DuJi't lo c*all an^l e\uJiune our .sl«»ek of statjoiiprv. KuA-eh)pi-s, I’aeket IIkuIs, liil! Hciirs, Slateiiienis aud Tugs, prin ted «u short uotice. l’ric<‘s reason able. Dr. M, D Kimbrough,. rUVSICIAX A.VD SCIUJnON. I OITice firsi :i*ior of Hotel Davie j MOaKSVri.LK N. i:. —^1— ■■ ■ ■ III ■■■■I A fitMni Xo. o2 browli-loadi^ rifle tor s;i’e or liv.dc. Cull'o: , the Editor. Buy Tiie Celebrated SI iitr l i U iJ. LECKERLING PIANOS. The highest SiaiidiUd e\ er re;i!-h- ed in the Piano in:v!;crs art. 2‘) yeuts iu ailvauce otall utlu^i iuakcH. Sold at strictly lactoiy prici-^. The norhl renou ucd EXCURSION BA TES VIA KO I.FO LK& ^VEbTEIlN KAU.- W AY. Pan-Americiin Exposition Jlay 1st to Oct. 31st, 1001, The Norfolk it ■\Vesteru Railway will sell excur­ sion Tickets to Uuffalo, May 1st to September iJOth, 1901, EPwdHTn iTjsagve coxven- TIOX, San Francisco, Cal. Cheap Excui-sion Tickets via the Norfolk & AYesferu liaihray, July Sth to the 12th, good until A u­ gust 31, 1001.AV. B. BI-JV’ILL, G. P. A. Eoanoke, Va. Orpn-3, MoUer. Biiraett & Sierlii Orgajis. Everythiu" iu nr.ufic Sold at about half price others charge, oii terms to suit you. We have uevor beeu undersold. AVrite toilay l.ir catalog aud prices. PIEDMOXT MUSIC CO. 'Wiustony K .- ( ■ r ' SC.vc-.'ir'ii;; I ■ leuKti:. I !'- - “iitnii lor a ■■ ■ ' ' ' ;iiau to licr ‘ <■1 the ■ - ■■ ‘ ‘ iu ihii Helind <• loiiw! “iV i-o I '■ •- y tliat ' 11 !I more rivi.iy I--:. ■ that f.;llo'V | l?'t- I“ IJut thci-e !-•• •'<'■'1 as seiluciuK nu ii- to do; biit ill oi'.r for woDieu fcf ot the fr.c.t, - Bieu, irtlic c VTC v,'<jiiJd virtue of the ‘'•\Vo:.‘;!.ii j - ■ ■ to stny iK*‘re ’ get- loff ciit <!i ■ of day ut'tc,' ll’*'- ' j a feli'.v/ win* 1 iuterii-'r wi-li a : - terial uutii lus she not descc-in'.o tal, aud is 1 bo sj-.iil for tiic : the tc-aiptrttion;' In cliar^iiiS ' to v.-hi.skey-'c-l and other Jurtsc liobii! in hiii V ••Tbcrc i-' ’ pleasure il'-'-'j sun and singing hi' earth. I ' :■ le;’-ve it ' -a'.ay