CHEROKEE SCOOT. Published Every Tu6fjy. -AT- r.:ur?HY, NORTH CAROLINA. ? t: ;k-y & town, Ej.iora nnd Proprie-ora. ONE DOLLAR A YEAH IN ADVANCE Advertising rates reasonable aid .tnade known upon application, payable quarterly unless otherwise stipulated. Nothing bat metal cut accepted. The Chicago Record-Herald sayi there arc feir times as many words Id the English language as In the French,' but young writers always feel that It Is necessary to, writ In a French phrase here and there In order to makt their meaning clear. . The practical question confronting every roung man to-dny, says the A lanta Journal, is not: Is a big Job ready for you? But: Are you ready for a big Job? If you have the right stuff In you, you don't have to go crawl lng on your stomach for any man's fa vor. You don't need to beg a Job as though you were asking charity. But don't swell up and -wait for big Jobs to come after you with a brass band. ? -Colonel Henry Watterson saya that When he applied for bis first employ ment on a newspaper he was told: "There are never any racanclea on a good paper, but there's always room for a good man." Colonel Watterson says be thought the reply so good and true that, after becoming an editor him' self, he said the same thing to all ap plicants. If Is true In all kinds of business, agree the AtlanfaJournalTl The whole world la full of good places for a good man. , The new Social Intercourse Guild, formed in Chicago, 111, found at its first meeting 300 "lonesome" persons in need of its ministrations. How many of this class It may reach after its plans are carried out for dividing the city into districts and offering spe ' Vial attractions in the shape of. card parties and musical entertainments, cannot be estimated. There Is surely no class more deserving of sympathy tban the friendless stranger in a great city, remarks the New York Evening Post, ... f ' Shippers of poultry and eggs should be very careful about responding to new commission men who quote prices higher than the regular market, ad' Vises the Massachusetts Ploughman. These are very likely to be Irresponsible parties who fail and defraud shippers ns soon as they have received any con' eiderable, quantity of goods. The best trade of the cities is mostly commanded by the older and long established Arms, and these are able to pay as high for the goods as anybody. New concerns iwbich quote very high prices usually Ho to at the expense of reliability. ' When President Roosevelt addressed the American Tract Society at Wash ington, D. C, he took for his text, "Be ye dpers of the word and not hearejrs only" wblcb Is said to be the text found at the point in the Scriptures - .which be selected to kiss on taking the oath at bis inauguration. The ad dress which he based on these Words iwat entirely sound in morals and as emphatic as usual, opines the New York Times. He urged his bearers to remember . always that it is not strength alone, or wealth, that makes a great nation, but the qualities of tho men and women who are the nation, The gracious potentate from wbon the enterprising Mrs. Header Is said to have procured for her clients a 3, 000,000 .railway contract, is variously described as the Sultan of Lahore and the Sultan of Jobore, the New York Sun, relates. There is no Sultan ot Lahore. That part of the Punjab has been British territory for nearly sixty years, continues that paper. There 1 a Sultan or Rajah of Johore, Ibrahim by name. Under British supervision be rules over a 'population estimated at 200,000. The revenues and resources of Johore are presented statistically In none of the reference books at hand. The lamented Akhoond of Swat died years and years ago. The butter product of the United! States, according to the official figures, I cxcetfiea iubi year ,uw,wv,ww pounds, says the American Cultivator. The number ofdalry cows was ten million, showing that the average cow 1 produced only about ISO pounds per year, or about three pounds per week. which is hardly a good return for tlio J care and feed. The average cow cer tainly I not a remarkably good paying proposition, and in order to bring tbe figures as low as they are a great ninny of the cows must yield less than threa 1 pounds per week. To the question, I "Does dairying pay?" the answer must 1 depend largely upon the cow. With' butter selling high enough to encthjrnse Imports from Australia there seems to be room enough here for better cons and more of them. SEEKS SCAPEGOAT Is Accusation of Stevens In Reply to Charge of Jordan. ACCUT FERTILIZER TAGS Georgia Agricultural Commissioner and Head of Southern Cottonv Associa. . tlon Engage ,ln Decidedly . . Bitter Controversy. "Mr. Jordan is now bunting for ft scapegoat, and I do not propose that he shall use me for that purpose." So said Commissioner of ' Agricul ture of Georgia,' O. B. Stevens, to a representative of the Atlanta Consti tution, after reading in an afternoon paper the letter of Hon; Harvie Jor dan, president of the Southern Cot m Association, in which, Mr. Jordan charges that "Mr. Stevens Is under taking to apologise for or stand by the fertilized companies in the reck less waste of tags this - season." " President Jordan's charge is based on an interview with Commissioner Stevens, which was gathered by a representative of the Constitution in the course of a casual conversation with the commissioner, and in which Colonel Stevens stated that the pres ence of unused fertilizer tags In cars of guano was doubtless due to care lessness of employes, as the fertll- izer companies, even If they desired to creatte the impression of heavy sales, would hardly scatter the tags in that way, but would rather de stroy them or hide them away. . President Jordan quotes part of this interview and seriously charges Com missioner Stevens with "undertaking to apologize or stand by the fertil izer companies in the reckless 'waste Qt tasi this reason, and to admit that the same condition of affairs has been going on every year." , Continuing,' Mr. Jordan declares that Instead of co-operating with the farm ers and the Southern Cotton Associa tion In trying to expose the fertilizer companies In their wanton waste ot tags, he appears from his interview "to have prejudged the case and ren dered his verdict in favor of the fer tiliser companies." When shown President Jordan's let ter Colonel Stevens, after reading it, made the following brief but pointed statement: "I have no desire to get into a con troversy with Hon. Harvie Jordan. I have, to the best of my ability, sup ported the Southern Cotton Associa tion movement, and hare in every' way endeavored to uphold Mr. Jordan's hands, having gone' of my 'own mo tion to New Orleans to assist him In bis election to the presidency. ", "The trouble with Mr. Jordan la that lie is now hunting for a scape goat, and I do not propose that he shall use me for that purpose. No doubt Mr. Jordan Is doing his best to earn his $5,000 salary, but I am under the impression that If he had proceeded along lines somewhat dif ferent from those followed by him since the New. Orleans convention, we would now be getting; much higher prices for our cotton. Mr. Jordan seems to have been a systematic kicker, and I am simply one of the many on whose reoffending heads he has poured the rial of his wrath. , I am perfectly willing that . the farming Interests of Georgia should judge between Harvie Jordan and my self, and as to which of the two has done most In contributing to the de velopment of the agricultural Inter ests of tne state." 6LAV8 INVADE JAP WATERS. Four Hostile Craft Reported as Sight ed off Hokkaido. A special from Tokio, under date ot Saturday, says: Four Russian tbr pedo boat destroyors were sighted west of Hokkaido yesterday (Friday). Hokkaido. Is the northernmost prov ince ot the empire of Japan. ITALIANS FOR THE SOUTH. Large Body of Immigrants Are Land ed at New Orleans. Frank P. Sargent, commissioner gen eral of immigration, returned to New York Tuesday from New Orleans, where he went to be present at the landing, of , a body of Italian immi grants. The vessel brought 760 Ital ians from Palermo. ..-.. The Immigrants were landed at New Orleans at the suggestion of the Italian ambasadoa, through whom southern planters made an appeal for Italian laborers. BLUE AND GRAY TO MINGLE At Unveiling of New Jersey Monu ment at Newbern, N. C. On the 18th Instant there will be a mingling of the blue and the gray at Newbern, N. C, where the state oi New Jersey will unveil a monument to the memory of the men . of the ninth regiment of volunteer Infantry of New Jersey. , Governor Stokes of New Jersey and Governor Glenn of North Caro lina will be among the distinguished guests. - v. w TO BRINQ BONES OF JONES. Application la Made to Navy Depart ment for Squadron of Vessels., ; Acting Secretary of State Loomls Wednesday made a formal request JO the navy department in behalf of the state department for the dis patch of a squadron of American na val vessels to France to bring to this country the remains of John Paul Jones, recently exhumed in Paris, DYNAMITniORROH Express' Crashes Into Cars Loaded With Explosives, DEATH HARVEST RESULTS Estimates' Place Number, of Passe rv engsrs Killed at Half a Hundred. Wreckage Takes Fire and' Adda to Disaster. ' An express train on the Peunsylva nia railroad rem into a freight train in which there were two cars loaded with dynamite at 1:10 o'clock Tburs day morning In South Harrisburg, Pa. near the plant of the Paxtang Light Heat and Power company. . Three terrific explosions that broke windows all over the city followed and two trainq were completely wreck ed and took fire. It 'was estimated that fifty persona were killed and one hundred injured. ': ' ': : When the first explosion occurred bodle were thrown clear out of the berths in the sleeping cars, many land ing down on the railroad embankment, and -some even having been hurled into the Susquehanna river, which par allele the railroad In that locality. All the physicians procurable In Har risburg were summoned to work with the injured. " .- ' ' A fire alarm sounded and the fire men arrived, to find themselves prac tically helpless in the work of res cue. A police patrol wagon was com- missioned as an ambulance, and many ot the Injured as possible were load ed Into It on each trip and taken' to the Harlsburg hospital, the capacity of which soon became taxed -because of the'large niimber that were brought in. A special train was made up and transferred Injured and dying to the union station. Many, of the Injured were taken Into private houses. Immediately after the wreck, all the passengers who .could do m ran from the scenes of horror to safety Iron, the Incessant small explosions, v , The agonizing cries of the unfortun. a tea were heartrending. The office oi the Paxtang Light, Heat and Power Company was transformed Into a tent porary hospital. At an early hour the Harrisburg Traction company ran out a number of cars from its South Har risburg barns and used them to brine the Injured to the hospital. The train was the second section ol the No. 19. There were 169 passen gers aboard. RtaiMTS 8LUR ON ARMY. Labor ' Leaders In Chicago Nettle Roosevelt In Wording of Petition. A strongly worded protest against the sending of federal troops to Chi cago was submitted to President Roosevelt while he was In that city Wednesday.- The protest is signed by C P. Shea, president of the Interna tional Brotherhood of Teamsters; Charles Dold, president ot the Chicago Federation of Labor, and by other la bor leaders. '"Peace," says the protest of the labor leaders, ."rests not upon the mi litia or the army, but upon the pa tience and long suffering of the toll ing masses. Can. a few soldiers scare, the men who make armies and who compose the flower of American Ulan hood." The committee presenting the pro test was received by the president in person at the Auditorium annex The. president told them no demand had been made upon him for use of troops In Chicago. He said that he regretted that the , protest apoke 'oi the federal army as It did. The pres ident said: . " .'. ,' 7 "Of the merits of the case I am wholly ignorant I have no knowledge of what the situation Is, or of what steps should be taken to end it I feel however, that In view of one state ment, I ought to say this: I regret that you should in the letter have spoken at all, of the use of the federal army as you have there spoken. "What I have to say is based pure ly upon what I regard as the unfor tunate phrasing of a letter presented to the president ot the United States." DECI8ldN IN FAVOR OF MORRIS. Georgia Supreme Court Settles Cobb County Treaaureshlp Case.- The supreme court of Georgia Wed nesday morning handed .down a de cision In the Cobb county treasureshlp case, In which the decision of Judge 3. H. Lumpkin is affirmed, and Judge J. T.' Pendleton of the Fulton supe rior court, is ordered to have the elec tion superintendents of Cobb county assemble, consolidate the vote 1 tor .treasurer and declare J. Old Morrik duly elected. The case was brought to the supreme court by J. D. Glovtr, clerk - of the Cobb county superior court, who has acted treasurer., CAftAfNI GOE3 TO SPAIN. . ... " - .' Russian' Ambassador at Washington Transferred to New Post. . Count Casslnl, the Russian ambas sador to this country, has been trans ferred to Madrid. He will be suc ceeded In Washington by Baron Ro sen, until recently Russian minister at Tokla Count Casslnl was offered the ambassadorship to Madrid twi months ago and accepted It. Ho will leave in June for his' new, post. '. CREW LOOTED FREIGHT CARS And Conductor, Under : Whom They ; Worked, Sentenced In Savannah. At Savannah, Ga., Friday, Conduc tor R. H. Floyd ot the Atlantlo Coast Line was sentenced in the city court to pay a fine of $250, or remain six months In jail. - ' The charge was simple larceny, and the offense consisted In the looting of a freight train by the crew, of rale Floyd was In charge. FIVE : pi TVrrifirt f: ado Wrecks i lown o ierritory. HALF TK E I :: II.'BJTAHTS KILLED White People Were Wrapped m Slum- ber Death-c-allng Element Swoop . ; ed Down Upon Them Una- , ., wares All Communication 1 With Outside World Is Cut'Off. . . Meager reports reaching Fort Worth, Texas, state that a terrlflo cy clone struck Bnyd, Oklahoma, Wed nesday night, wrecking the tows, and killing five hundred people, and relief is asked for. . ' ' ; ' ' A message to ihe train dispatchei sent nrTrtf ' orth asking for In formation was iewre4 as follows: I "We have same'report and are send ing a relief train on (he supposition that it is .true.S :Wires all ' down.'! " The telegraph operator at Chicka saw, I. T., states that he talked over the telephone with Hobart, Okla., noar Snyder, and that all wires In the vicinity oi Snyder were dkwn, but re lief trains were being sent from sev eral directions o Snyder4 Snyder is a town of 1,000 people in Kiowa coun ty, Oklahoma, located on the Frisco, 45 miles north of Vernon, i V ' ''.'' 1 Confirmatory Dispatches. Reports reached, Oklahoma City from Hobart and Anadarko confirming the"! news of a tornado at Snyder, but no details , were gWfen. - -: . Telephone reports received In Guth rie from HobarBt T,' Indicate that the entire townof Snyder was de stroyed by a tornado. A train of doc tors, nurses and other assistance left Hobart for Snyder, f - ; At 11:40 o'clock Wednesday night the dispatcher for the Frisco in 8a pulpa, I. T.,. received a report from EJiid, O. T., advising that a tornado had 'struck Snyder, Oklahoma, wreok lng the town, and killing 609 people, among whom was 'the station agent of the Frisco t thftt town. The re quest came aMoj for ' assistance. On tho strength of; the report the dis patcher ordered j a relief train with physicians to be lent from Chlokasha, I. T., and Quanah, Texas.' The wire between Snyder? and Sapulpa went down about 10, a.' m. s'' -i ' TWO HUNDRED JEW8 KILLED. Kishbieff Htrj?fm to Have Been Repeated jin Zehltomlr. Very grave fcports are current In fit. Petersburg' as to the extent of the massacre of Jews at Zehltomlr, the number of killed or wounded now being placed us high as twq hundred, but precise Information la . lacking. The minister of the interior has call ed for a 'detailed report' Dispatches, are being held op. Tele grams sent by the newspapers, to Ze hltomlr remain ! unanswered. It is asserted; that a, fortnight be fore the disorders proclamations were spread palling on the Christians to beat the Jews. fWhen these proclama tions were shown to the mayor of Ze hltomlr, the latter declared them to be stupid and ald there was no b caslon for alarm.4 ' , '- ':: TOBACCO G LAID TO REST. Funeral of Washington Duke t Dur ham Was Largely Attended. Fifteen thousand people attended the funeral of Washington Duke, the founder of the- Duke branch, of the American Tobacco company at Dur ham, N. C, Wednesday. The banks and schools of the city and. many of the manufacturing establishments were closed during the entire day and practically all business of the city was closed during the exercises . . RUSSIANS HEAR FROM TOGO. Report That Jap Shlpf Were 8ent to Intercept Admiral Ne'bogotoff. . ' Admiral Rojestvensky, according to a high naval authority at St Peters burg, has sailed south to meet the division of the Russian second Paclflo squadron, commanded by Admiral Ne- bogatoff. The admiralty has iaforma-.. tlon that a Japanese- division of fast cruisers and torpedo boat destroyers was sent outh for the purpose, ir possible, of crippling , or destroying; Nebogatoff'a ships hefore they could effect a Junction with those of Rojest vensky. ;. i- s. . '.- ' PORT RATES ARE REFUSED. . Petition of Atlanta Merchants Turned ; Down by Railroad Commission. ; The Georgia railroad commission Wednesday ..turned down Atlanta's pe tition for a fir d, reduced port rate, for which there has been an active and persistent demand from' the At lanta freight bureau and certain Atlan ta merchants f r the past two years or more. THu the protest of Brown. ' tlon was taken over Chairman J. Pope HOST OF F i-..iud at' All records York Sunday i grants who j in twelve ho;: riving la sten enter Neir Y Spring Influx Will probably former years. iNERS ARRIVE. houtand Immigrants i York Sunday. . u broken at New number of lmml- .1 quarantine. Wlth 13,039 foreigners, ar- ', were permitted to , liiillcatlng that the "l 'grants this yew "1 the records of 0 1 the pulpit: A BRILLIANT SUNDAY SERMON B) THE REV...ALFRED H. A. MORSE. Subject: Secret of IIaiplnc. Brooklyn, N. I.ln the Strong riaee Baptist Church the pastor, the ltev. Altred II. A. Morse( spoke Sunday ou "The Srtret of Happiness." He saldi Therg ore two hidden bauds, con trolled by the same intelligence) which are constautly working upon the hu man heart. And these are pain and pleasure. Man was made to be happy. If sometimes he must eat the bread ot lorrow It Is because, as Mr. Beecher said, "Sorrow is medicine." Joy is more divine than sorrow, -and does not belong only to these passing days, but shall remain with us when all tears are dried and sorrow Is swept forever frourtbe universe. Now, Joy may be divided into three classes. There is the joy of appetite, a merely animal condition. It comes from the fitting of a goodly organism into circumtstances which are suited td supply its need. This is the joy that makes the,chlld skip and play and fill the home with laughter. It is the joy of the singing bird. It is simply pleas ure. ,.." : .s"; But we are not always children, We gjw and come into the place of work Rnd responsibility. And here also 1 joy, and this we may call happiness. An earnest man finds 'joy la bis em ployment. The lawyer and doctor and teacher enjoy their professions. The minister enjoys to preach. The mer chant enjoys his business, and the me chanic his shop In spite of all its toll. This is joy, but it Is the joy of the bee that gathers the honey and stores it a way against the needs of a. hungry winter. There is the joy of living, and there Is the Joy ot working. These are all that many a man attains. But it takes a higher joy than these to fill the soul of man, as the sunlight fills the sky, or tho ocean fills the deep. There is a Joy that Is known as "blessedness," which arches these as the heavens span the sea. It is the joy of love, the joy of faith, the joy of a good conscience, the Joy of doing right for the sake of right, the Joy of sacrifice and of service. These are so far above the others that they belong to another kingdom whose law Is obedience, whose. Joy is right eousness, - whose fellowship is with God, and whose entrance Is by means of a btrth from above. And into this kingdom there are certain, well defined Steps. '. '",",'.;'. v-.vY-.."' ' "Happy," said Jesus, "are the poor' in spirit, for theirs is tbe kingdom of heaven." . And poverty of spirit is na kedness of soul before God. He is happy who throws aside his own rags of righteousness and going to God says, "Clothe me, for I am naked; feed me, for I am hungry; guide me, for I tim ignorant; put Thine arms under me, for I am weak.'V As in tbe mountain passes of the West the traveler holds up his hands before the bandit, so in tbe presence of God's righteousness the soul must throw up Its hands and sur render to God. Blessed are the poor In spirit, the -consciously bankrupt in the presenco of God. So long as the young er son remained In the far off land, so long as he Was satisfied with tbe husks from the troughs of tbe swine, so long as he wanted nothing, the father might mourn, but there was nothing for him to do. But when that son threw him self upon bis father's love and said, "I have sinned, and you see my want," theirnhe father could clothe and feed and kiss; place sandals upon bis feet nnd give him the place of the son. Does a prodigal soul wish for happi ness? I know of no chance for him till he fling away his sin and standing in his naked need acknowledges bis pov erty of soul. Tbe happiest, moment in the prodigal's experience was when he burled his face In bis father's shoulder and said, "I have sinned." . The hap piest man at the temple gate was. he who smote his breast and without so much as lifting his eyes, said, "God be merciful to me the sinner." ... Happy are they who mourn for sin. It Is not enough to" be ashamed of it. but there must be an actual Sorrow therefor. This does not mean to mourn for its consequences, 'nor for its pub licity, nor. for tbe misery it entails. Sin is more than a blunder which one may regret It is more than a mistake which one would try to repair. It is open and flagrant and defiant rebellion. When a man: mourns this, then God flings above him His smile as the rain bow spanned tbe flood, and he "shall be comforted." . ; Happy are the meek, for they Shall inherit the earth. But who. ere the meek? Tbey who obey the law. Moses bas passed into history as tbe meekest of men. But Moses bent the neck ot bis manhood to law, and maybe that is the reason that to this day our best in stitutions are all to be traced to tbe legislation in the wilderness. Only ouce did Moses lose his meekness, when with an angry frowu ho smote the rock. That shattered his meekness Into a thousand pieces, and he lost the -t-promised laud. - Ho,dld not inherit the earth. Jesus was the meekest man, and He has flung out His challenge for the world to come to Him. He was meek, for He was obedient, even to the place of death. Happy are the hungry. Hunger and thirst are spurs which are driven Into men to drive ahead. When men are hungry they struggle, and there is hope for a nation when times are bard, But when men and nations are -filled, I tlipy He down to sleep and rise up to I' .1 .... " Tt'l n T,n l.lli. iM -mm. grows weak with disuse. Hunger and thirst are spurt to activity. But tbe noblest hunger is tbe hunger for right Cess, for that is the meaning of "right eensness." To seek God and His righteousness is to seek for God and His Tightness. A man whose soul is famished with this consuming desire may well be happy, "for he shall be filled."- . Happy are the merciful. But mercy does not always mean leniency.. When a man is convicted of some gross crime It is no mercy to let him go to do the same crime again, Mercy sometimes exacts an awful penalty, for mercy Is a prerogative of righteousness, and mercy belongs to God. The man stand ing beside God, poor in spirit, mourn ing his sin, hungry for righteousness, is -merciful, and mercy comes also to li!m. "Ho shall receive mercy.", ; Happy are the pure in heart But jttbat does this mean? Who ot ui is ptfrcT It means to be single In pm pose. The diamond muat be of "the first water" if it ii to flash the, light The nan must lie single In purite If lie is to see God. The doubia-mltideil man can never see the vllou of Him whose countenance is as tbe sun shin ing in bis strength; for his vision broken and disturbed, like the waves of the sea driven by the wind and tossed. Ah! I love .the sen. I've watched It ou a windy flay, and heard It we-p and moan and nob. and brenthc out It anger in ad awful curse. I've seen the waves rlm buffeted and bent rn, now backward, now forward, till lta face was white with rag, but its heart was black as dt'atli. I've seen it reel and toss, till at last sobbing ha though Its heart would break, it would burst into a myriad briny tears upon tbe shore and ponr from its wretched bosom the seaweed and driftwood and filth it bas gathered in the Journey. That wave never saw tbe sun. But I've looked again. -The Sea was like a mirror, as clear as crystal. I could see the penrty pebbles, and there in Its heart I conld see the sun. The pure hearted waters lay all day long and looktnl into the face of tbe sun. ' Hap py, blessed are the pure, the single lu heart, "for they shall see God." Tbe matt who bas a supreme desire to please God, he is pure. He may have temptation, he may stumble, he may fall, but be rises again, and he is farther ahead. I shame to confess It, but I once played football, the barbar ism of college. I've seen a man fall and slide four times as far as he could go without falling. , He's a pnre man, though his clothes are covered witlj grime. The man who is pure in heart shall see Him that Is invisible. : The -man who serves God shall see Him. . Happy are the peacemakers, for they shall be called the children of God. God is a peacemaker, and bath recon ciled ali things onto Himself. And now the man who makes peace shall be called His son. ; He has passed through the school, 'and has learned poverty and mourning and mercy and singleness of heart, and now he is taken Into the family of God as Mosev was taken into the family of Pharaoh j daughter. . ' ; , . There ia one other "blessed" spoken by Jesus.- It I found in the compara tive form. ' "It is more blessed to give than to receive." It makes more for happiness to give than to get When self is the centre there is no happiness. But when self is forgotten there is hap piness at its height When a man knows he has nerves he cannot be happy. - Mr. Rockefeller thinks that happiness can be ruined by a sensitive stomach. The happy man Is he who not knowing that he has nerves or stomach cares for the other man. This is the eall to self-sacrifice. How utterly intolerable this world would be if every one lived for himself. Happily this cannot be, and the altruism lies at tbe bottom of family and social life. But there are different kinds of sacri fice. There, is tbe sacrifice. of self to self, of the lower to tbe higher, of the passion to principle. There is the sac rifice of self for others; and-there Is the highest sacrifice, that Is, ot self to God. Do we talk of Joy in these things ? Most people think of them as' a disagreeable sort of necessity.;: Mav- Jbe we see that this necessity serves a1 userut ena. But to rejoice in them I To take up our sacrifice with a song,' that seems out of the question. That is the dream of the poet.. Giving is blessed, because it is most like God. He has need of nothing but Just to give. . The glory of the gospel is a happy God, but He gave His Son. He might have stripped heaven of its angels and it would not have impover ished Him. The only gift that He could feel was the gift of His Son. And that was what made Him happy. God Himself could not be happy if Ho had wlthholden 'this greatest gift That was the law which Jesus de clared. It makes more for happiness to give than to get The Whole life ot Jesus was giving, but the happiest mo ment was that last, when He said: "Father, into Thy hands I commend My spirit," and He had given His life for a ransom. ' , In these simple words, then, I And' the whole philosophy pt salvation, of happiness and of heaven. If a man mourn for his sin,' he shall be com forted and an Infinite peace shall dry his tears. If a man hunger for Tight ness, he shall be filled. If he strive to serve God with a single heart, he shall see Him. If He do the work of God and live at peace, he shall be called the child of God, and if he seek for chances to pour out his life in service, he shall find- heaven about him on every side. And this is the secret of happiness. " ' A Life of Self-Abnegation. .The Rev. Dr. Jesiah Strong drawe this picture of the blessedness of self sacrifice. He says: "The life of self abnegation does hot attract yon. A cathedral window seen from without Is dull and meaningless. Bnt enter, and the light of Heaven, streaming through it, glorifies it with every beauty of form and color. Consecra tion to God for service may seem dull enough when seen from without; but enter into that experience, and the light of the divine love, streaming through It, shall gloriry your life with beauty and- blessedness which are Heaven's own." ' . V Th Wy TV Do lilDfc ' . Rev. F. B. Meyer says: "Knitting needles are cheap and common enough, but on tbem may be wrought tbe fair est designs in the richest wools. So the incidents of dally life may be com monplace in the extreme, but on them as the material foundation we may build the unseen but everlasting fab-' ric of a noble and beautiful character.' It does not so much matter what we! do, but the way in which we do 10 matters greatly Font Good Bales. General Gordon, the hero of China and likewise of Khartum, based hisi life upon four rules: Forgetfulness of self, obsolute sincerity, indlfferenco to the world's judgments, absorption lu' the will of God. These four rules abldo as guide-posts on tbe path to great ness, but tbe greatest of these la sur render to the. will of God. Paclflo' Baptist. "-"'-'.--' - , . i " Vat In Attitude. .-' Reverent attitudes are necessary i worship, bnt It Is the reverence and not the attitude In which the virtue resides. Our hvarts must be right Sunday-School Times, STORM DEMOLISHES BUILDING. Three Persona Lose Life and Six In . Jured In Omaha, Nebraska. Three persons were killed and six Injured by the collapse of a three-story building' at Omaha, Neb., Wednes day afternoon, during a heavy wind ctorm. Tbe building was occupied by tbe Omaha Casket company and the killed and Injured were, with one ex ception, employes of the concern. DEFYIN-3 ALl.IP; :D TRUST. North Car olina .Tobacco Growers Rais ' lng Money to Build Factories. The tobacco growers of North Car olina have decided to establish fac tcrics In the etate for tiie purpose ot defying the alleged tobacco trust Subscription books for a factory in Madison were opened with a propos-e,l- $30,000 capital and over 60 per cent of the amount was subscribed in au hour. Another factory will ba bn'It at I : y Mount L'ORE JEWS MASSACRED. For Forty-eight Hours Russians Kept Up Butchery Victims Fought . Desperately for Life. ' The report in circulation at St. Petersburg Monday that there had been a massacre of Jews at Zhitomir, government of Volhynia, southwestern Russia, la confirmed, in a dispatch to the Novosti (newspaper), which says the rioting begsa May 7 and contm. ued' for forty-eight" hours. Orthodox Christians fell on the Jews in the streets. -The "Jews were armed an fought their assailants, many being killed ' or wounded oa both sides. A private dispatch f rom '; Zhitomir attributes the attack on the Jews to articles by 'Krous Heven. Twelve Christiana werff killed and ' fiAy wounded. , On Sunday the Jews" tel egraphed to friends in St Petersburg to. ask the authorities to take strong measures for their protection and oi dera to that effect were sent "A re newal of the fighting was expected at the time of sending the confirm atory' dispatoh.;1 . :;v.; ;-' : Commenting on this news, the No vosti remarks that Krous Heven (tbe former ' editor of. the Besarabltz, of Klsthlneff, held to be responsible foi the massacre of 1903 at that place) had hardly returned to Klshlneff and .started; the publication Df his new paper, the Friend; before Jewish mas sacres commenced. - DEMOCRATS HONOR ROOSEVELT.' Preeldent Tendered Banquet During Hla Temporary Stop-Over In Chicago. ' Honoring and honored by his pollt leal foes, but personal friends. Presi dent Roosevelt was Wednesday night the chlof guest at a magnificent ban quet in Chicago, tendered to him by the Iroquois Club,' the leading demo cratlc organization of Illinois. Sur rounded by men who fought against him In two national campaigns, who deprecate many of his avowed poli cies, and who have frowned oipou some of his political actions; the pres ident was cheered to the echo as he entered the banquet hall, was applaud ed with enthusiasm throughout his ad dress, and at its close, and; was given to understand that in his , case pollt- -ileal differences were not a personal Issue. ; ' ;; j The banquet, which was from But . to last an ovation, was given entirely, by democrats to the leader of their I political opponents, and many of. the i. kindly personal references made by the speakers of the evening, the ma jority of whom are men of democratio faith, deeply touched the president. In his manner and words he evinced1 throughout the evening a deep grat ification at the warmth of his recep tion from 'men who have fought htm in political battles before now, and are ready to fight' him again tomor row it they considered it necessary. - The president left for Washington , over the Pennsylvania road on Thurs-' day morning at 11:10. A 6URFEIT OF STRAWBERRIES. Roads Unable to Handle Crop in the North State and Heavy Loss Results. There has never been anything In Mr. Hyde has bis Interests and hla the history of North Carolina that compares with tbe railroad block at Cbadburn. More than $200,000 worth ot strawberries have rotted at tbe depot '; ' 1 The railroad hauled car load after car load of fine but spoiled berries to the river and dumped them as so much garbage. The loss to the truck growers of the section will he at least 00,000. . ; . . Dillard & Bell, Attorneys at Law, MTJRPHT, N." C. ' Office pttt Corder'a, BEN POSEY, Attorney at Law, MURP.HT, N. C. ' Will practice in State and Federal Courts. AU business entrusted to us Will be transacted with fldollty and dispatch. - Office In now courthouse. . E. Br NORYELL, Attorney at. Law, ; MURPHY, NORTH CAROLINA. All business promptly attended to. . Office in courthouse, near entrance. F. P. AXLEY, Attorney at Law, I - REAL ESTATE. . MURPHY. N. C Dr. S.'C. Ilcighwny, Office Over J. E. Faln's Stor Murphy, N. C. DR. V. 5. r:;CO:iC3, ) '.? .. V. -' M v ; KU: I'TIY, N. C. DR. W. O. PATTON, f..u;.: :r, i, o. C - I 1 '-j J! t;. t s" ; -i t-j. ta l orl' ' t j A'l t.'.'S fr .. i