WITCHES rY3E 3UHEJ h OEiLfitf Wonderful Story of Mrs. Mary Webster and Her Eii! Practices at Old Hadley, Mass. There sed to be witches up in this the river country, (South Had ley, Mass,,) but none have -been seen lately. I believe the last case known was at Old Hadley, a few miles up the river, where in 1600 Mrs. Mary Webster cast an evil eye upon her neighbors and their vvvj-v q- - . chief. The chronicles which re port her trial show that cows on their way home would stop in front of her house and stand there trembling, to the terror of the children who drove them, until she allowed them to pass on. A load of hay was upset by her and restorbd to its normal position without help from human hands, according to the testimony of the driver. One day when she entered the door of a neighbor's house the baby was lifted three feet from the cradle by an unseen power and hung suspended in the air for several moments. A hen flew down the chimney and dropped into a pot of boiling water and various other things happened un der her influence, She was the cause of an epidemic among sheep and chickens, and finarry the ex asperated citizens appealed to Philip Smith, senior deacon in the Congregational church, "a man for devotion, sanctity, gravity, and all that was honest, exceeding exemplary' who arrested her and "haled her down to Boston," where she was tried, acquitted from lack of evidence and returned to Old Hadley in a vindicative disposi tion, where she ' 'encompassed and murdered her accuser "with an hideous witchcraft." . Shortly after her return Deacon Smith "began to be very yahtud inarious, and. after wonderful manifestations in the sick room, died, and his body was found full of holes that seemed to be made with awls." The details of this sickness and death are related with comments in the chronicles of the parish. The night the deacon died a number of young men dragged the witch from her house and hangsd her to a tree in her orchard. Then they cut her body down and buried it in the snow,, but, according to .. a. 1 t the records, she survived the ven gence of this vigilance committee, and on the following morning was found at her cabin as usual. The miraculous manner in which she escaped death was con clusive proof that she was a witch, but it is very likely that the young men in their excitement let her down from the tree before life was extinct and that she was re suscitated by the burial in the snow. She-lived eleven years af ter this incident, and.boie the blame of all the calamities that happened in the neighborhood of Hadley, even a flood of the Con necticut liiver, which she predict ed. The first case of witchcraft in . New England was at Salem, but at Springfield, where in 1651 Hugh Parsons and his wife were accused of and tried for practic ing the arts of Satan. Mrs. Par sons exercised evil spirits which entered into the bodies of Martha and Rebecca Moxon,, daughters of a well-to-do citizen of Springfield, and did many other acts which showed conclusively that she was a witch. While in one of her tantums in March, 1651, Mrs. Par sons killed her own infant, and when arrested the poor demented creature confessed to an intimacy wiih the devil ; indeed, she boasted of it. She was taken to Boston, tried and condemned to death, but was reprieved and imprisoned for further investigation. As her case is not mentioned again in the records, it is nrobable that she t A - died in prison. In the following year her .husband was tried for witchcraft, and the jury brought in a verdict of guilty, which was set aside by the Great and Gen eral Court. W. E. Curtis in the Chicago Record-Herald, Hard Times in Kansas. The old days of grasshoppers and drouth are almost forgotten in the prosperous Kansas of today; al though a citizen of Codell, Earl Shamburg, has not yet forgotten a hard time he encountered. . He a it li . KTarap nrriTn rtnfc end A iortniiT. Hi aged by coughing night and day, and could find no relief until I tried Dr. King's New Discovery. It took less than one bottle to completely cure me." The safest and, most reliable cough and cold remedy and lung and throat healer ever discovered, Guaranteed by all druggists, 50c and $1.00. Trial bottle free. 'HUMAN INTERESf" GALORE. A Good Story of a Succored Family ever Smitten, and the Gratitude of Warmer. Following is from the Troutman correspondence of the Statesville JLandmark: Sam Bustle dropped around some two weeks ago and request ed me to write a piece to the pa pers forim. "I don't want an ordinary stereotyped card of thanks," said he, "but I want you to write a long piece - and tell everybody, if you can, how sincerely thankful I am for their service to me during our siege of fever. It began in May and lasted till the middle of Au gust. You may say what you please about the world going daffy about money and worshipping and studying money, but it is not true. The world is getting better every day audi ,have had ample proof of this. Why, when my folks began to get sick and the grass began to grow in my crop, and when I w as all wrapped up in anxiety and going from' one bed to another caring for my dear ones and no time to study crops, what did they do but to drop in and take hold and plant and dig and plow the cotton and corn and gather in and thresh the wheat. Yes, they came from 6very direc tion and leut a hand. There were men of affairs with lots of busi ness of their own, who hitched up their wagons and came with wagon loads ot laborers, and there were men who didn't even know me who came with their sons and noed in tne crops. And tne wo- men, Diess em, wnen tney came to the houe they pushed up their sleeves and lent : a hand toward caring for the sick and cooking for the well in bearing testimony for the Lord, as Preacher Sowers says, by doing the thousand and one things which need to be done in a large family, where the mother is hovering between this world and the next and four or five others at the same time are lying extremely ill. That was a maifestation of a wholesome reli gion which is good to live and die by. Seven of us had fever and you who have had one or two cases at once can get just a bare inkling of what a serious time it was with us in the very busiest time of the farming season, with all these sick ones. ".But they worked out our crop and cared for us in a spirit of neighborliness and our hearts are just overflowing with thankfulness which we can't express. Yes, the world is getting better every day and this community is filled with some ot the best people who ever breathed Gd's pure air or ever tendered a cup of cold water in His namev" Publishers, push out some poli tics and give Sam room for this long piece. 'Tisn't often a family is up against it so tough as he was this summer and he has got to have a long, long say or burst Samaritans to Sam, yon stand thanked one and all. Your bread is out on the waters and the great I Apx will put His hand on it and direct its course and after many days it will return to you with interest. Your kindness to this humble-hearted man will not go unrewarded. Lutheran Missionary Society Elects Officers At a recent convention of the Woman's Home and Foreign Mis sionary Society held in Charlotte, the following officers were elected : Prsident, Mrs, J. A. Linn, Rockwell; first vice president, Mrs. J. Q. Wertz, Salisbury; sec ond vice president, Miss Ella B. Shirey, Hickory; third vice presi dent, Mrs. J. H, C. Fisher, Mt. Pleasant; recording secretary, Miss Constance Cline, Concord; corresponding secrets ry, Miss Mary Brown, China Grove ; honor ary treasurer, Mrs. P. N. Heilig, Salisbury; active treasurer, Mrs. A. W. Winecoff, Salisbury ; gen eral secretary of children's work, Mrs. R. C. Holland, Charlotte. A committee, consisting of Mrs. A. W. Winecoff, . Mrs. M. M. Kinard and Miss Constance Cline, was appointed to confer with" a committee from the Synods of North Carolina and select plans for the building of a church at High Point. Obstinate cases of constipation and nasty, mean headaches promptly disappears when you take De Witt's Little Early Riser Pills. Sold by James Plummer and all druggists'. NO OFF YEARS NOW. We U sed to Hate Tbem Bat Now the Can- 1 dldate Giles Us No fast. " We are getting farther and far ther away from the good old plan of letting the office seek the man. Eighteen monthr-in advance of time for the convention the can didates for Governor were out on the campaign displaying their wares. Office-seeking has come to be a scientific' business and is now regarded as the proper thing to do.- The Congressman-elect irom the sixth district ha3 not yet taken his seat, but here comes an announcement from a candidate that he will be in the the race for the position two years hence. And so it goes. The people who are the masters of the situation, and who are supposed to choose their servants, sit back and obey orders. .s It would be a wholesome lesson to perennial and premature candidates if a few slates were smashed when the convention meets. ,It would clarify the at mosphere somewhat and stop this perpetual disturbance. Years ago we had what was known as "off yeara" in politics; we do not have them now. The candidate is eternally before us. The pot is always boiling. The strife within party linos is often strenuous than that without. Great social, eco nomic, and even moral questions are settled according to the bear ing they will have on the politi cal situation. If the element of politics were eliminated from the SouthheiPailway embrSglio we have no doubt an amicable adjust ment would have fcbeen reached without resort to the courts. The candidate is a very clever man, and most accommodating withal, but he is a general disturber of the peace nevertheless. We wish we had less of him. He is cer tainly too much in evidence. He i i i -i j i i can oe controlled n tne people desire to contol him. No man has any claim upon the suffrage of the citizens. Nobody has ever earned an office certainly those have not who claim to have done ma t 1 so. The very best man ior al most any position is not the man who nominates himself, but he whom the -people nominate. Charity and Chidren. FOP Sale. When in need of fresh flour try our brands, Per fection, Straight And Pan Cake We also sell chop, corn, wheat, and oats mixed. Call on Shuping Bros , Rock, N. C. 9-7 3m. We Pay you for Reading this Ad., 25 Cents for 5 Gents. To every woman who reads this ad and whose bill amounts to more than $1 .00 at our store as long as this ad appears in this Paper 25cts worth of any kind of (roods she may select for 6 cts. Cut This Out and Bring it With You. We are still in the Bing and bigger than ever. Our great success since we have .been in Salisbury is due to our Motto, No Misrepresentation, and always hate in stock what we advertise in the newspapers. Treat the customers polite ly and least, but not last, give the best values for the least money. We have livesd up to all these facts, hence our success. We again carry the largest stock of Ladies' Ready-to- VII ear Goods in the City, We have made great purchases tfiis season for the Cash in Ladies' and. Children's Cloaks and Ladies' Skirts and we know we can save you money. Je are also headquarters for T1ating, Carpets, Art Squares, Rugs, and if in need of any of these articles we can positively make it intrfesting for you. . . Our DRY GOODS Stock is Complete. We carry fc KESS GOODS from the cheapest to the very best. We offer you no Leaders in order to sell you, but dlaim to give you the Lowest Market Price pn EVERY PURCHASE. Give us t call when in Town'and we shall convince you that what we tell you is correct. Dave estireoelhef, Tne Mayor Proved Himself as Bad as the .;; . Woman He Fined. . . ' . - Because Mayor Graham did not think that there was sufficient evi dence to fine John W Shepherd on the charge of disorderly conduct and cursing Mrs. Shepherd, prose cuting witness, told the court that it was 'a-- 'dirty trick" in discharg ing the hubby, and she was at Once attached for contempt of court and fined $5 and cost, a total of $7 50. Mrs. Shepherd had her husband arrested on the charge named and- then appeared in court as witness against him. The mayor looked into the facts of the case and fin ally discharged Shepherd. The wife -witness then left the court room and when she reached the door she said in a voice sufficiently loud to be heard by the court and ocners in tne room that it was a "dirty trick." Mayor Graham in structed an officer to bring her back into the court room and after looking into the matter the fine was imposed and she was placed in the hands of the chief of police until it was paid, which was promptly done. Special to Char lotte Observer. The Man and the Position. The real man of size is deter mined by measuring bim as he stands apart from the accident of position. Among the accidents and misfits which one encounters in the course of human events is the small man in the large posi tion. Such a man in such a posi tion sometimes seems big for a brief day, because of conuectidn with a large position. He comes into the position by accident. He most probably regards it as a providence and according to the divine fitness of things. If he does not invest himself with all the importance attaching to his posi tion it is a wonder. So small is he as compared with his position, that he is absolutely dependent on the position for power nd prestige. He must do business on the credit of his posi tion. His glory is reflected glory of his posit'on's sake. The way lid shrinks when separated from his position is pathetic. We have known men to go down from positions where accident had temporarily placed them, who en deavored to use the prestige of that former position to advance them in ther own little schemes. When a man is not bigger than his position he is too small for it. Only small men have to depend on large positions for their own largeness. Word and Way. SALISBURY'S Grow (IS j OESTREICHER'S. The Or iginal Underseller. Hair my Ran Away Don't have a falling out with your hair. It might leave you ! Then what? That would mean thin, scraggly, uneven, rough hair. Keep your Kair at home ! Fasten it tightly to your scalp ! You can easilyjdo it with Aye's Hair Vigor. H is something more than a simple hair dress ing. It is a hair medicine, a hair tonic, a hair food. The best kind of a testimonial "Sold for over sixty years." Made by J. O. Ajrer Co., Lowell, Haaa. J SARSAPARlLLA. PILLS. CHERRY PECTORAL. Big AdTertising Bills. Attorneys for the State of North Carolina today placed in evidence before the standing mas ter in the rate case the result of of their examination of the books of the Southern Railway. Among this appeared . several vouches showing the Southern's payments to newspapers for advertisements and other purposes. The most striking item was that to The Raleigh Evening Times, aggregating $6,000 for the year 1906. These vouches were for "ad vertising" and "special notices." Two were paid to John C. Drewry as president of the Visitor Pub liCbinss Compang Company, which publishes The Times, each voucher being for $2,000. - The State's attorneys also pJaced in evidence for comparison the vouchers of payments to The Charlotte Observer for advertis ins and special notices and those o m. of the Washington Post. The Observer s vouchers for the year 1906 aggregate $252, and the Washington Post's $1,032 Washington Special to Charlotte Observer. Stomach troubles, Heart and Kidney ailments, can be quickly corrected with a prescription known to druggists everywhere as Dr. Shoop's Restorative. The prompt and surprising relief which this remedy immediately brings is entirely due to its Restorative acs tion upon the controlling nerve of the Stomach, etc. Grimes Drug Store. Subsribe to The Watchman. 1 layers Store APPROPRIATE. STERLING SILVER, CUT GLASS : AND HAND PAINTED CHINA. Hospital for Watches, Clocks and all kind of re pair work. All work guaranteed. , SALISBURY JEWELRY CO., L.' BBYSDN, Mor.- - - - - 104 H. Wain St. OUR SAY SO. . "Our Say So" is all the guarantee you need. If we sell you a watch which we tell you is "so and so," and if that watch doesn't carry out our promises why it simply means a new one in its place without cost to you, provided, of course, that you give it decent treats ment. Careful handling, and occasional cleaning. If it grows tired and looses time, or gets frisky and races away the golden moments, why we have a repair de partment which will deal with its case, or rather its works. Give us a trial. GORMAN & GREEN, LEADING JEWELERS AND OPTICIANS, Salisbury, Spencer, Klarlen, N. C. sJLL' ran n rr rv nnu jn n rnan VI Something that no without- A 3 We carry a Full Line of all Kinds and d 7i invite you to VI GOOD Wore BETTER FINE 7 3 3 W. B. SyMMERSETT 108 WEST INNISS STREET. 6 ittirn w a Duriug September we will offjrjf for CASH la number f Two-Horse Wagoiis at c at. COST! Think of it. If ytu need a wagon now or expect to need one later you will make money by pur chaehing NOW. If you will investigatejve can show yon where you are saving at least 15 percent., and a lit tle later, more than that figure. 6 TIHIE WftCQM Z We offer for CASH only, aCOST, are the Mitch- ell, Virginia and Barber. These wagons have 7 gamed a reputation through MERIT only, and our y satisfied customers stand as a monument to this 7 tact. Convince yourself as to the saving in mice 7 and quality of goods offered . .9 I .u aa"u V1 0UB uuer OI 1 w iiorse Wagons at COST is that we desire to discontinne handling tvPo-horse wagons and confine ourselves to the sale of Oi.e-horse Wagons fine and medium grade Buggies and Carriages, Mantels, Tile and w,thIln1tVi1BAR0AINS YOff I 11 1 IV A TTT 8 Hr Rr n r a li u mm i 115 E. Couno.il JX JVJl SALISBURY - -- N.f I L ELECTRIC C BITTERS I ttisi rfEST FOB AND KIDNEYS. Home is complete h Neeessitv. I call ana see it. At Little Prices At Medium Prices At Good Priees nihw a Air in (9 '"I -4 t, Our Stock 9 1 -OF SURREYS AND BUGGIES 0 if q is large and compased of the latest styles and are offered at prices to attract the most indifferent purchaser ARE APTER- - o-e, 9 9 9 11 IT Ilodol Dyspepsia Curo Digests what you eat