it -'^' ■ ' • •'■■ ' ■* r • -4 ^ :' ' •*.’'^" . ■I-''.* .. '■- > .. ‘ >w right et to call on us ill weights and rites Miss Ruth :o care for six , with the shock e-time and did unpany. I had ng-down pains. <e Cardui, as it enced to use it i and women s woman’s tonic, or not mmence to use DU slide further lui today, for its 1 you and will Chattanooea. Tenfl^ l/omen,’* scat lr«c. s pj|[Y NEWSPAPER IN TRANSYLVANIA COUNTY J.^. MINER, OWNER AND MANAGER A. HOME I»APER,FOR HOME FEOPLE—ALL HOME PRINT VOLUME^'XV BRilVARD, NOETI CAEOLINA, JULY 8.1910. NUMBER*28 The 4th of Great July was a in Brevard The W. 0. W. Must^s Congratulated on Its Success in Getting Out the Crowd. Two Thousand Dinners Senred-More than Three Thousand people on the Stredts-Good Order and a Good time for Everybody-ldeal Weather for a Holiday Outing. It was a great day. They came from all sections of the county, and from all along the railroad from Asheville to Lake Toxaway. •‘Largest crowd ever seen in Bre vard and the most orderly,” was heard to drop from the lips of many. There were probably 1.800 visitors here, and Brevard turnGd out en masse, making about 3,000 people on the streets, and not a drunk man! The Woodmen were conspicu ous by their badges and by the dummy axes they carried. They were the "uests of the occasion and were the favorites of the several anecdotes railroad. Everybody wanted to hear about the railroad and ev erybody seemed for it. If there were any not for it they kept quiet. The speaker enlarged upon the many benefits that would result from building the road, and the certainty that it will soon be built, if ttie county votes the bonds. Judge Murphy of Asheville followed in his happy and force ful style. He held the attention of his hearers, * and convulsed i them with laughter by relating crowd. The local lodge is to be congratulated upon its excel- lent managecQent of the occason and for the splendid dinner serv ed to the immense number pres ent Everybody seemed happy and to have received an ample supply of good things to eat. A game of ball was played at 10:30 and 2:30. both of which were well attended and much enjoyed.' About twelve o’clock the Bre vard Band began playing on the court house grounds and the im mense throng began to assemble. Soon afterwards the first speak er, Judge McSwain of Greenville, S. C., was introduced by W. H. Grogan, Jr., Master of Ceremo nies, and delivered a fine address couched in language happily suit ed to the occasion. He was in I tine spirits and his hearers par took of his good humor. He spoke of the good being accom plished by the Woodmen of the World uplifting humanity and caring for the needy of the living and the widows and orphans of the dead. But he struck a chord that vi brated through the entire crowd ’wrhen he beeran to talk on the The Judge is always a welcome visitor lo Brevard. Ii anybody came here doubting they went away in favor of voting the bonds iThe Brevai^d Brass Band made a host of new friends and pleased anew its old ones, by playing a great many pieces for the enter tainment of the crowd. The boys are becoming quite ‘proficient, and are a drawinff card for the town. They deserve well from our people. The weather was ideal. After nearly a month of daily showery Monday was almost the only ex ception—it waited until the exer cises were all over and most of the crowd had departed for their homes, then it rained enough to wet the bunting that had served to decorate the town in honor of the day. Everybody went home satisfied and happy and wnll, we are assured, be ready to respond to the next invitation to visit our county-seat and .partake of its hospitality. The News is very thankful to the thousands who, by their presence and orderly conduct, helped to make July 4 such a pronounced success Come again, one and all! GENERAL After a seven hours’ NEWS struggle the cormbined NOTES crews of 30-horsepower gasoline fishing boats, Good Partner and Pioneer I, captured a man-eating shark, 36 feet lonfe, weighing about 15 tons, in the straits of San Jaan del Fuca, between Port Orescent and Port Angeles. In the shark’s belly they found pieces of bones and a piec3 of a kofdak plate. . yi A deal by which the Loujsville end Nashville railroad is to obtain coatrcl and practical owneft^hip of the St. Liouls Southwestern, known as the Cotton Belt, which has been pending for 90 days, and is expected to be consummated withii^ the next 30 days, became known at Si Louis. The con trol of the Cotton Belt, it Is reported will pass to the Louisville and Nash ville for a cash outlay of a little mort' than $1,500,000. The upper branch of the Louisiana legislature has gone on record as not only opposed to woman suffrage, but has refused to allow womBn to act as members of boards ^ an international or charitable nature, even though they be elected ot appointed* to such boards by men. The senate came to this de cision when Senator Oeuy^an tried to have prysed his bill allonving wo- A BOATING PARTY LOSE THEIR LIVES Georeia Mi(^ Is to of the Unfortunate Vicfims. ili3i men memU3rship on^ educational and charitable boards. The bill was de feated by a large majority. Baron Sternberg, arrested a few days ago, at St. Petersburg, Russia, by the secret political police after a search of his apartments, has been formally charged with communicating to Austria a report of a secret sitting of the duma. With a large attendance from all parts of the country, the National Ec lectic Mediaal association of the Uni ter States is holding its 40th annual meeting in Boston, Mass. The open ing business sessifr followed by sectional mesticgs. In a hotly contested electiom the city of Bowling Green, Ky., gave a majority of 87 in favor of a return to licensed sale of liquors. Three years ago the cit)^ went dry by 228 votes. The New York city pcrstoffice re ceipts for the year ended June 30 show an increase cf 52,413,204 over the preceding year, or 12.11 per cent. The year’s total receipts are $22,339,- 509. H. H. Rumble, a prominent mem ber of the Norfolk, Va., bar, has, been \ nominated for congress by the Repub- j licans of the Second Virginia Dis-1 trict in convention at Ocean View, Va. Four deaths and more thsjn a score of prostrations from heat occurred in Chicagcf. It was the hottest day of th6 season last Friday, the tempera ture being 93 degrees. Lucius W. Hoyt, president of the ColoTado Bar Association and head of the law department of the University of Denver, died at Esnver, after a brief illness. The Duke D’Alencon, grandson of King Louis Philippe, who was deposed by the revolution of 1884, died at London, England, recently. It is said Mrs. Charles A. Morse .has scrld the Morse properties in New York to get money to fight for her husband’s freedom, who is confined in the federal prieon in Atlanta. More than a score pt middies are searching the waters of the Severn river for the bodies of Mrs. Nellie E. Bowyer, widow of Joseph Bowyer, and daughter-in-law of Superintendent John M. Bowyer, of the naval acad emy, and Midshipmen Grigsby Thom as, of Union Point, Ga., and Sherman M. Nason, of Newport, R. I. The three left the naval academy in a sail boat, and the boat was found drifting a few hours later. In it were portions of the clothing that had been worn by members of the party. It is believed, that the midshipmen took Mrs, Bowyer to the bathing shore used by the naval academy peo ple and attempted to teach her to swim, and, that she getting beyond her depth, all three were' drowned. Mrs. Bowyer was a Miss Dean, of Pittsburg, Pa. Her husband, Joseph Borwyer, died a couple ct years ago, and she has ever since made her home with his parents. She was 28 yeSrs of age. Each of the midshipmen were about 20 years old, and both were athletes and members of the academy rifle team. SOUTHEHN RAILWAY COMPANY. • y Transylvania Division. Effective 12:01 a. m. Sunday, June 19, ’lOi N. B —Schedules figures-given as information only, aud not guaranteed. O OS Eastern Standard Time STATIONS P M "a'so 5 to 5 03 5 16 5 21 5 26 5 35 5 41 6 47 5 55 6 0^ 6 10 6 24 6 32 6 6 41 6 46 6 59 7 09 7 25 A M { 6 U5 8 05 9 10 9 26 9 30 9 37 9 43 9 49 9 57 10 Oi 10 15 10 29 10 37 10 40 10 46 11 04 ll'^ Lv Waynesville Ar Lv Ashevilie at Lv ..Hertdersonvilie...Ar ...West Hendersonville Yale Hor^e Shoe Cannon Etowah.... Blantyre Penrose Davidson River Pisgah Forest.. Ar Brevard Lv Selica Oherrylieid ..Calvert.. Rosman Galloways Quebec Reid’s Ar...Lake Toxawav...Lv A H ■905 8 00 7 57 7 48 7 44 7 G9 7 33 7 28 7 21 7 la 4 13' 7 10 7 05 6 48 6 6 38 6 8H 6 29 6 20 6 10 6 00 P M 8 00 6 15 5 00 4 41 4 39 4 33 4 28 4 21 4 0 4 05 3 48 3 42 3 38 3 3S 3*^ s’oo SENATOR M’ENERY DIES. HYDE DENIED NEW TRIAL. ^udge Latshaw Hands Down Decision In Fannous Kansas City Case, B. C. Hyde, convicted on May 1C last, of poisoning Col. Thomas H. Swope, the millionaire philanthropist, has been denied a new trial by Judge S. Latshaw, in the criminal court at Kansas City. Colonel Swope, who died last Octo- left an estate valued at iriore than $3,000,000. Dr. Hyde was tried the specific charge of murdering Colonel Swope by the ajJ^.iinistration of poison while attending him as a Physician. There are ten other indictments Against the prisoner, charging him killing and attempting to kill ^ario\is members of the Swope family. The theory of the state was that desired to kill the other heirs 0 get possession of the ^cate through Is wife’s inheritance. Mrs. Hyde was ^ Colonel Swope. he prisoner’s attorney imnjedlate- ly filed a motion for. ,the arrfest cft judgment and the judge set July 5th as the time for arguments. When this motion is disposed of, the matter of appeal to the supreme court and a motion to release Dr, Hyde on bond will be taken up. Two killings occurring within a few minutes of each other created intense excitement at Greenville, S. C. Peter Rowley, a well known citizen, was shot and killed in a quarrel by 0. L. Godfrey, a horse dealer from Spar tanburg. The second killing occurred near the Southern railway station, when a neg^ro named Bob Calhoun shot and instantly killed another ne gro. Will Brown, in a fight over a woman. Two autcr^pobilists were killed at New Brunswick. N. J. in a collision between a locomotive and an auto mobile near Woodbridge, N. J. From papers found in their pockets they are believed to have been Thomas Gilfeather. of Cincinnati, and A. Mor ris, of New York. ^DESPERADO DEFIED OFFICERS. Adair Barricaded In Store Near Falco is Captured by Posse. Olan Adair, who, while barricaded in the store of Jo'hn W. Davis, near Falco, Ala., shot*three men of a posse after him, was captured .later, with out trouble and is held at Falco. J. H. Givan, who was fired upon from ambush, for which alleged of fense Adair was sought, is not seri ously injured, nor is either Alexander Givan, brother of the other Givan; B. F. Finley and' George Coggswell, the others wounded by Adair in his attempt to avoid arrest. One man is dean and two others were seriously injured as the result erf an automobile going down a steep embankment and running into a fence near Waukesha, Wis., while going at high sp^d. William Krug, f vice president and general manger of the Fred Krug Brewing company; of Omaha, Neb., has been "killed in an automobile ac cident. Prominent Louisiana Statesman Pass es Away at New Orleans. United States Senator SamueT !>oug- las McEnery died^ at his home in New Orleans, La. He had for many years been T>ro'm- inently identified with public affairs. Senator McEnery arrived from VvTashington at New Orleans suffering from an attack of indigestion. He was placed in a carriage at the rail road station and taken to his home in St. Mary’s street, where physicians were hastily summcfned. The senator rallied somewhat after being treated and showed" marked improvement, but later his condition took a turn for the worse and he lapsed into un consciousness, in which state he pass ed to the beyond. Senator McEnery was in his 74th year and his health had not been good fen* several years. / Nos. 7 and 8—Through trains between Waynes ville and Lake Toxaw ay carrying chair cars and coadh^a. Noi>. . 5 and 6—Through coaches between Asheville and Lake Toxaway. For tickets and full information apply to E. W. CARTER' Ag’t. J. H. WOOD, Dist. Pass. Ag’t, AsheviJie, N C. County Gov»*nment*. Representative—G. W. Wilson. Clerk Superior Court—T. T. Loftis. Sheriff and Tax Collector—C. C. Kilpat rick. Treasurer—Z. W. Nicholls. Register of Deeds--B. A. Gillespie. Coroner—Dr. W. J. Wallis. Surveyor—A. L. Hardin. Commissioners—^W. M. Henry, Ch’n; G. T. Lyday; W. E. Galloway. d Superintendent of Schools—T. C. Hen derson. Physician—Dr. Goode Cheatham. Attorney—R. L. Gash. ^ovirn Goven^ent..' ROSE’S CLOSE CALL. With Less Than Half a Minute to Sp^re, Man Is Reprieved. With less than half a minute to spare, Arthur Rcrse was saved from the electric chair at Trenton, N. J., by a stay signed by Judge Min turn on a moving train and thrown from the window to the condemned man’s lawye?. Rose was strapped in the chair and the electrician was 'waiting, his hand on the switch, for the second signal to throw 2,100 volts through the body of the wife murderer, when the cry “Stop! Stop! A stay!” rang through the death chamber. Never in the history of this state, probably never in the history of the country, has a life been saved by a reprieve in a manner so sensational or by such a narrow margin. Had there been' the slightest slip any where along the line Rcrse’s lawyer would have found his stay of no use. James West. 20 years ‘ old. was burned to death and his brother, Ed ward, 18 years old, was seriously in jured as. a result of a fire which de stroyed a boarding house at Hatties burg. Miss. Latter leaped from the second story window, breaking sev eral bones and probably injurTng him self Internally. The charred body of his brother was later found in the ruins. Other inmates of the house escaped without injury. A gasoline launch containing four men caught fire and sunk a mile and a half oft Addison street, Chicago, when the gasoline tank exploded. All the occupants .were rescued by the occupants of another launch which was a quarter of a mile distant when the exploslc^ occurred. Mayor—W. E. Breese, jr. Board of Aldermen—T. J|. Shipman. J. M. !^ilpatrick, T. M. Mitchell, P. L. De- Vane, E. W. Carter. Marshal—^J. A. Galloway. Clerk and Tax Collector—T. H. Gallo way. Treasurer—T. H. Shipman. Health Ofilcer—Dr. C. W. Hunt. Attorney—W. W. Zachary. Regular meetings—First Monday night in each month. Boarding Houses. McMINN HOUSE BREVARD, N. C. This old and well known hotel has been leased for the sumnfer season of 1910, and solicits the patronage of the traveling public and home people who want a square meal. For^rates, etQ., address MRS. M. B. WATERS. WHITMIRE COTTAGE CHERRYFIELD, N. C. Summer tourists will find this an ideal home for resi and recreation— near the depot. For information ad dress as above. J. C. WHITMIRE. Profesdonal Cords. R. Ii. GASH. LAWYER. 11 and 12 McMiiin BuUding Notary Public, W. B. DUCKWORTH, ATTO RNEY-AT-LA W. £U>oms 1 and 2, Pickelsimer Building H. G. BAILEY Civfl and Consoltins Engineer and Soryeyor CITY EII6IIIEER HEIDERSOmilLLE, I. C. Southern Railway. For best schedtiles, fewest changes of cars and lowest rates to all points, call on or write to J. H. Wood, Distiic^; Passenger Age nt, C.

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