re imported by are not to be li its superiority, ' other medicine, e favorite wom- Ise it is so easy jits results, and irs, because of Try it today. the News oil cannot tory were enti- dcmpany was square deal to less firm nor to never have in- even cut under e intend to sell Sylvan ^ newspaper in TRANSYLVANIA COUNTY ew AND MANAGER A HOME PAPER FOR HOME PEOPLE—ALL HOME PRINT VOLUMMI BREVARD, NORTH CAROLINA, OCTOBER 14.1910. NUMBERHl latest GAME OF ; THE INTERESTS. Afs Ttiey Trying to Capture the Democracy? SIGNS OF THIS IN NEW YORK. Since • the Progressives Are Driving Them Out of the Republican Party, Are They Seeking a New Haven of Refugo?—Prcgressives Must Get To gether and Vote Together. By JAMES A. JEDGERTON. NOW that the progressive move- ment is driving the special in terests out of the Republican party., are they seeking asylum in the Democratic party? Having used the G. O. P. ship till they made it ob noxious to the country, are they now preparing- to desert it in the hope that they cau reach port in the opposition craft? It looks that way in New York state. It was remarked during. the gathering of the clans at Rochester that they resembled a convention of a certain railroad, so many of the attor neys and political workers of that par ticular road were present. There were also the attorneys and political work er of other roads, to say nothing of the army of lobbyists for all of the in terests. including those who are mov ing heaven and earth to repeal the racetrack law. A convention bossed by Charles F. Murphy anil presii’cd over by Alton B. Parker advertises its character by its lenders. It is not only too nauch for a pro.^'essive Republican to stomach, but too much for a progressive Democrat. Up to a few weeks ago it was uni versally admitted that the Democrats would probably carry New York this HENRY L. STIMSON. <<> o' The Republican candidate for governor of New York an nounced himself some time ago as a progressive. Mr. Stimson ^ is the man who prosecuted the ^ sugar trust and recovered mil- ^ lions of dollars out of which it T had defrauded tho government 4 by false weights; prosecuted Banker Charles W. Morse and sent him to the penitentiary and prosecuted and convicted the New York Central and four other railroads for rebating. 4> Mr. Stimson is forty-seven years ^ old and was educated at Yale. fall. The situation has changed al- niost in the twinkling of an eye, and the presence of the interests at Roch ester had much to do with working the change. The same symptoms have been wit- i^essccl in other states. It is \ime for the progressive Democrats to be on their guard. There should be no mis take on one point. The revolt of the American people is not against one party or the other so much as it is against the domination of the special Interests in politics. For the time being the voters are striking at the Republican party be- ^au^e that is the party in power and for tho :^rthei^ reason th^t, crooked business has been using tlie lenders of that party. The Democrats have benefited .not s:> much bec*ause the vot ers Iiave regained faith in the Democ racy, but because they have lost faith i& tha.t kind of Ivepnb]!(»!inl«m. Should th# Democrats come into power or e^^en partially so and show any sign 9f the horns and hoofs of siXK*ial priv ilege the people woiaid strtlie them down as swiftly as they are now stril^ Ing down the stand pat Republicans. The progressives of the country are going to get together and vote togeth er somewhere. They wi,l not consent longer to be whipsawed. fooled and di vided by party machines used in the Interest of special privilege. Possibly they will capture one of the old par ties and vote together.in that. Possi bly they will rise above party alto gether and vote against every agent of the trusts wherever he appears. Possibly they will form a new party. But get together somehow and some where they will. The trusts, having used the Repub lican party as long as they could, used it until they brought it to the verge of division and defeat, may now ; attempt to capture the Democratic party, and there are plenty of sign? that this is exactly their game. But even if they succeed they cannot fool the voters long. The true followers of Bryan, the progressive Democrats, will revolt as the progressive Repub licans have revolted. Sooner or later the combination of crooked politics and crooked business will be driven into the open and beaten in the open. The American people have passed the stage where they care for mere party labels. At last they intend to look after their own Intere.sts, t!i<‘ in terests of the common man. the i ill cr ests of the public at knge. Tt>day three-fourths of the country is progres sive and sooner or later will make its will felt. The particular place or man ner of the uniting of these progressive forces does not so much matter. Tho chief thing is that they unite. Tho special interests in politics must bo driven together in one place and th? progressives together In one place. Then let them fight it out. The result will not be long in doubt when that conflict takes place. The oiily safe course Is for the pro gressive forces to find out where every candidate stands, then unite on tho progressive candidate and elect him regardless of party. Especially should this course be followed in the congres sional election. Send no reactionary to congress, whether he be Democrat or Republican. Senator "Cummins’ paper, the Dcs Moines News, denounces Golonei Roosevelt and the New York Republic ans for indorsing Taft and the Payno tariff. But it must be admitted that the New York brethren are facing in the right direction even if they have not advanced as far toward tho light as Iowa. Give them time and they will go tho whole road. i-nrrr"f r ^ 11 ■— * <•> ALBERT J. BEVERIDGE. Senator Beveridge makes his attacks on tho Payne-Aldrich tariff more vigorous as the cam paign progresses. He is con ducting a game fight against odds, but defies the interests to send enough money into Indiana to defeat him. He says the privilege seeking corporations are trying to capture the De mocracy. One of the most de termined stands Beveridge hao made in the national congress is for child labor legislation. new^yoW^progr^Ive: Who»d 'a' Thought It? r onG;R£:5S puAse |‘1L Bt €00D —New York Press. Are the special Interests trying to hide behind state rights as the special slaveholding Interests tried to hide be hind the same shield a half century Igo? It would seem that the Issue In New York Is against Tammanylzing the state. . Republican Convention In tho Main a Victory Againct tho Interests. Despite the disappointment of pro gressives in some quarters over the New York indorsement of the Payne- Aldrlch tariff and Uif Taft administra tion, tho result in the Republican state convention was for the most part a progressive triumph. It disastrously defeated the old guai*d bosses. It declared for the Hughes plan of direct primaries, the only fair inter pretation of this plank is that it means state wide primaries on all oflSces-, as that was the plan advocated by the governor, who only consented in tho end to the elimination of state anti municipal offices because he thought he could get nothing better. It pledged the party to hunt out and punish the grafters. It nominated a distinctly progressive candidate for governor. This is glci-y enough for one year. To any one who knows New York politics the political revolution indi cated by these results is stupendous and cannot but lead to farreaching re sults. The Third Term Bugaboo. No sootter had Theodore Roosevelt come Out flatfootedly for the progres sive cause than some of the orgaas of the interests began working them selves into a frenzy over a third term. Harper’s Weekly—which my six-yeajr- old Insists on calling Harper’s Weat- ling, though I do not know why—ha« even gone to the length of charging T. R. with treason. Why all this hue and cry? The only utterance of Colonel Roosevelt on the third term question was a positive statement that he would not accept another nomination. That statement still stands. By neither word nor deed has he modified it. All the third term talk comes from others. It looks as if some of these gentlemen are doing the dust throwing act. They do not attack Roosevelt’s principles. They take up some side issue like an imaginary desire for a third term—his utterance concerning the supreme court, his tebuke to Lorimer or some personal or trivial thing. They can not so divert the issue. The question is. Are Roosevelt’s progressive princi ples right? Leave the^i)ersonalities and trivialities to those who are per sonal and trivial. As to the third term, why not cross that bridge when we reach it? Earlier in the year Duncan E. Mc- Klnlay reported that there was no In surgent movement In California. Yet the progressives swept the state and defeated McKinlay himself for renom- Ination to congress. The same Mc Kinlay campaigned in Maine and came back to report to Taft that the state would be carried by the old time plurality. Evidently Mr. McKinlay should attend a school for political prophets. County Government*. 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. Hemy, Ch’n; G. T. Lyday; Wi E. Galloway. Superintendent of Schools—T. C. Hen derson. Physician—^Dr. Goode Cheatham. Attorney—R. L. Gash. Town Government*. "Guilt !s Pcrcoriai.” When crime is committed somebody commits it. lie is the man to punish. It matters not how many aliases he as sumes, how many legal fictions he hides behind, the law brushes these aside and says, “Thou art the man.” “Guilt is personal.” That is tho most illuminating sentence uttered since the trust prosecutions started. When a corporation breaks tho lav.* there is some man or men ^jsponsiblc So far as the offending trust is con cerned, it can be dis.solved. But this is not sufficient. The real lawbreak ers in the trust are individuals, and they should receive the personal pen alty prescribed for their crimes. All governmental questions when analyzed are found to be simple. We need men of the logic of Lincoln to go to the root of a matter and de termine its fundamentals. In this day of seeming complexities the old morali ties still apply. The one of the Ten Commandments^ that has now become a political Issus is, “Thou shalt not steal.” After giving La Follette a plural ity of 102,000 for senator Wisconsin adopts a more progressive platform than ever, condemning the Payne tar iff and demanding physical valuation of railroads, the initiative, referendum and recall, Income tax, national con trol of natural resources, anti-lobby law, empl'oyers’ liability, child labor legislation and other measures In kind. A specif^ from Marseilles, France, says that it is rumored that there liave been mi^y deaths from cholera tmong the Ittlian Immigrants In that city. Colonel Bryan is becoming some thing of an insurgent himself. Despite all the hue and cry against him, every progressive and every fair minded manly man will rest)ect him more than ever for the fight he is now conduct ing. It makes for indei)endence and decency. Congressman Boutell, who was re cently defeated for renomination in the Illinois primaries, says insurgency is like the measles. Presumably he meant it is catching. Then, again, measles when repressed and nrot al lowed to come cut freely are some times fatal. Professor Bombarda, the Republi can deputy and anti-clerical who was s»:ot by an army lieutenant, died at Lisbon, Portugal, says a dispatch from that city. King Frederick, of Copenhagen, tag recei'^ ed Eooker T. Washington and conversed with him on the subjc 'I of the colored races. His majesty asked the American fcrr a copy of one of his publications. _ , Potato Production. Germany, Russia and Austria ex ceed the United States in the produc tion of potatoes. "I Regret to Report.* E Mayor—W. E. Breese, jr. Board of Aldermen—H. Shipman. J M. Kilpatrick, T. M. Mitchell, F. L. De- Vane, E. W. Carter. Marshal—A. Galloway. Clerk and Tax Collector—T. H. Gallo way. Treasurer—T. H. Shipman. Health Officer—Dr. C. W. Hunt. Regular meetings—First Monday night in each month. Boarding Houses. WHITMIRE COTTAGE CHERRYFIKLD, N. C. Summer tourists will find this an ideal home for rest and recreation— near the depot. For information ad dress as above. .r. C. WHITMIRE. Professional Cords. R. Ij. gash. LAWYER. 11 and 12 MdMinn Building- Notary Public. W. B. DUCKWORTH, ATTO R N E Y-AT-L A W. Rooms 1 and 2, Pickelsimer Building H. G. BAILEY Civil and Consulting Engineer and Surveyor CITY ENGIKEER HENDEflSONNILLE. N. C. —Omaha World-Herald. The south has also had her progres- I live victories, Hoke Smith in Georgia, j the anti-Patterson Democrats in Ten- I oessee and Senator Elect Broward of Florida being the winners In a few of 1 ;Iiem. NOTICE OF EXECUTRIX. Having" qualified as executrix of the last will and testament of Wash ington E. Galloway, late of the coun ty of Transylvania, this is to notify all persons havingf claims asjainst the estate of the said testator, to present, their claims to the undersij?ned on or- before the 9th day of July, 1911, or- this notice will be plead in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will make immediate'- settlement. This July 9th, 1910. SARAH LUCINDA GALLOWAY, W3lch Galloway, atty. ^Executrix.-. ADMINISTRATOR’S. NOTICE, Having qualified as administrator of the estate of J. C. McGaha, deceased, late of Transylvania county, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to ex hibit them to the undersigned at office of R. L. Gash, Esq., Brevard, N. C., on or be fore the 27th day of May, 1911, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their re covery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment. This 20th day of May, 1910. V. B. McGAHA, Adm’r estate of J. C. McGaha, deceased. ^try No* 2568* W. J. Owen enters and claims six hun dred and forty (640) acres of land, lying in Hogback Township, on the waters of In dian creek. Beginning on a white oak, E. D. Owen’s comer, and runs thence north 66 deg. east sixty (60) poles to a hickory stump on top nf the Blue Ridge; thence south 24 degrees east with S. A. Owen's line to a stone. S. A. Owen's comer, on top of the Blue Ridge; thence south with the top of the Blue Ridge to a black oak, John Kizer’s comer; thence west, ranning so a» to include all the vacant land on Indian, ercek. B. A. GILLESPIE, * Entry Taker. Chamberlain’s RS.“y. Never fails. Buy it now.. It save lifck