OIIARtO'iT DAILY OCgritVER AUGUST V, J903.
v ".
' i ; '' 1 V' I '
1
V V' '.Prlnc" Mlchl Cntcun and
V rlvea trom Europe tor lx month'
,ient' OrniU dauichter of Gen. and
" randuthUf ot Oen. tJ. 8. Grant.' ; i '- A '
.', iv i Thin t.th first Vllt of Prince and Prfncs Cantaeuseoa America
Inca their weddtnc-at Newoort In September. 18M. Their. two children.
' ' Prtnco Michael . Cantaouaen ti- yearsold and the prinoeu Berthe. two
I ' year aid ' lour month, have been the gueau of . their grandparent on
V Governor's laland." In. Ner Tork harbor? since laat December.. -
t : . The viaic which waa not prerlounly; . announced. wi made,- It ' la
r :il4, becauMof tha disorder In-th
-. v. the Prince lias hi estate. ?, " - a
'4
. v V.-;"xirtT'd TJV fFTTt Ml I' VL'IUP
" r - J- r.r.ii.i n i i i ii ri - n i iin
''i'V - ,V t'i ! ;-,' f -4"
: ! s,'iBe Androo Karnegy lasnun ov ipv
'A :- ,;;1ng ipr Mr, Rosyvelt aa now,et
'.the powr oy the government behind
,.. I . . . . ; .... J .
' s V Mr, Rosyvelt following aa aln-
' '. ..or the-throne communded . awl kort
v ' . . proceedings and punux aokumenu. i
,b- rlttea. In" Nerraan-Frenah. , ' When
Jhe poos Saxons kame Into kort their
Dllte-must - have ben aimllar X that
; .'ov the I-Ulyun wjhea (ha wer tiid
.at. Marlon, week b 4 last Awl skoI
!.. are In history wll remember how W1U
:. yum'a effort uxeedeJ. Tha.vll awlse
'). remember m.enny atbef. efforts tu awU
.f, er lanrwagexby : ledgislaahun and
whether or not Uia made good. Alex
androo, prior' S the birth of Androo
he Steel King, tride the experiment
and made a move-ment HI purpus
y- ,wta I make the Ju and tha Pershun
A epeek Greek,' as Wllyum'a was to
,',make the Saxoh spees. Frenah.. Now
'v Mr. HoseyvelMiai lent-tno la-wge In-'
fluence ov his hi staehun X kompel
Ms .Ubertylovlftg JauVlecka. f '
: nlu-kind -or stof: he' Has oroered that
. The Kongreahunat Rekord be epelt
, akordlnc to .Androo; and that-u-vtr-,
chal kompulshun, . for hoo kan get
along wlthowt; reeding The Kongresh
nai Rekorai; -t.KV1
. .Thlir Is abutiter tlustraahun ov Mr.
, Stoseyvelt's onest . - lmpulatvne -' and
. , Mr. Karnegy' amblshun. , . Both,' ot
. thees jentelmen have adopted mere-
chure as a aide line, the 1 as
, , dlterahun from his statesmanship and
, the. nthei' as a relaxasbud from think
Ing ov , steel S . mutch. Tha, du not
V beleeve In the crate doktrln ov the
XMviahun ov - Labor. ' "Tha ot, leeve
, eurnthing for outer Amermane i du.
. lift Karnegy has awlredy dun human'
;:ty testing eevls bl blldlivr inumer
,. aeei liDraru, most ov wnitcn nave uie
'.;:; dtstlnkshun. ov not ', kontalnlng , the
- . booit u kawl for; he has awlso ben
- the awthof ov that noo - so . widely
. eirkulated amnng his ewa - libra rls,
"The Mplrefv Komerae.r c For aman
'f.' hoo has literary amblshaa meerly en
" the quiet, his present .neevment ot
I be sauafytng. He taa Ananae the
steel trust and the blldlng ov librae
ru and the printing ov a book; but
le is likely 1 have sura trubel Intro
"duslng method ln3 hla' expenditures
, wperi ne koidi to nnan-ing a move
; ment ,. change the langwage by the
'-. ."'peepl. ; ':. ... -..'.., .- '.,s-'.';
, '.. awlso Mr. Roiiyvelt was the hero
.. ev Hawn wawn hii, and has kllmed
: rapidly from that hit f battel 1 the
, ". kret ov the pelltlkal mowctn ov this
j , kuntry. . On the. side -tie has rltten
'. ennt books, at od moments and as
:.; pastime, 1 ni- 1 ov i his . partner's
llbraris. He ot awlse b 'satlsfld.
. Both ' thees Jentelmen had . better
profit bf the exsampel ei Admlrabel
-v- Dewy,' el tha ma 'get , the eense ov
nmor ov the peepl arowsed and find
',; themselves laftxeU 'This wud hurt
: . thees Jentelmen, ' for eech ov them
: take himself plum' eiiu-ly.' , .Rum
, time the nt or the loly Js more flred
j, ful than the powr ov tne mlty. There
: ah bo menny ov the loly! And . their
lafter Is sumtlms umnteiljlbel 3 the
grate. , Admlrabel ..Dewy ' never -;nu
- J .
If the reeder has' followed o'wr re
i fiekshune thus fah, let him .reflekt
. xurtner as to now long -t wud , take
: htnv-t peroosnhli' daly 'peper. If It
was kwl spelt llk,thls. . The toplk la a
. praktikat . 1. , ; If he la In aimpatny
with , the. move-ment and Jlkee this"
V. eort ov reedin he shud send In his
name. at wun 4 the nekretary ov.the
' . nnt-Mf ev Refawm1 'Rnalln S'nrf) md
be he ken et a 11 1 el of .the flnanse
his pahm. But If tie i Is; .not In
elmpathy with it and thin it rldlku-
aa and Impraktlcal he need not aban
; don Ms blzlnes 1 combat it, for It. U a
' pees ov folly konslstenf . with . the
blldlng ov Babel) tn the land ov ' 6hl
nar, and, In-tod of simplifying-, wud
If It cud lntrodu-e konfuiihun ov
' tungn. Mr. Rosyvelt. kan kontrol the
tile ov The Rekord. but that 4a tb
limit pv hli powr ! Inovate; and If
the prlvat sltlsen kan deny himself
- the daly luxury of, that dellteral perl
bdlkal the fonntlk refawro wll not dis
turb h,im mutch. ;vv Jiw
When I fal t thinking W thla sub.
, Jekt l .kanot keep owt ov mind the
kawl whltch Mr. Androo ' Karnegy
parte tu Joel Chandler Harts. IHd u
c the fotograf ov th taken Jgether?
If so. did u ever c 1 men so mutualy
bored making sutch herolk effort not
3 eem sot It was m line with Mr,
Andmo'e ll-gottn literary amblihun
and h eed X himself,' "i have grot 1
go up eginat It:" and it was awlso
Imperative upon Mr. Harts .stand for
It, or pleed gllty ov inho-pltallty.
Ttoth had enuf b4 tha bouan. but bl
the time that vMlt ovor tha both
tud had 9 mutch. The foioraf eug-
4s an enalojy from nature: that a
Ul -. , A " i
,..f.-.;"' . - . r.-
iht frrinrrtm --Cun'taonMb'' hv " r-
llt,- Th Prtnce,wa MIm Julia
Mra, Frederick Dnt 'Grant, and
province of Poltava, . Russia, where
bare pt not I try S dense, bcawae he
kan du uther things better Mr. An.
droo and Mr. Joe) Chandler wtfd have
ben so mutfh happier If -eech had
shlnled on his own side. '. Perhaps Mr,
Karnegy was kontemplatlng the adop
ahun ov Mr.-Harts' sistbm ov spellng
In Unkel Remus. - . .'' , r
V As' men ktlme tnl tne rare atmoa
fere om gratene tha must loose the
korrektlve and holesum. Influence ov
the plato .and vally;' the kommon pee
pl ah only amused at this move-mont
ana mere is no sort ov aown mat tna
eh Justlflde In belrvg tikled: but there
eh menny ov the grate, bslde Mesira
Rosyvelt and Karnegy, S hoom the
humor dus not apeeL The Bored ov
Refawroed Spellng has duslns ov lllus
trlu names on It " If tha wer not
autch wel nohn .and wet reputed men,
we mite suspekt that tha wer plalng
a skin game with nr. Karnegy ana
enlflng arownd for. a me I graft But
that is not Che kase. ' it is awl onest
Injun, and the next aesflun's edlshuns
ov The Rongreshunel , Rekord v wll
prove this kontenshttn.'- r . -,
- . i - - JAWN "CHAWS.
vKtTXKD OVER, A CARD OAMTE.',
Bra Walker, Colored, the Victim, Vnd
"Pee; Ieg," Anonner Negro, .
. JsU Charged With the Crtmo. .
Speolal to The Observer.;' '
Torkvllie, S. C.vAog.t 1 tl. -Three
negroes were engaged in gambling In
a house la the . yard of Dr. . W.. O.
White, of this place, 'last 'night, and
became Involved la a row. As a re
suit. of. that row oneof them, Ben
Walker.' Is dead. ' Three, pistol .balls
were fired Into him by one of the
other, negroes. One Is supposed yto
have passed through his heart, anoth
er entered the brain at the edge of
ine, nair, a Dove tne leri eye, ana tne
third went into the throat, . either of
whlcb'would aecessarlly have proved
Iatal. ;... . .-r, - . v. .
'.The shoQtms; la supposed to' have
been done by a. negro employed - by
Dr. White to . look after -his horses
and do other work about the promts
es, AUhourh I Inquired of . no Jess
I-than a doien persons as to his name.
none or them knew him by any other,
appellation than "Peg- Leg," he hav
ing lost a leg and used what Is com'
moniy known aa a pea leg.,
ur. wnne. Knew notning or tne
killing" until .he- answered his tele
phone about I o'clock this morning.
and the . negro, weo was then four
miles In the country, told him that he
would And the body of Ben Walker
in the house in ni ysra, in whicn ne
had ' been staying, - and' that If the
sheriff would come for him he' would
surrender. Peg Lea Is now In Jalt
The third negro Is expected to be ar
rested jo-day, and It la claimed that
Doin ne ana fog xeg cook a si una in
tho shooting. A tdeck of cards was
found oo the table. In-, .the - house.
which is not over-7 s reet-rrom the
dwelling- of Dr. White, V
i !
, "HUSBAND ATTEMPTS SVICIDE.
W.'- M. nippy.''Who Tried to Deweit
Jim tviie t 'inr noinv time
Ago, Make an KSort to Kail Ills
" Life, But le rrnetrated by a Police
i man, t . '.; t . ' -,, ' '
Special to The Observer. y '
Gaffney, S. C, Aug. tt.Xtl excit
ing Incident occurred earlythl morn
ing ab the Commercial Hotel, in this
city, when a man disturbed that part
of thectty by attempting suicide.
A number or persona were attract
ed to' the' room when the shot was
fired; among the number ,a policeman.
They -were Just in tlmo to prevent
the man from leaping from tne win
dow to the ground below.. This was
about a. Pi. . i . i :'
The man was taken into custody
but wm released to-day on a cash
bond. He gave his name as w. M.
Rtppy, end he was- accompanied by
his wife, arrlvtna; lent evening i aftr
midnight on train Not S8 from the
North. They will be remembered, aa
the malt and woman who caused such
excitement at the Gaffney station a
few daxs ago when the woman nar
rowly escaped death while attempting
to catch train on wnien ner nos
band was attempting to run away
from her.
i , . Durham's Docket le Heavy,
Special to The Observer. ' ' '
Durham, Aug. ' II. ourl vr
meets
here to-morrow with Judge Fred
Moore, of Ashevllln. en the bnch.
Thl will be his flr-t official vlult to
this city. . will find a tremendous
dooknt. Th-re are now 17 f ao on
docket and tt la expected that thr
will be an Increase to thl number
by Monday. The term or court Is
for one week. 'Among ttio cnmis for
trial sre several thnt wui laka sev
eral dnys efirh. Th re are now in-re
limn DO prlnnprs In -the Ja'l nml
more than half of the trm nlll he
connumcl )n clnrln? tho iirimin.
BEVlYAt OF PUEITAISM
PJUK. OF UEV. DK,
In Strong Kermon at tho Urst Pree
bjtcHun CliMrrh, Eavannah Minis
ter !) litre That It I Ttme to "Cry
Aloud AraiMt 81n" .Would HaveJ
uie viu I'urtiana i.mulatcrt Jlev.
.fit A. Stewart ; Preactice at Trinity
-tliurt'li. (fromi -rrhe Iarth Is the
In thet absepc of the pjutor,
J. ,B Hoverton;' D, D th pulp
Rev.
DulDlt Of.
ine - irsi rresoyterian church la being.-
filled ' by Key' W, p. McCorkle,
i. P.. of Savannah, Oa.. Dr. McCor
kle is pastor of the First Presbyte
rian church of Savannah, and la a
man of strong intellect and spiritual
ity, and Is a preacher of ability. Yes
terday morning he used as his text
this, page; "Cry aloud, spare not.
lift up thy voice like a: trumpet, knd
shew ray people! their transgression,
and the house of Jacob their slne.fV
Isaiah (8:1,: end hla sermon was In
teresting and calculated to- be .pro
ductive of serious, thought " on , the
part of those who heard it, v
la part he said:-"Isaiah's' prophe
cies remind one of tome-great sym
phony of Mosart. -of Beethoven, of
Haydn. - What delightful Interlude
In all the . prophecies showing God's
love , and ' HI conitant stretching
forth of Hla hands to a wicked and
gainsaying people, j 'And through all
these prophecies there are three great
lessons taught r The awfulneas of di
vine Vt-ath; the ravishing sweetness
ori oivine love, and the rectitude of
divine Ihw !.". , -i-- .v.,',
."It is necessary that a minister of
the Ofpelvflrst oftli,' keep himself
pure, .And In the next place he must
cry aloud against sin and spare not
The-word never can be won to Chdst
by any compromise gospel. ' There
must be the faithful use. of all kinds
of ammunition. This Is not the most
pleasant way,, to g along In the
ministry, V It Is, far easier , to yield to
the temptation to cry peace,, peace,
when there I no peace, but the world
most be made o see and feel Its own
in and woe. . . .v x,
f "The PurlUns were' sturdy Chrls
ian - characters and were not spirit
ual dyspeptics as are many church
members of to-day those who want
not gospel meat, but gospel bouillon,
served In tiny,, tiny cups. I
, "The puritan believed In the "ex
istence of a wicked devil Just as much
as they believed in the good God.
The Puritan preacher had" a religion
mat was not merely a thing bf sen
tlment. He practiced what he Breach
ed. ' He ruled In. his own- house, and
was wnat would now be called an ex
tremlst on the subject , tf worldly
anusemetns, for he believed the play
house, to lead to' the-borderland of
hell, and the dance he believed to be
too silly for Indulgence by. any sen
slble person. . ' .. . .
"John Calvin had in hlan this Pu
ritan spirit and he waSjttie maater
spirit of the. 16th century. He waa
pastor of a church in Geneva, and
was a teacher In the great college
wnicn ne rounded there.., The degra
dation or Geneva at that time had
reached Its lowest ebb, and a large
quarter, of that city. was given over
to licentiousness and sin of . every
irp. jonn .caivin saw the condition
ot the city and cried aloud against It,
and the refcult waa Geneva became
the most moral city In Europe, and
remained so for many year. He
mad Geneva a clean clj. The mtn-'
Istry must cry out aloud against. sin
If the laws of the country are to-be
upnera. y,--. .-r
. 'The' kernel of Calvin's creed Is
'God 'rules la this world not angels;
not men; but. God.!-j i - ' .
' - The " world ' honors Calvla to-dayv,
yvaai is caivinismr . Just what Em
ersoa - says: ' The determination of
thought upon the unseen world Pu
ritanism gave birth to most profound
reverence ant strength. . le It any
wonder they could fight T Ho wonder
no army could withstand an army of
rnnuini. ine ruruini not omy ov
ercame opposing trooDS. but scatter
ed them. John Fiske said "Had.lt
not 'been for Puritanism, political lib
erty would have disappeared from, the
world. And the home. Is the creature
of Puritanism. It was . Puritanism
that founded the publlo school sye
tem, and religious and political lib
erty. . .;- '
wi need a revival of. PurtUnlsm
here ' and now tit a modified, form.
perhaps, but If It Is net possible save
in the original form, let uf have It la
the original. -.' ' i-t'",i'
v "Whet we . need Is more - of that
spirit which snakes us keep ourselves
pure ana cry out ageinit sin.- May
the mantle ot the old Puritans fall
upon us. 'f ,i" , ;.:
Revi S. A. Stewart at Trluliy Chorrhl
In Trinity Methodist , church laat
night. Rev. S. A. , Stewart preached,
in the absence of the pastor. ' Ho
based his sermon upon the first verse
of the Sith Psalm: 'The earth Is the
lord's and the- fullness thereof." -
He eald In part? "It was the mis
sion of tho Greek to teach the. world
art' the mission -ot the Roman, to
teach the world law, land It was"" the
divine mission of the Hebrew to teach
the world religion. , And In teaching
the world religion It was the. mission
ot the Hebrew to tesch the world
monthetsov one God, and that God
the God of all creation. , , , .'
'The Creator Is always greater than
fhe . things, created, gur ' Bible does
not teach .- us pantheism. ' tnst . the
ory which tesches all things to be a
pert of God. . a V1,, , .
This concepuon. of Ood 7 teaches
that the- world Is God's, which Is
the teaching of our text . Man's own
ershlp of property and wealth la not
ownership In fee simple, but Is sim
ply trusteeship, and he Is responsible
to God v most high for the . use , be
makes ot that wealth. ,
ThU i conception of trusteeship
gives the hlhet conception that has
ever been placed upon man's owner
ship of tho world's wealth. The hu
man raoe la of enough Importance to
deserve special mention In this oon
ceptlnn ' of i God's ownership of the
'world. Alt the acts of God ministered
to or bestowed upon. His children are
ministered or. bestowed for,the good
of humanity. And I believe the time
will- come when. society will . reach
thrt point 'when punishment In the
spirit or revenge will be done away.
and when that time come punishment
by the mob end capital punishment
wilt vanl-h away as the mist before
the sunshine.' -K '.:.'.: , .- j..
'The mlstakee made by every so
clety organised for 'the betterment
of the human race Is that a certain
poor, ..down-trodden clsss In - every
community, I neglected, while' effort
Is made to. help those who are fnr
ther removed. And there is no re
ligion In any society which makes this
mi-take.' ,
In the South It I our duty as
White peoplo to see that tha negro Is
educated In keeping with his ability,
and until we have done thl we have
not discharged our duty as the ruling
race of the South. , It I our duty a
people of the South to solve the' groat
questions now facing the South that
moat, be solved, it la eur duty to
nlHhem ourselves, and not lave
them to be solved by other. It 1
our duty to see. that the tufTrag of
the South. It concerns both white
nl colored, be regulated by at edu-
sfionaj atandnrd.
"It is arrued br some that rnltfn
ry work In forcl-n 1 m1i Intrrrur!
commerce, but : euch. argument has
long gtnoe leen reXuted. , .-.-.:
"Sensational attacks ' have '. been
made upon missionary work, but none
of thene .will ever Influence Christian
people to relax their efforts to bring
"In the name of our theism let Ua
not .cease to Uy claim to every class
or manxina in tne name of our God.
Let us , not ceaee In our efforts to
bring to God the poor and the down
trodden classes. ' Let us continue our
efforts to bring every class of human
ity, to Him. . Ley us do thl in the
strength ot our God, for it l-tn Him
that w live end move and have our
being." - , ; :
. r SCQTTiAyP KECK TEMSf 'f'j
Tonus;' Peoplo Making the Beet of Uie
Pinal Week o( Vacation A Delight
. Jul Porch rarty Personal Note
8pecal to The" Observer. ' , .f'
1:, Scotland- Neck,". Aug. tilThere Is
only one more week of summer gai
ety before the young men and young
Women -wilt be dispersing to the vari
ous schools and college, and they are
making good the time In social pleas
ure. . .,..-.-. :
Some night, ego. Mrs. C.' F Bur
roughs gave a: porch party compll
mnetary to ner visitors. Misses 'Elsie
Fernbee, Venegra Boker and Olivia
Berry, of Ayden. A gay company as
sembled and spent the time In chat
and: song, i and then Indulged In a
guessing contest Miss Undine Futrell
waa the successful contestant The
prise- waa a- choice box of Huyler's
which Miss Futrell gracefully pre
sented to Mrs. Burroughs' visitors.
The' young v-people present were:
Misses Fernbee, Baker and Berry, and
Mi-sea Katherme, Klltabeth and Un
dine Futrell,. Nannie Wllllford. Emily
Bixfa, Cleve Andrews and Lillian Tim
berlake and Meesra. John Gray, Al
bion Dunn, Scarboro Hancock, Tyler
Wheeler,- - Robert Coleman, Edwin
Jesy, Bruce Futrell, Allen Perry and
Paul Bryan. At IS o'clock the guests
departed Iq high glee over the pleas
ures of the evening.
Mr. N. Biggs and daughter, Miss
Annie, have., returned from Buffalo
Llthia Springs, Ml May Jonea, of
Newbern, and Miss Annie. Mclver,
daughter of President C. D. Mclver,
of Greensboro,' are here visiting, the
daughters of Major R. H. Smith.
Miss Lila' Hancock Is on a visit to
Levlaton, where a dllghtfut party was
given complimentary to her and qther
visitors. Mr. John Gray has taken hi
brother, George, to Hickory to spend
some time for hlr health. Mr. O. T.
Lumpkin has returned from a visit to
her father, Prof. L. W. Bagley, at
Littleton.- Miss Addle Lumpkin and
her brother,. Edwin, have returned
from Virginia, where they have spent
most of the summer. Mr. and Mrs.
G. L, Bll, ot Suffolk, have been here
thla week on a visit to relatives. Mr.
George Green, a prominent lawyer of
Weldon, spent a night here with Mr.
Albion Dunn. Mr. G. W. Llverman,
of Norfolk, has been here thla week
to visit his brother. Dr. A. C. Llver
man. Mrs.' Margaret Shield, accom
panied by her sister. Mrs. E. B. Hlgga,
has thla week returned from Virginia
Beach. Mr. J. D." Bowera. secretary,
and treasurer of the Scotland Neck
Cotton Mills, has returned from Buf
falo Llthia and -Panacea SprlnRs.
Mrs. a., Hoffman and daughter. Ml mi
Stella, 'have returned from an ex
tended' trip to .Wrlghtsvllle. Rocky
Mount and 'Roanoke, Va. Mr. and
Mrs. N. B. Joeey have returned from
Buffalo Llthia 8prlngs. Mr. Alex.
Neal, of Richmond.-Is here visiting
his father,-MaJ, J. B. Neal.
Ball-bury Officer Recover Stolen
, T Jewelry.:. , '
Special to' The Observer.
Salisbury,' Au. l5.--Ofncer C. W.
Pool has done a clever piece of de
tective work. Thursday a vUltor at
the home of Mr. John P. Lenta on
Chestnut Hill lost a box of Jowclrv.
It had been left oa the drcaser and
a new servant had, beun employed
by the. family. The people did not
Itnow to whom to look for the lost
article and called In Mr. Poole. He
suspected the nousegtrl and arrested
her but she was obdurate In her
protestation ft Innocence. Mr. Poo'u
went to an but house wher tho
woman slept and there, hidden In 'he
pillow case on the cot was th-j box.
All the articles ere Intact and were
restored to their owner, The woman
was taken pending n.n explanation of
her possession i tne gooa. una
stoutly holds out that she knows noth
ing of the theft . ,
ICONOCLART,
K-1m In The Smart Set
I kAow not which of rod I hate the
' more 'J' '
The idol raise wnicn oimaeo me, 1
Or you, whose elumy hand so rudely
TU veil ironi mj urinuyi y ; .
Wee 'I not happier, far when - kneeling
TWnrIT that self-made cod of mine.
Than when yeu f wept tbe flowered altar
Aad left ne with an' empty shrine? V
What though mf Idol's teet were .wholly
clay .'.
Mlsht not mr faith have turned thtrn
gold, r
Aswhen the pallid Kat by full-flushed
sj - . . ,
ts changed to glories manifold? . :
Tsa', haU is mlnC butchlefly for thl
- ! ' 7 ' ' . ' "
What of the whole world It was yeu
Yourself who played the stern Icono
, elast, . . , ,
fat are the fallen Idol, tool . .'. - -
HOW TO AVOID APPENDICITIS.
' Moat victims of appendicitis are those
who ere habitually constipated. On no
lAxsttr Fruit Symi cures enronie u
stloetlen by sllmulstlna the iwer nnA
bowel and restores the natural aetlon of
tne eoweis. onno jueasiiva rrult Byrup
does not nausaste or jriip end Is mild
snd pleasant to take. Refuse subetitutea
R. II. Jordan A Co. - , .
V Educational, rr
Scuth Cerclina Militeiy Aceicmy
::.,;-Ct2jd,ttartetaa,S.C
The State, Military Collage. E.
tabllshed by Ml of General Aambly
II4X. Full collegiate Voare ot four
years. - Elective. In the fourth year
fa Civil Engineering, English, Chem
istry and' Phy-lcs. 1 Terms:.,. For
tuition, board, clothint, book, heat,
light a'nd medical care, 20 a, year,
payable In three Initallmenta ; For
circular of . information, apply , to
Officer Commandinil, :
Citadel, - ; Charleston, S. C
Charlotte University Schools
orfere a four-year high school course to boys. The work begin with the
Uth grade and ends with the eleventh. Careful attention Is given to. each
student Rapid and subatantial progress I assured. Kxperlcncril - toiw i
era. w1h are also good dlw-lplluerlan a, hav been employed.. Teacher!
Mr, H. W. Glasr-w (Davidson), Latin, Greek, German; Mr, V. W. David
eon (Tale), MatKematlcs. Science, lll-tory N. C. Klocutloni Mr, II. O.
K m I th (Harvard). English. French, History, ..'English composition. Is hot
n-aiected. Frequent exen -lse ar given In declamation end debate..
French,-German, Greek, Latin end Stenography r elective studies. Thl
Is th school your son should attend
work, - fend for catalogue.. v.1(
. ' 11. X. VtJinuOWl Prlnct:
LEYE US OUR IAK0TOE
' -' -s i ' '
nrCHIXG, APEEL; TO RVVELr1
"Pashi Hard Lines" to Ilow the Or
dT of 'KuavHt and KarnegT'
"Perhaps He Waa Jcllue of Julius
Sexer," mym Another Paper of the
n Spelling Reform. , . . i . .
London Cable. J5th, to .New tork
v Sun..' ;. v ' ; r:'. .',
London Cable, th', to New York Sun.
It Is somewhat startling to find ia- Ui
EiiKllah nrru aiuih eulthets aa "anaroh-
pi
lat1' applied to the . President of . the
United Mtatea in Dlaee of the unbridled
eulogy with whicn lie ass oeen tauoea
for the lest two years. Every newe-
f taper In Londwn to-duy turn Its oeav
nt editorial guna upon Roosevelt and
all because he ha ventured,. to touoh
with a profane pen that most sacred of
Anglo-Saxon possessions, the English
language They do not gd quite so far
aa to suggest lynahlng, yet It Is clear
that sonw of the leaders In tha evenlnc ;
papers were written while steam poured 1
(rom the collar of the Enraged editor..
They are all In accord for onoe with
Bernard Bhaw, who said recently that
"it . took the combined effort of Peter
the Great- Julius Cuesari and Pope Ore
aory to revise the calendar, How, there
fare, can Carnegie, with all bis millions,
even poshibly with the assistance of
PpimA U.11I.I., ramnlMlLHanii.nnin
hep to revise the Ensllsh lansuaseT'
The Pall Mall Gaseile. In lie terrible
AHntinclatlnn avM . Th mttrt nf man
who so Interferes with . the standard
rules of wrammar and apelllng ,a to
worry more than hi Immediate circle
of friend and relatione la an anarchist"
The Kvenin News repudiates what lb
calls the American- languace - eatlrely, :
and gives President Roosevelt cart I
blanch In makln a tonsua ". little,
like Anglo-Saxon as are Volapuk or Rs-
peranto. it adds: "W quit see the
Juatio of the contention that tbe Dec la-
ration or inaependenee snouia apply to
the Isnguaae aa well a to the States.
American are- American, and ' they
have a perfect right to do whet they
will with the word they us as they
have to manipulate the stock . market
according -to their inclinations." 1 -The
8ui remark ot. President Roose
velt that having Introduced a new and
guaranteed brand or canned beer to tho
world thla tireless innovator is engaged
In popularising a new brand of canned
apelllng.
tanaara loses its temper
asks how dares this
Roosevelt fellow, tb temporary Presi
dent of an amiable republic, nresume to
dictate to ua hew to spell a lan-ruaje '
wnicn 'is ours, wnu America is sun a 1
savase and undiscovered country. It
Kooaevelt like to meddle with spelling,
well and rood, so Ions ss It 1 clearly.
understood that It i merely an Ameri-'.
can language he la creating. When' llj
oome to sentiment about Anglo-Saxon
hegemony to bolater up an attack on thej
Unallsh languas w begin to kick. Our.
language ia our own; we love It, and
we snail- writ it aa l proper. '
The Globe nronheaie that Roosevelt
will And, like William the Conqueror. .
that It la easier to subdue a people than
a language, and that tha resistance bf
the Filipinos to American rule Is child's
play to th stubborn valor of the En
sllal "ough." Then thl relentless critla
become thunderous and launches an In
sult which can scarcely have vanae-
quenfeea less than war. It aaya:
-we nave no uesire 10 Deiitu Ameri
can achievement, and we are, even con
tent to admit that- Walt Whitman wrote
poetry, It that will smooth matters, but
w must. venture to point out that In
literature th . United States still re
mains a province of England."'
ins writer points out tnai treeiaeni
Roosevelt has not tha necessarr author.
Ity for. even the edhiDaratlvelvi moderate
changes he propose and he la 1n danger
ot maxing a dialect instead or reform
ing, a .language. . a"ihru," the editor re
marks In . dl.fiut. - Is mere barbarism,
and "thoroly" and "thruout" are noth
ing teas than literary, einetlca.' ,
The UloW leader, under the .heading
"Ynttkv Plnkv " rannl mtmm ...I
think Rusvelt and hla fr-nda mlta ! I
tie our own langwige. They have not
left unj much else. In eum Instances It
mafjie puauiig, espeshuly to a forlner
and an I mature skoolboy, but its -ortho-grufy
has a sortln hlstorikal valu and
We do not like to part with it . Of kora
If Rusvelt. backed up py Karn-al, ea
w hav got to reform our apellng we
ahal hav to. and that wll be the end of
It for Kaniegl has awl the dollars snd
Rusvelt has awl the brunee, but awl
the same it wU be dasht hard lines."
Another paper, discounting the fu
ture, prints a letter from a Trorespon
dent" dated "Lundun, Aug. 2S, 20th,
beginning: "It will possibly hav escapt
tha notls of your reders thet to-day is
th KKHh anniversary of Roosevelt's
grate spellng reform. On thla day Just
h sentury ago that grate man who had
acted aa pecemaker between Rusher
and Japan, who had flowted the Senate,
umpt on trusts, sat at tahul with
culured altisen and waa expecting a
third tlrm ov offls a President Urted
to tutch up th Incllah langwige How
he got th Idea history does not aay.
r-ruapa n was jeuns 01 junus Beser,
wno ten nis mars on tne Kallnder. r'er
hap he argued that whnt a henlted na
Ban ov shady ancestry hn.t don be cud
do. Possibly Karnegle, who wa aome-
iiung oi a nanirnpist at the time., had
arowsed him. Anyway, ha aet out with
an tndep-nden of spirit which did him
oreaii. wot a
wa gud enuf In the times
ov Hnaxespere a
and Milton wos not gud
euur ror mm and the enlltent peepes,
sed he, so he put off Ms cote and set to.
He began with WO wlrds, a- sort of drop
ping of gud sede. To-day having uat
ina piow
blow w ar blest with a new lana-.
wise soma thirty fold, some lxty fold.
some us ma Ameriasns sitnaetner,
If the mere secular pre greet the
President' latest reform in this fashion
one trembles for him wheii The Hpec
Is tor; Th Athenoeum and other literary
uaiiieanipa turn tneir nroaoaiae on nim
next watts.
, London, Ang. 36. Andrew Carnegie In
a telegram to The Observer en reformed
spelling aaya: "The President's approv
al la a settled advance for tb majority
of th Knslish speaking race, flther re
(nrms win anumiera aiowiy roiiow.
"That we have Irof. 8keaf and rr.
Murray highly favorable argues for
race union tn me porblem or improving
our common language. We should co
operate through a commission."
Amnng other opinions Dr. Henry
(Iweel. the philologist, says: "I don't
like ineae partial reforms. Klther let
the- language alone or else reform It
TmMtsmWw with a aaar alntiak
Lm Km II Reich, the author snd l-o-turer
on history, saya: "Roosevelt'
pin , breathes that corn of history
which 1 natural In a nation of yester.
aay, nut is not acceptable 10 the old.
historic English nation."
i
Malaria Makce Pale, Sickly Children.
The Old Standard Grove's Tasteless
Chill Tonlo drives out materia .and
builds up the system, sold by all
dealers for 17 year. Price 10 cents.
Educational. , ;
Institute for
College
rottno - -
womsa ana frr a pf
Courses
' Blgh tiaaearl
xowy ei . '
Atnott
Catalira
naaie. tm
sat Via ee
r'. FRaVa.
for Four
Deaehter
isaMawl4.it.pT-e,
italeigh, Columbia, KnoxTitln. Atlanta.
tt College In li -States. POSITIONS
eeeursd or mbney REFUNDED. Also
teach III HUU Catalogue will con
vince you that Praughon's vis TH
VKarf. .. uh of send fsr It. ;.
urtii ready for
', ; ,
' Poplar auJ li
regular collegiate
xth Street.
Educational.
CONSERVATORY OF MUCIC,
L'A Ml OH GRADE COLLEGE TOR WOMEN
T BTANDAR0 Df A. B. COTJRSB higher ' than any cetleg for
V women, In. Nortlj or. Seuth Caroline,. '.: c: : ' .-,.:
JrACTJlTT Only experienced teachers front tho Iadlng Ameri
y: . - ;, can and Karoveaa universities at Ue head et Depeetraeata,
, W$tO Separate, speelally eenlppea bunding ' for mast. . CU
speotaJlsts -In tbe. Ceaservatery, who grve ail their ttme e
' teaching mualc .-. ZHreetor of Masle a Z-oipsis gradsate - of
. International reputation. -. .... -'
THE SCHOOLS Of ART ATD sCCPRSSIOX-Ob the satne
1 high plane with the eollegtet end muslo departmaata. - ,
LOCATION' trXSCRPASSiaX 10 acres of park campua overlook
ing the city, adjoining the city's new park, sad tree from
dust, smoke, noise, etc, with pare upland country lr, sur
rounded by song bird end the beauties of nature-V ,
OOIXEGK PLANT tt. &reproet buildings, odv aad
sanitary- in ell respeeta. - 1 ,.
An institution which 1 a Gift to Education, with reeoeroes
. outside the Income from patrons, TJndeaosnlnatloasI, aad aa-
peals to aa - Intelltgent, discriminating public, who desire -.
th hlght order of serviee at a , reasonable cost set he .
.merits, . ' I ., . '
niuetrated Catalogue sent on application.
SESSION BEGIXS SSFT. ltTH.
tit
T
est
.JL
T
e
CM
JJLti .?,,?,,?. Jt. ? ?..?.,.
T e TrTT
o
FIlESBYTKmAN COLLEGfif FOR
This old and reliable school makes
1
I r t. - - ... .
ftC-r' -;v'
- fee -
graduates In every section of the Btat. . .... , . . m
A superior faculty of trained specialist: musical advanUgea of the
highest order) anew building, with modern convenience, and a 'high
standard commend It to the people of the Pouth. ,
iiKv. f .
CAPITAL STOCK
V.'l.
r.l.'m,
,-v rimt ii vision or trie tau Term
? wH Is a conceded fact, known everywhere In North Carolina by tho4
who sre Informed, thabKING't Is the BCHOOI THE RIGHT i SCHOOL,
viewed from every standpoint of merit knd worthiness. - The beat faculty,
best equipments, the largest. More graduates tn positions than all other'
business schools In th State. " So get the UliT. - It Is the cheapest. Writ
to-day for our 'ftTECIAL OFl-tuItH, KEW CATALOGUE and full Informa
tion. Address ., - v.,-,..v .,,',..-'
:i ':v 1 kings businfss xxiixkck;' . s vT ,.'Vi";.':
' C1iarkit. N CU or Hahlirli. N. t?l . i ,
'f'.;v.v
W also teach HiHikkeeolng. Shorthand. .Fenmanihln. etc- bv' malL
Send, lor our. Home Study clrculgr, .
GrccrisbdraSFemalel C
' The Sixtieth annual seseton .will
1101. Advanced Literary -Cours-s. School of Music. Art an 1 i
Fraotlral Business Course, i - -
. All departments of Instruction under the core of si ' r- -htve
received their, training In leading CotVgc- and I .
In Jhls country and In Kurop".
new euiiaing; new eiulpment: all
For fuller lnforitlon, appiv tr r
E fir k 1
AS. R KING, President. - J
,T.if, T,.T,if,.. .Tnf s si. e J
I " I I I 1 TTr I I I I'sW
A larger number of.gradu
' ates enter the University and
Denominational Schools from
. Oak Ridge Institute than any
. a . aves . 1 '
oiner, sen 001 in xne aiaie. .
,More students go direct from
'its class-room into business
omcesas tiooK-Keepers, bten-
. 1 1 T , 1
erators than from any, other
Southern School '.':)
.
The school prepares for Col
lege, for Business, for JLife's
Work. It has a record run
ning through 54 years and 31
under the nresent nrindnflls."
What other evidence of eflv
ciency do you want?
Terms reasonable.
' 286 students last year. C
Catalogue on application, "
Address as above, r Box 103
J. A. & M. H. HOLT, Props. .
' ' " '"
tVOMElx; ClUIUXTTTE, K. CL '
no loud claims, but points to its
n. nniDGEs.,p. rrtsiarnt.
2 -'
a.
$30,000.00
tift nopteninrr e, isoe, -
W ' ". --V5 ., .- k. .-..-.
open Welne-dar. frt-
Mo-i'm conv-ui.Mi'-- v
- i'.t.. - u.