n x r? X T O COURIER Issued Weekly. PRINCIPLES, NOT MEN. ?1.00 Per Year NOI VOL XXVIII. ASHEBORO, N. C. THURSDAY JULY 2, 1903. AS EBOR -I Jh S. Bryant. Preskleat J. I- Cole, Cashier W.he BA.uk of R.andlema.n. Randlemar.1 N. C. wpiUl paid in, Protection to depositors, $20,000 40.000 Dirkctohs: S. O. Ncwlin, A. N. Bulla, W. T. Bryant, C. I- Lindsey, N. N. Newlin, J. 11. Colo. 8. Biyanl II O Barker and W K Harlsell. BRITTAIN & QRHQSON, ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, Asheboro, - North Carolina Practice in ths courts of Randolpn and adjoining .counties; in StaU and Federal uourts. iromps in tention to business of all kinds, J. A. Spenoa HAMMER & SPENCE, Attorneys - at Law Aabrbor", N. C. , North r,f Court Hwa.) Practice in all the courts E. MOFFITT, Attorney - at - Law, ASHEBORO, N. C. Phone No. 22. Practice in all the courts. Special attention given to scttleuicn of Estates. W-Ofpicr Nrah Court House 0. L. SAPP, A ttorney-at- Law. ftMlto t State aa fadaral Oearta CamaraaWk, 0maier,il and Pra fcaaaLaw. All b.waaaa proraptli IV YOV WANT - a n THE BEST LAUNDRY Sand your Laundry to the Ola R-allabW CHARLOTTE STEAM LAUNDRY. They am better prepared to do your work right than any laundry in the State; and do it right, too. Leave your bundles at Wood & Moring's store, Bosket leaves Tues days and returns Fridays. W. A. COFFIN, Agent. READ THUS and BE WISE! We are making a specialty of our Grocery department aud offer you some great bargains. Here are a few prices: IV -mu TtmiaUM1, I'. I IV , oysters. Ilk. ruttnl tlatu, HunlilMV, i-to. always on liantl. Wee pe Vhiotsr. Or. Kill. IVirto Kli Mnlasaea. . Fancy Table Kyrum lis.-. Jellies, shred'h! Cistmnitt. nlt-e Caii'lles, Ik-hI KliHir ami Keel. A full 1 1 "i- il other tinicerie Uio numeriais Ut iik-mhhi. J. F HE1TMAN. Trinity, N. C Land Sale. mm of N. C. English, administrator of Isaitsa M iMcb. dwawil, UKl Ktun. allium- Ut innreiaiHl, ct ala. u narto, 1 fm II kII at tin Oiurt House diaie in Asnvlsmi, N.C.al IHoVlnek m. an the Tth iUr ol Jul)', IVUt, IlK folluwllu; real out, u rt. . , First twt An uwllvMi-d one-sUlli Interest In mild to a tract of laiHl In HalMlolh County tsaiiMltvl an follows. bVaiuuiiiK at a nick jiU? fcanuerly p. Craven's conur. tlnnof west ill piles to a stone, tlw-nee north 70 pules to a Mont In if r Tnanlon'a line, thence east W k to a stone In aaM Cravens line. llu-iK-e aoulh to the begln nlng. eonlaliiliif an acres and in unlea. Hecuwt tract. An uialivtrieilone-tliira InteruMt In and to the traet of land Is slant of II N Burrow by buwU Learn and known a tlie Burrow Wace. ailjolnlnir tlie lamia of Janwa iHilin. Tyson Tnapluu aud others, and umiiule.1 a. follows. Hemnnlng at a blackjack sout, Tyson TnUm oiwuer, thence vent au cha to a ntutie near a .iet oak In aald Tmttilon'a Hue, thence aiHitb S clu to a red oak, theuee weat Ml cha and TS llnlu m a atake, thence anuth m cha and a UnkR to a atake In lAiptw'a line, theuce eant on Mild line 19 uh. aslkatothemlnlng tract abore deacrllwd, thence north on the mining tract line 17 cha So linka to a atake In aaid line, thence etuit 17 eha awl SO links to IMiiwee'. line, thence uorth IS cha ami ,5 links to the beainniliH, mHitaininK T& mtcm more or leaa. For furtlier deacriitlou of tho above named tracta of land aee deed ol Lewla II. Leach to Lett. Ha H. Payne, Loulaa M. Uach and rarUwnla C. Johnaiai, reonnleil In book to, pace 4M nf the ofttcc of Heguaer of tfeeda of Randulih County. Terma C'aih, and the title reeerved uuUl the further order of the Court. Thai tfkih day ol June, IW. N. V. KNULUip, CoinrobKlouer. Land Sale. ' By virtue of a tuarr of Male contained In a deed of tm.4 executed to the undersigned by Mulilda Burgess aud I. T. Morchead on the 7th dav ih Ail, 1W, which deeil la duly recorded In the Mncv of the kexMer of Iwls of Raudoli4i tmunty. In bk 104. page 5la, I will sell at public awtloo to tlie hiiiheat Iddtler ffr cah, at the Ciairt HiHiae ikr In Ashelmm. V. C, on MONDAY. JULY (7. IIUS, at Itofhick M, llw following tract of land llo. aid In RaiKlolph County, OiluiuMa Township, im the wah-rs of Kan,ly Creek and btsindcd as Hows. HtHrlnnlug at a abate In Pushs line. Via. H. York -s comer, thrnra north X dug east 44 Tula la lUslrahle property, lying between the armlua and autamre acres In oultlratloti, baaauce In wood and timber. Terns of Sals, CASH. W. J. UKKOMON. TutaJuM lath, luut, , Trwloe. Wt Will Buy it Back. Yon gaaan B rlak r1o so boy Ckaatbcrlaua'a CoHo. Cboktra and Mar rhaa IlotaMdy. Wa iU rarand roar oary if yam am aot rtift4 aftor -doa; It. Itta aTtcywbanf, aimifaj to bo taa ooa aaooaaatm rantaay m . lev itowia caMnBiaint aad Mva aaa tliatoevcr fwia. la pka"'. ! mtfl N'xMi. "Kiaaiiard l Oo., AkVvo, asd W A t'ndiwcil. WASHINGTON LETTER. Champ Clark The 'Iowa Idea" The Bailey-Cleveland Interview. HjH'Hal fTorreiiudcliee Oiurlcr. Washington, 1). C, .June 2!lth, liitst week I told thu readers of this corrcsiHHideneo about tho Hon. John Sharp William, of Mississippi, the man who will be tlie next lloor lead er of the Democracy in the Nutionul House of liepreseiitatives. I will now tell tliciii about the man who will be bis chief opponent in the Dcm ocnilic caucus, and who, though he is still mi avowed candidate for the honor, practically concedes his de feat, anil that is the Hon. Uliauir Clark, of Missouri. Tho must of the iieoplc of the country know Champ Clark, not alone because of Ins work in tbc Uongrcss ot the na tion, aud he has been in that body about ten or twelve years, but be cause of his work in the press of the country as tho contributor of a week ly letter anent current pontiral events always written in a reminis cent manner am! very entertaining, Champ Clark is one of the most pi'- tures'iue figures in political life to day. He leads the Democratic anvil chorus. Ho is the knocker-iu-cliief of the Democratic minority in the national House ot itcpresentatives, and when he gets to his feet he does hit the Kepu hi leans some of the hardest blows ever administered to them by any speaker on the Demo cratic side of the House. He has a wav of telling the truth on the Re publican party that is very attractive to the Democrats of the country. It is homespun truth told in an old fashioned home-folksy manner that is decidedly refreshing liecause it is so seldom we hear it. When in ac tion Champ Clark needs more lloor space than any man iu the House. He thugs bis great long arms around like Hails, and he pounds his desk like a deep water two-gallon Baptist preacher. The only trouble with! Champ Clark as a leader would be the fact that he is too uncompromis ing. Hi! hits nara ana tens tlie truth, but he does it in such a man ner as to excite the animosity of the opposition, leaves sore spots that never heal, and does not convince the Republicans of the righteousness of his cause. When a man is honest even though lie be a Republican, he is open to conviction in many mat ters, but if ho is insulted and his feelings arc hurt by the man who makes the speech, and who. other wise would convince him of his error, he thinks of nothing but revenge, and he gives the man no credit for bis unanswerable argument and his intellectuality. That is the trouble with Champ Clark. He makes enemies for him self and his party by his speeches and does his cause no good. There fore he would not make a good lead er for the minority party in Con gress, and his friends and admirers, knowing this, huve chosen John Sharp Williams in his stead. There is no better man and no better Dem ocrat in Congress than Champ Clark but he is too indiscreet by his vehe mence to be a suceesssul leader, and hence he will not lie chosen by the Democrats when they meet iu caucus next November. There is another reason why Champ Clark is not the popular man for tlie leadership. He scins to have a special antipathy to the so-culled gold Democrats, who left the party 111 18'JO and 1900, and he never loses an apportutiity to roast them to a brown turn when he is on his feet in the House, lhat not only docs no cood, but it antago nizes the fitment that we want to come back and afliliatc with the par ty in the next campaign. I hey are as good Democrats us anybody on the tariff and the trust questions, wnicn will be uppermost in the next cam paien. and the only question on which they are at variance with the dominant faction of tho party is on the money question, and all concede that it will not be one of the issues in the campaign next year. The bi metallists have won their contention that more money was needed to do the business 'of the country on in or der to bring prosperity to the na tion, because there is today one fourth more money in circulation than there was in 1H9G, but it came in gold on account of the gold dis coveries in Alaska, the failure of crops in the old countries, and an avalanche of money aud gold placed in circulation during the Spanish American war. With the money question eliminated those people will come back and vote the Democratic ticket next year, and we will win a victory over corruption, monopoly and special privilege. It would not help to bring them dock, nowever, it we put a man in the leadership of the party in the House, who, upon every occasion, line uw oi oiu, thundering against uaitnage, sam practically, "to the devil with the gold Democrats." Thus it is that Champ Clark, the sterling man and splendid Democrat, though one of the natural leaders in the House on account of his intellectuality and virile Democracy, will not be the man who will map out the next cam paign against the enemy of the peo nlfl and the people's rovernmenL The Kepu oncans ni lowa are sun boating that the "Iowa idea" is not dead, and that it will be incorporated in the platform adopted by the Ke- pnbucaa state convention. If the Republicans whotx-licve as does Gov Camming concerning the revision of the tariff covering the schedule, that shelter the trusts and monopolies want real tariff revision and reduction they can ret it. In stead of howling about it in their itjitfl nltfiirma. why not nnt it in the platforms on which their mem bers of Congress are nominated and elected and compel those candidates to stand for tariff revision ami re duction or get out of the race. Tariff schedules are changed by the Congress and not by tlie state con ventions or legislatures. If thev arc going to put tariff revision ami re duction in their state platform, why not put it in the shape of positive in structions to their delegation in Con gress to vote for it? It is a well known fact that the delegation iu Congress from Iowa is bitterly op posed to any tariff legislation that will lower the tariff wall in any way, If the "lowa idea is to have liny weight or bear any fruit it inn. t be adopted by the lowa delegation Congress. If only sixteen Kepiilili cans in the next House will vote with the Democrats we will have a bill passed by the House shortly after Congress meets in regular ses' sion that will take the shelter tents off many of the worst monopolies and trusts in tho country. Ut course such a bill could never get through the Republican senate, but it would prove the sincerity or those Kepubi cans who are howling about tariff revision and reform. The truth of the matter is that they are not sincere. I hey are get ting up this howl about the "Iowa idea" in order to fool the people in a state where their representatives in Congress come here and continuously vote to retain the schedules that will shelter monopoly. The "Iowa idea" is a gold brick. Democrats and Kepuuiicans alike have always denounced the English ioIicv of the opium monopoly in ndia and the opening of the Chinese Empire to the opium trade, but our present administration appears to now approve it for even a worse opium system is to be forced on the I nilippines. xue e.uiuoivc rij;111' w run opium joints in those islands is to be sold at auction, a law for that purpose having been prepared, and is now before the Philippine Commis sion. This bin is couteu so innr. ine American peoplo will lie able to swallow it. In order to prepare the American public for the proposal, tho War Department lately has been giving out vague information to the correspondents about new opium laws designed to "restrict the use of opium," and that the money derived therefrom was to be used for educat ing young Filipinos in American schools, us prospective teachers for the islands. A strong protest has been made to President Roosevelt to stop the ini quitous traffic or ut least not make this government a party to it by participating in the proceeds. The nefarious plan seems to be u pet measure of the Secretary of War, aud it is feared that the influence he exerts over the President will more than offset the protests that have been made. The denial of former Piesident Grover Cleveland of an interview with him written by Mr George M Bai lev, the Washington correspon dent of the Galveston-Dallas News, has created widespread interest here, and has been one of the chief topics of conversation in the puplic build- ug and the hotel lobbies. 1 have known Mr llaily for fifteen years, und I know he would not wilfully mis quote or misrepresent any man, and especially a man for whom he had the high admiration tnat ne nau tor Mr Cleveland. I saw the letter to Mr lluiley written by Mr Cleveland making "the appointment for this interview, and in which he said he would be glad to si Mr Uailey "in behalf of his paper." What else, then, could ho have thought of Mr Bailey s visit, except that it wus to get a letter for his paper? When llic lormer I rcBiuent unit Jir iwirey aneiiuivocully that he wus not a can didate for the fourth nomination at the hands of the Democratic party, Mr Bailey took him seriously, and frankly said so in his article which he prepared here tor his paiicr. I saw the article before it went to the Galveston News by wire, and it was as kindly in tone as any man on earth could have desired. The direct quotation of Mr Cleveland was very short, bui it was unmistakable aud took him out of the running as a possible candidate. The general consensus of opinion hcie is that Mr Bailey told the trnth, and that Mr Cleveland never would have denied the interview had he not received in-J structious from some man in his select coterie of friends to do so, iu order to hold all the power that a piospective candidacy would give him ih the next national convention. Evidently they belie vo that his name will carry more weight with the ele ment that left the party in 1896 and 1900, make them more active in participating in the conventions next year and more potent in the selection of some candidate' acceptable to them. They are simply using the name oi Cleveland to conjure with. The simple truth as told by Mr Bailey has forced their hand. CHARLES A. EDWARDS. A Million for Advice. Sometimes repressing a client pays a lawyer well. There is a persistent story, which probably will never be printed aa to names and details, that a famous truBt magnate rwid a law yer a million dollars in cash for simply saying to him, "Don t light. II you insisi uu uguuug a win mac your case. Dut it you nght, remem ber, all Tour hooks will be opened anu ail jour luct-auuauiauiuoi-u. xuv bewildering munificence of that in stant fee of a million was . a record j II . II t-. Wl for wise philanthropy which showed the genius of the philanthropist. Never was a fee better earned, if the tale U true. From Everybody's Magazine. The New Public School Building A Letter From Professor Pearson on the Bullbat. Greensboro, N. C, June 25th. 1902. According to a recent Act of the Legislature, generally known as the Audubon Bill, the song and insect eating birds of the suite together with theii nests are now protected from destruction by law. Due of the most valuable birds in North Carolina is the night hawk, usually known as the "Bullbat". this bud feeds exclusively upon insects eating large uuantitics ot hies, gnaw ami grasshopers which are so troublesome to man, but perhaps he renders us no greater service than by eating mnsquitoes. Since it is now known that the malady known as malaria is carried by mnsquitoes, and trans mitted by tlieir bite. There certjiin lv is stronir reason why the bullbat should lie accorded the protection which he so readily deseives. It has long Veen the custom in many sections of Noith Carolina to shout these useful birds in great numbers the ate summer afternoons. Numerous cases hare been reported to me, and I have seen the same with my own eyes, where these biids were shot down by tlie do.cn merely for the practice of shooting, and the j snort of seeing them fall. Some shooters do not even go to pick them up, und I have seen wounded 'Mill-, bats lying about on the ground late I the next day after they were shot. The Audubon Society of North Carolina appeals to the l'ikk! people of the stuto to use their influence in every possible way in behalf c.f the bullbat, and to see to it th::t the dreadful sufferings caused by the thoughtless slaughter ot these birds in the past shull not be repeated iu the state this summer. T. Gii.Iikkt Pkakso.n, Secretin v. H. T. Caviness, Chairman of Board of Commissioners Randolph County. Ho was born iu lWil near Cheek's Mills in Randolph county, and was ducated in the neighborhood schools- He began merchandising in 1M8i; at Cheeks. He has also owned and opeiatod grist mills, saw mills, and he owns aud ojierates a large farm. On December 2:ird, 1So7 Mr. Caviness married Miss lAd,a A. II. T. I'AVIlitw. Lowdcruiilk, daughter of Mr. Alfred lAiwdernnlk, of Brower township. He ha three children, two boys und one girl. Mr. Caviness was elected a county commissioner in 1H98 und again in 1902 by a luigc majority. He is rving as chairman of the board of county commissioners and is a most faithful, cflicieut, competent and conscientious public oflicial. What Can They Do? "Wnll. air. what nlace have vou to offer for the relief of those poor store keepers and gangers who win lose taeii jobs on July 1st?" asked on Observer reporter of District Attor ney Holton last evening. Mr Holton shook his head gloom ily, "I don't know what's to become if all of 'cm, he replied. "Ilocent y I have taken care of about 15." "How?" "Put 'cm in iail. Thev have been assisting various distillers in rcmov- ig whiskey on which no uu nas been paid. "'But of course I can t provide ior all the poor fellows," said Mr Hol ton, in a regretful tone of voice. The late ol those ouu store-Keepers id gangers is really a very serious question. Being a store-keeper is like running on a railroad. After on learn the trick you are not apt to ms lit for anything else. And a. man vim has been supporting his family by makiug $2 a day merely by meas- anng-corn whiskey nas not Deen nittlifvinir himself as a good carpen ter, a i ii"f ul member of society or the right sort of person to pull the bell cord over a mule. Why not organize a relief fund for the poor unfortunates? Charlotte A Observer, at Central Fulls, Randolph County. Found $40,000 in Gold. W. II. Croker, who lived at High Point, N, C, until recently was the city yesterday from Van Patton ohoals. 1 lie most remarkable cuiiist.iuces about Croker "s visit is the story that he brought, in which he calmly asserts to having found the princely sum of $4'),000 in gold and silver on Van Patton Shoals. The money was buried in a zink trunk, several feet below the surface. Another startling feature of this story is the means by which he dis covered the money. Some time ago, he says, he purchased an instrument, presumably what is know n as "a divining rod, the powers of which enable one to become aware of the locution of valuable minerals; not only the exact spot, but the nature of the ore. This was the same that turned Croker into a rich man. By way of information, mid not to throw any incredulity on the story, the writer has not seen either the money or the remarkable instrument, but gives the account as Cioker relates it himself. It is said, by wav of ac counting for the hidden fortune, that 70 years ago, one Joe Cooper, a miserly resident of that section, secreted the money for fear that he woul be robbed of it; and that being called suddenly to his reward, left no nurd as to the whereabouts of his fortune, Croker "s discovery was purely uccideiitul, w hich bears out the adage concerning the fortunes of one who is born under a lucky star. Spartanburg Dispatch. Proving Character. What is a good character? In a recent trial in North Carolina a person accused of crime proved "a gixid character" by good men when his defense was that he was drunk and the alibi he sought to prove placed him in a house of ill-fame. Can such ! man be said to be a man of good character? The man who gave this man "a good character" could not have known bis true character. It is often the case that the best ni'-n in the community know least about the real character of bad men. More good sense on this subject has been crowded by Elder P. I. Gold into u few paragraphs in the following article in the Wilson Times, than we recall ever to have read before Mr. Gold writes: 'If a man who gets ilitink and docs vile things while he is drunk has u good character, except when he is drunk, what sort of a character does a man possess who never gels drunk, bill .attends to his duty as every man should? Is it not a shame for a man to get drunk even if he lies down asleep all the time he is drunk? What a low standard of morals do people have w ho excuse a man for crime because he commits it when drunk. What right has a man to get drunk? From the exhi bitions of vile conduct in our town recently all chargeable they say to drunkenness surely our people should condemn that icious habit. A man should be punished for the evil he does while drunk because he has no right to be drunk. What is chaructci? It is the estimation one is entittled to be held in by those w ho love and abhor evil. A man to be a judge of character should him self be honest and sober-minded, having s uiie intelligence. He men are not judges of character, for they love vile men, and hate good men. One that docs well should be esteem ed according to his doing one who does evil should be rated according to his evil deeds." News it Obser ver. Prayer. If two of vou shall agree on earth, as touching anything that they shall ask, it shall lie done for them. Matthew xvin. Prayer appointed to convey The blessing God desires to give; Long as they live should christians py For only while they pray they live. Be careful for nothing; but in everything by prayer and supplica tion with thanksgiving let your rc oiicsts be made known unto God. Phil, iv, ti. The Old Jew's Mission. A short story altogether out of the ordinary is "In the Mattel ut the Mission," by Bayard V tiller, in the July McC lu re's." It is the story of an o'U jew, who maiiiuins a iittie Presbytcrian mission among his peo ple. As be makes few or no con verts, it is at length proposes that the funds of the church b? no long er employed to maintain his mission. The pathos of the situation and the final triumph of the old Jew's seal over considerations of economy, make ,a beautiful and powerful little sketch. DRAINAGE. For Improvement of Farms and Roads, All roads except those on pure sand can be materially impioved by tile drainage. In each community this is universally the opinion of the fanners who have hud the best sue cess iu draining tlieir own farms, The cost of tile drainage is not great say about oO cents per roil, oriflGO Iter mile, and the improvement is permanent, wilh no expense tor maintenance, and the lienetit is im mediate and certain. rurtlier, tile drainage is the very best preparation for a gravel or stone road. Gravel or broken stone placed upon an undiiiiued foundation is ul most sure to sink gradually, what ever its thickness, whereas a thinner laver upon un undrained roadbed will give much better service. "Roads tiled without gravel are better than roads graveled without tile. The road should be underdrained so as to keep the wuter level well be low the mad surface. In most lo calities this can be accomplished eiisonably well by laying u line of farm tile three or three and a half feet below tho surface along the road urfacc ulong one side of the road way. It is sometimes claimed tnat there should be a tile on each side of the road. Sonic writers on good rouds advo cate the use of a line of tile under the middle of the traveled iwrtion, and some advocate a line on each side of the wheelway. The object sought by these tiles is rapid drainage, and tfierefore it is urged that they should be laid near the surface. It is doubt ful whether any water will reach the tile, since the road serface when wet is puddled by the traffic, which prevents the water from percolating through the soil, und it is certain that in clay or loam the drainage thus obtained is of no practical ad vantage. More than one farmer has tried to drain h i s barnyard by laying the tile near the surface without uppreciuble effect. While a line of tile on one side of the road is usually sufficient, there is often u great difference as to the side on which it should be laid. If one side of the road is higher than the other, the tile should be on the side to intercept the ground water that is flowing down the slope under the surface. The tile bhould be laid in the bottom of the side ditch below the frost line. Of course the tile should have a uniform giadc aud a sudicieut fall and an adequate out let. The size of the tile required will depend upon the length of the line und the grade of the ditch, but local experience in farm drainage is likely to be a better guide than any general statement that can be made. Farm drainage is almost certain to precede road drainage in any purtic ular locality, The side'ditches are to receive the water from the surface of the trav eled way and should curry it rapidly and entirely away form the roadside. Thev ate useful also to intercept and carry off the water that would other wise How from the side hills upon the road. Ordinarily they need not be deep and, if possible, should have a broad, flaring side toward the road to prevent accident if a vehicle should be crowded to the extreme edge of the roadway. The outside bank should be Hut tuiough to pre vent caving. The piopcr form of ditch is made by the usual road ma chine or gradar. The side ditch should have a free outlet into some stream so as to carry the water en tirely aw ay from the road. No good road' can" be obtained with side ditches that hold the water until it evaporates. Much alleged roadwork is a possi ble advantage for this reason. Pil ing up tho earth in the middle of the road is perhaps in itself well enough, but leaving undrained holes at the side of the road probably more than eoiintcrbalunces the benefits ot the road embankment. A road be tween long artilicial ponds is always inferior and is often impassible. It is clieiiner and better to make and work embankment and to drain thorough- v the holes at the side of the roads. Often the public funds can be more wisely used in making ditches in adjoining private lands than in mak ing ponds ut tlie roausiue in an ut, tempt to improve tho road by raising the surface. A. U. .oou uoaus jui- -tin. Mob Law In North and South, East aad Wfst. Tl, lv.,1.,u uro Vinriiinrr at, the Stake ; (i, thirrswith rune where summary justice has been meted out to crimi nals since January 1. The places and dates are as follows: Negro burned near JSew Orleans, January 27. Negro hanged, w rignisvnie, u., February 8. ... Negro hanged, Blucfield, W. a., March 29. . Negro hanged, lanipa, rla., March 10. Negro shot to death, Shreveport, La., April 12. Jicgro burned, jopnn, .no., jipm 10. Negro hanged, Thebes, 111., April Of Two neirrocs hanged, Paynes Bluff, Miss., May 4. White mail hanged, Madison, Fla., Mav 20. White man hanged, Newcastle, vvvo., Jiay o. Negro beaten to death near Pitts- 1..... t'o Inn.t Negro bnrned, Belleville, UU I J une G.: Negro burned near Wilnuagton, jjcl., J une t. Bargains at And .the people are finding it nut from the way PL A. Moffitt & Oo. are selling the goods since they bought out THE WORTH STORE CO. We are well aware of the fact that big prices will not do in these times, when even the wealthy cannot afford to wasto their money and the poor require double duty of every dollar and every pcni,y. Who can tell the waste of nionev when vou get your goods of houses that buy and sell on long time? Compare our prices you have been buying same goods: Good Calico, worth 7c. for 5c. yd. Colored Lawn, worth 10c for 5c per yd. White Lawn worth 15c for 10c yd. Bleaching worth 10c for 8c vd. Ratter & Co's. Oil Cloth worth 25c for loc yd. Apron Gingnuins worth 7c for 5c yd. Black DrcsB Goods from 15c to $1.00 per yd. Open und Shut Funs worth 5c for 2c. White Shirt Waist Goods from 8c to 15c. Ladies' Parasols from 50 to $150. We keep in stock all kinds of Shoes, Huts, Trrfnks, Furniture, Mens and Boys' Clothing, Hardware, First-class Groceries, and. iu fact, almost anything usually kept in lirst-cluss General Stores. We invite an early und repeated visit and inspec tion. Everybody invited Everybody welcome. H. A. floffitt & Co. "Ceeapest Store on the RJver." Worthville, N. C. Successors to Worth Store Co Of Moneu Saved! BY BVYING YOVR DRY GOODS, NOTIONS, CLOTHING, GENTS FURNISHINGS, FURNITURE, &0., &0., of WOOD & MORTNG. Largest stock to select from and prices that are sure to catch those seeking bargains. We've Got Just Stacks of every description and of the very latest styles, and when you want a new dress, new hat, new suit of clothes, a new pair of shoes, or anything else that is up to date, why just go to see Style Originators. New Goods! WE ARE pleased to announce to our friends and customers that have the latest and most exquisite Btyles in white goods, lawns, dimities, and dainty shades in dress goods fabrics are now awaiting your inspection. Our large as sortment will convince you that we are leaders in dress goods. Gents Department! OUR CLOTHING counters are laden with rare bargains, and we can fit you out epio and span in a new suit, shoes, hat, etc. AU the styles in shirts, collars and neckties at prices to command a purchase. Come to see us. TAKE Chickens AND PRODUCE L. m. caudle, HE PAYS THE HIGHEST MARKET PRICES AND IN RETURN WILL SELL YOU GOODS RIGHT. BE SURE TO SEE HIM WHEN IN TOWN I D. M. OSBORNE & CO. .5A? Largest Independent Manufacturers of Harvesters In the J. H. WortliYille. below with those of other houses where of NEW GOODS WOOD & MUKINU. .Miller Wood. YOUR esaid Eggs OF ALL. KINDS TO and Binders World. CUnsrSS, A;,cnt, Karnsiur, ft. luMt.iicu-tm,