1 ' i -. i 1 J A W 1 i' .U r 5 " I 1 3 'A n h m v n i lit j '4 mi 1 - -iS. t i f ;l This ASGTJS o'er the people's r'i'ht. Doth a etarnal vig-il iraop 2-2o 3t,rair-s of liaia's eons 0 rail its bur d red. eyes to sleep. Vol. XIV GOX,DSBOROa N. C THUESDAY, MARCH 12, 19G3. J i -.1 w I imp i m ran o ,. ITEMS OP IITEllIiST FROM" DIVERS SOURCES. The Latest Telegraphic News of the Day Boiled Down to a Focus For Busy Readers. The Kaiser is as handy at theology as at bill collect! n;?. Senator organ has achieved an extra se. Senate. if any ion i" tle JSEr. Adviicks he will wai".. aff?:.:-taice hi reach- inrr this with After a long struggle in the Mis souri Legislature, ba-e-ball, foot-ball and high-ball have ail von rhe rig-it of way on Sundays in that State. The superstitious have not tailed j to note that the 13th comes on Friday j this month just as it did last month, j and yet we have not had any earth-1 quakes. X Professor Steins ist, claims to have discovered the secret of restoring lost eyesight, through an apparatus which supplies the place of the eye while the brain does the rest. All right, but seeing is believing with many in this case. The AnnapoUs Naval Academy is being arranged for the reception of done which did not iu my judgment the 320 new middies who are to he j proceed from a sincere and honest de appointed in accordance with the re- j sire to advance the best interests of cent act of Congress. Meanw tide, uie life of the average Congressman is not a happy one, for he is expected to se- cure cadetships for most of the bright j boys in his district. j best political interests. It affords me Dr. E. A. Alderman, president of j great pleasure at this last closing TulaneUniversily,in a recent address j hour of the session to say that in the at the North, referring to the situa- j discharge of the duties of presiding tion in the the South that preceded officer I have had the kind and con the war, said that the system then ! siderate support of every member of in vogue did not produce in any just i tllis "(xFy- No unpleasant incident degree either wealth or letters, that ! mars tie memory of our association, it arrested immigration, branded la- j There has at all times prevailed de hor, minimized invention, empha- j ference and courtesy among the sized the caste feeling, and set the members. I am sure that without badcre of pauperism on the schools of i regard to party or political differences the plain people. The Stuart Monument Association have shown unwonted of! late, and now have made quite sure ' , 1 ! that trie great Virginian cavaiyman i shall have a monument worthy of his fame. It will be the third eque- stria n statue to ee laiseu ;u xuvii inond. the others beiny; dedicated to "Washington and Lee. The site lected is on the Capitol Square. se- Ln the matter of quantity Missouri lends ail the States as an apple grow er. The figures show that there are 2',!n0,o00 apple trees planted in Mis souri, which is said to be 3,000,000 more than any other State can at the present time show. The people of Mismuiri also boast somewhat of the excellent quality of the fruit that is annually gathered from these trees. , .,, . . , Joseph H. Perkins, the veteran i t i x -,t coin collector and relic hunter, will ,,. , . . . , . publish a work of eight volumes, 1 containing the biographies of nearly j, or - 0,000 centenarians and photopraphs ' x x x of 600. He has been collecting them . TT ,, , all his life. He says that there are , , j. . . at present 4,000 centenarians in the dk F , ' , , 4. United States. The oldest man in the world, he says, is Manuel del ' . J . cj Valle a Mexican living near San Francisco, who is 157 AH perte of, the world are included m this col- j lection. - Lancaster, KyM March 9. Nor- man Argo, said to have been the nriP-inal Of MTS. StOWe 3 WOrla la- rnous character of "Uncle Tom," is dead at Paint Lick at tne reputed age of 111 years. Argo was oorn a siave and belonged to General Samuel TTpnnfidv. a wealthy planter of Gar- i i rd couutv and former member of the TrtnPlrv Legislature. Mrs. .emucy Stowe for '.Oi obtained most u ixin nele Tom's uaoin" irom tne Keriiedy plantation I iEG TSE A T URE ADJOURNS. Its Work Now Belongs to History The East Roll Call. Bleigh Post, March 10. The Legislature of North Carolina for the year 1903 has closed and its work is now a matter of history for the perusal and endorsement or con demnation of the sovereign people of Noi-th Carolina. The session closed at the hour of 1 i o'clock yesterday, March 9th. An unusually large number of the members remained in the'city for the j closing session, notwithstanding the ! time for which they received pay ex- pin d last Saturday. The last roll- call showed seventy-nine members of the House present. i xt was a day ot gladness mingled with sadness. Everybody was glad I the work was done and at the thought of going home, and sad be- cause the pleasant associations form ed here were to be severed. Most of I the members left on the afternoon trains, and others will leave this morning. Speaker Gattis, in adjourning the House sine die, said: 4 'The work of this General Assem bly is now done. For sixty days we have labored faithfully for what we conceived to be the best interests of all the people of our beloved State As the presiding ofLicer of this House I have had opportunity to observe with care the words and actions of its members, and I am glad to say that have seen nothing said or the State, "We commit our work to the fair and just consideration of those who have confided to us their highest and I we separate with none but kindly sentiments one to the other. j "It is a cause for great thankful - i riess that, we have hud so little sif.k- , . , , e , , ness and that the hand of death has not been laid upon any member or j employe of this General Assembly. i "In accordance with the joint reso lution of the two houses I do hereby ; declare this House adjourned sine I die." FIGHT ON CRUM. Charleston's Mayor in Constant Touch with Senator Tillman. Charleston, S. C, March 8. Mayor Smyth has been in close communica- tion with senator rl ill man by wire since the recent re-appointment of Dr. Crum as collector of customs was sent to the sentate by President. Roosevelt . J on Thursday, ' i . . . The commercial organizations, . .fe which have been working with the . & mayor in the endeavor to defeat the J . . confirmation of the colored physician, are ready to take the bull by the . . . , horns, but it is not known just how J . this can be accomplished. In view f . v w of the attitude of the president the . , business people of Charleston admit . fa probftb, xr. crum remain silent. He has refused to discuss ti e matter further , than to gay that he wants the place -h tr rnan tha rlrmr- nf Vir.no n I in order to open the door of hope to ' It j said here that an ef- fortwas madeto have him withdraw, but this was not done, and Crum is holding his ground quietly. - PEPSI-COLA is the. best soda "TH , R digestion sA relieves head ache and exhaustion. Ask your soda fountain man for it. 5 cts. rt foun tains. - , ( III ill. THE PROPER PLACE' FOR LEE STATUE. So Says Colonel Livingston in Ans wer to Some of the North ern Kickers. Washington, March 8. Colonel Livingston has made a contribution to the current discussion oyer the ad visability of Virginia putting a stat ue of Robert E. Lee in statuary hall. In the course of a series of interviews which appear iu a local paper, Col onel Livingston is quoted as saying: "This talk against the Lee statue is all misdirected. Virginia has been given the right to place the statues of two of her sons in Ihe hall, and that right cannot be taken away, al though there may be a great deal of fuss and feathers about the accept ance of the statue by Congress. The Marquette statue was never accepted by Congress, but it remains in statu ary hall all the same. Georgia will have a statue of Alex ander Stephens in the hall. He was vice-president of the Confederacy. If hatred of the Confederacy is at the bottom of this movement why any more objection to Lee than to Steph ens. Both represented a principal and each in his way did all he could to make that principle permanent. If Kansas wants to place the statue of John Brown in the hall no one can object. If Kansas thinks he was one of her great men nobody can object to her ideas of what great men are. The reflection will be on Kansas the same as will be the case as to Lee if there is any reflection." WORLD'S RICHEST MAN. Leslie's Weekly. The late Cecil Rhodes cut so colos sal a figure in the affairs of South Africa that he quite overshadowed in public attention his partner in a great enterprise that made both of them immensely wealthy. This obscure man was Alfred Beit, who was con nected with Rhodes in the working of the fabulously rich diamond mines ot Kimberley, which have yielded 10,000,000 a year. Mr. Beit, who has been dangerously ill at Johannes burg, with an apoplectic attack, from which, it is believed, he will entirely recover, is thought by many to be j the richest man iu the world. His wealth is estimated as high as nearly a billion dollars, while even a conser vative reckoning makes it at leas $300,060,000. He owns most of tlx Kimberley diamond fields, controls ! the cutting industry in Hamburg, and is interested in many other en terprises paying large profits. He is the most successful promoter in the Old World. While Rhodes was the forceful and aggressive partner, Beit was always careful and touched no investment that did not bring in good returns. . Though a quieter and less estentatious man than Rhodes, he had greater influence in South Africa than the "Colossus." Born in Hamburg forty-eight years ago, Mr. Beit first went to Africa at the age of 22. He worked long enough in the diamond field to see his opportunity, and then returned home and got his father to aid him in buying mines. Rhodes, backed by the Rothschilds, contested fiercely with him for a time, but they finally made peace and joined forces. Mr. Beit has a magnificent palace in London, but he is unmarried and has shown no de sire to enter society. English SDavin Linemen removes all Hard, Soft or Calloused I .umpe &d BlemlRhes from horse, Blood, Spav ius4 Curbs, SpMnfcB, Sweeney, Riong Bone, Stifl.--. Sprains, all 8wooieii Throat, Qkixh bs. etc. Save $50 by use of hois)e Warranted tha most wendorfu! Bie ralsh Cure ever known. Soi. bv If. ,, P.obinson & Bro d-vur- Id! oiiU EDWARD HUGHES OF LA GRANGE PERHAPS FATALLY SHOT. The Kennedys Attack the liughes Brothers at the End of a Suit Growing Out of a Fight. Kinsloii, March 9. Mr. Edward Hughes, p.. prominent young man of LaG range, was shot and mortally v. cinuled this afternoon by Mr. Jesse L. Kennedy, of Falling Creek. The tror.hle to-day grew out of the tight between Hughes and Will Kennedy, son of Mr. Jesse L. Ken u?dy. The fight took place in La Grange about two months ago, Hughes striking young Kennedy with a .billiard cue. The case was tried in court to-day, Hughes sub titling and paying the cost, which was small. Immediately after the conclusion of the ease, while Hughes and his brother Lewis Hughes were sitting on the steps of II . W. McKinne's store in front of the court house, the Kennedys, father and sou, walked over to them and young Kennedy struck Ed. Hughes with a stick. Lewis Hughes caught and held Will Kennedy, whereupon Mr. Jesse L. Kennedy fired at Ed. Hughes with rt.-Tr-caUbre pistol, missing him. Hughes turned to run, wheu Mr. Keunedy fired the second time, the ball entering the back about six Indies below the heart, ranging for ward and lodging in the abdomen. The doctors have not recovered the ball and think the young man cannot live. Mr. Kennedy is held in custody by the sheriff to await de velopments. The shooting took place between five and six o'clock, while court was in session near by. GEN' E FRANKLIN DEAD. He Whs a Classmate of GenT Grant and Took an Active Part in the Civil War. Hartford, Conn., March 8. Major General William Bull Franklin died to-day, at his home in this city, aged SO years. lie was born in Franklin; Ph., in and was the son of W. S. Franklin, who was clerk of the House of Representatives. He was a class-mate at West Point of Geu'l U, S. Grant. .He served in the Mexican war. In i 1SG1 lie was appointed Colonel of the Twelfth United States Infantry and immediately was made Brigadier General of volunteers. FARMER RANSOM. Charlotte Observer. The Raleigh Post conveys the in formation that "former Senator Ran som, who was removed from the United States Senate to make place for Farmer Marion Butler, sold his last year's crop of cotton for $76, 356.60, and the seed therefrom for S24(000, a total of $100,356.60 for one crop." There is perhaps no indeli cacy in saying, since he laughs and talks about it himself, that General Ransom, while in the Senate, was always heels over head in debt and was constantly harassed by creditors. Having, by its invitation, quit the service of the public, in which he could not make a living, and having gone to work for himself, he has grown rich and is now the largest farmer and, excepting Mr. Vander- bilt, the largest land-owner In the State. . Ifcch on human cured in SO minu -tes by Wooiford's Sanitary Lotion This never fails. Sold by M E. Robin eou & Bros, druggists. IP II HE HOI GROUND II. GOVERNOR AYCOCK DECIDES FOR GUILFORD BAT TLE GROUND. Both the Gen. Francis Nash and Gen. William Davidson Monuments to Be Erect ed There. Governor Aycock announced 1 yesterday evening his .decision to recommend the locat! of both the Nash and the Davidson monuments at Guilford Battle Ground, This ends a vigorous tight which has been on since the Governor was requested by the Secretary of War, two weeks ago, to make the selection, the con tention having been for various other localities. The Society of the Cincinnati and members of the Nash and Davidson families urged that the Nash monu ment be placed in Nash square, Ra leigh, ane the Davidson monument in Charlotte. The Daughters of the Revolution asked that the Nash monument be placed in Nash square, Raleigh, and the Davidson monument at David son College. The Guilford Battle Ground As sociation and the people of Greens boro, along with Congressman K itch in, who was very instrumental in se! curing the passage of the bill in Con gress, insisted that both f houid be ou Guilford Battle Ground; contending, in fact, that it was the understand ing that they should be on this bat tle ground when the bill was passed, and that the bill could not have got ten through with any other under standing. It will be remembered that the bill directed the Secretary of War to as certain the wisb.es of the Governor as to the location and be governed accordingly, as far as was practi cable. The monuments are to cost $;",000 each and will be erected under the direction of the Secretary of War. A hill has just passed the House and Senate authorizing the Guilford Battle Ground Association to dedi cate the ground to the United States governmen. In this way the sites for the two monuments will be deed ed to the Federal government. Chronic Diarrhoea. Mr. O B. Wicgfkl. of Fair Play, orfo . who suffer bu from chronic dys entery for thirty-iive years, says Cuctinberlam s Chone. Gaolers snd iJiarrhoea Remedy did him raore good than any other medicine he bad ever used. ior saJe at Msc Kay's drug store. POPE LEO. His Holiness Receives Five Thous and Pilgrims. Rome, March 8. The Pope this morning declared that he felt so well that he ought not to make those who had come considerable distances to pay him homage wait, and accord ingly, in spite of Dr. Lapponi's' ad vice, His Holiness received 5,000 pil grims from Berlin, Vienna and Bel gium, and bestowed on them his blessing. Pope Leo was loudly acclaimed by the pilgrims. Relief in Six Hours. Distrossiug Kidney and Bladder DIsap-' relieved in ix hours by "New Great South Aiieeicax Kidxet Cube " It is a great sucpru e on ac count of its exceeding promptness in relieving pain in bladder, kidneys and back, in male or female. Re lieves retention of water almost im mediately. If you want quick relief and cure this is the remedy Sold bv M. E. Rob nson & Bro drupgists, Goldsboro.N. C $100 Itewar? , 3 i Tha readers cf ibis will be pleated to learn that th is at least one dreaded disease thai seance has been able to cme ia nil ts stages and thas ig. Catarih, j&V Catarrh Cure is the only positive fure now known to the medicHJ fraternity. Ca tarrh being a constitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken inter nally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfs-ces of tie fcyetem, thereby destroying ihe foundation of the disease, and ;;vlcg the pa tient strength by buii.iirig' up the constitution arid ic ;ir V-v, r--iture in doing its work, "rh: - o praetors have so much fi:U.h ia ili, curative powers, that they -; .! . he Hun dred Dol-.ars tyc -xd- that it fciils to euro, ivr-i, . i;v c te&ti menials. A. s: cz co. ;' best ! fo disgrace isoid by Drv-trg Working lor ;. :" if you work yourse.T. Tragedy t . vi. "Just in the r. k l.- ovx littlo boy wa s gavsd' .-. ' 1 -- " . W. A, W&tliins of I'ki,.;.: !, y, Ohio. "Pneumonia had ployeu sad Lavoc with liiin and a ioyrinie cough set in besideK. DcctoJii Ot .,.' vd him, but he grew worse every dz.?. At length we tried Dr. King's Ict- Discovery for consumption, r.nd our dsrling was saved. H.. - now sound, and well." Everybody ought to know i'ts the only euro cue i'os coughs, colds and all lunj di?ewf. 'Guaranteed by J. H- Hill & Se. druggists. Price 50o and ..00. Trial bottles free. All the world's ? ai d every one Vvauts to be tie j.,iuporty man. Disturbances of sitrdiers are not nearly as gr ave as an individual dis order of the system. Overwoik, loss of sleep, nervous tezim will bo fol lowed by utter -rxWv. unless a rslip.ble remedy "ri;--diE.teiy em ployed. Tber'e nol-hir;;.' so efS'iient to cure disorders, oi the Liver or Kidneys as Electric Alters. It's a wondarfui tonic, ; ;..T;:ctire nerv ine and ibo gre..; ct vonnd med icine for run dowrt ?vs ens. It dis pels Nervousness, KhMuraatisra and Neuralgia and ex-jl -Li..laria germs. Only 50c, and a.s.;. ction guaran teed, by J. H. Ili..'"'. -: o:', Drug-gist- y.yn, To bog a girl's pardon after steal ing a kiss is an unpardonable insult. It Saved Let. P. A. Danforth. cf LaOrar-ge, Ga. bu tiered for 6 moak; with a fright ful running sore c.a his leg; but writes that, Buclvt-tV? Arnica Halve wholly cured it in days. For Ulcers. Wound t, Vi!:, it's the best salve in the vori-.'i. .re guaranteed. Only druggifct. !! &. Sou, A fashionable ball dress is not ex actly a weather sti ip. "W ork i ng O ver t f :n a . Eight hour lav..- ire ignored by those tireless, liU.'e workers Dr. King's New Life Pil'f. iiliDions are always at work nieht and day, cur ing Indigestion. Biliousness, Consti pation, tick Headiich?; and all stom ach, liver and bowel trouble. Easy, pleasant, safe. sure. "y 25 cents at J. H. Hill fe Bon ? drug store. In New York city 100 new cases of consumption develop each day. How to Prevent Pneumonia. You have goo 3 rear-on to fear an attack of pneumonia, when you have a severe cold, accompanied by pains in the chest or in the back between the shoulders Get a bottle of Cham berlain's Cough Remedy and use it as directed and it will prevent the threatened attack. Among the tens of thousands who have used this Remedy for colds and lagrippe, we have yet to learn of a single case that has resulted in pneumonia, wnich shows that this remedv is a certain preventive of that dangerous disease. For sale by MacKay's drug store, But 1 per cent of the people of Bulgaria are Moslems. Don't get into too big a hurry. You will never wish to take anoth er doss of pills if you once try Cham berlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets. They are easy to take and more pleasant in effect. They cleanse the stomach and regulate the liver and bowels. For sale at MacKay'a drug store. Willie has got in the chain-gang. f r ' t, . & - i I' i i 11 1 v I S S: . in n r-1 it