The Lenoir Nows, f t The News Printery IS NOW PREPARED TO DO NEWSPAPER. THE VERY .HKBT ADVERTISING MEDI UM. READ BY EVERYBODY. YOUR JOB PRINTING. ALL THE LATEST TYPEFACES USED. (JIVE US A CALL. A TRIAL IS ALL WE ASK. OVJuY $i.QQ THKVKAH, 4. H. c. MARTIN, Editor and Prop. PUBLISHED TUESDAYS AND FRIDAYS. PRICE 81.00 THE YEAR. VOLUME IX. LENOIR, 1ST. C, JULY HO, 1907. NO. J)5. X 7 HE UK IS iBH II 11. The Southern and Atlantic Coast - Line Attorneys Accept the y Governor's Ultimatum and Those Roads Will Put 21-4 Rate Into Effect. Raleigh News aud Observe. The agreement made yesterday aftemoon in the office of the Gov ernor of North Carolina by Gov ernor Glenn for the State, and by the general counsel of the Southern and Atlautic Coast Line Railways on behalf of their roads, by which the 2 1-4-cent State rate goes into effect by August 8th, and which a procedure of an orderly legal con test is agreed to by the railroads, all present indictments to end, is a complete vindication of the position and demands of Governor Glenn, and is a complete surrender of the raildroads to the laws of North Carolina, which they have violated since the first day of July. The full text of the important do cument by which the soverenty of the State is acknowledged is as follows: 1. The railroad puts the S 14 cent rate into effect not later than Augusts, 1907. 2. The State to appeal from the order of Judge Pritchard dis charging parties in Asheville on writ of haleas corpus. 3. The Southern Railway appeal to the Supreme Court of North Carolina in the Wake County case, and if the case is there decided against it to take the case by writ of error to Supreme Court of the United States. 4. That both sides co-operate to have both of said cases advanced and argued together and speedily determined. 5. The State at its option to in- diet the Atlantic Coast Line in one case. 6. All indictments aud prosecu tions now pending to be dismissed and no other indictments or prosecutions to be instituted for any alleged violation of the law, up to the time the new 2 1-4-cent rate is put into effect under this ar rangement, as far as the Governor can control the same. 7. The Governor advise all peo ple against bringing any penalty suits pending final determination of the questions involved and ask the people as a whole to acquiesce in this arrangement. 8. The suit pending before Judge Pritchard to be diligently pros ecuted without the State, however waiving any question of jur isdiction. Signed. Alfred P. Thom, A IJiX ANDER P. HUMTHRKY. Counsel for So. Ry. Co. R. B. Glenn, Governor. Messrs. Thom and Humphrey also as counsel for the Southern Railway Company undertake that the Southern Railway will not in augurate contempt proceedings be cause of anything heretofore done by any of the State officers in con nection with the rate litigation, and will do what it can to prevent the inauguration of any such contempt 'proceedings. This arrangement between the Bo uthernt Railway and R. B. Glenn, Governor, is also assented to by George Rountree, attorney for A. Nelson. Buckley and others, com plainants, and Alexander Hamilton General Counsel for the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Company, ex cept that they do not consent that the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Company shall be in dieted in one case, but as to that leaving the Btate at liberty to do as its sense of 3 duty may dictate. : , - THREATENING LETTER TO ANSON'S SHERIFF. Mob That Killed J. V.. Johnson Wrote That Sheriff Would Die if He Told Names. Charlotte, July 25. The state sprung a surprise on the defense In the trail of Zeke Lewis in Union county court, when, in offering rebuttal testimony, counsel pro duced a letter received by Sheriff Bogan of Anson county threaten ing him summary vengeance if he testified against any member of the mob at the trial. The letter was signed "The Crowd That Killed J. V. Johnson," and threatened the sheriff with death if he re vealed the names of any man he recognized at the jail. The letter stated that there was 342 men in the mob, aud, thought there might be some fools among them, at least 275 were settled men who knew wnat they were talking about and would do as they said. The defense hotly objected to the admission of this letter, but the court admitted it for the jury- to consider as bearing onhe conduct and evidence of Sheriff Bogan, and it was read to the jury and put in evidence. Sheriff Bogan was recalled and swore positively to the identifica tion of Lewis as the ringleader of the mob, declaring that he talked to him twice the night of the lynch ing in the jail and had known him for years. The state here rested and argu ment )egan. It, is expected that the case will go to the jury tomor row. A verdict of not guilty was re turned. Thousands of people are daily suf fering with kitjney and bladder troubles dangerous ailments that should be checked promptly. De Witt's Kidney and Bladder Pills are the best remedy for backache, weak kidneys, inflauiation of the bladder. Their action ifi prompt and sure. A week's treatment for 25c. 8old by J. E. Shell, Dr. Kent and Granite Falls Drug Co.. Origin of the End-seat Hog. Cleveland Leader. "Noah," said Mr. Darwin, "why didn't you take a pair of mastodons into the ark with youl It would have been interesting to preserve them for modern zoos." "Yes," answered the patriarch, "and I intended to do it. But it was this way: I got all the animals in but a pair of hogs and a pair of mastodons'. And instead of going together, the hogs took an end seat apiece and the mastodons eould't get in." Which was the origin of the species. Take the Postmaster's Word for It. Mr. F. 'M. Hamlin, postmaster at Cherryvale, Imi., keeps also a stock of general merchandise and patent medicines. He says: "Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Reme dy is standard here in its line. It never fails to give satisfaction and we could hardly afford to be without it." For sale by J. E. Shell, Dr. Kent and Granite Falls Drag Co. The Milwaukee Sentinel wit dis covered by the flavor that "Mabel's complexion wasn't real," which prompted the Indianapolis News to inquire, "What is the flavor of a real complexion nowadays!" Yon see you now where Burbank got the idea of an odorless onion. Wise Counsel From the South. "I want to give some valuable ad vice to those who suffer with lame back and kidney trouble," says J. R. Blankenshlp, of Beck. Tenn. "I have proved to an absolute certainty that Electric Bitters will positively cure this distressing condition, The first bottle gave me great relief and after taking a few more bottles, I was completely cured; so completaly that it becomes a pleasure to recom mend this great remedy." Sold un der guarantee at J. E. Shell's drug tore. Price Wo. A Message From the Hill Country. Dear Mr. Editor. May I from this faraway field have a little chat with you and your good people! As you cannot give the answer pro or can in time for we know whether to proceed or not, I will presume on your good nature Editors have to be patient and long-suffering aud go ahead. We have here in this country one condition which strongly re minds me of Caldwell, and this condition is most forcibly im pressed upon my mind when the weather is raigy I refer to the public roads. I think one would have to be a brave man who would venture far on the roads without first having made his will and se cured a first-class incontestable life insurance policy. The dangers that would face the daughty trav elor would be many; but specially he would have reasons to fear be ing burried alive, or slipping off the mountain side into the other world. The other day two men had to pay the price of being too brave. The were driving a hearse with four horses over a country road, when, lo! the first thing they knew, hearse, horses and men were gliding down the mountain side at an uncomfortable rate. When they had reached the bot tom of the ravine and had taken an invetory, they found one man missing, and the other so bruised, cut and broken up that he hardly recognized himself. Two horses had taken up their abode in the hearse, and the other two were se riously considering what would next befall them. The moral of this fable is that the county will probably have to pay several hun dred dollars, and may be the road overseer spend some months, as all trust, in jail. I know Caldwell cannot beat this road story. Next let me reason with you, Mr. Editor, in regard to keeping warm. I believe we can hold our own with almost any section. Old Sol is sincerely mindful of us in this country, though we are high above the sea with mountains to the right of us and mountains to the left of us. Hence we have no need to be burdened with apparel; to be simply clad in purple and fine linen is all that is necessary. But note, to cook our meals, to iron our clothes, to light and heat our houses (when they need heat in), we have no use for wood and coal natural gas, nature's bounty does all these things for us. Strike a match, turn a screw, and you are ready for business no ashes, no smoke. And too, the tariff rate is not alarming; for light, cooking, ironing, heating a house of 8 rooms my gas bill for the last three months was $1.76. Is not this remarkable! I am well pleased with this gas arrangement; for my part have always been, when we did not have a cook, to make up the fire and bring water. Now I have only to strike a match and I have a fire, and the water Ls al ready up. Mr. Editor, when you get water works in Lenoir, as you will soon, get natural gas, too! softly, may be you have a good deal of that now ! In this country we have fruit in abundance; apples, peaches, pears, cherries that is when the trees bear. More attention is given to fruit here than in any place I have been. The crop is short this year, however, on account of the late frosts in the spring. Some of the apple trees are of tremendous size; they look as though they might be a century old, but are in splendid condition. Now, one thing to be remembered in regard to the peo ple who live on their fruit farms is that they are splendid specimens f humanity good looking girls fine looking boys. There may be something then in living "under one's own vine and figtree." Mr. Editor, I did want to say something about what the French called our "Labelle Revier," our grand, gloomy and peculiar river the Ohio, which occasionally rises up in its wrath and sweeps over this broad valley from one end to the other, but I fear I shall not be able to do so this time. But this river is indeed a thing of beau ty, and hence "a joy forever." With kind regard and good wishes. Faithfully yours, A Dweller in the Hillk. Details of Crime. Exchange. It is urged in some quarters that the publicity given to the details of a case like the Thaw case should be a warning. On the contrary, its tendency is to debauch the country. Detailed stories of crime and filth, even if true, do not make for right eousness, but distinctly lower the moral character of hundreds of thousands of readers, and tend to make the crimes described more common. Where one persons is warned a dozen are weakened. But a great deal that was pudlished about the crimes precediugthe mur der was not true. With a basis of fact the sensational reporter turns his imagination loose, sometimes a filthy imagination, and conjures up the most sensational pictures he can draw. It makes little difference whether they are true or not since they will be read just the same. That the reports of the trial were not worse was mainly due to Presi dent Roosevelt, who, in the be ginning, inquired of the Postofflce Department whether newspapers could be excluded from the mails. The hint to publishers was sufficient Even the yellowest paper enrbed the imagination of its reporters. There is, of course, a clean and tj filthy way of stating the same fact, and the newspaper had in mind the danger of exclusion from the mails. Even as it was, the Canadian pos tal authorities seized some thous ands of American newspapers as too bad for Canada. The need of reform in our entire system of criminal jurispi udenoe has long been felt. Something is wrong when such a trial draws crowds on the street with the hope of getting into the court-room, and turns the attention of a nation to its details for months. Perhaps many crim inal trials will in the future he held private, with only a sufficient num ber of interested persons present to secure justice to all, and there will be more restriction on the press . Such a trial does not ruin a nation; the forces which make for righte ousness are too strong for that. But it works a distinct and lasting injury. It is greatly to 1 reg retted that this trial must le gone over again, although ihe interest in it has probably spent its force, aud the next trial will le tame in comparison- The Right Name. Mr. August 8herpe, the popular overseer of the poor, at Fort Madi son, la. says: "Dr. King's New Life Pills, are rightly named: they act more agreeably, do more good and make one feel better than any other laxative." Guaranteed to cure bili ousness and constipation. 3fc at J. E. 8hell'e drug store. The couple that yielded to the poetry of motion and "fell in love on roller skates," will bean excep tion to the general rule if they do not find some prosaic sleding in the matrimonial rink. A cleansing, clean, ooollng, heal ing household remedy is DeWitt's Carbolited Witch Hatel Salve. For bums, cuts, scratches, bruise. Insect bites, and sore feet it is unequaled. Good for pile. Beware of imitations Get DeWitt's. It la the best. Sold by J E, Shell, Dr. Kent and Gran ite Fall Drag Co. X Lenoir Book Store. I X X X School Books School Supplies and Teachers. Just Received. A variety of Bibles and Testaments, PostCard Albums, Photo Boxes and Novelties. Whatever you want in Blank Books and Legal Blanks. Lenoir Book Company. 1MsikIt1oS1 For the next 30 days I will sell my entire stick of Bicycles at cost and below cost, as follows: $35 Bicycles now for $25.00 $30 Bicycles now for 23.50 $28 Bicycles now for 21.SO A good stock of Second Hand Wheels below cost, from $1.50 to $14.75. Come quick and get first choice. IF- ZEEVEE. v for inferior gools. They are as noted for durability, con venience, and economy of fuel, as well as for style and beauty. Sold exclusively by R. H. SPAINTTOTTR & CO. LeeoiF News $1 New Wheat Clean and Dry $1.05. Nothing but the Best will make Snow Flake HOME MILLING CO. I Anderson's Pressing Club. $1.00 Per Month .Limited - to 3 Suits. Small Charge for all Extra Suits. CALL OR 'PHONE ANDERSON'S BARBER SHOP, NO. 54. The News Printery is the only print shop in town turning out first-class work. Try us. & & & & X X X for the County for the Children t t "GARLAND" Stoves and Ranges have the most artistic finish of .any that we have ever seen. They are everywhere acknowledged to be the best in the world, while they cost no more than is often asked t ' --M V' i