2, V ... - .. ' . v -. .- A Home Newspaper Published tna Interest of ;the People and for Honesty in Governmental Affairs. - - -;v : . .... VOL. V. NO. 33. Salisbury, N. 0 Tues&ay, August 3rd. 1909, Wm, h. sfEWARTf Editor. lilO STAfESYILLE AND IREDELL COUNTY. Interesting Talk by Recent Visitor to Tor key. Medai for Bible Study. Statesville Landmark, July 27-30th, Rev. William N Scott, D. D., of Staunton, Va., who is a mem ber of his brother's house party at the college, preached au able Ber mon at the First Presbyterian church Sunday morning and lec tured there Sunday oveniug on the Holy Laud. Daring th past winter Dr. Scott traveled exten sively in Europe, Egypt, Pales tine, Greece and Turkey, visiting many' points of interest in the Holy Laud, and his lecture on what he saw and heard and his impressions of the country, its people, religion, etc., was not only interesting and instructive, but entertaining as well. He told f the missionary work being donn, if any, at each of the principal towns and cities he visited and of the outlook aud opportunities of mission work there. The people of that region gave ns Christiani ty, he stated, and it is our duty to sand and take it ba-?k to them Mohammedanism is the religion of the country and the 1, yalty of the people to thir State and Church and their contentment with their present pitiable condi tion are the great obstacles to the Christian religion there. Damascus is considered one of the most hopeless missionary fields in the wcrld. Nazareth and Bethle hem are the only real Christian cities iu the Holy Land. Dr. ocottt believes that the re cent uprisings in Turkey will re sult n much good to the couutry genera ly and the Christian relig ion there. The overthrow of the old Turkish government by the Young Turks will open the way for missionary work'and the Christian missionaries can gain easy access to the country and the hearts of the people. Dr. Sett is gratified to know that the princi pal leaders of the Young Turk movement are graduates of Robert College, a Presbyterian missionary institution in Turkey. Dr. Scott and part left Constantinople ju9t a week before the first uprising there. The Beven children of the late R.3V. Dr. W. ,A. Wood will give a medal of proficiency in Bible study at Statesville Female College. The medal wll be known as the Wil liam A. Wood medal and it will be awarded to the pupil making the highest mark in Bible study. This is a worthy memorial to Dr. Wood, whose life work and mem ory are a constant benediction to this community, in which he so long labored; aud the memorial is fitting in that it not only encour ages the study of the Book of Books by far too much neglected, but is for the benefit of an insti tution in which Dr. Wood was greatly interested and for whose ' success he labored earnestly. Dr. Wood's childr n are to be congrat ulated. As there has been a great deal of talk and excitement over my ,gjiug to arrest (i. L. Moose I will give you the facts as they occur red. Moose was not at his home, as stated iu your paper. He was at the residence of J, J. Beaver. When I called on Beaver about Moose's whereabouts Beaver in formed me that Moose was in the hup.lr v.rfl man diner a. ' vhnn t. rra. ., , . cue. i nurrieo to tne otner sine of the housro, I saw Moose some 80 yards, running in the irection of a laree forest. I called on him to a v . n t u stop, he made no halt, I ran him . v inn ino T-nics Toresc ana lost sight of him Tnire was no at- tempt on the part of Moose to re- sist in any wav. The onlv thine strauge was he took a pist 1 out ; Of his old coat, while running, ! carried it in his hand, I suppose to keep fr jm losing it. When I saw Moose take the pistol out of the coat pocket I felled at him that I would get him and the d old pistol too. I failed to do what I said I-would do. I will inform all of my brother officers when the old coon hunter gets frightened he makes good chase. Q. M. Goodman. Statesville and vicinity was vis ited by a severe rain, hail and windstorm yesterday afternoon which did considerable damage to crops northeast of town, washed farm lands and roads badly and overflowed streams. The storm was severest in east Statesville and territory for a mile northeast of town. Corn and trees were blown down aud hail fell iu great quantitias. People living in the vicinity of the old Davis placo, on the Turnersburg road, say it was the heaviest raiustorm for many years. Had an Eye for Business. Aunt Nancy Stokes, colored, di d at her home above Wilkes boro Thursday of last week. She was the wife of old Uncle Sam Stokes aud had been an Liviid for some time. The Chronicle Bays: "It is related that toward the clcse of the war, when slaves had become cheap, old uncle Sam was' sold to a master ont in the Traphill section and his wife to another master living on the Yad kin river, so they were seperated by 8' veral roilee and that uncle Sam went to see the owner of his wife and asked him to purchase him so that they could live near together, that as an inducement to the trade that he proposed to put in his own savings, amount ing to s)me $50, in the purchase of himself, and that the trade was thu9 made. But thSy are again separated for a brief inter val and uncle Sam will feel lonely as the evening shades fall darker about him." North Wilkesboro Hustler. Fine Corn Crop. If the seasons continue favora ble there will be enough corn rais ed to last the farmers of this sec tion three years. Now this is good news from those who toil. 'PU A U .. J niltn. . parted above the average. Cot ton is still improving add will go away ahead of last year. The signs are that cotton will be a good price . The recent rains have been a blessing to the eastern sec tion of the State. The crops had been suffering for rain in several counties . The prospects now are bright for the farmers. Tobacco a curing is now going on all over Duplin and the growers are hope ful for good prices at Warsaw. John H. Carter informs us that his belief is that the price will av erage well throughout the season. Kenansville, N. C, News. Want Right of Way. Wiuston-Salem. July 26 C. B. Watson and W. F. Shaffner went to Asheville today to seo Judga Pritchard and to petition his Hon or to lssu a decree granting the S uthbouud Railway Company right of way through the proprty of the Whitney Power Company Aow in the hands of, receivers There is a well-founded report current that the Southern Power to get Company is endeavoring control of the Whitney Power p'an , but the men who have al ready expendsd several million dollars on the property are said to be determined to retain control and when the sale comes off the bidding is expected to be pretty lively. STATE OF OHIO, G1TY OF TOLEDO . i.ucas county. BP. j Frank J. Cheney makes oath j that he is senior, partner of -the ' firm of F J- Cheney & Co , doing business in the City of Toledo, , , 0t . -j k County and State aforesaid, and : t)mfc Baid firm win pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for ech and evey case of Catarrh thttt cal,,1t in cured by the use of Ha'l's Catarrh Cure. FRANK J. CHENEY, Sworn to aud subscribed iu my presence, this the oth dav of De cumber, A D., 1886. (Seal) A, W. GLEASON, Notary Public Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken iu ternally, and acts directly on the bio d and mucous surfaces of the svstem, :5end for testimonials free. F. J. CHENEY & Co , Toledo, Ohio. Sold by all Druggists. 75c. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. UNKNOWN PATIENT. Does Anybody in Rowan Know Anything of Such a Boy is the one Described. Statesville. Julv 27. -W. W. Turner, of Statesville, has return ed from a visit to bia brother. Dr. J. P. Turner, of Greensboro, and tells the correspondence an inter esting story about a boy in a hos pital at Greensboro. While in the Gate City Mr. Turner was told that an unknown white boy 12 to 15 years old, who had been found unconscious beside the railroad track in the vicinity of Salisbury about a month ago. was in one of Greensboro's charity hospitals for treatment, and thinking it possible that the boy might be Foy Kurlee, of Statesville, who mysteriously disappeared just a bout a month ago, Mr. Turner went to the hospital to see him, but found that he is not the Kur lee boy. The boy in the hospital is suffering from a severe gash on the side of his head and other injuries and lias been in a semi conscious condition ever since he was taken to the hospital. He can talk just a little at times, but has as yet not been able to tell who he is, where he is from and how he was hurt, and all this re mains unknown. He is not a bad- looking boy has black hair, dark eyes and Weighs about 100 pounds and Mr. Turner believes his peo pie could be fouud by frequent publication of his caso in the news papers. The whereabou's of Kur- ee are still unknown. Special to Charlotte Observer. Near Beer a Fraud. North Carolina will never do much with her pr hibition law until she is honest with herself. Under present conditions if we are not mistaken, the near beer farce has forced itself on many com munities and is recognized as a legitimate business if the tax is paid. Every man in the State knows within himself that "near beer" and all drinks of that char acter are nothing less than sub terfuges and if allowed to be sold in thn State will make the prohi bition law a failure. We see no difference iu having a near beer saloon and a saloon of the old kind. The near beer establish ment is worse for the community aod the State because they ac complish about the same result without paying the high taxes that were usually put on the saloon If reports are true it would take an expert chemist on every bottle of near beer to ascertain if the law is being kept and the State is treated fairly, To license the sell ing of a beverage which is seperat ed from that which is prohibited by law only an infinitestimal part cf alcohol leaves the way open for fraud and dishonesty, which no douht is often practiced. It is a farce. With "near beer" aud similar drinks allowed in the State we had as well repeal the prohibition law and go back to the licensed saloon. Au honest pro bibitionist want3 prohibition not simply to have a law of that kind just for the sake of saying we have it when we havn't.It will not do to say that it is better than it used to be. If it is better now, the ten deucy is towards a worse condi tion. High Point Enterprise. Not in the Trust. THE MIGHTY HAAG RAIL ROAD SHOWS which will (xhib it at Salisbury on Saturday Aug 7. are not iu the show trust. Sever al inducements were made to Mr. Haag to join the show trust, but he refused all offers and will con tinue to give tne puonc tne same high class shews, only this season will be enlarged in every depart i J.L 1 . . meu& au tue auow now travels on its own Bpecial trains of cars. The trust maguates advised Mr. Haag to obliterate the street par rade but he refused positively and this year has enlarged his street pagament so as to make it two miles in length, with plenty of muBic, pretty ladies, fine horses, t i j luuny ciowns ana massive open cages of animals, and takes place daily on tne public streets free. TOO HARD ON THE SEX. Dr. Broughtoq Hatrfs Women Over the Coals for too Mucptention to Dress, The following remarks are re ported to have been made recently in a sermon by the irrepressible Dr. Broughton of Atlauta. Trie women of thaticity may or may not take the remarks to heart ser iously : , ; "The women of to-day should be called upon to stop in their rush and do some serious thinking concerning the problems that rest altogether upon their shoulders. "The rich and well-to-do classes are setting a pace for those not so fortunate that js leading many to rum. 11 a ncn woman wants to clothe herself in generous apparel aud wear extravagant jewelry, she should do it at the functions of her own class, -and not flaunt her self on the streets or at church, or other plaois ot common meeting. "A woman has no more right to tempt a girl into extravigance be yond what she can legtimately ha vo than she I has tempt a man into vice. This responsibility his uot been properly impressed. Women of mesms seem to take a delight in making every other woman who can't keep up with her Feel just aB bad as possible. "Women of smell means, es pecially young women, have the same love for the beautiful a9 the rich ; the same thing that tempts one tempts the other. Gorgeous personal adornment should not be made a matter of public parade; the streets and public places are no place for display. It is vulgar, and indicates a low order of breeding. Let such things be reserved for special fuuotions among the classes that are able ot have them. It 1ST .a not oniy saue, but Christian. "Our Atlanta women have much to answer for in this regard. I have visited many countries and obEerved conditions, and it is my caudid opinion that At'anta's women dress more extravagantly than any other women 1 know of especially on the streets and in public generally. They seem to have gone crazy in this respect. "Women who can afford it and women who can't afford it alike; the rich setting the pace and the poor trying to follow as closely as possible and reckless and mad, flaring aud flouncing their fine gowns and jewels on the street and elsewhere. It does seem that it has reached the limit, and so ber-minded people, exoopt the dry goods merchants and dress makers, cry for halt. "Toe young woman knows that the way to win flattery and admi ration is to dreas as temptingly as possible. All are at it, and so she coos This is the road that thousands are going, and, alas, it is the road to ruin 'A great reform is ne3ded. A recent article in the Saturday Evening Post, in comment eg up on the change that has come over women, says it was once true that a husband, to brag on his wife, would speak of her rare domestic Qualities her ability to make pies, jams, and her . all round a- bility to make a happy home But now it ib not so, not because tha husband or children would not have it so, but because she has decreed otherwise. Now he has to brag on her ability to dress and parade and show herself and the number of clubs she belongs tr. ai4 f Via fQ ri rr.mafl aVia nrfrta and the like. Horrid, yes dam nable, is the chauge. It is wreck ing the home and destroying the family. A Holiday Coming. TH.E MIGHTY HAAG RAIL ROAD SHOWS which exhibit at Salisbury on Saturday, August 7, will be one grand glorious holiday. Everybody remembers Haag and everybodv knows the Haag shows This year the show has been en larged so as to make it impossi ble to travel by wagon and will travel on its own special trains of cars. Remember this one holiday. J- LEXIN6T0N AND DAYIDSON COUNTY. New Dog Law. Another Warning to the Boys. Minister is Quite III. Lexlngrton Dispatch. Jnly 28th. .Rev. A. L. Stanford, pastor of the First Methodist church, re mains very ill with typhoid fever at the residence ef Webster Kooutz on First avenue. It was at first feared that he, had typhoid-pneumonia. While he has a severe at tack, he ii not considered desper ately ill, and the whole town is joined in the hope that he will very soon recover. He is one of the most popular pastors Lexing ton ever had. Thursday night at the special meeting of the board of aldermen, a law prohibiting dogs being at large was passed, same to take ef fect the first of August. This law places a fine of $5 on the owner or keeper of a dog who lets it go at large. The fine is for each and every offense. Dogs may be held in leash on the streets, but cannot roam the town as some scores of cauies do at present- Business men say their business is increasing right along. Several manufacturers last week had the best business they have enjoyed since the panic began two years ago. This is especially true of the people who deal in lumber and building supplies . The panic is passing. The outlook brightens. The Southbound is on the way. People walk faster on the streets, there is more hustle than usual. Lexington is getting ready t ) do something. Have you joined the board of trade? Another accident caused by the pernicious habit of trying to ride trains in the railroad yards ouht to make for a cessation of the practice. The police have arrest ed several boys and several have been injured during the pass year or so, but tne youngsters keep on. Depot people say they are especi ally bad about it when No, 64, the local freight, shifts early morn ings. It is very dangerous and the railroad is uot responsible. A boy that rides trains in this way is taking his life in his hands and if he is killed, he's paid for. It has been apparent to the management of the Dispatch from the first that on account of bad crop prospects and the delay in farm work occasioned by the rains of the spring and early summer, the annual popularity contest of the paper could not be a success, and this conviction has deepened with each succeeding week. Crops are not god, people are far behind with their work and are making every minute count, and they are blue In such a frame of mind they are unlikely to pay attention to a newspaper voting contest, Hence The Dispatch this week withdraws its offers temporarily and later will offr to do some thing along the same line, only better than it has ever offered be fore. Any subscriber who has naid in morev on new subscrio- tion on account oi the contest shall have his money refunded if he wishes it and cheerfully. Hog-RatSing on a Large Scale. R. Wfl.lt.ara nf Sterling's " 1 ' l i i. e i lUWUBUlu, Utto a uuetuie ui eevcim ' L hundred acres in which he has 850 hotrs and 100 head of cattle, and when hog-killing times comes Mr, Walters will have the hog-killing- est time ever he will slaughter 800 hogs. Mr. Walters has found raising hogs very profitable. For several years he has been selling some 8,000 pounds of sausage each year to L. H. Caldwell, of Lum- berton, and he sells to others . Lumberton Robesoniah. Seared With a Hot Iron or Bcaldod by overturned kettle cut with a knife bruised by slam med door iniured by gun or in any other way the thing needed at once is Bucklen's Arnica Salve to subdue inflammation and kill the pain. It's earth's suprome healer, infallible for Boils,, Ulcers, Fever Sores. Eczema and Piles. 25o at all druggists. The Engineer. On a lark and stormy night last winter a train crowded with tired aud anxious travelers was creeping slowly southward away behind the sohedule time. The engineer kept his had on the throttle and his eye on the track, for the heavy rains made it perilous to travel as the streams were swollen and any minute there was danger lest the train run into a waBhout . As sta tion after station was approached, the weird signal was given aa a matter of course, and finally the Yadkin bridge was crossed in safe ty, and at a higher speed the' train rushed on and up the grade which leads to Spencer, and then the whistle blew loud and long and longer still.. It was a ehriak of triumph Beemingly and aroused many sleepy travelers who won dered what it meant But to one famiiar with the facts there was in it a beautiful and tender senti ment which transformed that hoarse signal into a serenade of melody and love, for it was a mes sage of joy to the wife of the en gineer who had waited anxiously and listened through the watches of the night for that very signal. She recognized the notes of it, for it was for the assurance that her husband had passed safely over the dangers of the trip and would soon be at home Trainmen- in .great numbers dwell in Spencer, and when they are due to come home their fami- lies listen for the whistle that an nounces the approach ot their trains, and when thty hear the signal, all their fears are relieved. So on that dark and rainy night, when the whistle blew so loud and long there was a bit of eloquence and sweet sentiment in it, for it gladdened a woman's heart and preparedjher for welcoming home a soot-begrimed, but noble man had brought to its destination safe and souud a passenger train laden with humanity. Green s b o r o Christian Advocate. Lots Of Hogs. In one Johnston county town there are said to be as many or more horsthan inhabitants. The people not only raise their own meat, but sell hundreds of pounds of it. Of course the hogs scatter a few thousand fleas and are ob jectionable to citizens of the town in many other respects, but all this counts but little when the pleasure of owning hogs comes up. In June, when giving in his tax there, one man gave in 40 head of hogs. He does not seem to be right sure that he listed enough, but thinks 40 is somewhere near I the right number. He carries on a good deal of business and does i not devote ,much time to hog- raising, or he would have more. Hogs from the country frequently come iu to visit the town hogs. It is said that the pigs go almost everywhere. When the grown hogs enter a store for groceries they are usually polite enough to go iu at the back door. Smith- field Herald. Pays tH Raise FfUit. Over half a million dollars i. profit directly due to improved methods of marketing were made w u n-; nQa.v. mnn mi., i duo udjikib hd"uu ""h 1 year, according to figures publish- ed to-night. This year for the first time Georgia growers organ- ized" into a mutual benefit ex change, modeled on the lines of California fruit shippers' associa tions. The result was that a crop of nearly 2,000 carloads of peaches this year brought about $1,000, 000 or about the same price which a crop of 6,000 car loads brought last year. The price this year went as high as $2 per crate. The importance of these figures for the South lies in the fact that not only the peach growers but the raisers of other great Southern fruit crops, particularly oranges, are organizing similar associa tions. In eac: i case -Southern as sociations have followed the Cali fornia idea of "keeping the crop rolling" in freight cars and sell ing it as it moves by meana of re- I liable agbnts of the association in ! the North. Asto AgrlcBltore. In his address before the sum mer school at Charlottesville, Virginia, Clarence H. Poe, ed itor, of the Progressive Farmer, spoke on the Agricultural Revolu tion and enlarged on the follow ing proposition : 1. For six thousand years un til this last century agriculture has been practically stationary. The plow which Cincinnati left to become dictator of Rome would -not have seemed unfamiliar to our grandfathers. 2 . Now a new day has come. These next hundred years will see a revolution in agriculture no less far-reaching than the revolution in commerce these last hundred. 3 . Much as this means to oth er sections, it means more to the South, because the South alone has more farmers than persons in all other occupations combined. 4. The fundamental need is to make more money farming. So long as the Southern farm, produc es $500 a year less than the North ern farm, the higeit civilization cannot be brought among us. " 5 . The programme of progress must include (1) individual ef fort better tillage, better seed, rotation, diversification, legumes, more live stock, etc; and, also (2) co-operative effort farmers insti tutes, test farms, short'oourses in agriculture, rural mail delivery, better sanitation, rural telephones, wia mada atn D f - 6 . For our . teachers the great est work is to help in bringing aboul a system of education adop ted to the needs of country life. Our textbooksthe wnole curri culum, have been made by city people, for city people, and have no appeal to the country dwellers. A change in the viewpoint of all the text books is needed, and the teaching of the-elements of agri cultural science as. well in rural schools. There is no reason why a teacher should argue that she is not competent to do this when (if she has studied the textbook prop erly) she probably knows a great deal more of "the knowable things" about history, geography or physiology subjects which she regards herself as thoroughly competent to handle. Keeping Oot of Debt. One reason so many folks find the road of life uncomfortable is the fact that they're walking bare footed over broken promises. There's nothing so heavy to car ry, so disheartening, so weaken ing, so nerve-racking, as debt . If it stopped with the flattening of the pocketbook, it would be bad enough; but it only begins there. It weighs on the mind. It places the victim to a disadvantage in work and play. It compromises manhood and womanhood, and eats away at charctaer like a canker worm. The best and biggest vow a yonnng man can make is to keep out of debt. There may come times when he cannot keep his vow and fulfill his duty to his own. Such times are not of frequent occurrence, how- ever, but when they do come, the uuoie " I . , . 1 J L - i gee creait tuan iu woum ne u uo i I v 1 J i - .3 l " J i. naa aireaay exausrea am creai. To keep out of debt means self- respect and self-reliance. It means health and happiness and freedom from that worst of foes. Exchange. Twas t 6lorioBS Victory. There's rejoicing , in Fedora, Tenn . A man's life, has been sav ed, and now Dr. King's New Dis covery is thetalk of the' town for cuiingC. V. Pepper of deadly lung hemorrhages. "I could not work nor get about, he writes, "and the doctors did me no good, but after using Dr. King's New Discovery three weeks. I feel like a new man, and can do work again. For weak, sore or dis eased lungs, Coughs andj Colds, Hemorrhages, Hay Fever, La- Grippe, Asthma or any Bronchial effection- it stands unrivaled. Price 50c and $1.00. Trial bottles free. Sold and guaranteed by all druggists. r 0 -J'J n i