etm'o The A RANDOLPH COUNTY, PAPER FOR RANDOLPH COUNTY PEOPLE. VOL. 6. NO. 6. ASHEBORO, N. C, THURSDAY, AUGUST 11, 1910. ONE DOLLAR A YEAR. Democratic County Convention. The democratic county con vention was held in the court house last Saturday, .as scheduled. Commencing at 10:30 o'clock, ex governor C. B. . Aycock made a rambling talk till half past twelve when a recess was taken till 1:30. When the convention reassembled the court room was pretty well packed, about one third of the audience beingre- publicans who were curious to see what a democratic conven tion looked like when "in ac tion". Many had read of the democratic congressional con ventions in the 5th, 6th and 10th districts and they decided if such spectacular shows ever come to Asheboro, they wanted to be on hand. However, they were somewhat disappointed as the ring boss and his lieutenants had the thing well in hand and no kicks were registered against the high handed methods of the county machine. Attorney J. A. Spence wielded the gavel but "order", that evaded him. He also told them when to vote but often they were at a loss to know who they were voting for. Sometimes he declared the result of the ballot in such stentorious tones that he was heard at least ten seats back from the rostrum. The performance opened by the chairman calling for nomi nations for candidates for the legislature. After a long halt somebody nominated T. J. Finch, situation or his cigarette with his wonted avidity. The. thing was. becoming terrible ?r when somebody moved that the legis lative nominations be postponed until the county slate was com pleted and somebody seconded the motion which caVried, the chairman in the mean time hav ing recovered 'his faculties. Nominations for clerk were call ed for when D. M. Weatherly arose and made a speech with drawing from the race, but it was noticable he didn't put his chief opponent's name before the convention. When the roll was called they went right on and gave Mr. Weatherly the few votes he received in the primary just as though he hadn't withdrawn his name The other candidates were W.. H. Griffin, W. C. Hammond and J. P. Boroughs Hammond was declared the winner. It required three ballots to decide the con test for sheriff, J. W. Birkhead landing the nomination as was previously slated. For register of deeds, G. T. Murdock nailed the nomination unopposed. For treasurer B. F. Newby, I. F. Kearns J. M. Hinshaw, W. A. Underwood, June Fox and J. P. Phillips were in the race. On the third ballot, Mr. Phillips landed. Just before the third ballot was taken, Mr. Hinshaw who had about twe votes to his credit, graciously withdrew from the contest. This seemed a very great sacrifice as he seemed to have the nomination at his very finger tips, only lacking 49 votes. When the Randleman delegates saw their candidate, Mr. Fox, was beaten, the convention had no more charms for them and LET THE BOYS PLAY. DEMOCRATIC PARTY'S PLIGHT. fVion cnrrtohnH v pIcp named . O. R. Cox. Mr. -Finch declined with they soon wended their way to- thanks and Mr. Cox did likewise, ward the bouthern depot ready Then J. D. Ross was put in for embarkation. Mr Ross was also The rest is quickly told. Dr. nviiiiuiuviuii) . mnnd. Thos. J. Fox of Franklinville was turned Redding's name, was presented down for coroner and the nomi- u.,4. n- Trri;r,rr vorl hoon tn nation was given to ur. w. 1. UUb 1111 . J..VtVil. PoloicrW fcpfnrp and neither a Sumner of Randleman as a sooth ,wn nr pWtion was anv ing plaster for the loss of June novelty to him, so he also de- Fox for treasurer. J. D. Welch clined. Dr. W. I. Sumner, H. was awarded the nomination for T- Rraxr T? R Ross. J. Rom surveyor as he is influential in Smith and perhaps others were Union township where they have put in nomination, before the so much trouble "rounding them chairman ordered a ballot. When up" on election day. the township roll was called, For commissioners,. T. Cavi the delegates proceded to vote ness, B. F. Bulla and W. T. oil th mndidatPR. rpe-ardless Foushee went in as slated. of the fact that most of them The county ticket having been w ffpd nnsitivelv t.hev could filled the convention returned ilUU uvuvv f - - ml . - . not accept if nominated. Two once more to the legislative KoiWc rlnW through when the branch. Some one nominated chairman declared T. J. Finch H- M. Robins, but Mr. Robins nominated. Mr: Finch again was quickly on nis leet and toio UflvW firmlv declared' he 'em there was nothing dom' and nnM nnfnPfPnt. as his nrivate there wasn't. As a last resort business would not permit. This they nominated by acclamation action of Mr. Finch paralyzed J. Rum Smith who was absent, fi,o nnnvpntinn: OnicWlv those But the hoodoo was still after who moved the nominations of .'em, for a delegate stated authori se multiferous candidates with tively that neither would Mr. fhp nominations and the. Smith accept. So as a very, very legislative ticket was as blank last resort W. J. Scarboro got a oeo Knid hpfld. The rinsters motion through the convention were dazed, not knowing what to the effect that in case either to do. They had attempted to Mr. Finch or Mr. Smith or both ominatP Mr. Finch and Mr. could not be persuaded to accept, Cox in order to float the Jonahs the county executive committee Vwv., tnpW wprp slated for the was empowered to fill the vacan- "" , . . 1J 1 ticket and the refusal of these cy by someone who would have . flpman to he cautrht in their it. Having completed the slate .-. 6uiiv-"."-- t . . . weU Waited trap, threw conster- as previously arranged excepting nation into the camp. No one candidates for the legislature N in authority seemed tuknow'just and after resoluting some weak what to do. They 'were entirely paragraphs meaning nothing, the at sea without chart or compass, convention adjourned, nearly all Great drops of sweat stood on the delegates and visitors having - the massive brow of the chair- previously left the hall. man. He lost the use of the gavel and sat speechless, gazing Among the 6,000,000 working on--vacancy. The ring boss, women in this country, there are leaned over the rail and tried to nearly 1,000,000 widows and 8, whisper to some one a dozen 000,000 married women whose seats down the center aisle and husbands have tailed to provide even his 2d "Friday", assistant for them. Nearly 100,000 di secretary or some other function- vorced women are among the ary, could not grasp either the wage-earners. (Wallace's Farmer ) A mother writes us that the men and boys in her neighbor hood have organized a boxing club, that some of the best boys in the neighborhood have joined it; that her boys want to join; and asks our advice. If the best boys in the neigh borhood have joined that club, and the boys were ours, we believe we would let them joirv If the club is largely made up of vulgar men and boys, then we would not let them join; for any benefit that would come to the boys from boxing would be more than balanced by the danger to their morals from associations with bad or vulgar companions. This brings up the large and important question of amuse ments for men and boys on the farm. The farmer's life, as a rule, is too naked and bare of amusements. If amusements were as well organized in the country as they are in the city, a good many boys and men who are now in the city would have staid on the farm. Let us consider this animal we call the boy. He is quite dif ferent in his make-up from the girl. He wants to run and jump, swim and play ball; and he will do it. It is simply a question of how to provide a way in which he can develop these natural and inborn instincts without damage to his moral character. You might as well try to keep two lusty younir calves in the barn yard from pushing each other with their horns as to keep boys from some kind of amusements. You might as well try to keep the lambs from playing, racing over the fields, lumping on a log or--rock and then jumping off. They are built that way. As a matter of fact a good deal of our efforts in training boys is 1' j 3 Z 1-L i J i 4. directed unwisejy lu uie attempt to eliminate certain characteris tics which the Creator put there. It is ours not to eliminate what is natural and wholesome, but io guide and direct it and keep from abuse. . A boxing club made up of the best men and boys in the com munity would be an excellent thing. It would develop the boys physically and enable them to acquire an art which might be very useful to them some times. It would afford diver sion from the drudgery of work. It would teach them to keep their tempers. It would bring together in friendly contest and enable them to understand each other. A knowledge of human nature, of the strength and weak ness of those with whom we as sociate is a very important part of human education. The benefits derived from such a r un would ne increased u there is some level-headed young man in the neighborhood compe tent to act as a leader and direc tor. This is especially desirable when the members of the club are of various ages. We would not stop with boxing. Wrest ling, Indian club swinging, dumb bell work, etc., will ddd to the usefulness of the club. The same may be said of base ball, football, skating or. any other sort of amusements which have been followed ever since there were boys and men, and which they will follow in some form or other as long as there are men and boys on the face of the earth. We believe , it would I be an excellent thing if there were a ua.&tjuciu icam m cvcij neighborhood and every Satur day afternoon in favorable a Upon entering the coming campaign, the Democratic party finds itself in the same plight that has characterized that party from a time fast becoming im memorial. In taking stock this year of its political assets, it can find nothing that may properly be put upon the positive side of the ledger, and therefore it is not "pointing with pride" to any achievements of its own, but is simply, as in the past, deploring what the Republican party has done or failed to do. Having had little or no part in the constructon i of the laws of the country, it cannot properly feel any responsibility in regard to them and must, perforce, con fine itself to criticism and com plaint. Against everything that may arise there can always be depended to be a democratic pro test; a protest that has its origin in a burning and not-to-be- quenched thirst for office. It hopes sometimes to be in power in the country, not by any merit of its own, but because hope, without" cultivation, persists in springing exultant in the human breast. Having done nothing,1 it has nothing to disturb its not altogether peaceful slumbers, except to file its protest against the ownward march of prosperi ty, and to decry and make little, if possible, the beneficent ad vantages to the country brought by Republican legislation. -In some parts of the country where Republicans have had honest, though reconcilable differences, the democrats have hoped that the breach would be sufficiently widened to admit their entrance; but as time goes by even this prospect is becoming less promis ing and pleasing to them. Each year. finds in the South, which section has been so highly favor ed by nature and the beneficent results of a Republican admini stration, additional numbers who refuse to be further soothed by the swan song of sentiment, but who are exerting a political in dependence not incompatible with their recognized best in terests. Yet here, as well as elsewhere, fortunately, the hope less predicament of Democracy is fully apparent, as it has noth ing to offer save its worn and frazzled protest against the things that are. Wilkes Patriot. Victories of Peace; or. The Results of Sanitary Science. less We are not to live, with others, but for them. Any one who lives to himself alone, can hard; ly expect to be very popular. The one is least selfish makes for himself the widest place in the world. weather were given up to that game. We are satisfied that a man would get more work out of the boys in five days and a half, with a baseball game in prospect, than he will in six days withouttme. So in the winter time the farmer and the teacher will get more work out of the boys, if some time is given each week to physical exercises of one soYt or another. Personally, we have never learned to box. We are sorry we never did. Nor have we ever learned to play football or base ball; and we are free to say that our education is lacking in that much. By all means encourage - games and sports amongthe boys on the farm; but be careful as to the kind of associates they have. A boy had better forego a good many innocent enjoyments than form bad associates, which are found to lead to bad hubils. "Peace hath her victories no renownjed than war.' Milton. The thunder of artillery, the battle clouds, the ghastly wounds the crimsoned sod, and the cries and shrieks of agony make a pic ture that focuses and holds the attention paralyzed with horror. On the other hand, the quiet, unobserved laboratory worker, as he wrestles day in and night out .with the forces of Nature for the knowledge that is power, attracts no uncommon attention, until the general educational effect of time brings the masses abreast of the advanced position long since occupied Jby their, unknown leader. The leader with battle back ground creates a profound im pression ; the leader with .scien tific' acumen passes unnoticed, but leaves an impression as last ing as the truth of which his life becjime a part. Napoleon U an example of the first, Pasteur of the .second. In 1906 a well known Paris newspaper made a poll; of the French people and Pasteur was voted the greatest Frenchman that ever lived. Such was not the popular estimate of Pasteur during his lifetime or immediately after his death. We have all heard of Hobson, but how few know of the less ostentatious but greater heroism of Lazear and Carroll. Fully realizing wrhat only a few could then realize, and without the plaudits of the public, they ex posed themselves to a greater danger than an exploding maga zine in order to test the mosquito origin of yellow fever. They gave their lives in . the experi ment, but as a result, 2,000 lives are saved annually in Cuba and Mexico alone, the Panama Canal is being dug, and yellow fever is rib longer a disease that strikes terror to the iieart. It is estimated that the at tempt of the French to dig the Panama Canal cost them 50,000 lives, most of them destroyed by yellow fever and malaria: In 1887, the death rate in the Canal Zone amounted to the loss of 1 person out of 10, or 100 out of every 1,000, per annum. The hospitals were overcrowded, and it is stated on good autholnty that the high death rate was the principal reason the French aban doned the undertaking. In 1905, when the United States began wf k on the canal, the death rate per annum was 65 per 1,000 of the; population. In four years Colonel Gorgas, the distinguish ed sanitarian in charge of health conditions there, has reduced the death rate to 25 per annum per 1,000 of the population. It will be seen that 40 lives are saved in every 1,000 of the population, arid, as there are 120,000 people in the Canal Zone, this means a saving of 4,800 lives annually.-; Yellow fever,, as has been said already, is a conquered disease. From 1850 to 1900 the city of Havana alone - averaged 750 deaths a year from this disease. Since the discovery of Lazear and Carroll and the application of this discovery there has been an average of not over 4 deaths per year from this disease in Ha vana. Vera Cruz Province, Mex ico, that had never been iree of the disease in fifty years, has riot had a single case of the di sease in the last four years And, as in Havana and in vera Cruz, so everywhere else that the very simple remedy for the prevention of ; this disease has been applied, it has disappeared. Malaria is another disease that BILIOUS? CONSTIPATED HEADACHE? for SPEEDY RELIEF; Nearly Bvcr$bod$ SIMMONS U YERREGUl ATC 3 WHY nor VOU8 Eleazer; - John Allen of Pirison Tenn. , visited at his brother's WM. Allen's last week. ' Miss Una Hill and"Mrs; Martha Grissom of Greensboro,-arte visit ing in this community this Sveek. Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Varner ofMilford Texas are spending several days in our neighborhood. W. E. Hall of Central Falls is visiting his brother- Thomas Hall. Several people from here went to the convention ' at Asheboro Saturday.. j Y Arley Luther is building a nice dwelling house. Eugene Carter spent Sundayl fat his father's near Bombay. ; William Allen has gone to Norfolk Va. to spend sometime.- Mrs. Stafford and daughter Miss Lee returned to their home at Greensboro last week after spending a few weeks here visit ing friends and relatives. Miss Mary Sykes of Asheboro is the guest of her cousin , Miss Nettie Luther. Elsia Luther was a -welcome visitor at Mr. E. G. Loflin's Sun day night. The Sunday school at Eleazer is progressing nicely under the management of W. M. Thayer. Most of the young people are expecting to attend the protract ed meeting at New Hope next Sunday. Misses Mary Sykes and Nettie Luther, spent last Sunday at Bombay. ' With success to the Bulletin and it's readers. has yielded to man just in propor tion to the educational effort di rected against this disease. In Italy, one of the most malarious countries in the world, with a vprv ireneral educational cam paign against 'malaria, there has been in the last years a o per cent reduction in the malarial death rate. The. average annual death rate irom maiana- oeiore this campaign was 16,000; it is . aa. v'j- rrr 1 ' J now 4,UUU; iz;uuu lives are saveu each year. . A large number 01 cities ana malarious provinces in other countries have, to varying de crees of effectiveness, adopted anti-malarial measures with re sults ranging from a J3 per cent to an 80 per cent reduction in their malarial death rate, in Ismalia, a town of 8,000, and in Port Swettmgham and Klanga, town of 6,UW, wnere maiana ai fected about 50 per cent of the population and was evidently sapping the life physical and industrial out of these places, a vigorous anti-malarial campaign has completely exterminated the disease. Next week's article will be a continuation of the enumeration of great sanitary victories over the foice of disease and death. I