.V Randolph Bulletin Published Weekly. ASHEBORO, N. C. Eggs can become so cheap as tc arouse suspicion. The harem skirt has displaced the hobble skirt, and it bids fair to become popular. Radium is being boosted for heating purposes, and there is no telling how high its price will go. Men do not mind how much women mimic their clothes so long as they remain womanly in action. Seattle is to have a 41-story build ing. It wants something Tacoma car see and put in its pipe and smoke. Chicago is becoming excited be cause so, many of its marriageable young men go west. But can you blamo them? Jail sentences for women smug glers seem hard, especially when the, women smugglers can better afford money than time. An American, has just paid $500,00(1 for one of Rembrandt's paintings. In emphasizing the artistic temperament that is going some. Germany's rapid increase in popula tion leads us to believe that the storls continues to be more popular there than the military bird. A theatrical manager says there are no pretty girls in New York. We can afford to pity the poor metropolis. There are no ugly ones here. In spite of the fact that a prisoner In a Washington jail earned $12,000 while behind the bars, we still hol3 that jail is a good place to avoid. The government has ruled that the trousers of an official cannot be pressed at public expense. We look for more baggy trousers in office henceforth. A domestic In 52 years of service saved $32,000. It would be interesting to know how much her employer able to accumulate in the same pe riod. The news that the kaiser has in. creased his string of motors cars to thirty causes one to suspect that Wil liam intends to go some in the near future. Another college professor has come to the front with ajplan to regulate. SSSP1 W ixsiCTias become of the old fashioned professor who taught in school? The news that radium is to be the future competitor of coal as a heat pro ducer inspires the coal dealers with considerable confidence in boosting their prices. The auto truck may be commercial, but it is also humanitarian, as any one will witness who has seen the struggles of an underfed horse with an overloaded wagon. There is no more delightful reading than the story of a romance in real life that ends happily; no more dis tressing reading than such a story that ends the other way. One of the aviators recently went up several hundred feet in the dark. He probably had an idea that it wouldn't hurt any more to fall in the dark than In the daylight. An eastern club woman who claims to have investigated, reports that men love fluffy girls. Perhaps they do, but they generally want the girls to get along with their own fluffs. The New Hampshire legislators are trying to stop eavesdroppers on party telephone lines, and they may become so foolhardy as to ask congress tc request postmasters not to read postal cards. New York doctors are preparing tc diagnose disease by studying the pa tient's dreams. The phantasmagoria caused by an injudicious mixture oi lobster Newberg and mince pie would Indicate defective judgment, or we have eaten things in vain. A New England sea captain died aa the result of being jabbed with a hat pin worn by a Boston woman. What an irony of fate it was that after fac ing death on the waters for many years he should be impaled on the point of effeminate fashion. A Brooklyn widow who advertised that she was a good cook of both plain and fancy dishes, and wanted a husband, got 145 proposals. This looks as if the cynical clubwoman's recipe of making a happy home by "feeding the brute" is near the mascu line ideal of wedded romance. One of the Johns Hopkins professors announces that poverty will be abol ished. It will not be possible, how ever, to get everybody to be pleased on account of the abolition of pover ty unless work can be abolished alonri with it. A man in a Massachusetts town was arrested for kneeling on the sidewalh and offering prayers. The magistrate before whom he was brought decided It is no crime to pray in the streets. The executors of the law certainly have some queer ideas of wrongdoin riMELY TAR HEEL TALK NEWS NOTING THE PROGRESS OF A MIGHTY STATE. Asheville. One and a half miles of the Black Mountain railroad has been graded and crossties are being laid. Thomasville. Southern Power com pany interests have taken over the light and power plant of this town. Southern Pines. A number of strangers are in town looking for lo cations for fruit and cotton farms, some coming from as far away as Iowa. Fayetteville. Arrangements were made here for an aviation exhibition to be given April 8 by Lincoln Beachy, aviator. Beachy is now conducting an aviation school in PinehursL Murphy. The town has sold Its $25,000 issue of bonds to build an up-to-date system of water works. The township is preparing for a $100,000 bond issue for road improvements. Shelby. Cleveland farmers are be coming aroused over the farm-life schools provided for by the last legis lature and an effort will be made to secure one of the ten provided for in the bill. Alta Pass. The Appalachian high way will be built from Linville to Alta Pass, a distance of 2 miles, by a com pany which has secured a charter for that purpose. Prof. Joseph Hyde Pratt is one of the leading movers in the enterprise. Charlotte. Captain James O. Walk er of the Charlotte drum corps and the Arab patrol, arranged to have a special train carry the members of his two organizations to Rochester, N. Y., for the great events on July 11, 12 and 13. Greensboro. Charles A. Sisson, center fielder of the Columbus team of the South Atlantic league, and Miss Louise Sergeant, daughter of a prom inent and wealthy manufacturer of this city, were married here. Sisson's home is at Grand Rapids, Mich. Charlotte. Gen. Julian S. Carr, ol Durham, notified the president of Biddle University of his acceptance of the invitation recently tendered to deliver the annual address at the commencement of the university June 7. General Carr is one of the fore most citizens in the state. Greensboro. Mrs. Ulysses Q. Thompson, recovering from an attack of fever, was allowed to read news paper accounts of the New York fire. She commented upon the fate of the girls and arose from her bed and plunged through a second story win dow. She is suffering with a fractured hip and other bruises, none of a seri ous nature. Decatur, Ala. The body of the young man who was mysteriously killed here was identified as that of William N. Parker, not Parks, as at first thought, and were sent to his father, J. S. Parker, Concord. He was identified by a missing toe and tattoo marks on the body. Southern Pines. A movement is on foot to rebuild the hotel at Lake view recently destroyed by fire. Charlotte. There is net thought to be anything involved in the differ ences between state insurance com missioner Young and the Order of Owls, which will hazard the organiza tion of the order in Charlotte or throughout the state. High Point. Negotiations which have been going on for several months between the representatives of the Southern Car company of this city and outside capitalists, for the reorganiza tion of this plant, have at last been successfully consummated. Among the new outside stockholders are Messrs J. B. Duke, W. G. Brokaw, Abraham Cook and R. W. Morrison, the latter two gentlemen having been associat ed with the St. Louis Car company for years and being practical men. The capital stock, it is said, will be raised over $100,000 more to make this plant the largest of its kind in the East. Nashville. A verdict of $2,090.25, with interest from January, 1908, was found against' the Carolina college, Maxton, in the superior court, -Stout & Denton, architests of Rockj Mount, balance due of 2 per cent., al leged cost of buildings. The Caro lina college did not fight the verdict, and paid no attention to the case. Shelby. The special election in N o. 9 township on the question of voting an additional tax for good roads fail ed to carry by 34 votes. The township is the third richest in the county Washington. Congressman Gudger thinks he will oppose the ratification of the reciprocity treaty when it comes up because it places a burden on the farmer by reducing the cost of what he produces while not mak ing what he buys any cheaper. Asheville. Judge Pritchard declin ed to grant W. V. Moss his liberty as prayed for in habeas corpus proceed ings heard before him a few days ago at Asheville. Moss will be obliged to remain in jail until the June term of United States district court. ' IS SENATOR IN NEW YORK INSURGENT DEMOCRATS CAP1TU ' LATE AND VOTE FOR SU- PREME COURT JUSTICE. VICTORY FOR TAMMANY HALL O'Gorman's Election Brings to Close Protracted Struggle In New York. O'GORMAN WILL SUPPORT PROGRESSIVE POLICIES. TJex ctanAa fnv immediate down- ward revision of the tariff; rec- iproclty with Canada, the par- ' ccels post, fortification of the Panama canal, direct election of United States senators and the Federal income tax. He favors $ rigid economy in government expenditures and is opposed to all special "privileges and private monopoly; to the new national- ism and to the centralizing ten- dencies of the Republican party. Albany, N. Y. Supreme Court Jus tice James Aloysius O'Gorman (Dem.) of New York City, was elected United States senator by the legislature af ter the most protracted struggle over this position ever held in the Empire State. - On the final ballot, the sixty-fourth, he received 112 votes to 80 cast for Chauncey M. Depw, whose term ex pired March 4. At the close of a day of almost con tinuous, negotiations the Insurgents capitulated and Justice O'Gorman was elected. A few minutes before the bal- - x i. t it rvi S iul was casL justice u uurmau s res ignation from the bench" was filed at the office of the secretary of state, as a constitutional provision would have prohibited his election while holding the office of justice of the su preme court. James A. O'Gorman has long been one of the most prominent members of Tammany Hall. He has been one of the foremost orators for thirty years, having established his reputa tion as a public speaker in its in-; terests, when, at the age of 21, his eloquence was credited with having! saved a doubtful assembly district Mr. O'Gorman . was born on the low O'GORMAN CHOSEN .1 May 5, 186U He is the son of TAom as and Ellen O'Gorman, and married Anne M. Leslie in this city on Jan uary 2, 1884. They have nine chil dren, seven daughters and two sons EARTHQUAKE IN ARKANSAS Buildings in Little Rock Were Shaken Perceptibly. Little Rock, Ark. Little Rock was shaken by an earthquake. Mirrors were shaken from walls, desks and chairs in offices rolled about and windows clattered. A near panic occurred in the South western Telegraph and Telephone building. H. F. Alciator, section director of the weather bureau, whose offices are located on the tenth floor of the Southern Trust building, reoprted con siderable sway in that building. The union railroad station, built of very heavy concrete and stone, was rocked perceptibly. Pine Bluff, Dumas and Wilmar also reported a shaving expe rienced shocks. No serious damage has so far been reported. At Monticello practically every house was affected by the shock. Plastering was knocked from the walls of the county court house and several people narrowly esccaped in jury from the falling mortar. The high school was considerably damag-j 1 A 1 ' 1 t W ea, tne plastering oemg torn rroni the walls. In one residence the plas ter was stripped from the walls. At Fcrdyce windows in many busi ness houses were broken by the shock. Memphis, Tenn. The local weath er bureau reported two slight earth tremors. The vibrations were very slight. $300,000 Birtnday Gift. Chicago, 111. Dr. D. K. Pearson ot Hinsdale, 111., will celebrate his 91st birthday April 14 by the. distribution of $300,000 to schools and religious organizations. This will make his total distributions of recent years nearly five million dollars, most of which has been given to small col leges. The gifts are termed by Doc tor Pearson as "debts," and in most cases are fulfillment of his pledges ro different bodies of certain sums when they should have collected oth er stipulated amounts. $12,000 Paid Kidnapers. Las Vegas, N. M. Two masked m-u forced entrance into the home i A. T. Rogers, a lawyer, and com clled Mrs. Rogers to surrender her r o-y ear-old baoy. The kidnapers .eft a note for Mr. Rogers' demanding ?12,000 in cash if the parents wanted their baby back alive. The money v,as paid and the child recovered. One of the kidnapers was partially identified as Dennis Hart, a notorious postoffice and bank robbers, who re cently broke jail at Albuquerque, New Mexico. ,; er west side oi New York CItyyjsJfi2ftoi.vi10u -without foundation, though TWO NEW LEADERS OF CONGRESS CHAMP CLARK Congressman Prom Ninth District of Missouri. When congress met in special session Tuesday, April 4, two new par ty leaders were found in the place of Speaker Joseph G. Cannon and Senator Nelson W. Aldrich of Rhode Island. They were Congressman and Speaker Champ Clark of Missouri and Senator Boies Penrose of Pennsylvania,, who succeeded Aldrich as chairman of the finance com mittee. This position carries with It the leadership in the upper house. Penrose, a Republican, will undoubtedly endeavor to line up the con 6ervatlve forces in the senate to oppose any radical tariff provisions that the Democratic house may pass. There will be very interesting battles between the Democratic lower house and the Republican upper house, and the brunt of them will fall on Penrose and Clark. PIE IN MEXICO IS IN SIGHT TENTATIVE PEACE PROPOSALS HAVE BEEN MADE AND ACT ED ON BY GOVERNMENT. . Mexico's Executive Will Retire Such Action Will Bring Peace His Country. If San Antonio, Texas. Explanation of recent governmental changes at the City of Mexico; the recall of Senor Limantour from Paris; the arrival of Francisco I. Madero, Sr., and his son, Gustavo, at the city; the departure of Mr. de la Barra from the ministerial mansion at Washington for his new position at the Mexican capital all were explained in interviews witn Don Francisco and Don Gustavo. Tentative , peace proposals have been made and on the administration side have been acted upon. In the view of Don Francisco peace is as sured if not within ten days, then at the furthest, .within a month. Mexico City. The report that Pres iiont niai win rflsisn is regarded as (UVUb a - J the date of such action' is contingent upon the re-establishment of peace. WEEVIL FRIGHTENS ALABAMA Cotton Seed From Infected Districts Have Been Sent Into the State. Montgomery, Ala. So alarming has become the indiscriminate ship ment of cotton seed and cotton seed meal into Alabama from districts in fected with the boll weevil that State Commissioner of Agriculture R. F Kolb has called a special meeting o the state board of horticulture to as semble in Montgomery to adopt dras tic measures for the enforcement ot the state laws on this subject fnmmifcsionar Kolb declares that tha ontton industry of Alabama is being imperiled by irregularities aiJ over the state and the shipment ot objectionable products is especially large from Mississippi. Heavy penal ties are provided for such violations Sixty Babies for Texas. New York. A dimpled brigade of blue and brown-eyed babies will leave here on a long journey to homes and mothers. Sixty little foundlings will the triD to fill vacant cribs in as many homos in Texas and Okla noma. Two sisters of charity, an to vestigator and four nurses from the Vnrlr foundline hospital will have charge of the cooing cargo. New Counterfeit $10 Note. Washington. A new counterfeit ten-dollar United States note, a pho tographic production of the Buffalo note, not very cleverly executed, was announced by the secret service. is of the 1901 series, bearing the por traits of Lewis and Clark, the back of the note being reddish brown in stead of green. China Satisfies Russia. St. Petersburg, Russia, The Rus sian foreign office has telegraphed the Russian minister at Pekin that Chi na's reply to Russia's ultimatum is satisfactory. China's reply is an In volved attempt to prove that she fully acquiesced in Russia's demands in her replies to previous Russian notes, and that if any matters were not specifi cally mentioned it was because .it had been taken for granted taat they were in accordance with the treaty rights which China never questioned. Tennessee Bank Robbed. Carthage, Tenn. After blowing the Bank of Lancaster, at Lancaster, this county, exchanging volleys with the cashier, W. T. Simpson, and shooting up his home, four robbers executeu their departure, on a freight train, carrying with them approximately $3, 000 in money. The robbers, before beginning operations, cut all wire ronimuncation with the outside world. The cashier was unhurt, but a hat for which no claimant could be found in the village was found per forated with bullets. BOIES PENROSE. U. S. Senator from Pennsylvania. WAVE OF COLOR HYSTERIA National Association for the Advance ment of Colored People Meets In New York. Boston, Mass. -A survey of the work that is being, done by the Na tional Association for the Advance ment of Colored People was given at the annual conference of the associa tion here by Oswald Garrison Villard, a Now York newspaper publisher, who chairman of the executive commit tee of the association. Mr. Villard in the beginning of his ddress stated that the association was organized because the 'situation of the negro in the United States called for a strong militant organiza tion to defend his rights and forward hi3 causes." Continuing the speaker said: "There can be no doubt that a wave of color hysteria is sweeping over the country. The road of the aspiring colored man or woman becomes more and more difficult; he is abused for his low associations. Let him seek to rise above them, and what happens? Despite the fact that he has for years been told that if he acquires property and buys himself a house, all will be well with him and his family, lr he deos so In a section of a city whether it be New York, Seattle, Baltimore or Richmond, in which he may as sure to his children good associations, pure air and clean streets, he is as sailed as if his presence there meant the bringing in of a taint worse than leprosy, and the laws are invoked against him. "In Southern cities, the public libra ries are closed in the face of the col ored man who would make himself a useful, law-abiding and valuable citi zen. His wife may be ill and desire the aid of Northern surgeons; if so she must travel in a day coach, and berth, and by the son of Abraham Lincoln even though it may cost her her life as it did in one case of which we know. "The Labor Unionists; some Social ists, even some Jews, who ought, in all conscience, to realize what oppres sion means and the wickedness of at tempts to hold down a race, would withhold a helping hand to the color ed man and thereby mock the teach ings of Christianity. CHANGES IN POSTAL SERVICE Postmaster General Reorganizing the Railway Mail Service. Washington. Drastic action was taken by Postmaster General Hitch cock in effecting a reorganization of the railway mail service. A round dozen of changes of the most import ant offices In the service were made by Mr. Hitchcock as a result of a long and careful investigation and thorough consideration. While signing the necessary orders for the change, Mr. Hitchcock said: "The investigation which was con ducted so long and so carefully indi cated clearly that the action which 1 have taken was absolutely necessary. World Peace a Dream. Berlin, Germany. Discussing the proposed extension of international arbitration in the reichstag, Chancel lor Von Bethmann-Hollwegg classed universal arbitration and universal disarmament as ideals impossible ot realization. "The nations, including Germany," said the chancellor, "have been talking disarmament since the first Hague conference, but neither in Germany nor elsewhere has a practi cal plan been proposed. Any confer ence on this subject is bound to be fruitless." Farm Implement Combine. Moline,- 111. A merger of 22 plow manufacturing companies into one corporation with a capitalization of $50,000,000 was announced at the of fices of Deere & Co. The name of the consolidation will be Deere & Co., and its headquarters will be here. The concerns which comprise the new ccmpany are located in Moline, East Moline, Syracuse, N. Y.; Ottumwa, Iowa; Welland, Ont.; Fort Smith, Ark., and Minnepaolis, Minn. Tne scope of the industry will include the manufacture of all farm implements PEACE PACT URGED ON ENGLISH WORLD ARBITRATION MOVEMENT BE TWEEN ENGLAND AND AMERICA EULOGU1ZED. ENGLISH BIBLE'S BIRTHDAY Meeting to Celebrate Tercentenary of; t King James' Version of the Bible. London, England. At a great meet ing of churchmen and statesmen in Albert Hall to celebrate the tercente nary of the revision of the English translation of the Bible by a commis-i sion which completed the so-called! King James version in 1611, Premier Asquith and Whiteiaw Reid, theAmer-, ican ambassador, who were the prin-, cipal speakers, seized the opportunity5 to eulcgize the arbitration movement. Suffragettes interfered with the pro ceedings, and when the prime minis-, ter began they unfurled banners bear ing the inscription: "Votes for wom en." The banners were torn up after a free fight. In his address Mr. As quith said; "The English Bible belongs not only tc the subjects of King George, but to the whole English-speaking world. One of the truths which has been slowly realized, and which now I be lieve is firmly rooted in the faith of Christian men and women on both HE FAVORS PEACE PACT. WHITELAW REID. Ambassador to England. sides of the Atlantic is that war be- ( tween English-speaking people would be not only a crime against civiliza tion, but an unforgivable breach oi these few commandments which are enshrined in the New Testament, on which nations have been bred. "There surely could not be a more worthy, a more appropriate, a more splendid monument of this tercente nary year than it should witness the sealing of a solemn pact between us, which would put an end once for all to the hideous and unthinkable pos sibilities of fratricidal strife." Speaking of how the Bible furnished the strongest and most indestructible bond for present practical unity in the aims and aspirations of the English speaking family, Ambassador Reid Reid said: "While that community of aims and aspirations endures, starting as it dees from our common possession and use of this book, and supported by the same language, the same common law, the same parliamentary institutions, the same civil rights and "largely the same blood, it is the greatest single guarantee for the peace and progress of the world. "In fact,", continued the speaker, "from the men and from the peoples nurtured on the precepts of this book, and mainly , on this version, came the recent statesmanlike proposal of th president of the United States and the inspiring response of King George, through Sir Edward Grey, which prom Ise to make war as a settlement oi any dispute henceforth before any English-speaking people impossible Washington. Felicitations on the Bible tercentenary ceremonies at Lon don were expressed in a message sent through .Ambassador Reid by Presi dent Taft. Children Jump for Their Lives. Dcmocest, Ga. Four hundred chil dren, mostly in the primary grades leaped from the windows of the HiL school building at Piedmont college and were saved from death when fir was discovered eating its way through me structure. More than a score o:. children were injured, but none fatal ly, owing to the short distance they jumped. When the alarm was sound cd the flames, had gained such head way that panic reigned, pupils anc teachers alike piling headlong front the windows. New York Capitol Badly Damaged. Albany, N. Y. Fire-swept, smoke stained and water-drenched, New Yori state's magnificent 527,000,000 capitoi stands a partial wreck by flames thai, started in the assembly library, burn ed away the entire west wing and did damages estimated at $7,000,000 be fore the fire was declared under con trol, after raging more than fouL hoars. Five million dollars probablj cctld repair the damage done by fire but money cannot restore the histori cal records which were the pride o" its state library.