CCMJM r i i !- UAe COURIER T T5he COURIER 1 1 eds In Doth News and Circulation. I Advertising Columns Bring Results. J eeued Weekly. PRINCIPLES, NOT MEN. $1.00 Per Year VOL XXXIV ASHEBORO. N. C, THURSDAY April I?, 1909. No 1? "1 JL JLJLjLj MEETING AT CONCORD Twenty Sixth Annual Sunday School Convention. RANDOLPH GETS THE PRESI DENCY. Five Hundred Delegates Representing Tern Denominations Attended Ran dolph Again Wine the Con utjr Banner. The twenty-Bixth annual conven tion of the North Carolina Sunday School Association .convened in Concord April sixth to eighth. It was one of the most interesting and profitable conventions in tne history of the association, aud a great deal of enthusiasm was shown by the Sunday school workers. 1 here were abom 500 delegates present. Thirty- Beven counties and ten denomina tions were represented. The day sessions were held in the Presbyterian chnrch, a larg. new building, handsome in appear. ance, and provided with almost every modern equipnieut and convenience for carry ma; on the work of a Sun. day school. The sides and back of chnrch were arranged so that small rooms conld be formed by s iding doors- -an ideal arrangement. The night sessions were held in the magnificent graded school andito rium. which hau a sealing capacity of abut 1200. Each night the building was crowded to over flowing. Dr. Franklin McElfresh, of Chi cago. International Secretary of the Department of leacber lrain ing, added greatly to the program by his interesting address on Teach er Training and Sunday.school wo k generally. Rev. Plato Durham made a fine address on tbe "Child in The Sun. day School," and mads a wonderful impression on the audience. The Department conferences and Bound Tablet were centers lor trek ing and imparting information in regard to tbe various departments of Sunday school work.. The-dele gates recognized tbe vattie of these meetings and derived ' great benen from them. Mrs. R Michaux, State Ele mentary Secretary, assisted by Mrs, Ghas D Melver, conducted a most instructive conference on elementary work. The music was conducted by Tullar and Meredith, who visit Sunday school convention! all over the country. Rev. C Brown Cox, who was elect ed president of the Sunday school association at the convention in Burlington last year, has made a most efficient executive officer. Randolph again won the banner, . but there were four other counties this year which met the itquire- ments, viz., to pay tne county pie ge, to have held the county contention, and each township convention and to D4 represented in. tbe State con tention. There were 54 delegates from Randolph county, thirteen townships represented. The Ran dolph delegates outnumbered any county outside of Cabarrus, and when called on to rise during roll tell of counties, they were applnud - ad. - Randolph county pledged f r the coming year $252.00, paid last year, Z331.00. This year our county not only woo the banner with honorable men tioD, but the honor of having the president for the ensuing year. Hr. Elijah Moffltt, who is president cf tne Uounty Sunday scnooi uonven toon. The election of officers resulted in tbe following': President E Moffltt, Asbeboro. Vice Presidents W R Odell, of Concord; J D Bardin.of Wilson; Rev J JK Prohl. of Wiuston-Balem. Office Secretary Miss Maud Beid Kaleign. Statistician Prof 8 M Smith, of Raleigh. Treasurer H W Jackson, of Raleigh. Executive Committee W B Cooptr, W C Dowd, E O Harris, B Harris, J K Pegram, D T Perkins, L R Yasser, R M Andrew, L W Clark, O B Cox. Thad Jones, H B Parker, Jr. S M Rankin, W C Wicker. N B Broughton. V S Blair. J R Mendenhall. J L Murphy, O M Poole, George W Watts, W J Young, 8r, and the officers of the association witb N B Broaghton a chairman. Department Secretaries Mrs E B Ifiohaux, Primary; Mrs G D Mo Iver, Home; Rev W B Duttera, Teacher Training; T B Eldridge, urraniwd Adult Class Uttur de tariment secretaries to be appointed by the executive committee are as MR. FINCH BUYS NIVARA. Brokaw Disposes of Home at Great Neck. W Gon'd Brokaw, a New York millionaire who lives at Fairview, Irinity township, this county, most of tne time, has transferred his summer Home, JNivara, of (reat Neck, Long Island, to T. J. Finch, one of Mr Brokaw's employes at Fairview, the consideration named in the deed being "one hundred dol lars, and other valuable considera tions." The property is said to be worth one-half million dollars. The estate which has come into the hands of ex-Sheriff Finch com prises 100 acres. It was bought nine years . ago by Brokaw and he built a costly mansi n thereon and greatly improved the place. Its Sale is subject to three mortgages, one for $61,000, another for $10,000 and a third for $2,000. Mrs. Brokaw did not sign this deed. It will Le remembered that it was published in this paper some u ontbs ago that sirs. Brokaw bad sued Mr. Biokaw for divorce and alimony. ihe Brokaws were married in 1907. The last of December in that year Mr. Brokaw and Mrs. Brokaw executed a deed for the vur ious tracts of land at Fairview in this county to Mr. Gould one of Mr. brokaw's uncles, Ttedetdwas not recorded in this county until about a month ago. Lbe Mew York World gives a long account of the trouble between Mr. and Mia. Brokaw, most of which was published some time ago. Mr .Brokaw having disposed of all his real estate, Mr. Brokaw ex pects trouble in getting ahmouv. It is said she wi 1 fight for her dower rights in the Great Neck property. INVITES G0VERH0RS. Chief Executive of Thirteen Original BUte to Participate la Caarlette Cele bration. Charlotte, April 12. rThe cen tral committee which is directing the programme or exercises to . be Held here ou the twentieth of May in celebration of the 134th anniversary of the signing of the Mecklenburg Declaration ot Independence, has in vited the governors of the thirteen original 8tates to come to Charlotte for the three days festivities. Gov Eben 8. Draper has accepted. r The people of Charlotte are pre paring to give M. Taft the great. est reception ever accorded a Presi dent of the United states lu a south ern citv. Special trains will be operated in to the city on the 20th "Taft Day" from all directions. Aa Calient Minuter. Rev. W. R. Lambuth, D. D., of Nashyule, Tenn., missionary secre tary of the Southern M. E. Church. will preach at the Methodist church Sunday night. Dr. Lambuth one of the most distinguished preachers in the United States to day He is a near kinsman of ex President Grover Cleveland, and in force of character , and strength of mind be does not suffer in oomptn son with his illustrious kinsman. Shooting at Wukiw, T. L. Davis, fatally shot Chas Gamble at Waxhaw Monday. The men were drinking when they began to quarrel over the contest for office of catton weigher in which a brother of Gamble defeated Davis for the nomination. fire at Graham. The Ooeida Cotton Mills at Gra ham was greatly damaged by fire on Monday of this week. Tbe fire started from a spark on the cotton platforms. The loss was $7000 ful ly covered by insurance. Good work prevented spread of flames. follows : Missions, ' House to House Vibitation, and later mediate. At a meeting of tbe executive committee tbe following were an pointed a central committee : N B Broughton. E Moffltt. W J Younsr, J E Pegram, G W Watts, C Brown Uox,H a Parker, Jr, SM Rankin, R M Andrews. Tne convention next year will be held in Wilson. Tbe hospitality ef tbe Concord people cannot be described; the gates of the town were wide open, and tbe latch strings were on the outside. Evervoce seemed to have suspended business and agreed to entertain the delegates and enjoy the wiiveutioa. ... Passing of the By MRS. IDA INGOLD MASTEN. Randolph is to have a new and modern courthouse. It will be a natural and logical improvement in the course of progress, especially indicative of the progress so marked in the south at the present tim. It will be a credit to the citizens of the couuty, an adornment to the town of A-heboio, and a fiuger pointing toward the better and grander commonwealth, the like of which is characteristic of p esent conditions from end to end of our great country. We do not measure a man by what be knows, or by the strength and depth of his emotions. We mea nre him by the amount and quality of his deeds.. The employ er who agrees to hire a man upon tne strength of that man a word that R AHDOLPR'S UW COURT ROUSE. He is a good workman, doei so he-1 can so he has no other means of knowing th truth and is in direct need of a man to nil tbe position. The employee gets uo p omise of a steady job or of high wages until the employer or his deputy hs had opporanity for testing the man's ?wer and wilungoess to woric. his is to show that the power to do things is of first importance. Words and plans nay eome first in the routine of business transaction, feu immediately lose their consequence in the face of the all-importaat question; the faculty and inclina tion to bung things to pas. it is so in all the universe; "to do" comes before "to teach in point of valu. 'All the works that Jesus did if they had been written tvery one, the world itself could not contain the books;" bnt the whole teaching of Jeous is to be found in the little New Testament, only a few hundred puges altogether. We may make much of words, but we must also make more of oar works. Our in teotions and emotions, unless fol lowed np by fulfilment in works, die witn the breath on which they Mr. Ida Ingold Mastea were bora and become a reproach to ns. It is tbe same with a commun ity, a state or a nation. What is ac tually accomplished is the index of character, good or bad. That the p-ople of Rand lph are yearning for better things will be made clear to all tne world by the erection of a beautiful co. rt house as well as their efforts for the bet termeut of tbe roads, etc. They have yearned and they are going to fulfill. Their desires, their dreams, and their plans amount to nettling without the fulfilment. If f ultil meut be deferred, all else becomes a reproach. We are glad to know that there is to I f a new court honse and are interested in its early oompletioo, yet may of ns will regret the pas- Old Courthouse. sing of the old one as the memories We w'll sigh which clustered about it betake themselves to the indistinct past. In the make np of hnman beings there is, in a greater or less degree, a bit of fogyism, or conservatism, or what you please, which longs for and reaches back ward after the old. It is in all of us, and sweet and commendable thongli it be, it stands iu the way of progress. We cling to old cus toms, old structures, and old places often to our burt. It is th's at- tachmeut, to the old things that makes the children waste their energy ou rockv, batren soil because their fathers did so before them lha home feelmjj is stronger than the desire for miterial betterment, uud they obey t le former iustinet. l suppose with us an mere is some such feeling in regard to the olu court bouse. I cuerieh 1 many memories of it, all of my early years. But there is one mstauce that stands oat plainer than the rest, perhaps you wui know why when l tell you about it. I was young, but I had decided to become a public school teasher My father, respecting my wishes in this matter, accompanied me to Aeheboro and to the office of the Su perintendent ofjPublio Instruction, then went away to do some errands iboat town. We had not known for some reason when tie regular day for exammining teachers hud been, so I had come to stand a special test alone. The Superin deat was tall, dark, and to my unsophisticated mind, forbidding. He leveled his piercing eyes at me, and I shrank up until I fancied I resembled something very green, a shrivelled - green apple, for in stance. If a small boy had passed througa the room at that moment what a welcome sight it might have been to me, and wbit a relief to the Superintendent: 1'if, n -mall boy citne, and beeidea I w is i- so sure after all that I i.-semli ed t green apple very much, tor my iet and hands had asaum- I enoruit.-) por tions. While the -neural s. inkage bad been going n trios- Members bad been getting larger un it they were burdf-iajme to in-'. I had a violent dee re that I uiigur fadeaway liKe the fau lts of which I n .d read. Bnt, alas, I was nude of fhsh and blood, (mo t of the blo.d ws in my f ce, howevei), and 1 couldn't fade. There I sat as big as life, ud very uncomfortable I was. 1 shall never forget the Superintendent's first question, Define likeness." I looked straight at him. I had been expecting something difficult. What did he take me for? He looked up, and in his eyes I read that he was in earnest. I pondered a bit: this world that tbej Superintedeat "poke of could uot be the one witn which I was familiar, the "likeness" thit meant a picture. Examinations could never be that easy, this must be something different, and so I timidly told him that I did not know. The Superintendent frown ed, if he reads this and remembers, he may frown again, but, still I in. sist that he frowned, as he told me very unceremoniously, that a like ness a tin-type, or photograph. A elii.l crept around my heart, for ( saw that I had lost my tim onui.ie to "make good." A t e that I was not sure of any tl 4 in particular. Theie was a d..z Bess iu my head, an uucomfort al' feeli ig in my throat, and a m Uture in my eyes that kept gath- ering int dr a in spite of me. the r-nperiuteudeut was not untind, (at e did not understand each other. He m irked me 82 iu the shade, and I pi what wai known as POST OFFICE RECEIPTS. Increase For First Quarter Made Dur ing The Month of March. The receipts of a post office is a fair index to the progress of busi ness of a tow-. Asbeboro has made a creditable showiug for the month of March 1909 when the receipts were larger than for any previous month and indications point to tbe greater increase during the month of April. lbe receipts for Msrch 190'J from stamp sales were $513.74. For March, 1908, $384.34. J; or the quarter ending March 31, 1909 the receipts aggregated $1,388.84. For the same period last year, $1,259 21. Ibis shows an increase ot $129. bd tor tne quarter and from the report for March, 1909, compared with the same month last year, it is seen that SS129.40 of the gam for the quarter was made during March 1909. Hurglar at Wadeeboro. Wadesboro, April 7. Several resi dent) s have been en lured iiud ran sacked recently iu the heart of town In alnioit every instance these burg lar es have been committed in the tarly evening during the absence of the occupants at church service. Tne town police are making every effort to locate the offenders. Vied. Miss Sadie Barker died at High roint April 7, after a linie ing ill ness. The funeral was conducted by Rev. A. G. Dixon, pastor of the M. P. Church. The deceased leaves one near relative, a sister. A Ntw Legal Holiday. The 12th day of April was made a legal holiday ai the recent general assembly, in commemoration of the conventional congress . .at. Halifax, having on tae 12th day of April, 1776, authorised our delegates to vote for independence. Three MMtgemery Defendant Pouad Galltjr. J. Elam Russell and Green Ho. San, of Montgomery county, and ohu Henry Jordan were found guilty of illicit distilling in the fed eral court in G'eeusbjro last week. Charcb la Looted. The Episcopal Church at Waynes ville, N. O., waa broken i to one night last week and mny valuable articles were stolen therefrom, such as linen and embroidered coverings for, he altar aud communion service. Fire at Spenrer. Fire of unknown origin destroyed the building, stocK and merchandise of Mr. J. L. Barker of Spencer on Thursday of last week ' entailing a loss of $2000 with $1600 insurance. Liquor Blectlon in Michigan. Twenty of the the twenty-seven counties in Michigan which voted on the question of abolishing the sale and manufacture of liquor, went dry in the election la it week. a "second grade certificate," which I presume was very good, consider, ing the circumstances and condi tions. And so it is, I never think,of the old court house at Asheboro that I do not think of a timid little girl sitting in the Superintendent's office with big feet aad hands and a very red face, seeking to place her unaccus tomed feet upon tbe thorny path of the country district sohool teachers. That little girl has not faded away yet, nor does she expect to for a long time, and her feet and hands are no smaller than they were then. But the old court house will s?on be no more. I may never see it again, and the thought brings a re gret for there are many pleasant memories of it. One at least was triumphant. When, having finish ed teaching my first school I went, accompanied by my father, (always accompanied by my father) to re cti v the money for my. winter's work, almost a hundred dollars, 1 remember it well, how bappy I was a I returned home with my very first money. So muuh for the old ooarthoose of memory Bnt, here's to the new one, for progress! "What u firet love worth Exoept to prepare for a second? Wll.l Amm Ik lorn. i;nn9 Ooly regret for the first-" MR. RICHARDS VISIT. Guest of Industrial Association Last Week. ADDRESS ON TOWN AND COUN- TY DEVELOPMENT. United Kfl'ort on the Part of People ot Town ii ii J County is Essential to the 1'iogresHof a Community. Aueb.ifo has taken on nw life and Mns i iteivst i i-tmiulated lasi T nil-id iy y t'i- v an uf M. V. Richards, I i iu,in.il A-ir. of the Souther" Uiiiwuv Aim f,eit two days in Aj-ebjn upon luw.ion of tbe Asbeboro Industrial Association. Thar day afternoon was spent in looking over the town, vi3iting the stores aud . tntetiug the business men of the town. Mr, Richards highly compliment ed tne people upon the appear, ance of our "magniticant little town,"1 as he expressed it. lie spoke en thusiastically of the progress al ready made and the prospect for ad vancement which is apparent on. every hand. Thursday night Mr. Richards spoke to about two hundred citizens on the development of the South re viewing the past fifty years. Ha also spoke interestingly of the best methods of town buildings. The fruits of bis address will be seen in the steady growth of our town. Mr. Richards toll of the many obstacles ovir come in the develop ment ef the Bouth cit:ag that only persistent effort and faith in the success of the work of developing a town,' county or nation will bring reward. He expressed great faith in Asheboro and the future of Ran dolph county. Referring . to good roads Mr Richards urged that the neoDle of the county plan -immediately for macadamizing the principle roads or the county, and showed not Only the value to the travelers, and. farmers iu conveying their products to market but also the greatly in creased value of farm lands along such roads. . Where ever we find good r ads, good schools and churches we find the highest type of civilation. Mr. Richards spoke interesting! v of the agricultural interests and urged that our farmers study more along the lines of modern agricul ture and .nstead of priding them selves on the large numbers of acres of land to boast of small bnt pro ductive farms. He urged more attention to the culture of fruits an - vegetables for packing purposes and suggested small oauneriea to take care of these crops assur ing profit to the owners. Dairying, stock raising, etc., were also suggest ed as profitable pursuits in this sec tion. Mr. Richards believes in the co operation of the people of the town and country in the development of a county. What benefits one bene fits the other. Neither can progress without the assistance of the other. Friday morning Mr. Richards gave a very interesting talk to the pupils of the Asheboro Graded Schools on the immensely increased opportunities for education in the State and urged them to endeavor by every means to fix themselves for success in life. Mr. Richards complimented the school very high ly as an institution our people should be proud of. Settle to Get llolton'a Job and Adami te be Provided For. Spencer B. Adams, Chairman of the State Republican Executive Comn-Utee, is slated for Commis sioner of the Internal Revenue. Thomas Settle is to be district at torney for the Western district of North Carolina, to fill the position now held by A. E. Holton, who has 18 tmnthB mere to hold. This id nice on paper, but Butler is to be reckoned with. He has not yet lost nis cunning. Ciareno Call, of Wilk-s, wants to be Marshal of the Wt stern district, so does George Hendricks, of Ran dolph; but it is whispered that Mil likan, who has held tbe place three terms, wants it again, and it is said that lendiicks in that event, will bock down. For the second time within the memory of nan the voice of Niagara Falls is mute. The falls an trosea over from bank to bank. At pres. ent the damage is placed at $1,000, 00.