Democra'ic Hand-Book Out. The Courier is in receipt of the :North Carolina Democratic Hand book for 1910. which was rearlv fnr distribution some days ago. The dook contains something over 200 pages, ueyocea to tne purpose of aeaung witn tne issues of the cam pai?n in a clean and clear .cut man ner. The principles of democracy are set forth in such a nlain manner that the voter will readily come to me conclusion as to wmcn party has the interests of the people at heart. At the top of the front cover is the lonowing: "Privilege mubt be ar rested at Washington : Butleriam must be averted at llaleigh." The nrsc pages are t iken up by Chair man Eller with a brief introduction. which is followed by the platform at Charlotte, and the aneeches at thn State convention. Many issues concerning tne railroad campaign are discussed thoroughly in this book, showing how the Democratic party stands on these vital issues. These books are readv for diatri feutiou and a copy can be had by anv one desiring same bv addressing Chairman A. II Eller, llaleigh, N. C. Our Washington Letter. When a woman purchases $10 wortn oi wool in goods, $4.e7 repre sents the value of the goods and $o.i;$ tne amount of the turn. This is because of the Payne Aldrich ad valorem tariff of 105 per cent. Or, in other words, on eacn !l worth of woolen dress goods imported, the Payne-Aldrich law levies a tax of $1.05. The consumer must pay the $1 value and the $1.05 tariff, or $2.05 for one dollar's worth of goods. This is but one of a thousand il lustrations that could be submitted to show how the tariff affects the the cost of livLg. Spending $3,585,685.66 every easiness aay, tne united States un , der the reign of the standpat Ke publicans has become the most ex. travagant government in the world. Increased expenditures in the first year of the Taft administration, over the corresponding year of Cleve land s last administration, amount ed to $575,730,600, or over 120 per cent. This occurred under the much heralded Taft policy of "out. to- tne-quick economy, recently re pudiated in Maine and Vermont. National expendituies for the en suing year amounted to $1,098,847.- 184, which is more than the entire capital of all the national banks in the United States, $919,143,825, and more than one-third of the en tire output of all of our gold mines in 1ZU years, $3,063,787,000. The striking illustrations of the publications of the Republican "business" administration are : A deficit of $11,579,265 since June 30, 1910. A deficit of $180,381,355.69 flinoe June 30, 1907. Here are some of the ways the standpatters spend the people's money in a republic: Marble baths for senators. Autos to carry them 100 rods between their offices and the Capitol. Tour ing cars for the President, vice President and "Uncle Joe.' More than $2,500 for appollinaris water for the senators. Thousands of dollars to keep them in vasaline, castor oil, olive oil, bromo quinine, hair tonic, costly perfumes, glyce rine, begamot, nail brushes, travel ing expenses for attending tuner als, etc. If the waste at Washington is $300,000,000 a year, as stated by Aldrich, every American family suffers to the extent of $16.56 every year. This is enougti to buy a suit of clothes. It will buy an overcoat or a cloak. It will buy nearly three tous of anthracite coal. It will buy four or five pairs of shoes, or various fitntr necessaries. Under our system of excessive protection.govemment extravagances and cost of living keep pace. As the government raises practically all of its revenue by taxing things eaten, worn or used, the consumer pays his pro rata of government extravagance every time he boys a protected ar ticle at his local grocery, dry goods or furniture store. This rule proves itself. The per capita appropriation by Congress jumped from $b to $iz between 1890 and 1910. Increasing in al most exact proportion, the prices of 100 leading articles, according to Bradstreets, advanced 56 per cent, between 1896 and 1910. An increased annual tax of more than $100,000,000 has been saddled upon the American people through increased freight rate within the last few years without opposition by the government, But this is not enough. The railroads want still more revenue, and as soon as the November elections are over it is believed they will be allowed to boost their rates a couple of notches The interstate commerce com mission is now goiog through the formal procedure of taking testi mony as to the reasonableness of the new . mcri-twei whicn, according to thf es'imtie -f t'i- lunniuisdion will 'fwlr " iMiiii.i ! iit of the rail roads $500.000.0ft0. Ther r high-priced lawyers for the railroads uue iictuiugu, ana aiso an impos ing array of legal talent for the big shippers. The public alone is un represented. One fact that has cropped out at the hearings is that the railroads seem to have unanimously aorppd that the increased rites shall apply wnere tney win be tne least annoy ance to the trusts and big combina tions of manufacturers The added burden is to be laid on the little fellow the merchant, the house holder, the fathers and mothers of the families, the countrv storekeeper and the farmer. Products of the trusts enjoy a striking immunity from increases. This is not hard to understand. It is not easv for the railroads to put an increased rate over on tne sugar or the steel trust. Such increases would be fought tooth and nail and probably defeated by counsel for the com bines who gather likes Hies about the room in which the commission meets. But it is easy money to put an increased rate over the general consumer, because he isn't present to enter objection, nor is anyone mere to enter ooj-.'ction tor mm. The interstate commerce commis sion declares it represents no one in particular, but sits as a judicial bodv wholly. The result is that in many, many instances the case goes against tne consumer oy oeiault. $100 Hewird, $100. The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to care In all its stages, and thai is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is tne on ly positive cure now know n to tne medi cal (fraternity. Catarrh belli a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken lnte ; uttlly, acting directly upon the blood and mu cous surfaces of the syttem, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution una agisting nature in doing its worn. Tne pro prietors have so much faith in Its curative now. ers that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any cuae vnat it iuiia to cure, send ior list oi tosti monials. Address; F. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Take Hall's Family Fills for constipation. To Readers of The Courier. We have made a contract with a Fountain ' Pen Co., of New York City, to advertise their $3.00 Pen for one year, ana by this arrange ment we can let our subscribers who will renew their subscriptions immediately (whether due or not), have one of these splendid pens for only $1.00. This is not a fake scheme, but a first class Fountain Pen with a 14 Karat gold point and guaranteed to be AS GOOD as the best pen made. It is just being introduced, and you may rest assured the very best material is used in its manufacture. We have them right here in our of fice, they may be tried to your satisfaction before you buy. If our subscribers at a distance will send check at once, paying for our paper one year from the time his present subscription expires, and add $1.00 for this magnificent pen, we will send it to him prepaid, un der our own personal guarantee that it fully comes up to the above de scription. We have signed contract not to sell to dealers, but to subscribers only. When its merits are known our subscription list will be doubled Our friends may esteem this as a great favor that we have been able to secure such a rare bargain for them. It will - pay them to act promptly. Address The Courier, Asheboro. Chamberlain's Colic. Cholera and Diar- hroea Hemedy is today the best known medi cine in me for the relief and cure of bowel complaints. It cures griping, diarrhoea, dysentery, and should be taken at the first unnatural looseness of the bowels. It It equally valuable for children and adults, is always cures. Hold by all dealers. Resolutions of Respect. Whereas in the divine Drovldence of our su preme Grand Master he cas seen fit to remove our distinguished brother, Hugh Harks, Sr., from a transitory ezlstanoe to a state of eternal dur ation and that in thedeath of brother Parks, our Lodge, this community ana tne state has sustain ed an Irreparble loss. Therefore be It resolved. 1. That while we bow in bumble submission to the will of Him wnodoeth all things well, yet we mourn bis departure from our midst and will ever remember kindly his long and faithful labor In our lodge. a. That weleztend to his bereaved son. Broth er Hugh Parks, Jr., and family our slnoere sympathy in this the hour of their sore bereave ment and commend them to Him who will be father to the fatherless and who alone can bring peace to the broken-hearted. 8. That these resolutions be mread noon oar minutes and that a page in our records be kept sacred to his memory. 4. That a codv of these resolutions be tender. ed to the bereaved family, one to the Asheboro Courier and one to the Orphans Friend and Masonic Journal. ii. F. rentnas, J. L. Phillips, C. H Ju Ian, Committee. DR. FRANK A.HENLEY DENTIST Office 'in front rooms over! Post I Office in Granford Building:, ASHEBORO, - N. C. INDIANA JJPJN ARMS Senator Beveridge, the Insur gent, Indorsed THE ALDRICH LAW IGNORED "The Coming Battle," Says Beveridge, "Is Between the Rights of the People and the Power of the Pillagers" -A Telling Exposure of Deceptive Sched ules and Sham Reductions. Indiana has raised its potent voice against the Payuc-Aldrlch tariff. Tb.fi Republicans of that statu havo en thusiastically Indorsed the .tiou' of Senator Beveridge, ' who oiii usod the bill through thick and tbiu. They have adopted a platform which, while it advocates a protective tariff "meas ured by the difference between the cost of production here and abroad," significantly ignores the Tuyne-Aldrlch law altogether. Senator Iteveridge in appealing for support did not soften in any way his antagonism to the bill, but loudly pro claimed it. In fact, he made It the head and front of his offending. The following extracts from his speech il lustrate what the Indiana senator thinks of "the best tariff bill wo ever had." After President Taft's mag nanimous defense of the Fayne-Aldrich law it Is singular that Mr. Beveridge should have mentioned him so con spicuously as a co-iusurgont on the tariff question. Senator Beveridge said: "Like President Taft, I wanted free Iron ore, of which we have the great est deposits on earth and which the steel trust chiefly controls. I could not stand for the duty that was pass ed, and I cannot stand for it now. "Like President Taft, I wanted on the free list many raw materials that needed no protection. Yet only one was so treated. I could not stand for the duties on these articles, and I can not stand for them now. "Like President Taft, I wanted the ancient woolen schedule reduced. It gives to the woolen trust unfair con trol and raises the prices and reduces the weight of the people's clothing. I stood against this schedule when the bill was passed, and I stand against it now. "I could not 8tand for the duty on lumber when the tariff bill was passed, and I cannot stand for it now. "I stood against the increase of the duty on cotton goods, and I stand against it now. "The reduction of the tariff on re fined sugar is a deception, because it cannot affect the price. Yet that is one of the boasted reductions we hear of. "These are examples of increases. I was against them then, and I am against them now. "From few, if any, of the decreases do the people get the slightest benefit "Extortion is not protection. "The coming battle is not so much between political parties as such as between the rights of the people and the powers of pillagers. "I believe that the reasonable pros perity of the few dozen American citi zens should depend upon the common prosperity of all American citizens. "Swollen and dangerous fortunes are not necessary to good wages to the worklngman, fair salaries to the clerk or commercial traveler or honest prices to the farmer. "We want no Lord North or King George, no Bourbon or Romanoff methods in American life, whether in government or laws, whether In enact ing a tariff or managing a party. "A political party is not a group of politicians, each with his following, combining to win the spoils of place and power. Such an organization is not a party. It la a band of brigands, and Its appeals In the name of the party are mere attempts .to beguile and defraud the voter for Its selfish purposes. Such organizations and men are the tools and agents of taw less Interests which know no party, attempt to ose all parties and practice only the policies of profit. "I was for a Just law. That could have been written, and it shall yet be written. "I could not stand for the obsolete and infamous sugar schedule, which no man in Indiana can read and un derstand, but which the sugar trust can read and understand, yet efforts to change that schedule were opposed by Democratic votes. We reduced the tariff on refined sugar 5 cents a hun dred pounds one-twentieth of 1 cent, a half of 1 mill, a pound which was worse than no reduction because It cannot possibly affect the price and therefore is a deception. Yet that Is one of the boasted reductions we bear of. "It is said that the law has made re ductions on articles entering Into the consumption ef the people to the value of $5,000,000,000, yet those articles are made up of such things as lumber, ag ricultural Implements, meat and food products, petroleum and its products, of all of which we are the greatest ex porters In the world; steel rails and coal, which we export; barbed wire, monopolized by the steel trust: nails, manufactured and sold by an interna tional trust as complete as the Inter national tobacco monopoly; yarns and threads, the raw materials for textiles, on which textiles, when finished for the people's use, the tariff was Increas ed; sugar, which was not reduced In fact, but only in pretense." "I'm licked," said Boss Aldridge when he heard that he was defeated by a majority of nearly 6,000. For once at least the Rochester political boss spoke the truth. , FOR LOWER PRICES Give Americans the Same Terms as Foreigners NO NEED TO SHUT FACTORIES Leading Jewelry Firm Makes Extraor dinary Offer to Waltham Watch Peo ple He Tells Them if They'll Aban don Trust Methods and Give Him Their Foreign Rates He'll Buy All They Can Make For Several Months. We hear now and again that some of our factories are shutting down, that thousands of men are thrown idle and that overproduction isho cause. What does this overproduction mean? Does it mean that there is nut enough demand in the country to keep the factories going? No; it only means that there is not demand enough at the existing high prices. If the man ufacturers would reduce their prices, say, to the level at which they sell lhi same goods abroad there would le plenty of demand and the workers might still be kept busy. Every pinch ed and poverty stricken family in the land is a possible purchaser of these goods, tligh prices are the barrier. Here is one example which is as good as a thousand. The Waltham watch factory has been shut down re cently. Dullness of trade is given as the reason, dullness of trade in spite of the tariff of 40 per cent on watches! Clearly foreign competition is not to blame here. If trade is dull it is not because people don't want to wear watches. It is because they cannot afford to buy them at the high prices charged. Reduce those prices by cue third and trade will be brisk as usual. Can the manufacturers afford to do this? They can. They do it for the foreigner, and what they can do for the foreigner they can surely do f r the American, and, what is more, he ought to bee that they do it. Here is a letter written to the mayor of Waltham, Mass., by one of the best known retail watch dealers iu the country, offering to buy for cash all the watches that the Waltham people can make for several months to come if they will give him the same terms as they give the foreigner: , March 20, 1010. The Waltham watch factory Is closed today. Four thousand men are Idle. The papers say overproduction is the cause. If you and the citizens of Waltham will Induce the officers of the Waltham Watch company to do away with their trust methods, including their "conditions ol sale," and sell their watches in this coun try to American jewelers at the same price they are sold fir in foreign coun tries 1 am ready to buy for cash all or any part of the watches on band; also all they can make for many months to come. A reply from you statins' the result of your efforts. will be appreciated. Very truly yours, . FOREIGN CHEAP LABOR. Protection Uses If to Supplant Ameri can Higher Priced Labor. The cry of "Protect the American workman against the foreigner!" has helped the protectionist party to get many votes. A more deceitful or absurd party cry was never Invented. Our protected industries employ mostly foreigners right from the ship In many cases so that it is the for eigner who gets the protection such as it is. t The workmen who have replaced the organized labor which was driven from the Carnegie mills at the time of the Homestead riots many years ago are not Americans, but Poles, Slovaks, Lithuanians, Roumanians, Croatians, Bohemians and other European races, who are content with inferior wages and an inferior standard of comfort. The workpeople who fill the factories of Massachusetts, Rhode Island, New Jersey, New York and Pennsylvania are largely foreign born, and they are there because they undersell Ameri can labor. According to the census of 1900, Mas sachusetts had 840,000 foreign born people. Rhode Island 134,000, New Jer sey 431,000. New York 1.900,000 and Pennsylvania 085.000. The foreign born population of these states and their children comprise a majority of the whole population, except in the ease of Pennsylvania. These foreign ers work for a dollar a day In the mills and factories, and the native American element seeks more lucrative employment The foreign pauper laborer Is here. Be comes with protection. THE FLOWING TIDE. Republicans Show Their Opinion of the Tariff by Voting the Democratic Ticket. That the trend of popular sentiment is strongly against the tariff is evident from the result of the three congres sional elections which have taken place since the new law was passed. The Payne-Aldrich bill became a law on Aug. 5, 1009. On Feb. 1. 1910. an election was held for the Sixth Missouri district. A Democrat was elected to replace an other Democrat by an increased plu rality. On March 22. 1910, an election was held for the Fourteenth Massachusetts district A Republican plurality of 14,250 in 1903 was converted into a Democratic plurality of 5.650. On April 19, 1910. au election was ' held for the Thlrty-swoiid New Yorfe j district A ' Republican plurality of , 10,167 in 1908 was converted Into a Democratic plurality of 0.900. ' 10 Weeks For 10 Cents Send us ten cents and we will send you the Courier ten weeks for ten cents. Send your own subscription today. Address The Courier, box 357 Asheboro. Rift AUCTION SALE OF I AAlh OVJ Saturday, Oct, 1, 1910 LA" At 12 o'clock M. we will sell at public auction our farm of 529 acres, tie old home place of our father, the late John R. Caviness, near Col. J. R. Lane's Mill, in the eastern part of Randolph County. This valuable tract of loud has been divided into nine tracts as follows: Tract No 1 CS 1-2 acres iu oblong shape, the old home place, fair buildings, a fine spring of everlasting water, good meadows, good orchard, considerable timber, land reasonably level, some good bottom lands on branch, public road running through fatm. Tract No. 2 Lies we t of tract No. 1, all woodland, shape nearly square, containing 41 acres, suited to farming purposes, bounded on the west by Big Urusli Creek. Tract No. 3 Contains 03 acres, almost level, lasting spring of water, good meadow, fair timber, public road forms eastern boundry. This is fine wheat land. Tract No. 4 Choice tract 62 1-2 acres, bounded on west by Big Brush Creek, to country roads running through it, fine timber good spring, fine mill site on creek, strong land. Tract No. 5 71 1-2 acres, almost level, splendid wheat land, pine and oak timber, a jublic road makes eastern boundry, sLape oblong. Tract No. 6 . 44 acres splendid farming land, fine bottom lands on both Big an Little Brush C.eek, lasting spring water, country roads run through it shape nearly oblong, some timber especially cedar. Tract No. 7 80 1-2 acres on public road, ten acres of meadow, would make a spldadid farm. Tract No. 8 25 seres on Little Brush Creek, well timbered, good stiong land. Tract No. 9 70 acres lying on Little Brush Creek, public road on east, fairly good house and barn centre of tract, eight good spring", fine farming land. This land i ten miles from Siler City, tn miies from Ramseur, eight miles from Ore Hill, fire miles from Bennett, the new static on the Bonlee and Western. Terms of Sale $100 down on each tract and $10U each year and interest on balance due, land standing good fot same. For further particulars call on-ffr write JOHN W. OR ROBERT L. CAVINESS COLERIDGE, N. C". TEETH Extracted By Painless Method. Gums Heal Rapidly as a result of the "antiseptic" properties of the Solution used on tne gums to prevent the pain. Weak or nervous people may have any number of badly de cayed teeth or roots removed with remakably little pain, and without bad after effects. Broken down health is often caused by having: a mouth full of con taminated teeth, badly decayed, with diseased roots. Your health may be almost instantly improved by having: them removed, and your ap pearance will also be greatly benefited when you have a new set made. "The Sherwood System" of taking- impressions and arranging teeth on plates is the only abso lutely accurate method. It is pleasant and painless, Plates made according- to the old method sometimes fit very well, but a plate made by the new method that always fits and never drops down when you laugh, is ' a thing- of Beauty, and a Joy for ever". Examinations Free. Work Guaranteed. 8:00 1:00 Office Hours Prices reasonable and will be glad to furnish them on inquiry. Dr. J.D. Gregg is graduate in Dentistry and has the distinction of graduating at the head of bis class, and was awarded the College Gold Medal and first prize in the Gold Operating contest. DR. J. D. GREGG, " Office in Cregg Building, Liberty, N. C. I Miss Eugenia Tysor I ANNOUNCES HER Fall Opening for Wednesday am. to 12:00 m. to 6:00 p. m. Sept. 28th. I