.. t. " i -v : - -: t 7 : - ; :. : -r 1 VOL. 0 NO. 30. .K. ASHEVILLE, N. C., SATURDAY MORNING, JULY 12, 1902. PRICE 5 CENTS BUNCOMBE Tumi nv BUILT o o --f - Ln o O n it , w T. S. ASHEVILLE 7 First Class u-v' 411 i rfti- rs i . WELL OMH lUU . imi ... ' ' '"-" . v ., Vrv : t ' T.t J : f flwt ; -- ? u i m nm 1 1 nil i i ty u v -f . ' r-.A:,-- -i - - : ' ' " ' - -AT THE- m 'z -V. (... nL D . o i urc jasper L Smathers & Son, 45 PATTGN We do a great deal of workjor people outside the city of AiKcvrllc; some of them outside the State of North Carolina. Malic up a bundle of yoursoiled linen and express to us and v; will return promptly, j. A; NiCHOLS, Proprietor. IF The YieScl of Wheat -Increased j There's jio questiorl .-but-that the yield of wheat and rye Is greatly . increased when planted by a : . .H00SIER GRAIN DRILL The discs are hung between two - bars wliich gives equal support on ,u. ci.'li- -'htMl the feed can b stopped and started at will with. uii,t raising tho discs. i X ON TIIKiSQl'ARE BEAUTY" FOR THE PRICE North Carolina r 1 i a-ys l f5J jrsj i 1 Tt) ' a&zz : ml Furniture m mi AVENUE-,; 61 laundred to suit the most WE HAVE IT, IT'S THE BEST." Ghampion lower Harclw HOME COLUMN OLD FRIENDS. There are no friends like old friends, And none so good and true, We greet them when we meet them As roses greet the due. No other friends are dearer, Though born of kindred mold, And while we prize the new ones, i We treasure more the old, There are no friends like old friends Where'r we dwrll or roam, , f In lands beyond the ocean Or near the bounds of home. f And when they smile to gladden, Or sometimes frown to guide, We fondly wish those old friends r , Were always by our side. There are no friends like old friends To help us with the load That all must bear who journey O'er life's uneven road. And when unconquered sorrows . The weary hours invest; The kindly words of old friends Are always found the best. There are no friends like old friends To calm our frequent fears When shadows fall and deepen Through life's declining years. And when our faltering footsteps Approach the greater divide, We'll long to meet the old friends . Who wait the other side. Living Within One's Incomer "Father, will you please lend me a dollar ?" "Yes, Carl But, my son, this this month. Js not is the second your allowance large enough ? I increase it willingly, but .1 learn '-to live' within want you to vj Lii in trellis. "I know, ather, and I do try As you know, Ixnever borrow oH anvone else. "It would be tine to have more, but I do not need it. I spendtoo much the first of the month on. j-jujc j luxuries, and find I need some ! thing for necessities at the close. nrvf tuti in floKt cn ti-liot fan uo out come to you to aavance someon my next month's allow- "You do just right about that. It is a trreat comfort to know that you run no bills, and apply to no one else for assistance. Be care ful not to overdraw, for you will get into bad habits which you can- not cure when you have money to control Ilere is a little state ment I found long ago : "Income, SI; expenses, 99 cents Result : Riches, affluence. "Income, SI ; expenses, SI .01. Re sult : Poverty, bankruptcy." Sermon short for the text, but strong and to the point. - - r- -si 111 j Mr. Uameron was caiieu away ?5!Carl stood studying the slip of paper. When he turned away, he had decided to discipline himself, Your Hair "Two years ago my hair was falling out badly. I purchased a bottle pf Ayer's Hair Vigor, and soon my hair stopped corning out." Miss Minnie Hoover, Paris, 111. Perhaps your mother had thin hair, but that is no reason why you must go through life with half starved hair. If you want long, thick hair, feed it with Ayer's Hair Vigor, and make it rich, dark, and heavy. $1.00 a liotlle. All druggist. If -your dniKffist catniotfsupply you, sefiU us one tioilar and we will eil'i's 1..,.'. in,in v.p sure anil e-ive tlie nauie If your nearest express oibce. Address, J. C. A YKR CO., Lowell, Mass. 4i 4! Haymaker I Has proven its superiority by years of satisfactory service. It is well and strongly built and esr pecially adapted to rough and tin even ground. Cutting bar can be lifted over obstructions or to an upright position to pass a tree without throwing machine out ot gear. You should see them and also Our rakes. -r Co. are . ASHEVILLE, N. C. so that he might prove worthy of the larger means that would one day be bis, by being faithful ai the management of his small in come now. Christian Observer. . Putting the Bits Together, She was a dear, quaint old lady 1 whose days were! full of kindness, and whose hands were seldom idle. one was showing some treasures L of handiwork, and among other things brought out a soft, 'silken quilt, daintily stitched and fin ished. I "Why, auntie, you did not make this whole pretty slumber robe out of just those odds and ends of silk you were gathering She nodded and laughed. "There are bits enough in the world, child, to make almost any thing we want, if only we are- will ing to save the bits and take the pains to put them together," she said "The reason for most .of our doing without is that we want our material all in one piece yards and yards of it so that we can lay on any pattern we like and cut it but easily. But it doesn't coma that way usually, , . "Strength, leisure, money, edu cationwe seldom get any of them in the lengths we want, but put ting the bits together will work wonders if only we learn how to do it. 'Slumber robo'r' Is that the new name for this kind of quilt? Well, the happiness robe is made in the same way, out of the bright not necessary to become possessed little odds and ends that come to of the facts of industrial develop us daily ."; Forward. jment. :- . . ' - The ancient world knew little Drudgery That Made Genius. about aggregated capital. Plato, Paderewski, when told by her! in his laws, ordered a citizen to be royril-'highhess. Princess Victoria, j punished if he attempted to con perhaps the most accomplished I cem himself withjradc. Augustus musician of all the royal family, is said to have condemned a Sen 'surely inspired," j ator to death because he so de graded himself as to engage in i that he was answered: Yout royal highness will, I lare say, be surprised when I. tell you that I remember the day when was quite an 'indifferent .player, was determined, however, to be what the world alls a genius, and to be a genius I well knevy that I must first le a druago, for ij:uti8 and "drudgery always u.o haul in hand. Ueniu"-- raid PmUj'rewski -is tUiec-(iuar-at's what genius ters tlrr.dgervr- t! is. a at una .tiuiu pr tioed day- after day, yehr after vear. till I became almost insensible to sound became a machine, as it Were. ow 'Paderewski is a genius,' says the world! Yes, but Paderewski. was a urnuge before lie was a genius! Churches in the Philippines, j The American Bible Society has received from its agent in the Phil ippines, the Rev. Jay C. Goodrich, his .annual report, on the situation in the islands, inclusive of the cir cmation of the Bible. He savs. among other things : The missionary forces have been greatly augmented. The Baptists and Presbyterians oiithe Island of 'Panay are reaching many of the rural people at the market places, where the' congregate from miles in the interior, and are great ly interested in the teaching of the Bible. Dr. Hall has a hospital at Iloilo, and is proving that med ical missions are profitable in spir itual results. At Duraaguette the Sillim-an Institute, under the di rection of the Rev. Mr. Ilibbard. is well established with a growing attendance. , The United Brethren Qhurch has established work at Yigan, on the northern part of the Island of v. ' . Luzon, with headquarters at Ma nila. The Disciples Church has two representatives in Manila, where English work is under way. Work emong the Filipinos Twill, begin shortly. - : X The Methodist Episcopcl church has opened work in Hagonoy, Bub acan Province, in San Fernando, Pampanga Province, and Gerona,' Tarliic Province, all on the Island of Luzon. Ltsser things will drop ovit as the hand closes upon tho larger du.ty or the greater blessing, just as, tho hand that reaches cut ' to grasp the great strong oak lets go its hold on the blade-of grass it had gathered. Phillips Brooks. Whether any particular day shall bring to you more of happi ness or of suffering is largely beT yond your power t.o determine. Whether feach day of your life shall give happiness or suffering rests with jTourseif. Cx. S. Mer-riam. MR. CLEVELAND'S FALSE POSITION IN SAYING THAT PRO TECTION BREEDS N' TRUSTS, Former President Cleveland is Again Trying to Commit His Party to "Tariff Reform" as Its Leading Issue. In the course of his speech be fore the Dave Hill harmony meet ing in New York last night Mr. Cleveland made this remarkable statement: "Xo oae doubts today that a high Protective Tariff has proved the 'parent of trusts,' just as was predicted it would." " We call this a remarkable state ment because it was made by an honest man who t5ld a deliberate untruth. We say "deliberate" be cause his knowledge is too broad and his prominence too great to admit of any other conclusions. Mr. Grover Cleveland cannot cite a single fact in the industrial history of the world to prove that the Protective Tariff is the "par ent of trusts," and no one knows it better than he does, for great ! knowledge of ancient history is manufacture. Rome obtained her wealth by means of theTammany 1- - plan, by plunder and hot by" pro duction. England knew little of aggregate capital until within three centuries. In the close of the sixteenth 'century England began to feel the spirit and etFect of association of persons and capital. Her people formed trade, combinations tr trusts, and as Daniel Webster de clared in one of his. magnificent 1 r t T1 1 - 1 1 speecnes, ingiana became a power to which Rome, even in the height of her glory, was not to be compared." ' ; The first trusts ever organized in the world came into existence in FreeTrade England. For years trusts have flourished there, and when several years agopnblic protest was made against such combinations of capital Hon. Wil liam E. Gladstone said; "You might aa well endeavor to stay the formation of the clouds, the falling of rains or the flowing of Ihe streams, as to attempt by any means or in any manner to prevent organization of industry, association of persons and aggre gation of capital to any extont that the ever growing trade of the world may demand." Mr. Cleveland, undoubtedly knowing these facts of history well, has the monumental gall to stand before a great audience of American-people and make an as sertion which he knows is abso lutely false, and yet he denounces Willian J. Bryan as a demagogue.. Free-Trade England is. the birth, place of trusts and Mr, Cleveland knows it. ' Trusts are being organized in England today and Mr. Cleveland knows it. He also knows, as everybody else knows, that there is no Protective Taritf in England, and yet he brazenly tells the peo ple of this country that the Pro tective Taritf, which had not bean, i even thought of when trusts wore! born, is the father and mother of i trusts. The gloom and blight of Clever land Free-Trade began to fade when the advance agent of pros perity "William, Mclinley was elected to thePresidency. The people have not x forgotten that gloom and that blight, Mr. Cleve land had bettor go away baok and sit' down. New Haven Ledger. NEWSPAPER COMMENT. S Economy is a good watchword.' But it must meai; Ratuething, In this cp.untry-, where the people's business is transacted in the open, and a public accounting is neces sary, and always as searching as the people require, a party asking power on promises of cutting down expenditures m,ust render a bill of particulars. If this is not a bill ion dollar .'country, just how much should suffice to run it, and how should the smaller amount be divided? Washington Star. It is not clear what the senate democrats will do in the short session. Perhaps Gorman will come over and lead them from the cloak rooms. But it is quite -certain that they can make no further use of young Mr. Bailey, of Texas. He might lead a lynching party or a cowboy expedition to paint a frontier town, but the democratic party in the senate is a touch be yond him. Milwaukee Sentinel. Inspired, ino doubt, by the il lustrious example of Statesman Bailey, of Texas, Statesman Car mack, of Tennessee, has intimated, in' more or less parliamentary manner, that John C. Spooner is a fool and a parrot. Statesman Cannack is mistaken about that. Not admirable in all things, iio man in ihe senate is less subject to the imputation of folly or lack of initiative than John C. Spooner. It may be added, for the inform ation of Statesman Cannack, .that the history, of Spooner warrants the assertion that in personal dis putes he is by no means a non combatant. Chicago Chronicle. SMILES Agre ed . - Ed n a lie's j u s t crazy to marry me! May He must be. Philadelphia Bulletin. Will (approvingly ) - " Gee ! That's a dandy toy automobile." Eddy- (proudly) "I should sny so! I made it run over Sister Sadie's doll, and it broke her head the very first time!" Puck. f " "Your son will be a comfort to you in your old age," remarked the visitor. "If that boy turns out' as he promised," said his father, "I won't have any old age." -j Detroit Free Press. What's the matterwith Jones ? Why ? He goes along as abstractedly-as though he were drunk and were seeing double. He is.x They have twins at his home. Detroit Free Press. A small boy inxme of our dis trict schools, when asked by a kind old lady if he studiedhard, said: "Oh," I don't hurt myselfxat it." "Oh," said the old lady, "youSnust study hard or you will neverI) President of the United States." "So, ma'am," cried the boy, "I don't expect to be; I am a demo crat." Petoskey Lyre. A Sad Case. "They say his father disinherited him because he married beneath him." "Yes. Her people. were nothing but college professors and preachers. His fathei owned three sawmills in Michigan and Wisconsin, and be sides I believe had large railroad interests. Isn't it queer how badly the sons of most of our great men turn out !" Chicago Record-Herald. Mrs., Wickler Did yoa ever see how all the necessaries of life have gone up? ! : :m Wickler No, they haven't all gone up. . :'. Well, I should like to have you mention one thing that hasn't gone up. " , -' Certainly. My salary .Brook lyn Life. Stvlish Novelties Derby Hats and Soft Hats Just Received. MEN'S WHITE A VERY H. DRY GOODS, FANCY GOODS, IS AFRAID TO VENTURE OUT THE "WASHINGTON" OF THE FILIPINOS IS A COWARD. He Will Be Given No More . Protection Than Any Other of the Filipinos Will Visit After Nightfall. . Manila, JulyJ. As a result of the proclamation of amnesty. July I the guard of American soldiers has been withdrawn from the house where Aguinaldo lived in Manila and Lieutenant Johnson, Aguinaklo's custodian, brought the Filipino today to see General Chaffee. It was the first meeting between the American general and the leader of the Filipino revolu tion. Lieutenant Wm. E. Mc Kinlay of the Ninth cavalry, acted as interpreter. . Aguinaldo was told that he was free to go anywhere he pleased and General Chaffee asked him if he had any complaint to make of American discourtesy or harsh ness. Aguinaldo replied that he had no such complaint to make, ile told General Chaffee that he was going to visit '. friends at his home in Cavitoviojo, in Cavite provence, and inquired what pro tection the American authorities would afford him. He seemed afraid to venture out. General Chaffee replied that Aguinaldo would get the same protection; as any other qitizen. The former Filipino leader then asked General Chaitee to 'prevent the courts from requiring himTto testify itf" civil suits. General Chaffee replied that he had no authority ta grant this request, and advised Aguinaldo to make a social call upon Acting Civil Gov ernor Wright.-. This Aguinaldo said he would do, but that he wolild co at nitrhf as he was timid about appearing on the streets in daylight. The release of the former Fil ipino leader has renewed specu lation as to possible vengeance upon him by friends of Luna and his other enemies. . Luna was a Filipino leader whom Aguinaldo caused to be killed in 181)9. THE REPUBLICAN PARTY No One Man Made It and No One Man Can Unmake It. No man ever made the Repub lican party. No one man ever fermulated its political doctrines, fought; its bktjtles, won its victories or established its. creatness. And no one man canXever make the Republican party cut. loose from its traditions, recant its beliefs, violate its solemn pledgesxreverse its policies and deliberately plunge to destruction and oblivion. Stik a pin right there. x She Republican party believes in the doctrine of x Protection to American industries not Pro tection to sorne of them at the ex pense of others, but genuine Pro tection to all in the interest of the entire people. It is primarily owing to its'econoihic policy, and its legislation and its administra tion, and to the energy which this dogma in the Republican creed has fostered and promoted, that; the United States have attained such a proud and prominent, position in en's Fur HIGH GRADE NEGLIGEE AND COLORED AT LOW ATTRACTIVE ASSORTME Special Values in High Grade t1 9 . . - '" REDWOOD & among the nations. It is surely owing in no. small part j to its solemn pledges, its faithful ob servance of them and its brilliant accomplishments in this direction that the Republican party won its well-nigh impregnable position in the confidence of the American people. Stic another pin: there. The Republican party has achieved greatness Jaeeause ; it has merited it because its mission has been patriotic because its beliefs and its practices have been positive and affirmative because its policies have resulted in plac ing the United States in the front rank of nations and have given to the American people prosperity such as no other nation on this earth has ever enjoyed. The Re-, publican party has achieved great- nese because it has never allowed itself to be seduced from the fun damental truths of its political creed, nor enticed from its well defined aim by reasons of mere temporary expediency. It has never been influenced by half-way bugaboos nor mugwumpiain hys terics.., ... ""'s j Under no circumstances has the Republican party walked open eyed into pitfalls laid, perhaps '; unconsciously, by conceited fools, nor deliberately given help to those who sought its undoing, or desired, even unwittingly,' to give the country's prosperity a black eye. And never, no never, has the Republican, party allowed it self to lie bulldozed and coerced into abandoning its traditions, forswearing its creed, reversing its principles and inviting destruction Chatham, N. Y., Republican. A cross mark on your paper indicates that your subscription has expired, and we politely re quest you to pay all arrearages and renew-at once, Subscribers wishing theur ad dress changed must give ' their, old address as well as new ' i CORONATION IN ! MID AUGW 1 Kin?; Edward's Satisfctor' Progress Causes This Announcement.' London, July 7. King Edward will be crowned between August 11 and 15. His recovery has been so rapid and satisfactory that the above decision was arrived at to day. No official. Announcement of the fact has yet been made. The pageant through the ! streets and the. ceremony at Westminister Abbey will be much curtailed from the original plan. Their majesties will drive from Buck ingham palace . to the j Abbey through Mall to Whitehall and thence to the Abbey, the same route as taken at the opening of parliament. - j WANTED, Agents Both hnen and women, to solicit sub scriptions for The Asheville Register. One in every town ship. Liberal percentage' given. W are iivf ayor of aT party that keeps the furnaces hot and the dinner pail full. Moravian Falls Patriot:"' '. ' ' Father Well, my sonwhat. did you learn at school today?; . "Not to sass Tommy McNutt !"- Chicago Daily News. !Y SHIRTS FIGURES, . -... ; 4 ' i- Clothing, one lot suits one lot of trousers..... CO. CLOTHING, SHOES , HATS. j -- - - - - - 1 ' '1 i ! . 4 ! i i ,1 ! ; I' i':" I .- . t -' : t.. ; It V: I A' I ' 'i ': i : .'; A - 1: I f

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