News ; i — ^ ' • Our County—Its Progress and Prosperity'the First Duty of a Local Paper. L. — X J. J. MINER, Manager. BREVARD, TRANSYLVIFI*-COUNTY. N. C., FRIDAY. AUGUST 2.1907 VOL. XII-NO. 31 TRANSYLVANIA LODGE No. 143, K. of P. Meets Tuesday evenings 8.30., Castle Hall, Fra- ternity building. A hearty welcome for "J visitors at all times. R. L. GASH, C. C. Brevard Telephone Exchange. hours: Daily—7 a. m. to 10 p. m. Sunday—8 to 10 a. m., 4 to 6 p. m. Central Office—McMinn Block. Profesdonol Cards. W. B. DUCKWORTH, ATTO RN EY-AT-LA W. Rooms 1 and 2, Pickelsimer Building. CASH a GALLOWAY. LAWYERS. Will practice in all the courts. Rooms 9 and 10, McMinn Block. D. L. ENGLISH LAWYER Rooms 11 and 12 McMinn Block, BREVARD, N. C. THOMAS A. ALLEN, Jr., DENTIST. (Bailey Block.) HENDERSONVILLE, - - N. C. A beautiful gold crown for $4.00 and up. Plates of all kind at reasonable prices. All work guaranteed; satisfaction or no pay. Teeth extracted without pain. Will be glad to have you call and inspect my offices, work and prices. The ^thelwold Brevard’s New Hotel—Modern Ap pointments—Open all the year The patronage of the traveling public as well as summer tourists i8 solicited. Opp. Court House, Brevard, N.C. DR. R. 6. BUCKNER Roohis 7 and 8 Medical Building. Phone 1270. ASHEVILLE. N. C. Diseases of the EYE, EAR, N8SE, THROAT. North Carolina in the Limelight! State Law Supreme in Spite of Consolidated and Federal CouH Injunctions! The Railroads Surieniler and Will Put the 2/4cent Rate in Operation, on All Lines on or Before August 8 '"■% THMfi; GOD AND 60VEHII0H eLENN THE TARHEEL STATE STILL HAS THE RIGHT TO MAKE UWS AND ENFORCE THEM WITHOUT ASKING CONSENT OF A FEDERAL JUDGE Beelnnlng ol the End In MonepoHslic Control of Law-Making Ro(llss--Ollier Stales WII FOLLOW Where Nortb jlaroilna LEADS! Lawlessness and Anarchy Will Not Be Tolerated Here, Whether the Violators Are Wealthy and Influential Corporations or Common Thugs—“Obey the Law, then Seek Redress through Our Courtss” Was the Ultimatum, and the Railroads Wisely Decided to Obey—^A Threatened Extta Session of the Legislature Was too Strenuous a Proposition for the Railroads to Face. E-I-P.A-N.S Tabules Doctors find A good prescription For mankind Tbe 5-cent packet is enough lor usual occasions. The family bottle (60 cents) contains a supply for a year. All druggists sell them. H. G. BAILEY, G. E. CORRECT SURVEYS MADE Maps, Plots and Profiles Plotted. Only the finest adjusted instru ments used. Absolute accuracy. P. O. Brevard,iN. 0. UNIVERSITY 00LLE6E OF MEDICINE ^tuart McGuire, m. d., pwcsidewt. This College conform* to the Standards fixed by law for Medical Education. Sand for Bulletin No. 11, which tells about it. Three free catalogueM—Spedfy Department, MEDICINE - DENTISTRY - PH/mMACY The threatened conflict be tween the State of North Caro lina and the Federal government over the enforcement of the new 2^ cent passenger rate, adopted by the last legislature, has been averted by an agreement reached at a conference between Gover nor Glenn and the counsel of state and the general counsel for the railroads. One of the principal Influences which has led to this agreement was undoubtedly the threat of Governor Glenn that he would call the legislature in extra ses sion unless the railroads obeyed the law. This was the last thing the railroads wanted done. The feeling engendered throughout the state by their refusal to obey the law would ^undoubtedly have made an extra session unpleasant for them. The state of North Carolina has won in its fight to have its passenger rate law of 2^ cents observed by all the railroads pending an appeal to the courts by the roads of the state which propose to fight the law. The promise of obedience to the law by the Southern and the Atlantic Coast Line railways, which, since July 1, the date set for the rate law to go into effect, have been violating the law, was given at a conference which the railroads sought with Governor Glenn, who has stated as a pre cedent to any agreement he might make, that the 2| cent rate law must be put into effect. The conference was a private one, newspaper men being ex cluded at the request of the rail road attorneys. After the con- f 4 ference Governor Glenn stated that at the beginning of the con ference the railroad representa tives stated that they were ready to agree to the 2i cent rate, later to be tested in the original in junction case before Judge Pritchard, an appeal if necessary to be taken by the state to the United States supreme court, w^hile the railroads would appeal ttre Wake county case to the North Carolina supreme court, and if necessary take the case on writ of error to the United States supreme court. The only trouble in the confer ence was a selection of the date at which the 2i cent rate should become effective. The railroads wanted a longer time than the State was willing^,to j?rant, but finall7 the 8th of August w^as agreed upon, as the railroad rep resentatives stated that it would be impossible sooner to make the proper arrangements at the va rious ticket offices to supply tick ets and to fix rates. Following is the basis of agree ment; The agreement entered into by the Atlantic Coast Line, the Southern railway and the state is: “1. The railroads put tbe two and one-fourth cent rate into ef fect not later than Augusts, 1907. “2. The state to appeal from the order of Judge Pritchard in discharging parties in Asheville on writs of habeas corpus. “3. The Southern railway ap peals to the Supreme Court of North Carolina in the Wake coun ty cases, and if the case is there decided against it, to take the case by writ of error to the Su preme Court of the United States. “4. That both sides co-operate to have both said cases advanced and argued together and speedily determined. “5. The state, at its option, to to indict the Atlantic Coast Line in one case. ‘All indictments and prosecu tions now pending to be dismiss ed and no other indictments or prosecutions to be instituted for any alleged violations of the law up to the time the new two and one-fourth cent rate is put into effect under this arrangement, as far as the governor can con trol the same. “The governor advises all peo ple against bringing any penalty suits pending final determination of 'the question involved, and asks the people as a whole to ac; quiesce in this arrangement. ‘The suit pending before Judge Pritchard to be diligently prosecuted without the state, however,^ waving any question of jurisdiction.” Messrs. Alfred B. Thom and Alexander P. Humphrey, counsel for the Southern Railway compa ny, understand that the South ern railway will not inaugurate contempt proceedings because of anything heretofore done by any of the state officers in connection with the rate litigation. They agree to do all they can to pre vent the inauguration of such contempt proceedings. This agreement between Gov ernor Glenn and the Southern I railway is also assented to by George Rountree, attorney for R. Nelson Buckley and others, complaintants. and Alexander Hamilton, general counsel for the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad com pany, except that they do not consent that the Atlantic Coast Line railroad shall be indicted in one case. As to this clause in the agreement, they leave the state at liberty to do as its sense of duty may dictate. acter to hound and bully the union men. and the tactics of the army of Pinkertons in their en deavor to secure evidence will be condemned by the public. But the worst feature of the long warfare, as shown by the evi dence, w^as the domiuation of poli tics in that state by the mine owners, and the employment of the state administration to har- rass the miners. The militia was illegally ordered to the scene of the conflict, martial law declared, and innocent men forci bly taken from their homes and thrown into the “bull pen” with out an opportunity for trial. The property of the union men was destroyed, and hundreds of them “deported” from the community on the flimsiest of charges. There is much promise for the future to be found in the fact that in a jury composed for the most part of business and profes sional men, on!y two members ever having Vorked for wages, should smash at the outset a con spiracy which had for its object the annihilation of honest men. The promise lies in the possibil ity that congress will be asked to investigate the machinations of the Pinkerton agency and those who employed it. Such action would be a warning and notice to disgruntled corporations and capitalists, who would wipe out organized labor, that the days of the Spanish inquisition have passed for all time.—Asheville Citizen. THE HAYWOOD VERDICT. As everybody hoped, but few dared expect, William D. Hay wood was yesterday acquitted of the murder of Governor Steunen- berg. That at least was the charge which was used to hide the real character of one of the most dastardly conspiracies which American history affords. The climax of the wholesale per secution of the Western Miners’ Federation was reached when a thing called Orchard, a liar and a perjurer proven, was dragged out of his lair to help the dirty Pinkerton association to fasten its clutches on innocent men. The struggle between the Mine Owners’ Association and the Western Federation of Miners has been a long and better one. Crimes have been committed by members of each organization. The methods employed by the mine owners in their desire to exterminate the union, have not beftn creditable to the state of Colorado, as the evidence in the trial of Haywood very clearly brought out. Their systems of employing men of unsavory char $100 Reward, $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 cure in all its stages, and that is Catarrh. HalPs Catarrh Cure is the only positive ciire now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a coiisticutional dis ease, requires a constitutional treat ment. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the foun dation of the disease, and givinj? the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curvitive powers that they ofler one iiundred dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address F. J. Cheney & Co , Toledo, O Sold by all Druggists, 75c. Take Hall’s Family Pills for con stipation. One newspaper story says a> New York man gave his seat in a street car to a lady and immedi ately fell into a tit. Another sto ry has it that the woman had a fit. It isn’t at all improbable that they both had fits. At least two fits seemed in order at the moment. “We never repent of eating too lit tle,’^ was one of the ten rules of life of Thomas Jefferson, president of the United States, and the rule applies to every one without exception during this hot weather, because it is hard for food even in small quantities, to be digested when the blood is at hisrh temperature. At this seasoa we should eat sparingly and proper- Jy. We should also help the stom ach as much as pcssible by the use of a little Kodol For Indigestion and Dyspepsia, which will rest the stom ach by digesting the food itself. Sold by Brevard Drug Co,