rs id .11 e- c. WEST o. uner were enti- )any was re deal to rm nor to T have in cut under end to sell es ‘ices other Deal buy their J 1 ONLY NEWSPAPER IN TRANSYLVANIA COUNTY J. J. MINER, OWNER AND MANAGER A HOME PAr»ER FOR HOME PEOPIjE—ALL, HOME PRINT VOLUME*XV BREVARI), KOETH CAE<'1 IM, DECFMBIR 2.1910. NUMBER*4S Four Weeks to Christmas And the Shopgirls Will BLESS YOU if You Buy Early MARTIN W. LITTLETON. N. Y. Congressman Elect Qives His Wife Credit For Victory. BATTLEJ^A CAVE. Trapped in Mountain Rsce'^s. One of Gang is Shot to Death. Trapped in a mountain cave In which they had sougrht concealment after breaking jail at West Union, Ohio, three fugitives had a sharp re volver l)attle with Sheriff C. W. Gib- bony, of Adams county, Ky. One of the fugitives was willed and the other two sun-endered. The men broke jail, fled to the Ohio river and crossed to the Kentucky side. The sheriif, with one deputy, followed, and when he caught up with the men in the mountains called upon them to surrender. The answer was a bullet from the revolver of one of the men, James Smith. Sheriff Gibbo- ny’s first shot killed Smtih, and then John Gaskins and William Burke came out of the cave with hands extended above their heads. They igreed to return to Ohio without requisition. PUBLIC SWINDUD OUT OF MILUONS S^e af Bo|iis Stocks Udged Against Firms. fiuudulentIse gf mails WHOLE FAMILY POISONED. In Raids 8o Important That Postmas ter General Hitchcock Took Charge, Postal Inspectors Fell on Two Big N. Y. Concerns and Made Arrests. In raids so important that Postmas ter General Hitchcock took charge in person, his Inspectors fell on two con cerns in New York city which they charge with swindling the public out of more than $40,000,P00 by fraudulent use of the mails. , Sheldon H. Burr, president of Burr Brothers; Eugene H. Burr, secretary and treasurer of the firm, and Frank H. Toby, its vice president were ar rested in the first raid and held in $20,000 bail each. The government charged that the firm sold between They ate turkey stuffed with oys- $40,000,000 and $50,000,000 of mining ters left over from the Thanksgiving oil stock worth little or nothing, din er and soon afterward suffered j Charles L. Vaughn, a director of excruciating agony for several hours, the Contin^tal Wireless Telegraph and it was only by heroic treatment and Telephone ompany, incorporated that their lives were saved. I in Arizona, was taken in the second Oysters in Turkey Dressing Thought to Have Been Cause. Five persons in the family of F^ W. Gibson, residing in Mobile, Ala., in cluding his negro cook, were poisonod from eating oysters and had a narrow escape from death. Gibson is chief clerk of the United Fruit Company in this city. 11,445,000 BALES. raid and held in $10,000 bail. In- spectjors say his company has sold to the amount of at least $1,000,000, / which has brought in no return to the investors. Vaughan is treasurer of the Columbia Finance ' Company, 1 which acts as fiscal agent for the Final Estimate Made by New Orleans Times-Democrat. A total of the Times-Democrat for ' Continental Wireless Telegraph and the cotton crop of 1910, as based on Telephone Company, and had charge reports from correspondents through- but the cotton belt, relates to the of the Continental office In New York. Both raids '^'were -lt^ther evidence actual growth of the year and is ex- : that the government, in its warfare Photo by American Press Association. V/INS FEDERATION. Combined Labor Interests to Meet fn Atlanta, Ga. The American Federation of Labor closed its thirteenth annual converi- tion at St. Louis by choosing Atlanta, Ga., as its meeting place for next year. The entire list of officers, includiniJ President Samuel Gompers, Secret'iry Frank Morrison and Treasurer John B, Lennon, were re-elected. The contest between Atlanta, Wash ington and Rochester, N. Y., for the iiext year’s meeting was the feature of the final afternoon’s proceedings. Delegations representing the three cities made vigorous fights on the floor, but the southern city won with a vote of 8,739, against 5,337 for Rochester, and 265 for Washington. Fraternal delegates to the British Trades’ Union Congress were chosen in William B. MacFarland (carpen ter), of Buffalo, and Daniel J. Tobin (teamst'‘rs), of Boston; William J. Tracey (plumbers), of Philadelphia, "^as elected fraternal delegate to the Canadian Tr:.des and Labor Congress, while Vice President James Duncan "^3^8 selected as the federation’s dele gate to the International Labor Secre- tarial, to be held at Budapest in Au gust, 1911. elusive of linters, repacks, etc. By states the crop is given as fol lows: Alabama 1,165,000 Arkansas 700,000 Georgia and Florida .. .. .. 1,825,000 Louisiana 255,000 Mississippi 1,200,000 against alleged interstate swindlers, means business, and no longer will be content with issuing fraud orders denying them the use of the mails, but will press for convictions on orig inal charges. The present campaign began some months ago, and has re sulted in the arrest of Louis Colla North Carolina 700,000 and his associates, charged with oper- Oklahoma » 900,000 ating a string of bucket shops; the Tennessee 300,000 officers of the nited Wireless com- Texas 3,200,000 officers of the.United Wireless com- Correspondents say that farmers pany, the United Exchange of Chicago, have hitherto sold freely, as a rule, the Steel-Miller cotton firm of Cor- but are inclined to hold the remnant. GENERAL The district court of ap- NEWS peals of the First district ITEMS. at San Francisco has sus tained the conviction of Abraham Ruef, former political boss of that city, charged with having bribed su pervisors, and denied him a new trial. inth. Miss., and more than sixty other firms in different parts of the coun try. CAUGHT IN QUICKSAND. Fearful Experience of Gilbert Ste phens Near New York. Gilbert Stephens is under the care The decision is contained in 46 pages . physicians in his home in Silver written by Presiding Judge Cooper ; Park,-New York, and may be and affirms the lower court on ail weeks in recovering from the shock points. Ruef had been sentenced ^ Qf g, long battle with death in quick- fourteen years’ imprisonment and was at liberty on bail. Fighting their way through dense snioke and blinding fiame in a burn- iiig oil house on the Baltimore and Ohio railway, Howard Vinkendoff and Wilbert Elery were burned to death at Pittsburg, Pa. The men had work ed all Sunday and part of the night and had gone to sleep in the oil house. Sparks from a passing en gine fired the little building and th'cy wards him with a knife before the shooting occurred. A. wholesale raid was made on al leged blind tigers at Gainesville, Ga., when an Atlanta detective, John Wil liams, turned up ten peddlers. Five of these turned up five others and were set free. Nothing could be gained from the remainder and they were fined $100 and costs. Williams left town immediately after trial. Threats were made against him, it is stated. William Green, aged 72 years, was burned to death, when the furnishing of his room was destroyed by fire at Memphis. Green, through mistakes, had filled a kerosene lamp nith gaso line, an explosion resulting when he applied a mMch. _ The population of the state of Nev^ York is 9,113,279, according to statis tics of the thirteenth census, made public by Director Durand. This is an increase of 1,844,385, or 25.4 per cent, oyer 7,268,894 in 1900. The increase , from 1890 to 1900 was 1,265,267, or ' 21.1 per cent. On the present basis of apportionment, New York state wiil gain eight or nine representatives in i the lower house of congreM. _ sand. Stephens had taken a short cut homeward and stumbled into a de pression which was formerly the bed of a small lake. The place is widely known as spotted with dangerous quicksands and Stephens found him self in the grip of one of them. The more he struggled to get out the deeper he went in. For two hours he shouted for help until finally his voice was silenced by’ the mud which rose above his shoulders and press*.d on his lungs so that he could hardly breathe. The quicksand had reached his chin and was pulling him slowly, but sure ly, to death by suffocation, when Wil liam Piscule, a town constable, who was out duok shooting, saw him and came running to his rescue. Piscule hurriedly picked up an armful of brush and sticks which he threw out on top of the quicksand. This gave him a fair foothold and he reached down to Stephens, tying the straps of his gunbag beneath the helpless man’3 shoulders. After a long struggle he dragged the prisoner out and laid him down exhausted on the shore of the lake. Marriage License Clerk Salmonson, of Chicago, was kept busy on Thanks giving Day. According to report, be tween 800 and 1,000 marriages oc curred in that city on Thursday for which licenses were issued. During his service as marriage license clerk for twenty-nine years, Salmonson has issued more than half a million mar riage licenses. FOREIGN A. W. Finch, the Loq- NEWS don agent of Pearson ITEMS. Dodge & Co., of New York, was remanded for onei week in the Mansion house court at London, charged with having defi-auded his em ployers of $125,000 received in pay ment of a consignment of copper. Finch surrendered to the police at Liverpool. John W. Knight, managing partner cf the defunct cotton firm of Knight, Yancey & Co., which recently failed for about $6,000,000, was arrested ai Decatur, Ala., by a United States mar shal and taken to Huntsville. The ar rest is made upon indictments found by the United States grand jury, charging fraudulent use of the mails. Ten leading business men of Decatur accompanied Knight to go on his bond, which it is said has been fixed at 120,000. A verdict of guilty in the first dc- irree wafe returned at New Orleans in the case of Eugene Besancon and Francois Rodin, tried for the murder of F. H. Reidel. The Jury was out for only five minutes The dismem bered body, of Reidel, who was a watchmaker, was found sewed in a sack, in the Old Basin canal, October 11. Besancon and Rodtn, who were arrested a few days later, made con fessions, according to police. I Twenty officers and committeemen of the Southeastern Underwriters’ As sociation were found guilty of “mali ciously and in wanton disregard of the rights of the public” increasing the rates for fire insurance in the city of Newport News, and fined $400 each by a jury drawn from Southampton county, in the corporation court at Newport News. The verdict was re; turned after a trial lasting one month and seven days. Notwithstanding the precautions that have been taken to stamp it out, typhoid continue^ to increase among the midshiiJmen havai acaifefny at Annapolis. Eight additional cases have been taken from the midship men’s sick bay to the naval hospital recently, making the total number of midshipmen now suffering from the malady twenty. The cause of the out break remains a mystery. Three youthful highwaymen at Chi cago shot one hold-up victim to death, fired at two others, and allowed a fourth man to go after stripping him of cash and overcoat. The bandit trio committed the series of crimos on the northwest side within the pe riod of an hour, and although seen by a half dozen persons, cleverly es caped. News was received by telephone of the death, at Fort Dade, of Captain Charles Moore, aged 73, for thirty years keeper of the lighthouse at Eg- mont Key, 40 miles from Fort Dade. Captain Moore had been ill for some time with cancer of the throat, which caused him to resign three months ago, and his death was not unexpected. Corbin W. Mercer, a widely-known druggist, died in All Saints’ church *i.t Richmond, Va., during service. He had been in ill health for some time. He was a great-grandson of the fa mous revolutionary war commander. General Hugh Mercer, to whose mem ory the national government erected a monument in Fredericksburg a few years ago. Percy Blake, well-known newspaper man in the south, who served as city editor of Tennessee, Mississippi and other papers and for years an author ity on sporting matters, died at Birm ingham, Ala., from a lengthy illness with asthma. His remains will prob ably be taken to Tennessee for inter ment. B. F. Dillon, Sr., general superin tendent of the southern division of the Western Union Telegraph Compa ny, died suddenly at his home in’ the Mendenhall apartments in Atlanta on Monday. Death was caused by acute Indigestion, followed by a stroke of apoplexy. Mr. Dillon stood high in the service of his company. A special from Mkrion, N. C., says: A blackened and charred body sup posed to be that of Jim Flynn, a white man, was found on Mount Ida, a mountain Just outside the city limits of Marion, by mea who were fighting the forest fire which had been raging over that and adjoining mountains for several days. Five men are dead as a result of a premature explosion of dynamite In a Santa Fe rock cut east of Barstow, Calif. Supt J. C. Mohler and three Mexicans were seriously injure^) Connty Governmect>. Representative—G. W. Wilsoi^ Clerk Superior Court—T. T. Loftis. Sheriff and Tax CollectPJ—C. C. Kilpat rick. Treasurer—Z. W. Nicholls. Register of Deeds—^B. A. Gillespie. Coroner—Dr. W. J. Wallis. Surveyor—A. L. Hardin. Commissioners—W. M. Henry, Ch*n; G. T. Lyday; W. E. Galloway. Superintendent of Schools—T. C. Hen derson. Physician—Dr. Goode Cheatham. Attorney—R. L. Gash. Town Goveriunrat*. Mayor—W. E. Breese,' jr. Board of Aldermen^—^T. H. Shipman. J M. Kilpatrick, T. M. Mitchell, F.i L. De- Vane, E. W. Carter. Marshal—J. A. Galloway. Clerk and Tax Collector—T. R Gallo* way. Treasurer—T. H. Shipman. Health Officer—Dr. C. W. Hunt. Regular meetings—First Monday night in each month. Profesdonal Cords. R. L. GASH. LAWYER. 4 11 and 12 McMinn BuiUins^ Notary Public. H. C. BAILEY Civil and Consultins Engineer and Surveyor CITY EiiSISCEIl I: IT. NOTICE OF EXECUTRIX. Having qualified as executrix of the last will and testament of Wash ington E. Galloway, late of the coun ty of Transylvania, this is to notify all persons having claims asrainst the estate of the said testator, to present their claims to the undersig-ned on or before the 9th day of July, 1911, or this notice will be plead in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will make immediate settlement. This July 9th, 1910. SARAH LUCINDA GALLOWAY, Wslch Galloway, atty. ^Executrix, ADMINISTRATOR’S NOTICE. Having qualified as administrator of the estate of J. C. McGaha, deceased, late of Transylvania county. North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to ex hibit them to the undersigned at office of R. L. Gash, Esq., Brevard, N. C., on or be fore the 27th day of May, 1911, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their re covery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment. This 20th day of May, 1910. V. B. McGAHA, Adm’r estate of J. C. McGaha, deceased. Entry No* 2568* W. J. Owen enters and claims six hun dred and forty (640) acres of land, lying in Hogback Township, on the waters of In dian creeks Beginning on a white oak, E. D. Owen’s comer, and runs thence north 66 deg. east sixty (60) poles to a hickory stump on top of the Blue Ridge; thence south 24 degrees east with S. A. Owen's line to a stone, S. A. Owen’s comer, on top of the Blue Ridge; thence south with the top of the Blue Ridge to a black oak, John Kizer’s corner; thence west, running so as- to include all the vacant land on Indian ercek. B. A. GILLESPIE, * Entry Taker. The Rev. Irl R. Hicks 1911 Almanac The Rev. Irl R. Hicks Almanac? for 1911, that guardian Angel in a hnndred thousand homes, is now ready. Not many are now willing* to be without it and the Rev. Irl R^ Hicks Magazine, Word and Works ^ The two are only One Dollar year. The Almanac is 35c prepaid • No home or office should fail to send for them to Word and Works Publishing Company, St. Loui£^, Mo. Chamberlain’s Ifever iaiU. Buy it aow. It nujf save liftt