. . ••'^ ^ ■ •;'•*■ %'->> »- •■^k. -i‘' ONLY NEWSPAPER IN TRANSYLVANIA COUNTY '■~0, ■'Si -XV J. J. MINER,ilWNER AND MANAGER A HOME PAPER FOR HOME 3PEOPILE—AI^L HOME PRUvTT >- VOLUIE*XVI BREVARD/NORTH CAROLINA, 24.1911. NU1BER*8 ■ BOLD HOLD-UP Or^ SOUTHERN ROAD Georgia Bandits M in tiie True Western Styie.^ OBTAINED ABOUT $14,000. Repeated Attempts Were Made to Dy* namite the Large Safe in the Ex* press Car, In Which was $60,000. JAMES LOWTHER. Speaker of House of Commons, Who Would End House of Lords. Disappearing as completely as 1^ the earth had, swallowed them up, not a trace has heen discovered of five ban dits who, in real wild west style, held up the Southern^ railway’s fast mail, Xc. 36, near White Sulphur Springs, Ga., Saturday morning at 2:15, dyna mited and robbed the express car of $14,000 in cash. More than $60,000 In currency and gold remained in another safe in the express car unmolested. While clipping off the miles at a pretty fair rate ef speed Engineer Fant had just settled in his seat to make up several minutes’ lost time when he suddenly saw a red signal ahead. He slowed down the train, and upon ap proaching the signal, noted that a man was swinging a lantern. Supposing tliat seme track obstruction had been discovered, he brought his train to a dead stop. Mounting the cab without! ceremony, and quietly, two masked; men “covered” Engineer Fant and Fireman Rufus Johnson. Engineer Fani was marched back to the express car, and was ordered to carry a shovel. The fireman was told to run. He ran. Expressman Ordered to Quit Post. Three other members of the gang" came on the scene, and patrolled the train while the two men who*had the engineer “covered” opened the door to the express compartment of the bag gage car, ordering Expressman Miller to hold up his hanSs. Miller obeyed after the bandits gave him to under stand they meant business. Conductor^ Mooney thought the whole affair was a practical joke, and hanr died one of the robbers roughly. He was soon convinced, however, by the persuasive presence_of a' dangerous lobking gun that he was face to face with the real thing. After working for ten minutes, arid after making three unsuccessful at tempts to dynamite the larger safe In the car, the men turned their atten tion to the smaller safe. They (lUickly j effected entrance to its contents, an>, secured about $700 in currency, gold and silver. Probably alarmed by the ^ explosions set off in the%effort to break; the larger safe, the bandits allowed the j train crew to take their places on the! train, and they disappeared in the woods. A reward of $100 each has been of fered by Governor Brown for their capture, Bandits Secured $14,000. Information received later is to^ the effect that one of the packages taken from the express car safe contained $14,000. In addition to this, a quantity of for eign money,, the .amount of which is not stated, also is missmg. Several foreign silver pieces were found on the ground shortly after the robbery, and these are believed to have been in the missing package. * FIGHT TO A finish: Administration and Publishers War Over Postage Rates. Lines, it is said, are being closely drawn for a fight to a finish between the admini^ration at Washington and American ^jblishers over the plan to increase the postage rates on aiiver- tising sections of magazi^ies. Postmaster General Hitdhcock Is taking an active part in urging the plan by^demonstrating to senators and representatives that the attitude of the postal department is just. Presi dent Taft is seconding the efforts of his postmaster general. According to Hitchcock, the publishers are using unfair methods in urging publishers of small periodicals to fight the proposed Increase, because it would be harmful to them. He asserts that as a matter of fact it would be of great benefit to many fraternal publications and oth ers of that class which are unable to print advertisements. NORTH J>01£ FINDER GIVEN'dARD RAP ' Arlcaiisas CoopassRian Imu Gapt. Peary. OEWT|D A “FAKER.’^ —" ~' In Debate on Naval'^AfH^ropNatfon l»l}I, Macon, of .ArkanoxSr Sajrs Peary ' Should Be Driven From Naval Ser vice—Reply From'Peary's Fricnda. TOBACCO MEN SHOT. Growers Are Ambushed and Wounded by Negroes. RELATIONS STRAINED. Three tobacco men, on their way to Danville, Ky., were held up by^ negro bandits, who seriousl;^ wounded each of the travelers and obtained about $100 in cash. The negroes escaped, but later two of the number were cap tured and placed in jail at Stanford. The victims of the hold-up were D. O. Ballard, Clarence Deatherage and E. B. Hatfield. As they drove along a country road not far from Stanford, they were passed by a party of ne groes, who hid themselves in a clump of trees by the roadside. When the tobacco ~ men came abreast of the ambuscade they were targets for a hail of bullets from the robbers’ revolvers. Deatherage was hit by five bullets, both of Hatfield’s Jaws were broken, and Ballard’s ^kull was crushed. City and county officers and a posse took the bandits’ trail and arrested two negroes in Danville. One of the prisoners admits he shot Deatherage. Representative Macon, of Arkansas, speaking in general debate on the naval appropriation bill in the house, made a sensMional attack upon Cap tain 'Robert E. Peary, denouncing him as a “faker” and declaring that “he should be driven from the naval ser vice.” The bitter words used by the inem- ber from Arkansas called out a quicK reply from Peary’s friends. Repre sentative J. Hampton Moore, of Pehn* sylvania, after, vainly af;empting to in terrupt Mr. Macon, finally got the floor in his own right. He character ized Mr.’ Macon’s speech as “unjust, outrageous and offensive.” He said there was always ,^6me one to be found .to suspect every performajico by men of genius and courage. He referred to Captain Hobson’s exploit of the Merrimac and to Dewey’s vic tory at Manila bay. “Heroes like these,” said Mr. Moore, “have not the time to.stop and deal with every fdog that barks at their heels.” Mr.' Macon declared that Peary’s whole story was a “fake pure and simple.” He said his contempt for “fake heroes” was supreme, and he in timated that ho put “the hero of San Jvan Hill” in that class. Mr. Macon denounced the Peary Arctic Club and charged that it had maintained a paid lobby in Washington. He said that President Taft’s* judgment in this matter was not to be' accepted, for he had congratulated Cook as heartily as he did Peary. TO SPEAK TO NEGROES. Taft and Roosevelt Will Address ^hem in Atlanta Soon? > '[Theodore Roosevelt and William H. Taft will be vicitOrs to Atlanta next mbnth, and will address the colored people of Atlanta at the Central Ave- mle Methodist Episcopal church, col ored, at the corner of Central avenue ajid Hunter street. ‘ Rev. J. A. Rush, pastor of the church, received a letter from Mr. Roosevelt accepting the invitation to speak there, and March 9 has been set as'^a tentative date, though the hour has not been s«t. President Taft accei)ted ihe invita tion of this church a week or so ago and will deliyer an address there on iSfa^ch 10 in the afternoon. YOUTH SLAYS SELF. County -Covfct‘E.mfciut,. Representative—Thos. S. Weed. Clerk Superior Court- Ccs. Paxton. Sheriff and Tax Collector — Fred. A Shuford. Treasurer—Z. W. Mchols. Register of Deeds—B. A. Gillespie. Coroner—Dr. A. E. Lyday; Surveyor—J. C. Wike. Commissioners—W. L. Brooks, G. T. Ly day, Arthur Miller. Superintendent of Schools—T. C. Hen derson. ^ " Physician—Dr. Goode Cheatham. Attorney—R. L. Gash. JoTin Williams Shoots Himself Through ^ Head in Macon, Ga., Hotel. John Williams, a young white man hardly 30 years of age, went to Ihe Exchange hotel and shot himself in the head with a revolver. Death wa^ instantaneous. Indications are that^he came to the place with Intention of ending his life Coroner Young took the case charge to make an investigation, i The dead man\ had followed. shows about the country for recent employ* ment. in BIG EXPDSmON IS PROPO^D IN 1915 To Msk son. Myetsaiy Ending lavil War.. TO BE HELD AT LOUISVILIE It Will De Known as the Lincoln- Davis Exposition—Probfibie That Corporation of the Federal Govern ment Will Be Asked in the Venture. RAISING THE MAINE. Anniversary cf Battleship’s Sinking Is Observed. Trouble Seems to Be Brewing Be tween Russia and China. The relations of Russia and China are strained to breaking point. Russia has notified the governments of Great Britain, France and Germany ‘ of her intehtion to make a military demonstration on nhe Russo-Chinese • frontier owing to China’s persistent, violation of the St. Petersburg treaty of 1881. Russian troops will be sent forth with to the district of Hi. ‘ The extent of the demonstration, it Is added in the diplomatic note, will depend entirely upon the attitude as sumed by China. The vital questions involved are free trade in Mongolia, the extra terri torial rights of Russians in China, and the establishment or a Russian con sulate at Keobdo, Mondolia. $100,000,000 COMBINE. Company Formed to Control Output o1 Automobiles. .extra session certain. Jf Senate Fails to Act on Reciprocity Measure. The first authoritative announcement that President Taft will call an extra session of congress if the senate fails to aci upon the McCall bill, putting into effect the Canadian reciprocity agreement, came from Mr. McCall him self, following an interview with the president at the white house. According to McCall’s announcement the president feels that he is under an International obligation to summon an ^xtra session if it be necessary to get action on the reciprocity agreement i hat session would be called immedi' ately following the adjournment ol <iongress at noon Marcl^4. ! The Christian Science Monitor pub lishes a report to the effect that a, $100,00t),000 automobile combine is in' process of forq^ation. The article says: .“^ccoyding to trustworthy inforiaa- ticn received from Wall street sources in New York,.*Boston is the center oi Interest in a $100,000,000 automobile trust that is being formed. ^ “Representatives of the J. P. Mor gan and Rothschild int^ests and capi tal of some men who were connected with the Licensed Automobile Dealers’ Association, ^together with $9,000,000 belonging to Walter Flanders, the De troit automobile manufacturer, are re ported to be behind the deal. “It is said to be the plan of this combination to purchase all shops in the United States that manufacture the machinery that makes parts for au tomobiles, buying these large factdries outright with patent rights. “The negotiations pending in Bos ton are for the purchase of one of the largest machine shops in Providence that makes machines that^ turn out parts for automobiles.” Thirteen years ago Thursday the battleship Maine was blown up in Ha vana harbor, and in memory of the men who died, appropriate exercises were held at Washington by military, patriotic and religious bodjes. This year’s anniversary of the terrible disas ter added interest from the fact thai the work of raising the sunken hull of the wrecked vessel is noy^ nearing completion. Engineers of the United States army are in charge of the project for raising the Maine. A steel caisson was driven into the hard clay bottom of Havana harbor, which is about sixty-five feet below no^an tide. Walls of a coffer dam were then built along either side of the hull from this caisson until they met at the other-end of the vessel. This wall was filled with clay from a bar near the wreck to give sufficient stability to prevent it from being over* turned when the water is pumped out. The piling of the walls was driven through ten to eighteen feet of mud and about thirteen feet of the softer clay. The steel sheet piling was driv en until the steam , hammer made no impression,'resulting, it is believed, in making the dam practically water tight. When the wreck has been exposed all bodies will be taken out, and the third of the ship which is a twisted mass of wreckage will be carefully ex- nal exh ille in for Loiifisville in 1915. It will be known as the Lincoln-Davis exposi tion, to mark the fiftieth anniversary of the end of the civil war. Directors of the Louisville Convention league, in an announcement, call attention to the fact that both Abraham Lincoln and Jefferson Davis, heads of the two governments opposed to each other from 1861 to 1865, were natives of Kentucky, and the claim that Louis ville is the proper place for siJch ex hibition. It is probable that co-opera tion of the federal government will be asked. “Now that it has been definitely de termined to hold the Panama exposi tion in San Francisco,” says the an nouncement, “all the vast expanse of country east of the Rocky mountains is left ‘expositionless’.” It then ar gues that the fiftieth anniversary of the close of the four years of strife between the states should be fittingly observed; that no more suitable 'method than a world’s fair can be ♦found, and that Kentucky, as the birthplacfe of both President Abraham Lincoln, of the United States, and iPresident Jefferson Davis, of the Con federate states, is the proper place to hold such a celebration. One of the features proposed is a grand reunion in which survivors of both the Federal and Confederate armies shall partici pate. That federal aid will be sought by the Louisville promoters is indicated by a comparison which they make be- amined by experts to discover, if pos sible, the cause of the explosion which, tween the amounts of money turned sent the Maine to the bottom. The re- into the national treasury by Ken? mainder of the ship will be bulkhea^ed tucky and California so that it wUl float, and when the cofferdam is again flooded the Maine AVIATORS ARRESTED. wi^ be on the surface, ready for Con gress to decide what shall be done ■with her. ^ The human remains found win prob ably be brought here' and buried beside At the completion of the_ aviation the bodies ,already recovered iij^. Ar- exhibition at Tampa Sunday, J, A. D Ministers at Tampa Wage War on Sun day Exhibitions. Town Covernment*. S Mayor—W. E. Breese, jr.1 Board of Aldermen—T. H. Shipman. J M. Kilpatrick, Tv M. Mitchell, F. L. De- Vane, E. W. Carter. Marshal—^J. A. Galloway. Clerk and Tax Collectw:—T. IL Gallo way. . ^ ' Treasurer—T. H. Shipman. Health Officer—Dr. C. W. Hunt Regular meetings—First Monday night in each month. SOUTHEHN RAILWAY COMPANY Transylvania Division. In effect January 1911. N. B —Schedules figures given as information only, aud not guarantee.d. C 33 Eastern Standard ;rime STATIONS C 5! P M 3 40 3 45 4 4 5 00 5 05 5 08 5 13 5 20 6 26 5 Hi 5 36 5 4*2 5 5.5 6 02 6 04 6 Oi 6 i2 6 21 6 30 6 40 Lv Asheville Ar iiV ..Heoders6uvHie...Ar ...West Henderson Vi lie... Yale Hor>e Shoe Cannon Ecowah Blantyre Penrose Davidson River Fisgiih Forest,.....-.. Ar Brevard ,Lv Seliea CherrySLeid ...„Calvert„ Rosmun GaHoways Qtieboe Reid’s Ar...Lake Toxaway...Lv A M II 80 10 25 10 10 10 10 05 10 02 9 56 9 49 9 42 9 3S 9 30 9 24 9 08 g 01 8 58 a 54 8 50 8 43 8 34 8 25 Nos. 5 and 6 are through trains between A>heville and Ldke Toxaway. No. 5 connects at llei dersnnville with the Carolina Special for Spartanburg, Columbia aud Charlestou, and at Spartanbuig with Nos. 11 ai d.l2 for Atlanta and Charlotte. For tickets and fall information apply to E. W. CARTER, Ag’t. J. H. WOOD, Dist. Pass. Ag’t, Asheville, N. C ProfesMond Cards. “LAWYER. '1 and 12 McMinn Building Notary Public. W.W.ZA0HARY , Attorney-at>-Law BREVARD, C. H. G. BAILEY Civil and Consultins Ensineer and Surveyor BREYARli AND HENDERSONNILLE. N. C. lington Cemetery. $500,000 LABOR FIGHT. McCurdy and Clem Beachy, aviators, and Colonel T. J. L. Brown, chairman of the census celebration committee; General J. U. Strode, of the Wpst Tam- , pa race track, and Phil Collins, treas* American Federation, of Labor Will Vacing association, were Wage War on Enemies. A Washington, D. C., dispatch sayti; To support labor unionism in a life Mrs. Caroline M. Hypes, 98 years of age, who was one of two surviving real daughters of the American revo lution, died at*Greencastle, Ind. Mrs. Hypes was born in Baltimore, Md. At least six perso^ %ere drowned off the coast south of San Pedro in an attempt to smuggle a party of Chinese ashore, ao€ording to a report at the Angel Island immigration itation, at San Francisco. arrested on a charge of violating the state laws relative to the giving of ex* ^ ^ ^ hibitions on Sunday to which an admis- nd Sht, which may affect the |g charged. Bon^s Trt'cro iir.me whole labor situation in America, th€ ^iately furnished ^erlcan Federation rf Labor Is rals- ' ^he arrest of the aviators anS bffl- ng a fund of $500,000 to be sent to . ^ials of the race track was the result warfare a concerted effort on the part- of with the Merchants and MMufaetu- ministers of th® city. Sennons rers association of ttat city. It was were preached denouncing the giving announced at the federation • head- ^f such an exhibition on Sunday^ and quar era at Washingtoxi. j consequent running of execursiona —^ i into the city. No niove was made by A coUislon off the Essex coast P™sram suited In the sinking of the steamer been completed. Mount Park, Cadiz for Yarmouth witnessed by the Thirteen of the crew are, reoorted ' e^er assembled drowned. i Tampa on any occasion. NOTICE-Change in Hour of Meeting. By a vote of Dunns Bock Lodge at last regular communication the hour of meeting was changed and the following will be the hours un til further notice: Jan. 13, 1911, meeting at 2 p. m. Hereafter the meetings will alternate—February, meeting at 8 p. m.’, March, at 2 p. m., etc. All members are urged to attend these meetings. Visiting Masons cordially invited. Jan. 9,1911. Welc^ Galkoway, Sec’y. The Rev. Irl R. Hicks 1911 Almanac The Rev. Irl R. Hicks 'Almanac for 1911, tha^ guardian Angel in a hundred thousand homes, is now ready. Not many are now willing to be witliout it and the Rev. Irl R. Hicks Magazine, Wbrd and- Works. The two are only One Dollar a y^r. The Almanac is 35c prepaid. No home or oflBlce should f^^to send for them to Word and WOTks Publishing Conipany, St. Jjouis, Mo..

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