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r 1 H i J VOL. 26. NO. 1. CARTHAGE, N. C. THURSDAY; OCTOBER 29. 1903. ONE DOLLAR A YEAR.'"". i - - "- S ' ' : L ' . . .-....... 2" . - Oujtt. S03UCZI ,ASJX 5016X1110 A&AUJOT TXZQ WOUXjI). . . : - " ' " . ; ; ' ' " J k -' I '"?.. , , 1 : U1PID IHSE OF DOW IB. UAXL JONES SIDELIGHTS ON BOinB LOCAL XOP1CS HI, wonderful Personal magnetism lias Helped Ilia Cause. Baltimore sun. ' ' ' In 10 years John Alexander Dowie, a Scotchman by birth, has risen from the doubtful returns of street preaching to the leisurely opulence that belongs to the head of Zion. He has established himself as prophet of 150,000 people, who give him one tenth the Bible tithe of their weekly tjiruingfl, and has made Zion City, 111., which he founded, a thriving manufac turing town, with a lace plant imported bodily from Nottingham, England, at a coetof over $1,000,000. Dowie has declared himself to be the reincarnation of the Prophet Elijah and a divine healer and restorer. He calls himself Founder and General - Overseer of the Christian Catholic Church in Zion, Reincarnation of the Prophet Elijah, Restorer and Messenger of the Covenant. Dowie claims to speak by inspiration, and his followers accept h'n utterances as Divine messages. They hold that : lie" li be cured by prayer p'' 'oyment of physicians FABUEBS nOBB INDEPENDENT. Past vO and spirits, at- .f;tits, oard playing and r..;-in oath bound secret so- rt particularly the Masonic order are forbidden. All who would bo saved mu.rv give one -tenth of all they possess and cam to tho General Uverseer, to bo used a he wills. They believe in God, in Jesus Christ, Ilia Sou and in the salvation of those who keep His commandments and the will of His representative on earth (Dowie) through the atonement on the They believe in the literal resurrection of the dead, in the communion of saints and the life everlasting. t' When Dowie was at the World's Fair in Chicago he stood before his tent and shouted : "All doctors are liars and cowards All druggists are low tricksters. Come to mc and he healed by faith. I am the only man in the. world practicing and preaching the true word of God." Personal' enemies to Zion are, with Dowie, all thieves, robbers and trick sters, and in his speeches to Zion he devotes them, collective and individ ually, to "Fire ! Fire ! Fire !" , In appearance Dowie is tall and large. He is 0 feet high and weighs ISO pounds. His hair and beard are grizzled", almost white, and he .has a high, thai voice. His gestures are many and violent, in keeping with his often unrestrained speech. His best adHet ia wonderful personal magnetism. Dowie is 57 years old and was born in Scotland, where he studied for the ministry. Early in life he went to Australia. It was when in Sydney, N. S. W., that he formed his faith healing theory While reading Ins Bible he made up his mind that Christ meant to heal (the body as well as the soul, and that bod ily healing could bo accomplished .'by the laying on of hands. Dowie first tried the cur? on him H' if. lie suffered from a forai o stoin- Mi.bio that. doctor pronounced :. . " lie says be h'-V t;a Bible :, .;. i -f one ni.u, ;.r .; . v. for a '. A wad cured,. '-oy JVwie wis twice impris oned fur holding temperance meetings without a permit. At that time he was an ordained Congregational minister, but in 1S78 he left that faith, went to Melbourne arid set up the "Free Chris tian Tabernacle," the forerunner of ion. Dowie left Australia in 1888, he says, U enuso he wanted to travel ; his ene mies say because he was driven out by the authorities. He landed in San Francisco with his wife, Jane Dowie his son, Alexander Gladstone, and his daughter, Esther. That son graduated in 11aX) from the University of Chicago ,H was in 1890 that Dowie went. Q rhicago "to tight the devil on his own i-'OAnd." .At first he established heal- t53 homes, and on complaint of, the nodical fraternity a special city ordi nnnce was passed requiring that medi nne be used in th oi. s n. result o repeated violation of this ordinance Dowie was arrested more than a hun dred times, and iu 1893 had achieved Prominence that he made up his imud the time was ripe to found the onurch. Straightway he founded, the Christian Catholic Church of Zion and ade himself its head. Its develop. -.' Cnt binre has been a marvel. Iowie's v V'th is now estimated at fully $20,' ,lf0,0(j0, and he is considered- one of 'shrewdest business men in the V&ited States. Conditions ImproTed Wltbln Atlanta Journal i ifew lean. If there is anything I love to see, it o". Chronicle. is to see the fur fly, when it is flying Ane re i MecKienourg couniy from the right direction, and from the are independent, notwith- right animals. -There are several 8"""D& ine scarcity 01 laoor, nign things that I have an innate constitu- ftnd other ni-on- seemingly tional hatred forjlamong other things I aetnmental tneir welfare. It is with- will name first, whisky, secondly money m the Past few e&n thia condi' sharks, thirdly general cussedness. Uon ha8 001306 about' and every The three powers in this country are nnda the farmera of th said to be the pulpit, the press and the nnancia spaing ana uving net- parior. The reformatory power in each ter than the Prous year. cannot be calculated. If the three Much has been said and written re would combine against any evil, it cent'y about the problem of labor. would have to eo. but while one of Hundreds of negroes have left this these powers is at work, generally the county and city within the past year, other two are looking on enjoying the and in some localities the farmers have fight, and wondering which will get the 56611 unable to secure the necessary victory. The parlor can reform the bands at any price. 'There is only gambling world by going out of the one solution to this problem," said one business itself. The press could reform of tne be8i known and weathiest farni- the politics of this country, and "the ers ln the county, a few days ago. "A pupit could reform the morals of map. larSe number of the negroes who have I am glad to see the fight The Journal been working our cotton and other and other dailies of Atlanta are making cP8 are gone. The talk of bringing on the money sharks. Go it, gentle- foreigners to fill their places is all boeh, men. You can't clean them ! up too for the present, at least. Even if this quickly or too thoroughly. '! were feasible, it would take several I notice with pleasure the generous years to get them on the grounds respones of the citizens of Atlanta to. Meanwhile the condition of the farmers the family of tbe murdered pblieceman. remains the same, j The Southern Colonel .lim English told a great truth planters don't like white labor much, when he said it was not only a charity, anyway. They want their work done but a duty. Yes, sir. the bounden right and if it is not done right, there duty of the citizens of Atlanta to take WN be a kick, and the Southern gen care of the families of murdered police- tleman hasn't learned to be rough with men so long as the common council of a white man. Atlanta will continue to license Decatur ' "The solution of the problem is this: street dives, for the darkness of the Let the farmers diversify their crops nieht is no more traceable to the fact uae improved machinery, and raise that the sun has gone down than that stock. This is the only thing to do, murder is traceable to Decatur street and I am glad to notice that our people whisky. There is not a member of the are instinctively learning it. There is council who has sense enough to go over twice as much improved machinery home by myself but what knows that and farming implements in use in the low down dives of Atlanta sell Mecklenburg county at the present whisky that will make men commit any time than there was only two years crime known to God or man,-and how ag- Almost every farmer has his far the council is responsible for the grain drills, two or three harrows 6f murder of Policeman Drasbach is a different kinds, mowing machine, cul- question it can decide for itself . j There uvaiors, improved plows, etc., and a are two kinds of whisky, bad and worse, large number have grain harvesters, It is bad enough to sell the bad, but to corn harvesters, corn shredders or TUB H0311C1DAI 31 A MIA. NO RBOBOn l!f TUB COUNTY. Kins ton Free Press. Whether expressed or this time in this State a not, just at question - that is largely occupying the'minds of . the people is the increased number of hom- ftrocmoIel ofNertki Car Bar Necreee. Beanllca 11 J. L. Ramsey la Leslie's Weekly. A recent number of Leslie's Weekly contained an able editorial on "The Clark Howell, lades committed within the borders of Negro in the South." our country. Why this is so and what of Atlanta, is quoted as having been thK tk. a.w nZ ? 'It, vi l . . , .. . . I -6- " wvvinj. lucio were reso - "able to ate a number of localities m lint;. ;t Cttn Qrewtn at aalrlfn. Raleigh, Oct. 22. A Isrgely attend ed metting of North Carolina cotton growers is being held here. E. L. Daughtridge, of Edgecombe, president; T. B. Tarker, cecretary. , gute Chemist Kilgore made a talk covering his obser vations of cotton during his recent trip lutions introduced providing that dis cuseion should be solely on the matter the remedy to stay the increasing hom icidal mania would require the wisdom Ohio, Indiana and Illinois where a ne- of a sage to answer. ; J rro is not permitted to liveor even toL .ruof; ttn The point, especially as appUed to get off a train at his town railway sta- ETfippnt " . North CaroUna, that the law as to mur- tion." You say : "If there are local- resolution b 8. B. Alexander W IL der U . inadequate, has been pretty fairly itiesjike this in the south we have Coz, Currie, of Cumberland- T & well discussed in the newspapers, both never heard of them." I was born pk-- jrtu w 1. .'v, by editors and jurist, and the oonolu- and bred in the south, and have visited nornll .n( AtKr. " ' sion reached is that the law is not I almost everr rjortion oi it. Llia'al tt . "... . ' , ... . . , . . . . ' -Aiuiuc, aeversj monms sjro, Lssued a whoUy responsible. Another phase of Weekly has stated the matter correctly drcalu IeUer in to ooUon show- the question shows the responsibility to as to all of the south with the exception :no, .v.. ' 7 be on the jury, system, which entiUes of a single county-Mitchell county, tfoi wcre exce88if . d tne defendant to such an unfair advant- North Carolina. Tor more than thirty wu DOt nearl as lanre as thev staud age over the public, which the State's years that county has managed to dis- it to eMer 8 Jr prosecutor represents This in itself courage any disposition the negro may Uehed n N CaxoUniTand South cannot wholly be the cause as the have manifested to become a resident CaroUna and gave the grower, great en- average jury, however, selected, is ac- in her borders. If gentle hints are not couragement One South Carolina countable to the communitv in which nvooofui fm-.;kiamAtKrv4a.M.4A u a 'u .vawoc-wi. gret 8id it was worth half a million uvx wuuu. &v wjuu iuc oirange 10 say, juucneu county is dollars to that State uuuuua iur wuitn puouc Benumeni win not a democratic stronghold, but is the stand, lherefore tbe question resolves reverse. It is one of the few itself into a sociological one and the in North Hamlin. - j - - ' v " counties that have given a people, as a whole, are responsible after substantial republican majority in all. Accepting this as a fact the thing every election since the civil war. Hence to do is to do away with maudlin senti- partisan sentiment does not enter into ment and acquit our ourselves like men the negro question at all. Mitchell when it comes to a question of duty, county is situated just west of the Al and be governed in our acta in such leghenies, the top of the "Blue Ridge," matters by oursense of duty. aa the mountains are known locally, The public is not clamoring for the forming the line between Mitchell and blood of innocent men to appease their McDowell. Recently a railroad was blood thirsty hnnger nor do right think- projected from Marion, N. C, to ing people demand vexamplee," but Johnson City, Tenn. This road runs they have a right, for self-protection to through Mitchell county, which was ask that just retribution fellow the com- practically isolated heretofore. The mission of crime and that when fairly building of the road has naturally been snown to be guilty no power nor in- followed by teleeraDh and telenhone fluence be allowed toin tervene to avert lines. Of course silk hats, Prince Al the aims of justice. bert coats and other evidences of rivili- The tendency of the times is to fall zation will trraduallv drift intn th OB5BBALRI "Elijah" Dowie, at tbe bead of bis ' restoration army," has Invaded Ktw York city and begun a campaign of purification. President Roosevelt is personally managing tbe republican campaign in Maryland. The president is very anx ious to defeat tbe democratic ticket in order to injure Gorman's presidential boom. . . In Orangeborg county, South Caro lina, A C. Qunter, who wu a witness against J. IL Tillman, cut the throat of a man named Busby, cutting out bis tongue. Cotton men are in receipt of ad vices to tbe effect that the crop la Arkansas has been seriocxlr Injured by frost and that tbe yield is likely to t less than last year's conxamptien. Circuit Attorney Folk who unearth ed the boodlers in tbe If isvixl lgida ture and who prosecuted tVn r 2 ffar--lesaly, will, it now seemi t-V "A cer tain, be nominated by ,Co :i for Governor nxt yar. . The Mary lard" Democrats seem to have a pretty Isir chance for carrying that State,, but should they lose we would hear no more talk of Gorman for ne presidency. If Maryland a lone, it was shown by reports that the crop is not nearly so large as ated. A committee of ten was ordered to be appointed to confer with llarvie Jordan in regard to securing the absolute concert of action as to secure a price of not legs than 10 cents. Such a course had the absolute Democratic, Gorman will oprtainl be approval of tho meeting, mittee will be named later. The com- .nr. Ilanna'e Tribute to nr. Cleveland Washington Dlapatch. lSin. The Washington Tost publishes the following di -patch from Cleveland, Ohio: "Senator Hanna, in a speech to night before a large gathering of Cleve land people, did an unusual thing in paying a tribute to Grover Cleveland, lie Slid that Jefferson was a true Dem ocrat, who if he were living to-day, into a faUeidea of forgiveness or rather county, but the negro will not be wel- woul( not Prnrit himself to sanction indifference, and the criminal goes un- corned to grow up with the country for lDeee c11 Democratic teachings of wmppeu ui justice Decause me majority many years to come, if ever. Tom Johnson. "The farmers will be compelled tn lor r- is not license the place that will sell the worse huskers, threshers and engines. is almost a crime itself. Clean out your dives and Recorder- Druylta oa,i uke-a-vacailon. Burglaries and mur ders will almost cease in Atlanta. I note with pleasure that the new union station is taking shape, and that sufficient labor in the coun- 0 to raise simply cotton and corn. We must raise grasses and small grain which require little labor. The piedmont section is a will I -m . . 1 V It will come ud to the standard. -The good stocic country, it tne people were Southern railway is a great system, and only inclined that way. Some farmers cannot do a little thing without belittl- is this country have imported graded Inn itaotf tr ifa nmn A a m a era ThoTO ia and full blooded stock and are well 1U 1VOVU hU A Vg VVV1A auxav k nothing small about Sam Spencer, and pleased with the experiment. thfin fJolone.l Jim English is a man of "I think that, within a few years, laree proWrtions and the station when the country people of this section finished and furnished will not only be be even more independent than a thing of beauty, but a joy forever to are now. They are beginning to raise the traveling public. It is said all everything they eat on their farm, and thinss come to those who wait. Surely instead of selling their grass, grain and Atlanta has done the waiting, and now tner produce, are turning it into the finished product, pork, cattle, chick- thinps can be done in a nurrv. but a cuc great big thing demands time and plans and thought. If some of the roads remain in the old station I am sure they wili fix it up to meet the de mands of the public, and embellish it so that it will not be an eye sore to the city I am still in the country and for the past week have been gaining ground. ' hope bv first of November to be able - a w o do light work. " I rather work than olav. If any fellow rather play than a w work he can eet a trade out of me on the spot It of the public wills it so. If the crimin ally inclined are confident of sure and swift punishment it is an uncontra dicted fact that it will deter them from the commission of crime. ' - r l ' - 1 that a recent sentence of death passed upon a murderer disclosed the fact that I he was the 42nd to be tried in the county in 20 years for a capital of fence and the first to be given the death penalty. It is too much to ask the public to believe that othf r than Few. if any slaves were owned in "And, he added, "Grover Cleveland Mitchell county. S'.rong union senti- is another great Democrat, greater than ment existed there prior to and durinc nis time or his party, mho looks with the war. The people are plain moun taineers. Excent for tyi tut,t?. -i vuc ufgro, ine inhabitants of Mitchell county are not different from the na tives of other mountain sections in western North Carolina. I have been through the county several times. The people are not lawless ; feuds do not thrive. Strangers are sure of kindly treatment if they merit it. The entire almost disgust upon many of bis fellows up with fallacious doc trines. nJcfferson, Jackson, Tilden and Cleveland wire Democrats whom all good men edmirc and respect " a candidate f cr the nomination for Pres ident by the national Democratic con vention, President Spencer, of the Southern Railway, who has been on a tour of in spection of the entire system, was quoted in Birmingham, Ala., as saving that the greatest problem confronting the railroads of the South is adequate transportation facilities. He expressed the opinion also that the next year, in dustrially, will be the most notable in the history of the South. . complete absolution bid not intervene county is mountainous, romantic and in at least some of those 42 cases to nicturesoue. The streams are hordered put aside justice. by level strips of fertile land. Agri- It is certainly a serious thing to sit cuitUre is the principal industry. ThiIii'i Little Joae. Dos ton Tost. Bishop William Croswell Doane, of Albany, recently entertained J. Tier pont Morgan at Northeast Harbor. Bishop Doane was at one time the rector of au Episcopal church in Hart- Faar Mim K 11 14 Sealfcerm. Keytville, Va., Oct. 19. Passenger train No. 11 and No. 18, a mixed train on the Southern Railway, collided near . here this morning resulting in the death ' of Conductor AtweUT anf MaiT &l7F?niUAms. C. D. Farmer, end- neer of the passenger train, bad an ankle broken and an arm bruised. Fireman Jackson, also of the passen ger trs in, was cut on the bead. Big gagemaeter Tyler baggsgemaster of No 8, had a shoulder dislocated. Engi neer J. D. Taylor, who was a passenger on No. 13 was somewhat bruised. Both engines and the mail and baggage cars were badly damaged, but other cars escaped with slight injury. they in jUgmenn t hUman Ufe: b?1 U fi3 Moonshine whisky is manufactured in ford d the at this church - I Qnnol it ncram that it ia tvi a n o flnrxr tn I 11 rr"l - : :.! I equally certain that it is man's duty to lend his aid in the vindication of the law in the interest of society at large. Nuns Rebuked by Pope Plus. The pope of Rome recently sent his confidential secretary to the mother superior of the cloister of the Sacred Dry Towns Proper. Heart, and demanded her to assemble News and Observer. oil tnp oistprs in the. creat hall at once. o When a town votes out the saloons Two hundred sisters responded within a some croaker is sure to say: "You short while, whereupon the pope's rep kill the town." No doubt some of the resentatives mounted the platform and antis took that position when States- addressed them as follows: ville was voting on prohibiton. It went "In the name of his holiness, Pope "dry." During the past three months Pius: over $150,000 have been invested in "Mother Superior and Sisters The manufacturing enterprises. Within holy father has been much displeased the same period a certain North Caro- to learn that some good-natured, but Una town, well situated for manufactur- ill-advised members of this order have ing, lost the location of a large indust- J presented his sisters with fashionable a Buiati way. iue uuca mines oi Allien- Make Twaja wouU ocgjonally attend. en cunmuuie a poruon oi me mica Xwain one Sunday played a joke upon supply 01 mis country. th rector vr i .1 I xears ago, uverymen irequenuy seni Dr Doe" he said, at the end Of negro drivers with teams to carry com- the 8ervicegf ..j enjoyed your sermon iiiHrriMi mm iHKiiiHn nriiiiiii . iiib tt ki i nivi... - . J ' I tbis morning. 1 welcomed it like an In each instance the negro drivers were 0ld friend. I have, you know, a book toid mat tney must never enter tne county again. A few weeks ago a number of negroes were driven out of Mitchell. They were employed by a telephone company ia putting up poles and wires. Evidently the telephone people had not heard of the unwritten law of Mitchell county. A camp was established just inside the county line. The next day a large delegation of armed citizens walked into the camp at home containing every word of it." "You have not," said Dr. Doane. "I have so," said the humorist. "Well, send that book to me. I'd like to eee it." "I'll send it," Twain replied. And he sent it the next morning, an unabridged dictionary,- to the rector. Brown Kay Cotton Will go Higher. The Charlotte Observer's New York is the old. story over again , the trial enterprise because the capitalists sort of headgear. farmers getting the worst end of it. The did not wish their labor demoralized by "These present have been returned shortest crop of cotton in years, and going down in price every day. I wish the farmers were organized like other big things in this country. It is about time for Mr. Brown to step in again if he proposes to be a real benefactor to the southern formers. It may be that the numerous saloons. and the pope commands that they be Whiskey never yet brought one dol- sold and the proceeds devoted to charity. lar to a town without causing ot ten. the loss "At the same time his holiness wants 1 to impress upon the order, and upon i others inclined to be friendly to himself and relatives, that his sisters have neyer worn hats in their long livesf and that "It is safer to commit murder in South Carolina than to be drunk and he is simply a philanthropist, or it may c'isorderly," says the Spartanburg Jour- they are too old to begin now, that he is in it for the millions, or he nal. "The latter offense invariably "Further am instructed to say that may be doing it just for fun, but is is calls for $5 or 15 days." This sounds the fact that the holy father was elected about time for him to do it again. I pretty rank, but whP douhts that if supreme pontiff by the grace of God, think cotton ip. this section will all be J.ames H. Tillman had walked out on has in no wise altered the social status picked ot by the first of November jit the principal street of Columbia, full of of his sisters and . relatives, who are looks that way now. I am -holding mean wmssrey ana nrea nis pisioi a plain people ana propose to remain bo. my immense crop of eight or. ten hales time or two without hitting anybody, that he would have been hauled to the Lyntblnc After tbe Co arts Fall. Durham Herald. Whenever tbe people take the law in their hands and lynch those whom tbe courts refuse to Dunlsh, we - will stand up and justily it. 4 J8ton Brothers, one . pf the oldest riry fiocda firms of Statesville, assigned Monday morning. Mr. R. V. Brawly u named aa assignee, for 10 1-2 cents minimum in price. I may not get it, but I won't have any cotton to sell until 10 1-2 is reached. Yours feeling better, Sam P. Joses. President Calls Extra session WAamvoTox. Oct. 20. The Presi- . 1 .-W- .... y dent to-pay issued a proclamation call ing the Fifty-eighth Congress into ex traordinary session on Jfovemper y at it? o'clock. 'x The proclamation states that the pur pose of the session is. to. oonsider the commercial convention between tbe United States and Cuba, which re quires the approval of Congress. The hero should remember that un- : easy lies the head that wears a wreath of laurel. police court and at least fined a few dol lars T The same is true of the Raleigh case. If Ernest Haywood had gone out in front pf the postpifice, pulled a fasfol frcm his pocket and fired a few random shots, hla fine would have been at least $25 for carrying concealed weapons. It is mighty hard to reipect the - Jaw- wth such cases, before one's eyes. Charlotte Observer. If the pope's sisters would suddenly ap pear with such new fangled headgear, and ordered all the negroes to leave the I correspondent sends this special : county at once. The telephone con- William C. Brown, the New Orleans tractor tned to argue the matter with cotton operator, left for his homo this the mountaineers-but they were obsti- afternoon. It U estimated that his nate. The negroes went promptly, and profits amount to nearly 18,000,000 the mountaineers supplied the neces-j Mr. Brown was in a happy frame o sary labor to carry on tbe construction j mind when he veiled the flxr of the of the line. j exchange to bid good bye to members A few negroes, live in each of the I To the Observer correspondent he said counties adjoining Mitchell, but th-y ! am no going to take a rest. I have know the exact location of the invisible my business to look after. Cotton will border of that county, and they look go higher, 1 believe. I am a bull on upon it as an insurmountable barrier, coffee also and expect to see it ad And it is. To cross it means a hasty vance." In regard to the rumor that retreat and death. he and Mr. Sully would work in com pany, Mr. Brown said j 'This is the first have heard of it. The present prices for cotton are not due to a bull campaign. Spinnersare buying heavily. They with others are begin niog to realize that the crop wU be a short The following paragraph, which Is from the Charleston News and Courier, goes right to the tpct : "On bis recent visit to Buffelj to sliced the funeral of his old PcMTnaster-General, Wilson. 8. Bissell, Grow CJevtlind made nn!y one call, and thai was cn Hr. J per son Davis, who bad beenli r Several weeks. Mr. Cleveland does ovt ;i3T to have lost any oi bis revpect for th South since bis retirement front j ubuc office, in spite of the fact thai a eat people in the South proved by their attitude towards him thst they were io no way appreciativs of bis treatment of the South and were unworthy of the., confidence placed in them." The death toll of the Alps this season has been enoimous. Already more than 300 accidents ara recorded, result ing in tbe loss of 150 lives. No dis trict has escaped; from the' Jura moon- tains the Dauphins and Maritime Alp, the great Swiss raoges, to the Austrian peaks. Tbe story is the sams, an al most daily tale of periloua ad ten tare,, accident and death. Return to Duel, Says Preacher. The Charlotte News, whose editor is a Presbyterian minister says, editorially ; that in view of the acquittal! of Till- mm m a n 1 XT a imv 4 1 aaa m V ri Is) ka aa as presented to them by members, of uu "'T ' .. . - v , : ' , . , I return to the duel, and tbat this is now tbis orqer, ine Romans mign, imnai they attempted to play the 'grand dame' w"' uoc"' and lady of fashion in their declining 0ther Wn in th." 1DK I.I A A 1 - J ' i l A . . ? A a ft years. The pope assures you ftt li" W5i UBW nothing is further fraxa his sisters m'.nd, and, that his sisters, have no social aspirations whatever." Th Tatboro Southerner has called upon the State Bar Association to put its seal of condemnation, on Judge Peebles who presided during the so called trial of Haywood, charged with the murder of Ludlow Skinner. Tbe Southerner says that the jury could not have done otherwise than acquit in view of the judge's sharge. Teacher What influence moon upon the tide? High School Girl I doVt what effect it has on the tide, has a tendency to make the awfully spoony. has the every man for himself, and tbe one who can gel the drop on his enemy ia the one who must go to the formality of sustaining the plea of sell-defen&o. One of the leading papers in the state makes the editorial declaration that tbe criminal courts seem to be fox the sole but it I purpose of sending petty criminals to unted I wcr 011 roads and giving a clean bill of health to those charged witn Ligner crime. one. it know It i9 rumored in Columbia that Jim Tillman expects to settle in Alabama. Whiskey ! crooked. - Board Street Methodist church of Co- v lumbus, Ga., has orderedju members to straight makes a roan t pay or, seek other fellowship. Fifty j dslinquents have been dropped. The South Carolina papers are not a all backward io declaring the belief that in the trial of Tillman for the murder of Gonirilea witnesses were pro cured to swear lies and that the jury was "fixed." Thus The Gaff oey Led ger says; "We knew the Jury was packed. You ask: How did yoa know it? Did you see it packed? e answer: We have never seen the Rocky Mountains, but we know (hey exist. We did not see tbe jury packed. but we know it was," - Rank talk, this but warranted, no doubt, by the facts. Charlotte Observer. The more trouble some people the mors thsy want to borrow. have Referring again to the case ci Sen tor Piatt, of New York, and the Uis Wood who, it is said threatened to make trouble for him on account ot his marriage a week ago yesterday to -Mrs. Jantvay, the latest story is that Miss Wood received tlS.OOO from lbs Senator as tbe price of peace. - " - . . Nearly 1,000 negroes have packed their, belongings and are prepared to emigrate to South Africa from MltiUsip pi. They will form tbe advance- guard of an army of their race wbicb, it I said, will leave the State because of the well know anti-negro views of Govern nor elect Yerdaman. The Newberry Observer says that Dr. George B. Cromer, tho preeident of Newberry College, has sent bis tion to tbe board of trustees as presi dent of thai institution," the resignation to go into effect on tbe 1st of next July, or at the close of the eoUegiats yar f
The Moore County News (Carthage, N.C.)
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Oct. 29, 1903, edition 1
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