SHIPMAN & OSBORNE CO. HENDERSONVILLE, N. C., THlRSD AY. AUGUST 24, 1905 J . '"' 1 m W . VOL. XV. NO- 4fi A - ' . - r v A BROKEN BRIDAL. Two Lovers Slain in a Collision Auto. Struck by Train. Richmond, Vt., Aug. 14.-Deputy Po lice Commissioner Harris Lindsey, of New York City and Miss Eliza P. Willing, of Chicago, were almost instantly killed at Pike's Crossing, near Bennington, Vt., this afternoon, when a Northbraoch train on the Rutland Railroad struck the automo . bile in which they were traveling. - Miss William' nephew, Ambrose Cra mer, and the chaffeur, B. Adamson, were thrown ut and badly brursed and cut but not seriously injured. The engine was thrown about fifteen feet and the tracks were torn up for 100 feet. The automo bile was dashed to pieces and was after wards destroyed by fire. , Mr. Llndsley and Miss Willing were to have been married next week. The locomotive and one car were run ning backward to meet the flyer from Tur lington station and were thrown from, the rails, the engine being overturned and roll ing a distance of ten or fifteen feet from the rails. Engineer William Sibley and Fire man William Muggan jumped from the cab and were unhurt, while fifteen passen igers also escaped injury. The injured were removed to the hospi tal at the Soldier's Home and were resting 'comfortably late tonight. The accident occurred shortly after 4 o'clock this afternoon as the party were tcayei&ng un a street grade leading over the crossing. Hr. Lindaley and Hiss Willing occupied the rear scat of the car, & big tour ing machine. The boy and the -chaffeur were in front. There is a curve near the crossing and Adamson states that he did not eee the train until it was upon them. Engineer Sibley and fireman make the same state ment. The locomotive tender struck the rear seat of the automobile which was thrown about 60 feet. For sunburn, tetter AMd all tkin jud so?,d -diseases, DeWitt's Witch Hazel Sulve has mocqut. It is a certain cure for blind, iblmJiog, itcbicg and protruding piles. It will draw the fire out of a but a anil he? I without leaving a scar. BoMs, old tores, carbuncles, etc., t re quiekly cored fcjy ibe va?e ef the genuine De Wilt's Witch Hzsi Salve. ..Ae?cpt no subsUite as heyje of- tea danRerbua aniinceJnvdld,Uiy. P. Y. Hunter. :.' To the Carolina Mountains, i. Give me the land where the wild roses ram ble. Where the trailing arbutas marks Die spring with its bloom, Where the laurel and ivy and cliff-fiojadiag bramble Bathe the air 'neath a halo of softest? per fume. 2. The' fend where still echoes the black mai n anys' cooning Where lingerejthe spirit of knighthood--and clear .Like the voice of the angels communing, Sighs the sweet-voiced maid to her brave J Cavilier. 3. Thou give me this land, 'tis enough quite forever, A boon far more precious than honors1' veneer. And far though I roam, may my thoughts linger ever, 'Round the flower-twined haunt of the staunch mountaineer. Charlotte News, "It is the belief in certain quarters in'. Washington tbat Marion But'er is the real head of the republican party in this state. When the republican party tbisbtate. VVnaa the repulican party in jxortn uaronna can ormg itself to forget the past record of Butler and" be willing to follow bira as its leader, then that party must be in a pathetic plight.' Charlotte New. M0RTGAGE0N GIRL'S HEART. Austrian Paid Her Fare Across the Atlantic, She Married Another. Wilkesbarre, Pa. (Special.) Joseph Kropkern, of this city, today sued for the amount of a mortgage he had upon theaf fections of Miss Joeefy Wassal, because she married another man after being promised to him. He and the girl's brother are great friends and a match was arranged be tween them, although the girl was in Aua tna. Kropkern paid $45 to bring her here, bat when she came he failed to propose, thinking, as he said today, that the brother bad made, the proposal for him and that the marriage was understood. N The girl, after waiting several weeks, a couple of days ago married another man, whereupon Krop kern today brought suit for the $45. Alderman Donehue gave judgement; against the girl and ordered it Daid. -f ' THE NEGRO OF TODAY. And a Type of the Old School That is Fast Disappearing. Yesterday afternoon, on turning sudden ly the corner of a street I ran into a little negro lad of perhaps 11 years. . Some half dozen articles which he probably was car rying home from the store, were knocked from his arms by the collision and scatter ed In as many different directions upon the pavement, a newspaper which I carried in my hand when we ran together was also dislodged by the contact. ' Tipping the ragged excuse for a cap that he wore, bowing and looking very regret ful and with "scuse me sab, I'se berry sor ry,' he proceeded to restore to me my pa per in utter disregard of bis own half-dozen bundles scattered hither aad thither upon the sidewalk. Then gathering up his pack ages one by one, and "giving his ragged cap Another tip, tnis time with his ebony face wreathed in smiles, hurried on his way. . I stood still for u moment and watched him as he trudged down the street. His head was thrown back and he whis tled a tune a merry, happy tune. He was conscious perhaps of having repaired his fault, (no more his than mine) and done his duty as a gentleman? Ah, no. He was only a ragged negro boy, and could not do a duty "aa a gentleman:" Yet, methinks, there are many who boast of their blue blood, claiming by birth, the title of gen tlemen, and many others whose claim to the title depends upon the size of their bank account, who might learn a much needed lesson iirtrue gentility and polite ness, from this little ragged urchin, de scendant of Africa sable race. As I watched him go down the street I thought. "How strange! Have the years rolled backward and the . old days come again?" But no. Here comes another negro. Panama hat on back of head, patent leather shoes, cigarette between his teeth, bristling with self importance and with the brand of A. D. 190 apparent all over him, who al most pushes me into the street and keeps straight ahead with a jaunty, self-satisfied air." And thus I am reminded , that the year 60 was 45 years ago and this is an ae of equal rights" and "liberty." But that first little negro he of the lad ed ragged cap and the cherry Mnile-what of 'him? I do "'not "know his name iffever saw him before. But . I'll wager that he received his training from one of the south 's truest types of gentlemen the old faith ful ante bellum negro his father or grand father, probably. Here's to their happiness and prosperi ty those old negroes, the few who are liv ing. To their eternal peace and well-being the many who are dead. Frank Armfield Hampton in Charlotte News. Dt-ar Gds: I have solved the mohei'-i- law problem; just give her regal ly IJol Hstor'9 Rd :ky Mountain Tea. It wi'l ruke ber healtoy, happy pud dojile a3 a lamb. 35 cents. Tea or Tablets. . Pointed Paragraphs. (Chicago News.) Don't cry oyer spilt milk. Call the cat. There are also a number of fugitives from injustice. Necessity knows bo law, but many a young lawyer knows necessity. The man who has more than he needs never had more than he wants. No, Cordelia, marriage and happiness are not necessarily synonomous. A soft-headed nail and a hard-headed man are both difficult to drive. Some politicians are self-made, but most of th candidates'are machine-made. A sour mash drives some men to the sa toon and some others to the divorce court. Though the wisdom of the ancients may h we been superior to ours, we are still al bere is a vast difference between get ting ' ahead in the world and getting a head in a. ifctooa. It's U twenty-fifth anniversary of her debut . tQe world that is oftenest cele brated 11 woman. Good Ben are seldom heard of,' but the rascals at always getting their names in the police reports. A man's ' laziness has certainly reached the limit wl ne tee3 that it is too much trouble to tr T to avoid trouble. A few couni vrfetters have lately been making and tr. vine to sell imitations of Dr. King's Ni V. Discovery for Con sumption, Coug bsand Colds, and other medicines, then defrauding the pub lic. This Is to w. n you to beware of such people, who 8efc to profit, through stealing the 1 repudiation of remedies which have been successfully cureinar disease for over 35 ..- years. A sure pro xectlonto you, is pur5 name . on the wranoer. Lioolc lor l vu mi vr. smg s, ottBuckienrs remedied s all others are mere imitations. H. v E. dgucklen & Co., Chloogo, Ijiaud Win dso Canada. SOME THINGS TO DO. Think of Them -as You Pass Along the Rugged Path of Life.: Be helpful, be sociable, be unselfish, be generous, be a good listener, never worry or whine, study the art of pleasing, be frank, open and truthful, always be ready to lend a hand, be kind and polite to every body, be self-confident, but not conceited, never monopolize the conversation, take a genuine interest in other people, always look on the bright side of things, take pains to remember names and faces, never criti cise or say unkind things of others, look for the good in others and not for their faults, cultivate health and thus radiate strength and courage, forgive and forget injuries, but never forget benefits, rejoice as genuinely in another's success as in your own, always be considerate of the rights and feelings of others, have a good . time, but never let fun degenerate into, license, learn to control yourself under the most trying circumstances, have a kind word and a cherry, encouraging smile for every one, be respectful to women and chivalrous in your attitude toward them, meet trouble like a man and cheerf ally endure what you can't cure, believe in the brotherhood of man, and recognize no closs distinction. Success. HOLY JUMPER UNDER ARREST. Danville Man Charges Him With Enticing His Wife Away. (Danville, Va,, Dispatch.) ;" . L. Walker, a painter, swore out a warrant this afternoon for the arrest of Rev. A. G. Garr, who is at the head of a sect of religious enthusiasts, known as the Holy Jumpers, on the charge of en ticing his wife to leave him and for se creting his children from him. Walk er's wife has for tho past eight months been attending the services of the Holy Jumpers and has by degrees been con verted to their religion. On . last Sun day night she joined the Church, de spite the protests of her husband. One of the doctrines of the Holy Jumpers is that it is wrong for any member of the flock to mary a non-member. Mr. Walker says that Mrs. Walker has been under the influence of Rev. Garr since 9he--beganattending the services, and has not for several, months been 'a wife to hm. When the man went home to dinner today he found his wife and two children missing, as well as all their belongings. Walker discovered that his wife had taken refuge in the Holiness House, a large building occupied by the Holy Jumpers. He went to the house, and when he asked for his wife and children Rev. Garr told him that he could not see them unless he became converted to the faith. Walker is indignant over the affair, swears vengeance. He believes that the Holiness preacher has exerted an evil influence over his wife, and this is at the bottom of her deserting him. Over a dozen of the Holy Jumpers, in cluding many women, recently served terms in jail because they persisted in yelling and screaming during their ser vices on the streets, in defiance to the mayor's orders to them to stop. The night service of this sect attract many people, who come for curiosity. The members of the congregation dance under hoisted umbrellas, women preach while holding crying babies in their arms, and other strange antics form the part of a ceremony that is ridiculous in the extreme. . ; A number of complaints have been made by husbands to the police that their wives have either deserted them or gone crazy as a result of joining the Holiness Church. Schoof for the Blind. The North Carolina School for the Blind in Raleigh will not open until September 20th, this fall, on account of impossibility of completing the repairs that have been in progress some weeks, $7,500 being expended in this work prin cipally for cement floors in the base ments of all the buildings and the doub ling of the capacity of the laundry. Sick wards are being prepared also. It is a notable fact that although the institu tion is sixty-five yeare old there has been heretofore no provision made for the separation of the sick from the gen eral student quarters. Superintendent Jno. E. Ray says the enrollment this year will exceed 350. MPOIIiED HER BBAUT1T. Harriet Howard, of W. 34th St., New York, at one time had her beauty spoil ed with skin trouble, She writes: "I had Salt Rheum or Eczema for years, but nothing would cure it, until I used Bucklen's Arnica Salve.'' A quick and sure healer for cuts, burns and sores. 5c at The Justus drug: store fYOUNG MAN BEWARE. if:-' If Yoi are to Blame.Take the Med- icine Without Protest. Toung man you" have won her. Now don'tpoil her. If you have been honest shells married you with her eyes open to the fa)ct that you are poor. She is willing tomaiie the best of your poverty; she is willing to "skimp and pinch." Let her helper I you build up for hor a pedestal and set her thereon and adorn he with flashing gems that you can ill afford, you will spoil her. - . ... . " -V'- If you want to see her dashing around with a bull pup and diamonds, while you wear a wrinkled brow and patches, v do it. But remember as she sails past you that you nave ho one but yourself to blame. - Some husbands are big enough fools to be proud of a strutting wife. They love to see sparkle, while they become gray and seedy. They point her out as she rustles by, meanwhile pulling the rags from a worn out cuff. - The man who does this is not being fair to his wife. He is doing her a life-long injury. . He is robbing her of the delight of lov ing him. He is turning her friends against her. . V He is setting her up for ridicule. - He is making a fool of her. Few women can resist the desire to gratify their love for pretty clothes. You knew it when you denied yourself a suit that the might have a lace scarf. By and by the worm will turn. You will feel abused and neglected. When that day comes remember tbat you are to blame. You, .it was, who set your wife upon a pe destal. When you kneel before her throne, holding up the gold that has broken your health and sharpened your knees, don't blame her. The man that crawls around in beneath a : woman's feet may the dust keep on crfwling. ?you leve her and value your own and bappiness let her do her part. Tell her iuc truth when the cash runs low. Don't be a weakling and go a-blubcring to borrow enough meney to buy the hat she wants. (five your wife what you c&n afford hon. syr. Give it freely and gladly. But' be trink with her; don't conceal from her the wj-ty purse, jJr - Doti't make a queen of'-youciwifernntil you can afford to be her king There is not a woman on the face of the earth who will love you after you have made yourself her slave. Exchange. Never in be way, no trouble to csrry, esy to take, pleasant and never ffiling in re spV are DeWiU's LUtle Early Eeis. These famous little pil's are a ccriem guar atee8gv:t headache, bil'orfns to.pid liver Bid fill of the reso'tJag from con: siipation. They tonic pod strengthen tbe liver. Sold by F. V. Hrnter. The Law Unconstitutional. Asheville, N. C, Aug. 14. Special. Judge Fred Moore this afternoon signed an order compelling the county commissioners to turn over the making out of the tax list and the annual county statement to Regis ter of Deeds Fortune instead of Auditor Stokeley. The decision of Judge Moore was in ef fect that the auditor's office, created bytbe last legislature, in so far as it effected the emoluments of the office of register of deeds was unconstitutional. The salary of the auditor was fixed at f 1,200 a year, the major portion of his work being the tax . lists and the annual state ment, heretofore made by the register of deeds who received several hundred dollars for the work. When the office was created Mr. For iune decided to contest that portion of the act affecting his salary with the result that the decision was in his favor. It is said that the constitutionality of the office audi tor as whole will now be tested, that the commissioners will refuse to pay the audi tor his salary since he does not perform all the duties set out in the act and that the auditor will sue for his pay. Bryan to Donate Library. Springfield, HL, Aug. 12. William J. Bryan has made known his plan to give a library to the town of Salem, his birth place. The library building, the ground for which will be broken December 11, will occupy the site on which the house in which Bryan was born now stands. The Bryan homestead will be moved across the street, opposite the library. Mr. Bryan will be present and speak when the earth is turned, and he will then depart for New York to embark on a European tour. After a hearty meal a dose of Kodol Dyspepsia Cure will prevent an attack of Indigestion. Kodol is a thorough diges ant and a guaranteed cure for Indigestions Dyspepsia, Gas on the Stomach, Weak Heart, Sour Risings", Bad Breath and all Stomach troubles. Sold by F. V. Hunter THE OLD NORTH STATE. Pride and Devotion of North Caro linians to Their State Justified by her History and Achieve ments of Her Sons. Houston, Texas Chronicle. There is something admirable and in spiring in the state pride of the people of North Carolina, and their pride in and devotion to their state is justified by her history and by the achievements of North Carolinians from the period of the Revolution until this good day. As one of the thirteen Colonies which re belled against British tyranny she was the theatre of bloody war, and her sons bore well their part in that memorable struggle. . Recent historical investigation has proved that upon her soil was framed and proclaimed at Mecklenburg the first Declaration of Independence, and in the conflict which followed upon the latter declarations at Philadelphia many a son of North Carolina sealed with his blood his devotion to the principles which her people had been the first to proclaim. . When independence had been achiev ed her sons stood as peer of the proud est in the halls of legislation, and were potent factors in shaping the policy and destiny of the young republic, for the existence of which they were in such great and honorable measure respon sible. During the formative stage of the na- ilonar government, when there was a struggle between intellectual giants re presenting the respective contentions for a strong centralized government on one side and a government wherein the autonomy of the states and their, unsur rendered sovereignty should be the guiding and controlling policy and prin ciple on the other. North Carolina statesmen stood always for the latter contention, the true faith and the basic principles of the republic conceived and created by the patriotism and genius o Jefferson and Madison and their great compatriots. - North Carolina always, adhered to lofty political ideals. Her representa tive in Congress and her senators were men of the highest intellectual and moral sunward, ska swit to- jrepr-. Beht her in the ' national councils none busmen worthy of her historic and lofty political and social traditions. It would have been as impossible for a man with a tainted record or upon whose name there rested even the suspicion of dis honor to have secured a seat as repre sentative or senator from the Old North State as it would for an unpardoned sin ner to have entered heaven. In that old state there have always been and are yet maintnined the loft iest social standards and traditions. The meretricious and demoralizing com mercialism which so dominates other sections has found no lodgment there. Money there is not the measure of merit" No man buys his way into society there. The people hold to the honorable, ex alted, ancient social faiths and there is to be found an aristocracy not of wealth but of breeding and grace and. culture. The people of North Carolina not only profess devotion to the true principles of republican government, but are ever ready to make good their professions, and when their rights were disregarded and aggression upon the soil of their beloved state was threatened, they rose as one man to defend their homes and firesides, and historical statistics prove that North Carolina sent more soldiers to battle in proportion to population than was ever furnished by any state or nation in all the annals of human history. Great as was her contributions to the armies of the south in numbers, the quality of her soldiery was equally as remarkable. Her people cherish with pardonable and imperishable pride the record of North Carolina's sons from 1861 to 1865, and on a monument recent ly erected in that state In perpetuation of the memory of their matchless deeds there is graven the inscription, sustain ed by historical records: "First at Beth el.' Farthest at Gettysburg, and last at Appomattox." ' To read that inscription thrills every man capable of appreciating heroism and devotion to duty, like a bugle call. First in the opening battle, f artherest in the advance up the historic heights of Gettysburg, and last to yield when the great drama closed in gloom, but yet in glory at Appomattox is a record upon which North Carolina may well rest through all the changing years. It stands and unmatchable, and the impar tial historian of the future will write North' Carolina down as she deserves.' " The devotion of her . people to which they testified by their blood in time of war was not more remarkable and scarcely more admirable than has been that displayed in the well-nigh as trying times of peace. Though her fields were laid waste, the homes of her people de stroyed, her Industries prostrated, and anguish, sorrow uuspeakable and pov erty dire kept watch and ward by every hearthstone, yet her children did not forsake her in the hour of Her darkness and desolation, but facing a future that seemea nopeiess, out of verv love of their old mother they have redeemed and de llvered her from the hand of the spoiler and she is now a land of prosperity in peace and plenty smiling. Grand old state! The home of a brave, faithful, glorious people, who love lib erty better than life, who hold unseduo- ed to the Dolitical and social teach ings and traditions of their fathers, who have in council hall and on battle field made luminous the pages of history, whose sons in her defense have ."trod the road to dusty death as to a festival, ' and watered the roots of the tree of constitutional government with their heroic blood. Admitting no political guilt, asking pardon of no man or no power, with con sciences void of offense in past and trust ing yet in the God of their fathers, they have rebuilded their waste places, re stored their broken fortunes, regained their political supremacy and glorying in her past, rejoicing in the abundant prosperity of her present, with the song of the husbandman, the roar of the fur nace, the hum of the spindle and the whirr of the loom, they are heralding the triumphant march . of North Caro lina toward a future which shall be worthy of her richest and noblest his toric and heroic traditions. The pills that act as a tonic, and not as a drastic purge, are De Witt's little Eeariy Risers. They cure Headache, Constipa tion, Billiousnesa, Jaundice, etc. Early Risers are small and easy to take and easy to act. Sold by F. V. Hunter, . m m Suggestions for HendersonvIHe. Asheville, Aug. 16. The Asheville board of trade, desirous of ascertaining the number of visitors to Asheville at this season of the year, will undertake with the co-operation of the mayor and board of aldermen, a census of the strangers here. The census will proba bly be taken early next week. It i not proposed to take a census of those visitors who spent a time in Asheville this season or this year, but only those -sojourning here when the census man makes his round. It is conceded that there are - more visitors "here now, or wT!I1 wheja reM5'i&K:ett reach Asheville this week, than ever before in the city 'a history and the board of trade, in order to ascertain the num- . ber, will make a house-to-house canvass. It is proposed to take the census in one x day in order that names may not be du plicated to; send out a large number of canvassers with ballot boxes and slips of paper as ballots and to request ' each boarding house keeker to deposit with in the box in the hands of the census taker the number of guests in the house. In this way the prosperous or unprcs perous condition of the boarding houses will not be known. No, Mills River Declined. Asheville, Aug. 16. Upon the peti tion of the citizens of Avery's Creek township, the board of county commis sioners yesterday ordered that an elec tion be held in that township Saturday, September 16, to determine whether the said township shall issue $5,000 in bonds for subscriptions of that amount of stock to the building of the Appalachian In terurban Railway. Well informed citizens of the Avery's Creek section, in town this week take an optimistic yiew of the proposed road and say that there is little doubt but the bond issue will carry by a large majori ty. Avery's Creek adjoins Henderson county and in view of the fact Hills River, adjoining Avery's Creek on the Hendorson county side of the line, has voted bonds, as have also other town ships in Henderson, the people of Av ery's Creek are anxious that the road extend through their section and are willing to help the project alone in a substantial manner. If Avery's Creek votes the bonds, a bond election will probably be called for Lower Hominy. the township lying between Asheville and Avery s Creek, and the road pushed on toward this city. ' State Printers Improving Plant. Mestrs. . M. Uzzell & Co. have taken another step forward in their determi- nation to handle the state printing promptly, by putting in a new Smythe stitching machine. The state work has increased so rapidly during recent years that it is next to an . impossibility to meet the demands of the various depart ments without employing modern meth- -ods and realizing this fact, the state printers have set about the task. The recent addition of a folding machine, with a capacity of 20,000 32-page forms daily, and the rapid stitcher just put in. ' means that delays will soon be "things of the past." Raleigh Post. ; i Jl i v v -: ..Tv.'"'. .1 ' -"V. V ft 1-. - v.i.v.