, X i-;y-r ' ? 1' v. i il':. i;i -r'fl -,' t-V : l'" :. T ' . 'V:. riVI-V-- ' V PUBLISHED.SEMl-WEEkLt 'At- 1 VMVm-rr- ., - y. V - . -LJ j i 1 I mfmmmmmmmK , r . i ... -.TTT r .n;i.:. ' ' "" ' ....... r ' ; ' i r,. . ' ' 5 i, . ,-V, - H .p iMTSRIOAN PRESIDENT four .years and nine: out of 'tenmu ractiimiosr mt,faer of women arid .child- f am elected we shall hav the ablest tell, you ttat-the poprtoWWr waved haridker- rftbinet that this country can supply islaUon will be that which J J.tt0r jeth - . . Mr. Hughes also declared - that he to nrotect meinran ;inausy, in.w ? , . .. . ,6,ntain American, rurhts and -7'. . i ... . . .. i i muuiY uwvwwk -7iri r - i 'niAmi asm nia wkhlchi uui i nvi." ;.- - ; ce ;? Ofioree'. Harvey v guessed wrong as? tb'only one state in. his .election I ? Vwoi:. in 190a he was only -I7f eie- t 'ipi " v-4.oa ntA of. the .way, 'and in 1904 only 22. -In April of the present y es, before a single state : had' in dicated a preference for the nominee, he closed an analysis of the political Situation under the heading "Nobody for Huirhes But the People with the positive prediction that "rig or wrongly, wisely or noi, the people will prevail and Charles will .be the next Be- nblican candidate . for President of . United . States." , In the Wortn Airerican Keview to be pubhshed to Wrrow toionel Harvey predicts tiie election of Hughes as certain, m tail as follows: ' " v . 1 Electoral : votes essential to- a choice, 26We predict that' Mr; Hughes. will .carry these states: . . v California - - Cknneticut " Idaho ' . Illinois ; . ;Iowa - ' Kansas ; 'Maine Massachusetts -r' r""" ' Michigan : ;: Minnesota r : f f 'New Hampshire r .' New Jersey .' . - -New Mexico :"iv K:- New-- -York ' , ; North Dokato ; V . Oregon - - V -Pennsylvania , Rode Island . ; - -'. ' South Dakota ! : ' Utah - - r uVJVermont - . ; ": Washington " Wyoming . 77" I Total -2? . - We. expect that Mr. Hughes will carry these: V'UAUUMW We believe MW4; Hughes ilarry "TWawaTft '. : - 9A wuw . O Maryland enfoKementof the lSW ppeared to them not t be influenc- osjqn . ,ZJ c .and -believe tobe m bje plea that President ;son , w ?e "f rw; c,4Al;i ingi th Kl Md kept the nation out of war. waen cxeuj. uaswery " ky, r1 would tiffht ! at loreign . uuiuwrcc . . . ,f; :: 13 7 4 29 13 10 .6 18 15 12 4 14 3 45 5 5 38 5 5 4 4 ,7 3 " vrri -i-ir sii .t"1"1 natis-y i v - wfpr tour would mamtein.Amencaa.nghts ai severe competition it; is destmea 1 pped WmZiZL th. firt that he had "absolutely, no patieA meet at the conclusion tte been whatever witii the idea that n , Am- Europe, It is acknowledged even by, :&tt(jaft1rill be:i?tggSl-U JT pMIv to erican citizen, following his lawful officers in the Bureau foreign ana pafiCT- eTwh?had' bee 'influenced pursuits" in any, part of the wprid, Domestic Commerce at e fhaUjj wmrexnianlfC MeSbut he had de- should' be left unprotected by .the compelled. to. meet an unusually pres-. - JVc -; My' SL.Va hAedared: exactly the country ' from which he came." - sing foreign competition, 'lnesei, im amaze, Mt. Hughes said, Adivtba!Ltiim:Wwyr 'enaoV h RAidJv-Hf ia .11troRted that a nroner at- this fact when Placed to;ita I inight call the early Victor-Itjude is that a policy of . protection legislation a clause nnown.-. wij-ia yvirginiai withwaVA PWf-l&a't ; - v j M - '.. - should .not b maintained , because : it dumping provision, w our peace: ; , . ed supply, ?ut wnicti will; be more .of the nature,. 0 " fateruption, ex- Ia it possible that any uch notion the protection theAmenca prccer. .k,v,n 2lt floras i approval, bing after should obtain in the shadow of Bunker must have.,.. . I ; T Anite of a prevision which Aakea ?m W Y?:.,:- JA vam -tv v i ;: "Th anti dumninTlwovision of , the ,Tsessiori of liquor in certainqnarj .. . . . mn1 P .v - anA . . ... , ... a - . , .- ik Liciuea in. jm.jucw m ,ne auoiencce iuiw w i uniawiui ipr any ;Jioum 4iw ji : Several voices rticlea from any foreign country to .laid ia by, those abld to, provide maV. v " V,.itJWrtedTJL.,. This feature jpf u8c ki 11 11 nrLimca niMiur t iny . . -c r T- ' V .'.'11 , If we are to save sell f.:' ':---mhtrialW:-less IVhi law. it is, exiected,:wilJ soon iijeel than'the actual market value a who- f a test in cwrrt, cThe inails. have lesale price : of such articles vat ; the been swamped xot past ew time of exportation to cth United $Ul letterf. ;froa-yjJ States in the principal markets of the concerns "seHeiting fotare prderti tung w uuj '-ir,: -IK . IS KILLED BI; AJ sale price xreignt auxy, ana wiex 1-1...,. j.-.-. - Total - 3 We alott t Mr. Wilson beyond ques tien: . ' - . ' Alabama -- "Arkansas Elorida " ;Georgja . ;-; - rVirginia . jKentucky - Xiouisiana " - " Mississippi 'jNorth Carolina Cnt-Ti Piarnlina - OWUWU. 12 Tennessee s " Texas . . 14 12 13 10 10 12 10 t called "what I cvin,1tia the answer: "No."' ; Mri Hughes can beetrusted to kea?l ; , M . nriroaraA his ad- bJs, wonLM answered Colonel . Raose- d ,in Advance, and whilehe adhered velt. ; When he, says "f TTt to. it in substanee, made radical nor submit to such deeds as me nn- of its phraseelogy in delw- rt T.iiitania or the killing qfJ" , x ' ourciUsen, in Mexico be. meanj what ; to on Mr ne says. r ' -HnW nn various tonic. . and one . You have stood up and listened w who persisted finally made him self heard amid confusion, :.: !'What specific policy will you take Mexico V.:: the heckler . shouted. What specific policy will you take in t, om vrwi wino' to do fr lsadinf to the fair grpndtod lVQe for Mr. Wilson. because ne Kept s ei ht hour biut - What- . question was iosi osa and cat calls: son in )uww. rwSi;iiafl?c1uir death bf W of Washington or uncom." j i ;.-I.tdont; know," Mr. Hughes re- criminal law that it will b$Wlfi' v :;,::. .:,:, He was" interrupted again whn. he 1 what sort, ef mess we, will impossioie w couyiw that provision, however rajunj importations may oe to. AmeruM, trjy. iw- a wh&e ve- lki.;4-u.i. mf thv were there I v- -- k: VWrt we will ? not dustry, unless it bcleariyprove bis ects were done with tne Y t; bny iflWe4.thH hl t 2j-jiL& thf to vote n:- Second when we ay we wiU destroying: or ntfmngrw vhm .. , ---iMn hosbfM. ViZXZZl - : . V anrg -V . CUV ' WAbll T AI 1 HTkA W A KTkllTiiriiin - nHflilcr , A11U , VW 1 nnrfcAtiAn chariFesi nrovided.tha, sucn i ' 5aiisouTy -vcw ? I t Hr-T ;,t acts he done the iin -. laiistrv'mttWsvTeninW ttt use;they -were written: k-' " 1 . . - .. -t. !r v ... - . . ii. kitNTMU i r ntrnT wnm Villi HI C LUlU v I or . an mousxry m r the establishment the United States. of 2 the .accident: xotaen,: ww.i -r .T vi.- W. tkT the Democratic Admimswaupn soeed;ne: bodies all the American mdustry, ini Mt;-tlnkeV'was years old, Ifeives wneme: file colonel declared. The women applauded his ref erence law is fatally .defective, in "Jit" least I - jow ana sii children, one son is to hyphenated citizens; ! respect the righW Jf '. small -nations l.wnt mft them ia- realiy And third, itlhall be miderstoed ie , T - - .. . ... ... . . ! ico inLatin Amenesj ao ,ise ! that American rights With respect lives and property shall be. protected,." .The audience , applauded and cneerea. Mr. Hughes declaration ef his in- tPTition to be "an There is no room in this country . tf elected was interrupted by 8ollmi? nrices of foreign products inj the1 Slate University iasilfbr the perpetuation of diflferent naf- .hpespt. ani aT)plauses at the conclusion the coimtry1 of. production are; so !W - cbnmienrthTOUfhofit Ihejiiyaities, he continued. To divide 1 every Mr. Hughes said fW those aroods could be ;sbld 'inj - . - - . : 1 6nr citizens along political racial lines . eiwlaf be guUty of moral treason to the) . exception of the - presidency vuMfMCber. n we are to save otir wqrkingmen from a : catastrophe we inuSt plan a tariff; protection' alohg sound economic lines.'?..."; Z1 , Taking up ; the. Xdamson -Jaw, iftlr. Hughes said: - ' Recently the head -of ;the"opposing party sought ' to increase the wages at a " group of railroad employes con stituting less ; than- 20 per 'cent, of those employed by railroad companies I believe that this legislation will be found by labor even by th,ose who are ostensibly the beneficaries of the act to 4).denve.5;;;v -"If. the -law , is. effective, the great bpdy of Workers must pay the bill, as the burden' must fall upon the public, thus .constituting - class legislation of a most objectionable character. "I believe that.: government , action should be fair to all.: We proposed te protect "the American workingman to protect the American, wage scale, to the end that there may be the largest participation possible, in the prosperi-: ty, of expanding industry. . "When, ta commercial-struggles be gin anew the1 industry of every Euro- peaiv country,, will, be backed by the good;wi and intelligent oversight of their ? government. .r Our: national pol- - icy reiuires.thatyr our government maintain a strict schutiny of business organizationsV;but;j:;this(k supervision can be - effective and' yet leave the government free to encourage, legiti mate and ; wholesome business enter prises. I stand for such- supervision and ; control, but I demand that all business be treated fairly and justly "The present administration has viewed business enterprise' with sus picion and has made the 'government " a brake to the wheels of legitimate industrial progress. It has put this country in four years further pn the road to a class war than has .been, ac complished in a- generation before. "Ycu ask what road; I ' proposed to travel. These are the principal which mark it an executive responsible to, the : whole nation, a- cabinet chosen from bur ablest men, a foreign policy that stands courteously, but firmly and consistently r for American 'rights, a ilag that protects the American citizen in his lawful rights, wherever his leg- itimatevbusiness may take him, a pre- y tparaucn lor iraue cuuia-tiwiv. rni.i -, y 1 sheJlpTCtecall i ; Mex--i workmenjft government supervision oi . to I hase, will act online assurapwyw wu. state. Mr. Tolbert' lives" at i who rn' his waV to' the fair t .. r . . ... . . ... ... i . i .. . - . . . v . ... . . de nap-pAed;-f ' ' ; ;.;', ::; 1 . He spoke tonight at a mass meeting to have governea w ctiy sr.-anfi tteita shrdlu "emyp. vbgyp ffor.;the Hamilton club at the stock-J0f the present admimstrationr-1 iook When the trefehbUc." I is radically different from that wV 20 .. 149 Total .i We regard as doubtful. Arizona iColeeado - : lssoari Jlontana - ;;Nebraska Nevada V West Virginia . i e 3 6 18 4 8 3 8 that those goods America at the foreign selling price nlus freight,and still at a, ptice. be low that which the American, produ rr. with his high wage . scales, and shorter hours of labor, 'cjin Ipossibly ; : , , 1 - : T , - iTjon the President as the executive affore to accept. Second, tne- vpmiuw lurWTrirA v cnilNT&MBHfi Wfifn CJolcnel Roosevelt began his , ' the eovernmen xx markets. Thus is placed upen ; the MEXICAN iCOUNTKROTl VJ . . de-J business manager aifd bis considera- American compter . theurdenofj;, Tampa, Oct. 2-Viuwa j "11 minutes Thecrowd tiW.of- mere politics .and rtis collecting evidence asto the Value j sutes Secret 'Smr-Am--r- their expediency must yield. ,;At mjery a foreign countryand also, tevadence Wright "dropped in on A. Bm4 '.5 e Colonel obtained a outset ofHhe present dnumstration, x is 'substaJitialryVless. a .erocer , v,, tn be al- i the two departments of govern- than the value.. .To .llectand : pry. $280,000. in Mexican money The: He janghed at a huge ment -most closly touching our for- duce evidence of thischaracter ia.a cre Wrvke num pronouncedJhbS gE the "Roosevelt big stick" eign relations the department of state foreign country would be mor costly counterfeit and .expressed .bundle Was handed him'nd declared that and the department f the than .any American ;rQducer; could to JMdungton. nThe poegs;, galnt Wilson, instead: of carrying there were chosen men, undertake.' Third, theiaw,i,,aWx curea ymuej, tl"ratamitick, had spoken harshly ana ever tneir anuu. !Wttlm&l a powder puff. ' solutely unequal w defective in that it caanot be enforced I when "he bought; an c4d Total - - --5 Grand Totals; . Hughes - Wilson --.... . Doubtful ---.7.. - w mfTAKEN HIS FRIEND f J FOR A BURGLAR SHOOTS it Durham, Oct 29. Believing him to ls:JViMftBurdai. J. W. Creech a. wealthy t "v:-- i t 4-la Tpoville sec- : wnacco x wix- - - . tion of Oak Grove Township in this eounty, early this morning shot and vfiiuf John Emery, a young man who t,o lied with him fora. number of yearn Following the shooting, of flcers in this city were notified, and a " thorough investigation resulted. Cor t pt. A. C. Jordon stated that his ver- At would be that Emery earn to v - "Ms death by a mistaken on the part of Emery, according to,, , infermation -Obtained by-.0fficersf had.gone to call 'V pm a young lady' friend, - and re : :A home shortly after midnight. 'M 7vM arrived his footsteps awoke ' Mr. Creech, 'who says that he called ... . . - imn 4.1.0 ' UnttrurV- he -nd asKea.. iu -- .-.. - did not 'reply and he opened with his etm. The bullet enter- ' " . j i?Mra mftuth. and caased al v ost instant death. Mr. Creech, who , rfose friend of Emory ,s near- f; v? jy hysterical witii'remorse, it is said. bemuse of the speemcreqreme that the prosecuting officer -W upenpenmg n ioun e :it , "It is mami government must. prove Hf M- JUjr WVe yw' hmt terests of the .- l.w ould uvnal thousand dollars worm ht 6nei tnejaau ca"iiiK pV-cutive chlis be strictly enforced !n-every particu- dollar- per handful, lar, it .would, affords PPprotostioa -; yv ' - c . ''a 1 !m JiMvMf . I . . v - . ;a- - whatever to the American iuuj flcourt of law either the m "It is mainfest thert the great erests of the. nation .and the most tne nau camug w v --sw -Mirations were euboroi- answered, IH tell you Jgj W;if It has long been the theory of AmH. Jbreigw product m, ; for niari. ican industry require tne opening," ket 0r the evil intent of the'tteprtejr. our markets to. foreign compeuwu. That being true,' it would be inconsi tent for any prosecuting officer t'under a Democratic administrationto; insist in any court of law that imporaxauir.. of foreign products could possibly be with intent to injury er. destroy Am erican industry'. Smew it is we w- ory of Democrats that eneouragemenv . . . ' u MAiir9.Mment. ex American trade and creates a demand for American products, - tnai parv, can not consistently or sincerely .at tempt to enforce an .anti-dumping law. . - . 'rjL "On November 7th, tne Am?M. people are to choose a Congress and a President wno, yry mercial and industrial policies ,dfjhe United States for the next iour,y-?--That legislation wUl be the. most im portant thatVwill be enacted durmg tiiat period.- The ; Republican., j- --Quotes stand now and have always stood for a protective-tariff which recognizes the rightof meri- imniediately. Hf I had been President : I would ye carried on the government on diplomatic intercourse, the, President Vas in ita power the international and the nation's honor, u w. : nulhave carnea on wit? i Interests 'and the nation's-nonor.- mtvlttblkarf'-rparty ?oJ-S,ri j!fft hsi than the too interests, ana - - i"9. ;rr?J7J- ; imm aave; nee country to sen in compeuus similar goods produced herts: so with the intent or sup Lcorrespondihg :quantity of . rt froiihle". "He re-l?"T ...xl 1 ..Unid country-to .s te .cpe firm- so with aw tntett of " MaK&Tl thi TdiJ id GuUUghta "j ,. ten of the ding quantity of f Ae?W 18 and ; then iet tiie Germans - products, and mat ne WhSriain with him on, how mucn . ari4 -otlrteous msistence on musf ' injure mencan S ehould, concede them instead of bar- of oQr citizCns, at home and aoroaa, u :.- . . . only course which."'will give us lasting prove under the technical r 6 labor ih the next galvice.liW r W nvt . tha American vftrooucOT3:.i ,aj'; wislv . . , k w eal- that extent. That is a presump wmpi them. . - both fact and law 'hvte jexico;i would have put Leon call upon' any American ?mWm iWood in there and told him to do WA ' technical rfelte:6f "00a . . - . . . ii mn hd.va been cal- the benefit of every. oV)ubt .The Dt. H . Jt waaverit wuld be face. When this war began . TvrZ-w'-tfliverr-'AB it- is peace buu iy tie ;fore gn: importer Mexico the doupt, anq places upon mi can producer;' the' burden ;pfciYAL MAN SHOT, v at his bwntt expensed tito arf ; . - BY -PRO IN 01 of imported 'articles;' "There should, net be in ;? of any American citizen the OXFORD in-aroducers to a; material advan- , fol whkh policy Is t rae . . . ..if-ofd hiMxuisa'. ... . sJiia.i!a tage in inenwu.;"wi 7 "tt I pest interest ex ine junen ef the higher cost of laDor ana rov: erials in . this .t country. Under sueh a tariff it is not necessary for the American producer to rove in any ' It'll probably Jk quite ' to General Goethala to get an Hf Jon rday jois - -t -.j-, r-; :"' . ' ' &&Glm7r Oct. "-ST. Lewis- eeicer, white as shot and probably .fatally fended this afternoon by an-un- v. - nf- Iraininllp CountV iiw rwford. Shooting resulted hen Zeeker, a carnival man, rebuked ti,.ftro fer-eursing his .wife, it. is "said; Zeeker's hqme is in Lebanon, He was brought to Watts iios- pitalhere. J" -" - . , . 7., ..aw . 1 iiiiii.tnju nuii;iv - - - men were vainly seekingemployment tm.M h war ends, and the develop ed energies of Europe are thrown into -Areial produetfon, tur nau face a competitibn such as it never f fh two things must hap- S VU5 ' - , - , 1 pen-either millions of men seeking work in vainer else there tuust be -sought out the problem . of protection to American mdustry and orcommercial organization. ; France and England and Germany are already at work upon their problems of this the averaee business manj is -hfinest; and finally, a "domestic;- policy ,v which looks to industrial peace and coppera--tion, not to industrjal war." . ..Mr. Hughes's .speech here, .tonight was the third of, the dayr , The first ?livreH at Hartford, after a parade through the streets, inj which thousands cheered the nominee,, before an' audience that crowded the largest available theater, Mr. Hughedevot- , j .,.i. Yiia cnovVi tn the need 6f industrial preparedness to meeT.EurO-r pean commercial t competition' after the war. . T . .' . . At Providence the second stop, the Kill was filled . to overflowing Stu dents at Brown university,, front which Mr. Hughes was graduated, in- -terrupted his "speech at inlervals with college yells,; each ending in a cheer for. Hughes. ""' - Mr. Hughes left providence t 5 :4V o'clock and reached , Boston, an." hour ater."'" . '" ' - REPORT OF COUNTY SUPjERIN TENDENTS MEETING, MT.tA.IRY. The West " Central District 1 Asso- ciation of County , Superintendents was held at Mt. Airy the pas-week. The following1 topics were discussed in round table conference : t- 1. County , Institute and its Adaption to Work of County Teachers. . i .. 2. County Teachers' . Association and; Reading Circle. v.. 3. Examination and Uertincate ox Teachers. ' ' - 4. Attendance., ? ; ,: 5. Moonlight- Schools. - 6. Rural Library Its Preservation and Use. -.. . - 7. Larger Type of Rural Schools and How to Get It. , - 8. School . Buildings. ' . ? 9. Suggested Topics for Meeting of State Association. . . ; Th several Members-, of. the btate of Education were present and by the sentiments expressea, uie . ,4irecw& proved both profitable and 'pteasttht to all present. ; c; ; . ; . While at this meeting , we secured the service of Messrs. Brogden and London-for the teachers'of hi county , Mr. Brogden will meet with th teach- ers in the Sseveral township's of the ; .Aimf.v durinar the month of December A program as fixed by Mr. tirogaen will be published at a later daW Mr. j. L. London will give- the teachers of the county, a number of practical lessons in penmanship, Mr? London represents the Palmer Compiny and s : .Af i hi work. ' vrD. S. L. 1 ; .' - . . . ' ri. 3 r-.y' ;i- ...,T'.