! State Netfs. General Nerts. ; dstc peea anouv. j ! AiJesfaasey County, UHle Jorncr suc- joeds if. B. Joyuer, resigned; all , Drutnhlll, Gates Coontr, Albert 11-j . . . ... r.. IlutMi succeeds J. II. Umpblet, re-; Th lie. CUrenoe V. T. PJchetca, postal TiDnM i. , aad sl Grlmihairg. Jack : cbarge4 with the marder of Miss AtU la operation at Duke and v laaioM County. Bessie rtckleselmer succeed Unaell. was arraigned la Itlehmoa. on December 6th. K r Grlmsbawes, resigned, j y.. NoTexnber lJtb, and tbe date of I bu Uai t for January 15, 112. -(2) Tbe founding of a new dr- Saperintendent Denmark, of the; .,.. ii'itnntKn. J ! nasty with a Chinee emperor oa tbe Southern Cotton Oil Company. Fay-i J j TJJe tQVQ of DaylOD four mllei ibrone. eteeville, was caught In the macbln- ivmum A, KJimer U Killed ftf nrrl.bunr. Va.. suffered J The succoring of the needy cry last Tuesday afternoon ana very f Kfrwnan Injur!. ! 120.000 fire Sunday morning and oppressed We are aetata to do wtU ibea. Why bate we allowed ours! to I trampled upon thus? Tree aoa of China asd of the south, we pray you well to coatlder Ue tM&st and read oar propaganda: " ($) Tbe ofertbrow of tbe pres ent Man can 4 f nasty. badly hurt. Fast train No. 37 on the South-! The' entire town waa saved from de-f Introduction of many Jm Pemberton shot and killed Eat j ern waa Parker, near Mt. Gllead, Notember ? at Troublesome Creek, eighteen milea nth Pemberton claim aelf-defenae north of Greensboro. Engineer Wll-, and gave himself up to tbe officer. . Ham A. Kinney waa Both are colored. j fireman badly Injured. wrecked Monday morning j itructlon by tbe aid of automobile. Throwing nitroglycerine blasting j WOITLD AMKXD SHERMAN killed and b,a J cartridge. Into a " ei Tbe proposition for the establish ment of farm-life schools in Gaston County was defeated by a heavy ma jority a few days ago. The farmers' Tote killed the proposition. Mr. Henry M. Hosemond, a well- known citizen of Durham, fell dead i death of three boys at Rochester, N. i ... v ttU f"Vi .1 a KaIa. Aside from the 111-iaiea engine. ; - . - et i,tl there were no fatalities, and tbe ne-1 were hurled into the air several bun gro Qreman. Ed. Towns, waa tbe only dred feet. person really seriously injured There; whit of Ten were several reported as having In-j Mrs. Alexande r.B-J.; Juries of a slight nature, but they j nessee, waa elected Presldent-Generai were not carried to the hospital. of tbe United Daugh era o f n k -,n rhr, in federscy. at the meeUng in Richmond on the streets last Friday. He bad!the rails to snap which derailed thej. i"1- been in apparent good health and was a man of splendid physique. Aviator Robert G. Fowler, on bis Revenue Agent R. B. Sams, of Asheville, reports the capture of 47 Illicit distilleries during the month of October, as a result of which twenty six prosecutions will be remommend ed. B. D. Brown, a night policeman of Hamlet, was shot last Saturday -night by a negro named Benton whom he waa trying to arrest. He Is not thought to be seriously wounded, however. During a storm of wind and rain Monday, a barn on the farm of Mr. Lee Albertson, near Sttesville, was bolwn down, injuring his son and lit tle daughter, who were in the barn; also seriously Injuring Mr. Albertson. The State Department of Agricul ture reports that during the month Of October 19,865,980 pounds of leaf to bacco weresold on the various mar kets of North Carolina as against 28, 754,487 for the same month last year. David McNeil, colored, of Lemon Springs, was shot and killed by his fifteen-year-old son, Will McNeil, No vember 10th. The boy stated that bis father was attempting to strike him with an axe when he fired tbe - fatal shot. Frank Snyder, of Winston-Salem, was instantly killed and fourteen j others injured, several fatally, by aj runaway street-car in that citjr last Saturday. The accident was caused j by the car skidding on slippery rails i at the top of a hill. The three-year-old son of Mr. W. E. Klrkman, of Winston-Salem, fell into a well at the home of the pa rents last Friday and was killed. There was very little water in the well, but the child's head struck the bottom and was crushed. J. M. Hail, an aged man of Lum berton, was killed by the V. & C. S. train No. 79 from Hope Mill last Fri day. The engineer seeing him, blew the whistle, but being deaf, Mr. Hall did not hear it, and was struck be fore the train could be stopped. Capt. G. P. Erwln, a prominent cit izen of Burke County, died at his home in Morganton, November 14, in his seventy-second year. His death was due to paralysis. He was chairman of the Board of Commis sioners of Burke County twelve . years. train. Tboma.Ti.le and be , the U of! "J" !- four brothers to meet death in a ran road wreck. A Total of Twenty-Four Counties Lend Aid to Fight the Hookworm. ago, narrowly avoided a collision with a freight train in the sand near Mas todon, N. M. He grazed the tops of the cars but his machine was not damaged. Dr. John A. Ferrell, speaking of j The payment Qf a just sum to de the progress being made lnthe eradi-j pendents Qf United States prisoner cation of the hookworm disease, j fQf labor done whUe gerving sen says: ! tence3 is urged by William H. Moyer, "Five counties have provided the j warden of the Federal Prison in At funds necessary to have free dispen-1 l&Qt&t Ga in hlg annual report, made saries for the free examination for j blic xovember 13th. and treatment of hookworm disease Member Think They lUve Discovered More Qunpaiga MterUL Tbe newt comes from Washington that tbe Democrats have decided to amend the Sherman anti-trust law and knock up the precedent of the opinion of tbe Supreme Court aa to the "rule of reason." Congresamaa Henry.of Texas, in speaking of the plans of tbe Judiciary Committee, is quoted as saying: "The coming session bf Congress is by no means to be over-shadowed by tariff legislation; of course the tariff revision will be of great im portance, but it will not minimize other problems before tbe House." take s ot t a Us wst IJ by etai tbe pbe?bau a&4 potaab ra5trr4 available la lb mXl U esal to tal ly 2.003 bt&ftbt! f com, 3.$t bsaJu els of wheat, or fifty-alt poz& bale of cotton All of lh aitrofrta baa kts takes either directly froa tbe air or reader available by de cora petition of pre-fsliUsLf fgrasic cutter la tbe toil, la caa the pb paate and potash are not tupptl4 mrtificu.llr ther are takea up from the earth through the roots of the plants; built into tbe plant tUioe and rendered available to tbe suc ceeding crop oa decay of tbe root. stems and leaves of tbe retch plan la. J. L. BURGESS. N. C. Department of Agriculture. BERMUDA GRASS FUR HOGS. 'since November 1st. These are the counties of Wake, Vance, Beaufort, eBrtie, and Edgecombe. Prior to No vember 1st, nineteen counties had made provision for them, making a total now of twenty-four counties. The work has been fiulshed in ten counties and is now in progress in Pitt, Brunswick, Pender, Harnett, and Hertford. "Five widely separated points in a county are selected. At each point an available building, usually a pub lic school-house, is secured for the dispensary. On advertised days of the week the Field Physician and his Laboratory man spend about six hours at each dispensary. On corre sponding days of the five to six sub hequent weeks that the county work continues the dispensaries are simi larly opened. Thus people in every section of the county are afforded an opportunity weekly for free examina tion and treatment until the succes sive treatments needed to effect cures have been received. The people are cured, and the educational work goes on by actual demonstration." , Capt. Tom Jolly, traveling repre sentative of Cooper Brothers' Marble Works, Raleigh, and formerly freight conductor on the old Cape Fear and Yadkin Valley Railroad, was shot and Instantly killed near Pilot Mountain, November 8 th, by L. Tllley, as a re- Bult of a quarrel. Deputy Sheriff J.'D. McD. Mona gnan was shot near Fayetteville No vember 8th by one of a party of men whom he asked their destination in a search for some suspicious charac ters said to be lurking in that un savory quarter. His wound is not thought to be dangerous. As Sheriff Smith, of Scotland Coun ty, was In the act of committing to jail a negro under suspicion for the murder of another negro at Lauren burg, S. C, on the night of No vember 9 th, he was stabbed in the "back and probably fatally wounded by two other negroes who attacked him with knives. The brick dry-bouse of the Fay etteville Wooden Ware Company, containing 150 cribs of seasoned Juniper and . oak staves, warehouse also of brick and, a quantity of lum ber were destroyed by fire early Sat- day morning. The loss amounts to 58,000, with Insurance of $4,000 or $5,000. Mr. John Moncastle, a well-known and influential citizen of near Winston-Salem, was shot and killed - at Jamison Mill, in Franklin County, Virginia, by a man named Bryant a "few days ago. Bryant had accused 'Moncastle of reporting an illicit dis-; tillery alleged to have been owned by Bryant. The following changes in Nortn Carolina fourth-class ' postmasters Choke Off the Democratic Party and Save Robeson. Lumberton Robesonian. In commenting upon two reports of the grand jury Friday afternoon one a special report covering investi gations of escape of prisoners from: jail (both reports are published else where in this paper) Judge Carter! made some remarks that ought to be seriously . considered by every good citizen of the county. He said that In Robeson County, with its50,009 inhabitants, there have been more homicides during the past five years than have Occurred in the Dominion of Canada with its 6,000,000 inhab itants during- the same period. And he strongly condemned this county's method of caring for its county home inmates. He denounced it as un christian and vicious. It Is. The! Robesonian tried to convince the county commissioners some time ago that this system ought to be changed and we hope Judge Carter's strong tolk will arouse the people to demand a more humane method, . Evidence has been produced con clusive that Miss Hattie Parcel, the fifteen-year-old girl who was found dead In the Miami River, near Miami, Florida, a few days ago, was killed before throwing into the water. P. C. Cox is charged with the murder. Severe cyclonic storms swept over several Western States, including Wisconsin, Iowa, and Illinois, last Friday and Saturday, leaving num bers of people dead, and scores in jured. Homes were demolished and suffering intense from the cold, hail and sleet. Stories alleged to have been cur rent at Springfield, Jill., are that Emanuel A. Abbams, a citizen of Chi cago, refused to vote for Lorimer for $2,500, but that he did so when of fered $5,000, as related before the Senatorial investigating committee last week. A dispatch from Arkansas, dated Friday, says seven hundred persons, nearly all the population of Gentry, Ark., were looking for C. A. Catron, cashier of the Bank of Gentury which failed Thursday with liabilities of $160,000 and assets estimated at $125,000. Ueattie, the Wife Murderer, Denied a New Trial. The Supreme Court of Virginia has rendered a decision, denying tbe ap peal for a new trial, filed by Henry Clay Beattle, Jr., convicted at Ches terfield, of murdering his young wife Louise. July 18th. Unless the Gover nor of Virginia grants a reprieve Beattie will be electrocuted Novem ber 24th. 4 How a Georgia Former riant It 00 Saaday Laad for a llog raatttrrv Mr. Walter T. Kenner, of Spring Palace, Georgia, In a letter to tbe Atlanta Georgians, says: Since writing my article of recent date for tbe Georgian on bog and cheep raising In tbe South. I have bad numerous inquiries from South ern farcers in regard to the t?Uing Bermuda pastures for hogs. I Two Women Fight Deadly Duel. At Sapulpa, OklarfTuesday, two women, Lilly Marshall and Mrs. Lau ra Smith, fought a duel on one of the principal streets of the town. Mrs. Smith is dead and the Marshall wo man is In jail. Both were rich oil land holders and the fight was the re sult of jealousy. Hoke Smith Resigns at Last. Hoke Smith, the Senator-elect from Georgia, has resigned the Governor ship at last. John M. Slaton, Presi dent of the State Senate, will act as Governor until the people of Georgia elect a new Governor, which must be done within sixty days. of have not L10 time to answer all there inquiries by personal letters, so 1 will answer through the Georgian hog department and possibly It may Interest some one else besides the parties who seek the information. The firrt thing to do is to thoroughly prepare your wire grass land by plowing and harrowing toa seed ted. Then lay off your rows with a bull tongue plow snd scripo (or Johnon wings), making a moderate deep furrow and wide, about 2H to 3 feet wide between the rows. Take the Bermuda roots which yo.i can obtain by plowing up a small plot of the grass and rake out with a hay rake or garden rake and drop tht.se roots one in a place or a small wad of roots every 18 inches or two feet apart in the rows. As you go along step on the roots, which will cover them sufficiently for them to take root at this season of the year. There will be a fairly good set the first year on sandy land and by the second year you will have a perfect mat. You can put all the hogs and cattle on it you want and the rooting and tramping only improves the grass. Farm Topics battler. mi? ,? UUi It aai r fa f-i iU refa aa4 ious & ... u r f " v ml sens. 9 ik it fc. . . - ... - - v t&re4 broa frets ttu roe-Jtrwy a&4 O. t, c 1, root la It froa Nou-w , 1 oUc4 st os us iM a , laatlt Coast Ua RiNM ordtr ta tblr 4pm $ 7 . to ecdaeer for tb. u'J1; train If &c4ry ta ?..,t , killing of tck a tu,f lfJ?j they bad rld for tl.i of ftlM-k In CO 4i this wholesale Ucgv,f r hiss roadbed was matted jtji Ta!T grass to prevent it fros ni thr cftd vnr v.f.... tbe natural toll; ot;Xtl.:f " stock would coccrtcM c& at way tracks to eat the trw lu J killed. Ton need not b 4frv4 Bermuda grass. It U nj d t of by frequent ploicf ai m cover crops. After yoa c0 rn" set you won't want to get ru as It Is tbe salvstiea of u grass counties of Georcli - rm ids. Tbe time it now m bt j tu we have got to get to rsUts ari stock and better stck aol tt4t do It unless we have more and better ones. You U1 t 15 -cent pork before Mirth 1. u there Is no corn of any cosmw: In tbe west. You will fee 11 !J In tbe South by May 1 aod tt afford to fatten meat to tell e 15 cents on $1 corn. V bt to raise our mest on patut i, grain. I am doing it and k&o yn can if you will try. 1 make mj iHr Jerseys and O. I. C. hogi cr? weigh 300 net st eight to ten tmrj old with ample pasturag sal a 13, grain once a day. Howem. 1 1$ my eye on them and keep th ! t; of them, keep them in goes Utlu and growing all th time, a lou? hog will not grow on all the tors U Georgia. Give your stock the tu tion they deserve and you M ivt more stock and better uoc ca tt. third the feed you are now gttsrr, them. GREEN MANURING No. 15. Hairy Vetch. Everybody can grow hairy or win ter vetch. You may have to have It inoculated before it will make much of a growth and you may have to be Census figures show that the negro somewhat careful not to let it be come a weed in your wheat and oat fields but It is one of our best plants for soil improvement and gTows de population of the United States.is in creasing less rapidly than the white race. The increase ipi tne wnues, 01 course, includes immigration, but the ing the fall, winter, and spring when naturad increase of the white race Is about 4 per cent greater than that of the negro. The Virginia and Southwestern Railroad has placed orders for seven, mammoth locomotives, 600 gondola cars and 65 steel frame box cars. The most other crops are off the land. It should be sowed In September or October and plowed down just before planting In the spring. The seed can be secured from most seed dealers and wilkcost around $3.00 a bushel. You will be interested to learn that a ton of cured vetch hay con- mainder $5&0,000 is secured by mort gage filed In favor of the Banker's Trust Company, of New York, as trus tee. Two Democratnc Candidates Loosing " Ground. Winston Journal. new equipment is to be furnished for tains more nitrogen, phosphate and $640.000 $140,000 cash and the re- potash than a ton of hay made from any other legume we nave so iar ais- cussed, and, as a soil improver, it is in the class with those plants that have no equal. A ton of vetch hay has 55.8 pounds of nitrogen, 14.6 Aa a rimihlehAiirtAr frAieht train Dounas oi pnospnaie, ana was nassine a section gang on the pounds of potash. Norfolk and Western Railway, twenty Following is the composition oi miles west of Lynchburg Saturday, green vetch compared with composi- the front locomotive exploded and j tion of fresh cow and horse manure: James Calloway, a colored section I Material Nitro- Phos- Pot man, was killed, William Rosse, a gen. phate. 3.2 1.9 1.6 ash. 8.2 7.3 7.3 cr s-per p i i J h t 1 "A!V v.- m Gil Milam is guaranteed under the pure food and drugs law to con tain no opium, morphine, strych nine, mercury, potash or other dangerous or habit forming drugs. Thus you take no chances with your health when you take Milam. l& 1 1 I I I I IBLDOTA bin eSfcl-il You take no chances iik rw money either, for if yon bor s coarse of six bottles icd art not benefitted you can grt roar money back for the asking. No dispute no arroawnt-yot are the Judge. f rK 1 I will always take pleasure In recom- I I V mending Milam for Uric Acid troubles. II C.T. Barksdale, former U.S. Postmaster, white fireman was nrobably fatally Hairy vetch, green. .13.2 Whether we like it or not, we are injured, ana other person received in- "wloc of the opinion that two public men juries. Tesn cow manure. . .o who are aspirants for high office are I It will take about five tons of green losing ground rather rapidly. These Eighteen Chinese scholars who Vetch to make one ton of hay, and it men are Governor Woodrow Wilson, have been engaged at the task for S an easy matter to grow three tons of New Jerey, and Governor W. W. thirty years, have completed tbe mag- 0f per acre. This gives you fif- Kltchln, of North Carolina. Wilson na charter oi China, and It will beaa tons Qf green vetch to plow un sentlment seems to be very much on promulgated as the constitution of Ler for 80ii improvement. Now one' the decline. He seems to be talking 1 the United Republic of China, just as I on of green vetch contains, accord most too much to suit folks. As for I soon as the fall of Peking is an- ue some expert analysis. 13.2 Governor Kltchln, a Rockingham nounced, so says Ho Lee, President pounds of nitrogen, 3.2 of phosphate, County lawyer said he could find 300 of the Young China Society Lodge at g2 pounds of potash. By plow men in his county who voted for Mr. Los Angeles, California. ing under fifteen tons of green vetch there would be rendered available, WHAT CHINESE REBELS SEEK. I In each acre, 198 pounds or nitrogen, 48 pounds of phosphate, and 123 Danville, Va. For nearly eight years I suffered with rheumatism at times unable to walk. I am taking Milam with great benefit, as I am now able to walk and suffer no pain. Mrs. Ira R. Preston, Abingdon. Va. Rheumatism affected my heart until I could not lie down without such pain that I could hardly bear iL Milam hs made me feel like a new woman. Mrs. J. P. Brown, 635 N. 8th St.. Richmond. Va. For 18 years I was confined to my bed the greater part of the time with rheuma tism. Milam has been a Godsend to me. I now walk about my farm the swelling has left my limbs and joints reduced to normal size. F. L. Gristie, R. F. D. 1, Chocowlmty, Si. v.. I I hare been a great sufferer with L A a. tMsn vn tin vil I UCUUlsuaui Situ ivi ss- m - able to attend to my duUes conuon ously. Sis bottles ofMilam made s new man of me. Claude Curling. U Z SL, Norfolk. Va. I spent over $3,000 for rheomsttim whk no benefit wbsterer untU I tned WiUm It has done all you claim for it w ej case. I. H. Wade, corner Cbtuth an4 Lee Sts., Norfolk. Va. For a long-standing and sggrsrsted ease of rheumatism I am srlad to say I r ceired more benefit from Uie use otUut than all the other treatment over a period of ten years. C P. Barr. with W. M. Ritter Lumber Co Hocuw ton, W. Va. Since taking 8 bottles of Milam my rbes matism is entirely eone. nay v and appetita improved-1 wouldn't ue $50 for the good it has done me. A. Bride, Danrille, Va st will do you no nood to put It offnothing to gain, all to lose. Act xoaay. Your druggist has Milam or can get it very quickly from any drug jobber THE MILAM MEDICINE CO., Inc., Danville, Va. -Jl Kltchln for Governor hut who would not vote for him for the Senate. The Result of Bad Government. Dallas Advocate. 1 , Jhe people of grand old Gaston Proclamation Issued by Insurgents pounds of potash. ' On a ten acre field Reaches England by Mail. you would tnus get x, so pounas oi t, , . nitrogen, 480 pounds of phosphate, A cable from London says: and 1,230 pounds of potash. You "A letter received by . the latest would thus get, for almost nothing, are to-day in a rebellious state so far wroht up we ;;;; s;?? - e? - io-o"5! lamaiion issued by the revolutionists from 260 tons of fresh ' cow manure during the Canton riots. It runs: or from 49 tons of 822 fertilizer. "'Sons of China: We are not Yon would get as much phosphate as robbers r treat us not as such. We, I you could from. 300 tons of fresh the Chinese proper, are governed by cow manure or from three tons of V-. lf.At.H. I e 99 fornWor Thafo wnnM Tna for them, is a source of much dis- "'uwl Z m VwJiiTmI - .t I usurpers of the throne, foreigners? las much potash made available as they do not hear the groaning of the (of fresh cow manure or by using masses; the people's grievances-are! about 31 tons of 8 2 2. It will not redressed; their mandarins are a cost you at least $150 to haul and mass of corrupt officials ; they nave spread 300 tons of manure In case sansDury rose sold parts of China to Western na- your field Is half a mile from the There will be 53 Sundays in this tionals: they have declared war iiDon stables. The two bushels of' vetch year, which is rather unusual. Not I nations witnout our Knowledge or seea ior tne acre wm cost, aoout ss again until 2020 will this occur consent and now demand of us south- or $6, and the plowing and most of again, 109 years hence. As will be erners increased taxes to meet the the harrowing will Incidentally pre- remembered, New Year's Day fell on payment of indemnities incurred by pare the land for the next crop Sunday and 1911 goes out on Sun- them.' The amount of nitrogen thus taken increased tax they are compelled to pay. Taxes are so enormously high that it is almost "beyond a poor man to pay them. And the fact that we are receiving nothing extra In turn tax-payer. There Are Fifty-Three Sundays in This Year. day. 'Why should wi be the sufferers? j from the air at no cost at all ) and THE CAUCASIAN and Uncb Remus dorad Msgaziirc Both One Year for Only $1.23 tJnele Remua' Hone lUgazlne waa founded U Chandler Harris, ths author ot the "Uncle Remus' stories, d 1 the best magsxine of its class published la ths Units State. Jack London, Frank X. Stanton, and other promise writer contribute to this magazine. It la published U Atlaata every month andthe subscription price ir 11.00 a jaar. Th Caucasian la the best weekly newspaper published In the Stats. Why not haTe both of these excellent publications la Xo8f borne? Subscribers who are in arrears must pay P rea,T their subscription in order to take advantage of this esctp tional offer. This is the best bargain in reading matter e s have ever been able to offer to . the reading public. Seafl your subscription to-day. Don't delay but do it now. Address. THE CAUCASIAN, ' : ;-i " . RALEIGH, k. cx