N tttt GAU0ASXAXX. Pas Two. t State Nerts. The Friends held their yearly meet ing at Guilford College last week with a good attendance. Ministers of that faith from all parts of the world attended the meeting. Andy Albright, a farmer living near Statesville, was attacked by yel low Jackets while working alone in a field a few days ago and and stung until he was unconscious. Charlotte doctors now have an agreement by which thye will now charge $2.50 for day calls and $5.00 for night calls. Double fees will also be charged in cases of contagious dis eases. Mrs. Mary E. Chappelle, last pen sioner of the War of 1812 in North Carolina, died In Charlotte a few days ago at the age of seventy-nine years. Her husband, Eli Chappelle, died sev eral years ago at the age of 107. Two Durham negroes broke Jail Tuesday night, went out and got drunk, but returned to the jail in time for breakfast Wednesday morn ing. No one knew they were out un til they came back and asked to be locked up again. Negro boys entered the home of Mr. R. O. Harrison, in Fayetteville Sunday, and took all the 3ilverware, china, and other valuable articles they could get away with. The boys were located and the goods found in the house of a negro woman in a no torious section of tho city. Mrs. W. B. Pruett, of Charlotte, has brought suit for $20,000 against the Southern Power Company and the Charlotte Gas Company for the death of her husband, who was killed by coming in contact with a live wire in a new school building at Fairview, July 22. Mr. Harvey Barley, a Confederate veteran of Mecklenburg County, was found dead in his wagon in the road last Saturday. He was haujing saw dust and failed to return home when expected, so a search was made for him. Heart failure is supposed to be the cause. Deputy collectors and Revenue of ficers captured a distillery in Alex ander County last week and arrested Ed. Lippard against whom there are charges of illicit distilling and retail ing. Two keys of brandy and about three hundred gallons of pomace were poured out. A . movement is on foot to mark the graves of three North Carolina Governors Governor Abner Nash, Governor Richard Dobbs Speight, Sr., and Governor Richard Bobbs Speight, Jr., which are two and one-half miles from New Bern on the banks of Trent River. As the jailer at Henderson, Vance County, entered the jail with dinner for the prisoners, one day last week, he was overpowered by six prisoners, one white man and five negroes, who made their escape. The prisoners had sawed their way, out of their cells, and were in the corridor ready to sur prise the jailer. F. H. Schutters, thirty years of age, and formerly a United States .army, recruiting officer in Wilming ton, who was sentenced to thirty days in jail for violating his agree .ment following a plea of nolo con tendere in a case charging him with the sale of whiskey, died in jail a few days ago of delirium tremens. , . Mrs. Pheope Tomberlin, an aged lady living near Monroe, was found unconscious in a fence corner near her home a .few days ago. She ap peared to have been terribly beaten, and a tenant of Mr. A. C. Scott ' by the name of Bob Moser, has been con nected with the crime, having been seen near the place where she was found. . ROBBERY' IN WEST DURHAM. Rich 3Ilser Woman Robbed of $1,700 Son Knocked Senseless. The Durham dispatch of recent date says: "A robbery of $1,700 in cash from Mrs. Hawkins Hicks, a white woman who lives near West Durham has been reported to the county officers. According to the reports some one entered the home and took a trunk containing her money from one of the rooms. The robbers took it Into a nearby field and got out all the valu ables and the money. "Mrs. Hicks is a very old woman, half blind and half crazy. She was known to havealot of money, and was a miser. Her husband, who died many years ago, left a farm near the city which has become a very valu able lot of land with the growth of the city. She has recently sold off a part of her land receiving $15,00 for It. Her bank-book was found near the trunk, and it showed a balance of about $20,000. Tho robbers did not attempt to bother this. "She lives with her son, Jim Hicks, in a ramshackle cottage, which is very old, and easily entered by rob bers. The son reported the robbery to the officers that morning several hours after It occurred, who said he heard a noise in the house, and went out to make an investigation. When he went into the room in which he heard the noise, the robbers knock ed him senseless, and then carried out their plans. Mrs. Hicks says she did not know anything of the rob bery until she got up." General Netfs. EIGHT TO DIE IK CHAIR IX XEW YORK IN WEEK. Large Canal Contract Let in This State. A Salisbury, N. C, dispatch says: "The large contract let in this part of the State for a long while was giv en yesterday for digging the big ca rial at Whitney for a manufacturing concern, which bought the hydro electric plant some months ago. An other big contract was let by the same concern for completing the mammoth stone dam on. the Yadkin River, where the 45,000 horse-power plant is being developed. "It is stated the two contracts amount to $750,000, and that it will require nine months to do the work. More than 700 men will be put to work at once and the sinking of the canal will be pushed. The work of building the dam, as well as that of running the canal, was started five years ago by the Whitney Reduction Company, which stranded in the pan ic of 1907. Since that time work on the big plant has been at a standstill." Crimes Under Democratic Good Gov ernment. The August term of Davidson County Superior Court for the trial of civil and criminal cases convenes next Monday week, August 12th. The docket includes two murder cases, twenty-six blind tigers, twelve for as sault with a deadly weapon, and sev enteen for carrying concealed- weap ons, besides a long array of assorted crimes one hundred and twenty-one cases in all Lexington Dispatch. An Iredell Man Seventy Years Old Marries by Mail. Statesville, N. C, Aug. 10. H. T. Johnson, a farmer, of Chambersburg Township, who. has already lived his allotted three-score and ten, was this week married to a lady with whom he was not personally acquainted until the day before the marriage event. Mr. Johnson had already been twice married, and knowing the happiness of married life, he decided to embark for the third time. Through the aid of a friend he got into communi cation with Miss Sarah Jones, a proof-reader on a newspaper at Cull man, Ala. Both were inclined toward matrimony, and the proposal and ac ceptance were made by letter. By agreement Miss Jones came tolredell and the couple met at the home of a friend, and after a day's personal ac quaintance, they called Justice W. W. Turner, of Statesville, to perform the ceremony. Body of Young Iredell Man Found. Statesville, N. C, Aug. 12. The dead body of Ebby Ritchie, who had been missing since Saturday after noon, August 3rd, was found in the Catawba River yesterday about a mile below where he is supposed to have fallen into the water while suf fering an attack of epilepsy. Young Ritchie was making his home with his brother-in-law and sis ter in Catawba County. Saturday af ternoon he went to the river to come across into Iredell to see his father, Mr. Thomas , Ritchie, but he failed to show up at the home of his father and search for him was made, with the above Indicated result. The Sugar Plum Between the Bull Moose and the Professor. Waynesvllle Enterprise. From the way many Democratic organs are knocking Theodore Roose velt, It appeareth that the sugar plumb Is between the Bull Moose and Professor Wilson. Commodore T. B. Garner, former ly or tnis city out now editor or. a weekly newspaper 1 n Wllliamston, W. Va., announces his candidacy for County Chairman, but says he will accept anything. This Is an unusual ly broad platform on which the Com modore should win. Mount ' Airy One Negro Kills Another. Statesville, N. C, Aug. 12 States- vllle's first homicide in years occur red Saturday night when Will Mor rison, a young negro eighteen years old, shot and killed Len Houpe, an other negro four years his senior, The shooting occurred at the home of Morrison's mother, several blocks from the square, but the news of the tragedy spread rapidly and within MM. . . m . mb mieen minutes several Officers ana a large number of the curious were on the scene. The murderer was found in the house lying on a bed, while his victim lay on the front porch breathing his last. He died before medical aid reached him, a bullet having passed through his heart and lung. Morrison was immediately tak en to jail. A corner's Inquest was held to-day and Morrison was committed to jail without ball to await trial. Leader. i Wilson Remedy. Clinton News-Dispatch. On, you Democratic farmers who are hollering your throats sore for Wilson. We know you are feeling good since . the school teacher says he wants the farmers to make more per acre so they can sell their corn, cotton and other farm products cheaper and thereby reduce the "high cost of living. . Now, you have it straight from Wilson's own mouth. Four men were drowned la a mine at Benton, Wis., a few days ago. They were overcome by foul air and fell in-j to the water. Mrs. Maggie Norment baa been ap pointed postmistress at Lumherton, succeeding her husband. Dr. R. M. Norment, who died a short time ago. President Taft on last Saturday sent to the Senate the nomination of Cyrus G. Engle to the Collector of Customs at Natchez, Miss. A steamship worth $3,000,000 coal laden, In Lake Michigan a few days tago, after colliding with a steel steam er also laden with ore, was sunk. A bale of new crop cotton was re ceived at Savannah, Ga., last week from Dodge County, Ga., and sold at aunction, bringing 30 1-2 cents a pound. Reports from the Department of Agriculture In Washington are that the crops in the South were injured by the army worm during the month of July to the extent of 8,000,000. The body of Miss Sinnle Carlson, a music teacher, of Denver, Colorado,! was found not very far from her home In the city a few days ago. She had been criminally assaulted and then murdered. The biggest bull moose In the world is said to be in the possession of John F. Bible, of Hopkinsville, Ky. It is a trophy of one of his hunts in Michigan, and weighs 2,350 pounds and stands 7 1-2 feet high. Two train officers and a passenger were killed by the derailing of an inbound train on the Plymouth di vision of the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad, in Dorches ter, Mass., August 8th. One hundred and three miners were killed in an explosion in a mine at Gerthe, Germany, August 8th. Many others were injured. It is thought that a blast reached a big pocket of gas causing the explosion. Little Estelle Drake, the four-year- old child who was hurt by an automo bile, in the vicinity of Hendersonville last week, died Tuesday as a result of her injuries. The car was driven by Marion Matthison, of Anderson, S. C. In the district between Constanti nople and Adrianople, Turkey, an earthquake last week wrought, much havoc to life and property. Whole towns have been destroyed by fire caused by earthquake, and two vil lages were engulfed. . 9 An engine on the Virginia and Southwestern Railroad at. St. Charles, Va., last week, turned turtle, ran down an embankment, and killed the engineer, Frank Xi. Barb, of Bristol, Va., and Oscar L. Wagner, also of Bristol, who is a weighmaster. The fireman was also injured. Col. Gibson Gray Corn well, a prominent lawyer and society man of West Chester, Pa., committed suicide on the train a few nights ago on his way from New York to his home town to face charges of misappropriating bonds belonging to a trust estate. Eugene W. ChafinT a resident of Arizona, was officially notified Satur day of his nomination for the Presi dency of the National Prohibiton par ty. The ceremony took place In a Methodist church, and Rev. Dr. Mead, of New 'York, made the notification speech. Seven of Them Will Be Excreted at Sing Sins Prison on Same Day. New York, Aug. 10. A record for wholesale official electrocution in N'ev York State will hare been estab lished next week when E. F. Davis, of Corning. N. Y. the official execution er, snuffs out the lives of eight mur derers condemned to die by the New York courts. Besides these men, there are eighteen additional mur derers now In the death cells of Sing Sing, Auburn and Clinton prisons who must shortly pay the death pen alty unless new trials are ordered by the highest court of the State. The eight doomed men all are guil ty of crimes which at the time of their perpetration excited wide interest. Five were implicated in the murder of Mrs. Henry Hall at Yorktown, Westchester County, on November 6, 1911. They are Italians, who, with robbery in view, entered her home in the absence of her husband. One stabbed her to death as she was being, held by the others. The sixth mem-j ber of the gang, Santo Zanzo, already has paid the death penalty, It having been established that he. actually did the stabbing. He was executed on July 8th last. The three men who complete the list of doomed are: Joseph Ferrone, also an Italian, who murdered his wife In New York City on October 24th last by cutting her thoat; John W. Collins, a negro, who on July 1, 1911, shot and killed Policeman Thomas Lynch in New York, and John Matuszewski, who shot Police man Charles Schaeffer, of Buffalo, on September 11th last. Seven of these men are in Sing Sing, and, according to officials of the State prison department, little more than an hour will be necessary to execute them. They probably will be killed on Monday. PRESIDENT OF HATI KILLED. Several Others Lose Their Lives When National Palace is Blown Up. Port Au Prince, Hatl, Aug. 8. The National Palace was blown up by a powder explosion and burned to the ground to-day and the President of the Republic of Haiti, General Clncin- natus Leconte, perished. Members of his family, who were awakened by the terrific shock, found themselves almost surrounded by flames, but managed to make their way to safety. The first .explosion was followed by others when the fire reached the cellars of the palace where a great quantity of ammunition was stored. So great was the force of the explos ion that a number of small cannon, fragments of iron and shells were blown for great distances In all direc tions. Many palace attendants were killed, and it Is estimated that the casuallty list will reach four hundred persons killed or injured. Panic Prevails. For a time a great panic prevailed, and the military authorities took charge of the situation. The explo sions occurred shortly after 5 o'clock in the morning and within an hour, when the fire, which was confined to the palace, was extinguished, the structure wasa mass of ruins from which it will be impossible to recover the body of the President. The cause of the explosion of the powder magazine has not been ascer tained. At a joint meeting of the Chamber and Senate this afternoon, General' Tancrede Aiiguste, Senator and ex- Minister of Public Works, was named I as President. . i r Bernard Murray son of a former fire commissioner of Hartford, Conn., has confessed to the firing of thirty hotels within the last four months in Connecticut and Western Massachu setts. He Is twenty-four years old, and says he could not resist the im pulse to do it, although he realized the consequences. The Panama Canal administration bill, providing, free passage to Amer ican ships, prohibiting railroad own ed vessels from using the waterway, and authorizing the establishment of a one-man government when the ca nal was completed, was passed by the Senate last Friday night. WASHING THE OLD BILLS. Uncle Sam Starts Up Laundry Busi ness in Treasury Department. More than a half a million dollars of old paper money, washed and iron ed to the crispness ot new In the Fed eral Government's currency laundryt will be placed In circulation to-morrow. - - This lot will represent Uncle Sam's first job as a laundryman. For weeks the Treasury Department has been cleaning and reviving dirty old notes by the washing machine perfected In the Bureau of Engraving and Print ing. Secretary MacVeagh to-day stamped the venture a success and the. laundry will be run in full swing from now on. All unclean bills which are not practically worn out will be washed, ironed and redistributed. The first Bubonic ' plague, which has four batch f notf 8ent to 8Qb- tlmes swept the world, again threat- tfe?f!f d pald oa to banks in ens the United States, from South li1"7681- America. It is said to be raging ' The Treasury Department has or- along the west coast of that conti- ttr? more machines nent. Surgeon General Rupert Blue in f eT m onths 11 f "Petted l in charge of a campaign against 'Z'1'Z.i 7"!!!?f ment expects to save hundreds of thousand of dollars annually. the spread of the disease, and every precaution possible is being taken. The Senate accepted last week the conference report " on the legislative, executive and judicial appropriations bill, abolishing the Comerce Court, but retains the judges for service In other Federal Circuits until the end of their terms, and fixes seven years as the length of service for govern ment employes within the District of Columbia. This seven year feature has aroused much disapproval among the Government employes in Wash ington, which means that every seven years Government clerks in the class ified service must seek re-appointment." Seventeen Workmen Burned in Coke Oven Explosion. Birmingham, Ala,, Aug. 10. An explosion of , gas at the by-product coke ovens of the Tennessee Coal, Iron and Railroad Company at Corey, near here to-day, while a change was being made in one of the big mains, resulted in seventeen workmen, in cluding assistant superintendents and foreing, being seriously hurned. Dr. H. R. Deholl, assistant superinten dent, and one of the best known Ma sons of Birmingham district, Is burn ed about the face and arms. The Caucasian from now until November ae loth (CEBITS This will be one of the most Interesting cunrir tory of this government and The Cattc&sUn will Im, throQch the cjunnaisra. including the election rvn. . (CENTS Get up s dab of four or more subscribers rtrht . . and thereby help as to help the cause we both adtoou. ADDRESS THE CAUCASAIf), RALEIGH, II. t See! c, c. Mcdonald Real Estate and Loan Office for STOCKS AND BONDS RALEIGH, N. C. He will buy, sell or lend you money on Red Estate or other good Collateral. Be Sure of Your Piano When you buy a piano you want TO BE SURt you are getting the best toned instrument and one that will retain its tone for years. Hard to be sure isn't it? There is only one way to be absolutely sure be governed by the name ad experience of the maker. Henry F. Miller Pianos are the result of long yean' of experience. In 1850 the Millers made Pianos, about the best Pianos made in this country at that tim! To-day the Henry F. Miller Piano is reconized as the best Piano that can be made. You are safe in buying by this name. Art Catalog and f nil particulars free. 1 DARNELL & THOMAS RALEIGH, IM. C. THIS ADVERTISEMENT will bo found In your favorite agrfcu!- lis month. We reproduce It btf that we have Mens "Ease" aod Boy" shoes. Read It and tbm tural paper to teU you American letters also. MENZ-EA8E- SHOES PIT LIKB A comfortable every -day shoes yon ercr walked In. And after you have worn them t1 btii1 u' better, strocffer or wears a am name on ycuow label you agalnat imitations. Ask for CiUi:z B. 12 It inastratea aS fetishta Men JBaaaralaotbe American Boy for boys, an ex act duplicate of 9 ' " 'AmarirrZ U comfort and la fnn n A a. wjf timer IcatSu we have cot m V - ePM.a Haas a. a 1JTTT . wroonee tO VOO fnrrr. 1 ? t 3nf -American wy ' satisfaction and are all fa JfLatk "Here'i to the Start and Sin? Land of our Birtfl. we en earth." tnr.TDi vs - - If The Mens 'Ease' abort OB ucn ui 4 i. one iu nit rSi. r -I wffl aay that the W j" 52 the best for everyday JJ, I are Just as soft no"2 TST fc1 them. T! re sw r is them.; T botunt ft pair of M ldm? the JW as s rJow shoe is the ?vtZ vorst season on shoes. U" Z satisfactory fat every Vgx&P- nsnoiicturers cw elainTTbey wear lfc fortable ia every way. t -vara a tetter shoe, . sJF.IX b -ler sstisfactioa. or - tv . 1 unx tout ."-T.. - crs r.f Mens ase' M 'Zs of weatner, soft and pliant 2ase that I TL-is JfLf . . I take rJessure ia "coaiZJl ftwm n.iM8..c.,uuw.D.tr.lt,nict. . - . . " .... II the best shoes I evsrsa - S SSJs isS . oi service, nor to repeil water, and fhm ra only oera "VL I9" tiieran conn'.SL10 water, and these letters are aty ra uuoo shoes worth considering the next time yoo need 'E&oseini Heiplbei?tt 123 FAYETTEVILLE, STEEET