'This Argus o'er the people's rights Doth an eternal vigil keep ; No soothingstrains 6f Maia's son Shall lull itshundred eyes to sleep." $1.00 a Year aOLDSBORO,N,C, SATURDAY, AUGUST 7, 1909. .VOL.. XXTV NO. 72 $ 1.00 a Year. OIL SEi-CEIITEllAL Edwin L. Drake Drilled First Oil Well Naar Titusville in 1859. How Enormous Has Been Its Growth I Seen From the Production of 1,186,600,000 Gallons in This Country in 1907. Meadville, Pa., August 5. The semi-centennial of the founding of the e-reat oil industry of the United Str-tes by Edwin L. Drake, who drilled the first oil well near Titusville in 1859. was celebrated today by the oil men if this count-y, in onnectio with the annual picnic and outing of the Western Pennsylvania Pipe Line Assoi'a. ion at Conneaut Lake. Weeks ago the managers of theoufing had sent invkations to handreds of oi! rr.en throiitfhout the country and a large nuniler of them came to attend the celebration. Among them were many of the leading oil men of Ohio Indian.'., Kentucky, Illinois and Okla homa, who had gained their first knowledge of the oil business in and around the Titusville oil basin Edwin L. Drake, although justly famous as the founder of the oil in dustry in this country, was not the discoverer of oil. From time imme morial the Indians had obtained oil for medicinal purposes from the val ley of Oil Creek, near Titusville where the oil in many places rose to the surface or exuded from the porous Tock. Even before the time of the Indians the mysterious mound-build- , ers knew of the existence of oil and it is known that they dug deep wells to collect the oil, which they proba- :bly used for no other than medicinal purposes. The early settlors of Pennsylvania : found oil in many places in the Oil tCreek valley and its vicinity and used .crude and primitive methods to col lect oil from springs and wells, to sell it as a liniment, put up in bottles and labeled "Harlem Oil," "Rock Oil," "American Oil," "Kier's Petroleum," "Seneca Oil," etc. The oil which was found only in small quantities was worth eighty cents a gallon where it was found and $1 a gallon in the East, where it was sold in drug stores. In 1854 a lawyer from Maine, by the name of Eveleth, and a man namea Bissell, who had been a school teach er in New Orleans, passed through the Oil Creek region, on their way north. They became interested in the oil and took samples -with them to New Haven. They submitted these samples to Professor Benjamin Silli man to test the oil for its value as a lubricant and for illuminating pur poses, in place of sperm oil. The re port which he submitted in the fol lowing year was so favorable that Eveleth and Bissell and several oth ers formed, under the laws of New York, a joint stock company, -called "The Pennsylvania Rock Oil Compa ny," which company purchased in fee .simple all the land on Oil Creek, upon which there were any traces of oil. The company also leased for ninety nine years all the lands, which wer .supposed to contain oil. In 1856 the company sublet the land to parties in New York who were to develop the property and pay a roy alty of 12 cents a gallon for all th oil produced, to the company. Dur Ing the hard times of 1857 the New York contractors became financial ly Involved and unable to carry out the contract. Taking advantage of a slight flaw in the deed they surren dered the land to the Pennsylvania Rock Oil Company. James M. Town send, one of the stockholders, who lived in New Haven, conceived the idea of examining the property, and If it was found as reported, to assume the leases surrendered by the New York parties. Mr. Townsend engaged Edwin . L. Drake, formerly a conductor on the New York and Newi Haven Railroad. who had been compelled to give ui ( his position on account of bad health, to go to Pennsylvania to Investigate the situation. Drake sent a favorable report and Towsend organized a new company with a salary of $1,200 a vear and established himself on Oil - .Creek. The first crude attempts to gather the oil were not very success- ! ful, and at last, upon Drake's advice it was decided to bore for oil. The work was begun in 1859 and progressed but slowly. After $50,00j had been expended on boring without result, the company decided to aban don the work, but .just then oil was struck and it rose in the bore hole to within fiveeet of the- surface. It hd tn he DumDed from the well and the .:supply seemed Inexhaustible. The company was in a fair degree to be come rich, when the works were d'e stroyed by an explosion of gas in.th? well, which ignited the oil. In the meantime overproduction had caused the price of oil to fall to $1 a bar rel and, discouraged, the Senaca com pany sold out. For two years noth ing was done, but then the work was resumed, additional refineries were built and from that time on the o!l industry made giant strides. How enormous has been its growth may be inferred from the fact that the pro duction of crude petroleum in the United States in 1907 was nearly 1,186,000,000 gallons, representing a total value of nearly $85,000,000. FULL OF TRICKERY, SHORT-LIVED It -Will Be Repudiated When a New Congress Is Elected Next Year. While the consumer gets nothing from the Aldrich-Cannon tariff scheme, yet the period of business waiting and tnueitciiiity will be ended hen the bill ntues the Senate and is signed. 1'jsiness will then go on in practically tho cid Dingley grooves. But the tariff planned by and for New England will not last long. No tariff does. The Dingley tariff lasted twelve years, and it is the record. The Morrill tariff, signed by President Buchanan, was changed during the Civil War. Rates were frequently al tered between 1865 and 1883. The tariff law of 1883 was repealed by the McKmley act of 1890, and the latter was replaced by the Wilson bill in J8P4, and the Dingley law was passed in 1897. The last named has stood twelve years, not because of any good ia it, but because the Republican par ty lemained in power. The new Aldrich bill nearly met de feat when th- conference report on it was brought before the House. The vote to recommit it was 183 yeas and 193 nays. Twenty Republicans, chief ly from the Middle West, voted against it, and the Republican party is a party of discord over it. It will not last long. It will be repudiated when a new Congress is elected next year. It is full of jobs at the expense of the consumer, but the worst joker in it is, no dubt, the maximum "and min imum section. Under this section all duties on goods are automatically in creased on March 31 next 25 per cent. If a country can show that it in no way discriminate against American goods the Presidf tt may grant it the rates name l in the bill as it was re-! ported Horn the conference commit tee. Possibly England can do this. Other European countries cannot and r e ther can Brazil nor Canada. Twen ty-five per cent, may, therefore, be snfely added to published rates on nine-tenths of imports. This clause i- a piece of trickery to advance rates while it hoodwinks the consumer. THE BUSINESS AT HAND. Does Goldsboro Realize Its Opportun ity and Obligation? "Twelve-cent cotton" spells "Good times in the South." "$1.25 wheat" means "Good times in the West." Three billion bushels of corn this fall will surely bring good times again to us all. "Then lumber will be high and cars will be scarce. "Delays will be vexatious and the worry simply fierce. "Don't procrastinate, but get busy now, today. "Place your lumber orders without further delay." Such is an extract from an adver tisement of the Massee & Felton Lum ber Co., of Macon, Ga. It tells a story, for it applies not only to lumber, but to everything else. Twelve-cent cot ton does mean great prosperity for the South, and $1.25 wheat delights the heart of the Western farmer. Three billion bushels of corn," which Is now the promise, though of course it is too early to predict the final yield, would largely exceed the biggest crop ever before raised and add mightily to the conditions making for prosperity. jWfhat a wonderful country this is! How nature has given to us illimitable opportunities! With its vast possi bilities in cotton, wheat and corn and other agricultural products, with its almost boundless stores of mineral wealth awaiting utilization, how infi nitely great are the possibilities of nnr country for business. "Get ready or get Left was the theme of a recent editorial In the Manufacturers' Record. Get ready for business or get left in controlling your share of business in the coming days of great activity may well be the thought of every business man of the country at present, and nc. only of every business man. but ot every community. What is Goldsfcoro doing? KILLS FLEAS Cures worst -case mange.- Bicaise's mange cure. Not poisonous. Full line Bicaise's Dog Remedies for sale' by M. E. Robinson & Bro., Druggists. sa we-sw . . f ! The tariff bill missed defeat in the House by a small vote, but this miss was as good as a unanimous vote.. COLORED BAPTISTS State Sunday School Con vention Holding Forth Here. Delegates From All Sections of the State in Attendance An Impres sive Body Raleigh Chosen for Next Meeting. . , Editor Argus: The Colored State Baptist Sunday School Convention. Dr. Roberts president, now in session at First Baptist Church, this city, is being attended by large delegations from every section of the State. Part of Tuesday was allowed the State Baptist ' Young People's Union, Prof W. H. Knuckles, president. The lec tures by Dr. A. W. Pegues, supervisor of the State School for Colored Deaf Dumjb and Blind Youths, and Prof. C. R. Frazier, of Shaw University, were comprehensive and effective. Reports from the various unions made the past year's work of the local organizations the best in the annals of the B. Y. P. U. among negroes in the State. Tuesday evening the first session of the Sunday School Convention was held. - i In behalf of the city, Col. J. E. Rob inson delivered an address of welcome that was scholarly, logical and whole some for the hundreds of colored peo ple, who applauded him. Dr. S. A. Vass, superintendent of the work among colored people for - the American Baptist Publication Society in behalf of the convention responded to the welcome address and caused the enthusiasm of the conevntion to run high. The annual sermon was preached by Rev. O. S. Bullock. Every phase of the Sunday School work is being discussed by the delegates and the interest manifested by them in the va rious topics and lectures is making the program an interesting one. "Some of the Causes and Prevention' of Tuberculosis," was comprehensive ly discussed by Dr. J. E. Del linger, ol Greensboro. Subjects of vital inter est were ably discussed by Dr. A. M Moore, Rev. Dr. A. Shepard, Miss A M. Hall, Dr. J. A. Wfhitted, Miss A. L. E. Weeks and others. The delegates are representative colored people of the State and among the prominent colored business men present are Mr. C. C. Spaulding, man ager of the North Carolina Mutual and Provident Association, the largest ne gro insurance organization in the world, and Col. James H. Young, of Raleigh. Today Col. James H. Young, of Ral eigh, made a strong appeal for the convention to continue its efforts in behalf of educating colored girls for active and conscientious service. He praised the white people of the State, for their interest in the work. ' The work that Prof. A. B. Vincent. a missionary of the convention among the negroes of the State, was highly commended by the convention. The following officers were unani mously elected for the ensuing-year: Dr. N. F. Roberts, Raleigh, president; Rev. P. S. Lewis, Charlotte, recording secretary; Mrs. Sallie Barber, Wilson, assistant secretary ; Dr. A. W. Pegues, Raleigh, corresponding secretary t Col. James H. Young, Raleigh, treas urer. Dr. N. F. Roberts was given an ova tion by the convention upon being re elected president. The convention will meet at Raleigh next year. OFFICIAL REPORTER, August 5, 1909. Appointed to West Point., Ray Lee Wooten, of La Grange, has been appointed a cadet at the mili tary academy y- Senator Simmons. Carl D. Taylor, of New Bern, has been designated as the alternate. GOVERNMENT AEROPLANE. Will Be Thrown Open to All Aviators Who Wish to Experiment. Washington, D .C., August 4. The government aeroplane, which is to be placed at the disposal of - Wilbur Wright for the purpose of training Lieutenants Lahm and Foulois in the manipulation of .the Wright aeroplane purchased by . the government, is to be thrown open for the use of any aviators who desire to conduct exper iments. This decision was reached today by General James Alien, chief signal officer of the army. Little is to be done with the army dirigible this summer. It is now housed. The attention of the aero nautical division of the signal corps will ' be given almost entirely to ths Wright aeroplane during, the summer and autumn months. EXTERMINATE "TYPHOID FLY." He Is the Proven Common Enemy of Mankind. Wle are told that this common pest, which we are so much accustomed to look upon merely as a nuisance, is, in reality, the-most dangerous insect known to man. Dr. Ta. O. Howard, chief entomolo gist of Georgia's department of agri culture, in order to fasten upon the popular mind the dangerous character of the house fly, has suggested that the name of this insect be changed to the "typhoid fly," and it is by this name that the house fly Is henceforth tc be known by a number of earnest medical men who feel that we cannot do too much to arouse the people to the danger of this pest. It is reliably estimated by those who are capable of judging that 85 per cent, of the cases of typhoid fever in cities, and 95 per cent. In the rural , districts, is caused by the "typhoid fly." They generate and live In filth and everything they toush becomes contaminated to some degree. . It Is highly probable that this contamina tion contains the germs of typhoid fever, and hence it is not difficult to understand why the typhoid fever ep idemic occurs in summer and remains until frost has driven the "typhoid fly' into hibernation or destroyed him al together. The fly committee of the Georgia Medical Association has undertaken the task of distributing some printed matter which points out the danger of typhoid from the common house fly otherwise known as the "typhoid fly' and strongly urges that people Don't allow fles in the house. Don't permit them near food espe cially milk. Don't buy foodstuffs where flies are tolerated. Don't eat where flies have access to the food. r Some startling descriptions are printed of the manner in which the common . house fly distributes death and disease. . v There is no need to go into the sta tistics of typhoid fever, but if anybody chooses to look, them up they will find that it is high time we were takr ing steps to prevent the recurrenp of typhoid epidemics, J Scientific investlgaCioa nas proven beyond a doubt that it is the common house fly which is responsible for these epidemics. The old" idea that bad drinking water was the most fruitful source of typhoid fever has been exploded. While there is danger from this source, of course, It is the deadly house fly which really does the damage, and this crusade to destroy h'ni should be carried forward with an unsleeping vigilance worthy of the gravity of the situation. KITCHIN ON "TRUST BUSTING." Many Believe Speech Yesterday Means He Will Oppose Simmons. Raleigh, N. C, August 4. In what many take to be a pronouncement leading to his active candidacy for the seat of Hon. F. M. Simmons in the United States Senate, Governor W. W Kitchin today addressed . the Wake County Farmers' Union on "Trust Busting," taking the ground that state legislation can accomplish but little and that the real fight must he through national legislation. He defended his own and the North Carolina legislature's record in anti trust effort, insisting that it is in the halls of Congress that the people must have their anti-trust law mak ers. He regretted adverse criticism of the last legislature and of the execu tive for not raising a -row with the legislators for not doing more and argued that sub-section ""F" adopted by the last assembly Is no "pink tea" concoction, as compared , with the de feated sub-section "A" or the Texas anti-trust act either. - Jeffries Off for Europe. New York, August 5. Reiterating his willingness to fight Jack Johnson f rothe heavyweight title before any club offering suitable terms, James J. Jeffries, accompanied by his wife and manager, took passage today for Eu rope, to rest, after a long and arduous theatrical tour and to get himself into condition for the expected contest with Johnson. The immediate objec tive . point of the big champion is Carlsbad, the famous health resort hi Bohemia, where he will do a little preliminary training. "After leaving Carlsbad he will make ; a short trip, visiting Germany, France and Eng land, and will probably re turn to America about the end of October. After that, he sayshe will be ready to take on Johnson at any -time or place. Meanwhile Sam Berger, Jefr tiles' sparring partner, is left on this side to take care of any offers from clubs or individuals desirous of se curing the championship contest. A news item, says candidates are becoming plentiful. If this contin ues there wilL be' more candidates than voters. EflD OF TARIFF REVISION Littla Better Than IlewDea of the Same Old Cards. Any Attempt to Compare the General Tendency of the Present Law With the Dingley Sched nles Is Difficult. It is conceded that there are so many changes of classification in the new tariff bill, such as the familiar device of substituting specific for ad valorem duties, that any attempt to compare the general tendency of the present law with the Dingley sched ules is exceedingly difficult, but the general impression prevails among those who are most capable of judg ing that the new tariff is but little better than a new deal of the same old cards. There are many reductions and other excellent features embodied in the new bill, but there are others which the President himself,- in spite of the concessions he did succeed in extorting, is compelled to deplore. The South gets the hot end of it, as usual, for while the manful stand for free hides finally prevailed, the tax continues on cotton bagging, and the impost on many of the necessaries of life remains unchanged. " "Vile should be duly grateful to the President for having insisted that the tax on lumber should be reduced to a dollar and a quarter and a reduction from forty to fifteen cents on iron ore is a further concession, which the public, hat in hand, is truly thankful for, but the woolen schedule remain. practically the same thanks to tbt influence of such manufacturers as Whitman and the changed terminol ogy of the cotton schedule does not conceal the fact that there is an av erage increase there of about three per cent. The adoption of a maximum and minimum basis is one of the wisest features of the bill. It is in accord ance with the Jbest thought of the century in the matter of tariff rates It gives the government, through the chief executive, a weapon with which it can compel foreign countries to give us their most favored nation rates. To have to overcome a twenty- five per cent, penalty on all commodi ties they export into this country un less they give as good rates to our own exports as they do to those of other countries is calculated to secure the best possible treatment from for eign countries. Something like justice has at last been done to our fellow citizens of the Philippines. Some day, when in ternational complications have brought serious embarrassment upon us, and our own repudiation of the Monroe doctrine has been brought home to us, we will regret the fact that we have not turned loose those islands long ago, which hang like a millstone about our necks, but so long as they are ours the nihabitants should be treated justly and fairly, and the most patriotic of our citizens cannot contend that they have receiv ed justice in the matter of the -tariff until now. Restrictions still exist in regard to the amount of sugar and tobacco which may be imported free into this country in any one year one of the most flagrant abuses of the protection principle of which we have any rec ord. As a practical fact, however, good encouragement is given to Phil ippine industry and complete justice may come hereafter. President Taft announces that he stands ready and willing to "defend the present tariff law. He thereby in dicates that it will stand in need of defense, and such no doubt is the case As its provisions become clear under the fierce light of investigation, it will be found that the campaign promises were but hollow mockeries. That the people who expected mate rial reductions have been deceived scarcely admits of debate. The Dem ocratic party will have a good battle cry when the next election comes around, for it 'is the hollowest mock ery to talk of revising the tariff "at the nands of its friends." FAVOR REORGANIZATION. S. A. L. Stockholders Approve Adjust ment and Plan Bond Issues. Petersburg, Va., August 4. A meet ing of the stockholders of the Sea board Air Line Railway was held here today, presided over by Judge Lehigh R. Watts, of Portsmouth, Va. v The adjustment plan incident to the company's reorganization, was ap proved, as were the authorizing of the new refunding mortgage to secure an ' Issue, not to exceed $125,000,000,' of ! refunding bonds and of the new mort gage securing an issue, not to exceed $25,000,000 for adjustment bonds. TEACHERS' INSTITUTE. It Is Largely Attended and Good Work Is Being Done. 1 ,The Wayne County Teachers' Insti tute, now in daily session at the Graded School in this city, with Pro fessor Walker and Mrs. Marianna Cobb Gariessen in charge, is growing in interest and in benefits to thu laree number of teachers in attendance, and the responsive spirit with whih the attending teachers meet the co-opera tive work of the instructors makes th institute one of exceeding pleasure as well as profit. Tomorrow afternoon the Goldsboro Woman's Club, always ready to do itl, full part by Goldsboro, will g'.ve au! "at home" to the teachers, in the na? ture of an open-air outing at thij Pari; pavilion, where refreshments vill br served. TURKEY AND GREECE MAY LIGHT Report Is That the Belligerents Hart; Had a Bloody Battle Already Near the Frontier. Const.ant.innnle. Alienist K TnrVav planning war with Greece bvr thtl t , j or, i , t Island of Crete is menaced upon herj noruiern irontier oy the uuig,iausj While iour 1 urkish transports bear-! . ... xMvauc w ismun, wuiu was brought to the Grand Vizier that? a bloody encounter between Turkish and Bulgarian troops had taken nlace: near the frontier. Villagers took part and many were seriously wounded. According to the Turkih version, the Bulgarians precipitated the fracas bv firing on the Turks. The dispute with Greece over Crete has assumed alarming proportions bordering on actual warfare. Rifast Pasha, tho minister of foreign affairs, declared to the Helenic minister today that the Ottoman government would make a formal demand for the immediate re call of Grecian officers from Crete. The Turkish minister in Athens will also make this demand. If it is not fulfilled, and Greece has intimated that it will not be, Crete will become the battleground. Turkish troops will soon arrive there to enforce the pol icies of the Ottoman government. Turkey already has a flotilla of ward ships off Crete. These policies are about being resented. Greece Is pre paring for a more vigorous protest. While Turkish transports carrying troops are ploughing through the Aegian Sea, the Grecian government is preparing for war. ! EUREKA HAPPENINGS. Prof. E. B. Phillips and Mr. T. F. Jones spent Saturday in Goldsboro. Messrs. Ed. Dawson and Leslie Da vis spent Sunday in Wilmington and V.'rightsville Beach. Qi.ite a number of our people at tended the Masonic picnic last Friday at Stantonsburg, This picnic is given annually for the benefit of the orphan age at Oxford. All report plenty of larbecue and a pleasant day. Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Overman are spending a few days in Goldsboro this week visiting relatives. Mr. and Mrs. T. C. Hill spent Sun day in Eureka at Mrs. Missouri Yel verton's. Prof. E. B. Phillips is attending the teachers institute this week. Messrs. W. E. Dawson , and Jake Mayo and Misses Bettie Barden and Bertie Becton spent from Saturday until Monday at Warsaw, visiting Mis Irene Boyette. Miss Mary Lewis Sasser, of Golds boro, is spending this week with her grandmother, Mrs. Missouri Yelver ton. - Mrs. J. R. Sauls is quite sick this week. Her many friends wish her a speedy recovery. Miss Ruth Jones spent from Friday until Sunday visitng friends in Sara toga. Quite a number of our young peo pie attended the yearly meeting of the Primitive Baptist Church at Saratoga Sunday. Mr.v and Mrs. L. D. Minshew attend ed the quarterly conference at Leb anon Saturday and Sunday. ' Mrs. Bon Witherlngton and children spent a few days the past week with her sister, Mrs. Luby Edmundson, of Lindell. , - Mr. and Mrs. June Davis were vis itors in Eureka Sunday. Rev. Mr. Black filled his regular appointment Sunday in the M. E. Church here. He preached. an able and inspiring sermon. All Sunday Schools of Nahunta township are requested to send reo resentatives and reports to the con vention, . which meets at the M. E Church in Eureka Friday, August 6 1909. Several able speakers will b. present and- much good is expected to be accomplished for the Sundav School cause. MAG1STER. aOLDSBOROIflTERESTED Pacific TouringJjParly na?e Miraculous Escape in Wreck. At Dubuque, Iowa, Defective Switch on Illinois Central Causes Acci dent to C. H. Gattis JToria , Carolina Party Train. Raleigh, N. C, August 5. Informa tion came to Raleigh yesterday that the North Carolina party touring the West in charge of Mr. C. H. Gattis in the Seaboard Air Line personally con duced party had been in an accident ru iowa, but that no one was injured. Air. Gattis, who is a traveling pas senger agent of the Seaboard Air Line, telegraphed as follows from Chi cago: ' , ; "Our party -was derailed at Du buque, la., on the Illinois Central, this TT iivn " K'f a a 1 . iu "mo uuii ui received s scratch. Four rear carJ uiw.ujug.. iiu uue nurt or receiver! a but no dama and WQ fe n ,iriW tar . . - uuuid laic. is declared to have been a marvelous escape were received last night from the 1 elegraph-Herald, of Dubuque, la. In reply to a telegram sent by the News and Observer asking for partic ulars as to the accident, that paper replied: "Accident was due to defective switch, which opened when a part of the train had passed. The accident occurred at a point thirty feet above a slough on one side and the Missis sippi river on the other. None of the passengers was injured, but their es cape is regarded as miraculous." It will be pleasing news to friends and relatives of the North Carolina party that though there was a wreck, no one was injured, and that the part is still "happy on the way" in the West. f CAPE EEAR ON A RAMPAGE. Reaches Forty Feet at Fayetteville, and Still Going Up. Fayetteville, N. C, August 4 The Cape Fear river is on a boom, but it is earnestly hoped that a repetition of iast August's disastrous flood which ruined crops in the lowlands will not ji had. Today all the cotton mills in f'ayetteville which are run by elec tricity from Buckhorn on the upper Cape Fear have been suspended for a The street cars were stopped on ac count of backwater at Manchester on Little river. Later in the day they were run by the city dynamo. The latest advices state that the river has reached more than a forty -foot rise, and is still rising. A fifty foot rise would be nineteen feet less than last year. Reports from the lowlands are that some corn is already submerged and consequently ruined. WOODLAND CRUMBS. Mrs. Sally Holowell Byers and sis ter. Hiss Emma Hollowell, of Golds boro, attended church at Woodland Sunday last, where we were glad to tuett them. Mrs. Byers was reared 5n this community, but since her mar riage has made her home in Ala mance. - The Sunday School convention, which convened at Providence Church last Thursday, was a very enjoyable occasion. Mr. George Hood, of Golds boro, made an excellent speech, as did Mr. James Mitchell, Mr. Marshal Hood and Mr Charley Stephens. The program arranged by our township president, Mr. G. W. Parker, was carried out nicely, while it was very warm - the Ice cream and lemonade contributed to make it comfortable. It was thought by some to be the best township convention we have .ever had. . The sad news of the death of Dr. Swindell reached us last week. Ha had many friends through this com munity who mourn the loss of such a noble soldier of the cross. t Prof. W. E. Yonts came down from Guilford College Saturday evening to resume his work as nrincinal rf Woodland Academy for' another vear He will attend the teachers' institute at Goldsboro for two , weeks. Then the school will open with Miss Roella Cox assisting. READER. Woodland, N. C, August 2. ' Nine million seven hundred and 3eventy-six thousand words were ut tered in the tariff bill. What a Job of embalming for the Congressional Record. . The WJright brothers were paid $30 -000 for an airship and their expert services. The field is profitable, and we may expect the correspondence schools to take it up. r Pi 1 '.. Vr.:,ii. ... V . ' i-l ' ' -J ' 4 "? ? ! i s