THE TTOMmGTON MESSENGER, FRIDA1T, SEPTEMBER 9,. liilM 4ti pucbh J5 .A TWO-EDGED SWORD. A wo-edged sword has this Watts Decome and it behooves the cort servative, patriotic people of the state to see to It that its slaughter of the hopes of continuance of Rood govern ment and democratic rule in our dear old state shall cease. A two-edged sword it Is, and both edges are being -o uismemoer tne democratic party. Between th advocates and the' opponents of this measure there Is crimination and recrimination. Neith er side can lay the blame on the other, for both seem to be determined on the wreck and ruin of the only party which can save the state from return to ihe extravagance, debauch ry and disgrace of the days of fusion- ism and carpetbagism. Each side to "what is called this great moral issue, which, while it is called a moral issue, Js brought directly Into politics, seems to be. trying to secure the political ad vantage of the other. In the fight between the two. what Is foing to become of the democratic party, on which depends so much of the prosperity and advancement of our people in wealth, education and moral improvement? Both sides seem to have lo3t sight of everything but whether there shall be liquor sold in certain localities at all or not, or whether from private or munici pal saloons. In some counties, because the men nominated by the democratic convention are ndi' prohibition ists, the ticket Is considered no good by a minority element, and it meets and launches into the already disturbed ranks of that party a full county ticket composed of men of its own views on the liquor question. Cau anything be more absurd? Can men .who do this call themselves demo crats? In other counties men who opposed the Watts law declare they .will not vote the county ticket because some of the party's nominees favor that law. Do you call such men dem ocrats? A democrat is a man who stands by his ' party platform and .votes for the candidates his party men in convention nominate by a majority vote. There Is plenty of time after the political issues have been settled and the party candidates have been elected to settle the question as to local option 'dispensary or open' saloons. Keep these out of the political contest. No thing can be gained by bringing them into it and a great' deal can be lost. Let's all unite as we have done here tofore in electing the democratic can didates and save the state from return to republican rule, then take up this moral question'. For heaven's sake do noc bring it into politics. You men who stood by the democratic party in those days when It was in a life and death struggle and who have stood by it from the day it hurled the republi can party from power, with its fraud, corruption and rascality, pause and consider before you now bring upon it defeat and submission to the dark forces which once humiliated you and ground you in the dust. Pause before you take the fatal step, and consider whither you are drifting. Don't let your opinions on a mere moral ques tion, which, if you must taint with politics, can be settled within the par. ty, lead you to desert that party which has made our glorious old state what ehe is. In this flght over the liquor ques tion, if brought into politics at the ap proaching election, the democrats have everything to lose and nothing to gain the republicans everything to gain and nothing to lose. The republicans know that in a fair light on the politi cal issues they have no chance of win ning, and therefore it Is to their inter est to stir up strife In the democratic ranks. They wish to divide the party against itself, and every move toward of opinion on this loquor question is fostered and encouraged by them. Every move of this sort plays Into their hands. If we are to be -defeated in this election, let it be by the enemy and not bv men within our own ranks, .Stand by your party until after the election; then, if you must, divide on the questions of the Watts lav. '.Maine, Vermont and Arkansas vote for state officers today. Of course everybody knows how they will result. still there is some interest in the vote in the two New England states, be cause the democrats are trying to re duce the usual republican majorities in these vro. A FACT ABOUT THE "BLUES" What is knows as the "Blues" is seldom occasioned by actual exist in? external conditions, but in the great majority of cases by a dis ordered LIVER - THIS IS A FACT which may be demonstra ted by trying a course of They control and regulate the LIVER. They bring hope and bouyancy to the mind. They bring health and elastic ity to the body. . TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE. Mtfi jm. BECKwmrs statement. We take the statement of Mr. B, C. Beckwith, given below, from the Morn ing Post of Sunday. Now that th; question of lease of the Atlantic and North Carolina railroad has been set tled and the contract made, we think it is time to stop discusain the merits of th question. Two members of the board of internal improvements, nine out of ten of the directors, and a large majority of the private stockholders favored acceptance of Mr. Holland's proposition, and they have theWpro vai in their action of "a large major ity of the people of the state Ths matter Is settled and let it drop. We think, though, we should In Justice to The Messenger, publish Mr. Beckwith's statement and make rePlr to one or two of the assertions contained there in. The Post savs: Mr. B. C. Beckwlth of the state board of internal improvments, who return ed yesterday morning from Morehead City was asked by The Morning Post if he had anything to say about the lease of the Atlantic and North Car olina railroad. He sat down and wrote: "No, not now; but I must congratu late The Post. You and the Charlotte Observer and the Wilmington Messen ger have accomplished that which you undertook. You've forced a lease of the road. You are IT no doubt of that. Your guns have silenced the others or captured them, and knocked me out. "I see that my colleague, Mr. B. W. Ballard, has received the formal thanks of the Charlotte Observer for standing with Governor Aycock, without which the lease could not have been affected It took his vote and the governor's to authorize the state's proxy to vote for a lease. Without his vote It could not have been done I opposing. Well, 1 am glad to see The Observer has sq completely changed Its opinion of wy friend Ballard, and now, thinks so highly of him. for It held him and the board of internal improvements in mighty low contempt In April last, dur ing the Investigation of the affairs of the road and so did the Messenger. You knew better, or at least your man ners Tvere finer. "Well, you've been ipersistent. Insis tent and consistent in your efforts to force a lease, and you've won. I like a fighter. I despise a quitter." This paper has not taken part with any other in attempting to fore a lease of the road. It has thought all along that it would be better for the road and also for" the state that it should be leased, and we have per sistently urged that the state authori ties should take this course. We have not attempted to force any one to this course, because, in the first place, we knew that should we desire to "force" any line of action on the men whs had this matter in hand we would ut terly fall, for they are not the kind cf men to fbe forced by newspapers; In the second place, there vras no occa sion to attempt to force. What -we un dertook to do and we are glad to see that Mr. Beckwlth gives us credit for having succeeded in our endeavor, was to convince those in control of thi3 matter, and the peoiple of the state, that the property should be leased. We acted for what we thought th best interests of the state and the railroad. If our efforts have been ef fective, as Mr. Beckwith says they have, we rejoice in the knowledge "that we have been of some benefit to the state. In reference to Mr. Beckwith's state ment that The Messenger "held tha board of internal Improvements in mighty low contempt in April last, during the investigation of the affairs of the road," we make positive denial and assert that not a line can be found in the columns of this paper during the month of April last, or at any oth er time in which The Messenger used any language contemptuous of the board of internal improvements, or of any. member thereof. During the whole time of ' conten tion over this road. The Messenger has done what it conceived to be its duty to the people of North Carolina, and it has no apologies to make for tho course pursued. If our efforts have been in the least degree instrumental in convincing those whose duty it wa9 to pass upon the question of lease of this property, that such course should be taken then, we feel repaid for our labor and cheerfully submit to ad verse criticism from those who refus? to yield to the verdict in this matter of the overwhelming majority against them. If the Messenger has been Partly in strumental in bringing about this lease, as Mr. Beckwith says it has, we feel well repaid for our labors Jn knowing that wre have brought about a condition which will bring into 'th? state treasury thousands of dollars yearly, where heretofore there was an annual drain to keep this property afloat to say nothing of the dividends which will for the first time in the his tory of the road annually drop into the pockets of the private stockhold ers. Twenty-five years or more ago the state had an opportunity to lease this road to entirely responsible par ties at a rental which would have placed in its treasury about ninety thousand dollars a year, but refused. Had this lease been made the private stockholders since then would have re ceived in dividends more than the face value of their stock and still own the stock, which would today be worth far above its present value, but the road was a good political lever, and that it might be kept In politics thers was opposition, and still is from some quarters to its lease on terms advan tageous to all concerned except those politicians who object to its going out of their hands. It was to put an end to such contli tions that The Messenger advocated the lease of the road. The lease has been made. Now why not let the-mat-ter drop. Nothing can be gained by further discussion. We would not have again alluded to the subject ex cept for" Mr. ' Beckwith's statement. - 7L Qhczt thzt Game in,. the Rlaytlovrcr V: : Is sure to attract the titrntica of every New England woman and with pride uf her heart she marvels that it i so atroeg and well preserved. This is due to the fact that it has received prompt attention when any igns of weakening were shown. So the woman of to-day may keep her strength and preserve her good looks if she gives immediate attention to the first symptoms of any womanly weakness. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription prompt ly cures disease and restores strength to all women who are weakened by any womanly disease and are run down by maternal and household cares. FOR WOMEN WHO CANNOT BB CURED. Backed up by over a third of a century of remarkable and uniform cures, a record such as no other remedy for the diseases and weaknesses peculiar to women ever attained, the proprietors and makers of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription now feel fully warranted in offering to pay $500 in legal money of the United States, for any case of Leucorrhea, Female Weakness, Pro lapsus, or Falling 0 Womb which thqtr cannot cure. All they ask is a fair aoQ reasonable trial of their means of cure. World's Dispensary Medical Asso ciation, Proprietors, Buffalo, N. Y. Miss Stella Johnson, of 28 Brady St., Dayton. Ohio, writes : I was troubled with severe pains every month when I wrote to you for advice. After following your directions, I am happy to say that after five years of untold suffering I have not had any pains since first using your Favorite Prescription. I thank God and Dr. R. V. Pierce fir the health I now enjoy. I shall urge other women who suffer as I aid to use your medians." " Take Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets instead of any ether laxative. THE CliARKTOX TRAGEDY. Up to this writing the two men who are accused of the horrible crime at Clarkton last Saturday are safe in the county jail in Elizabethtown. There was a crowd of fearfully wrought-up men at the scene of the tragedy Satur day night and Sunday, and as the evi dence against the men is so conclusive it is remarkable that the county officers were able to prevent a lynching and to get their prisoners away. That they did so shows great coolness and deter mination on their part and they deserve all praise for theTr conduct. "When we consider the nature of the crime and all the surrounding circumstances, had the friends of the dead and the living -who have so suffered at the hands of these brutes visited summary furnished on them, who is there who would have the heart to say that they should be punished? Lynching, we 'mow, Is a criminal offence. It is technical mur der. Mob law is a dangerous thing be cause of the precedent it sets for vio lence and defiance of law and order, but then ,we are all human, with a large mixture of brute nature in us and when such crimes as this arc brought home to us are committed against friends or perhaps relatives we have little thought of any but the one law of quick and Just punishment. Had the friends and relatives of the poor dead mutilat ed woman taken these fiends from the hands of the officers and riddled, their bodies with bullets or hanged them to the nearest tree their conduct could not have received severe condemnation from public opinion. It is true that if these men are guilty they will suffer death by the judgment of law. Noth ing can save them. This Is the .right and proper course for the case to take, but what we want to say Is that under the cricumstances no one could severe ly censure the people of (Bladen county if they took the law into their own hands and executed the guilty parties. Sunday's dispatches brought no news of consequence from the seat of war in Manchuria. The first Russian corps which was in danger of capture ; has succeeded in joining the-maivi body of troops. The authorities at St.v ' Petersburg seem to be in the dark as to General Kuropatkin's movements. ' There is great disappointment that af ter making the stand that he did at Liao Yang he should have been com pelled to retreat before the Japanesa forces, after destroying and abandon ing his immense army stores at that point. The Charlotte Chronicle does not seem to have been much impressed with Hon. F. D. "Winston's speech at Concord last Friday. Judge Brown will secure a well de served rest from October 7th, to the first of next year, -when he wil take his seat on the Supreme Court bench. . He will go to this court with a reputa tion earned upon the Superior Court bench, which any member of the court of last resort might envy. The officials or the agricultural de partment dismiss in a very cayaller manner th charge that there was in formation secretly given out before th official report was made public. They seem to think that all that is neces sary Is for them to deny the positive statement that the figures were In the hands of certain persona in.-tSavannah before th department report was pub lished. This may satisfy the depat ment men. but hardly. those1 who have mad tlw charge. . The "gathering and marketing of crops seem to be more Important to the North Caolina farmers than poli tics these days. Our people should not lo&e sight entirely ot the great stake issue in the November fictions; , Did rou have a good, time yesterday and Vnjoy the Labor Day exercises, or are you glad that the next celebration is twelve months off?' - - S5QO GEORGIANS TOZYISTT ST. IUIS. Governor Terrell and Staff - and the .- legislature IVfll be Present on Georgia Day. 1 'Atlanta, Ga., September 5. Extensive preparations are being made amonsr the Georgia state officials to represent the state at the SU Louis World's fair on IGeorgia day, which is set for September 2Sth. . Oovernor Terrell and his staff, and the Georgia legislature in a body, will leave Atlanta on a special train over the Southern Railway at 4:20 p. m. Monday, September 2Sth and will arrive in St. Louis at 2 p. m. the follow ing day The train will go via Rome, Dalton and over the Queen and Crescent to Lexing ton, thence to Louisville and St. Louis. This train will carry a large number of prominent 'Georgians, and will ensure the success of the day; chosen in Geor gia's honor. Special trains will also te run from Brunswick and Macon to Atlanta, bringing prominent citizens from the southern part of the state who will be with the party to visit St. Louis on Georgia day. A Labor Saving Idea. (Eva "Ryland-5aillard in National Magazine.) Realizing- the fact that the cutting out" of round cookies -was the main part of the work' because it necessi tated handling and rolling part of the dough over again, as well as making hundreds of other useless motions. I decided that an easier way was good enough for me ' and abandoned th "cookie cutter" at once, and forever. Nowadays I roll the dough into a thin sheet and with a thin knife cut it into bars or squares. - The cookies are cer tainly as pleasing to the eye; as ea&y to bite or break and in every way as desirable as the round ones, while they have the- advantage of requiring less space when put away. The change from round to square cookies proved the biggest "little help" toward saving time, strength and patience that 1 have found in a long time. CASTOR I A For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of In the Garden of Eden. Among the stories told by Dr. Em mons, a well known clergyman of a former day and generation, there are many which show his keen wit. In the Iowa town where he was pas tor there lived.according to the Youth's Companion, a physician who was a pantheist, and took pains to let every one know it. He had made frequent boasts that he could easily conquer Dr. Emmons. He and the doctor met at the house of a sick man. "How old are you, sir?" asked the physician, brusquely. "Sixty-two," replied Dr. Emmons, quietly, although his eyes showed his surprise, '"May I ask your age in turn? "I've been alive since the creation in one form or another, said the phys ician. curtly. "Ah. then. I suppose you were with - auu IJVC 1 I'll. FjLijki kja. y i inquired the doctor. "Certainly." came the reply. m," said Dr. Emmons, placidly, meditating on the other's face. "I al ways thought there .was a third person there, but some have differed from me. CURITY Genuine artels Little Liver Pills. 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