j brings Success. ' , ; . , , - ! .i lvt-rt iisf in the (Jolii . i.i.M". is .shown by its well SENSIBLE BUSINESS MEN 8 i - i. '"i.imiiH to spend i - t inn- nri' st-en . j That is Proof that it pays Them. As an Advertising Medium Tin (oi.t Lkak stands at the heud of n'WjaHTs in thiH section ful tin famous j BRIGHT TOBACCO DISTRICT The must w'ule-awake and ll t t-i'h I business lucll uc iiM commits with the higher! Satisfaction and Profit to Themsclfes. nun R, iNNihG, Publisher. arolina, Carolina, Heaven's Blessings J-rTJ3isrr jHl:b:r..j SUBSCR1PTI01 $1.50 Cart. )L. XVIII. HENDERSON, N. C, THURSDAY, JULY 2G, I89U. NO. 32. WRO'E A LETTER. A'. v. live where there is no skill ::i w mien's diseases, and still :i:fnrd to pay the liiyjli fees -iiiferers should follow the ':- Anna Willy, of Northville, Dik., who writes as follows ! -v, Kuffalo, N. V.: ;..vl health, thanks to vour : ! : rt-nifl ies. I suffered . ! -inrile iiilmcnts fur more than ( -vrot.- to vou for ndvire. After , . -nr ti-'-'- H'lviee, ajid takini; .. In rii vtr'i Favorite I'rtxrij) i iitNtl liscovery,' t am Tiow :,:.v wimriii. I have also taken v)iir ' Pleasant I'ellets,' which t' Ifooil." jrob;dl y treated and cured ,! t in. ile weakness, pains in and abdomen, nervousness, ; "liarities, tileerations, tit : i ! ttiale troubles, than any : iii v-ician. His wide experi- v Jits him to brinvc about cures els- f ails. He charges no t'i tiio-ic who write him for invites all to consult him His wonderful remedy, !' ivorit" Prescription, can eooii to overcome nearly ev- !;- a-.e that atllicts jjirls and i .,'. no alcohol, opium, or and does not create craving ' i mill ttit s, as is so often the i- mi I'.ii ini s advertised for : : ii-. '!! d:eine dealer will give you ivivite Prescription, and not you to t ike some inferior he little added profit he may ii i-h may en lo e 21 otic-cent n 1' tt 1 .. and III. I'icrce will : p.itrc Common Sense i which is the inoM mm 1 Meal family doctor book ever nt.iiiiins.' over 700 pi. 'lures. .'.: 1 loth bound, 31 stamps. "Waves rm t- A. L St at ion) Mmnl ani Lirncli Counter. F' ,!! ti Rooms, Comfortable Reds. -! I i( Mv tirst-class. 1 1 Uejit place. An orderly. SALOON in th- Sti-.te. slocked with i nl tie- i'iv l!est ar.d Purest .0 i - inoiicy can buy. i ; i;s a ND toij ::os !iis in ronnff tion. A Urcat Convenience Tt! Ik People. ! ! l.e', . a "lice line of samples in . Ii:e!i 1 cm order Sails trom p I 1 mii .10 s ti oia .sjr.n ui, any size ' iii m-I. and a tit guaranteed. Also o! -erge-.. linen ducks and ! ; - i ;t ,. chc;i p. Ib'iiiember you can A ' oii w.int, I iom the cheapest to . ! ii - des not cojilliet with my ; I ;:';!ofi!lg at all. James W. White, I he I'p-to-date Tailor. 1 1 1 I ' l.icr I", iicoin's store, opposite e In (lie Spring 11 1 a i onic iml lnvit:r- r t mi el liinu to tone up the Svs .11 d uive added stlelieth to the MMii ion A L'ood Jilood I'm i 1 what veil want To it'y Mood and keep it so t ike . 1 (n t tt,cT. of i!l Blood Purifiers. Scrofula, Old Sores, Rheumatism, Ikzema, Tetter, i ;l 1 1 ,i 1,,-a-es 1, 1" the Hlood and 1 1. 1 ;i! i-dd to its treatment. 1: in 1 1 v elmi-. cures etrected by i: e W rite to day lor hook of -'duNied tct illioli l.l Is. Postoltice i i . 1 1 10 1 atoi y , U ii I rcl 1. . . in Henderson hv 0 The Dor i Miil II. antJ Y. cy Drug; Co., Thomas, W. Parker. VIRGINIA COLLEGE 1 : YOU.N.fi LADIES. Roanoke. V.l. '; nt lso;i. nne of the leading I Voiinii Ladies in the South Iiiiildui's. all modern 1111- I --it.. Canpiis tell acres. Grand .1 -i-e!iei in Vail y of Va . famed i!:!i Kiiropcun and American l"u!l coihmv suiieiior advan- . Ait rnd Mu-ic. Students from een aies. l"or catabgtie ad- ' l's eiilent. U I I'.: i'. II AKi;;s, Uoaiicke, Va. 1 'l i! It:.- rieuiuch, I'llt It et 1 v. iirmer. HI IRES Root beer .1 -i;,W.- you r. ully II 1 -I" W UT I!! !;! . R3 . I .. I -l.il: .1. i.ti:.i. S n 1 V... i. ink lilKf PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM r:ei:.sc and 1..:i.:.u the hair. I'ninu'ic a lnxurtart growth. Mover Fails to Kftor Grmy Hair to its Youthful Color. Curt.- Vtelp d en-i St hair tauing. 5-r. ami ? I vat PmygiaU an.J. - s -r e j- t-r Cs&sV 9j-Cit. "'U'"! sni Cci.tilne. A tt tJ - I . UIC f .. WJ --.-.;t :.r e'.. ...,,r . ' ' ' ' --! I nicillicK -V- V ' ' ' :::i n r.i.. rIke Xyif I 1 crfcr. .rJ.r-.lrnm mlstut I ' ' .1 im .a:. ai I-rucEi.ia. or nu -I.: I e'B . 'T ':f:.uM. t.-Lirai'Hil. I V . '.:.'.i:T fi-r l.i:.!!."!,:!'. l-mlurii .A' Vi..l. l.t.tllHl.. ,:,,.I,:-.- ..-mr f,: 3 JL; r;i t..-r yon can have goods deliver ''' "here in town absolutely free of -" ''"' 11. TIU tM. SON'S. ha 7i. y. Remefly REGARDING LYNCHING I THE UNITED SOUTH AS TO ONE There is Hut One Way to Stop Lynch 'it and That is t Stop the Crime I hat Invite It-The Atajorlty or the Southern People Object to Lynch ing, Save for 1 lie One Unpordonable Crime of Assault Upon Defunct less Women and Children. ( Witii.injjtoii Mes-enj-ei .) Some of the college professors and presidents :ti; very enthusiastic ad vocate., f the now republican plan of turning the l.'ii i ted States into a .second Kiio;iim! :Ul,j making them the oliier great Anglo-Saxon" empire. Some of the college men are also very i!eiiiitici;Uorv of air lynching for al'l oll'-iices inclndin'r the cruel a.ssaults upon pure, helpless uoiiien and chil dren. IntheN.irttievervd.lv fiav :unl ignorant editors deiiounce all ly ueh i ns i 11 ill ' South while either giving a ijuai assent 10 rapes or b siience nlio .v'm. t hem t n go uni hai lenged. If the Missruijir were to un dertake to dix-uss all the bitter, slanderous articles thar. appear in Northern rabid sheets it. would have lo produce a daily editorial. I here may he some excuse for fools and madmen in the North making all .-oris of false impressions upon their leaders as t: Ivnehiiigs in the South, while hardly condemning at all such tnob law in the North, but no South ern man ou'rht to make a mistake mi i tin- p uiit. It is probably a fact that ! j not more than one negro in ten who j commits a rapt: up hi a white woman i of character is ever handed l.v cmn-l ! or mob. Key. Dr. iioss, editor of the Na-livi!le dkristiaii AlaMtlt organ of! the Southern Methodist church, is re- I ported in Southern u t:vspape rs is 1 saving that .'! I t rapi ted upon wliit.es by s were commit negroes in t hree illOll tils. President Dreher, of Iteaiioke t'ol lege, Virginia, is a scholarly and able educator. He has written well and wisely upon ed ucation, in t he South. Ileceiitly he sent to the New York Sun an article bearing upon Southern lyiiciiing-s. Just why he should choose such a malignant and unscrupulous Northern newspaper as a medium of expression, we do not know. We learn, for we have not seen the article, that he contends that Southern lynch ing are by no means limited to rajies. but that they apply to other crimes. This is a true contention. The Mf.wnnrr in common with other newspapers that believe in lynching anv brute that violates the sacred person of a pure white woman or white child, does not justify in the least the mob hangings for other crimes. i,et the law ileal with all crimes but the one crime that in vites speedy and sure punishment. President Dreher is able to make a good argument against all lvnchings, for the North, and South, often over runs with pious denunciation and very plausible argument against mob punishment of all kinds. We copy the following from him in the Rich mond Timet: 'The only position to be taken by law-abiding and law-respecting peo ple is this: That lynching for any crime whatever is itself a crime against civilized society. Wherein especially differ In civilized society the protection, for does civilization from barbarism'.' we have laws for the administration of justice and the punishment of crime. Under bar barous ami savage conditions brute force rules and revenge dictates pun ish men t. To say, then, that in the South or anywhere else in our coun try it is necessary to lynch any class of persons for any crime whatever is to confess that our laws arc defective, the administration of justice uncer tain ami our boasted Christian civili zation to that extent a failure. The remedy for this condition of affairs is certainly not in lynching, for every mob tramples the law under foot." In a perfect civilization with per fect criminal laws, and pare and competent juries, and judges without bias or fallibility, and lawyers above all tricks and catches and sophisims, this would work admirably. All men of ti ft v years old have probably seen red-handed murderers escape the hangman, and. indeed, punishment i , almost of anv kind. With the jurv system now existing in the South it is not only possible, but it is ipiite probable that any murderer or rapist, if a black, may escape punishment. If this is not true every where in the South then other States are better off than is North Carolina. We turn to copy now from the Richmond Times, with whose views we are in sym pathy. Commenting on President DtvherSi communication to the Sun, it says: The best people- throughout the South, indeed the great majority of the Southern people, are violently opposed to lynching, save for the one unpardonable crime of assault upon defenceless women. We have con tended, and we do contend, that the lynching of this class of criminals originated not in any spirit of law lessness, but in a spirit of chivalry. 'Southern men hold their women in reverential regard anil when any in dignity is shown them their indigna tion knows no bounds. That feeling is entertained by every man who has the true Southern blood in his veins, I ...... ni-,1 nlnini tn lw difFereilt. .111(1 v wv m'i v. iw in this resnect from other Southern . men. We feel, as all of is feel, that the scoundrel, be he black or white, who commits this crime should be swung up to the nearest limb and that his taking off is a happy rid dance." The Messenger has iterated and re iterated that the Southern white men were resolved to kill any man, black or white, who was monster enough; brute enough to commit the unspeak able, hellish crime, and that no amount of Northern or Southern denunciation or undiscriminating argument or intense sentimentality, would ever stop it. There is but oie f,,rIhi ng for rape. Iet the orever. .Soutti(;rn homes I of white women will and must be pro j tected. The brute who violates a I white woman must die if caught. J The Time expresses a plain, widely! j prevailing conviction and purpose in ! I this: ! "It is useless to conceal the fact i that there is a strong sentiment in ! the South even ainonj; the most law- I abiding citizens, in favor of lynching I for criminal assault. Hut the'se men ' are not in favor of lynching for other j crimes and they are not the men who! take part in other ly nchings." i A GENTLEMAN. Oiaru:ret Sannster, in Rural Home ) I knew hi n for a ginitleiuan By siirns that never fail; His coat was rough and rather worn. His cheeks were thin and pale A lad who had his way to make. With littlf time to play; I knew him for a gentleman By certain signs to-day. He met h'w mother on thi stre-t; Off came his little cap, Mv door was shut; he waited there Until I 1. -rd hj3 lap He t.i k t : i.Mlt from my hand A- 1 hi. mi ld.uppel my pen, II - ..tug to pick it tip for me '1 .lis gentleman of ten. lie does not push and crowd aloiej; His voice is gently pitched; lie does not flinff his bonks ah utt As if he wre bwi'ched. lie stands asid- to let you pass; He always shuts the door ; He rims on errands willingly To forge and mill 11 ml stoie. lie thinks of you before himself; He serves you if he Call For, i 1 whatever Com pa iy. The m iiiiiers make the man. At ten or Oii ty 'tis the same; The niHiiiir tells the tale, And t ilUcern the ueiitieuuu 15v sinus that never fail. "He that any g.md would win" be inovided with tr hmI health and hoilld every- one who would have good health snoilld remember that pure, rich bloot is the first requisite. Hood s S usa pai 1 1 la , by givmg I good blond and good health, has helped , many a man to suc.es. GKEENSBOROS GALA WEEK. State Firemen's Tournament August 1st to 4th. The State Firemen's Tournament will be held in Greensboro, August 1st, 2nd, 3rd and 4th, and the iieople of that prorressi ve city propose to celebrate the occasion in a fitting manner. The celebration will be turned into a "gala week" of the rarest enjoyment and all who attend will be made to feel at home in the "(iate City" of North Carolina. In addition to the meeting of the North Carolina State Firemen's As sociation, and the many interesting events incident thereto, such as quick-steaming contests, reel races, hook and ladder races, etc., there will be many other interesting and in structive features. On Tuesday, August 1st, a road congress will be held, and addresses will be made by Prof. J. A. Homes, State geologist, and other prominent and well-informed people on the subject of good roads. Tuesday night the annual meeting of the State Horticultural Society will be held. The grand street parade and spetacular trades display will come off Wednesday morning, and this feature alone will be worth traveling miles to see. Wednesday afternoon will be devoted to horse-racing. Liberal purses are offered and some of the finest blooded stock extant will be on the turf. The half-mile track has been put in splendid condition for the occasion and those who attend may confidently expect to see some interesting races. The industrial exhibit, the trades dis play and the tine arts exhibit will be specially attractive. Two spacious exhibit halls have been secured, and two of the itnest bands in the Slate will give continuous concerts. No admission will be charged to any thing, except the horse races. Greensboro is putting on her Sun day clothes for this event and her citizens are bubbling over with en- thusiasm. Tremendous crowds are anticipated and everybody that comes may feel that they will be properly cared for. Not only the hotels and boarding houses, but the private homes of citizens will be thrown open to visitors. If you go to Greensboro you will not be "a stranger in a strange land," but you will be the . . 1 1. uesi 01 ine mosi nospuaoie peopie tin me giuue. niej nui ium; tuu ujr the hand and make you feel that you are among friends. The railroad rates are so low as to enable all to attend. Tickets will be sold on a basis of one tirst-class fare for the round trip. Tickets will be on sale July 81st and August 1st, 2nd and 3rd, good to retnrn until August 7th. On August 2nd and 3rd (Wednesday and Thursday) a rate of practically one cent a mile will pre vail. This rate will apply to points within 150 miles of Greensboro and extend beyond that distance to in elude Wilmintrton, Kinstou. Rockv Mount and Asbeville Strictly Up To Date. (Philadelphia Record.) I see," remarked Dedbroke that vou advertise an up-to-date boarding-houe. 1 suppose that re fers to the service and appoint ments.' No, indeed," replied the landlady; thsit refers exclusively to the boarder. I don't keep any one who irets behind." His Life Was Saved. Mr. J. E. Lillv , a prominent citizen of Hannibal, Mo., lately had a wonderful diliverance from a frightful death. In tell ing of it he says: "I was taken with Typhoid Fever, that ran into Pneumonia. My lungs became hardened. I was so weak I couldn't even sit up in bed. Nothing helped me. 1 expected to die soon of Con sumption, when I heard of Dr. King's New Discovery. One bottle gave great relief. I continued to use it, and now am well and strong. I can't say too much in its praise." This marvelous remedy is the surest and quickest cure in the world, for all Throat and Lung Trouble. Regular aiaes &Q cents and 41.0& Trial bottles free at the Dorsey Hrng Co'sj every bottle guaranteed. TECHNICAL EDUCATION. WOKKOFTHE AGRICU LT U K A L AND MEt'HA N IC A L COLLEGES. They Should bo Made the Training School of the State's Development It is the Agricultural and Mechan ical Coilejres That the South Must Look for Its Industrial Leaders of the Future .North Carolina'sOppor tuutty. ( Manu factuieis' Record ) Two great problems are at present ' engaging the attention of American ; educators. One relates to the promo tion of the best methods for overcoui : ing the drawbacks arising from a pre ; ponderance in the general scheme of j education of regard for the humani ; ties, the branches of polite learning, i in preparation for professional life. ! The other deals with the attainments of men who shall successfully direct i the destinies of institutions of learn l ing. In the latter case the tendency j is to select for the presidencey of the institutions men of affairs who have shown by their works that they are interested in education and are quali fied to take a wise and practical view of its purposes, and who are able to advance on practical lities the inter ests of the institutions because of their acquaintance with the world at large, instead of men eminent onlv as schol ars. In the former the conviction is deepening that the successful man in industrial life and in agricultural pur suits must be a trained man, and that provision must be had in the school for that training. North Carolina, in seeking a presi dent for its College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts, is brought face to face with both problems at once. Most of the Southern States have institutions in which it has been generally possi ble to get a good, liberal education as a foundation for a business career or a professional life. That some thing else was needed was indicated in the founding of agricultural and mechanical colleges to meet the per fectly legitimate demand for techni cal education, fitting the farmer and manufacturer for their future on a plane similar to the equipment of professional students. It must be confessed, however, that in more than one instance the aim of these lunger institutions has been thwarted because the persons con trolling them have difficulty in es caping Irom conventional ideas of education, and have been dominated by the older professional views. There is, though, a strong and grow ing determination in North Carolina to avoid the loss of energy in cling ing to conventionalities, and to push the character -of the training at the agricultural and mechanical college into new fields to meet the wants of the agricultural and industrial classes. The Legislature of the State has re cently taken a position which, prop erly cultivated, will produce a textile school in connection with the college. Manufacturing in the State is now recognized as having more promise of growth than ever before. I he devel opment of trucking interestes indi tes the trend of agricultural opera tions demanding better equiment of farmers. The far-seeing men of the State realize that it is a part of wisdom to adapt the courses at the College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts to the new conditions. Every one of them, probably, admit that the State Uni versity and the denominational col leges of the State are doing an ex cellent work in their respective fields, and that their students are as thoroughly trained and as well grounded for their work as are men of the same class anywhere else. But they also know that the demand of the hour in the South is for training in skill as well as in the acquisition of knowledge. Thev contend that the preparation of the hand and brain for useful employment is the great hope of the South, and that the schools of the Sooth intended to develop its agriculture and manu factures should teach its youth to deal with the forces of nature in telligently, and to manipulate the machinery for utilizing the raw ma terial at hand. Now that the vacancy has occurred in the presidency of the college at Raleigh, a valuable opportunity, has been presented to emphasize this conviction by selecting for the head of the institution an administrator in close touch with educational, in dustrial and business affairs of the State, rather than a teacher or pro fessor. By this they may avoid the tendency to make the school a mere competitor with other institutions of the State rather professional in their bearings, and thereby to save un necessary waste of expenses and energies which should be devoted to the preparation of young men to meet the needs of an industrial com- munuy. mere are a lew insuuiuons , (r knmvk.(lca.. aml soni(. f thft in the country where under one man- , natives ,ire bott(n. th:lll W(f have seen agement are gathered the teaching of j elsewhcre. Just whv our .)eH,e havo the humanities, technical training j bpeu SQ care,CS4 as (a fruitgroN ing. and instruction in agricultural antl negl(?ctflll of their own interests science. This is hardly the case mi.i,,,,.",, ,, (U,. r- u . .! t r ? . . . . . North Carolina, inerelore it is wise 1 to avoid paralled work in institutions receiving support from the State, and to use them respectively as was in tended. This, of course, does not imply that the faculty in all should not be professional teachers. The manufacturer or the farmer training j - ,ii just as liberal preparatory as the lawyer or the physician, but he needs something else beside, and . it is proposed for him to get that in j the College of Agriculture and Me chanic Arts He will be more likely v,.: ,..,.i it . u .... .. rieaun. 11 ne ls.weaK, mckjv ana .-in rim to obtain it properlv if the institution i 1 -n i ' t :;,via . , r, r , t down, she will be nervous and lrritab.e. is directed by a man who knows ; If ghe ,ias i ,, or kidnev trouble, what practical life is, and who reil- j i,er imp-.rre blood will cause ' pimple?, ize the necessity for the training of j blotches, skin eruptions and wretched corn young men to back up life. j plexion. Electric Bitter is the best medi For years the Manufacturers' Record cine in the world ro regulate stomach, liver has Insisted that the lrn. and full ! and kidneys and to purify the blood. It H .O V 1 rf-i T"4 TYl Onl n f f ho inrlnclmal a - - sibilities of the South should beVin at home. The doctrine, faithfully fol lowed, has enabled the South to make past farm life of the South have now reached the stage where there is a demand for technically-trained minds and hands. To the agricultural and me chanical colleges it must look for its industrial leaders of the future if it shall reap the benefits of the unfold ing of its resources. North Carolina is by no means the least as a posses sor of riches yet to be realized. It would be a grave mistake for the State to lose the opportunity to make its College of Agriculture and Me chanic Arts the training school of its developments. Why Continue It? (Scotland Xeck Commonwealth.) Can a State grow rich in which nearly everything is imported? Is it a fact that we sleep on beds and between sheets made in Connecticut? that we take our morning ablutions in vessels made in France? that we put on hose from Germany, linen from Ireland, rock our babies in cradles from Michigan, broil our fish on ranges from Cincinnati, buy our flour from Minneapolis, get the baking powder from New York, our knives from Sheffield and our canned beef from Chicago?" So spoke Dr. 1). A. Long in his ad dress before the Teachers' Assembly at Morehcad. Dr. Long is now president of Anti och College, Ohio. He is a native of Alamance county of this State; and in speaking for development and pro gress in education he recognized the fact that such cannot be unless we have development and progress in the substantial part of life; namely, inde pendence at home. North Carolina is yet strictly an agricultural State, though it may some day become quite a manufactur ing State. We remember now what Tom Dixon said several years ago in his great address at the Weldon fair. He said. "North Carolina is a great big farm;" and as he trilled the r, a la Yankee doni, he swung out his long arms in a manner gracefully suggestive of reaping grain. People of common judgment ought by this time to see that prosperity never comes by patronizing others always. We must have some pat ronage come to its. Tf the stream ilows on all the while one way it must needs How out after awhile unless the fountain head be replenished. Let us people ponder well the enor mous amounts of money that are being sent awav all the while for things we ought to grow and mantl et n s fact ure at home. Dr. Long's questions, quoted at the head of this article, among other things mention beds and sheets that come from Connecticut; hose for Ger many; baby cradles from Michigan; Hour from Minneapolis, and beef from Chicago. All of these things ought to be made here; and besides he men tioned baking powders from New York, which ought to be displaced by home-raised buttermilk. - These things are worth our careful study. North Carolina Fruits. I W i I ni ington Messenge r . ) North Carolina ought to be a great fruit State. It would be if all the farmers were wise in their day and generation. We repeat what we have before said, after visiting many States and living for a time in threes that the best grapes, the best pears, the best apples we have ever eaten or seen were grown in North Caro lina. There are vineyards and orchards now in this State that show its capabilities and advantages to some extent for fruit growing. What has been done in a half dozen coun ties can be done in fifty or more. We knew a gentleman in Caswell county, near Milton, who had 20!) varieties of the pear on his farm. In the San ford Express there is some ac count of fruit cultivation in Moore county that is encouraging. Dr. li. Vonllerff has a vineyard of thirty live acres with over 20') varieties of the European grape, with 10.000 of the Niagara and 12.000 of the Dela- T . . t. - fc 4 1 I . f ware. n says inai 1 nonsaii-is crates of very line grapes will bo ship- ied from this vineyard in July The Southern Pines Free Press sav of a i irmt iarm 01 me ,iessrs. loung: f -They have 11.00:) dewberry vines. jvji) blackberry vines and over 10 2.000 peacu ..ees, ... 1 .1 1 1 i young, are in tirst-class condition 1 hey had shipped up to Monday of ilk last week onlv about 200 crates I though the picking season has just : 11.11 . 1 i commenced, and the best prices reni - ized were obtained in New York. VI 1 ...... . . ... .i-i 1 1 1 t ' up in pi;ut crates, thirty-two quarts ' to the crate, while the picking costs ', 1 cent per epiart and the express to cenis iier nnarr. 1 ne oeri ies are m 1 1- . 1 ,1 1 .. lor iiuite sixty vears there have . J 1. , m-t-ii vinevaros 01 uaiite iria '.-. 10 ance or simply laziness? North 1 Carolina can nroduee fruits in irreat ! t -tor,, 1.. ;i HHUtllUli. 1U l"'ll, C Win:". IK . n-i.i". ft 1..1.1 ;.. ! ..as, me 111 si uim s iau, un .... Nxr 1 . , . 1 : . . . ew York, the lirst and second prizes , , . , for apples were taken bv two Guil- . it . .. .. ford eountv pomolorists, beating all i?' j Yankeedoodledom. j No Right to Ugliness. The woman who is lovely in fare,f"riii and temtter will alwavs have friends, but ! 'ne ,7' T?lT .at,r:JctlTe, ,"" ee ! "er , ... - . . . . . 1 - . . , i Kives strore nerves, tin 2 lit eves, smootn. wonderful strides during the twenty years. Industrial ami i vel,vel-T k,', "l'1 o".'10- ll wulri charming woman of 1 III Uftl. WAt-ttJlVIIi a run-down invalid. Dorsey Dru t ''. Onlv "0 cent at the TARHEEL HEROISM. EXTRAORDINARY CASE OF SUC CESSFUL KIDNAPPING. A North Carolina Young Lady Proves Herself Equal to the Every Emer gency and Playing Her Part in a Trying Ordeal Most Successfully NVith the Aid of a Plucky News paper Man She Outwits Her Op ponents and Escapes With Children. (Greensboro Telegram.) Greensboro has a heroine. If nerve, pluck, fortitude and tact dis played in thrilling adventure by a young lady under circumstances be fore which the majority of people would quail, constitute a heroine, then she is entitled to boast of one of a type which scarcely a decade of North Carolina history has produced. Our heroine appears in the person of Miss Elvia M. Bell, who resides with her father just out of town and is stenographer for the Merchants' Grocery Company. The facts are these: Her sister, Mrs. E. L. Case, on account of mis treatment, separated from her hus band, who resides at Ocean Springs, Miss., with his father, and came with her two little girls, Evern and Neva, aged respectively four and six years, to live with her father near town. Her husband soon came and desired to take the children. It was agreed that they should return to Missis sippi with him to remain two months and be returned to the mother the 7th day of May last. When the time was up the husband, not only refused to return the children, but ignored every communication addressed to him on the subject. The mother was greatly distressed at the retention of the children and could not endure the delay and ex pense incident to regular proceedings at law. It was at this juncture that our heroine appeared upon the scene. After consulting a law lirm of this city, Bradshaw & Newlin, as to the risk involved in the undertaking, she resolved to go to Mississippi, kidnap the children, if necessary, and bring them with her to Greensboro, know ing all the while she would have the strongest opposition to encounter. Accordingly about the the 10th of June she boarded the train at this place, and in due time arrived at Ocean Springs and took lodging at the hotel to study the situation and mature her plans. She carried a let ter of introduction to some lawyers there and soon had the sympathy of the hotel keeper and Mr. Martin Turnbull, a reporter of the Times Democrat, enlisted in her cause. After fruitless interviews, of not too friendly a nature , Mr. Case finally agreed that one child could return Monday, the 2bth, but the other must remain with him. This con cession did not satisfy Miss Bell. She had gone for both and both she must have;. Strategy now was her onlv resort. A sail down the river was arranged for on Sunday by a party with which she was to go. This continued the belief that she would not leave Ocean Springs before Monday. Now it was easy to secure permission for the children to dine with her at the hotel on Saturday, and here the excite ment begins. Tc allay suspicion of final depart ure and to be rid of all possible in cumbrance it was arranged with the hotel keeper that baggage should be left behind and hotel bill remain un paid. When the children came Saturday morning it had been plan ned by the Tinies-Dcm'wrul reporter that Miss Bell and the children should go down the ri-r in a boat toward New Orleans, but this miscar ried and, to escape unnoticed, they took a carriage for Koutainbleau, a station several miles distant on the L. fc N. Railroad, to take the North bound train from New Orleans. It was a fast drive through Mississippi mud and water, and the little party were much bespattered. A small-pox quarantine was encountered and after considerable . difficulty was passed. Fortunately the train was :ui hour late. As it pulled in Miss Bell ,,,, ,n wilon, ..I,,, ,-,.,.. j Tim.lh:tnorrtU reported on the rear of the train waving to her I Troll t teal 1 c She 111 II I C for llllll lit trliiin tttn f4iml net fir llttl riftt'ter ,.7, apl t)i(; c.hiilirt.n ,,,i(li!v , thJ f ... ... . ,i ,Kf .i" 1 r 11,1111. .ut.: iicm tucii: in., i.i.i.-. f . , f , , . , , c:llI!rht ; . . t h as tIlo on re- io the racket who. as well as 1 poller, n:ei uoiiiiicn me 11. 011 ... 1 . 1 1 ...1...1 4....;.. lower j ipiest i F .lurn tln tvi'iil nn.l w.is now in ' , , .. i 5 , , , . 'l ',e "M ''" . !ul Tin an anoearance. upbraided .Miss - i 1 . 1 Bell, taunted her with trvinir to do 1 m- ( ' ! .something smart" and informed her I that they would get otT at Scranton i(the next station) intimating that she i would be arrVstcd tnere. - 1 , ' . ,. I a Pullman car ticket tin mid be arrVstcd there. Not having disturbin'r . , ! laetor was soon removed iroui me 1 w till scene bv tne porter, ana ..us ien port locked herself and the children in side one of the compartments of the Pullman car. At Scrantou the grand father alighted from the train ami the officers got on. who failing in their search got otT at the next ; station. In the meanwhile the grand- ! father at Scrantou. had a warrant , 1, .11 , i. i. I ;.l l' 1 1U1 .11 lJiloji Lin: i.ijai' ivim . ... . , ,.0tV;i nappnif and telegraphed the Mobile, i I 1 o , " ' . ' 1'.. rt 11 1 tifin t us to hsvp tier arrest- ', ' ... . , . tuir ir firii ir 11:1 I'll 1 11m :iu en. ine reiwrier amicipaicu nui uuu r.. . .' .... I I used all his influence with the rail road men in her behalf. It was de cided that she and the children should be locked up antl the con ductor would immediately leave the train. When the train arrived at Mobile, 1::50, two of the city's detectives and a crowd, over which hovered an air of suspicion, were there to greet it. The otlicers at once began their search aud one of the trainmen treacherously gave the scheme away. hev demanded admittance, wuieh being refused, the door was battered Miss P.e'l was clutching both children in her arms and holdlv de- 1 manded their authority for attempt ing her arrest. Failing to produce any she resisted them and took refuge behind every seat of the car. Reaching the door she kicked it shut, which locked fast, the same tedious process was necessary to reach the other end of the car. Her arms were bruised and blackened in the strug gle. She and the children were now hastened to the police station but the faithful reporter of the Times' Demo crat did not desert her. He at once secured the service of Gregory L. Smith, one of the most prominent attorneys of Mobile, who immediately went to her ami hearing her storj told her to leave the station. The chief of police objected promptly, saying he bad a warrant for her detention, which charged her with being a fugitive from justice on the evidence of bein train. Mr. Smith Judge Semmer and secured a writ of habeas corpus returnable instantcr, and the case was tried in the city court, Mr. Smith representing Miss Bell and the city attorney the chief of police. The Mobile Daily Item, of Sunday morning, gives the following account of the trial: "The young woman was placed on the stand. She testilied that Evern and Vena Case were the children of her sister, Mrs. Edna L. Case, of Greensboro, N. C. That her sister and brother-in-law had sepa rated and an agreement had been drawn up by them as to the custody of the children, by which the husband 1 1 1 1 1- .1 had been permitted to bring them away from Greensboro, where the wife had gone, and retain them until May 7th, 1899, after which it was agreed the children should go to the mother to be retained by her. Miss Bell stated that she was authorized by her sister to go ami get the chil dren and had done so. She produced the agreement entered into by Mr. and Mrs. Case. It was signed by the two parties and witnessed. "Judge Semmer, after hearing the pro and con of the matter, made an order discharging from custody the young woman, which also released her from the warrant issued by the Recorder. The Judge stated that he did it on the contract produced by Miss Bell, but that if the matter were before him otherwise or between father and mother he would give the custody of the children to the mother. "Miss Bell is a brunette of distin guished appearance ami talks with considerable intelligence. She wore a handsome black traveling dress and stylish hat." After the largely attended trial Miss Bell was surrounded by representa tives of the different newspapers who vied with each other in showing her every possible kindness. She was immediately carried by them to one of t h best hotels in the city where rooms were secured, the little girls put to rest and she was served with an elegant supper. It was planned for her to leave Mobile on the mid night train for the North, but it was suspected by the reporter, and sus pected rightly, that the grandfather and officers would come from Scran ton 011 the very train upon which she was to leave. How to evade them was notv the problem. It seemed a difficult one, but nothing is too much for reporters and railroad men. In conjunction they planned that Miss Bell and the children should be on the opposite side of the train from which the passengers get on and that a door be opened on that side for her reception. Accordingly when the train came the grandfather and the ollicers, who had been wired of the arrest, alighted on the side with the throng, while Miss Bell and the chil dren quietly entered from the other and reached Greensboro on the north bound train last Sunday evening. The little girls are none the worse for the trip, but are contented, bright, pretty and happy. The cour age, tact and skill shown by Miss Bell 'are remarkable for a lady of her years. Never for once did she lose her presence of mind, but through the whole trying adventure was as cool, unflinching and incisive as a surgeon s knite. The Telegram challenges the State! for a young lady more daring, brave and adventurous, and yet so piiet that this adventure is even now known to but few of her friends. The Fun of Killing (Our Dumb Animals.) Various monarchs and princes of Kurope find their fun in penning up larre numbers of harmless animals j and killing them. j One ex-president of the United States finds his fun in going South to j wound and kill ducks. j Another ex-president finds his fun i in iroinw up into the Adirondack in ! summer and shooting (by torchlight) j the beautiful and harmless deer that come down to the water to drink, I and President McKiniey (in hisj speeches) seems to forget the starva tion, wounding and killing of men, women, children, horses and mules , in Cuba, and those far-o(T Asiatic ' island which we bought from the Spanish government for twenty rail lions of dollars, but which the Span ish government had no more right to sell than that other distinguished per-: ; sonage who took our Lord and Master up onto a high mountain and offered him all the kingdoms of the earth antl the glory thereof. In this state of the world's humane education comes up the question in ; lioston: How shall we contrive to teach our children to be merciful? Kngland is going to do it by adding to her tremendous navy 119 new war ships and training all her school boys from 13 to 1 years of age for war. How can we do it in Boston? Gko. T. Angki.i.. It i hard to tell which you like best warm weather or cold weather AMERICA'S Greatest Medicine a 1 loo l's Sarsaparilla.because it pos sesses unequalled curative jxwers aud its record of cures U GREATEST. a t- f e - " - t-'i ' St ' An Excellent Combination. The plejiac.t nut hod and lieiicGcinl effects of the well known remedy. Sykii ok Ems, manu f ad n red l.v the 1 Cai.ifokvia Kio Svuir To., illustrate the value of obtaining the 1'npi'td Iuxh- conceaieu on ine;tivc principles of plants known to t. then went liefore medicinally laxative and oresntine- lliem in tlie form most refreshing to tin ' ta&te and sioceptabL to the system. 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