TT A A.?K A I fly J w 1 .1 rv. Vol. VII. LINCOLNTON, N. C. TUESDAY. APRIL 15, 1913. No. 30 LIVE ITEMS OF STATE NEWS. TO PROTECT ROADS NEWSCH00LH0USE NEAR MACEDONIA OF LINCOLN COUNTY. SKI "4 ... J t All Sort of Happenings In the Old North State Culled From Our Exchanges For The Benefit of The News' Busy Head ers. A crate of strawberries, the first one for this season, was sold at Mount Olive Wednesday, bringing $5 which was considered a very low price for the beginning of the. season y the price, no doubt, being regulated by the quality of the berries. With seasonable weather for the next few days, the market there would be in full blast A $60,000 bond issue will be voted on in Cherry ville May 6 for municipal impiovements, which will be divided as following: $20, 000 for a school building, $4,000 paving, $25,000 for waterworks, $5,000 for lights and $6,000 for paying the outstanding debt of the town. Each item will be voted on separately, and the outlook now seems to indicate that all will car ry by a large majority. Mooresboro, Cleveland county, has become quite a depot for li quor shipments since the Webb law made Eutherford county dry. Eutherford patrons of the mail .order liquor houses, in great num bers, are having their booze ship ped to Mooresboro and are hauling it over through the country. Many have been coming down on the trains and carrying it back with them in the passenger coaches. .The conductors on the Seaboard do not wish to haul the liquor and are seeking legal advice about the mat ter. President Woodrow Wilson has written to Mayor J. Eugene Ban kin of Asheville, expressing his appreciation Of that city's invita tion to the members of the Presi dent's family to spend . their Sum mers there ..President Wilson stat ed that he and Mrs. Wilson had .decided after carefully considering the matter, that they ought to choose a secluded spot and for that reason they decided to to take the Churchill place, at Cornish, instead of tbe Summer home which was placed at their disposal by the residents of that city. North Carolinians who spend their vacations in the western part of the State will be interested to learn that work is beingjcarried on looking to the completion of a horseback trail to the summit of Mount Mitchell by the coming summer. Work has been started on the trail and it is expected that it will be completed within a very short time. Last summer horse back riders were able to reach the peak, although the trail was not very wide and was considered dan gerous. Many improvements are being made by those who are in charge of the work which is being done at this time." T.'T-" - Employer W. A. Joly, of the Internal Eevenue service, has re turned to Asheville from a raid in South Carolina where he succeed ed in seizing and destroying two illicit distilleries, one in Green ville County and the other in Spartanburg. The latter was a 95-gallon still, and had been known among revenue men for the past threei years as "Big Betsy." Mr. Joly says that it has been op erated from Saluda, N. C to Mel rose, 8. C, during that time; but the men have never been able to get it. He cut it to . pieces : and then consigned it to a bonfire. He found 2,000 gallons of beer at the plant at which 'Big Betsy" was being operated. Miss Mary McNeely, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. John C. McNeely, of Shiloh township, Iredell county, aged 12 to 14 years had a narrow escape from death when her cloth ing caught fire in a field some dis tance from her home. Mary 'and her younger sister had gone to the creek bottom where their father was at work and when the father had to go to the house on an er rand he told the girls to pile corn stalks while he was gone. As he was returning to the field he was met by the younger girl who told him that Mary had caught on fire and had jumped in the creek to put the fire out. Bushing to the creek Mr. McNeely found Sis daughter still in the water. The flames had been extinguished, but she was suffering torture from the burns, practically all her clothing i being Durnea irom her back. Bill Introduced ; by Hon. R. B. Klllian at The Last Session of The Legislature Passed And Is Now a Law. Section 1, That the Board of Commissioners of Lincoln County; through its authorized agents or employees, is hereby authorized aud empowered, after due notice to the land owner and his failure to comply with the terms of said notice, to eater upon any land ad joining and lying along side of any public road in said County and to cut all timber or standing trees within thirty feet of the edge of said road on either side thereof: Provided, that no fruit trees, or shade trees about a dwelling shall be cut except by and with the con sent of the owner of said land or his agent: Provided, that no hedge for protection of land from washing shall be cut when less than six feet in height That the timber so cut under and by direc tion of the Board of Commissioners of said County shall belong to and be the property of the owner of said land and the notice above re ferred to shall be given to said land-owner for the purpose of giv ing him the privilege of cutting said timber himself, and the land owner shall have thirty days from the service of said notice on him in which to cut said timber. That after the expiration of this time and in the event the land owner has not cut said timber or trees tb en the Board of Commissioners shall direct said work to be done and after it is completed, and if the land owner and the Board of Commissioners cannot agree as to the amount of damages, if any, then the said Board of Commis sioners shall cause three free hold ers to be summoned to go upon said land and view the timber and inspect the road and assess the benefits and damages, as provided for under the general road law in the matter of opening new roads, with the right of appeal to either party to the Superior Court of said County: Provided, that in the event the land owner should appeal and not recover a laiger amount than that granted by the three free holders so summoned, then no cost shall be taxed against the Board of Commissioners of Lincoln County. Sec. 2. That it shall be unlaw ful for any landowner or any other person in chirgeofor cultivating any land in Lincoln County to cut any ditches or build or construct any terraces emptying the water from the land and delivering it in any public road in Lincoln Coun ty, unless it shall be impracticable to convey the water in any other direction, and in the event that said water cannot be delivered elsewhere than in the public road, it shall be so delivered as not to enter the road in a large volume, and such ditches or terraces shall be provided for its delivery into the road as shall be . approved by the supervisors of the township in which the land is situated, or in the event of the election of road commissioners for laid county, then in accordance with the method ap proved by them, and any person violating the provisions of this act shall be guilty of a misdemeanor and be fined or imprisoned in the discretion of the Court Sec. 3. This act shall be in force from and after its ratification. Big Township with Small Population. Dmnn Guide. . ' ' .-;...;.. Johnsonville is the third largest township in Harnett county, and has only about 50 votes. There is not a postoffice in the entire town' ship except Bock Branch and Pine view, which are only a few feet in side. Only one rural route, and it comes out from Cameron in Moore, yet the Atlantic : Coast Lines bound it for 35 miles on the east and the Seaboard runs parallel with: its western boundary and within four miles of it There has been no road worked in the township- for about 12 years for two reasons. There are : not hands enough and there have been no magistrates for about that length of time to act as supervisors. Little Miss Fannie Sharpe, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. F. M. Sharpe, celebrated her fifth birth day on last Saturday by giving a dinner to a number of her little friends. vtLiWiW!""' Tjj THE ALL 80UTH BUILDING. The Southern States Building of the National Conservation Exposition, which will be held at Knoxville iff. two months, . September and October, 1913, will be one et the largest and' most attractive structures of this great national show. This building is designed to contain exhibits of manufactured products of the sixteen Southern States, especially such as will show the processes of manufacture which prevent waste and utilize by-products. MARSHALL BEARDS "LION IN HIS DEN" Temper of American People Will Not Brook Oppression, He Says. Warns "Interests." Vice President Delivers Stirring i Address Before the National Democratic Club. New York, April 12 Vice Presi dent Marshall served warning to night un men of vast wealth and on "special privilege" that the temper of the American people had reached a point where it no longer would brook oppression. , He told the members of the National Dem ocratic Club that the spirit of un rest was such that unless reckoned with the institutions of the Gov ernment might be jeopardized and the country revert to paternalism or turn to socialism. "Current opinion holds, justly or unjustly," he said, "that, the welfare of the people of this cou try depends not a little upon the conduct of certain men in this City of New York. I have concluded, therefore, to 'beard the lion in bis den' in the hope that he may hear. GOVERNMENTAL DUTY. ' 'Present advantage shuts our eyes to the permanency of our in stitutions. Not what we are nor what we stand for, but what we can make has come to be the meas ure of governmental duty and in dividual conduct And yet, de spite this theory of life. Carl Marx and hunger and a longing for happiness are abroad in the land. They are perturbing the waking hours and coloring the dreams of millions of Americans who, after all," have the rights to to say what shall or shall not be." , The Vice President declared his warning was the result of observa tion of conditions in 27 Northern States during the recent presiden tial campaign. Swollen fortunes and the . accumulation of great wealth through governmental priv ileges granted, he held, had much to do with the discontent "Alone with general prosperity has come a marvelous piling up of colossal private fortunes. Not withstanding charges against me that I have freely assaulted the possessors, of ' these fortunes, I know in my own heart that such a view of my public atterauces is a mistaken one. My assaults, if I have made any, have not been di rected at the possessors of the for tunes but at the principles of gov ernment which contribute, directly or indirectly to the accumulation of fortunes. The piling up of colos sal fortunes, - supplemented by a general diffusion of knowledge, has made large bodies of people restive. ', '. k GREATER' EQUALITY. , The desire of the people is for greater equality of opportunity and enjoyment. More and more, men are coming to the belief that social ism alone will open up and guaran tee this equality. If I were the possessor of a vast and growing fortune and had made up my mind that the Government should con tinue to help me make it grow, or if I were a socialist, I would frown upon the educational system of America. "Have backward-looking and inward-looking men ever stopped to consider what might happen to them here in the great State of New York, if those who have not, should take it into their heads to make common cause against those who havtt They talk about vested rights and in their talks assume they have both an inhereut and constitutional I right to pass their property down from generation to generation until some reckless de cendent shall have dissipated it Suppose a Government and a Gen eral Assembly ia the State of New York should repeal the statute of descents for real and personal property and the statute with ref erence to the making of wills, on their death, how much vested in terest would any relative have in the property which fell from their nerveless hands at the hour ; of dissolution! The right to inherit and the right to devise are neither inherent nor. . constitutional : but upon the contrary, they are simply privileges given by the State to its citizens. HEAR PEOPLE TALK. "Let backward-looking and inward-looking men read the returns of the last election. Let them put on masks go down into the East Side and hear what people are say ing about them. Let them not close their eyes and dream that what has beea forever will be. All that a man hath will he give for this life and he is not wise who having plenty, risks it all to get a little more. "The belief that there is an un equeal distribution of wealth in this country has been supplement ed by the belief that much of it has been obtained through special privilege, that it did not come by labor, skill, industry, barter or trade, but through corners oh commodities, through corruption of Legislatures, through the sale of impure foodstufis, through wreck iag railroads, through all the de vices kuown to man whereby the law is not abrogated or chloro formed." 7 CHANGE HAS COME. "Let those who started,"he said "and are keeping up this theory of especial privilege which finds its root, its sap and vigor in prohibi tive duties, believe me when I say that a change has come across the spirit of the Republic. Be not de ceived. Our justice is ceasing to be perpendicular and is beginning to be hoiizontal. Men are refusing longer to look up that favors may be handed down to them and are beginning to look around to see how mutual benefits may come to them. Wake up, my brother; be contented with that which thou hast gotten. Yield a little - that thou mayst save much." .:',. "The backward-looking and inward-looking men may be able temporarily to check the onward movement of the forward-looking men, but if they do it will be an unwise interference and may result either in a paternalistic system Of government which can only endure upon bases of ignorance and serf dom or in a socialistic system which will destroy both the oppor tunity and the desire of the man to exercise in the fullest capacity his natural and acquired endow ments.1'.' Mi. Marshall called, on his hear ers to support President "Wilson in bis poiicies"that the individualistic democracy of Thomas Jefferson may not be destroyed." ANOTHER YETERAN PASSES. Mr. T. P. Scagle Who Formerly In Lin coln County Dies at His Home at West Palm Beach. Florida, Mr. P. V. Seagle who was born on Clark's creek and up until the year 1855 lived in this county, passed away at his home at West Palm Beach, Florida on last Sat urday morning. Deceased suffered a stroke of paralysis on last Wed nesday which was the final cause of the death. As stated before Mr: Seagle em igrated to Florida in the year 1855 where he became engaged in the orange business. When the war broke out between the states, he answered the call for men and en listed in a Florida company. Lat er bis company was sent to join Johnson's army, then operating in Tennessee and Mr. . Seagle par ticipated, in many important bat tles. He also saw service in Ken tucky and Mississippi. Returning from the war he resumed his chosen occupation, that of raising oranges for the market and was quite successful, the freeze causing him to lose his all. He then went into the hotel business at West Palm Beach and remained in it until death claimed him. . Mr. Seagle is survived by a widow and three children two girls and one boy all of whom live in Gainesville, Fla Only one other member of this family is living, same beiDg Mr. A. J. Seagle, a brother of the deceased who lives in this county. Deceased was a faithful member of the, Methcdist church and at the time of his death had attained the ripe old age of eighty years. .. The funeral , services were con ducted at Gainesville, Florida, yesterday morning and the body laid to rest. Fellow Figures Out That He Is His Own Grand-Father. , Angus Carney, of Philadelphia who has announced that he is his own grandfather. Has his neigh bors doing arithmetic. ' Carney has complied the follow ing: "I met a widow with a grown daughter and I married the widow. Then my father met my step daughter and married her. That made my wife the mother in-law of her father-in-law, and made my step-daughter my step mother. My father became my step son. "Then my step mother, the daughter of my wife, had a son. That boy was of course my brother because he was my father's son. But he was also the son of my wife's daughter and therefore my grandson. That made me grand father to my wife's grandson. "Then my wife had a son. My mother-in-law, the step sister is albo his grand-mother, because he is her step-son's child. My father is the brother-in-law of my child because the step sister is his wife. I am a brother of my own son, who is also the child of my step-grand-mother. I am my. mother's brother-in-law. My wife is her child's aunt My; son is my father's nephew and I am my own grand-father. Chattel Mortgages are for sale at The News office. Two Deaths Near Little Mountain Sec tion Several O.her News Items Gath ered by Alpha. Iron Station, N. C, April 11. Since our last ta The News, our community has been saddened by two deaths. Carro Littun the 13 year old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. Littun died last week at Maiden of typhoid fever and her body was laid to rest in Mountain View cemetery, Rev. Mr. Bimmer con ducting the funeral services. Carro was a pupil in the writer's school at the Mountain View schoolbouse during the winters of 1911 and '12. She was a bright girl, the very picture of health and little did we think that her young life would so soon be blot ted out On last Saturday Mr. W. A. Gilleland answered the last call, and his body was interred at Mountain View Sunday, his pas tor, Rev. W. W. Rimmer conduct ing the funeral services. Mr. Gilleland was about 53 years of age, was twice married, his first wife being Miss Susan Goodson, by whom he had nine children. His second wife, Miss Laura Parker was the mother of two children. All the children we think survive except one. Mr. Gilleland was one of our best citizens and will be greatly missed by his neigh bors. Here's our heartfelt sym pathy for all the bereaved ones. Rev. J. W. Kennedy preached a good sermon at Lebanon last Sunday from the text, "Be not deceived, God is not wicked, for whatsoever a man soweth, . that shall he also reap." The sermon was a very instructive one An old fiddlers convention was pulled off at Denver last Tuesday night About fifteen contestants entered the contest for prizes. Mr. Henry Mayhue won first prize and Mr. Click Smith second. Some of our lo:al talent were in the . race, but came home fully convinced that they were not the best fiddlers. Those who heard it, say the mucic was fine and the behavior good. The Board of Education at its meeting last Monday decided to build a , new schoolhouse in the Macedonia district, Ironton town ship. The house is to be located on the Sherrills Ford road north east of Macedonia. -Mr. J. - W. Little of Denver who was appoint ed a member of the Board of Edu cation by the last legislature is a man who always keeps his head, and may be depended on to do what he thinks best for the schools of Lincoln county. We notice that every now and then some good fellow bobs up who says he may contest for Yates Webb's seat in Congress. Now it is per fectly legitimate for any one who wishes to contest for Mr. Webb's seat. There are scores of good able men in Mr. Webb's district, . but unfortunately they have not been tried. Mr. Webb has been tried and not found wanting and few men ever had a stronger hold on the common people than Mr. Webb , and by the way what is the secret of his great popular ity. This scribe believes that Mr. Webb's success can be accounted for by the fact that Mr. Webb is a christian man, and when he goes to Washington he takes his relig ion with him and puts it into practice. Certain it is that they who would succeed Mr. Webb, un less he wishes to retire, will have just lots of votes to reckon with. Alpha. : Catawba and Lincoln Counties' Pioneers. Hickory, April 11. Rev. J. H. Shuford, who has been engaged in gathering historical data relative to the pioneer settlers of Catawba and Lincoln counties for several years, is planning a trip into the South Fork country for this pur pose. Mr. Shuford now has the records of almost all the original settlers of this section, and these will probably be published in book form at an early date. ENTERTAINMENT. Daniels' public school will give its closing entertainment April 18, 1913. The same exercises will be given both afternoon, beginning an z o'ciock, ana at night, begin ning at 8:30. An admission of 15 cents will be charged for benefit of school improvement X.