THE
MONROE
JOURNA
1
VOLUME XIII. NO. 32
MONROE, N.C TUESDAY SEPTEMBER 18, 106.
One Dollar a Year
Profram f th Coovefittofl ot the
Convocation Charlatu, Saint
rVtcr's Episcopal Church, Char
lotte. N. C Thursday and Fri
day. Oct. Ilth and 12th. IW6.
WKPNKMDIV, IMTUHKh TKXTH.
8.-00 p.an. Ktening prayrr, con
firmation service and sermon by
Ike 10. Iter. J. R. Chetdtire.
Till ItsllaV, CMTUHKH ELEVENTH.
HMK) a. at. Organisation of con
vention. 11 a. m. Morning prayer, ser
mon aud holy comwuniou. Preach
er, He v. II. T. Cocke; alternate,
Ke. T. U. Faulkner.
.'(.-OOp. m. 15c ports of ministers,
parish aud mission treasurer,
treasurer and archdeacon of convo
cation, etc
p.m. Laying of the corner
Htoue of 8t. IVter'i parish house.
HKM) p. bi. Kvening prayer aud
addresses on convocations! mi
sions:
I. "The Field," the lit. Rev. J.
It. tTicshire.
II. "What ia Being Done," Mr.
0. K Frick, treasurer of couvoca
tion.
lit. "What Should tie Done,"
the wv. K. A. Osborne, arch
deacon.
I V. "How We Can Do It," Rev.
Francis M. Osborne, secretary of
convocation.
FKIUAV, IHTOItKtt TWELFTH.
7:.'10 a. ni. Holy cominuuion.
10:00 a. lu. Business session.
Reports of men's missionary leagues
and conference.
11:00 a.ni. Morning prayer and
sermon. Preacher, Rev. F. J. Mur
duck; alternate, Rev. K. L. Ogilby.
3:00 p. m. Conference aud
Thompsou Orphanage work.
M:INI p. m. Kveniug prayer aud
addresses ou the Meu's Missionary
League:
Find aeaker, Kev. M. A. liur
lier; alternate, Rev. A. R Berke
ley. Heconil speaker, Hon. J. P. Itnx
ton; alternate, Hon. J. 8. Heudcr-
Mill.
N. a (1) MiuiHtera will please
Hend their names aud the names of
lay delegatea to Mr. J. L .Sexton,
secretary of 8L Peter's church,
Charlotte.
(2) Besides it treasurer, each
mission ia entitled to two aud each
parish to three lay delegate.
(It) Kitch branch of the Meu's
Missionary League in this couvo
ratioo ia asked to send a delegate
and report of work being done.
CAKNHJItrS DAU1HTER-5 C ASE
Valuable Land Sale.
f virtu of br uriVr and rtm matter. the
HuiNTtiir Con if uf tinloa count , NorUi Caroli
na, in a ) tJ mMeM.iiir .Herein penttlng
vltereln KayriHinj lniar. irn lm ami other-,
ar piaitittfU ttiid Ad Hate tier at) 4 other
are itrfeitttaiit, I will, on
Monday, October 15. liMMi,
riHMM tn awl at imbue auction, at he eourt
hituaw door in Monnie, N (V.thateeruln pin,
iratH or (-arret ot land, lylii ftml l-elii In
iitMM i rwk tnwittblp. In Mitt nmnir ami
Ittai, kmiwn m ih lat hm plat ui J. A
Umi. ilemiril, aad iHtnilmnir M mur'
m it. A full drf rlilU il ali land may lw
Mn try nrrrmtr tu 1h prtllltMl A led In lite
aUii uantel prtHwdlnn and i wlttrh rt(f r
nitv ! he-ihf atari. Middinn tll benln at
$V.tM, a thla llf nale f nald land
Term uf Mile: nr third eah and the re
aiatmtfr m a e renin f twelve month with ap
pnitnl aerurttjr.anri title retained until all thf
tuit-hae moiifjr hM bren aid. Thithe.th
tlajr ttf HeutenitMT, A I iw
K. M KKIiWlNK.Conimlolmier.
Und Sal.
Kt virtu nf fta unVr nil dwrw maiW liy
Ffwl MiHir. )uilir prr.Mltit ,t Frhriurjr l.rm
il Hi MiiMiior I'ourl if I'nloB nHimjr. North
I'ftnillnft, In el.ll att4 th.r.ln pemllns
h.rvln T. R. Vl l.r pUlnUff.MdC.ft
Hlilt ldfvnilnt. w IU. un
Monday, October 13, 1!KM,
,ipcM to Ml l puMt U(llon, l th unnrt
Unu dtiur In Miinrt, N U.. tbalwruin pi.
Iiwt ur prrl tif lnrf ItIhx nd hthm In Jt k
n hjwn.hlp. In Mid piiuiiiv and Hi.t.. ml
Jnlnlnir th ut Inndii of M r. JulU Curvlon
lid tlira, tiHittltl nw ftdhiw: On th n..ullt
liy lh. Iln hrlwn thn Hut of Nnrth ('amir
li and Houth Cnrulin . m th North and K.l
f tli .tal land. if Mr. Julia t'urton I now
Mr. I i. Waliupi.and on th Hct liy tu
land. of Jan Hi.mI and lavtd Hoodmo Mr..
H. I HhmIi, tHinuliiltiit ii ar. mur or I.,
and known a a turn ih Hi Atianilr HimmI
Irarl 4 Ih lal land of Jam. Hood, dtf'd.
Trw. uf Ml : Ca.h .
r'KANK AHMHKUI,
a. I. KKIIMINK,
iioni wliiliwra.
Land Sale.
Mf Tlrto of an ordr and dr of th Hupp
rlor t'iHjrt if t'nltm county, mad In a .p'lal
Kr.TTr.lln, whrln 1. Mrdlln, H. K. Me
rll l al-ar bllllonni anil M. A. Mdlln,
Vlrxlnla Mlllnl al ar dlrntlaata, I will, on
Monday, October 15, llHWi,
ainiM to mi Bt th court houa door In Mon
h, N . t. all that iwrlatu pi, traft or narct
of laud Ivlnir and brlna In Marhvlll town
.hli, Mhlnmnlyof I nlon. Htatof North Cam.
Una, known a. Ill lat bom ntae if Mary K.
Mnllln, daid, and ompiwid of two a
rat tract, on mmlalnlna' BI1, aomaand Hi
.thr ana, arr, a full drlptloa of whlh
aiay I .a In th ntltliHi lld IB th al.iv
Bmd molding and to whlh dpiiiIm) rfr
nr I. hrty Ban.
Trma of Ml: tn thlrd a.h and th r
Bialmlr tm a fwtlt f twlv month, with an
ovd Murlly and till rtalnd until all th
Iturrha BHHiay ha. hn bald. Thl. Ihth
day of Hrtmlar, A n lt
a RK U I N t. Com m lMlonr.
Sale of Houm and Lot.
Ry virtu of Bdaviw of th Runarlor Court,
mail Judtf m. K. Ju.tl at th Aturnot
tlvll lrBi, In th artlon nilltd "It A Itavln
v.. L. L. rtnhr and Th paopl' Rank of
Monnm," whria th wadr.land wa. an
tlntd ommla.lonr to mak Ml of th
him and kit darrtbd la to aomalalBt In
Mid actio, I will, OB
Monday, October 1, VMM,
Bt thoart howa door la Monro, N V. , aril
at paldl aoctloa in th htirh.t hloilr, for
ra.B, th MIowtna; drlhd houMi and lot In
Ih Iowa of ahaw. N. C, lt: h.lnnln al
B .Ion wa th a A. I aid of th emlilni road
and on th ftowlh .Id of MTala .trM, and
run. W Vt I w fi to a alak on Ih nouth
alii of Mill .trt; thn B I llfrl
to aaton; lhnl KW.MIH to a Mob
In th Raal ttof th l'rovlitno nvd , lhno
Hi with Mid road Wa ft lo Ih hria
BIiib. II blnn th hit numhrd W In Blat tf
Mid tuwa and ontalnlntf on ar, mor or
IrM, alolalnB land, of WaahlmttoB lltn
and ohra, and kntiwa a ih houa Bad lot
asld kL I, rinrhr hy C. J. Hudaoa.
Thu AiuraM li t, naav
A. M lTAI'K,Commla.lnBr.
Land Sale.
Ry virtu nf an ordr bimI hf R. A. Armnld,
t rk nf Ih oprt.Oowrt, In th .nrclal nro
artHttna: rntltld M.aw HlniHI. atlmlnUtrator
Barah HtnMia, drad, ... ! Hlnaon
Bt al.. th alrl'nd BomtBlonn will, ob
Monday, October 1, IWMl,
atlh roart am An In Monro. M C.,all
at (nihil auUo to th hutha.1 Mtr th
lowlnf ilmrtW Iwt of land lvln la Monnw
town.hlt,ail)olnln;lhland.of Moan Hlnann
and othra. lo-wll: All that nl or p"!
land knows aa th (anah Uluwia tratt and
Iibb th rmaladr of Ih. atnrty iwii ar
trart ddd 17 Aaron Hlnana in Karah HlnanB
anath April. Kaa.and iwronantln Rtaik 1. Baa
lift. IB Ih lo nf th Rfft.w of tilfi7n
I atoaaoaaty.afwr airBtn and airludtnc
a, aolri 10 ttiar. H tnaoa oa 1.1 Mnrh .
Ini. Ri.dt I. Baa BBI.Ia Mid hl.tr-.
llli, and alaln U tai agrw. add
tMid Miw. HIiomim wHh Anaa.t. IMI 10,
Rk w), aa lit l Mid oronal.and hln a
trart of U arr. tn b imiI. Tnrau f Ml :
saah. ThU A (-! tlt. rant
a. m nr. n.
a. a i t n.
OaBtmlMtnaara.
Little One Attlictcd muctl IJWc Lo
Ills Armour.
LnwduM lorWMBtadBl New Vork Anta-B.
Little Mui Margaret Carnegie,
the only tlanthler uf Mr. and Mr.
Andrew Carnegie, aud perhaia the
richeril heirvw lu the world, hi Mill
to be ulTeriiig from au aggravated
form of hip diavawe which have
twilled the medical eiierta of Lou
don aud the Coutiueut. It haa been
gradually growing wonteaa she ad
vane iu age and ia now au bad
that niie has to be atwisted at every
move.
Her complaint is similar, if not
identical, to that which Lolita Ar
mour, the Chicago heireiw, aunVred
ao long, aud who Dually obtained
relief through an operation by Dr.
Loreujt of Vienna.
Dr. Loreni haa been appealed to
ia Margaret Carnegie a behalf, but
her age ia auch that the prtifeawr
that did not rare to undertake the
UHiial treatment in such caitea.
The fact of her mUfortuue wan
made public when Mr. Carnegie
eiplaiued hw inability to atteud
the oiieuing uieeting ol the Koyal
Natioual Kihtedtlftxl. He aaid bin
daughter'a conditiou was too se
rioua.
A friend of the family who re
ceiilly vidited tbem in Scotland
thiia dencriliea her condition.
"Ou a recent visit to the Xorth
of SctMland 1 aaw thin unhappy
child lilted out of a train ut a rail
way Mtatiou near Skibo Cantle and
placel tenderly by her attendant
in a bath chair. It wan only too
ohvioiui that ithe aullered troiu an
aggravated raaeof hipdiwaHe, and
it wan indeed pitiful lo nee the
wiatful looks- which thia girl, aoen
vietl fur her great inlieritanceft,
rant nMn the poor but vigoroim
and healthy boy and girU of hei
owu age who rouitl ou the road
way uutrtide the atalion and raced
recklerMly past her iiivalidM chair."
Miugaivt Carnegie wax born
March Ml, ISitT, and from that day
liua had every ultentimi ami luxury
her futher'a great fortune could
provide. An a CliriatmaH gill in
l!HK! A ml re w Caruegie prerieutetl
her with thc'J,UKl,(MHinmiiMiou at
rilth avenue ttnil Ninetieth Btreet,
one of the fluent remdencea iu New
York. Nlie haa alwajH takeu a
great Inteiext lu the Central Park
Aw, and to gratify one of her child
ihh whims her father ptirchnvtetl
Hannibal, the higgcat and hairient
liou in the world, which ahe prompt
ly presented to the Ilronz zoologi
cal (iartleim. When Hannibal died
he aecured another lion to take hU
place, She is a beautiful child,
and baa made many friends ou ship
board iu ber fretiueut trips to ami
from Scotland. Her illnena ha
beeu kept secret from all but inti
mate frienda, but is now said to lie
so serious that it can no longer be
concealed.
Lolita Armour, another little
American hi'lmw, who suffered
cruelly from hip trouble, is now
able to walk, and by the time she
reaches womanhood it is believed
all trace of her trouble will have
disappeared. Hhe sufTered from a
dislocated hip from birth, anil the
whole medical profession anticipa
ted the arrival of Dr. Loreuzof Vi
enna, who was to make his Amer
ican professional debut iu her case.
The operation was successfully per
formed in October, 1!02, and she
has been slowly improving ever
sijee. Her father, J. Ogden Ar
mour, engaged Dr. Lorem for 40
days at the rate of 11,000 a day.
He visited the priucipal cities of
the I nited States aud performed
many charitable operations before
returning to Kimipe.
When you have cold it ii well to
be very carelul about using anything
that will cauie couitipatioo. He par
ticularly carelul about preparationa
containing opiates. L'ae Kennedy !
Laiativa Honey and Tar, whi:h atopi
the cough and moves the bowels. Sold
byC.N.Simpsou.Jr, aud Dr.S.J. Welxh.
E. Hillman of Abenieen, sum
mering at Waynesville, Haywood
county, went out one day recently
to one of the highest peaks of the
mountains there, and while on the
mountaiu a heavy fog enveloped it,
and be became bewildered and lost
his way. For eight days be wan
dered everywhere, with nothing to
eat but blackberries. Finally a
sheep ranger came Uion him, and
found him very weak from hunger.
A school of sharks at Virginia
(leach held np a party of bathers
one day last week. The bathers
swam half mile to a Bhip, and
when tbey boarded the vessel they
discovered a lot of sharks all around
it. Finally the man-eaters left for
deep water and the bathers plunged
in and matte for the shore in rec
ord time.
Backache
Any person having backache,
kidney pains or bladder trouble
who will take two or three
Plne-ules upon retiring at night
shall be relieved before morning.
Th awhiktaal vtrtBa f ta
(rasa nau ami ibbum bb
UlBd Jrem tka RatlVB Fum
Uvw bwbW IWmrais ay th aalcal as
BMtoa for mtartaa. ta rtaaval afar
all ( th TtrtsBB ! th Ifatlr Pukt Uat
sn i vaiwa ta rUTii( all
Kldntj and Bladder Troubles
MVaBMwtsf 4v Baaartlas ay HcMV awaawaia4V
riNMJLI i1E0ICINi',C0, CHICAGO
Sold by M .K. MoUuley, Druggist.
What Henry Watteraon Thinks ol
Bryan Now.
Loulnlll DtaaatrB. Uth.
Knteriug the Southland for the
I first time in two years, William
'Jenuiuga Itryaa was today el-
rtiuietl with spontaneous gladihrww
( He seized the occanioii to read a
i statement in explanation of his New
i York sMech on goveruuteut owner
ship of railroads.
When Mr. Bryan entered the hall
on the arm of Mr. Watteraou, there
was a demons! rat iou that lasted
two minutes. As soon as the noise
subsided, Mr. Wattersou began bis
add reus of welcome, speaking in
part as follows:
"There is but one paramount
issue for the next prenideutial bat
tle, and that is the rescue of the
government from the bands that
have niisned and debauched it and
its restoration to the custody of the
plain, but sovereign eople. The
parties to it are, upou the one hand,
a standing army of trained politi
cians, held together not alone by
the cohesive power of the public
patronage, but by a community of
interest as unyielding as it la un
thinking, richly caparisoued iu all
the panoply of successful war; and
oa the other hand the mass and
body of those who hew the wood
aud draw the water and pay the
taxes, undrilled, unskilled and
widely separated; often groping in
the dark; sometimes misdirected
by divided counsels; always lack
iug (be resources by which results
are reached aud dangers turned
but, uever yet, united except to
conquer. It is trained troops
airainst the raw militia. Give us
but half the discipline of the regu
lars and a tithe of their eiiuipiiit'iit,
and we shall drive them Is-fore us
across the iiarricadeH ot criminal
wealth though led by Theodore
Idsktcvelt himself,
"I recognize as our chieftain iu
this approaching coutlict the lion.
illiam Jennings Bryan of Ne
braska. It cost me no sacrifice,
either of personal preference or
pride of opinion to make this dec
laration. Mr. Itryan and 1 have
not always agreed as to the means;
we have uever disagreed as to the
end. The appeal to the moral ua
lure of the people which he hits
made with so much eloquence and
power, I was making when he was
a boy. He grew to manhood under
my teaching. If at times 1 have
raised the warning linger of the
schoolmaster even threatened the
rod be was big enough and old
enough, and good looking enough
to stand It, aud to survive it, and
has thrived in spite of it maybe
by reason of it; and in any event
has quite outgrown it. I too, have
lived and learned apace, and one
of the things I have learned has
beeu to look more to the objective.
point and less to non-essentials; in
matters of difference to agree to
disagree with my comrades and
friends; on great occasions and in
great a flairs to send all minor dif
ferences to the rear, the lietter to
march abroad against the common
enemy.
"That common enemy is prerog
ative. That common enemy is tiie
effort of the orgauized few to ob
tain from the government unfair
advaulage over the unorganized
many. That common enemy is the
selfsame money devil, w ho failing
on account of God's bounty to eat
us out of house and home through
the impositions of the robber tar
iff, has now his attorneys abroad
in the land telling the people we
are going to take the roof off aud
tear away the walls, when, as a
matter of fact, we are simply going
to turn him out and clean np after
him.
"We purpose to reform, not to
revolutionize the government We
purpose to re-establish Democratic
institutions iu the nation's capital.
ret ii ruing to the voters what tie
longs to the voters. We purpose
to drive from the floor of the Sen
ate those who sit there, not as ser
vants of the people, but as corpo
rate counsel. We purpose to drive
from the Door of the House the
Siieaker aud his rules committee,
who have made uu autocracy ot
that which was created a legisla
tive hotly. In a word, we purpose
to readjust the lost balance between
the people and the lawmakers.
Our jury is the nation; our proof
the record of the Kepublicun party;
our witness Theodore Roosevelt;
our attorney, Mr. Hryan ol Ne
braska."
Well Worth Trying.
W. II. Ilrowu, the popular pension
attorney of l'ittsfleld, Vt., says:
Next to a pension, the best thing
to get ia Dr. King's New Life I'll Is.
He writes: "They keep my family
in spleudid health." tjnick cure
for headache, constipation and bil
iousness. 2rc. Guaranteed by all
druggists.
Three men have been arrested
for conspiracy to wreck the Uoal
Kstate Trust Company ol I'll i I lei
pbla. President Hippie is a sui
cide because of the bank's affairs.
The men arrested are outsideiw.
Sentiment ia that since he is dead,
the men associated with him and
the director of the banking house
should be arraigned for stealing
hundreds of thousands of dollars of
other people's money.
A bath cleanae th akin and rids
th pore of refuse. A bath makes lor
belter fellowship and citiranship. Not
ooly should th outside of the body be
clsaaard, hut occasional oafl of a Ian
tiv tr cathartic opens the bowel and
clears Ih ytm ol effete aaatttr.
Beat for this are D Witt's Little harly
Risers, Pleasant little pills that do
sot grip or stcaea. Sold by C N.
Simpson, Jr., and Dr. 5. J. Uh.
Arachel's
Talks With the
Boys.
iug these art ir lea, are either read
era of the I'rogreiwuve Farmer or
among thus bo lhjea while it is
being read aloud. If you are al
ready interested in this paper, hap
py are ye. I do aiurrrcly hos
that you read it all every week.
IVui't tell me, "I haven't time."
If time and siiace permitted, I think
WCl.l, hoys or shall I say young that I could puiut out niauy a half
geutlemeut Wheal was youri hour a day that you just waste.
aire, I uiueb preferred to he called i Hut my theory is, "A man out do
SENATOR TILUVUN TALKS.
V CRN Lit AND HIS PVUMY.
Arara! ta rrorMiT Vara.
J , .Uv.U
; to us as "young geutlemen ' we
knew that Bnmelhini serious or
solemn was com iug, and we did not
' i.i--. : .. i I ... l . .. I
liar iwrtiHis aintBuiriiiH una, aiiu.
besides, we could not feel that there
was going to be much sympathy
shown for ua in the way of warniug
or advice. It ut when heeommeneeti
as I have commenced above, with
the words, "Well, boys," we felt
like getting up chaser to him, for
we knew that there was good feeJ
ing in the words and something
pleasant was coming.
Let me give au illustration: It
was a hot July day the time was
U:.'lu p.m. on a Friday. The school,
nuinheriug about one hundred boys
large enough to belong to the mill
tary department, with twenty five
or thirty of smaller size, had just
beeu called in for the regular Fri
day afternoon exercises, couiposi
tions and declamations, and every
fellow was fauuing for life with bat
or atlas, trying to Cool off in time
lor his speech or com posit iou, wheu
Mr. iovejoy broke the silent by
saying:
"Well, boys" every hat and
atlas weut dowu npou the desks
and close attenliou was given the
speaker "it is tremendously hot
weather and you are all tired and
worn dowu with your week's work"
just here we heard au unusual
uoise, uot loud but strange, which
seemed to come from the ground in
the shade of the great oaks near
the building, but we heeded it not
"aud wheu I ring the bell, rise,
form a line and march out to the
oaks on the north side of the house,
and, if you see anything of a green
color and lit to eat, eat it."
At the ting a ling, every boy was
ou his feet, the hue formed, the
march made to the door, then a
mud rush for the shade, as the sight
of a huge pile of watermelons met
the vision of every mother's sou of
us! Can I, ought I, ever to forget
this most welcome and joyous feast T
Kvery one of us ate till our nankeeu
trousers could hardly bear the sud
den strain upon the buttons. Tbeu
slowly going bark into the school
room, we saw that Mr. Iyvejoy'e
hat was not in place aud his desk
was locked and he was goue. Such
a shout went np, even to the rooms
above, that the rafters were jarred
by the joy nil sound, tor these signs
meant holiday.
Now, boys, I wish to get close to
you and tell yon, among oilier
things, that it is high lime that
you were thinking about the choice
of some business that is to occupy
your time for the years that fol
low your twenty-second birthday.
(Some people would say your
"twenty first" birthday; but they
forget your first birthday, which
was the day on which you were
born. Hemember that, boys; for
you can "catch" mauy people on
that). You ought to tie ready to
begin business as soon as you are
"free," aa some of you call it. By
this time, most of you have alwut
obtained all the education that you
are going to get. I use the word
"education" in the general sense
that it is commonly used, lint,
really, it is not the proier word;
for we would be very much nearer
the truth if we say "schooling," as
a man's "educatiou" is seldom
Buished till he dies. 1 have seen
people who have "finished'' their
education they were fools. (That
is a rough word, but Solomon, in
the Bible, calls them that and he
knew).
The boys, for whom I am writ
EilBiit Otctort Pnlti Its hftdliitL
V mfnr to that boos to wak, nervotw,
in Berlin wootan knowa a lit. Fierce'
I'avorlM PrwacrlpUoa.
Ir John Kyfeon of the Editorial Ruff
ot Tub Kci.utic Mbiiu l Kkvikw says
of Unicorn nattiHsUmliM IHotoO which
Is one of the chief Ingredients of to "Fa
vorila I'rwcrliiiliin' s
A rrmedr whiih InvarlaMv art ia a atr
In tnvuTorBtor sisaoa for Boraial ar-
tirtty uf the sntlrs rvpnMluottve rim."
lictmllnus',lB Ukailsa w hava a owlli-a-tnnl
wtih-h mora fully an.wrrs th abovs
puri.MMW Uu any itfaar ar vita wan I sat
oroufilHUtL lfl UM tratlout of dlM-aaoa sa
ruhar u worn H a antoum that a i-aw Is
sMt whlcs dues But praarsl auai Inulcattaa
fur tins rmiillal hml' l. rrfe furthor
says: Tti faliowluf ar bbmnic tli lallnf
uiuh-atkna for bakmiaalUsioura tua). I'aia
or sr-hlnc la lu hack. wilB laumrrtMBal
BkaiM- (waal fondlUona of the rtruuurltT
ore ant of wuconn. aaoutal oVirrki and Ir
ritability. BMuttat4 wlta chruuh- dtao
Ui rvprtKlu'-tlr ory an. wf wosaan, conitant
aro.ali.at of brat In Ut nehai of the ktd
url mmrruaaia ISoodtne), Sue to B walr
etiml cundltkai of th rvpruduetlvs ar.tml
amanorrno-a t.unprraaad or abaral aamUUy
pfrkjua I, artalnf from or acrompanyloa an
aliuurmal runuitltai ot th t!uj'tlre oraana
and anasile I thin Mood I hahlti drawinc
an.athna Ut Um sitraaas lower Bart of Um
aUltmtn."
ft svnrsor traaof th above aystplmna
ar proaeat, no Invalid woman ran do
botbv titan lake Irr. fww'i FavtsHM
Hrwriitkm. oo ot iba leadlna I m redi
stil of whlrh Is I'nlront mnt.iirlUlonlBS,
and th mnlleal proparttea ot wulck It
Hat faithfully repraawiu.
Of Ooidsa Heal root, another nrnwrWit
Inaredlsnl of Favorite. teacrlvtHtn,
)n.f. rinlvy Klllnswond, M. l).,of Boa
sett Madtcsl Oolkws, Cklrsgo, asys:
II SI SS tmptn-tant rernedy In dlwmlvof
th ttaih Is all ratarrttal ousdllkaia
sod ral auSMbWaaaul. H at aavfut"
Prof. Joha M. Mdrt, M. !)., 1st of
Cincinnati, says at tiosiea Heal mot I
Is ralatkn w Ita (nral ffrls on tha
eyatera. Haw w lettrte. aa sal aa wlr
sW at tsnh raM ataMilli pw.Vis. It
la ii rrwWla narld as Ma tosie saatal la
all aatslliaiad sistw
Pmf. Banhotow, M. D., of J'fferaoa
Hedical llea. says of Uoldea Heal :
Valaahht Is stHtsa aaaurrSat, aweor
rkaai ta.ndinfi and ronawaUvs dyasaawr
raw tpalsful bummii ruaU.il.
I)r. Ptayes'a Favonwn rVaaerlpUoa falth-
E' l Haas sat all th above Basted la
Mta sad saraa ta diaasM tut wkath
are rwevjaisnilnl.
anything that he wants to do."
Now, dou t bristle up aud come at
me and say, "That's not so; fur 1
waut to make a fortune, but I know
that I shall never get it," and so
forth.
WeJl, now, I am not talking to
idiots or to balnea. liable waut
the noon aud grab for it. You
dou't waut the moon, nor do you
grab for it ou can make for-
tniMvbut I am glad to know that
a tremendous majority of our young
men do not waut a fortuue, hen
they say they waut it and do not
proceed in the right way to get it,
iu their innermost hearts they do
uot waut it W beu I see a man
lying dowu, in reach of a basket of
provmious, and saying that be is
starving to death aud wants some
thing to eat, but does uot thrust
out his hand and take the food, I
say that he is either a fool or a liar
be can take bis choice of which
one he will be.
This brings me to what I wish to
say to yon concerning "getting au
education," as is the common ex
pression, but the luiiMirtaiice of this
subject requires a chapter to itself,
and we will continue this "Talk"
iu next week's Progressive Farmer.
Lenoir Co., X. t
Father Beats Daughter's Lover
Unmercifully With Cane.
1'ro.ut-rtly Suei-tal to New. and oIm rvr.
Our town was thrown into a fe
ver of exciteuieut late Thursday
evening by the report that au eu
raged father bad assaulted and
seriously or painfully hurt the
would lie gallant of his ti ft ecu year-
old daughter. It seems that a man
named O itryan, a traveling pho
tographer, claiming to he from Iu
dianu, had been boarding in the
home of the young lady and had
beeu paying her some attentions.
As soon as the parents learned of
this, it is said, they forbade him
the house.
A short time ago O'Rryau went
to au adjoining towu, about twenty
miles away, to engage lu bis regu
Ur work. He came back once or
twice, it is said, and tried to see
the .ang lady. The vigilance of
her father prevented this. Ou Mon
day the young lady started to
school, and on Wednesday 0' Bryan
ap'rcared on the scene once more
and attempted to see her at school,
which was denied him. At recess
he forced himself into the building,
but was ordered oft the premises
by the superintendent. It is said
that he lay iu waiting, trying to
speak with her, but, failing in this,
he succeeded in getting a note to
her, asking her to meet him at the
evening train, aa it would in all
probability be ber last opportunity
to see him.
The irate father had hunted him
all the afternoon and was on hand
at the train, and upon O' Bryan
appearing he at once attacked him,
beating him over the head and
shoulders with a cane. The town
marshai spiieared ou the scene and
took the now fully aroused father
iu hand, but not before be hud ef
fectively booted O'Bryan the length
of the coach, into which he bud
scrambled with alacrity.
Told of Murder In Sleep.
Sllilj.luwa.Sirlal,liah,tiiNrw Vork Hrald
Because he talked iu bis sleep
and told about a murder which he
committed, Charles Kockler was
sentenced today to life imprison
ment. There was no evideuce
against the man until the story he
told iu his sleep was investigated,
when sufficient evidence to convict
him was found.
August Schroeder was murdered
two years ago. Charles Kocker, a
farii hand, married Hchroeder's
widow some months later. Mrs.
liocker infoinied the county attor
ney that her husband, while talk
ing in his sleep, had told of poison
ing her first huslwnd, even telling
where he had purchased the poison
he had administered.
The story was Investigated and
the purchase of the poison traced
to Itocker. Scbroeder's body was
exhnmed and traces of the poison
were found.
Was a Very Sick Boy
but cured by Chamberlain's Colic,
Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy.
"When my boy waa two years old ht
had a very sever attack of bowel
complaint, but by th uae of Chamber-
Iain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea
Remedy we bronchi him out all nieht,
says Maggie Hickoief Midland, alich
Tins remedy can be depended upou in
th moat saver cases. Even cholera
infantum ia cured by it. Follow the
plain printed directions snd a cure ia
certain, ror sal by C. N, Simpson,
jr., and Dr. S. J.Welsh.
Kev. Lucius B. Compton, a Holi
ness preacher of Asbeville, is sued
iu Buuoonibe county for slander by
woman Holiness preacher named
Grandma JefTera. She wsnta 12,000
because the Rev. Mr. Compton said
she bad been turned out of the Bap-
tut church for lying. This is I
very bad state of affairs for Holi
ness people to get Into.
Good for tb coO((h, remove the
cold, th causa of the eouy,h, That's
th work of Kennedy's Laiativa Honey
and Tar th original laiaiiv eonch
syrup. Contains do opiates. Sold by
C N. Simpson, jr., snd Dr.S.J. Welsh
DUtint;uihd South Carolinian
Declare that the Disprntary
ite Have a Maturity in the Seri
ate and W ill l.tkcly Control the
House.
'asrkttr owrwr.
"If my npsiiit'iits are mil iidird
with the result of the primary elee
tion held in Mouth Carolina vester
day," declared Senator li. II Till
man to au Olwcrver reHirler last
uight, "I certainly am. I did not
have the npiiortunity uf vol ink-
the first llemm-ratic primary which
was belt! while I was ou a lecture
trip West, but I voted yesterday.
True, the gentlemen for whom I
cast my lutllots were defeated, but
that neither surprised nor does il
disturb me. The Governor ttoes
uot enact laws, you know, neither
cau he repeal those which are
made."
This thought was a pleasant one,
for here Senator Tillman sUiiied.
glanced sharply at the uewsuiier
man aud smiled.
"My fight was on the legislature.
In the Senate we have a safe work
ing majority and many friends tell
me that we have control ulaotif the
House. With the uew iSeuutor
who favor a State disiM-nsary and
the bold overs, we have a majority
of 10 men in that body. In the
House the vote will lie closer, ao 1
am told, with the odds iu our favor.
You must remember that I have
been out of the State for several
weeks past, and I cannot speak
authoratively. My information,
which 1 am confident is reliable.
gives us an easy majority iu Isith
branches of the legislature, h'or
this reason, I say that I won my
tight."
As he uttered tlie.se lint words,
Senator Tillman turned sharply
and glared itlsiut the room us if it
were full of his opMinentt, some ol
whom, (veilniph, might tiiestitn his
word. He presented a picture to
lie reiiieinls'ivil. Coat less and col
larless, bis full head of iron gray
hair rumpled up and the iierspira
tiou standing out ou his forehead,
he looked the man that he is, one
who lias risen from the lowest to
the bighfMt by the sheer might ol
his owu achievements. That he
was vitally concerned in the out
come of the .South Carolina prima
ries, wits evident from the manner
iu which he expressed himself.
His words came thick and fast.
Tbey were sharp and to the point.
"I believe we did well in the
primaries considering the odds,"
coutiuued Seuator Tillman. "The
prohibitionists, the 111 i ml tigers,
the local optiouists, and the high
license advocates mude common
cause against the dispensary, well
knowing that its defeat would give
them the opportunity to carry out
their nefarious schemes.
'This unholy alliance did not
accomplish what its promoters had
iu view. I visited '.'I counties, in)
object being to carry them for the
dispensary iu the legislature. An
auti dispensary liovernor was
named and so also an miti-dispeii-
sary Attoruey General."
Here Senator Tillman turned
aside to take a fall out of Lyon, the
uomitiee of the party for Attorney
General. "He was elected on the
'auti graft' platform," said Senator
Tillman. "A great hurrah was
made and much dust stirred In the
fight. The friends of the dispen
sary are as much opposed to graft
ing as anybody in iSoutn i arotina.
We desire nothing more thaii a fair
aud square deal. And yet, such a
vast amount of political capital was
made out of this anti graft platform
that Lyon was elected."
After a discussion of several ot
the details of his dispensary scheme,
which has been discussed so nint h
of late in the South Carolina pa
pern, Seuator Tillman closed with
the statement that he was deter
mined to give his native State an
institution worthy of its glorious
past and one that would lie a model
for others lo copy after. It Is a
herculean task, he said, "one that
requires incalculable work aud
thought"
Here Henator Tillman tnrneu ami
sat down in a chair, which stood
in one cornr of the risim. His
grip was open on the table and he
was making ready to go down to
supper in the Central Hotel dining
;h;tll. He ha aged roiutidernhly UK.
i during the past lew i-ant, bile
there are many more wrinkles in The Utile Netrro W ho (a Creating
his face and his bair is a shade
grayer than it was several years
ago, hisst.-p is just as ela-Uie and
vigorous, his eye as bright and
keen, his mi ml as tjuifk aud wr-1
repine aud his tongue as sharp
and IreiM'haul as it wasadctwlej
a Stir in New Vork by Making
t rends With a Monkey Brought
Oter by a 5authcrner.
rh.rl-.lt.-1 Mwftrr. Ulli
The Chronicle of yentertlay foil-
t.tiiiftl th. Inllii ut). editorial:
"Mr. Runnel . VrriH-r of New
ago a hen be lilted biinseir alstve: .oik reeeittly iiiiiMHtetl from the
all heads in South Carolina and .Congo Krw-; State ao African pyg
paved his way for entrance into niv. The It'i-lnuaii is I firt'll
that most exclusive club in the j inches tall ami ia J.l years old. He
oriti, ine Senate ot tne I uitetl , is so low lu the animal scale flint
If a Cow gave
Butter
mankind would have to
invent milk. Milk Is Na
ture's emulsion butter
put in shape for diges
tion. Cod liver oil Is ex
tremely nourishing, but
it has to be emulsified
before we can digest it
Scott's Emulsion
combines the best oil
with the valuable hypo
phosphites so that it is
easy to digest and does
far more good than the
oil alone could. That
makes Scott's Emulsion
the most strengthening.
nourishing food-medi
cine in the world.
Sand tor fro sample.
SCOTT BOWNI, Chemist
0-4l S Pssrl Street New York
Oa- arw $ I .OO. All druaglet
States of America.
Karly this morning he will leave
for Spartanburg, S. C, from which
point be will go direct to Wiseou
sin, where be has engagements to
speak. Senator Tillinau returns to
that section, the Northwest, where
he has la-en lecturing for the past
month. Iu all resjiects his visit to
the city was a most delightful one.
PROP. CHARLES fl. CONNER.
The Newly Elected Professor at the
A. and M. College,
rr,itfrt-iv Karawr.
I'rof. Charles M. Conner, who has
recently lasen elected Professor of
Agriculture in the North Carolina
A. ami M. College at Raleigh, was
tsiru aud raised ou a farm iu Mis
souri and graduated at the I'uiver
tity of Missouri iu the agricultural
course. He then attended the Mich
igan Agricultural College for tsist
graduate work. Then he was elect
ed Assistant iu Agriculture at the
Missouri hxperiment Station and
bad charge of the exiieriinents in
agronomy aud auiuiiil husbandry.
I he results of some of this work
have given him considerable prom
luence.
In l!l7 he was elected Assistant
Professor of Agriculture iii('lem
son Agricultural College, (South
Carolina, and while there hail
charge of the ex peri uit nt work on
the r.xierimeiil Slut ion as well as
the teaching. He carried ou a num
ber of extensive exeriiueiits with
fertilizers and with Is-ef aud sik
production. He introduced a iiiiin
ler of uew subjects in the course
iu agriculture anil was instrumeu
tal iu establishing a thorough
course in animal husbandry.
Iu l!Nll! he was elected Professor
of Agriculture iu the Florida Agri
cultural Col lege ami director of far
mere institutes for that State. Here
his work has liecii markedly sue
cessful, ami has done much to
ipiickeu interest iu scientific agri
culture throughout Florida.
Many of Prof. Conner s old stu
dent are now holding good posi
tions or are running successful
farms of their owu the best proof
of the value of his training.
Prof. Conner is no stranger to
the farmers of North Carolina as he
has been doing Farmers' Institute
work iu thisState lor two summers
past. Now let the friends of agri
cultural education co-operate with
hi iu in trying to make the course
in agriculture at the North Caro
liua A. and M. College as good as
there is anywhere in the couutry.
Pain from a Burn
promptly relieved by Chamberlain'
fain Halm. A little child ol Michael
Strauss of Vernon, Conn., was recent
ly in great paiu from a burn on the
hand, and aa cold applications only
increased the inflammation, Mr.Stauaa
came to Mr. James N. Nichols, a local
merchant, for aometliiiiK to stop the
paiu, Mr Nichols aaya: "I advised
him to use Uiamberlain s ram Balm,
and the first application drew out the
inflammation and cave immediate re
lief. I have uted this liniment niysr.lt
and recommend it very often for cuts,
burnt, straina and lame back, and
have uever known it to disappoint."
ror sale by (,. N. Simpson, Jr., and
Dr. S. J. Welsh.
Marvin and Howard Middle-
brooks of Georgia, two farmers
who were contesting for the honor
of marketing the first bale of cot
ton in their community, almost
came to blows at the gin w hen each
discovered that they were first, but
the feeling sulisided ami they
laughed about the incident. They
each sold a bale at teu cents a
pound.
No one would buy a sailboat with
ssils that could not be reefed. There
is always that possibility of a little too
much wind that uiakea a cautious man
afraid to to unprovided. The think
ua man, whose stomach sometime
Koes back on him, provides for bin
stomach by keeping a bottle of kodol
tor dyspepaia within reach. Kodol
digests what you eat and restores the
stomach to the condition to properl)
perforin its functions, sold by L, N
Simpson, Jr., and Dr. E. . Welsh.
While V. A. Jolly was very sick
Saturday nieht, some low down
rascal or rascals slipiied to his sta
bit and cut off the tail of one ol
his milk cows. Forest City corre
sHimlence Hut her fordton Sun.
When two strong mm come to
blows, even if they ar well matched
it ia a pleating sight, but if the mau
who geta th worst nf it will us De
Witt's Witch ilsiel Salv b will look
better and feel belter iu short order
He sure you get DeWitt's. Good foi
everything s salve is used for, iuclud
ing piles. Sold byC. N. Simpson, Jr,
and Dr. S. . Welsh.
fjamnel Browning, a gray haired
man who Mid he lived In hen
tucky, startled the throng of Bryan
visitors In Chicago Wednesday by
rushing at them as they stood out
side Bryan's door, declaring he
would k ni fe every one of tbeu. He
also inquired for Bryan. The police
disarmed him and locked him up.
He is demented.
some iieople donlit that he is a man.
Ir. Verner rtt-eiitly turned hi iu
over to the New Vork ZMilogic:il
Park, and the keeter has created
somewhat of a Herniation by fum
ing him into the monkey bouse.
The pgiuy and a big uurang
outang are Ihhiii companions. They
hug and kiss each other ami rut
np all sorts of caiers in the cage.
The spveUrle has j licensed a good
many New Vorkeis. The lender of
the objection to the exhibition is
Kev. ir. Me Arthur of Cavalry
Iluptist church. He says in ail
seriousness that the person rmpou
sihle for this exhibition of the lit
tle African ought to take him out
of the monkey cage aud put him to
school. The cIciL'vinaii said:
"We send our missionaries to
Africa to christianize the people,
aud yet iu this case we have
brought over one of the Africans to
briitali.e him. It is high time our
christian missionary societies ttsik
this matter up. 1 shall communi
cate with Ir. tiilliertof the Mount
Olivet liaptist church, and the pas
tors of other colored congregations,
calling their attention to this out
rage and usking them to co oientte
with me in stopping it.
II is stated thai Dr. enter Im
ported this pygmy for the purjKise
l educating In in iu America, ami
that ilfler subserving the useful
scientific purpose of sliosinir the
people of New Vork without cost
what a real pygmy looks like, lit
tle lieiiga is to be taken to Dr. Ver
ner' s houie down South and put to
school. Wonder where his home
is down South aud what school
will thaw the pri.et lint mean
while, as long as they keep the lit
tle nigger caged, with or without
the monkeys, slavery in its basest
lonn is lie) tig practiced in enlight
ened .New lork for the edification
if the vulgar multitude."
Seeing this iu the evening paiier
Mr. Paul C. Whit lock of the Char
lotte bar called on au Oliaerver
man slid volunteered the informa
tion that Dr. Verner is a grandson
of the lute Dr. Phillips of the State
University. Columbia, 8. 0., is
his home. He basls-en a mission
ary in Africa for several years.
He exhibited a dozen or more of
his pygmy friends at the St. Louis
Imposition. He started to this
country with alsiut 40, a regular
herd ol them. At the sight of the
big lsiat ou which they were to set
sail a niimlH'r of the Istys became
l ightened aud took to the jungles.
fter the show wits over at 8t.
Ixiuis Dr. Verner returned to Af
rica, taking his pygmies with him.
I lie fellow iu New iork must lie a
recent importation.
Dr. verner is a cousin of Dr. h.
K. Kussell of this city and of Mr.
Charles P. Kussell of New Vork
city. He represents the Presbyte
rian church iu Africa.
"To Cure a Felon."
says Sam Kendall of Pliillipsliurg,
Kan., "lust cover it over with
Kuck len' s Arnica Halve aud (he
salve will do the rest." Quickest
cure for burns, boils, sores, scalds,
wounds, piles, ec.eina, salt rheum,
chapped hands, sore feet and sure
eyes, duly ;.c. at all Uruggists.
Guaranteed.
The lieople of lxe county, fla.,
are warm over the marriage of a
mulatto to a young white girl of
good family. He was so nearly
white nolsHly knew be had negro
blood iu him, and the girl married
him secretly. The fellow prudent
ly put distance lsdweeu himself
and Lee county when it leaked out
that he Was not only a negro but
had a negro wife. The white wo
mau is prostrated and is constantly
guarded lent she kill herself.
Chamberlain's Cough Remedy
acts on nature's plan. The most suc
cessful medicines art thoee that aid
nature. Chamberlain's Cough Reme
dy acta on this plain. Take it when
ynti have a cold and it will allay th
eolith, relieve ttie lungs, aid especto.
ration, open the secretions and aid
nature in restoriug the system to a
healthy condition. Thousands have
testified to its superior eacellence, It
counteracts any tendency of a cold lo
result in pueunionia. Price 15 centa.
Large size 50 cents. For isle by C.N,
Simpson, jr., snd Dr. S. J. Welsh.
A-t any "lap" that voa war a.
Whr Ui t'aar, wllk Sear sebUtaV ssS t
rllMRstr.
Th Yank. ul Went th Tank, aajt ,
Ttay far sa Burtj at ,jt!a Tea.
Caf llaB bruf OoalBBav
Indigestion Causes
Catarrh of the
Stomach
Far man yaara M ha baas wDDosad that
Catarrh of Ih Stomach oausa Indipatloa
ins sVspspsla. hot th truth at sxaetly ths
apposlts. Isdlrattloa cause catarrh. R
pea tea attacks of InalfasSoa Inflames tha
atsooua mameranae Hntng th stomaoa ana
aaposss th asms of th stomach, thas eaus
lr A f laad secrets msda bam' at
Baa tric ef aa htral dlfaatloa. Thl It
sails Catarrh sf ths Stomach.
Kcdol Dytpxptia Csn
rshrrs all knllammaBoB at Mas si boos
mmbrana Using vt stomach, antscvj the
twivaa. sad ears hs4 kraals, soar rkanfa,
sanaa sf ruHnsas after satin;. fe4irsaUoa
Sytpesata aa4 all rnaca Wsubeas.
KotJol Digest What Yea tt
Mak Um Staaaarai fwaat,
sahNsalv. caJrb.tl M. leeetatlMSBBS.
0 kial . vticli atlla far to aaaa.
Pt sssra s. 1. 0. PswiTT 00.. Owasaa, sTa
Forsal by Dr. S. J. Walsh and C.
N. Simpson, Jr,