1 0 s. A 1I ) trot i murk ht" min thiit yimr i. Ii;rt i tlun t jpjr be hind nd tht ytt i pMlicr will 1 i iitu lt'l uitle-i y o a nmk pnyrrwnt. Ml L4 Ti 'J T0. AWA MOUNT AIRY, WORTH CAROLINA, THURSDAY, JANUARY IS, ID 00 NO. 28 1 am mm H rrf 1 IT' 4 WILD RIDE DOWN MOUNTAIN. Engineer Coble on Runaway. Asheville, Jan. 17. Engineer Coble, pulling the throttle of a westbound freight train on the Murphy division of the Southern Railway, had one of the most thrilling experiences on Balsam mountain Friday, between Will ets and Heauty, recorded in rail way circles here for many a year. The engineer was on a runaway train down the mountain, and while escaping without a scratch he will perhaps never be able to forget that wild ride down Bal sam. All the other members of the train crew jumped. Engineer Coble, a stalwart son of Erin and making his first run as an engineer, elected - to stay with the train, for a distance of perhaps six or eight miles, with the runaway hitting itup at times at the rate of 100 miles or more an hour; worked with the big machine, and finally getting it under control, brought it to a stop. The train's flight, how ever, was not checked until it had whipped off five of the seven cars, practically destroyed the telegraph office and wires at Ad die and made kindling wood of a part of the Addie station. Crew Jumps To Safety. According to reliable informa tion received hereto-day a freight train of seven cars was passing over the Murphy di ision west bound. Engineer Coble was pull ing the train and, reaching the top of Balsam, started to ease down in careful and efficient man ner. About the time tbe water the mountain, red, the wheels began slipping. Soon the train was gathering headway and then the crew, realizing that the thing was from under control of the engineer, lost no time in swinging off to safety. Some of them perhaps had been o i runa way trains on Balsam before and they didn't care to go through another experience. Engineer Coble, - however, stuck to his post. He worked manfully at his re verse and his brakes, but his ef forts were in vain. The train kept getting faster. It swung down the mountain side with a mighty rush and those persons a bout Addie station, on a curve near the foot of the mountain, hearing the noise but not know ing what it was, took precaution and sought places of safety. Addie Station Destroyed. And it was well they did. In an instant or two the engine with seven cars plunged into sight. It is said that the thing was going at 100 miles an hour or more. At Addie iive of tiie ears were whip ped oi" like the tail of a kite. One of the cars was thrown against the front door of the station and that part of the building was con verted into kindling wood. The telegraph office, instruments and wires were simply demolished. The operator or station master had got away just in the niche of time. Another car was thrown into the yard in front of the sta tion, while others were piled a bout the place in heaps. The engine in which sat engin eer Coble and to which the re maining two cars were attached never hesitated. Making the curve it just kept a-going. All the time the engineer was work ing desperately at his brakes and the reverse. The loss of five cars didn't seem to disturb him. Past Addie and on down the track went the runaway. Two miles further, with the steep incline passed, the engineer succeeded in again bringing his engine un der control and then to a stop. He had a frightful ride and a thrilling experience, but he was unhurt. The Asheville division officials were notified shortly after the runaway occurred and wrecking train was sent to the scene. The runaway happened about noon and it was well toward nine o'clock that night before the de bris at Addie was cleared and the track made ready for use. Those who viewed the scene at Addie yesterday declare that they have never before seen so com plete a demolishment. Battle With IJandlts. London, Jan. 23. Three per sons were killed and 21 injured at Walthamstow, a suburb of London, as the result of asen satioml attempt made to-day by two Russians at highway robbery. The men were run down and sur rounded bv a posse, and one of them finally committed suicide. The other attempted suicide but did not succeed, although he is now lying in a critical condition at Tottenham Hospital. Two of their victims, a police man and a boy of 10. lie dead, while five of the injued are in a hospital seriously wounded. London is breathless at the in troduction into its precincts of Russian revolutionary metnrds. One of the revolvers used by the men was found to be the same type as that used by Rus sian revolutionists, having a large butt with rest, a long, nar row muzzle and firing bullets of the soft nosed, expanding Maus er pattern. The bandits held ,up an auto- wuti at the entrance to the rub ber works at Walthamstow and made off with the money. They were followed by a few employes and a gradually increasing crowd of police and civilians, few of whom were armed. The police jumped aboard a trolley car, and the bandits, find ing themselves closely pursued, jumped aboard another car and forced the driver with a revolver at his head, to send his car along at full speed. One of the men ran to the rear of the car and repeatedly emp tied his revolver at thp pursuers. Reinforcements of armed po lice on foot, bicycles and on horseback joined in the chase and fussillades were exchanged for a distance of a mile. The car went thundering down the track with the mounted and bicycle police straining every ef fort to keep up with the peace makers. Nearing the Tottenham marshes the bandits made the motorman slow down and, jump ing off, seized a milk cart and made for the country district. An automobile was pressed into ser vice by the police and it was rap idly overhauling the assassins when they took to the marshes. The pursuit in this treacherous ground was a difficult one, but eventually the police succeeded in overtaking one of the men. who, finding his position hope less, turned his weapon upon himself, inflicting a dangerous, though not a fatal wound. The other man, failing to reach Ep ping forest, took refuge in a cot tage, which the police, now re inforced by buckshooters, who; were in the vicinity, first fusilla ded and then stormed. They found the assassin dead on the floor, he having sent a bullet into his own head. Charlie There was a splendid trick done last evening. I saw a man actually turn a handker chief into an egg. Billv-That's nothing. I saw a man only about two weeks ago turn a cow into a field. Carnegia Medals Awarded. Pittsburg, Jan. 20. -The Car negie hero fund commission, at its annual meeting here to-day awarded 26 medals, $14,750 in cash, and pensions aggregating $565 per month for deeds of valor investigated since the last meet ing of the commission last Octo ber. Joseph A. Forsyth, aged 40 years, of Atlanta Ga., recived a bronze medal and $1,500 with which to liquidate a nnrtgageon his prooerty. Fur yt.h :i Febru ary 10th, 1907. pullel John C. Reed, aged 71, from the railroad tracks just as a train reached the spot. For rescuing Carl V. Chalk, aged 18, and his father, Walter V. Chalk, aged 38, from drown ing, on July 4th, 1907, James H. Archibald, aged 35, of Gates Tenn., was awarded a bronze medal and $1,000 to be applied toward the purchase of a farm. The younger Chalk had be come exhausted while swimming, and hampered his father so much when the latter tried to save him that both men would have drown ed but for Archibald's assistance. A silver medal and $1,000.00 awarded to James B. Goldman, of Cambridge, S. C, who risked his life to save Warren Finley. a negro section hand, from being run over by a train near Water loo, June 29th, 1007. Finley's legs were cut off but his life was saved. A silver medal and $50 a month, with five dollars for each depen dent child under 16, was award ed BSsa Omner, of New Orleans, widow of Frank Omner, f?ho ist his nfe rescuing John' Levi (colored) who was overcome by sewer gas October 22d, 1907, in a citv sewer. Cleansing His Conscience. There was once in Boston an old codfish dealer, a very earnest a:id sincere man, who lived pray erfully every day. One of the great joys of I.h life was the fam ily worship hour. On year two other merchants asked him to go into a deal with them bv which they could control all the codfish in the market, and greatly in crease the price. The plan was succeeding well, when this good man learned that many poor per sons in Boston were suffering be cause of the great advance in the price of codfish. It troubled him so that he broke down, in trying to pray at the family altar, and went straight to the men who led him into the plot, and told them that he could not go orf with it. Said the old man: "I can't af ford to do anything which inter feres with my fa r.ily prayers. And this morning when 1 got down on my knees and tried to pray, there was a mountain of codfish before me high enough to shut out the throne of God, and I could not pray. I tried my besf to get around it, or get over it, but every time I started to pray, that codfish loomed up be tween me and my God. I would not have my family prayer spoil ed for all the codfish in the At lantic Ocean, and I shall have nothing more to do with it, or with any money made out of it." Selected. A Religioui Author's Statement. For several years I was afflicted ith kidney trouble and last winter I was suddenly stricken with a severe pain in my kidneys and was confined to bed eight days unable to get up wii-hout as tMHtanre. My urine contained a thick white sediment and I passed same fre quently day and night. I commenced taking Foley's Kidney Remedy, and the pain gradually abated and finally ceas fd and my urine became normal. I cheerfully recommend Foley's Kidney Remedy. Sold by J. H. Gwyn. PinealveACTS Court Stops His Persistent Wooing. "And it being satisfactorily shown to the court that the love of William C. Ragan, party of the second part, is distasteful and otherwise objectionable to Mrs. Elsie Smith, partv of the first part, it is ordered, adjudged and otherwise decreed that the lavishing of the affections of said William C. Ragan. party of the second part, toward said Mrs. Elsie Smith, party of the first part, is hereby enjoined and otherwise prohibited. And the said William C. Ragan, party of the second part, is ordered to come into court and show cause why said decree against his am orous activities should not be de clared final." So the courts of the land and the State of Ohio heartlessly, cruelly and with all the stern ness of their puissant powers have put to fight, imprisoned, but not conquered the divine pas sion of the enraptured Ragan, writes the Toledo correspondent of the Chicago Inter Ocean. Blind justice has ordered that the faithful and persistent swain shall no more utter oot-see-003 in the presence of his adored, shall no more warble lovelorn ditties to the trumming of his soft guitar, shall no more shower her with theater tickets and be ribboned boxes of bonbons. And all because the object of his affections cares not for them whenthev emanate from Wil liam C. Ragan. Tis a bitter world! Two years ago the sprightly and comely widow Mrs. Elsie Smith met the unhappy Rajran. Sines tHt ill fated hour RTan i.iT .., 'the ' '"devWea luv"o? the pretty widow. His visits to her home number hundreds, his proposals reach the scores, his attentions know no bounds. But despite the ardor and the persistence of this attack, on her heart the affections of the widow remaided intact. And as the weeks wore on the more distaste ful became the attentions of her admirer. "Get out," she ordered as h proposed for the three hundred and thirty-eighth time last week. "If you run me away I'll take carbolic acid, shout my head o!f and jump in a been- vat," h.) threatened. "I'll give you a $100 if you don't," she promised, and sur reptitiously winked the other eye. "Under those conditions I'll postpone suicide until you refuse me tomorrow night," replied the would-be benedict. "Here's the check. On your way," and as her admirer disap peared the comeiy widow's voice was iicnra sropjrng payment om the chock over the tvlei!)o:u. In desperation she appealed to the courts. Her ietition for it - junction wai granted but the order does not extend to prevent ing Ragan taking his own life. It is not chronicled in the court record that the young woman asked that boon. She Oidn't Sleep Well. A woman who lives in an in land town, while going to a con vention in a distant city spent one night of the journey onboard a steamboat. It was the first time she had ever traveled by water. She reached her journey's ena extremely latigued. lo a friend who remarked it she re plied: "Yes, I'm tired to death. I don't know as I care to travel by water again. I read the state ment about how to put the life preserver on, and I thought I un derstood it; but I guess I didn't. Somehow, I couldn't go to sleep with the thing on." SAYINGS OF MRS. SOLOMAN Being the Confessions of the 700th Wife, as Translated. Wouldst thou be a bachelor girl, my daughter? For this is the great feminine bluff; and no such thing existeth. except in the magazines and the imaginary. u), a Dacneior gin may ot. . sweet young thing who assumeth a becoming pose, or she may be an old maid who maketh the best of an unbecoming situation; but a confirmed bachelor girl is one who hath not married - yet. For the single life is a perfect ly lovely thing in story books. Yea, it is made up of rarebit sup pers and high art and the admir ation of the multitude; but in real life it is a bak hall bedroom with a gas stove for company and twenty-five cent table d'hote for excitement. Verily, I say unto thee, no wo man who would not exchange a type-writer for a cradle, and a desk for a sewing machine, and an easel for a cook stove, and an armful of diplomas for an armful of babies and a latch key for a nice pair of broad shoulders if the right man oiTered them to her. Yea, observe how easily a lady college professor droppeth her Hebrew and her Greek and learneth to talk baby-talk. And mark how willingly a lady doctor stoppeth rolling pills for the pleasuriroI!ing a baby carriage. For art if but it 13 thou cann bout its rf tie it yjf thou canst fiot run try fingers through its nair. nor call it fun ny nicknames, nor cry upon its coat lapel. Neither canst thou worry about it, nor wait upon it, nor "fus" over it. Verily, verily a woman must have something to coddle and a man is better than a teddy bear. Solah! For Apartment Houses In City. Winston-Salem Journal. With the intention of con structing mlol apartment houses, Mrs. R. J. Reynolds yes terday through Mr. Jas. S. Dunn purchased from Maj. T. J. Brown a lot on West End. The lot, which fronts on Fifth street, is 150 feet wide and extends back to 5 1-2 street a distance of 200 feet. The price paid was $8,000. Mrs. Reynolds proposes to erect the most up to date apart ment houses possible. They will be furnished with every conven ience, including janitor service and heat. This will be the first real ambitous attempt to erect modern apartment houses in the city and they will be similar to the larger cities. The plans for the houses have not been drawn vct- It is interesting to note in con neetion with the purchase of the lot by Mr&. Reynolds from Maj. Brown tnat he purchased this piece ot property in 88o from the congregation of the Moravian 'Statements upon whac has al Brethren for the sum of S320. ! ready been accomplished by the Threi years agj Maj. Brown sold a slice of filtv feet fronting nn Fifth tn Mr T. iLhrrr,n w $1,20J, and yesterday disposed of the remaining 150 feet frQnt for ?8.000. Real estate property has increased at practically the same rale throughout the city. PIGS. Fine Polan China and Mammoth rigs ready to ship. Order before they are picked over. JOHN A. YOUNG, Greensboro, N. C. The Tactful Suiter. Harper's Weekly. A youth in Trenton, whose de votion to the young woman of his choice has encountered many ob stacles during his long courtship, recently sought her out with this , encouraging statement: i mi ins. k a au ngni now, Alice. I managed to get access to your father the other day and while he wouldn't exactly give hi3 consent I rather imagine I've made some headway. He bor rowed $10 of me. Surely he can't stand me off much longer after that." The young woman sighed. "Yes, I've heard about," she said "and I think you've made an aw ful mess of it. Father mention ed the $10 and remarked that I'd better give you up you were too r l: i. .-.I. .11 -.-Li easy. CROWS HEADS. Bald Headed People May Get a Now Chance In Life. In these days when youth'is the moving factor in business; when a man makes hismarkat thirty-five and is r.ady to retire at forty-five; when business hous es pension the man we call "mid dle aged" rather than allow his lagging influence to intrude upon the commercial rush, a bald head is almost fatal to any man's hopes The following must therefore prove interesting to people who are losing their hair or who are bald. Resorcin is one of the latest and most effective germ killers tJfed by science, and in a with Beta Napthol, ancina and an- and also c thy condition of the scalp, whJeh prevents the development of new germs. Pilocarpin is a well known a gent for restoring the hair to its natural color, where the loss of color has been due to a disease of the scalp. Yet, it is not a col oring matter or dye. This combination of curatives mixed with alcohol as a stimu lant perfects the most effective remedy for hair and scalp trou bles. The famous Rexall "93" Hair Tonic is chiefly composed of Re sorcin, Beta Napthol and Pilo carpin. It makes thescalp heal thy, nourishes the hair, stimu lates the follicles. Where the head is already bare,' it enters the follicles, revitalizes the rootsr supplies nourishment and stimu lates a new growth. We want you to try a few bot tles of Rexall "93" Hair Tonic, on our iersonal guarantee that the trial will not cost you a Den ny if it does not give you abso lute satisfaction. That's proof of our faith in this remedy and it should indisputably demon strate that we know what we are talking about when we say that Rexall "93" Hair Tonic will grow hair on bald heads, except of coarse, where baldness has been of such long duration that the roots of the hair are entirely dead, the follicles closed and grown over, and the scalp is glazed. Remember, we are basing our us of Rexall 93'; Ha.r Tonic, a,nd w; hav.e e r'Sht t0 assume mac wnai ic nas uone to nun- dreds of others it will do for you. In any event you cannot lose anything by giving it a trial on our liberal guarante9. Two siz es; bOc, to $1.00 The Ashcraft Drug Co. ML Airy. N. C. 'p Vr- HAIR ONW.LD