A blue mark here means that the sub scriber to this paper is a year behind and is expected to make a payment. The fig ures on the labf how to what date thia paper is paid. UY .A3 AIHV, WORTH CAROLINA, THURSDAY, APRIL 13, Wll 0. 30 T I a I Jk r i I TAJ RECORD SIZE STILLS Rerenue Officers Geiie Biggest, Blockade Outfits Reported in! Great While. Georgia prison commission this Raleigh, April 8. The biggest' morning recommended to Cover- , , ,. .... ; i nor Brown that he grant an un- blockade distillery seizures in .... , , B. ml uiinivuo u j conditional pardon to Thomas this State in a great while were , Kdgar stripling, the former po reported lucre tolay by W. K. 1 lice chief of Danville, Va., who Merritt. J. K. Cameron and other I killed a man in than state 14 1 ?I V f fWr nn, heir. a still of 675 ,.,. ':., J,;th full pnnin- e&lU) C1PT y.Jl ?M. lJZZ meut. seized northwest of Fre wont, and the otlier a still of 225 gallons capacity within a short distance of Kinston and in 350 yards of the Norfolk South ern Railroad, I he jjremont piani uu ir - merly been a government still and seized and sold two years ago and then stolen from the government, the off.cers never having been able to get up with , . . , i .. ' it again until now, With it was;stancos full equipment, including a 2,800 gallon mash tub and a 380 gal lon doubler or condenser. It was on a 300-acre plantation in a house built to imitate a tobacco. barn and had underground steam i pipe connection with a cotton gin boiler, some distance away by which the pbmt was secretly operated when the gin was run ning. The plant is on an estate the executor of which, a brotheF of the deceased, lives in Fre mont. All parties now connect- ed with the place disclaim know-; ledffe or connection with the plant Officers say warrants are to be issued at once. The outfit near Kinston was ; Kincf anA rx nanu rtf:beinp introliicwf bv Attompv whiskey were included along with big quantities uf beer and Ull UMWll UUtlViU) VA. ' corn mash. The plant included a building and an inclosure with 125 hors. 40 cords of wood and OTtfiTnitiiF. "ThJ3"p'am is said to have been running for nearly two years with the know ledge of people. of that section. Two negroes were at work there when the officers came up. One escaped. Coca Cola Wins Fight. Chattanooga, Tenn., April 6. The case of the government a gainst "forty barrels and twen ty kegs of coca cola" was de cided in favor of the Atlanta beverage in the Federal court here this afternoon. In ruling on a motion for preemptorv in structions Judge Sanford held Jhat caffeine Is not an added or deleterious ingredient of the beverage. lie overruled the mo tion Mints relating to the mLsb...Jing feature of the alle gation, but counsel for the gov ernment moved to dismiss, with out prejudice, the case on these points. A verdict was returned in favor of the defense. Feder al counsel entered a motion of appeal to the United States cir cuit court at Cincinnati. The coca cola case has been one of the most important ever tried in the Federal court in the South and the cost of the liti gation lias been enormous. It is said that .t200,000 will not cover the expenses. Uotli sides have luxd experts from all sections of the country, the most eminent scientists, principally chemists and physicians. The government has spared no expense in the ef fort to prove its contentions and the coe a cola people have been equally liberal in securing ex pert testimony. It Is Good to Be a Southerner. We people in America are in deed the favored of the gods and none more so than those of us who live in the South. There is indeed much to suggest the idea that here in the South, with bur rich natural resources, kind ly climate, democratic ideas, the absence from us of a fashion mad, idle-rich class of degener ates, -iur old-fashioned ideas of morality, and our growing free dom from the enervating effects of intemperance and idleness, we shall grow leaders who will not only make the South great but win leadership in the Nation at large. And in bringing alout this result, upon no class does so much depend as upon those next to the soil. Clarence Toe, in Raleigh (N. C.) Progressive Farmer. PARDON IS URGED Giv. gtHT)liT,- T.ihrtv. Atlanta, Ga., April 7. The ' . 1 . .1 . ' rers ao escapeu wnue oe inK wen to me penitentiary. Ilk fate now rest with the gov- ernor. (eager eyes the graceful flights The petition for clemency was and perfect control of the ma based on the "unwritten law."jc"e displayed by the aviator. It was argued by Stripling's at- Mr. Beac.hy's assistants assem torneys that Cornett had made Med the flying apparatus early n.l ,.n ..,.,. n u: .1 uia vnstcrdnv morninc nnl n ahfirt l8iatftr Mrs T IL Dunham, and ; thafc when ghot Cornett through the w5ndow of the latter home he diJ it Qu the iinpui(Se dmjer wnicn any man would v labored under likp pireum- ouioutca iu xiuj yiiu aim ma Affidavits were produced from Mrs. Stripling and Mrs. Dunbar to the effect that Cornett had made improper proposals to both 0f them, and thai shortlv after Stripling was informed of these advances, the killing of Cornett 'Better between the judges box followed. I Bnd the grandstand, on the race Posed As Christian Martyr, i track, and Mr. Ik-achy had it Attorneys for the opposition rolleti into the field enclosed by branded Stripling as "a man tlie track. vLo. has ped asVa Christian Tue assistants, having previous martyr, butvho in reality is &'y thoroughly oiled the various hypocrite of1 the deepest dye'Imrts of the machine, started the and a red-hawded assassin, wlu should feel thankful he iroes nn- hung." i propeller, lhe propeller, anven Editorial comment from the,by an eight-cylinder, 60-horse Danville Register played a promi- Power engine, revolves at 3,500 nent part in the hearing, these , revolutions per minute and it o - . t ,1 Cameron for the', opposition as showing that sentiment in Dan- Tille ia not altogether for Strip-! hnar. as had beeai made to an- Pear. v. . wTi$e ' aVEofney aiso" offered" 'as evidence a letter which he re ceived from the editor of the Register, in reply to a query as to Stripling's standing in Dan fille and the sentences of the public regarding his case. Danville Brought Into Case. "This letter," said the attor ney, "declares that few of the leading citizens of Danville fa vor Stripling's pardon. And it states that Judge Aiken, a prom- ,ul 10 !, e rui- fe ment jurist of Danville, con- lirKt , contact with the ground the de.uned Stripling's record as 1 njHehme bounded and was car chief of police and statt'd that ! nod 8,?'(ra,1 ards b.v th(! monlP,n' even though he should be par doned, he should not be allowed to return to Danville." The statement in the letter that the men whom Stripling is accused of shooting while in Danville were all shot from the rear, was vigorously attacked by Attorney Miller, counsel for Stripling, and lie produced certified copies the proceedings of the coroner's inquest which he declared show ed that the unidentified negro, shot by Stripling at the hitter's home was shot in tho top of the head from an ujwdairs window at Stripling's home, ami that the otlier m a n, KeynoUls, whom Stripling is charged with killing I . i I i .i in uauvuie, was sni in un ne(,k from the front. The fi"ht i over the application for clemen cy was one of the hottest in the records of the (JcorgLa prison I tuiiuiun.iivu. ... , Speaks Gets Thirty Years. Greensboro, April 8. dtidgi Daniels todav sentenced Moses Speaks, who was yesterday eve ning convicted of murder in the Sl'l-ornl rlclTi'i' tn .'() vixirst in tlin State penitentiary. This was the ! case for the killing of his wife at High Point about two months ago. In the case for the murder of his son-in-law, Will Miller, at the sajne time, the solicitor took a nol pros with leave. ,Ind.- Daniel and Solicitor (lattis will recommend to the Governor that fi1. I... r: l . . i. , '.. , . "ttic tin- Mil Wl ( V I (1011 IT , A 11 " " - lutnn to any Thirty years otlier prisoners. ! is the maximum lciiaiLy lor me crime oi murder . 11 t t in the second degree. Speaks is now 46 years old, so he will hanl- iy live oui ins term. Rheumatism Relieved in 6 hour. Dr. Detchon'n Relief for Rheuma tism usually relieves severest cases In few hours. Its action upon the system Is remarkable and effective. It removes the cause and the disease quickly disappears. Plrst dose bene fits. 76c and 1.00. Sold bj Gwjn Drnf Co. FLYING EXHIBITION Lincoln Beachy Had Perfect Con trol and Made Safe Trips. Greensboro News, Apr. 8. All those hair-raising, death de fying stunts in the upper air were absent yesterday afternoon at the aviation demonstration given by Lincoln Beachy at the fair grounds in bis Curtiss bi plane. Instead of the large au dience being excited or fearful II..., ..1,,. ,..,...1.1 ftl 41. . mu ju, uc wa- jorUy of them watched with e while after the noon hour the crowds begun pourmg in eager to see the queer kite-like ma- chine, which, though heavier than air by 700 pounds, could vet rise from the earth bearing a man aiul soar like the eagle far "P m the clouds. By 3::50 o'clock in the afternoon there were about 1,500 people in the grounds and Mr. Beachy came forward and took charge 'lne biplane had been put to- cn?ine .by getting behind the aviator s seat ana turning tne lairly sings as the blades cut . . . . . " l 7 W , 8 fed efforts of several men to kP the machine from leaving grouiiu At last all was ready. Mr. fieahy'tuoTr-ntS- SeaC tuffle'd on the gasolene, dropped his hands, his assistants turned the ma chine loose. It sped gracefully down the inclined field, while the crowd held their breath. At a bout 150 feet from the start Mr. Beachy tilted his rudder and the oiplane rose slowly, but steadily, sailed like an immense bird a- round the race course at a height 01 ,H,,?U,1 ?w l?n "iea uaca urn. At tne next contact the machine ran about 100 feet up the incline and stopped within a few yards of where the start bnd been made. As the aviator stepped from his biplane a loud applause was tendered him from the enthusias tic and interested spectators, ()ery few of whom had ever seen the flight of an aeroplane and to whom the flight of several minutes at a 4oo-foot altitude was little short of wonderful. The second flight was of much longer duration and at a higher j altitude than the first. This time the birdman sailed west of the! grandstand and was gone sever-j id minutes. Then circling about: t'.lt' grounds and making a pretty j dip, ine aviator again nrougui. his machine to the starting place. In alighting the second time some difficulty was experienced with the engine that made fur ther flight during the afternoon impossible. It had been the in Mention of Mr. lieachy toper- form several difficult feats in front of the grandstand, and, then, without any warning hit a l'"e for Winston Salem where j ne gives a uemonsirauon uus hi - j ternoon. Owing to the defect in j his engine, he was unable to; carry out his original plans and the machine was dismounted,! acked in two large boxes and j will be shipped this morning fori the fwin-City. Mairv who saw the two flights were disappointed. The whole .1 -ill l .... thing looked so easy and many .... 1 . . 1 . : , .i.v .1 ......i n l,,,,.. the whole machine could be 1111 " nvi illicit iiiv -'iv u v proVpa on an d how oaav it woul d hc to builJ oue iikethat. To tlwte, however, who were near enough to Mrs. Peachy to see the strained expression on her faec when Mr. Peachy was in flight and to see what a look of relief came over her countenance when he alighted safely, the tiling took 011 a different mean ing. WANT PARDON REVOKED Hendersonville Citiieni Infuriat ed Beyond Endurance By De fiant Action of Wiley P. Black, Keeper of Near-Beer Saloons. Hendersonville, April 7. In furiated almost beyond endur ance by the defiant actions of Wiley P. Black, keeper of two notorious near-beer saloons here, the Law and Order League of Hendersonville has petitioned Governor Kitchin to at once re voke the conditional pardon giv en Black some months ago and have him returned to the Bun combe county chaingang. On Sunday morning all the pastors of the different churches will discuss the matter from their pulpits, a great mass-meeting of the people will be held in the court house on Sunday afternoon for the same purpose, and when on Monday morning, the city council take up the question of granting Black his revoked li censes, the same big court room will be filled with saints and sinners, lawyers and laymen, all interested in the outcome of this noted case. At an enthusiastic meeting of the Law and Order League held in the court house last night, funds were subscribed and meas ures adopted looking to the per manent abatement of Black and his whiskey selling activities in Hendersonville. His place have repeatedly raided by the officers the most recent resulting in breaking in the doors of hia two places of business and the dis covery of over two hujfv -.bottle o booze. Tins towntouneil immediately revoked his licenses to sell near-bere and during the week the places have been clos ed. Black, convicted in Bun combe county anil sentenced to the chaingang for selling liquor, later given a conditional pardon by Governor Kitchin, has said there is no power in North Caro lina to prevent him from selling whiskey, and at the hearing of the case next Monday he will be represented by an all-star cast of legal talent. The rehearing of the matter will be held in the court house, the council cliamber being inad equate to hold the great num ber of citizens who have expreas od their firm determination to let nothing interfere with their j being present. The Law and Or der League has engaged Mr. Micliael Sehienck to look after its interests at this meeting and the expression may freely be hejtrd on the streets that Black must stop his liquor activities in lleindersonville if one meth od fails then another will be adopted. Although this is ordi narily tlie most law-abiding-town j m North Carolina, raids by the 1 officers 011 blind tigers here arej numerous. (Jonvietions have been! none. Invariably the witness' swear the booze was given them. They scorn the suggestion that1 they have paid filthy lucre for it. It's the same way with the keepers of the joints. They j stand, according to their sworn i testimony, for a great moral; principle. They do not sell; mean liquor for a profit perish the base and unworthy thought!' In this particular case of Black,' it is believed that Governor Kit chin, satisfied with the fact that great quantities of whiskey have' been found in his near-beer sa-! loons, will return Black to the, gang without waiting for more; conclusive or more legal proof of' the allegation that he has been! violating the laws of the State! while enjoying the clemency of' the Chief Executive. Mother's Morning Prayer. "Edith, do you say your pray ers every morning!" asked the Sunday school teacher. "No, teacher, I don't pray ev- j rry m;riiui, uui my mamma does," said little Edith. "And what prayer does your good mamma bay V asked the teacher. "She says: 'Oh, Lord, how I hate to get up. RECEPTION Interesting Vi3ita and Visitors A Drunk Man, a Near Beer Dealer and a Lawyer. Lexington Diwpateh. Wednesday afternoon The Dis patch office was visited by three very angry citizens who vented their rage in language all of it 1. . , , . .. .. I heated, much of it disgusting ' - 1 a. i-.. 1 t a -in! and not a little ef it unprintable. The first of the triumvirate was drunk. He had apparently been on a protracted debauch, judg ing from th inri:ila tKi!if intnTi. INVOLUNTARY BY EDITOR. . , , , ' ,. ,. !the reason that through inadver cants had made on his ordinar-L . T . , .... ily decent appearance. It is certainly more charitable to as cribe his appearance, words and actions to temporary aberration caused b y over-induleence in'rurt nf tha Stota or,J an ffrt booze, than to say that he waa'will be made to get an early "cold sober" Wednesday after- opinion. noon. This gentleman had beenL The importance of the case can . , 1 1.1 . . , . 1 be appreciated when the fact is reported slightly injured in a ' if Judge Danicl.g de. iigni in a disreputable joint on Main street. The second citizen was a near beer dealer. Two months ago the Dispatch had reason to roast the joint operated by this par- maa LCi iaui u.pcu-, mcrpaseu tne tax rate Z cents on ings that were a disgrace to ththe $100 valuation for scliool town. His particular hell hole has all of the ear marks of a blind tiger and the Dispatch did not hesitate to say so. It is a menace to the welfare of the town and is doing untold injury to the boys and young men of th community. Wednesday af ternoon the proud i possessor of this doggery threaU'neti to whip the Editor of The Dispatch and when invited to wade in and do it. that ho xeAA J. racing catch him outside of ' the city limits. So, there is a licking iu store for the Editor when he gets outside the corporate limits maybe. The third irate citizen was a1 lawyer. Just why he should cnwwe mm, 01 an umes, 10 veni his rage for a fancied grievance is hard to say. It certainly look ed like he was mighty careless about the company he kept, to:0jtj 4:1 cents ad valorem say the least of his performance He followed close on the heels of the near beer man and his j stitutional the old rate must was the only part of the sbow;preVail and the State lose . the that was "worth the money." tWt (.0tji 0n the $1Q0 and 6 The otlier performers were dis- j (.t,,lUs ta. poll. The case, was gusting. His part of the show I j, on i,timlf of Governor, was excruciatingly funny and his ( Kitchin bv Assistant Attorney audience howled with apprecia-i (t.,UTal G h. Jones and Mr. B. tion. By the time ho opened upjp Dixon appeared for Auditor there was a large audience pres cnt including two policemen. He demanded strenuously, earnestly and vociferously that his fair name be kept out of The Dis patch for ever and ever, and the Boss Man issued orders on the spot that the gentleman's cogno men should never again blacken the pages of The Dispatch and it will lc even so. Storms may sweep over the gentleman's de-1 voted head. Judicial gubcrna torial, or even presidential light ening may strike him, but never a word of it will find its way into the columns of The Dis patch. The gentleman may not know it but he has relegated himself to oblivion so far as Davidson county is concerned ami whatever may be his deeds of prowess in the future, even his friends will know not of them unless he becomes a men ance to public welfare and dire necessity compels The Dispatch to use his name, he will remain forever in the obscurity which ho has chosen as his ortion unless he repents. However, he is a fairly safe and reasonably sane individual and it is not at all l:::tly that he will be "call ed out"" in these columns. Thus passed the afternoon. There have been afternoons more pleasant but never one more in teresting. Admonition. The wife of an old Quaker peeked through the keyhole one day and saw the husband kiss ing the hired girl. She gently remonstrated with her liege lord. He promptly replied: "Wife, if thou dot not stop thy peek ing though wilt cause trouble in the family. NEW SCHOOL TAX VOID Legislature Fails to Maintain Constitutional Equation By Omitting Increase of Six Cents in Poll. Greensboro, April 5. After listening to argument of coun sel, Judge F. A. Daniel tonight sustained the defendant's de uiuntr til iilv ciis . ,. Kitchin, Governor, ... , . murrer in the case of W. W. vs. W. P. Wood, Auditor, and thus held as unconstitutional the increased ad valorem tax of 2 cents for school purposes in the State for tence the Legislature failed to maintain the constitutional equa tion, as between the ad valorem and poll tax. The case will at once be carried to the Supreme cision is sustained by the Su preme Court, the State school hool fund will suffer a lass of prob ably $400,000, this being a spe cial appropriation for two years made by the recent session of the General Assembly when it . J A If UU AAVT UU llOb WfVi purpose of the Legislature to increase the poll tax 6 cents, but in some way this was omit ted in the machinery act, and, if a former decision of the Su preme Court is followed, this will invalidate the levy, and the a mounts levied in the machinery act of 1909 will still obtain. The State constitution requires that in levying State and count y ia. ic iutr'berrrrvt?"" time the tax on $100 of pro- ! perty. The case came on for a hear- Nng before Judge Daniels upon proceedings instituted by the Governor against the Auditor for : mandamus to compel the Auditor . to caji on tiie counties to levy for State purposes a tax of .45 cents on the $100 worth of pro perty and $1..1a on the poll. The and $1.29 poll tax, and, if tin section in the new act is uucon- Wood. A ease very similar to this went before the Supreme Court in 1S97, instituted by Governor Russell against Auditor Hal. W. Ayer. In that ca.se the Supreme Court held the increased rate un constitutional for the reason that the constitutional equation be tween poll and ad valorem tax had not been maintained, rol- lowing, this decision, Judge Dan iels said he felt lmiH-lled to sus tain the demurrer filed by the defendant to the Governor's complaint. In the original case, Chief Justice Clark and Justice Douglas filed strong dissenting opinions and the plaintiffs think perhaps they can have the opin ion in Russell vs. Ayer reversed. Wearing Qualities. During the progress of the morning bath of a few-months old infant, a little neighbor girl came into the room, carrying a doll which she had received for a Christmas present, and stood watching the operation for some time. The little girl's doll was much the worse for hanl usage, being minus an arm and a b g. Finally she said to the mother of the child: "How long have you had your baby?" The child was informed, and looking from her doll to the baby she said, "My, you have kept it nice." Shake Into Your Shoes. Allen's Foot Ease, the autlseplic powder. It relieves hot. tired, ach ing, swollen, sweating feet, and makes walking easy. Takes tbe sting out of corns and bunions. Over 30.000 testimonial. Sold ev erywhere. 2ic. Don't accept any sub sucuio. S2!5p! FREE. Address. Allen S. Ohnstead, IeRoy, N. Y.