0L. XXXIV MOUm AIRY, NORTH CAROLINA, THURSDAY. JULY 10, 1913. JVO. 2 NATIONAL PENSION FOR CONFEDERATES. Such Likely to te Result cf GtttysbuTeunion Tar Heel Claim Fixl Hatflefield, Vtyshurg, IV, Inly 5. The rcfreat from Get tysburg started' this morning when General Julian S. Carr gave nrdors to tin 1,21.') North Carolina - v veterans to break camp. Oolite a mimer (if the old .soldierN left last night; me of tin .in went to Philadelphia and New York and Home to Washington. Each and veiy one is happy; happy be- cause they canine to this histori- cat spot ami happy reeause tney received the heartiest welcome rviu- gm-ii -m m jmi-rn iw. wmin. iwo tilings are alm..t certain to result t pom the reunion hcsiuea uw seining or the controcrs Jx'twren the .states. In the rwar future North Carolina in going to nave a monument neinting m the valor of her men who died Here, ami also ot those who were joriunate enougn to eM-np'; no, Beeoiut, hut in no wise- least, uie mue.ri uimva oi jh-hnrmiihk v.on-he UKirj, and the greatest indi federate soldiers and movement ' vMnal coiut ri-lnitif n cf .tl8.fir.9f0 to have tlfem cared for in United I was ,na r t( thf (.0nv(.tor of .; rtatit soldiers homos nas receiv- toms in New York more than -t-d a start that is almost sure to j decade ago by an unknown ner result in the government doing omet.iung to care lor uomeoerate jm well a.s the I nnm men wheji they "become disabled. Governor (Vx. of Ohio, in a ... i. :.. ji... v.,i. riTiii ui rni- .M.i wi run ii a i i ems eiKJS nis ennTrvmytieii an camp hwe last n'ght d-eelared j onymonsly, but if he sigiw his that, the tune had long since past Vhen the United States govern-1 inent should take care of dLsabl -d Confederate soldiers. "There are seven Uniteii StaHes hohlien' hfMiiesin. Ohio" declared ffiovernor Cox. "We do net need 4h.Hii all, and I am in favor of 4iirnii!,g one of thnn over to J'Jckrth Carolina at once. No men in the bwtory of the world's hat tit? ever fought hanler'than did vthe.mn who wore the gray; thry Ierve m much as any other inen who fought in the war be tween the statV, and I am ready 9mvw to have it don." Colonel A. II. Hoyden, of iSal ishury, said the .speech of Gov ernor Cixx was one of In-sit he had ever heard. Colonel Hoyden, aa iH'fn' (uve knows, ban always btien willing anri reaily to luelp the Confederate soldier, and the de claration of Governor Cox struck tt nesponsive cord m tlw' heart of every man who heard him speak. Colowl fJeorge MciConill. of the 24th Michigan regiment, "tine Iron brigade," startled an audi- vnce ol 8(HH 2, 000 or :5.(KK) v4 irans Thursday night when he de- dared that he hoped to see the time come when "The Star Spaji grlod Hamier" would be sung to the tune of "Dixie" " 'Dixie' is the most popular song 1 ever heard," said the Mich igna tman. "It gets more genu iine enthusias'tie applause thaji ny other song, and I for one nvill welcome the time when the Jiaitonal air shall be sung to the tune of 'Dixie.' " Going a step further. Colonel MeiConnell said that although th 1 fight of the Roosevelt Rough Riders at San Juan hill was mere boys' play as compared with the battle of Gettysburg, that jRoosevelt had received more pnb iie'rty for this little battle than was given the combined forces of ihe north and south duriii'g Hie dents involving desecratiojis of na entire jeriod of the M-ar between ! tional fhtgs which markil ecle the states. "Aihl yet," he said. J brat ions yesterday are expected "'two jer cent of the men eneag- to f.rm the h-iibjei't of complaints ; riTeri ir ':!" ui!t- in-it- ni n-i 1.1 wwui n .'a n-i a-ent were sn'issing, after the three; d.v,-eV fight." j ( yrus ii. wnisen. oj insron- involving the tramplmsr of an HaliMii was in gremt demand for . American flag at a Hrktish par sp'eeehes. Ever since he ciiniclHile, probably cannot be made the Aieiv the old vetearns have de- basis of an official jrotest be-maiidi-d that he make a -peeli eau.se the inteniatieiial law does vlieiiecr be is seen in a crowd. 1 not guarantee protection i f flairs Ajiil he takes a keen ikehirht in lalkinur to the "b.is." as h cal's iln' oio ei. illelal lillll. lings. i Judge Walter Clark, Judges' In the Tucson. Ar'i7.., incident,! iA. W. Graham and W. J. Peele. ! however, where the flair over the! of Raleigh, who have been here iMexicin consulate was t'rn down iunog the week looking alter the .state departimmt probablv the work given thetn in seeurinur h ill feel obige.l to reiiest the data as to where the North Car-'local authorities to make a pro lina troops foncht. Vlicve the per aiology ai-1 amends to the liave ample proof tlhat the Tar1, Mexican consul, if that can be Heel troof went furthest in j 'done withou tinvolving any of Viekett's famous eharire. and ; ficial recognition i f the Iluerta fcv.ihn they g,t hack hme thy in-j yvvernment. which apjiears to be tend to make public the infimia- the gnsit apprehension of the stat tiim seeuml. j di-partm.mt at this juncture. Fewer Penitents "Conscience" Stricken Ihan in Yean. Washington, July 6. Fewer pen. tents, tt tired by the ".Still wnall voice" confessed and ur rendered "conscience money " to t ln Federal government during tlw fiscal year lUl.'I tlian for .many years. The "coiWcionctf fund" received during the 12 nornls ended June -50 totahd only 2..S14.41, the lowest amount ' frUln. 1 . M H and cm parable with h Jim) year average of $4,1100. - That flim jiS t,li o only official index to scruples, but no treasury (,fri,,-ial attoiii'pts to explain the decrease- in restitution of money received from the government L; traud or error During the .past 100 years the , government has received consei- t.IK.(. contributions aggregating n.-arly a half million dollars, the , exact figures up to June .'() but lMiiif 4.'4,31.'i.G;. The remarkable fund was es taMMicd durinir President Mad- ison a adminis! ration in 1 SI 1 hen, the first contribution of ." wat m.,.,Ved. The largest amoun CVer received in one ynr wns $3h,- wu p,tt,iy U1 defrauded the government of tariff duties Treasury officials surround the frii wth a certain degree of j saerednesN. Usual I v the peni ....... i i - .. 1 ' nanne his Secret is hx-ked in tin .archives of the irovernirnf-nt T i the oiM place in the federal es tablislmnent where a eoftfrife sin ner may make confession and a- mends without the slightest dan ger of prosecution. Burch Station in This Wants Agrent. County Wasliington, July 5. A peti tion, was I Bed today with t hi in terstate commerce eommissian by (Charles W. Doekery and oDiers against Southern Railway com pany seeking an order requiring the defendant company to build and maintain a station and an agent at Hurch, on the Wilkes horo branch of the Southern. It is alleged in the petition thbit the revenue, amounting to several thousand dollars anmually, deriv ed by the company from'this sta tion, i amply sufficivnt to war- ratit the company in granting the relief prayed for; that the com pany has refused, though often requested mini petitioned, to "pro vide a station and agent, and that there is no place for the demos it of frieght or the accommodation of passengers, or any facilities reasonably sufficient to accom modate ant serve the needs and demiands of the public; that the failure of the company to pro vide the neeessairy' facilities is a discrimination aganst this olcal ity. Wliilp apparently the case is not of great importcriK'e, it is en tirely possible, that it will ;!l eisively settle the mooted ques tion of the power and authority of the conumisNion to cnvpel car iriers to irovide station facilities at a point within a state. Flag- Desecrations. Washington. Julv 5. Two Iikm- , "VS. nmnrn' xTlshJ so mr iHHiun.g nas necn neatsl from them. The affair at Winnineir. Mann.. oi a foreism eountrv except nvbere thev .1I...1,..' 1 , "-!,: WAS NEORO TEACHER HAM ILTON MURDERED? Once Was Valet to Frenchman Who is Reported to Have Left eLgacy. firecnuboro New, 4th. The ImhIv of Hamilton Clark. negro A. & M, crlli'irc pro- IfNHOr who at found dt-ad with ljl Ptol hole through his heart in I . ..... lount Ary eilneslay mornng as.sed through tin- city yesterday arxl was put on tran No. :t(i to be oarml to the home of the sis ter of the deceased in Washing ton. One of the professors of tln college accompanied the body to its destination. Though most of the available evidence in the case still points to ihe decision of the coroner's jury at Mount Airy that the man committed suicide as the most probable explanation if Ids death, there has grown up some .strong doubt in the mind of those who kjii'W the nojrro pro fessor and some suspicion of foul play has arisne anion? the author ities of the college. Whatever was the cause of his death, it is the universal opinion the the legacy which the deceas ed thought that he would receive on the first of July, whether real or imagined, had much to do with his death. There are two conflicting the ories. On holds that the matter of the legacy was a hallucination of tilu mind of the negro, that he had somehow Income obsessed! with the queer delusion that lie was to receive iflUl.(MK) from a white U'liefactor, which gift he thought would come to him on the first of July, and that wlwu the. first came no legacy was re ceived, he left hurriedly for Mt. Airy and killed himself heeause of the depression resultant niwn the destruction of his cherished delusion. The other suspicion which has arisen ia theminds of some of hi friends is to the effect that there may have been something to the legacy actually', and that some interested person lured mm to Mt. Airy and killed him to get him out of the way. Same of the professors of the college slate that they have seen papers be longing t the deceased, which bear out his strange tale about the legacy. it was hu story that he onee serv?tt as va.'t-t Im a r) r;cn Frertchiua-j 'ti the city oi Wash ingitn, ami that this nan left lain a Wacy of $101,000, to take effect on July 1, 1913. President Dudley declares that the manner of Clark! clearly showed, the ef- lect of association with some one of the French nationality hid ex cessive jnoliteneas, and his vivac ious inaiuier of speech. It is further asserted by Presi dent Dudlev that Clark was never known ot be tucianuholy, that he never drank, or smoked, and that lie was never known to have a revolver. These facts with the addiitonal fact that the shot was fired Tuendav night and the oth er occupants of the house seem not ot have heard it and not to have found the Indy until the following morning, are thought! by wune to cast a shadi w of sus picion ujhui the conjtH'ture that tli death was causi'd by suicide. Jlowever, this conjecture still stands as the most probable, in the face of tin evidence to hand, until further information can he secured. PubUc School Examination. IXrhe examination for the white I teachers of the nuUio schools of Surry County will be held at Dob in i in r rioay, .July K and llth .PJl.i; and for color-, ed teachers, on the 12 Sa unlay. .... m . i i ii i i n.-i- wi-u ui iniiiu i.nai pri vate examinations are not given .,i. 1 idered f, ..a ott.,.r.. tt ..: ,1- 4.1 i in t-.wlliW If II- : -""'h ' .(i.l (l iJ H I'lV'il . w, (. . e o i i r . upt. oi rv-n.is. y, Rheumatitm Quickly Cured. orThou well known resilient of Newton la I gave aim a bottle of Chamber, Iain's Liniment which he api.lied to illtZiT waso""' Forronic! muscular rheumatini you will find10 nothlnu belter than Chamberlain's1 Uniment. , Sold by All Dealer. j ONE MAN BUILDING RAIL ROAD IN KANSAS. Wlwro It is doto or Why He is Building It He Won't Tell He Works all Alone. Dodge City, Kan., July 6. In the spring of 1908 a fanner in th Spring Creek Valley in Hodge man county was ivppn adied by an old Germon. a stranger, who a.skl to buy a srtip of land cross art of his farm. Surprk eil at tlie request, the fanner questioned the old German arxl tinally burned the land was want ed lor a railroad right of wav. Tl, .. iv. . i . . ,'. i ne dinner coum not nelieve that his visitor was the represen tative ot a railway companv and bus beliof was justified by tin tnuik admission of the stranger that tie was not backed bv anv company. He wanted the lain tir his owif use, he siiid. lie was to be the sole railroad builder. Hi at was the wav Rudolph pieyer started on his railroad con strumon. liis queer enterprise provokl no end of comment a- mong the fanners in the neighbor bond, but comment did not in terest this hard working, uneirtn- munieativc Teuton m the le.xst Men sail five vears ago that hi would soon quit his quixotic cam paign to throw up a grade aoross a broken prairie country when some of the fills had to lie seven ty feet. Hut hudolph Meyer is still workiiug. Men believed that when he exhausted his supply of money and his appearance dxl not indicate that he had 'much he would have to quit work be cause of hick) of right of way to work on. Hut he has always had the cash rewdv to pav for the next strip of land, no matter how much the onvner asked for it. i r t i -sieyer nas worked live ve.irs now and Has hardlv five miles of road grade to show for his toil. A little mnle team and a single scraper comprise h compete out fit. With it he works all day when the weather is fine. When the ground is frozen or soaked M'ith water he whiles away his tiime in his ilttle cook shack, which is always stationed near the part of the grade he is at work' on. The work of Rudolph Mever lias been the topic of keen specu lation among railroad men in western Kansas. What induced him to undertake a job of that kind? Who furnishes funds for carrying on the work! What route does he intend to follow? AVhat railroad is interested in the project? Is he crazy? These are the questions that have been dis cussed over and over again the last five years. And' Rudol4i Meyer is the last man in the world to throw light on the puzzle. The questions have been put to Meyer on dif ferent occasions, but they mk"ht as well have been withheld so far as eliciting' information is con cerned. No cross-examiner has yet managed to extract from the old gtader any information that hniOiints to anything. And no in formation has been dug up from any other source. It is a pecul iar project carried out in a pe culiar manner by a peculiar man. A party of visitors to the scene of the strange railroad grade re cently found the lonesome cook shack of the grader huddled dowi in a vallev between two hitrh hil's (rWering above it was hte grade of 70 feet, hauled. into place a scraper full at. a time by the pa tient labor of the old worker li nd his mules. Stretching away to the north east toward Jetmore are the few miles of grade which Mever has to smw for tW five vpar ff work. All lhe (,irt in t'hp ,p AVJW kuiUh1 ,,v Mev wlU and dumps the scraper. He is! tll(1 workman, the hostl. r, the j ....... I. ..1. .1 . ,""vlMr.w,,er v o.. , .. ternrise that should have the ser - vice of a hiirh grade engineer and " I . ...... i . i, t .n . .iinci uf i.-. i a i i-u it 1 - APV(ir nevf.r 0yj,M.ts Xn talking; en, a Geneva lawyer, ami a spleii- to visitor;. He seems 1o enjoy jib I shot, will sail for New York a. iiini nii i none hi.k tooijiii .HifU.-! 10 laKe pari 111 UiC dofwn on his little e;min to fiml l!mn P. rrv r r. -n iont manaires to worn- out an j extremely indefinite answer to nil niiestinps Thn vUit.tm uni. M h he M-pened art a ra',lroad grade there. Oh, I just picked out an easy place to build one," Meyer repli- d. Where waa he going! Meyer bad no objection to telling. Just oin over onto the flats; but lt.fe liii.ln't fiiii...l ..4l, X)l(in tjiat Just ahead of where he is work ing another fill rnrst be built up find just beyond that is a dis couraging raise w here a cut must le made through the high hill. AVhen a Visitor pointed to these Meyer merely observed that fur ther on it was level. When it was suggested that the Haute Fe, which has a branch to Jetmore and might like to have a line up the valley of the Pawnee, might be interested in a line there he said. "Well I guess the Saute Fe is ali right in some ways; I don't know -much about 'em." He said he'had not had much experience in building grad., but finally remembered that he had helped build a little grade for the ante Fe. Meyer admitted that his plan is to cross the Hodge man county line about six miles further south than Jetmore, and Ire thought it would be a good place to start a town near the county line. Some- of the people sav the tenns of the deeds are that un less traiiw are running over the grades within six years after the doeds are executed the land shal revert baek t the original own crs. If that is true Mever will have to hurry. Hut it is preftv hard to get accurate informatii n when the only man who knows won't tell. It is the right of way that may cause a hitch in Che work at hist Meyer has almost completed the work on the right of way he has. and has tried to buy some more. The owners of the land wanted have so far refused to sell ami hote in that wav to force the builder to show his hand. Any way they have deemed to hold up the work for a while. But Rudolph Meyer does not appear to worry. He thinks Tic knows a wav in which difficul ties of htat kind can be avoided After 20 Years Leaves Pulpit to Practice Law. Griffin, Ga., July 5. With the loop-the-loop jump Dr. Dent At kinson, who for more than "JO years has been a Presbyterian Ininister, aJid for some years re cently has been in Chautauqua work, while here in connection with the Chautauqua recentlv closed quit that field of work, laid aside the ministerial robes, withdrew from the Republican party to tihe Democratic and took an. examination for admission to the bar of Georgia and was ad mitted by Judge Robert T. Dan niel, of the Flint River circuit. Dr. Atkinson is an Englishman by birth, but has been in this country ;15 years. He holds a I'h. D. degree from Che Univer sity of Illinois, as well as a liploma from Harvard. He has taken a three years' course in law training in Ohio Northern university and Chicago university For years lie has traveled, going around the world. Hit purpose is to loeate in Atlanta next September to einter actively into practice before a ' the courts. Dr. Atkinson savs his specialty in practice will hi either criminal law or corpora tion. World's Leading1 Marksmen Head ing for United States. New York, July The hid ing marksmen of the world are already heading for the United States in order to jwrticipate in the international shooting tour- imment at ( mj Perry, Ohio ' September, 1-!). One of the most j fonnidable teams is that which; win rciireM'iu ri nenauii. u was at first thought that tin entry would have to be canceled, 1 . I. 1 IVei. overcome, a team of the best Swiss marksman under the cap- LThe team is' the best that pwitzeriaisl can send, ami the j wagering there is three to one (that it will win. Out of the six- teen hfternational meetings d, ing the last deeaib- Swntzerla ir nd has won fifteen times, and was second once by only a few points. ei,-,I)lu momentary auicuues uavng Repeated Picfcett's Charge. Gettysburg, Pa., Dispatch, Unl. A haiulfu! of men in gray re enacted today the charge of Pickett across the field of Get tyslsirg. Up the slojie of Cem etery Ridlge, where death kept tp with them in T:, lf0 vet erans of the Virginia regiments of that immortal brigade made their slow parade. Under the brow of this ridge in the Hloody Angle, where the Phiablephia brigade stood that day, was a handful in blue scarcely larger, waiting to meet the onslaught of gM-aei'. There were no flashing saibrcw, no belching guns, only eyes that dlnimtxl fast and kind ly fae-m' behind the stone wall that marks the angle. At the end in place of wound or prison or death, were handshake, speeches and mingling cheers. The veteran in gray marchod for a quarter of a mile over the. gnumU that they traversed dur ing the charge. They came up the slope in column of fours, ir regularly but responsive, to the comnwiiids of Major W. W. P.ent- ley, of the 24th Virginia. Ahead of them marched a band and well down the column wan a faded Confederate flag, its red fold pierced with many holes and its shaft colored with the sweat of many a man who died that it might, fly high in the last desper ate effort to pierce the Unioai lines, lis progress was slow and painful, for the timothy in the field! was high and its plowed surfaee was not easy for world weary feet. Up to the very edge of the stone wall, coverd now with tangled vin and shaded by trees, they marched iai tTTe hot sun, while the luid played "Dix ie." 1 here they stood for half n hour while their comrades in blue peered across at them. . The blue line formed behind th walls. Ooverhead floated a faded standard of the second army corps. Behind them were the statues of the Philadelphia' bri gade and the fourth U. S. A. bat tery, where General Armrteau died. As the mm in grav forme! in a long line facing the wall, the start and bam and the flag of the second con were crosse(l in amity; the rtans and stripes ws unfurled amd the crowd that came to watch burnt into cheer. Re presentative J. Hampton Moore of Pennsylvania made a long speech amd Major HentJey answer ed him on behalf of the South. The veterans jji gray were given a medal provided by John Wan amaker. They crowded over the stone wall, shook hands and the charge was over. What Ambassadors May Do. Ambassadors have curious priv ileges. Mast people know that they and their households are safe from arrest, and embassy be ing considered a'- geographical part of the ambassador's own country. Hut there are. many less well known. The ambassador is the only person about a court who has the right to turn his pack on the sovereign at the end of an interview. And he alwavs exercises it, turning to bow after walking three paces. This, of course, refers to state occasions. This worked out rather funny in Queen Victoria's time. To turn one's back' on a lady would be rude; to retire backward would be to resign a privilege, so the ambassadors always pom prom ied bv edgim; sidewavs toward the door like a crab. Another privilege of ambassa- dors is the riirht of havinuf both leaves of the folding doors thrown open when beinv ushertd into the royal jre.senee. No one else can claim this privilege. Another highly prized privilege of the ambassadyr one that sov ereigns must often regret is that of Wing able to demand an inter view with the sovereign whrneV'-r it ehoo-s. at any hour of the day i.r night. The sword is the ambass.idrs emblem if honor. It is a lorg rapi.-r wit'i a blunt-l point. One great diplomatist the late Lord Dufferin nsetl to say that th only practical usg be rver found f r it ws. to joke fires with ar? file bills on.