9 VOL. i. NO. 25. PITTSBORO, Ji, C, FRIDAY, MAY 15, 1902 S2.03 A 40,000 KILLED St. Pierre, Island of Martialque, Blotted Oct tjf a Eaiin of Firi' SHIPS tN PORT DESTROYED The Country For Four Miles Around j Covered With Hot Lava, Followei by a Deluge of Ashes. VOLCANO MONT PELEF, EXPLODED IeatB JLUt f.icd That of Any r. tie Calamltj lo th (Hi story ot tue IVrttern Henicnhere United State Conml Frontl. Ills Family, and Ylce-Couul TMttrl Are Ameac the Id Kibrm Vftwli la th Harbar Ietrajed..War ahip Saved Thirty Lire, sad TUeae Are tbe Only Known borl.or. London. -The correspondent f the Times ot St. Thomas, D. V. I.. elates that the "toWu or &C Pierre, iu the French Island of Martinique, has been totally destroyed ty a volcano. All the Inhabitants of the town, say the corre spondent, have lost tbcSr lives, end all the shipping In the harbor ha been d" fctroyed. London. A dlptcb to the- Dally Stall roia Polnt-a-Pitre. Island of Ouadekuiiie (French West Indies), aays: "Th Mont Pelee St. Pierre) crater elected molten rocks and ashe .luring three minutes and completely destroyed JSC Pierre and the districts within a four - mile radius. All the Inhabitant were burned. Tlie darkne, except where relieved by the burning city, wai Impenetrable. For live mile on the landward side of the city the ground "was covered to a considerable depth with ht ashe. which rendered an approach to the city by lamtdmpos Sible." ' ' St. Thomti. D..W, L-It la now esti mated that 40,000 person perished a a result of the volcanic eruption In the Island of Mitrtinbjue. The French cruiser Snehet aixivcd at Point-a Pitre, Inland of Guadeloupe, French Wot Indies, frotu Fort de France. Martinique, bringing several refugees... She contlnni-d the report ly dctrycd by a volcanic eruption. It la supposed th;it the tulsjhboriiig par ishes were laid waste. The commander f the Kuchct retri ed that the entire town of Jt. Pierre watt wrapped In flame, lie endeav ored to ave bout thirty perxonH. nil more or .1cm .burned, from the vessel lu the harbor. Ills orticcra went ashore In Btnall boat aeekln for survivor, but were unable to penetrate Into the tewn. They lav heapa of lutdle upon the wharves, and It la believed that not ft alnple person In 8C Pierre at the moment of the catastrophe, eaconed. M. U sloutu t, the flovernor of the colony, bla wife, and his ataff colonel, were in Ht. Pierre, and probably per ished. The extent of the catastrophe cannot le iniaslnwl. The Brit Iwh nchooner Owiu Travejer, which arrived at Dominica, waa oppo alte Ht. Pierre. Hhe repot ted that when ghe waa about a mile off the const the volcano of Mont Peh exploded, and fire from it swept the whole town of Ht. Pierre, destroy li'fc the town and shipping. " ' Parla, France, The commander of the French cruiser isuchet has tele graphed to the Minister of Marine, M. de lanessan. from Fort.dc France, Martinique, as follows: v . "Have Just returned from 8t, Pierre, which baa been completely destroyed bv an Immense mass of tire, which fell on the town at about 84fu the mofuliiK. The entire population, about 23.000 souls, Is supposed to have perished. I have brought back the few survivors, i Olllflli ISII,T. tilt- -II1'I!IH IU "n harbor has been destroyed by tire. The eruption continues." The ISuchet was ordered to return to St Pierre with all tho speed pnrblo, and to forward details of the disaster to tho French (Jovenimcnt. It la feared that the Governor of Martinique has perished. - WflHhlnfftoti. D. C The following 'fableirrnni has been received at the JStntc Department: Polnt a-Pltre. Guadeloupe. "Secretary of 8iato, Washington: "At 7 o'huk a. m., on the isth Inst, a stonn of steani, mud nnd flro envel oped the City of St. Pierre and com munity. Not more thart twenty tier sons escaped with their lives. -'The . Frilled Stales Consul and family are reported nmonjt the victim. V ) "A YMF, Consul." Tho Consul . at Maitlnii was Thomas T. I'rentls. lie was hnyu in Mlililu.'in, was appointed front iissH chusetts as Consul at tSc.Vt'hclhH Isl ands In 1S71. and later served a Con sul at Port bonis, (Maui Itiii,) Koiien. nud Itatdvla. lie was npiuilnteil Con mil at Martinique iu Hmk). j The Vb-e-Consn! nt Mnrtln'ar.v'' I Aniadce Test art, w!i woa appifuled from Louisiana in 180H. Washington, P. C.In the dispatch on tlie JSC Pierre disaster received i y the jSmte Department from L. IL Ayau United Stat Consul lit Point A Pifre. Jnad.--ltt.ape, l snys: -Eighteen vessels were burned and suuk witli all on board, including four American vessel and a steamer from tuebeo iiained lloraima." COMFAKEU WITH F03IPF.II. mtatwl That lha llsaaUr Caa Only !- Llkcnrd to That la A. U. S9. Paria. France. The Parisians have scarcely realized the ntvfulucss of the. catastrophe f.t St. Piern?. The only ieru of frlef yet vJsible 1 tlie l'.lf masted lias ovtr the .Miaiairy of the Cobysie. Beyond reproducing the cable dis-. patches received by tbe Goyetujuent, fhi eveiiiic.; popers elmer rcfraiiicl frotu commentJug on the i:katcr. or coi.ftncd thenisclvca to priatiu;: h!ito rles of ancient end modern similar events. : The utominjr newspapers did not do :uicii Jtctter. The Fitaro followed thu euide Uspiitches with a geological his tory of the island Martii;ue. i,ui fpeeulated i;cthcr-thecatahtiOjhe vctt due to an eruption or an esrth;uakc or to both, winding up with the state ment Hint "it is not France alone, irjt humanity as a whole, that is plutts-d in jaourninir. a siicu calamities t.'l u; the feeltuK of .wili larity uu'.t.ii" ail who think and eel." The Maths said the disaster is one i t the most frightful catastrophic re corded, and that one muft em back rojnpeii to find a cataclysm of u.i:h U eaianiitouti nature. .Ixndoii.All tlie newspapers here rz ;res the utmost horror over the Mar ticiine catastrophe, which, they sar, for it suddenness nnd magnitude la. n'.y con-parable with that at Pom peii, and they extend deep j-'juipathy to the Fnnch Nation. It b issible that nore lives wers lost in the destruction of St. Pierre Uian when Pompeii and lierculaneum were destroyed. An actual compari son is not .possible, bex-ause the variouo nuthorltica are unable to do more than guess at the, figures in regard to tiifc destruction of the ancient cities. The populaiion of Pompeii at the time of its destruction baa been given at from iSo.oOOto r0,t0; but according to Fiorrelll, the General Superintend ent of the excavations, Pompeii had bo 'more than WW inhabitants in it earlier days, nud no more lhan '12,000 at the time of Its destructbo. Tin- number of lives lost at liercu laneum Is believed to have been consid erably less than at Pompeii. Frnfrwor M llaa'a Theory. Iondon. I'rofessor John Milne, the seismologist, in an intervt'w published In the Daily Express, declares thai hi Isiiilc instrumentu have recorded no disturbance, and that they would al most Inevitably have done so had serU ! ous earthtpiake occurred. I Professor Milne's theory is that , Mount Pelee ha "blown its head otr. owing to the Infiltration of water through the rock a until it reached the. mo! n material beneath, forming steam of tremendous pressure until something had to give way. tuk island ok martikiqi'e. A lnssloB of tha French In tlia Wt Indira Ulscovrrcd bjr Colombu. . The Island of Martinique belong to the group' known as the lesser Antilles, in the West Indie. It lie thirty-three lit lies south of Dominica and twenty two mile north of Saint Lucia. It U forty-three miles long by from twelve to twenty broad, and htu an nrea va riously estimated nt from .'S30 to 3S0 square mile, four-fifths of which la volcanic. Tho Island was discovered by Columbus, uu bis fourth voyage, on June 1.. l."02. St. Pierre, the capital of the Island of Martinique and the birthplace of the Empress Josephine, la ten miles square, with a population of i.'i.ooo people. It Is ou the northwest coast of the island, being one of tlie largest towns of tho French group. It la well built on o narrow strip of land lying along the beach i f a eml-circufaF bay and overhung by cltTa which approach the shore.' There Is an interesting old Catholic college In tho town, of histori cal Importance. While there arc few manufacturing establishments in the town, the people of St. Pierre are pros porous. The harbor wn the stopping place of vessel of all nations, it being good, although much exposed. Tho at.choraco Is exceptionally well adapt ed for, vessels of 'more than average draughtT' Though not unlike other na tives of tbe lesser Antilles and tropi cal climate in their habits and meth ods, tho Inhabitant of Ht. Pierre were Industrious. The chief popular amuse, ment In the cnpltal of Martlniquo was dancing and driving. Tlie Island of Martinique contain several extinct volcanoes, the highest point being Mont Pelee., with an alti tude djy4h't0 feet MANY KILLED BY EARTHQUAKES. 1 1 1 About 00,000 Taopla llava ttean l-etx lloiualan la Ouatf mala. Guatemala City, Guatemala. For nearly a week earthquakes have becti tumbling down cities, towu and vil lage on the western slope of tho Sier ra in this republic. v tiue.ultcnango. the second city of the rep til die. suffered by far the most. Hundred of resld'-uecs nnd public buildings were vlther totally destroyed or seriously damaged. Two hundred bodies have born recov ered, and many persons were badly In .lured. Fire, as well a Hood, added to the horror of the nllit, with tho result j that many people have gone Insane u"d j other hate committed mcuic. Approximately, rio.isHi people ituve been left homeless. , PAUL L FORD BUBDEBEO Novelist Slain by'His Brother, Who Then Killed Himself. DEMANDS FOR MONEY REFUSED Acsallant Had Been Disinherited by Kit Father, F:neenderItK Bitter Feel! up Author Shot W hiU Mulne at His Desk In Ilia L.lhraryBrav In Face of Death Sole IVitaM ta tha Tragedy. New York City. Paul Leicester Ford, the deformed author of "Janice Merc dirh" and "The Honorable Peter Ster ling," never conceived a climax in cny of the novels that have made him fa mous iso dramatic ns that wbichbas brought hi eventful life to en abrupt end. Iu the library of lifs home," sur roun led by the boots he loved, he was shot to death by his brother. Malcolm Webster Ford, a tall, stalwart man. scare. ly less famous- for his .athletic a-h!eveCieats than was Paul for bis writings. Before he had fallen from tbe chair where he sat why a the but wng tired Paul saw his brother h.hoot himself and fall lifelfss. Tl- trn.dy was the re stilt of a feud growing out of the recent c-nuiciue ot the rattier of both men, the father-who had disinherited Mal colm and M-lio bad given the lion's shar of his W.OuO.OUO estate to the de formed son. PauL Mr. Ford was seated fit his desk workiugjon the notes of a new novel, and Mi- Hall was also-occupied In an other part of the room, when Malcolm Ford, who had leen admitted into the hous. by a servant, entered tbt library. He paid no attention to Miss. Hall, but walked, directly to his brother's desk. Paul, looking up, said: "tiood morning. Malcolm." Miss Hall did not hear Malcolm return the salutation, but she did hear him say: "I am at the end of my rope. I want you to " Mis Hall did not hear the conclusion of tbe sentence. They then engaged In a whispered conversation of a few ud'nuie. The last word that Miss Hall hoard came from Paul. They were: "No; I cannot.'' Nliss Hall heard a step back of ber. and saw Malcolm back away and raise his arm. Then she heard tbe report of a revolver. Miss Hall leaped from her choir and look.nl around lu an agony if fear.' She gaw Malcolm standing, tall and erect, within two feet, of the chair where Iliol Ford was crouched. She dashed through the portietys with a scream of fright. Then she beard' Malcolm call: "Miss Hall. Miss Wall: come back come back and sets mo take my own life." Locking thnuiu'h the curtains Miss Hall, with blanched eye, watched him deliberately rafso n revolver to his left breast, and. with his face turned to ward the window, press his linger on the trig r. She heard rather than saw the body of the athlete as It swung around toward her nnd dropped heav ily to the floor. Miss Hall then reached the chair Just ns Paul Ford was about slipping from the seat to tho floor. Put ting her two arms - around - the frail body she half lifted an! half led him to a conch that stood ou the other side of her desk. Her scream for help had attracted the servant, and one of them was sent for the family physician near-by, Dr. Baruch, who arrived five minutes after the shooting. He Immediately exam ined the dying nuthor upon the couch and discovered that the bullet had en tered Ihe left breast, and had pene trated one of ihe lnrger arteries, In-, fllcting n surely fatal wouifd. Dr. Ba ruch administered a stimulant, under which Mr. Ford regained conscious ness, and asked:,'iIow am I, Doctor" The doctor ma do no response. Mr. Ford looked up at hint again, with n fccblt' smile, rnd asked once more: Ifow nm I, Doctor How am 1?" He reail his fate In the face of tho physician, for, with a strong effort to keep up. he said: "I will try to die bravely. How am I now, Doctor':" The doctor assured him that he was acting bravely." With the assistance of the women servants the doctor carried the body of the novelist Into an ad jolnli s apartment and placed It on a led. Dr. Baruch had nn exciting quarter of nu hour bet we u trying to retain life lu the feeble body of Paul Ford and ;o prevent tho servant from Advising Mrs. Ford of the tragedy that had robbed her of her husband. He suc ceeded In retaining life In the body of Paul Ford for fifteen mlnues. Ho was leaning ever tho dwarfed figure when the end came. Dr. Bosenburg. Mho also had been suniux utd, had made an examination of the body of Malcolm Ford. He had been shot lu precisely tlu samoi spot ns had his brother, whom he had mur' dered. ai d bis death was almost Instan taneous. Tho physicians proevdrd to the apartments of Mrs. Ford, who Is short ly to become n mother. They learned thai Mr.. Ford lind demauded of one of tho servants the cause of the noise and confusion down stairs, nnd had lnvii told that Mr.. Ford had been shot. The physicians found her hysterical and In urgent need of -their skill. So critical was her cotplitlon that neither physician . dared leave the rooirt Tor four hours after the tragedy occurred. 4 Paul Ijeicester Ford was - born in Brooklyn In WW. HI health in child hood and early manhood prtneuted tbe malformed Paul from going to school o;' college, but he found a real univer sity In his father's library. Paul Kurd's bis.otlcal publications, big and little (including rc-prlnM of scarce writing, edited I y him, number WjX bast., SOITHERN BAPTIST CONVENTION Great Representative Religious Bods fleets in Asbeville. ARhevMe. Special. The forty peventh session tfeTth year) ' of the Southern Baptist Convention began here Friday. The attendance will be large. The first session was called J order by Hon. John W. Northern, (at Atlanta. This convention is the largest 'or ganized body of Baptists in the world. It embraces churches in the States east of tho Mississippi river and south of the Ohio; also lu Mary land, the District 'of Columbia, Mis souri. , Arkansas, Indian Territory, Oklahoma, Texas, Mexico and Cuba. The convention is not a legislative, but an advisory body. Under the de nominational teachings of the Church the Convention does not cuake laws for 'its constituency.! The delegates moot for co-operMion in missionary an-1 educational work. The niectlcgi of several societies and holies auxil iary to the gvit-ral convention were heia during the day. The main quta: tior.s for consideration by the conven tion -a'iJl be education and "home., at . foreign missions.' Both the -home ai?d foreign boards havt increased their work greatly during tha last year and will r-Mrt free of debt.. It is said the home board, of which Dr.' McConueii. of A'.ianta, Is tetretary will' report t .ta'meec?n band of sonniking like &,'. The report of the. fcreijj-n board. - the fceedouarters ct which Ik ivascviile will fct made by Dr. It. J. Willi nuhnm. ' . Mr. Northern Laving declined a re election as president, tltvre was much e peculation among the delegates a.s to who would be tho presiding officer.' Many were of the opinion that. Mr. NorthLn would -yet be induced to Bferve another t-rm. The Baptist Young People's Union held a meeting Thursday morning. rAmong the speakers were Pre; dent John 1J. Chapman. Mr. Chapman toM of the remarkable growth of the -organisation and predicted even larger growth this year. The association was shown to he ia a highly, flourishing condition. The American Baptist Educational Society met in the afternoon and elwted the following officers; Presi dent. A. Gaylord Siocum, LL. D., of Michigan; vice president, John i Forbes, Ph. D., Florida; John H. Har ris, LL.. D Pennsylvania; recording secretary tf Rev. H. B. Grose, Massa chusetts corresponding secretary, II. L. Morehouse, I). D.. Ill Fifth avenue, New York; treasurer, E V. Carry. Mont Clair,. N. J.; auditor, G. W. Mur ray, New Y'ork; members of the execu tive board. 1902-5. Eugene Levering, Baltimore, Md.; Hev. F. T. Tomilis sun Elizabeth. N. J.; Rev. Fred T. dates, New York; Joshua Levering. Baltimore; G. V. Murray?-New Yoi"; Col. J. A. Hoyt. Green v'Me. S. C: K. W. Stephens, Columbia. Missouri: J. W. Bailey, Ita'.elgh. N. C; J. B. Cam brel!. Waco. Texas. In lb absence .of the secretary .if the board Dr. Norman Fox. of New Jersey, was elected as recording sec retary pro tern. The executive board of tbe 'society submitted its report', showing grants had been authorized to ten institutions during the -yeRr. The number of high sohools.-'ln th? South has increased from 431 In U:)0 to 1,35) In 1901. The report of Treas urer E. V. Carry showing receipts for the fiscal year of $77,075.73 was. read, by Dr. Moorehouse and adopted. Presi dent Boatwright declared there was a great educational revival going on. State and private aid, he said, were building up State institutions. "The loss of denominational patronage may make the weak hearted think de nominational Institutions must be given up," ho continued, "but the de nominational rt hools are the bulwarks of tha nation. When the State institu tions foster a sustained Christian citi zenship, secular schools may may be needed, hut not now. The demand U for schools which shalUsupport Chris tianity., not church tenets." , Dr.' j. I. Orochti addressed" the so., piety on "The-Bearing of the Modem Educational Revival on Denomina tional Colleges'." Dr. E.VU. Poteat. -of Philadelphia; J. M. Prestige, of Louis ville, and others also delivered ad dresses. ", The trustees of the Baptist Semi nary at Ixniisville were iu session, Hon. Joshua Levering, tf Baltimore, presiding. Reports of the various com mittees ife read and the institution was shown to be In a most flourishing, tondition. j The Dry Goods Market. New York,- Special. The market was quiet again for all descriptions of cot ton goods, there waa more Inquiry from exporters following a riso in tho market for silver, but little actual buying. Prices are maintained In both Maple and fancy line. Print cloths are Inactive for narrow and wide goods. Newsy Notes. , Wheat (crowers In Northern Mis souri are alarmed over the heavy rains at the past two days. The resignation ot flllza M. Mosher. woman's, dean of tho University of Michigan, was tendered Thursday. A falling elevator killed one than and seriously hurt two at the Auln;an Company's plant, Canton, O. A valuable bell, cast In St. Pet"rs h.:rg and shown at the World's r'air, has been stolen from a Russian churrh in ChkrtKO, 111. The corner r.tnnti of the Ohio Mi IKulcy Memorial College, of -Government will be laid at Washington, D. C,, May H by President Hooslt, . HE MUST APOLOGIZE Bill Arp on Roosevelt's Remarks About Davis. BILL SAYS TKEY WERE WROMi. That Rocsvelt Should Hasten to rube Ample Amends For the .V.I.lnke He Has Made. Once more unto the breach, rod friends out a more," . I would like ia kcow about what time President Roosevelt is going tj retract what ha wrote; about President Davis. It has ni)w been proven by the official records a Jacksoa. Miss., that Mr. Davis never was governor, nor was he ever a mem ber (1 the legislature of that State.-and in a public adire3 made after the at c! repudiation, he declared he was on j:: scd to it and the debt ought t? be raid, aod tais anateur historian de-to:-m.ts him in h! book as a a arte tra'tnr and repudlator. Mr. Davis foirelit n Mexico for the hecor of. the fisp; V.-on the victory tt Buer.a Vista: i'-"T'stf!-.- rt.U5;..i: aim .'ii.r ue i years walked with crut.'hcs; married Genera! Taylor's daughter f : r hle-f.m wife' and didn't run away with Ur, either: w.-.s secretary o? war unu.r Franklin Pierce, remodeled th? cani ciium at West Point and If stands as ho f-amed it; was a member of the United States Senate when his tSat ceccded and. like General Lee, be-' went with, fcl-s people. He did not seek the presidency of the confederacy and in sisted that another be chosen. Now all this has lvng since been et&bilshed and if Mr. .Roosevelt did not know it he could have known it. He certainly knows it now, and If he is a gentleman he will retract it and tpologiae to Mr. Davis and the family and to the sairjr ed shade of '-Miss Wins! and to the people of the South. He called him an arch traitor and arch repudlator and rem pare' him to Benedict Arnold and that 'Slanderous libel is in print in a book Of so-called history and has pois oned the minds of all the fools, fana tics and idiots who have read it. When is he going to retract? The International Cyclopedia, edit ed by distinguished professors of Co lumbia university and Dartmouth cd Icec, says of Mr. Davis. "He was, a ripe s h'.dar, a vigorous writer, a splen did orator, a brave soldier, a true gen tlm-.a.), a sturdy champion-, a proud, true patriot, a lover of liber'.y, a Chris tian h?ro--thi is the Jefferson Davis that history will thetish." General j Ia'o was his bi-som friend and confi dent and yet this so-called historian, this rough rider and bir hunter, praises Lee while he defames bis friend, a man Infinitely his superior In everay moral, attitude and every noble emoiicn. But maybe ha will retract and apologize, though Tom Moore says:'' "But faith, fanatic faith, once wedded fast , To some de-ar falsehood hiigs It to the last." He had better roctrart, for some of our old soldiers are very mad about it. They are talking about suing him for slander and gamisheeing the govern ment for his salary. Killing bears in the wilderness won't save htm nor will that little brush we had in Cuba. That Is perhaps tbe biggest little war we have ever had and every small politi cian and stump orator who wants an olllce jtlmps up and says we are all brethren now. We fit and fout and bled together at San Jatian and Santiago and then, we crossed the wide ocean to whip oufJsotuo niggers and we will oom all be on tbe pension roll. An old veteran said to me, "That llttU Spanish war remind me of the fellow Who was drowned at Johnston, and when he knocked at the gate St. Peter didn't recognize him and rj fused to let him in. 'Why, my dear sir,' said he, I am one of tbe Johnstown sufferers. I was drowned In that flood.' So the good saint relented and let him In. He wandered about hc-aven; looking at the beautiful thin-1 and after a white came across au old man and said, 'Good morning, old gentleman ; glad to see you. Been her a long time, I rec. kon?' The old man said nothing. "1 am one of the Johnstown sufferers. 1 was drowned In that great flood.' Th ' old man did not reply, but tumd and, walked slowly away. . So the fellow went to St.' Peter and asked wJ that old man was. 'He would not speak jc me.' said' he, 'though I told him I was in tho (treat flood at Johnston.' And St. Peter replied, 'That old man, sir, Is Noah and he had a flood .of his ow n to think about.' " " And now we read that all the hor rors of our civil war are being repeat ed in the Philippine. In our war It, was. the white yankees -wlffk made. war': hell for us, but now they are .making It hell for the negroes 'In the Philip-i pines. VVg were trying "to smother what our people suffered, but they W4n't let us and now boast that Gen eral Sherman found It the best way t.: shorten the war. No, we old men and women can't forget and i hope that our children and grand-children will learn it. all in some Southern history. Th? clvllhed world has not .forgotten HeroJ nor Nero nor the duke of Alva nor tha massacre of St. llarthobvmew, where 30,000 Protestants were butchered In a night But when will tffeody repent, retract and e;o:ogi? He has get it . to do sooner or lafr cr go down in history as a malicious d -farcer of one whose shoes he was not worthy'to ua loossi He and Miles will get together 'otne time and sttme -where. Now, why does nr-t Teddy consider the tee'sr.gs of our pec;i!e ia his appointments ta Soti-thf'rn. offices? Why did he r.o.t give ijava-nnah a white raaa for a collector? Appointments of ne-sroee to be post mastcs and revenue collectors ara an insult to us. and be knows it. If be has such affectionate regard -f0r those negroes why not give them a place at Washington or Albany or B 'ston or a consulship at Hayti or San Dotainga? ' These efflce ar? the nearest of a!l to our people. The pijitjTice is our try sllng plae, a kind o Mecca, and tho postuiastelr our confident. That officer should .aMpve nil others be aceptable to the majority of the p:o;d?. The co!-"' lector has hc comm erce of a city in his hands and under his control, ar.d tuat commerce i a all white none cf it comes from the negro race. Wfc3tC--cuse can he give f." sueh arpjint ments? None, an jj when is ha gain;? to retract and apViosrlze for that sland er of Mr. Davis? Echo answerers when? Bill Arp in Atlanta Capstan-, tioa. ..'.' tiW ROUTE TO COLISBIA. Important Railroad Bu ldiiiff That is to tilve a 5hort IJne. HanW, Spcial. Mr. . Ernest Wil- Hams, president of the Charlotte. Mon roe & Columbia Railroad Confpany. and owner of the Apex Lumber Compuny will csuhlish a planing mlil at this piacc and will do a large, bufiino.-a in finished and dried lumber. Mr. Williams, togetber'with some as sociates, baa large lumbef and saw mill Interests In Che?terfi-ld county, ii. C- Fcr the dsvclopnteat f this intv'.at a railroad Is now being, built frft:..i a sta- , tioa called McBce. in South Cat .-Jn:i,.' on the Seaboard ro3d, towards Monroe. The company building this road'i3 the- Caariotte, Monroe &' Columbia. 1 Ue railroad is in reality secondary to th3r lumber interest and is being built to develop the latter. The railroad is n) finished and running from Me Leo. to Hamburg, about 12 miles. It is abw graded 10 miles further to Jefferson 'tnv Chesterfield county, and the additional ten miles should be In operation itt alKiut .thrse months, Je'fferson is only about 15 'miles from Monroe. President Williams thinks he will have the roal cotepktcd from Me'Beo. to Monroe in side one year from now. When thi; road Is finished to Monroe it v.-.iuhi make a short line from Charb-:te ta Columbia and if it should be op.rst"I by the Seaboard through t'rpins- might be operated over it from Charlotte to Columbia. 'McBee station is in Chester-.-field i aunty, S. C. between Ciieraw and Camden. Mr.'. H,D!gS8, of M ."'Bee. & C, is general manager, of the company' lumbei 'and saw mill interests in SoatU Carolina. When the Charlotte', Monro & Columbia road is finished to Mon--roe it will add to the importance of . that town as a railroad centre. Simmons Good Work. During the session of the Senate) committee on public buildings andt grounds Friday; Mr. Simmons, who is a. member of the committee, performed some practical and valuable service for his State. He secured the consent of the commlttee to report favorably an amendment granting $7&,0i)0 to repair the postofflce building at Gre'nshoro, and also an amendment which carries $135,000 for the purchase by the gov ernment of the court house at Winston,, and 125,030 for making iaiprovonit.nls thereon. Both these amendments ;tow go to the conference committee and it Is hulleved that the --Greensboro appro-"" prlatlon will tie allowed to stand, as the merits of thlsi proposition are uni versally admited. Relative to the Win ston appropriation Xhtre is a large cle ment of uncertainty, as it is known that Chairman Merer r, of the Hons, committee, will to a great extent defer ' to the wishes of Representative Biaek barn, who has succeeded in holding tho matter In abeyance iu so far as tho House committee ts 'concerned. ,The committee also ngreed to an amend ment giving an additional 3,000 ta Elizabeth City. , ! flust Not Drink. Winston-Salem. Special. A .Winston man has left his wife because she ob- " jeeted to his taking a glass o'f beer when he felt like it. The husband went away ou One of the Norfolk Ai Western trains a. few days agaud it is under stood that he has gone to West Vir ginia. Before leaving town the husband, it Is stated, wrote a, note to his wife, in which ho eaid something' like this: pc-ar Wife: You know that. I have been a 'kind husband and provided yoa with a very good home and living. N w t have only this to say if you will al low me the. pleasure of taking' a glass of beer whoa 1 ckoase to. 1 will. re-, turn and live with yon; otherwise,! will leave town, neves to return. This Is my final proposition. , Plt-aso an swer. . -. i ' , The proposition, tin writing) was de livered to the wife and imtnedl.Gely after readmit she wr;do her imsbaiul briefly, but emphatically, notifying him that she'would net accept, bis terms. Tho husband boarded tbe train soon after peruains tho kite's 1 answer to his message. Tho wife, wiU return to the homo cf her father; Iti a r.eighbor Ing town. The household property h ' been 'shipped. ' ' ' '- St