The Progressive Farmer, June 13, 1901. State News. FROM CUBBITTJCK TO CHEROKEE. Itimi of Interest Gleaned From our Corres pondents and Exchanges in all Farts of the State. J. T. Dawson has been appointed postmaster at Halifax to succeed a negro who was in the office for two or three years. Greensboro will probably secure a large silk factory, the chief induce ment being exemption from taxation for number of years. The Concord Times has recently put in a new outfit. From a typo graphical standpoint The Times has no superior among North Carolina newspapers. Clinton Democrat : Congressman Charles R. Thomas has appointed Mr. Walter E. Pridgen, of Kerr, to a West Point cadetship. The appoint ment was made on competitive examination. In the list of newly appointed ca dets to West Point are the following from North Carolina: Hugh H. Broadhnrst, R. I; Howard, T. W. Jones, Jr., St. Clair Newborne, W. E. Pridgen, L. P. Sohoenmaker. The President has commuted the sentence of Nicholas Politz, who was convicted in North Carolina, of counterfeiting, and sentenced to serve six years in prison. His sen tence is commuted to expire June 13, at which time he will have served two years. Reidsville Revi6w : Petitions have been circulated for a route of rural free mail delivery from Reidsville to a number of points in the eastern part of the county, and it is highly probable that this popular service will be recommended by the post office officials. Charity and Children : The vale dictorian at Wake Forest this year was Mr. Rooke, a poor boy, who could not afford to board at a board ing house, but bought his his rations and did his own cooking. We have heard that his record as a student was the best ever made at the col lege. The world will hear from the young man is his life is spared. At the University commencement this week the following changes in the faculty were announced : Char les Lee Raper, elected associate pro- fessor of economics and history. Dr. Isaac H. Manning, elected pro fessor of physiology. Eight instruct ors and assistants have been chosen and the executive committee is au thorized to elect a professor of the Romance languages. Raleigh iV to have an auditorium. At a recent meeting, the directors of the company were authorized and directed to purchase the Academy of Music from the trustees of the Meth odist Orphanage ; also to purchase the building adjoining so as to in crease the width of the building 22 feet and give it a seating capacity of 2,000. The stage will be so spacious as to seat 350 persons. There is 10,000 in cash available. Monroe Journal : Mr. John H. Benton sold and caused to be sold in Union county last year about 73,000 fruit cans. That means 75,000 quarts of fruit, vegetables and berries saved that otherwise would have been lost. At ten cents a can, the value of this fruit, etc., is 7,500. More fruit and vegetables were saved in the county last year than five preceding years, and nearly all this has been and is Uing consumed by the producers. At their recent commencement the faculty and students of the North Carolina Baptist Female University 1 n--eiited gold medals inscribed, F'lr heroic service, February, 1U00," to two young lady students who volunteered to nurse another student -..-ho hud bimtllpox in the month n.-nti-.iKMl on the medal. The peo ... nl t o d.iy honor noble deeds no h-s than did our ancestors. Nor ure - -pp rti:nit:es for doing knightly .v'is rarer than in the "bravo days , ; .j 'jari.tte Observtr: Mr. Will Van : j und Mr. Warren Koark spent y -terduy at Tuckuseege Ferry, on :. r.-itawba, where the recent Hood vercd a lot of Indian graves. Vhey were searching for relics and v.vro quite successful, securing a tomahawk, an iron axe, several clay pots, pipes, arrows heads and several Spanish coins. The graves of the Indians are cn a hillside, about 50 yards from the banks of the river. The recent freshet washed away the earth in such a manner as to leave the skeletons of six Indians exposed from the feet to the shoulders. All the Indians were buried with their tcet to the river. The S. H. Lof tin bank failure at Kinston has many distressing fea tures, that of the numerous small depositors being greatest, as some of these had their all in the bank. The Great Eastern Railway is generally credited as being the cause of the failure. Money was heavily ad vanced to build the road, and the road was not collateral against over drawn acoounts. There is a report that the Vanderbilt interests would absorb the Great Eastern. What has become of all the copies of the Bragg fraud commission re port on the "special tax" bonds? A State official wants a copy. He was told yesterday there was not one in the library. A lot of people, good, bad and indifferent, were more or less interested in getting that report out of circulation. There is a supply, but a limited one of the Shipp "fraud commission" report, but these have for years been secured and destroyed whenever practicable. Ex. Col. Olds : Governor Aycock to day received a letter from Miss Hen rietta Aiken Kelley, now in Italy, and also a number of packages of the seed of the white Italian mulberry (the best for silk worms), which she requests the Governor to distribute through the Agricultural Depart ment to the people of the State, with a view to the promotion of silk worm culture. It is a wonder that the people in North Carolina do not de vote more time and care to this in dustry. Bishop Cheshire in his annual ad dress to the North Carolina Episco pal convention, which met recently in Durham, stated that the total number of clergy in the diocese is now 45, with cures embracing 8,000 souls. St. Mary's school for girls, he reported to be in such a flourish ing condition that it is now an im portant question how the students shall be accommodated another year. The debt on the property has by the energetic efforts of the financial agent, Rev. A. A. Pruden, been re duced to $17,000, in the past two years. Ex. Wilmington Messenger : The Mes senger's Raleigh letter of yesterday's paper gave a statement made by a person who had made calculations as to the cost of the penitentiary, and he is probably accurate or not far from the mark of expenditures. He said that "if the money which the legislature has in the last 32 years expended on the penitentiary had been applied to the public debt, it would have entirely extinguished the latter, including the $1,500,000 mort gage on the North Carolina rail way." Salisbury Sun : A corps of experts, consisting of eight men, sent out by the U. S. Agricultural Department, are making a soil survey in West ern Rowan. The gentlemen now have their headquarters in Salisbury. They examine the soil in different localities and classify it. The object is to find what kind of fertilizers are best suited to various soils and what crops are most adapted to the soil. Samples of the soil are taken and sent to Washington for analysis. The corps is working in connection with the State Agricultural Depart ment. Rowan has set a good example to the other counties of the State in building a county asylum for the care of its insane who cannot be gotten into the Stite Hospital at Morganton. It is on the jail prem ises but apart from the jail, so that none of the opprobrium which at taches to jail confinement will attach to the inmates of the asylum. It appears that provision for all the in sane in North Carolina will never be made by the State, and in this case it behooves the counties to look around and determine what they will do themselves about this class of their unfortunates. Charlotte Observer. At its recent meeting President Winston, of the Agricultural and Mechanical College, made a report to tho board of agriculture, showing that the enrollment was 302, re pre senting M counties and the States of Virginia, West Virginia, South Caro lina, Alabama and Florida. One third of the students are self-supporting. They earned $2,464 last session. Nine -tenths of the students work all their spare time. There are 10 post graduates, 2G seniors, 13 juniors, C2 sophomorers, 71 freshmen, 71 short course students, 17 special students and 32 taking irregular courses. In the college courses 37 are taking agriculture, 5 scientific (now abolish ed), 47 textile, 121 engineering and 82 mechanic art. In his report tVcsidt lit Winston said: 'I iinLii speak too highly of the conduct of the students during the year. The faculty unites in declaring that the year's record for character, conduct, scholarship and efficient performance of duties generally has far surpassed that of any other year in the history of the college." Fayetteville Observer : Fayette ville is to have a negro exhibit at the Charleston Interstate and West Indies Exposition that will be a credit to the State and to the South. Rev. T. W. Thurston, Superintend ent of the Ashley Bailey Silk Mill in this city, has been appointed Chief Director of the Manufacturing De partment of the Negro Buildings at this great exposition. Superintend ent Thurston will send several of his best machines to the exposition in charge of a number of his picked employes, and will thus give practi cal demonstrations of silk manufac tuaing by negroes. The cloth which is woven there will be cut into num erous pieces and distributed to visitors. A textile school is already operat ing in connection with the North Carolina Agricultural and Mechani cal College at Raleigh and is being greatly enlarged and improved. Its new building is now approaching completion. In its construction, ar rangement and equipment it will be a model. Instruction in North Caro lina's textile school is already both technical and practical, but the prac tical operations will be much more extended when the new building is opened. The State gave $20,000 for this structure and it will receive much from individuals in North Carolina and outside friends of tex tile education in the State. Georgia has one of the best textile schools in the country as a department of her School of Technology, and we are glad to know that North Carolina will soon have a first class establish ment of like character. Atlanta Journal. OUB TRUCKING INTERESTS. Wilmington Messenger : The pa pers outside are finding out that big trucking is done in North Carolina. It may be mentioned that the straw berry men have, had a good run with good average prices. The lowest prices have been about $1.50 per crate, delivered at the railroad plat-, form. We find the following appear ing outside : "The trucking industry in North Carolina is assuming immense pro portions. The official figures show that last year 66,495 packages of vegetables. 4,544,050 pounds, 48 cars, 12,504 crates of canteloupes ; 23 cars, 4,153, crates of dewberries; 55 cars, 32,840 crates of beans ; and 349,9S9 crates, 17,499,450 pounds of straw berries were shipped from Wilming ton section alone." If North Carolina's great capabili ties could be fully developed in all of its manifold interests it would astonish the natives and arouse the curiosity of the people beyond. NORTH CAROLINA RESOURCES. We find the following in an ex change. It is a condensation, we suppose, of a report sont out from one of the State departments at Raleigh : "North Carolina has 153 varieties of native woods, 177 varieties of minerals, 20 kinds of gems, and im mense stores of mica and corundum. "North Carolina has 3,300 miles of rivers, of which 1,100 miles are navigible. North Carolina has pro duced in the past century $21,700,000 in gold. 'North Carolina, it is estimated, could furnish 5,229,000,000 feet of long leafed pine." We may add that there are eighty rivers and innumerable lakes, sounds and canals. It is possibly the best watered State of all in the American union, now. Wilmington Messen ger. GOOD SCHOOLS AND GOOD ROADS. We have declared many times be fore that good roads and good schools are the two great needs of our peo ple. It must rejoice the heart of every loyal North Carolinian to see nope for these ripening into reality. Never before in the State's history has there been such interest in these two lines of permanent progress. Especially has the news from the May elections all over the State on graded schools been gratifying. On every hand we are hearing and read ing of more schools more books, more libraries all of which means a freer, greater, and more enlight ened popple. Uustoma Gazette. General News. 'ALL THE NEWS THAT'S FIT TO PRINT." The Facts Boiled Down and Presented in Convenient Form for Bnsy Readers. The slight improvement in Mrs. McKinley's health which manifested itself about a week ago continues and hope begins to be felt that she may after all recover from the pres ent, attack. Mrs. Mary Elizabeth Lease has filed a petition in bankruptcy. Her assets are $2,298.75 and her liabilities $3,247.55. This is the Mrs. Lease who canvassed with Gen. Jas. B. Weaver in 1892. Hon. Charles Foster, of Fostoria, Ohio, ex-Secretary of the Treasury, has made application in the United States Court there as a voluntary bankrupt. His debts are set down at $747,700, and there are no assets. Rather complete failure. John D. Rockefeller has agreed to give $15,000 to Carson and Newman College of Mossy Creek, Tenh., pro vided the trustees raise $50,000 ad ditional by 1905. Carson and New man is a Baptist college, co-educational, supported by the Baptists of East Tennessee. It has about three hundred students. One of the ablest of English re views is authority for the statement that the English Government has al ready spent over $725,000,000 in South Africa, and that the present rate of expenditure is something like $30,000,000 a month. It estimates that the eventual cost of the war will be about $1,000,000,000. Ex-Senator Charles A. Towne, of Minnesota, last week announced that he is out of politics for good and that henceforth he will devote all of his to business. Former Governor Hogg made a similar announcement a few weeks ago soon after he began mak ing big money in the Beaumont oil field, and a declaration of the same kind is expected soon from Governor McMillan. The Cabinet last week unanimously decided that existing conditions do not warrant the calling of an extra session of Congress this summer. Secretary Root and Attorney-General Knox bother rendered opinions to the effect that the authority to govern the Philippines vested in the President by the Spooner amend ment is ample. These opinions were concurred in by all the members of the Cabinet. There seems to be a general under standing among the Democratic rep resentatives who have from time to time visited Washington since the adjournment of Congress that there will be no contest next December for the minority leadership such as marked the scramble for the honor two years ago. There was much op position to Representative Richard son, of Tennessee, who received the nomination last time after a rather sharp campaign. This year, how ever, it is asserted that Mr. Richard son will be unanimously nominated just as will be Mr. Henderson, who was Speaker in the last Congress. PUNISHMENT OF WEST POINT CADETS. In the dismissal of five cadets from the Military Academy at West Point and the suspension of six others for one year, it has come to light that the pledge given by cadets to the congressional committee on January 19, to abstain from having, has not been kept. The hazing since that date, it is said, has been less severe, so much so, in fact, that the cadets consider that they were living up to the spirit of the pledge ; but the academy authorities understood the pledge to mean that all hazing was to cease, and took measures to en force the law forbidding it. This strict enforcement made Colonel Mills, the superintendent of the academy, unpopular with some of the cadets, and, after two of their number had been punished for haz ing, a large number of them, on the evening of April 16, "engaged in an insubordinate demonstration direc ted at the superintendent of the Mil itary Academy," as Colonel Mills says in his report of the affairs, and the demonstration culminated in "the moving of the reveille gun from its accustomed place to a posi tion on the plain immediately in front of the superintendent's quar ters, at the doer of which the muz zle was pointed." This led to an official investigation by a board of officers, who reported all the facts obtainable to the superintendent, and the superintendent made his re port and recommendations to the Dvutciury ui War, uud upon tai re port the Secretary acted as related above. The eleven thus punished are said to be the ringleaders, and and the others who took p.irt in the demonstration are to be dealt with later, with less severity. Literary Digest. FROM FIVE TO TEN PER CENT. This Seems to be the Increase in the Cotton Acreage. New York, June 15. Dispatches to Dun's Review from the entire cot ton belt make a most satisfactory showing. Unfavorable weather con dition during the opening weeks of the season injured much of the seed and made replanting necessary. This adds to the cost of the crop, but does not prevent a full yield. There seems to be from five to ten per cent increase in the acreage under culti vation, and while damage undoubt edly has been severe in some sec tions, fairly good weather from now to tle beginning of picking would insure an abundant yield. Excessive rain has made the growth of grass unusually rapid, and the scarcity of labor, together with large grain crops, makes it difficult and expen sive to keep the fields in good con dition. Injury from insects is light in most States, except for boll weevil in parts of Texas, and lice in regions where moisture has been exception ally heavy. These pests are not as harmtul as usual, however, and aside from the probable increase in cost, the planters have cause for gratifi cation. WHY TEXAS IS WILD WITH THE OIL FEVER. The Recently Discovered Beaumont Wells Yield More Oil Per Day Than All Other American Wells Combined Aladdin's Lamp Outdone. Baltimore, June 15. In editorial correspondence in a recent issue of the Manufacturers' Record Mr. Rich ard H. Edmonds summarizes the re sults of his observations in the Beau mont oil field. He traces the events which in four months have given what was known to a few as an im portant lumber and rice center a national and world-wide name. He shows the marked difference be tween the circumstances surround ing the search for gold in Califor nia and the Klondike and the dis covery of oil in Pennsylvania and those connected with the Beaumont developments. He describes the leading features of the speculation in the new field, and he gives a warning of the dangers involved, although for the time speculation has halted. Regarding the present situation and the prospects of the field Mr. Edmonds says : "The gushers which have been struck so far are all within a small area, probably half a mile in diame ter. The smallest is said to have a capacity of 35,000 barrels a day, and it is claimed that the largest can produce 50,000 barrels a day. But suppose that all were turned on at the same time and that their aggre gate output was 100,000 to 200,000 barrels a day, that would be greater than the total product of the 70,000 or 80,000 wells now in operation in the United States. In other words, these Texas wells may be able to produce more oil than the entire out put of the United States at present. But nobody expects them to continue to have such an enormous flow. When the tremendous pressure which forced the oil 150 feet or more into the air in a great stream has been relieved, pumping will doubt less be necessary as in other places ; but, admitting this, we will have a condition that i3 of world-wide im portance and influence, The new wells now being bored will soon prove the extent of the field. If it be confined to the narrow area where all the gushers have been found, then we have a remarkable discov ery of immense value ; but if the field is broad and over a great area aDd the only final test, the drill, proves that oil exists in anything like the quantity to be reasonably expected from the conditions already known then we have a proposition, which, as has well been said, must stagger the world's oil trade. If it is found that as much as 200,000 bar rels a day can be safely depended upon from this field, then possibly $100,000,000 or more will need to be invested in order to provide ample pipe lines, storage facilities and tank steamers, of which more would be needed than the whole tank steamer fleet of the Standard Oil Company. "Of course, there has been a wild speculation in land and in stock companies. Land within the onarmed circle of the 'gushers', which was worth $5 to $10 an acre four mouths ago, now commands $75,000 an acre spot cash. The ac tual cash sales of land sinoe the boom commenced four months ago havejbeen over $10,000,000, so a lead ing banker informed me, all of the transactions having been for full cash, no deferred payment sales having been made. Many fortunes have been made and stories without end could be told of individual profits. "A Southern Pacific Railroad me chanic who moved to California a year ago tried without success to sell a small tract of land near Beau mont for $500. Unable to find a buyer he kept the land and when first well was strdck he returned and sold his $500 property for $160, 000 cash. A friend from Mobile who was with me met an old acquaint ance who had gone out with money to invest but had refused to pay $5,000 for a tract of land only to see it sell for $240,000 within a week. "Such fairy tales are heard every where, but unlike fairy tales they are true. But speculation has reached a dangerous point and conservative investors are now holding off. While many sound oil companies have been organized a great many wild cat companies have been started to catch unwary buyers. "Wherever there are chances for such enormous profits there must be corresponding chances of loss, and hence oil stocks are hardly a wise purchase for any one who cannot afford to lose his entire investment. The buyer of stocks may win heav ily, but he may also lose and hence such operations are not suitable for people of limited means. It is really a rich man's game because he can afford to take the chances of loss for the chance of making a big strike. "All Texas is stirred up over the oil business and the aotivity which it h.s started will spread .o neigh boring States and inaugurate a greater general industrial and rail road activity in that section than the South has ever witnessed. These things suggest that the whole South should make a careful investigation of its undeveloped wealth, for it may find riches as little dreamed of now as was Texas oil six months ago." PLATT AMENDMENT ADOPTED. The Cnbans Agree, by a Vote of 16 to 11, to Make It a Part of Their Constitntion. Havana, June 12. The Cuban con stitutional convention today aocepted the Piatt amendment by a vote of 16 to 11. A resolution to accept was carried without discussion. Immedi ately after the opening of the ses sion Senores Tamayo, Villuendas and Quesada, constituting a majority of the committee on relations, submit ted as a substitute for the commit tee's former report the Piatt amend ment as passed by Congress, recom mending that it be accepted and made an appendix to the constitution. In the vote on the resolution the 27 delegates present divided as follows : In favor of acceptance : Senore Capote, Villuendas, Jose M. Gomez, Tamayo, Monteaguedo, Delgado, Betancourt, Qibera, Luorente, Que sada, Sanguilly, Nunez, Rodrigues, Buerriel, Juilez and Ferrer. Opposed to acceptance : Senores Zayas, Aleman, Eudaldo, Tamayo, Juan Gualberto Gomez, Cisneros, Silva, Fortun, Lacret, Portuondo, Castro and Manduley. Senores Rivera, Correoso, Gener and Robau were absent. The latter two voted against acceptance in the previous division. Senor Ferrer voted with the Conservatives, ex plaining his change of attitude by asserting that he believed acceptance would be the best solution of the problem. The convention will now appoint a commission to draw up the electoral law. WASHINGTON OFFK.'A LS GRATIFIED AT THE NEWS. Washington, Juce YZ The news of the adoption of the Piatt amend ment by the Cuban constitutional convention was received with gen uine gratification here. The admin istration officials all along have felt confident that its ratification would be accomplised when the Cubans realized that this government was firm in its attitude regarding the amendment and it acceptance would be necessary before the United States would consent to withdraw its super vision from the island. Now that tho Cuoans have demonstrated their good faith in the United States it is expected that a fairly speedy evacu ation of the island wiil follow, con tingent only upon the establishment of a stable government in the island.