Tuesday, September 1, 1903. THE PROGRESSIVE FARMER II A PATROL SYSTEM FOR COUNTRY A Suggestion that Deserves Careful Attention How it bnouia decrease Crime. Tt is not often th'at the Philadel phia Press is able to make a sug gestion of value to the South. It has done so signally, however, in an editorial referring to the lynching of the negro White in Delaware. It went to the root of the matter when it said that the lynching was possi ble because Delaware, like other States, had neglected its' duty to kep the peace. It added : The country road is not safe to wo nicn in many parts of the country This was true in Delaware. It is true in many counties in this State, noticeably along our great railroad lines, though ilot through their fault. The human wolf is always abroad. Sometimes he is a negro and some times a white man. In either case our States make no provision to de fend the highway against him. Of fch?es like that for which this man was lynched are rare oil the seques tered unbuilt roads every city has, because its highways are patrolled by police. Women in the countryside and on the eoliiitfy hitrhway have a right to the same protection as thir sisters in the city. A mounted rural police should network rural highways. It should be paid by the State, through a tax on property, an impost most of which the fitie would pay. If Delaware had taxed its corporations and city property with a fair rela tive tslx on farms, to provide d rural police and keep the roads' Safe, this crime would never have been com mitted. It is because the State leaves its rural highways lawless and unde fended Against the human wolf that lawless mobs take the law into their own hands. Make the roads safe to women by a State rural police which relieves the countryside of the hid eous horror which now overshadows Jt for all lonely women, and lynching would disappear. Our States neglect this duty. They neglect another. This particular hu nmn wolf had served a term for this offense. ,Vo man ought to leave a ktate prison after a conviction for this offense or its attempt until the prison surgeon had made it impos Hhle to repeat offense or attempt. The way to prevent lawlessness in the ttifh is to prevent lawlessness in the criminal. Begin there and the mob will never be heard from. Our laws instead let these things dnft. The roads are not safe for Jack of a rural police. A human wolf hke this man, twice convicted for lawless violence and once for a sim dar crime, was turned loose, un marked and uncorrected, to return to his (.rimo Peril to. its women nc, community will long endure without pthroak; but the remedy for this lawless peril is not more lawlessness, l'lt more law. Our States, most of all States like are and PennsvlvnniA. nnmss bich the imbruted of both colors wander as tramps, vagrants and semi-criminals, nejed a rural mount ed police patrolling the country high way. If the States keep the peace the mob will, too. The States need also a sharper edge and a heavier hand for the tramp and vagrant. A man of this class and habit convicted of violent crime should be kept un der watch all his life. If his crime be of this character, or even if it be attempted, he should never be left able to repeat it. This policy, persisted in, would end lynching by removing its cause. Nothing else will. A rural police which rounded up tramps and va grants at sight would soon rid our country roads and lanes of the ter ror and horror that now broods over them for women, and out of this ter ror and horror, when crimes come, mob3 grow. In all of that is the wisest sort of suggestion for the South. If a ru ral police is such a pressing neces sity for the protection of women from the human wolf in Pennsylva nia, where the population averages 140 to the square mile, and in Dela ware, where it averages 94, how much more pressing must it -be in such States as Florida, with less than 10 persons to the square mile, ag Texas with 11, as Arkansas with 24, as Ala bama with 35, or as Georgia with 37 persons to the square mile? Thinking men have long ago reach ed the conclusion that a revival in modified form to meet changed con ditions of the old patrol system is essential to the well-being not only of the South, but of other portions of the Country, and an attempt to meet the exigency W.1 made in a bill introduced last fall by Mr, It. B. Blackburn in the Georgia Legislature providing for the establishment of a State patrol force of probably 10, 000 men. ATr. Blackburn set forth at the t ime in" the Manufacturers' Rec ord the features of the bill, which, put into effect, Would undoubtedly have proved a deterrent of crime and misdemeanors costly to the State, and also the means for the prompt administration of the law to a saving for the taxpayers and for the- sup pression of vagrancy, the parent of so many ills in the rural districts. That bill, we believe, is still on the table of the Georgia house of repre sentatives. It should be taken, there from and promptly passed as an in centive to other Southern States and to the rest of the country to take the proper steps for the betterment of rural conditions, and especially for the protection of women from the prowling wolves. Manutacturers Record. FEARFUL ODDS AGAINST HIM. "Red -ridden, alone and destitute. Such, in brief, was the condition of an old soldier by name of J. J. Havens, Versailles, O. For years he was troubled with Kidney disease and neither doctors nor medicines gave him relief. At length he tried Elec tric Bitters. It put him on his feet in short order, and now he testifies: "I'm on the road to complete recov ery." Best on earth for Liver and Kidney troubles and all forms of nh rind Bowel complaints. 50c. Guaranteed by all druggists. Lightening Rods and Agents. A thunder storm followed by a lightning rod agen is apt to make a man nervous this sumnfer weather. According to the agent it is race suicide as well as murder in the first degree to live in a house without a lightning rod, and there is none oth er but his worth putting up. Light ning rods are good things to have on a house, but when a strand of barbed wire posting about a dollar will give all the protection you can get, what is the sense in paying from $30 to $50 for a twisted piece of metal with a fancy ball and pronged fork aft the top that is no better? Whatever you do don't sign a note for a lightning rod. In ten cases out of eleven the signer don't know what he is binding himself to do. When a lightning rod agent tempts you, tell him you don't believe in rods, are afraid of them, have no fear of lightning, believe in predesti nation and trust in Providence, and if he still insists, offer to swap him a bull for the rod on condition he catches the bull, but don't sign his notes. Southern Farmer. Women as Well as Lien Are Hade miserable by Kidney Bladder Trouble. and Kidney trouble preys upon the mind, discourages and lessens ambition; beauty, Z t F t vigor ana cneenui ness soon disappear when the kidneys are out of order or dis eased. Kidney trouble has, become so prevalent that it is not uncom mon for a child to be born afflicted with weak kidnevs. If the phild urinates too often, if the urine scalds the flesh, or if. when the child reaches an aee when it should be able to control the passage, it is yet amictea witn Deu-wet-ting, depend upon it, the cause of the diffi culty is kidney trouble, and the first step should be towards the treatment of these important organs. This unpleasant trouble is due to a diseased condition of the kidnevs and bladder and not to a habit as most people suppose. Women as well as men are maue miser Wo -urHVi Iridnev and bladder trouble, and both need the same great remedy. Ti.rt anrl the immediate enect oi 5wamp-Root is soon realized. It is sold hv-druTttsts, in hlty- cent and one-dollar size bottles. You may have a sample bottle hv tnfiil free, also a Home of Swamp-Root pamphlet telling all about Swamp-Root, including many ji iuc iuuui"ua --" monial letters received from sufferers cured. In writing Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., be sure and mention this paper. Don't make any mistake, Kf 'mmlipf the name. Swamp-Root, Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, and the ad dress, Binghamton, N. Y., on every bottle. Bend model, sketch or photo oi invention for free report on patentability. For free book, i When writing advertisers please mention this paper. r. Full Sacks of plump, rich grain are obtained by the use of a fertilizer contain ing not less than 6 actual' Potash For Wheat. Rve. Oats, and all other grains, Potash is most essential. Write for our books, they are free to farmers. German Kali Works, 93 Nassau St., New York. Atlanta Qa. Branch : 11 So. Broad Street, Inman Bldj. 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Tickets on sale every Wednes day and Saturday up to and including September 30, 1903; final limit sixty days f kom date of sale. For any other information, apply to any ticket agent of the Southern Railway, or address T. E. GREEN, C. T. A., Raleigh, N. C.