IS ft THE BLUE MARIC don't ; n n ov Your Neighbor by Continually Denotes Your Subscription h as Expired, and Request you to J . Pjeasc. - Renew Promptly. ) ' Corrcwini His Paper. t J,--cr;:3 . For - Yourself. J M. W. L1NCKE, Editor and Publisher. , ESTABLISHED 1805, ' Subscription Sl.00 PER YEAR. VOL. XIV. NASHVILLE, North Carolina, JANUARY 23rd 1908. NO. 4 -7 f JEWS' OF THE OLD -IJORTil STATE Brief Summary-of JVVhat 7 r . th& Past eek. - j Whst 0-r Ex,hir42S 'Tell Some Thiers Pleasant, While Otters Are, Somewhat Revoltlnj.; ; . -j " " " 1 - i UeM of Interest CiU1bm4 la Short Faratfraphs and Mainly For- ( tailing te Hatters U ' . ,. North bnliiuu A movement has been started In Newbern for the establishment of a boatline between Newbern and Nor folk, 'Plans are immature, but it is horjed to ron ltoeoffcrmgcomfort :' able and pleasant passenger service - as well as handling freight. Cameron, N, C, ; Jan; 14-e" W.' 'y-- Clark, a prominent young man, while out hunting this morning, was accidentally shot while driving in a ;-'' buggy, the entire load entering in his right side and ranging upwards. ' " . He died this afternoon about four ..." o'clock. . '.'" :L- ' : .Winston-Salem, Jan, 14.--At a . meeting' tonightVof the executive . committee of the North Carolina h Fireman's Association, it was de .'" cided to accept ' the invitation, to j , hold the annual meeting to be' held f-"'. in Wilmington in June. Salisbury r'; contested for the meeting. ' : . ' Presidents of railroads operating, in Tennessee have been requested by 1 'Governor Patterson to ..meet him.in ' v . conference at Nashville on January 27th to discuss the question of re ducing passenger rates in the State , and saying him the necessity of eall-i ' tag a special session of the legisla- 1 Charlotte," Jam 13. An express ; car" of 'Southern Railway train No. 29, was burned today near Royal Road, Va. An explosion in the car 1 from some unknown orignTcauBed " , the fire. Messenger - Cunningham; was wedged in thevestibule between " the tender and the end of the car - and narrowly escaped death. . The farmers in the vicinity of y ' Maysville, have orgahiied a Cotton ' - Growers Association, and will build . a cotton warehouse in the near fu r ture , Several hundred 'dollars worth .of stock has been taken al v. "Teady. and one of the officials stated that there as' a good demand for stock and that the movement was v ' " sure to succeed. Newbern Journal. George Roussf a negro barber of " High Point, NI C.', unearthed a tin - ' can filled with gold and silyftr to the amount of three hundred dollars; The find was. made on the railroad embankment near - the Globe home , . ( factory. ' His coat got caught on an iron stake driven, in the ground, . which caused him to , make an exam - ination.V, The money -was buried ' ;; 'during the Civil war. .- ,r i Lent will begin much later this 1 ' year than 1907, Ash Wednesday f all- Ing in March 4th, Easter Sunday will fall this year on April.19; last year it waTMarch 81." School .child ren will deplore the fact that both Washington's birthday and Fourth y of July will occur on Saturday, which is really too bad. - On the 28th of ' June- there will be" a large partial eclipse of : the sun , visible to5 North , s , CaroKnal. beginning 'Jer i about 9'30 a. m.. and lasting three hours. - - s "" '." ... Guilford College, Jan. 13.-One of the buildings of Guilford College, -"" v3 a" waa destroyed by fire be 1 "n 5 and 7 o'clock this morning. ' il. is building contained the library, two society halls and six class rooms. Ey the time the fcre was discovered it waa too late to save the building. Tf V a 1 i"ic.f..T'irtsf ..sees 1 rro- f oi3 i 1 sludonts "a portion of 1' 1 ' py was saved and moyt of t" -f, ti I' e L i L -3 in the halls tmor;;nT j f :r 1".". ?en Y , r f 'en yt-ars I tav? v, Has Transpired During Read It All. ; ? Elizabeth City, N. C, Jan. 18. The little two-year-old child of Mr. Tom Davis, had a narrow escape from death this afternoon. While playing in the back porch the little tot fell headforemost into a tub of water and when discovered by the mother a few minutes afterwards was unconscious and from all ap pearances dead. ' Mrs.' Davis snatch ed the child up and screamed for help., Mr. Cliff Madrid reached the side of the mother quickly and ran with the child to the. Standard Phar macy, where Drs. Pendleton, and I Fearing, by the use of pumps soon restored it to consciousness.; .' I -, ' Tillett Vaughan, a white man of Durham, N. C, who' has been In all kinds of trouble and is about ascom- mon as a .man can get to be in this life,' was before the "mayor on the charge of. beating . his lS-year-old daughter. Miss Lillie, and inflicting serious injury, The mayor sent him to the grand ' jury under bond of $250. He could not give the security and is now. in the county jail. It was late in the. afternoon when Vaughan, who was filled with liquor, beat his daughter. A crowd of in furiated citizens went after Vaughan who tried . to make his escape, and captured him. For ' a few minutes there was talk: among those who had held Vaughan as prisioner of dealing out summary vengeance. , ' I ElieabetK City, Ni C.j Jan. 16th. -With, flags at half mast the schoon er George A. Gaskins, Capt. George Gaskins, arrived in port today with the bodies of CaptGflchrjst, and mat Charles, of the ill-fated Leo nora, which- was: reported was ship-; wreked and five men drowned Tues day in the dangerous waters of Cape Hatteras. All . the bodies have washed ashore and the other three bodies were buried in the.vicinity of the wreck. The owners of the lost vessel ordered the bodies of the cap tain and mate shipped to their homes in New London, Conn., and upon arrival here the bodies were put in charge of undertakers and prepared for shipment.- .Thursday afternoon one of the young girl students of J.R Tyn dal's Industrial Christian college, at Orphan Heights, 8 miles from this city, attempted to commit suicide by ' drinking the contents of a one ounce phial of laudanum. Her act was' discovered shortly afterwards, and the officials used such means as were at -hand to prevent death and phoned- Kinston fora physician.' When the physician left her ; late Thursday night, she had been brought around and pronounced free, from danger. The authorities , at the college seemed very reticent and we have been unable to learn the girl's name or any of the circum stances explaining her reasons for attempting to take her own life. Kinston Free Press. ' The perfidy of one Peter Rogers, a tailor of this city, has placed Mrs. Martha. Maybe,' a widow, who had been the housekeeper at Mrs. ' Mc Cullen's boarding house for the past six months, in a strange predicta menfc debauched by . the alleged bridegroom, who in a mock ceremo ny at his place of business on West Centre'' street Wednesday night, made her believe- that she was his lawful wife." Rogers; who is; re ported to have a, wife and three children at TarbOro, is -in jail in de fi.uH of a f")0 bond to appear at the ner.t term cf court when the plot to eiitrap this poor woman will be un earthed t 1 the guilty ones made to suffer. KThe accused is 43 years old, and withthis fdony bids fair tobe a member of the cn.ty chain-gang. Goldsboro Headlight Davidson, N. C, Jan. 16. A bru tal murder was committed near here t'.'j r.icr:.'-j heh Ezekial Gresory, an oil r in over sixty years of age, T.i f D th' traia io the back, that r f r join' nnd mu-'.!lc, . t r i, back- ! . ; - . -'.,- Vu Ket j : , ' t "6 f.-.r 4 1 i J. A j . i (. t .( rove?, their was killed by his son Dave, the wep on used being an axe. The murder er, accompanied by his wife, left im mediately following the deed, but both were arrested near Mooresville this evening. The county coroner was notified and will arrive tonight. The substance of the story gathered from the daughter of the dead man was that, following an altercation this morning in regard to arising, the son went from the house into the yard . and defied his father to cross a line drawn with the blade of the axe in the earth. The father crossed the line, a blow was heard and the daughter rushed out to nnd her father prostrate, i - , . Elizabeth City, Jan. 13.- Mr. Jas. W. Pritchard, a farmer, who resid ed about two fle8 west of this city, committed , suicide . early Sunday morning by blowing his brains out with a rifle. Last summer Mr. Pritchard had 1 a severe attack of sickness effecting his brain, but had fully recovered, and since then had been in his usual Jiealth. Saturday night he remarked to his wife that he was not feeling well and feared he was going to have another at-' tack as he had last summer,. He went to bed, however, as usual, one of his children sleeping with him, and his wife thought nothing more of it. Upon awakening early Sun day morning bis wife found that her husband had already gotten , up. Having called and ' looked around the lot for him and receiving no ans wer, she became uneasy and called one of her neighbors, Henry Pritch ard, who is a cousin of her husband. He came . .at once, and after searching all the outhouses, finally located Pritchard, lying in a pool of his. own blood in the wood house only a short distance from' the dwelling with a rifle lying close by. - j " - SULLY AT THE HEtC And Cotton Advances Two and One; ,"r- Half Dollars Per Bale. -:V V New York, Jan. 16. The "engross ing topic of discussion in the cotton marget today was the admission by Daniel J. Sully, "Cotton King," that he had taken up the reins" of full leadership. On , the, heels of yesterday's sharp rise there was another- bulge, of 19 to 23, within the March option selling at 11:45, the highest price since early in Decem ber. - -"'.'..'. : :". '.; v.', - The magic of the name of the old bull leader has been sufficient to put prices up 50 points in the past few days, or $2.50 a bale. ' j ; r;; " It appears now that the first bull campaign ;of , any- consequence in months is now in -full swing with Sully at the helm.. .' ,U No little: curiosity as to Sully's backing. He is quoted as saying: "1 was asked by certain interests if I could do certain things, and I said I thought I could, I am now going to do them." There is one story that Sully )s acting for the Farmer's Un ion in the South, which is fighting for 15 cmtCQttim:&fK:Jf& '; Nath Coanty if Froud, Bt , " ' , - , i i Our 'esteemed contemporary.the Raleigh News and Observer, says: "The Nashville Graphic! has enter ed on ita fourteenth-year, Editor Lincke has made it one of the best county papers in the State'jujd Nash county has cause .to be proad of so good an exponent." f " ', Yes, we : have one of the best towns in the State, one of the very best counties in the State, ?'one of the best local papers in the State," some of the very best people in the World and getting better every day, so, why should we not be proud. The', Graphic, Well!.; We fear, the manifested . appreciation,' flowers arid kind words of cheer which would be of such bouyancy and sweetness to us in this life will only be heard by twittering bird8 after this "exponent" has paid the debt to nature (like affeof our other :L) v' .t 1j dae. ; Mini YourEuslness. ' If you dou't Di be Jy will. It Is your business li kf f r-. rf all the trimbie you can aod iil keep out if 1 vr a- 1 t iK'i'l t ' If if you r ' 1 : . "s I v Li'3 rills. 'i . - , r ,'.,1 kSCd A GENERAL LAW. '4 Pass' It At Speda! Session Says Senator Simmons. MANDATE OF TKE PEOPLE. After Tkereaili aa Deliberate Ce tUeraUea f tke Tameeraac . SitMUea TEli 1aIa D .' etnt Gitret Oplaiea as te ' Waat Is Best Mr.. Thomas J. Pence, special Washington,, correspondent of the Raleigh News and Observer, ends that paper the following interview with Senator F.M. Simmons, former leader of the State Democracy as to what the special session of the leg islature now in session in Raleigh should do with reference to the de mands made for State prohibition. Senator .Simmon in his interview said; '' v "v- "It must be apparent to every one that the tentiment in the State in favor of prohibition is so over whelming that nothing can prevent the adoption of State prohibition, as the policy of the State. This may be accomplished by one of three ways; by an act of the Legislature at the special, session which meets next Tuesday, or by its submitting a constitutional ' amendment to the people to be voted upon at the next general election, or an act of the next Legislature. "Whatever may be the views of some as to the enecuveness ot tne local option provision of the Watt's Law in bringing about ultimate prohibition it is evident that a vast majority of the people are unwilling to await the. slower process of this method, and ' that we are to have State prohibition in the near future by one of -the three ways I have mentioned seems to be certain. : . I have hail some doubt as to the extra session should do with refer ence ' to this matter, but after thorough and deliberate considera tion. It seems to me that under all the circumstances, giving full con sideration to the interest of the tem perance people, the State, and the party,, it would be better that the special session of the Legislature should take the responsibility and as a general law prohibiting the sale and manufacture of liquor any where in the State. - When the man date of the people with reference to a matter of State policy, after ma ture deliberation, ' is unmistakable and it is evident that delay will not change tbat purpose but only result in - friction and agitation,i it would seem to be the duty of their repre sentatives as well as wise policy, to execute that mandate at the first opportunity." The Wkltkty Qaestloa - The whiskey question presents it self i to' the: farmers from two as pects. First, as a personal question: What shall each man do in regard to this matter? -i Some will become to tal abstainers. Some will be in a class that rarely takes a drink. Some will be in a class that occasionally drinks because they find no danger in it for social' purposes or even for medicinal - purposes. Others will drink too frequently. Others will drink constantly. So down to. the last drunkard in the gutter. ? 'it Each man. determines for himself into each class he shall fall. ' i " The other phase of the question is as to the restraint the State may placer upon each individual. In other wOrds whether the State shall allow men themselves to decide these points or, whether to a large extent it will decide the question itself for its citizens. ' ' In Georgia recently they passed a law prohibiting the sale of liquor in any part of the State. In Kentucky nearly 90 per cent of the counties have, under the local option law. voted to forbidt&et'sale'of liquor in each of these -counties.- ' : n j Each State is dealing with the Advice to Mothers: Don't let your children waste awpy, Keen them stron? an1 hfilthy ourln-T t ,e win ter wuh L.il. inter's T ' '-v . -!. 'i 'iti. It is the ; .i j! rc d-;'-cn. I ere r i hv ' st'.e tf . 5. i.a, Ita vr'lwLlca. i .vklj Li-u.jCo. matter in its own way, according to its own conditions, and in these States there te a varied opinion con cerning the law. There ought to be no great variety of opinions concern ing temperance. In our judgment the question will finally be settled by the attitude fathers and mothers takfl in their home, the attude of the church and of social communi ties. If the children are educated to believe in temperance, in self-res traint, in self-control, if in season and out of season parents and teach ers and preachers - will say to the boys and girls of America, "touch not, taste not, handle not," a gener ation will be raised free from the in fluence of strong drink. -' The law wilt- fall unless it be sus tained by public sentiment such as we have outlined; by a sentiment that exists permanently and not tem porarily, but a campaign such as we have indicated, a campaign of edu cation extending through twenty years is necessary if the law is to be enforced. In time this education makes the law unnecessary, because when men refuse to drink there is no necessity for law forbidding them to drink. . That time te far off, and at pres ent Southern communities are pro tecting themselves against the cross roads groggeries and the corner sa loons by laws forbidding the sale in the different counties and States. In the South it is largely a matter of self-protection. . It te not so much a temperance wave as it tea determi nation on the part of the peopleto maintain order not only in the cities where we have, organized police forces, but in the country districts where men are exposed to more dan ger from the brutal and the igno rant, from the drunkard who puts a thief in his mouth to steal his brains away .Home und Farm. - TO A WATERY GRAVE. Five Young People Meet Tragic End While Skatinf oa Thin Ice. Connellsville, Pa., Jan. 15.--Of six persons who formed a skating party at the Jimtown Reservoir near here tonight, five were 'drowned. They are: John Luxner, 19 years old, George Cochran, 21 years old, Frank Cochran, Jr., a brother, 17 years old, George" Fulmer, 21 years old, Eliza beth Fullner, a sister: Miss Fuller and. George Cochran started toward the center of the resorvoir, but had not gone far when the ice broke, and they were thrown into the wa ter. As the other members of the party gazed horrified at the spot two heads appeared above the surface. Cochran supporting the girl with one hand, was clinging to the broken edge of the ice with the other. In a moment a human chain waa formed by the other four, who clasped hands with Andrew Mack, the only survivor, at the end of the line near est the shore. Just as a hand was being reached out to- clasp Miss Ful mer, there was another crash of ice. Frank Cochran, Luxner and William Fulmer had also gone down, the thmdee giving way under their com bined weight. Mack was Obliged to dash to shore: Helpless to save, he saw his merry companions of a few moments before, go to death. He heard a scream and a'chokingsound, saw uplifted hands above water for several seconds and then all wasstill At a late hour tonight none of the bodies had been recovered. ' ; MeJUni-Farming Far. . There Is no way of making farm ing pay except by making each day contribute something to the profit of the farm. Line upon line, precept upon precept, day by day, these are the rules of successful farming. Neglect, indifference, lack of con tinuous labor-, these are fatal. Na ture never stands still. Work in her laboratory goes on every day in the year and every hour of the twenty-four in each day. The farm er must imitate nature in this. He ought to regulate his work so as to Why suffer from Rheumatism? Do you know tbat rheumatic pains con be relieved? It you doubt tbis -y o;,e errllcatiun of Chamberlain's i "a I ,' !. It will rnnke rest and , r i 'Me, and tkat certainly r a ' - .t deal to any one af- l. I . a rbeumum. WHAT OUR NEIGHBORS ARE DOING. Occurrences In The Various States of The Union Since The Last Issue of The Graphic. secure the greatest results greatest comfort. There are period of the year when the weather does hot permit him to work out of doors, but these days can be well occupied about the house and the barn. Moreover, a man te a thinking ma chine, and the farming man should be thinking about farming methods. We' do not mean that he should think of nothing else, but if he te going to have satisfaction in, and good rules from his work, he must put himself, into it He must put his thoughts upon his crops, upon his soil, upon his markets. He ought to keep a record; if not a dai ly record, 1 diary, he ought to keep a running story of the year's work so that he may know next January what he did wrong last January or what he failed to do at all, what he ought to have done or what he did that turned out well. It will not do to trust to one's memory for these things. . Time plays us many tricks, and as we get older we re member many things that did not happen, and we forget the things that everybody about us well re members. Do not suppose that you can make money on the farm in any happy-go-lucky manner. What you want te methodical work, continuous work, intelligent work. The future be longs to the" American farmer. He has done in this year work that has saved the whole country from se rious disaster, but unless it has saved the individual fanner from disaster he will take little comfort in it When we say that the future be longs to the American farmer we do not mean that it belongs to the in dolent farmer nor to the negligent farmer nor to the farmer who does not care what happens so it does not happen to him. It belongs to the industrious farmer, the intelligent farmer, the man who learns by his own mistakes and the mistakes of his neighbors. Home and Farm. ' Itacate Tear Children. . No argument is needed to impress upon cvsry farmer the fact that the best -;i .1 most valuable crop on any farm are the little boys and girls who make happy the firesides of ev ery father and mother. The man who through indifference or unpar donable neglect failed to give his children the full advantages of all the school opportunities offered in his neighborhood last year should resolve to do the better by his little ones in 1908. The proper education of the boys and girls on the farm is a sacred' duty which all parents owe to their children. It te not a ques tion to be argued nor one that any parent can defend. If . any crop must suffer by neglect' let it be a field crop of the fireside. The sordid selfishness which puts the value of a dollar , above these priceless little jewels can only be actuated by an almost criminal disregard for, the future of the child or the future of the community, county, State or country. Ignorance is the most dam- aging of all legacies that a parent could bequeath to a child, while a proper education is the most valua ble. No child can now enter the do main of manhood . or womanhood and meet the competion of life in the 20th century with any hope to carve success in material development un less he or she is fortified and equip ped with a brain educated and train ed to do things well. We stress this important feature of our home life on the farm because it te the most important of all else and be cause in many sections of the rural districts it is most netdected. . The man who in 1907, gave his la bor, and that of his wife and child ren to provide comfort and luxuries tor those who sat m easy places and enjoyed the profits from the pro ducts of his labor; should resolve to bring about a change. The Cotton Journal. It fills the arteries with rich, res blood, makes new flesh, and h-. ' V men, women and children. KoiLir" can tuke its place, no re? t done so mucn good as 1 .,. rs Pockv KounUio Te.. '&.?, or Tebk'. Nashville Drujj Co., I.,;-:. vllIe,K.C. .. with thejVhat The Dispatches Say t periods! - , These Items Taken From Our Val ued Exchao;ei. rtefleriew ef What Bas Traatplre la Other Sections Daring Tfce Last Wee! aa Slace Oar Last lane. AshburyPark, N. J., Jan. 16. Miss Olga Sjostedt, a Red Cross nurse during the Spanish-American war, who recently returned from the South, bringing with her a hor roring tale of . abuse, is going to prosecute T. E. Pender, the planta-. tion owner of Weldon, N. C, who, -Miss Sjostedt alleges, mistreated her on his lonely plantation. The exportation of manufactures - from the United States te now in excess of the importations by 120 millions of dollars. Prior to the fiscal year the imports have exceed- . ea me exports, this neaitny con dition of the Commerce of our coun-' try will make it hard for a panic to last long, under wise management of affairs. - ':'.-';', ", New York, Jan. 13. Mrs. Cathe- rine Martin, who was shot by her husband, Alfred Martin, . in their apartments in a Brooklyn hotel last Saturday, died early today. Martin . died Saturday from a self-inflicted bullet wound.; The double tragedy . te said to have resulted from a suit for separation begun by the wife. Mrs. Martin was a native of Char- ' Iottesville, Va. The Rocky Hoaat Tobacco Market. Owing to the extremely bad weather of the past week or ten days, and the rough condition of the roads, the receipts of tobacco are very small this week," lasting only a few hours each day. The offerings consist most of re-sale warehouse and shippers tobacco, with but few loads of farmers tobacco fresh from the country. When such appear the buyers are eager for it, and the bid ding spirited. All of the independent buyers are out in force, and seem anxious for every pile of tobacco of fered that show color and character. . The common grades still predomi nate in the receipts, but are more eagerly sought after than before the holidays. It is reported that one or more larger orders for foreign gov ernments have been placed on the market recently, which may account in part 'for the renewed activity. It is estimated that prices on some grades are fully 10 per cent higher than any time this season, r ; Will Forfeit to the Government. ' The order issued to District At torney Holton by the Commissioner '. of Internal Revenue to institute libel proceedings against all land-owners upon whose lands illicit distilleries -" are operated, , will no doubt cause land-owners to open their eyes to the -( situation : and proceed to search every inch of their grounds for these hell-kettles. If this order is issued to all District Attorneys in North Carolina and a few confiscations of :: land are made by the government, the law giving, this power will be a strong factor in ridding this and all other States of "blind tigers." The order says, that, "the land up. on which an illicit distillery is found will be forfeited to the government and that the man who allowed an other to pass over his land going to and from a whiskey manufacturing plant for the purpose of operating the same, will be guilty." . . By the way. did any f n.I'y ever accumulate so many t ill -1 V a last arrival was not cci;.'.1-.1 ',.3 best of the lot? The FV jtf F inc. -8 t t t 1 (