.- . . - . i 4 . - ., - ..." : - PONT ANNOY sv - ' '. '-'" The, B!k apHig THE BLUB MAR i Your Neighbor by Continually J Denotes Your Subscription has ' Expired, and Request you to t i Please - Renew - Promptly. ' , Borrowing His Paper. ..''. f. ' Subscribe For Yourself. J i:.. - v . " ; " 1 1 " " y - 1 1 1111 gaemJ hi i iin i 1 1 ii i mi i i i ii i n ii g5igf1 11 1 11 ' 111 " 1 " 1 ' ' " ui.... i i n n i .t .-i -i M. W. LINCKE, Editor and Publisher. , J . ' - ;.. ,". vV : ''';! ESTABLISHED 1803. Subscription $1.00 PER YEAR. v ' , ' T.i' '' ,11 ii ,i ii i i ,i ii.ii-ii uui i' Msg "i " n.iii u 'in ii n i ii i. ii hi ' '"limn ' ill ii mi 'J 1-i-i i--LLx-i..-ijm.u-i J VOL. XIV. ' v jy ; ' NASHVILLE, North Carolina, FEBRUARY 20th 1908. NO. 8 -' '" ' ' " , i ---- - 1 'I T 1 Professional Cards. Dr. C.F. Smithson, DENTIST. . Office: Planters Bank Building, . Rocky Mount. N. C. LEVY'S COFFIN & CASKET HOUSE, ' " Rock Mount N. C " Day and Night Phone, 305 Funeral Directing and Embalming S. F.AUSTIN, Nashville, a. c. E. B.GRANTHAM Rocky Mount, ir. o. : AUSTIN & GRANTHAM, LAWYERS. Promptaltention given toall matters J. P. BUNN.' ; F. S. SPRUILL, Eocky MilffDir Lonisburf. BUNN & SPRUILC Attorneys and Counsellorsat-Law. Will be in Nashville trerr flrat Mqndar JACOB BATTLE. Rooky Monnt, N.C. R.A.P.C00LET. Nashville, N. C. BATTLE & COOLEY, . Counsellors And Attorneys-At-Law. Practice io State and Federal Courts Office in Grand Jury Bldg. E. J. Barnes, O. P, Dickinson BARNES & DICKINSON, Attorneys and, Counsellors-At-Law Wilson, N. C. Practice In Nasb, Wilson, State and - Federal courts. ; Office over Savings Bank. j mo. e. woodsrd, WUud. , Lioic T.Vacghax Nashville. . WOODARD 4 VAL'GHAN, Attorneys And Counsellors at-Law Prompt attention given to all matters entrusted to our care.. Umce in Grand Jury Building. P. A. WOOUAKD. ; W. I THORPE. Wilson. - ' ' Kooky Mount B. A. BROOKS, Nashville, N. (!. WOODARD, THORPE & BROOKS, LAWYERS. Offices: Nashville and Spring Hope. Office In Grand Jury Building. . Twentieth Century PRESSING CLUB. . J. J. STATON, - Propr. & Man. Nashville, N C. ' - Prompt Attention Given to All - .Orders. ' ' - I make a specialty of dying La dies' Silk and Woolen Skirts, Dres ses, Etc. v Rear Of Bank Building. Z A DELICATE THROAT ..c Probably you haven't bad any trouble for several months, but you may now " ' Cool nights and snappy mornings may bring unpleasant reminders of a delicate throat; : - . If you grow hoarse without any appareut reason, if an ugly little hack arises, you need Syrup of White Pine and , Tar ; at mice. It soothes and heals and, best ol all, it prevects those revere spasms of coughing which are so likely to produce soreness of the lungs. ' Price 25 Cents, j jv : ' J i i The Bluest Man Ever. J'l'H bet none of you folks know that the biggest man that ever lived was born and raised in North Caro lina," said a Tar Heel at the Hoff man House the other night. "His existence and dimensions are vouched for in the American encyclopedia. says the New York Press. 4 "His name was Miles Darden. He was seven feet, six inches high and in 1845 weighed 871 pounds. He was bornin North Carolina in 1798 and died in Tennessee, January 23, iso. unui 1803 ne was able to go about his work in an active manner, but his weight increased so fast that year that when he wanted to move about he had to be hauled in a two- horse wagon. In 1839 it was chron icled that ' his coat was buttoned around three men each weighing more than 200 pounds, who walked together down the streets of Lexing ton, N. C. At his death he is said to have weighed not less than 1,000 pounds. . His coffin was 8 feet long, 35 inches deep, 32 inches across the breast, 18 across the head, and 14 across the feet. These . measure ments were taken at the time and are matters historical record.' Washington Herald. THE NORTH CAROLINA PRESS. It li Rltfht Behind Everything" That V Uplifts the reeple. Right behind everything which has for its object the uplift of our peo ple stands the Press of North Caro lina. In the fierce battle for the de struction of the liquor traffic The News and Observer has stood like stone wall; and all over the State our country newspapers to the best of their strength have gladly cham pioned every righteous cause. A de praved and immoral newspaper can not flourish in North Carolina. It must convince - its readers that it loves the right in order to win their patronage. They may be deceived but they will not let the same man deceive them twice. ,1 The field lor the country paper is broader and more inviting now than it has ever been. The educational revival has opened new and larger opportunities for the country editor. The rural free delivery instead of being a hindrance, is a great help, for it creates a thirst for reading and the deeper the thirst the better for the local paper. I anral ways glad to see a community proud of, and loyal to its paper. It is a good sign of the paper and a better sign of the people. A merchant ought to pat ronize his home paper whether it Lpays him in dollars and cents or not. It does pay him in a great many ways. It tells the story of loyalty to the world, that outsiders read and understand; it reveals a breadth and ft spirit of enterprise oh the part of the home people that is the finest kind of any advertisement and one that draws like a magnet, Archi bald Johnson in Asheboro Courier. .... The Farmers' Union. " - Since the Farmers' Union was in troduced into Korth Carolina ' its growth in the counties whereorganiz ers have been at work, has been mar velous, ' The demand for organizers can not be supplied as fast as it is made Beginning in Texas about four years ago, this organization has come eastward until every Southern cotton growing State has been or ganized except North Carolina, and an organization will be set up in this State within the next sixty days. The only reason North Carolina hasn't i been ,. organized into the Union sooner, is because the oppor tunity has not been presented soon er, The delay, nowever, win oniy cause North Carolina farmers to line up in this great beneficent movement the quicker.' Kindred organizations', that wen forerunners of the Farm ers Union; have had an educating in fluence that makes the way easier to establish a real, active practical farmers' , organization. Marshville Home. )' . - ..' ' . . - V ;;' A Dangerous Operation ' is the removal of the appendix by a urgcon. No one wno takes Dr Kintrs New Life Pills is ever - sub jected to this frightful ordeal. Tbey work si quietly you ono i reel men:. Thrv cure constipntion, bnuucb"1 oil iutisncs and miliaria. 2oc at Nashville Druy Co. THE. MONEY ROBBED May Be Returned To The Southern Cottoa-Producinf States. Bill U Cong-rets Which, If Fatst. Would Rightfully Restore Noarly - Two Million DoUars to the , State of North Carolina. Washington, D. C, Feb., 15. Would North Carolina like to have returned to her $1,959,704, which was illegally taken from citizens of the State in taxes on cotton pro duced wjthin her borders from 1863 to 1867? : " In the Forty-fourth Congress a bill was introduced by Roger Q. Mills, of Texas. All these measures, with the exception of that of Mr. Blount, of Georgia, proposing to "extend the time for collecting the cotton tax and reviving such claims as are now bar red," were referred to the Commit tee. : At the time feeling between the sections was still high and the animosities engendered by the Civil War too strong to permit a respect ful hearing of these bills. Today the bitterness of thirty-five years ago has largely passed away It is safe to say that a majority of the members of Congress are inclined to be fair. If it can be shown that the claims advanced for this $68;000- 000 are fair and just, good men among the Republican representa tives in Congress will no doubt urge that justice be done.' All the South ern memDers are asking for is the principal, the interest on the debt for forty years being ignored. : In view of the action of Congress on the "sugar bounty claims'," ; they have strong hopes that the cotton tax claims will be approved. ' There were four seperate acts of Congress passed between 1863 and 1868 authorizing the levy and collec tion of a tax upon raw cotton. The first act, passed on July 1, 1862. lev- lea a tax oi one-nan oi l cent a pound. The next was the act of March 7, 1864, providing for a tax of 2 cents a pound. The third was that of July 13, 1866, which levied a tax of 3 cents a pound, and the last was the act of March 2, 1867, Jevying a tax of 2 1-2 cents a pound. All du ties on cotton were removed by an act of congress on February 2, 1868. Liquor in Prohibition Territory. The act to prevent traveling sales men from soliciting orders or pro posals for the purchase of intoxicat ing liquors in prohibition territory in North Carolina, provides that it shall be unlawful for any person for himself or as agent or traveling salesman for any person, firm or corporation, to solicit orders or pro posals of purrhase by the jug or bot tle or otherwise of intoxicating liquors within the borders of any or all counties, townships, precincts, towns and cities ' in - the State of North Carolina wherever prohibition prevails or the sale of Intoxicating liquor is prohibited by law. Pro vided, that this law shall not be con structed to prevent the sale of in toxicating liquors In not less than five gallon packages to all parties or persons who are duly authorized by law to sell intoxicating liquors. An Excellent Law. , ,-v Among the acts passed at the re cent extra session of our Legislature was one to provide for the burial ex penses of Confederate prisoners. It allows $20 to be a apropriated out of the general county fund upon the recommendation of the chairman of the - county board of pensioners. Many pensioners heretofore have been hurried by " private subscrip tions, and it is very proper that the county should provide them a decent burial, " We never worry about the spirit ual welfare of the man who always sprinkles ashes on his icy sidewalk. For Rheumatic Suffers, v The quick relieffrom pain afford ed by applying -Chamberlain's Pain Bulm makes it a favoi ito with suffer ers from rheumatism, sciatica, lame back lumbgo, aed deep sead ana inutcular pains. For sale by Nash ville Di'U; Co. 1 STATE m FOREIGN' These Item's Taken From Our Val ued Exchanges. ' J -" " " BriafRoriow of What Has Traatplroa la Other Sections Daring The Last Week and Since Onr Last Itino. W. C. Fuller of Rocky Mount, has filled m the United States district court, Raleigh, voluntary petition in bankruptcy, the assets being given $3,500 and the liabilities $5000. Governor Glenn last Thursday com muted the death sentence of Frazier Jones, the Guilford county wife-mur derer, to life imprisonment, upon the investigation that has been made since he granted a reprieve of ten days to Jones last Friday at 11:30 o'clock, just half an hour before the nogro's soul was to have been sent into eternity from the gallows. The Wake county Medical Associ ation has adopted resolutions to the effect that in view of the fact that the law has honored the medical pro fession of the county with the lega lizing of the sale of liquors through prescriptions, if would be dishonor able conduct for a physician to either give or sell a prescription for whis key for beverage merely and violation of this trust ! reposed by the law should be grounds for revoking the license of such physician. St. Johns, N. F.Feb 15. About five thousand bales of cotton are floating about Trepassey Bay from the wrecked British steametjTolesby with a salvage of $5 a bale, and the fishermen are earning considerable money, but perform their work un der hazardous conditions. Thus far about 500 bales have been recovered. The Tolesby went on the rocks near Steal Cove Point, January 13, while on her way from Galveston Texas to Havre. The crew was saved after a frightful experience. The ship is a total wreck. ; New York Feb. 12 The conviction of William H. Vanschaick, captain of the excursion steamer General Slo cum, which was burned on June 15, 1904, in East river, with a loss of over one thousand lives, was affirm ed today by the United States Circuit Court of Appeals. Captain Van schaick was convicted of neglect of his duty as captain and was given a sentence of ten years in prison, Cap tain Vanschaick is 70 years old. He has been at liberty on bail and has been married since the conviction. Little Ida, the , three-year-old daughter Mr. Al. Gates, ' met with a horrible death at her fathers home three miles east of town, Monday. It seems that the mother had gone out to gather some , wood and left her four children in the 'room. When she returned she found little Ida ly ing on the floor dead, having caught on fire and perished in the flames. One of the other children, while at tempting to save the life of her little sister, was right badly burned on her hands. Hillsboro Observer. . Washington, D C, Feb. 17. -The official report of the trial of the new armored cruiser North Carolina oft the Virginia Capes Saturday night, j conrfims the statement in the press dispatches that she averaged approx imately 22:48 knots in her four hours ipeed trial. The North :. Carolina holds the proud record of being the fastest fighting ship in the American navy. The previous best record for speed made by a battle ship or arm ored cruiser was on the occasion of the trial trip of the armored cruiser Pennsylvania. That vessel, which is of a smaller type than the North Carolina, made an average speed of 22.44 knots. The Tar Heel ship made an average speed of 22.48 knots, al though confronted with adverse wea ther conditions. Medicine That Is Medlclnce.' 'I have Reffered a good deal with malaria and stomach complaints, but I have now found a remedy that keeps me well, and that remedy is Electric Bitters: a medicine that is medicine for stomach and liver troubles and for run down condi tion." says W. C. Kieitler of Haliday Dlecirio Bitters purify and enrich the blood, tone up the nerves, and impart vigor and energy to the weak Your money will be refunded if it fails to help you. 50c at Nrshvillo Drug Co, - . , Nswspapirt SavtatheDay There was no real basis for a panic and yet the public seemed to demand panic. How then was the terrifying situation ameliorated and the coun try saved from a financial wreck of tremendous proportions? Not by a knowledge of the conditions for the public had that and. threw it to the winds. A simple declaration of fear on the part of a score of depositors was enough to start a run on any bank. Institutions were tempting on every hand, not because of unsound ness, but because of the inability of any bank to liquidate all its libilities on a moment's notice. And yet where millions talked of ruin; and fought madly for deposits in October and November, the same millions in De cember spoke lightly of the late fi nancial flurry. How was this finan cial starvation stayed? Simply by the iteration and reiteration of the true conditions, in the light of which a panic unwarranted. And by whom was the truth hammered homo? By the American press. And yet there are bankers whose institutions were saved that do not believe enough in the American press to believe that it could help to bring them deposits and increase their bu siness. Appleton's Magazine. NORTH CAROLINA WOMAN 132. Bora Before Declaration of Indepon donee and Now Living. At the great age of 132, Mrs. L. Kilcrease, living at Pine Mill, near here, celebrated her birthday today. It is believed she is the oldest white person in the world. - She was born February 18, 1776, in Halifax county, North Carolina, and lived there 100 years before she came with her fam ily to Texas. Her daughter aged 98, and grand-daughter, aged 63, live with her. ' Mrs. Kilcrease shows records in a f amilv Bible corroborating her state ment as to her age and investigations have proved them correct. She still enjoys good health and is able. by the use of a cane, to walk about the house. She saw George Washington, her recollection of incidents she wit nessessed a century and a quarter ago is marvelous and she likes to re late stories of those stirring times. A Pathetic Story. That was a most pathetic story the New York papers told on Sunday. A paper hanger by the i name of Sackman, aged twenty-six," with a wife and year-old baby, tramped the streets three months in an unsucess- ful s earch for work, and how in di rest poverty they starved to death in their miserable room. " In the richest city in America, where idle young men spend enough for a bouquet to buy food sufficient to last three persons a week a young man willing to work and his wife and baby die in the agonies of cold and starvation? New York is , great and rich, but contains more misery than any other city on the continent. ' Judge threatens Blind Tiger Patrons. While holding a special term of the Federal Court in Raleigh last week, Judge Boyd intimated from the' bench that if parties who buy liquor from blind tigers are brought before him under indictment from the grand jury he will impose sen tences in keeping with the sentences meted out to the blind tiger men themselves. The position of Judge Boyd is that one who by buying a drink procures the breaking of the law is himself guilty of breaking the law. sW.i - There is no question that the pat ron of an unlawful institution is an aider and abetter in violations of the law, Exchange. , Marked for Death. "Three years ago I was marked for death. A grave-yard cough was tearing my lungs to pieces.- Doctors failed to help me, and hope had fled when my husband got Dr. King's New Discovery," says Mrs. A. C. Williams, of Bao' Ky. "The fiirst dose helped me and improvement kept on until I had gained 58 pounds in weight and my health was fully restored." This medicine holds the world's healing record for coughs and colds and lung and throat diseases. It ' preyens pneu monia' Sold under guarantee at Nashville Drug store. 50c and tl.00 Trial bottle free. For Cash OUR STOCK Is Not Limited to High Grade Furni ture alone, but among the many ; things we carry also Corn, Oats, Hay and Mill ' Feed ,. ' V Car Load of Hay Just Received! We handle three of the leading brands of FLO U R ; "Red Feather," "Harter's A." and "Dunlop" In Groceries We have a full and complete Line cm bracing everything essential for the family meal. . What Do You Need In This Line? Dozier & Jones, Two Doors West of Bank of Nashville. Don't Forget We're Headquarters For Furniture! A So::.i Car THE-B A INK - OR - NASHVILLE. I S. F. AUST IN, Pres. S. G. GRIFFIN, Vice-Pres. w. G. DOZIER, Cashier, t I MS i I 3 i after f-Tmr 1 Interest Paid on u n D.oys.suus At Cost! We have on hand 40 suits boys clothinjr the latest styles which we will sell at p prime cost. Our reason for doing this; we are going out of the clothing business r All $2.25 suits All 3.00 suits All 3.50 suits All 3.75 suits All 4.00 suits All S.COsits All G.COsdts 1 On Time. Just Received Consult The Officers ui. una uaim on any Question in volving money. They are always ready to consult and advise. The Bank of Nashville is a bank for everybody who re ceives and pays out money. It invites you to deposit your funds with it and pay your bills with checks. The advantage of so do ing will be more and more appa rent with every transaction wheth er your affairs be large or small. Time Deposits. Den. i will go at $1.50. will go at 2,C0. will go at wi!l goat will go at v;i:iroat will cd at 2.25. 2. SO. 2 7r- Or 5