Prorrrcssivo Merchants The Trading Public t i Um Oaj lAc Advertising Column For Kaau's lit Liberally Patronize Merchant Who B4 For Tba Trade ..-. i -..4- li 11 ii It Reaches Tho People rl ill: .J .-Hi,. I- Watch For Tho Bidders The Nashville Publishing Co.,Publlshers. ' : ':.. ' ' ESTABLISHED 1883. j 7 ' ' ' ."! " ' '' M. W, LINCKE, Editor and Manat?, VOL. XVII. - l . NASHVILLE, North Carolina, MAItCII, 23rd, 1911. :"s't:: ''U. t 'Cf : 'V; NO. U i ' Professional Cards. Jaa. P. Battle : Thou, J, Dean Cattle & Dean Physicians and Surgeoa) ' NaahvBle, N. C . Offer their profeuloBal lerTlaoa to Um pauple ol Manviiie aaa iiuTuuDOinff eonntlca 1'niaipl attrition girea all call, day . s or mgni Offlon looatad la mar of Want Ora Co., . Pfaonaa Nm, 70 84 FRANK A. HAMPTON. Attorney-At-Law, V OppOMlva Poetoffloe, Rocky Mount, North Carolioa. - 0. M T. mONTAIH. K. T. FOOIfTAW, Fountain & Fountain. - r - Attorneys-At-Law. Rocky Mount, N. C ' Office Sod Boor 5 Point Drug Store. Practice lo all the courts, - . .. Dr. C. F. Smithson. DENTIST. ; Office Over Kyser's Drug Store. Rocky Mount. N. C '. I :'" " DR. F. 6. CHAMBLEE ,.' ' DENTIST. ,', Spring Hope. N. C. f Office In Spring Hope Banking Co. Building : ' I J.P.BUNN. f F.S.SPRUILL. i : Rooky Moont. - - " loaiabai-f . BUNN 4 SPRUllL, : Attoroeys and CouajeJIorsit-UW. ' WUl btla NasarUla arerr'ant Moadar S. P. AUSTIN, K B.QRANTHAM, Na-bTllle, . o. KockjMoaBt.. c. AUSTIN & CRANTBAM; ; LAWYERS. t'roinptaHeotloDKlven toall matters A. WOOUAKD, . W. L. THORPE. WlUoa. Rooky Moaat , ' ' B. A. UROOK.8. NaahTMe, N. IJ. - VVOODARD, THORPE ft BROOKS. LAWYERS. Offices: Nashville aud SprlnK Hope. Oflloo la Grand imi Building. W. A. Vixen. - Wllaon. Laos T. VAtb3Ba NaiTlll ' ' , FINCH & VAUGHAN, Attoroeys And Counsellors-at-Law ' Prompt attention jfi veo to all matters entrusted to our cure. Offioe In Grand Jury Building. - K J. Babmbs, O. P. Dickinson BARNES & DICKINSON, ' Attorneys and Connsellors-At-Law Wllaon, N.C. " Practice in Nuah, Wilson, State and Federal courts. Offloe orer Saringa Bank. ' " . . T. T.ROSS, Dentist, Spring Hope. N. C Office In New Finch Culldlnc Will be in my office every Wednes- day, Thursday, Friday and - , ; Saturday. NaahviMo Office at residence Where I can be found ; M0NDAT AHD TOEBDAT ' , Cu..Cu, Fk.. & Co., Undertakers aVi.ilWMaa.lwl a ' Polite and Courteou3 Atten tion Rendered : Day Phone 312; r:''.t 236, 124 Tarbcro and Vachir jton ts Rcclcy I!our.t, N. C. Attorney eni Cc-r.. .:;r At Law, ka. - Pr ct!5 til All Cf i-rlJ :.( or ia Sud Floor 'ew C a I. uUuiug la I' r of Court F ')Ha 1 ..r t " i i . j MOTCLSS TIIE9 TO SELL EAEES. Tate HUlUa Calaoae Affactal By I FaaUao. Washington, March 15. Recent advices from pestilence ' stricken China hart caused great activity and alarm in official and semi official cir cles Grave fears are entertained for the aafetv of the American colony m Pekln and other large Chinese cities, and diplomatic circles have been stir red to their depths by reports from that plague ridden land which bode ill for all those detained within its boundaries. ' Through semi-official sources it be came knowB,today that the recent appeal of President Taft, hereof the Red Cross Society In America, for funds to allev!i , suffering in China, was due to aai:. "i reports from that country sU! : r that three mil lion Chinese are ected by famine and plague, two millions of whom are dying for lack of food, and that while deaths, so far, have been few among Europeans the bond of pesti lence and famine was ever drawing closer to the community 1 of' whites, who are compelled In the country. The appeal for aid issued by the President in behalf of the American Red Cross, has brought In over S33,- 000, of which $8,000 were invested in food supplies and hurriedly shipped to China from Seattle, aboard the United States army transport Buford, on March 6th. The remainded of the sum collected, over 125,000, was cabled to Consul General Wilder, at Shanghi, by Secretary of State Knox! It is said that the money has already been distributed by the consul jren eral among the relief societies oper ating in the famine district ; Mr. Cochrane, an American medi cal missionary of the Presbyterian church, reported, that in the district where he was at work the most con servative estimate was that .80,000 were in dire d is trees, and that in the whole afflicted region to say there were two million starving would be nearer the mark than an estimate of one million. ' The following b a summary of the official census. Of the first class, those who had plenty, there were 2,826 families, totalling 18,995 people. Of the second class, those who could sustain themselves until harvest, there were 83,712' families, contain ing 209,937 souls. Of the third class, those who would require aid with in a month there were 23,793 families, containing 156,301 persons. Of the fourth class, the absolutely destitute, there were 89,431 families, including 197,681 persons. The famine is the direct result of the great flood which inundated the provinces of Kinag-Su and Anhui last summer, ruining the crops. ' Conse quently there was no harvest, and the supply of food on hand was suffi cient to sustain the people until . the harvest of the coming summer. : "During the first days of the fam ine," said Secretary McGee, "moth ers endeavored to sell their , babies to provide food for themselves, and save their other children from star vation. Now they are trying to give the children away in the hope that those to whom the babies are given will be able to' feed them. Along the banks of the Grand Canal the victims of this terrible calamity are living in mud and water,' with only j shacks of matting over their heads, hoping against hope that they may exist until boats bearing the necessi ties of life come up the canal to re lieve their distress, . v "The plague is creeping southward towards the famine district. , It has already ravaged Manchuria " and thousands of refugees, who have Bed to Chefoo, in Chantung Provice, have carried the dred scourge with them. Hundreds of deaths occur da;!y The frozen grou:: J prevents the burial of the dead, r:.J long rows of co!7ns lie on the roa !. ' !a. Per sons stricken with the jh'rue are ijv2 ty the thousand, er.J it is cf so fiUi a rrtara that its victhrs Cs qmL'y. TI.8 people lave at f t c-r',-.t:J to V 9 crc cf tl.s to." 3 eft 3 i' 'i3 vLl' '3 r; ! t!..e ':-" ' i! . iJitc. Jl la " v 1 f.-o-it! a chr-j.'j, wou'J la IL' t'l c" '-' "it? t!.9 I ' j c;- 3 c V 'id I a eft' a vi 3. ' Bemwlal te.Beild. The advantages of borrowing from an association are worth word or two. For one thing, a man with a loan mortgage sleeps nights, for as long as he keeps up his month ly payments his loan cannot be called; whereas, when money is bor rowed from an individual, there is always the chance that the lender may suddenly ask for. his capital, and it will be necessary to go out seeking another lender, perhaps In time of stringency, and tu pay the legal fees for a new mortgage, and perhaps a premium or a higher- rate of interest. Again, the home bought under a building association mortgage will be good value, for the association's appraising committee probably includes a practical builder and the amount of money loaned is governed by the solid character of the property. As the borrower can not get enough on mortgage to make an extravagant purchase, he will not overload himself in taking on the oblbfation. . v ' Some of the largest associations have never foreclosed a mortgage, indicating that the amount of the monthly payment each borrower can meet has been shrewdly gauged. Futhermore, in buying through' a building and loan association the purchaser of a borne has the counsel of men 7 thoroughly experienced in every detail of . real-estate trans- j fers and careful to see that there art no "jokers" or . neglected points in the deal. - The" average loan committee in one of these associations may be trusted fur ther In real-estate knowledge, than even an experienced fealty at torney. The latter looks chiefly to points of law; the loan men look be yond the law and into the human nature of the deal For a building and kme aosedation S essentially a j human-nature institution.-Satur day Evening Post. A Child's Ida. Unfamiliarity with money gives ; children a queer idea of the value of I certain coins. A 60-cent piece drop-1 Ped from the pocket of a visitor in a downtown school and was returned by a smalt girl with the remark; THere sir, is your $10." ! The man laughed id spite of him self, but the teacher looked sad. ; -Poor little things, she said." ''How can yon expect them to know any better? They never see a piece of money bigger than a quarter. They are as sharp as a coin collector on cents, nickels, dimes and quarters and can almost tell the date" across the room, but a piece of money big ger than that is such a parity in their homes that they are apt to call any thing from one to a hundred dollars "When I first took charge of this class there wasn't a child in the room who could name the denomination of a coin above a quarter. They had heard of big money, but had never seen it They have had several les sons In identifying Uncle Sam's money, but that particular girl hap pened to be absent, so it is not. so strange that she should take your half dollar for $10." Boston Herald Half Algal Aad Balf AalaaaL My idea of a boy? He is half an gel and half animal; he Is wideawake all night camping out, but falls to sleep in church; he is superstitious, giving a dandelion, three puffs to see if his mother wants him; he carries a lucky stone in his pocket; he cures warts by burying a dish-rag; burnt feathers,: pins, and father's barn make a whole day's show: he stones the dogs, but' will work for hours over a dog that limps with a broken leg to the back door; no kinder heart ever cared for a motherless lamb; he disturbs family worship, but who makes us think more of heaven when he kneels and prays? He is half an- ol and half animal. Sydney Has t::::onscr Friends. I ovr wouU' you I. lie to number you rfricndr ty'tiii'.iionVas Buck 's Aroioaf ..ive docs? Its astound- ion lX n v t c; s ii t frty ye rs hi sulye in the : c. 1 fi'.re bru! l f. r ; ',. ' t ' i. I .1 f r f -. I !. u BAD FOR THE PEACH CIOP.? :: -.--r.'- Jr :f:-Vli; Lest At Seataara flaws Rasartad Te Be S40.9M , j "It looks very unfavarable for1 the peach crop Iri North Carolina," said State Horticulturist W. N. Hutt. yesterday afternoon. "Mr. J. Van Lindley, whom I saw stated that; his crop at Southern Pines was damaged to the extent of $40 000," , Mr. Hutt stated further that Mr. S. B. Shaw; his assistant, reported the crop in jured In the . vicinity of Statesville. As to the apple crop, it has not been injured by the present cold spell, as the blooms of the apple trees "are notyetfuH. v. The cold wave reached here in .full force yesterday morning at 7 o'clock, when the temperature fell to 24 de grees. A special cold wave predic tion was sent out from Washington Wednesday afternoon at three o'clock to the effect that the temperature would fall SOdegrees within 24 tor 36 hours.-"- ': yi. ' . The lowest tempera! ure on record on or after the 16th of March : oc curred on the 16th, 1800, when the thermometer registered 20 degrees. The temperature 'yesterday , was 18 degrees below normal. - ?' . The freexing line yesterday morn ing extended into Geogia, and in parts of New York zero was almost reached, The lowest temperature in North Carolina occurred at Ashe ville, where the thermometer regis tered 14 degrees! -News & Observer aaralUfe Sckoals. ' The bill providing for the estab lishment of "Rural Life" schools is, as we said last week, one of the few constructive measures the late Legis lature had te.ita Credit "-A brief synopsis of the provisions of .the bill may be of interest, not only to North Carolina farmers, but also to those; in other States,. ! i " Twenty-five thousand- dollars an nually is made available by the State for the support of ten of these schools, $2,50c to each school. Be fore the State funds can be had, however, the country or township in which' the school is located must fur nish buildings and equipment, in cluding dormitory room for at least 25 boys and 25 girls,' and an arable farm of at least 25 acres. Thecoun-1 ty and townships also required to contribute at least $2,500 per year ! for the support of the school. Pro vision is made" for bond issues by counties and townships wishing these schools, and their control is vested in a board of trustees, one member from each township in the county, with the County Superintendent as Secretary of the Board. The State Superintendent must inspect and approve all buildings and equip ment. ' - The course of study differs from that of the ordinary high school chiefly in the greater attention giv en to agriculture and related sub jects and to domestic science. ,- In deed, it may fairly be said that the courses of study for such schools are yet to be worked out. i ; f i To insure a truly rural atmosphere, provision is made that the schools shall not be located in towns 'of more than 1,000 inhabitants,' nor hearer than three miles to a town of more than 5,000 people, except that buildings already constructed in such towns may be used if suitably located, , ' , We hope to see the ten schools provided for in this bill established at an early date, and feel sure that they will cmtribute greatly to the State's agricultural progress- . Mr. Cobb, who introduced the bill in the Senate, goes back to his county en thusiastic over the foundation of a school there; and as progressive Robesson will now have a County Commissioner of Agriculture, giving all his time to the development of the county's farming interests, we may expect to see it become even more prosperous and advanced than at present Progressive Parmer. " Kills a Murderer. A merciless murderer is appendi citis with many victims, but Dr. Uio'j's New Life Pills kill it by pre vention. They gently stimulate the j;-.)irch, liver aad bowe's, prevent L ; t t clogging that invites ep- curing eon' ,! . ' 1 -", i n-'- I j it v.' j I .'-;0. ; Me Base Fraai Law. A big gathering of tobacco farm' ers at Danville on Thursday resolved to follow the example of the tobacco growers of Kentucky and pool their tobacco. The speakers paid their respects to the American Tobacco Company, which has the farmers at their mercy. The statement was made in the meeting that Kentucky farmers made a branch of the trust pay eighteen cents a pound for their crop by pooling, and it was stated that before the tobacco was pooled the same grade of tobacco had been bringing only five cents. Mr. Fort, a speaker from Kentucky, referred to the United States government and its battleships, also their sailing around the world, and scaring the different nations; of how the govern ment can convict a poor man, but says they can't touch a man worth a million; that if he was convicted the skilled doctors of the land would ex amine his head and swear that he was insane, " He also stated the farmers of Virginia and North Caro lina should get together, be men, and stick- ' 1 ' . - The tobacco farmers . of North Carolina have come to the resolution that as to any help by the State, none Is now in sight. They listened with approval to the severe roasts of. the tobacco trust by men now high in office and they thought the strong arm of the State would protect them from the robbing trust that) has grown rich while paying them star vation prices for their crops. But they saw that the harsh criticisms and earnest pledge to put trust mag- nates in stripes was merely for cam paign purposes, and not to carry out. Therefore, the farmers are organ izing on their own hook to fight for fair prices. ,-r ."' It is a disgrace to the government that a trust "can "take from the mouth of labor the bread it has earned," without even being prose cuted. It shows that the Trusts are bigger than the People, and that Greed governs where Justice should reign. - ; , : The day will come when tobacco farmers will not have to fight their own battles for a fair field without help from the arm of the law, but as long as the Trusts are in the saddle as at present, they must either fight by organization or submit to con tinued robbery. News & Observer. Temperance Farces Saeali Raspeae. 'i The North Carolina Anti-Saloon League has just closed its legislative campaign. The near-beer nuisance has been made illegal after the first of July, 1911, and the anti-club liquor bill is already in effect. As to the efficiency of the latter, we are not exactly clear in our minds. , The dentists ' evidently drew some teeth and they thought they bad done some efficient doctoring; but it was the best be ' could get through the. Legislature, and the Superin tendent says that' it'- y will.- "hot allow clubs to handle liquor in any shape."' In securing this legislation the Anti-Saloon League did a good deal of work and necessarily entailed considerable expense. A special call is being issued to - the churches to contribute to the liquidation of the debt thus incurred, Suid we trust the call will meet with a generous response. Christian Advocate. f "Gains' Seats" The recently appointed Chief Jus tice is a pretty good story-teller. He was formerly a Louisiana sugar planter, and this is one of the stories attributed to him: ''. v' " " ' ' Two negroes on a Louisiana plan tation became involved in a row with another Ethiopian who was handy with a gun. The two started to run about the time the bad man began to shoot The fleeing ones had pro ceeded about a hundred yards when the following dialogue occurred: . "Sam, you hear dat bullet?", v "Yes, I hearn it-two t: "How you mean two t ask ed the questioner, as he quickened his pace.': ','"' . " "I hearn dat bullet once when it passed me, and den e- . ' r, t'3 when I r -i it." j , 1 out f . between short tret'. 3. I'cw Y. t.:'. . - . TOE COCA COLA HEAIIN0. Isperts Testily As Te The Prfrttos , Of The Baveraja. , . , , Chattanooga, Tenn., March 15. Iu the hearing of the case of the United States against a certain num ber of barrels and kegs of Coca-Cola, in the Federal Court here today, some of the most interesting testimony yet brought out was given by Dr. Ly man F. Kebler, chief of the Bureau of Chemistry, Washington, ' D. C. Dr. Kebler is the chemist who made a test of Coca-Cola, ' and today he testified that Coca-Cola contains caf feine, and declared that to each- ounce glass there was one and one fourth grains of caffeine, which he says is poison. '- V ' . Dr. Kebler cited many eminent authorities in proof of his statement that caffeine is a poison, and refer red to a number of deaths reported as being caused by its use. One of the writers had reported ' a case where four and one-half grains of the drug had produced death, and he declared that about three glasses of Coca-Cola contained this amount of caffeine. Government chemists stated that Coca-Cola contained neither cocoa nor kola, and the effort of the gov ernment was to prove that the drink is miabranded. Dr. Kebler testified as to the find ing of vermin and bugs in the vats, as the result of his inspection of the Coca-Coca plant in Atlanta He fur ther testified that caramel and brown sugar were added, and, because of their opaqueness, tended to conceal impurities in the Coca-Cola syrup. A BaralBf Saaaae. There was a time in the good old State of North Carolina when only the very rich could commit the crime of murder and come out of the cru cible of the courts unscratched. . If the present tendency of our courts continues, the time will come when any poor devil will be able to kill his enemy, have a farce trial, be acquit ted and have his name enrolled in that peculiar hall of fame frequent ed by criminals and near-criminals. Human life is entirely too cheap in Davidson county. How long will court trials continue to be a mere farce in murder cases where the de fendant, or his people, happen 1 to have a little money? Lexington Dispatch. .-,,., , ,.. ... The Bride's LeeX. A girl about to be married wor ries so much she begins to look like an old married woman. ' In addition to worrying about her clothes and coaxing her folks to give her a new outfit, she sits up too late with her young man, and the result is an anx ious, careworn look a week before the wedding that cannot be told from the look on the face of a wo man who has been married a year or two. Look at the next girl you meet who is soon to be married and you will remark that she has "aged rapidly." Atchison Globe . Texas 0 ale as. ' Mr. D. A. Walker of San Antonio owns and operates six onion farms, aggregating 300 acres, near Asher ton and Cotulla, Tex. ' According to the San Antonio Daily Express, Mr. Walker expects to gather from 200 acres of his farm in April and May 4,000,000 pounds ' of onions,' which will require 100 cars to get them to market. .The farms are irrigated, each one having a qumping station and an earthen reservoir with a ca pacity of 6,000,000 gallons of water, tenant-bouse and packing and stor age sheds Manufacturers Record. A Fierce Mint Alarm is the hoarse, startling cough of a cblld. suddenly attack? t by croup Often it aroused Lewis C '-mfn of Manchester, O., (EL R. no I) f r their four children were i . y subject to croup. '' ' ' s .i i severe atiabts' he wrc .3 j afraid they would d!o, but s rroveil wbot a certain r lark's K;"v 1 ' ,:.:3very !?, r ' t) I ..r. V r '7 fa it f r ' i f ? ; v ' ' ) i t PROTECTION In cold, unassuming" figures, here is our guarantee to every , depositor, regardless of the a mount he may have in this bank Caaiul - . . . $ioo,000 Serelcs fraAta SS,000 SteckkeMersUak. $100,000 TU1 $155,000 .' $235,000.00, that amount stands between your deposit and any possible loss." This bank' wants your business.' Four Per Cent Interest paid on Savings deposits j Compounded Qurterly : ' The Planters Bank, v Rocky Mount, N. C. Cure Those Chills Quinine, hot-water' bottles and . blankets usually constitute tho treatment when suffering from Chills. Such treatment will un- , doubtedly do some good, but ' the benefit received is only tem porary.. The pores should be , kept open, perspiration induced all pains and aches removed and thesystem rid of malarial poison .Nyai's -- - V Chill Tonic Was devised for that very pur pose, it does it, too. It is pleas ant and easily taken, does not contain quinine, is much more effective and there are no un pleasant after effects. It not only rids the system of the ma- . ( larial poisons it purifies the blood, strengthens it and builds up the broken down body tissues - '. 50c a bottle.'' The Ward Drug Go. Exclusive Agents In Nashville. NEW BARBER SHOP Equipped with Latest Improved Fixtures and every modern appliance for furnishing my patrons . with the Very Best Service. - Sharp Razors, Clean and Sterilized Towels, Choicest Face Lotions, Powders and flair Tonics With over eleven years experience .: in the business I feel confident ' of giving entire satisfaction. - I Will Appreciate Your Patronage Very truly yours, G.F.C00LEY,N2shYi:!eNC .Opposite The Graphic oiiice, Next door to B. H. B, Vester's. I!:v2Yc:r I!:::: Covered ivith For A:i::-:3cI7i-r.:r.3. C., ........, i ......... , v . . ,A r 4 T: