THE OMMONW A Family Newspaper: For the Promotion of the Political Social, Agricultural and Commercial Interests of the People Q rrs a rr ft iw VOLUME XXXIII. "BIRTK OP A NATION" HERE IN NOVEMBER Mr. R. J. Madry, proprietor of the new opera house, announced this morn ing that he had booked D. W. Griffith's great photo-play, "Birth of a Nation" for three performances, commencing Monday night, November 6th. On November 6th. On November 7th there will be a matinee. The booking agency through which Mr. Madry has engaged this splendid picture guaran tees that the picture will be complete in every detail, even to the twelve-piece orchestra and extra picture machine, with lots of special scenery, etc. It is not announced as yet what admis sion price will be charged. In talking with a reporter this morn ing. Mr. Madry said: "You may tell the people through your paper that my new place will be ready for business not later than September 20th." "While there has been nothing definite estab lished yet as to the name and nature of the first attraction, Mr. Madry said that he was considering several good comedies and dramas. "You might say that I am strongly considering Billie Clifford in the celebrated farce comedy, 'Linger Longer Lucy,' " continued Mr. Madry. "This troupe, which consists of a lady orchestra and band with a strong supporting company appeals to me." Among other attractions which Mr. Madry is considering booking this fall are: "Mutt & Jeff's Wedding," "Bring ing up Father in Politics," DeRue Bros., Ideal Minstrels," the musical farce comedy, "Some Baby," and Co burn 's Greater Minstrels. It is impossible just yet to fix a date for any of these attractions. But is is practically certain that the "Birth of a Nation" will appear here as above stated. Regarding the seating arrangements Mr. Madry stated that he had bought the very best obtainable. In fact, to quote him, "I sent all the way to Chi co to get a man to come here and measure or these . scats. ' ' . On . the main lower floor there will be 439 chairs of the latest type, exclusive of boxes. There will be two aisles, one on the right and one on the left. All told there will be a little in excess of 700 seats in the house. Mr. Sauerwald is completing the scenery this week, and same will be hung immediately. All of his work is excellent. As soon as practicable the Common wealth will announce the exact dates of the many attractions which Mr. Madry will play at his theatre this fall and winter at' intervals of ten days or two weeks. TWICE-A-WEEK PORD SERVICE STATION POR SCOTLAND NECK SCOTLAND NECK, H. O, FRIDAY, AUGUST 25, 1916. READ IT Vv - IN THIS PAPER NUMBER 56. The Commonwealth has just learned that a Ford Ser vice Station will be opened up here on Sept. 1st under the firm name of Scot land Neck Motor Co. This new enter prise will be a branch of and under the supervision of the Barnes-Gregory Mo tor Co., of Weldon, and Mr. J. C. Tilgh man of Weldon will be the local man ager. It is also announced that the Ford Motor Company is now making a new model can In fact, the model is so much changed that the new car will hardly be recognized. The 1917 model will have stream line hood, black ra diator and nickel radiator cap, the ra diator being much larger than the old brass type which has caused so much criticism. No brass will appear on the new car, the hub caps even being nickel plated. In connection with the Ford line, this new concern will handle the New Oak land Light Six, and will carry in stock a large supply of genuine Ford parts and accessories. NO COMMUTATION FOR MILLER AND WIGGINS MBS. DORSETT FROM NORTH CAROLINA IS PERFECT AS MODEL Daughter of Mountain Farmer Is Much Sought After By Artists. Washington, Aug. 24. Mrs. Samuel T. Dorsett, whose husband came here from Asheville several years ago, is de scribed in the Washington Times of to day as a model for artists. The local paper prints a striking looking picture of Mrs. Dorsett. "American womanhood for American allegorical figures in art appears to be the slogan of the artists of the country, said the Times. "This statement is made in view of the fact that has just come to the light revealing the identity of the model for the Junoesque figures in Paul Bartlett'f pediment for the House of Represen-, tatives wing of the Capitol building as! a North Carolina farmer's daughter who is not a professional model. "Mrs. Dorsett is the model. She is the wife of a prosperous Washington real estate broker and makes her home in this city. Because of her majestic figure and perfect proportions she has attracted the attention of many artists and has posed for them to be preserved in marble or on canvass, as the case, may be, several times. "Mrs. Dorsett is the daughter of Captain John Milton Thrash, of North Carolina, and she was reared on a farm on the sides of Mt. Mitchell the high est mountain on the American continent east of the Rockies. "The section of the country from which Mrs. Dorsett hails is called the 'Sapphire Country,' because many gems of that kind are found there and the deep blue flash of the sapphire is re flected in the clear blue eyes of the young woman whom artists have called a living Brumhilde a ' Daughter of the Gods. ' 'Mrs. Dorsett is just an inch short of six feet tall. Artists have said she is perfectly proportioned. Her full figure i adorns the diplomas of award bestowed SIX CAR-LOADS MATERIAL AT R. R. STATION .Six solid car loads of material, con sisting of cast-iron pipe, galvanized pipe, pig lead, jute, pumps, and many other accessories for the Scotland Neck waterworks and sewer system, arrived yesterday and will be unloaded as soon as practical. As stated in these columns some days ago, the superintendent of construction, Mr. W. A. Coates, was here and will personally superintend the work of get ting the material in shape, so as to pro ved with the work as soon as the tific cessary tools arrive. It is said that the giant ditching machine will be here in a few days at the very latest, and that the work of excavating will be started. Other material will arrive from time to time and the work will be pushed rapidly to completion. A large force of workmen will also arrive from other towns where the J. B. McCrary Co., nave been installing similar systems. It is not known definitely as yet just where excavation will begin. WARBENTON DISTRICT SUN DAY SCHOOL CONFERENCE METHODIST E. CHURCH SOUTH Weldon, N. C. September 11-12, 1916. Monday Night 8 o'clock Devotional Service Address "The Wesley Bible Move ment" Eev. W. C. Owen Address "The Teacher's Ideals" Mr. J. M. Way. Appointment of Committees Tuesday Morning 9 o'clock Devotional Service Sunday School Work in the Warren ton District By Eev. J. D. Bundy Elementary Work Miss Minnie E. Kennedy RAILROAD MEN STILL TRYING MANY PLANS Washington, August 24. Objections which developed tonight at a meeting of railroad presidents and managers, to points in the tentative plan devel oped by the committee of eight presi dents considering ways to avoid the threatened strike, resulted in a further postponement of final action. The conference adjourned to meet ALLIES MAKING SLIGHT GAINS ON SOMME PRONT again tomorrow, and, as one president Open Conference Led By Miss Ken- Phrased it, the situation is such "that Graham County Murderers to Pay Death Penalty Sept. 1. s Asheville, N. C, Aug. 23. Governor Craig today denied the plea of com mutation of sentence for Merritt Mil ler and Hardy Wiggins, under sentence of death for the murder of Phillip Phillips, of Graham county. The men had been granted reprieve until Sep tember 1, and will be executed on that date, unless the Governor grants an other respite. The prisoners were said l l. 1 1 1 x 1 T iu nave ueiuutcu iu a Kanir ui wmen y.,r i, T. T . S- by the panama-Paeific Exposition as ' 1 ' the majestic allegorical fie-nre nf Van. ama. This was made from a photograph and engraved by the head engraver of the Bureau of Engraving and Printing WAR RISK INSURANCE BUREAU BRINGS PROFIT TO TREASURY More Than 1,500 Policies Issued Since Its Establishment. Washington, Aug. 13. Since its es tablishment nearly two years ago the bureau of war risk insurance has brought a net profit to the Treasury Department of $2,237,859. Secretary McAdoo so announced today in mak ing public reductions in rates on sev eral classes of insurance for American steam vessels and non-contraband car goes. More than 1,500 policies have been issued by the bureau, covering a total of .$141,415,302 insurance. Known loss es have amounted to $771,329, and of this $58,811 has been recovered in sal vage. At present the bureau has out standing total risks of about $11,000,-000. was the leader. Williams is serving a life term for the murder of three other members of the Phillips family. Governor Craig issued a lengthy statement giving his reasons for refus ing" to commwfce"" the sentences of the! two men, his principal reason being that Phillips, after being shot, had tied the mule he was" Tiding, and when his daughter found him, told her that it was no use to go for a doctor, that he was dying and that Merritt Miller and Hardy Wiggins had attacked him, Miller shooting him. He described where they had stood, and repeated his assertion on several occasions be fore his death. This, coupled to the fact that he was shot from behind a log where the assassins were concealed and that blood hounds trailed the two men to some extent, followed by their conviction and the refusal of the Su preme Court to set aside the verdict, the Governor says, leads him to refuse to commute the sentences of the two men to life imprisonment. MURDERER IS CAUGHT AFTER FORTY-FOUR YEARS ODD FELLOWS TO MEET IN DURHAM NEXT YEAR Grand Encampment Elects Officers and Adjourns. CLAIMS ALLIES' NAVAL LOSSES ARE GREATER Berlin, August 22, via London, Aug. 23. The German admiralty issued to day a statement asserting that the loss es of the British and the French navies in line of battleships anu cruisers to August 1 comprised seventy-two ves sels, with a total displacement of 496, 050 tons. The German losses in the same class es during the same period were twenty five warships with a total of 62,667 tons. It was stated that the list of the British and French warships includ ed only those losses which definitely had been established. WOMAN IS EXECUTED AS SPY IN MARSEVILLE, FRANCE Paris, Aug. 23. The execution of a woman as a spy is reported today in a Havas dispatch from Marseille. According to this information, Felice Pfaat was'put to death yesterday at the Lighthouse Shooting Range, having been convicted of espionage by the council of war of the fifteenth region. Ealeigh, N. C, Aug. 23. Durham gets the 1917 session of the North Car olina Grand Encampment, I. O. O. F., that city having been selected in the closing hours of the convention here to day. New officers elected and install ed were: ' Grand Patriarch, T. A. Greenleaf, Elizabeth City; grand high priest, Col. J. C. Besant, Winston-Salem, grand wardens, J. D. Berry, Ealeigh, and John L. Wade, Fayetteville; grand scribe, L. W. Jearneret, Asheville; grand treas urer, John E. Wood, Wilmington; grand marshal, O. W, Jones, Winston-Salem: grand sentinels, Winston Davis, Ealeigh and T. W. Phillips, Washington; grand representative, W. B. Bagwell, Durham. The grand encampment turned over to trustees of the Odd Fellows ' Orphan age, Goldsboro, funds raised for erec tion of a modern dairy barn. With Grand Patriarch W. B. Bag well, of Durham, presiding, the sixty- ninth annual grand encampment of the North Carolina Odd Fellows convened in Odd Fellows hall here last night and completed the preliminary work ready for the business of the session to be taken up this morning. Ihe encamp ment will be in progress through Fri day of this week. There was the con ferring of the degrees on a number of candidates last night and also the ap pointment of the working committees for the convention. The Jkncampment is meeting here instead of Asheville, on account of the flood damage to rail way transportation. here. J 'Mrs. Dorsett lived in the Sapphire Country r most of her life and hhe 53 still well in her twenties. She grew up on the farm. She knows how to ride and shoot and has spent most of her life in the open. A few years ago she went to Florida for a winter visit and at one of the big hotels was introduced to a foreign nobleman, an artist, who was painting pictures in this country. He was struck by her beauty and her unusual figure, and requested her to pose for him. She complied more as a laifchan anything else. The picture was a great success. "After her marriage, Mrs. Dorsett met the late Max Weyl, the landscape painter, and Mr. Weyl, asked her to pose for him. He was painting a pic ture of her to prove his ability at fi gure painting and portraiture. He was engaged on this picture when he died. Paul Bartlett, the sculptor, met her through another artist, and asked her to pose for the figures to be used on the House of Representatives pediment. She appears as the great figure in the center of the pediment and as the wo man sitting at the spinning wheel in the center of the left of the pediment. "While these figures were being made S. Y. Turner, the mural painter, met Mrs. Dorsett and at his request she posed for a number of figures in his famous mural decorations for the State capital at Madison, Wisconsin." Mrs. Dorsett is "well known here and in North Carolina. Andy Wise, Charged With Killing Man in Buncombe 44 Years Ago, Arrested. Asheville, Aug. 24. After eluding the officers for 44 years, Andy Wise, a white man, charged with the murder of John Eogers, father of Steve Sogers, of this county, has been arrested at William son, W. Va., according to a telegram received by Sheriff E. M. Mitchell this morning. Immediately after the alleged mur der, Sheriff Mitchell states, Wise was arrested by Sheriff Plemmons, who was sheriff of Buncombe county at that time, and was brought to Asheville to be placed in ther county jail. Sheriff Plemmons drove up to the old countv courthouse with his prisoner, and as he was preparing to hitch his horse to the hitching post, the alleged murderer made a break for "liberty, and had not been wea nor berd of since bv" a W f the succeeding sheriffs in the interven ing 44. years, until Steve Rogers, the sou of the murdered man, rushed into Sheriff Mitchell's office on April 1st, stating that Andy Wise, the man who had killed his father, had been seen in the French Broad neighborhood. Sheriff Mitchell procured an automobile and hastened immediately to French Broad township, only to find that Wise had caught the train out of Alexander the morning before. After getting a good inscription of Wise, from the persons who saw him on his brief stay, Sheriff Mitchell had a large number of circu lars printed and sent them into the surrounding States, resulting in the ar rest of Wise at Williamson, W. Va., by Sheriff W. G. Hatfield. One of the deputies, it is stated, will leave imme diately for West Virginia to bring back the prison or to trial. nedy Organized Bible Class Work Mr. Owen Open Conference Led by Mr. Owen and Mr. Terrell Teacher Training Past and Present Mr. Way Open Conference on Teacher Train ing Led by Mr. Way Tuesday Afternoon 2 o'clock Devotional Service One Minute Eeports from Schools and Classes Elementary Work in the Country Miss Kennedy The Pastor and the Sunday School Mr. Way A Definite Plan for Our Work Mr. Brabham Organization of District Sundav School Mr. Owen Tuesday Night 8 o'clock Devotional Service Address ' ' The Teen Age Girl ' ' Miss Kennedy Address "Our Twentieth Century School Movement" Mr. Way Adjournment it may be settled in twenty minutes or the matter may go over till next week. ' ' A statement issued by the railroad executives tonight summed it up this way: "At the invitation of President Wil son, Messrs. Hale, Holden, Judge E. S. Lovett and Daniel Willard went to the White House at noon and held a short conference with the President. "A conference of the railroad exe cutives was held at 3 o'clock and a new phrase of the situation of some importance was laid before the con ference by the special committee. "After considerable discussion with put definite action, an adjournment was taken until 11 o'clock tomorrow morning. In the meantime the special ommittee of the presidents will con- inue its labors." London, Aug. 24. Striking simulta neously, the British and French have made substantial gains in the Somme region, according to Paris and Lon don. Maurepas has fallen to the French who have pushed forward more than 200 yards beyond the town on a front of a mile and a quarter. The British report a 300 van! o,n-n.. -. J v uu v V; VI Thiepval and the capture of many prisoners. No change is reported in the East, though the Russians offensive in Ar menia is apparently assuming power ful proportions. WANTS NEW RAILROAD BUILT; STANDARD GAUGE TWO ATLANTA, GA., GIRLS ARE DETAINED IN DANVILLE All preachers, teachers, superintend ents and organized Bible class workers are invited and urged to attend. Nomes should be sent immediately to Rev. F. M. Shamburger, Weldon, N. C. so that entertainment may be provided. SAYS ENEMY MUST ASK FOR PEACE CHARLIE, AGED FOUR, IS A GREAT SMOKER SECRETARY BAKER SPEAKS IN MAINE No proposals Have Been Made to Great Britain, War Trade Minister-Declares. London, August 23. No peace over tures have been made to Great Britain, declared Lord Robert Cecil, minister of war trade and pariamentary under-se-cretary for foreign affairs, in the House of Commons today. Lord Robert's statement was made in response to a question. "No overtures have been made for peace" said Lord Robert. "Therc( is only one way in which overtures for peace could be made, and that is from an enemy. If any such overtures were made the first thing we should do would be to consult with our allies, but no communication of the kind had been made. ' ' WINTERVILLE HIGH SCHOOL BURNED WEDNESDAY NIGHT Waynesboro, Va., Aug. 23. Mrs. r.mitt Uorpimr anil TJaIIv Gardner, a RETURNED FROM THE WEST Mr. N. E. Winslow and family have returned from Kansas City, Mo., where rhev soent two month's with relatives. Mr. Winslow says crop conditions out there are fine, but that the people it jju wait ore nirneriencine one ine uuuuic Spirit of Declaration of Independence And Golden Rule in Foreign Relations Waterville, Maine, Aug. 24. Presi- j dent Wilson 's European and Mexican policies have ' ' infused the spirit of the j Declaration of Independence and of the Golden Eule" into the United States' foreign relations, Secretary of War Ba ker declared in an address here tonight in connection with the Democratic cam paign in Maine. "The administration has kept the peace. It has done unto Mexico as we would be done by and has infused the spirit of the Declaration of Indepen dence and the Golden Rule into its foreign relations. It has maintained friendly relations with the European belligerents and placed this country in a position from which when the end of the great European struggle comes the moral forces of the United States can be exercised in the interest of justice and humanity. "Large problems lie before us in the next four years. The reconstruction must take place. No unfamaliar hand should be put in to guide the course of our nation during that period. No un certain voice should be permitteed to speak our spirit at the council table that, rficofrnizes the Universe. This is HUWV D New Bern, August 22. Charlie, aged 4, and the son of Mr. and Mrs. E. S. Edwards, of Greenville, came to town yesterday to see a physician about be ing treated for the after effects of an attack of infantile paralysis, which he suffered some time ago. Now, ordinarily there is nothing un usual about a 4-year-old youngster com ing to New Bern, but with Charlie it is different and he is proving to be the talk of the town. Charlie, despite his tender years, claims the distinction of being the sec ond Walter Ealeigh when it comes down to a question of being an expert smoker. Last night " Charlie propped himself up on a prominent corner down in the business section of the city, located Havana in one of his pockets, asked a neighboring lounger for a match and proceeded to fire up. When pedes trian passing that way saw a little tot with smoke belching from his mouth they started to yell "fire" and call the police but Charlie put a stop to this by calmly observing that it was a fairly good weed that he was smoking and proceeded to iuhalo it to the end. According to Charlie's parents, who came over from Greenville with him, he has been smoking since he was two years of age. Three and four strong eigars a day is about his limit during the summer time but during the cooler weather he thinks nothing of burning up a half dozen a day. Charlie will probably remain here for several days in order to see what Che local medicos can do toward putting his constitution in trim once again. , Uoldsboro, Aug. 23. With the hope of inducing the Virginia Box and Lum ber Company to take favorable action in the plan for the standardizations of its road being built from this city to points in Duplin and Lenoir counties, M. R. Bcaman, commercial secretary of the Goldsboro Chamber of Com merce is today in conference with Pres. ident Neufcr at Pittsburgh. Mr. Bea man has been corresponding with Pres ident Ncufer relative to the project since the plan was proposed last week, lie thinks his trip to Pittsburg will as sure prompt action. Danville, Va., Aug. 23. Alice Wick- man, aged 22, an Atlanta school teach er, was yesterday morning removed from train No. 38 upon receipt of a series of telegrams from tho Atlanta authorities, charged with kidnapping Mary Warnock, aged 18, also from At lanta and reported to be the member of a well known family. Both girls, handsomely dressed and of independ ent means, strongly resented being taken from the train and asserted that they were on their way to New York to visit relatives. ' Subsequent inveetiga tion showed that Mary Warnock has no relative living in the metropolis, The local police being asked to arrest any man found in company with the two girls asked Miss Wickman if she had any friends on the train. She said that William Oldknow, of Atlanta, connected with a moving picture com pany, was the - only person she knew on the train. He was awakened and interrogated but claimed ignorance of the identity of the girls. He was al lowed to proceed. Son after being questioned another message came from Atlanta asking the police here to put the girls under sur veillance and not to place them in jail as they would be sent for immediately. Neither girl would speak for publication. CANDIDATE HUGHES REBUKED BY TILLMAN HALIFAX SUPERIOR COURT. . .. I . wmt- Wia l-.ro- v;i;i i,:n;i Vvo the same bolt or nf the hottest summcm lightning during an electric storm here;ther, Mr. J. E. Winslow, of Greenville, j late today. also was out for a visit to nis par.. PICNIC AT LAWRENCE'S. There was a grand picnic held yester day by the Episcopal congregation of a tim when, havinir passed forward i Tarboro at Lawrence's, Edgecombe nobly on a high and difficult course, the j county, formerly called Kill Quick, finish should be left to those who have ; Many people from this section went demonstrated their ability by their over to attend and report a most en- work already done." rjoyawe uay. Lightning Struck Administration Build ing, Which was Destroyed in Less Than an Hour. Winterville, N. C, August 24. Dur ing the severe electrical storm that swept over this section for several hours hours last night a bolt of light ning struck the administration building of Winterville High School at Winter ville, about one o'clock and within an hour 's time the entire structure was mass of ruins. The citizens of the town and the student body of the school responded promptly to the alarm of fire, but ow ing to the location of the fire and the fire company 's inadequate equipment nothing could be done except to set to work to save what furniture and fixtures that "was possible. The flames originating on the top of the building sufficient time was given to save the contents of the first floor. On the se cond floor there were three pianos and a very costly fifteen hundred vol ume library, which was destroyed with the building. The seventeenth session of the insti tution had just opened on Tuesday of this week, with promise of the most successful year in the school 's history. And though the work will be consider ably handicapped for some time, Prof. F. C. Nye, president of the school stat ed this morning that not one day would be lost in the progress of the school work, as the other buildings would be used until further arrangements could be made. The building was valued at $5,000 and fixtures at $1,500 with insurance of only $1,000. The trustees of the institution are in session today when it will be de cided as to what steps to take for the rebuilding. It is very likely that the Baptists of the State will realize the existing conditions and a modern structure will replace the one destroyed. State Docket Cleared Thursday Civil Docket Taken Up Friday. The following arc the cases disposed of on the State docket: Andrew Long, liquor. Defendant waived bill and pleads guilty. $10 fine and costs. Will Taylor, c. c. w. Defendant pleads guilty. 6 months on county roads. B. Neddcr and William George, sell ing wine. Defendants plead guilty, and pay a fine of $5 each and costs, Cry of Sectionalism is Denounced. "Pitchfork Ben" Says Waving Of Bloody Shirt Will Avail Nothing. Washington, Aug. 19. Senator B. R. Tillman, in a speech in the senate to day, severely rebuked Charles Evan Hughes, candidate for the presidency on the Republican ticket, for waving "tho bloody shirt" of sectionalism throughout the country in his efforts to get himself into the White House. After expressing the sentiment' that he had believed, with the War between the States gone these 50 years, there had come a broad peace between tho people, it had remained for Mr. Hughes again to stir the fires of the 60 's. Sen ator Tillman said: "I read in one of our newspapers yesterday of a ' one man parade ' up Pennsylvania avenue a lone union veteran, unheralded and alone, marching in celebration of his own enlistment in the Civil war. While I accord full credit to him for the patriotism that prompted him to re spond to the colors then, and can un derstand any excuse the vanity even of it today, I could not but be reminded of that other lone figure that has gone parading and shouting about the coun try, a veteran of neither side in any way, waving the banner of 'sectional ism' before the people who are trying to forget; if, indeed, they have already forgotten. "But in contrast with this 'one man parade' I foresaw another parade that is to take place on Pennsylvania ave nue next spring, when at the invitation of the Grand Army of the Republic they and the Confederacy that was shall march shoulder to shoulder, no longer foes but friends and fellow citizens of a reunited country. I ask you, sena tors and fellow countrymen, if we may not in spirit at least march with them to the greater glory of Gol and ouf loved country?" "It must have shocked and sur prised you senators," said the South c 1 A- j. rr t . Eulus Smith, liauor. Defendant i Carolina senator, --io imu wmi o pleads guilty. 6 months on county ' after Appomattox a candidate for the roads. Geo. Givens, larceny, jury trial verdict not guilty. Jesse Bonny, resisting officer. Pleads guilty. 6 months on county roads. Jim Bullock, c. c. w. Jury trial, Ver guilty. $15 fine and costs. Frela Smith, c. c. w. Jury trial, Ver dict not guilty. David Deans, liquor. Pleads guilty. 6 months on the county roads. Weldon White, a. and b. Jury ver dict, guilty. 6 months on the county roads. Joe Lizzie Smith, liquor. Defe.ilint pleads guilty. Fine $10 and costs. Matilda Fenner, liquor. Jury trial, verdict, not guilty. Horace Fields, larceny. Defendant pleads guilty. 4 months on county roads. Philip Davis, c. c. w. Defendant pleads guilty. $15 fine and costs. W. W. Loyd, a. and b. Guilty. 4 months on county roads. Weldon News. GERMANY'S CROP JtUlr- l FILL EXPECTATIONS Berlin, Aug. 23, by wireless to Say ville. The Tageblatt says that the fa vorable crop forecasts are being borne out fullv and that excellent yields of high oincc of president ot tueso re united States should have thought it it necessary to drag forth that old biood and mud bespattered banner of sectionalism and wave it over the heads of the present generation if Americans. ' ' He declared that if the majority of the leaders in congress were from the South they had attained to their pres ent rank through long servico just as he had done. "I did not earn the nickname of 'Pitchfork' on account of my partisan ship," continued Senator Tillman. "It was due to the bluntness and frankness with which I spoke. My mother taught me to despise hypocrisy and lying above all else and I owe this personal char acteristic to her. If I ever did hate the Northern people and I confessed to that the last time I spoke here that hatred and partisanship have died out of my heart, and the pitchfork, if it was considered the emblem of it, has long since been buried. From its grave an olive tree has grown and I am tendering the olive branch, claiming to represent the South in doing so, to all Northern people. "Let me, before taking leave, to meet you again by the mercy of God, in December, bold it out to you and through all of you to the constituen cies which vou represent in the earnest all cereals are beinsr obtained through . . . . . -1 A 4t:a n ..b4 i A Misses SalUe Krel and Novella Hor-' out Germany. Fodder also 13 plentiful hope that it may . ..j..,. ton and Mr. J..Lloyd Horton, of Farm"- The potato crop, however, has suffered able and imsceining cry of sectionalism, ville, were here last evening as guests from the excessive rains Sugar pro- even as it once hcrald.id the receding of Dr. Keel. duction has increased. i waters of the deluge.