The Rocky Mount Record Published Every Thursday by ROCKY MOUNT PUBLISHING CO., C. W. FORLAW, Editor ¥~ SUBSCRIPTION PRICE: (In Advance) Three Months, gg Six Months, qq One Year, - - / j LOO Entered as Second Class Matter in Post Office at Rocky Mount, N. C. STATE PROHIBITION. Prohibition is no longer an experi ment in many communities in North Carolina, and it has been found effective in promoting the cause of temperance in proportion to tha zeal with which the officials and citizens have- striven for enforcement ot the prohibition laws. The success of it has encouraged tem perance advocates to go further, and make a bold fight for State-wide prohi bition and then to have congress pass such legislation as will safeguard the expressed desire of the people for practical prohibition. This may not be accomplished at the present session of congress but friends of the cause have every reason to believe that it will soon be done, and then whisky cannot be shipped into the State as it can now under the regulation of inter-state com merce. Prohibition is largely a moral ques tion, insofar as it relates to temperance and advances that cause, but it also has another phase of much importance to our Srate. That is as an economic question. While we hold to the view that the greatest good is accomplished in the way of real temperance by in culcating the principle in'the youth at the home, yet that prohibition does much towards removing the curse of strong drink is not to be denied by reasonable men. Besides, by placing the sale of liquor under the ban of the law it will have its effect on the rising generation, who, seeing it thus dis countenanced will shun it as they will not so long as its sale islegal Viewed as an economic question and presupposing its effectiveness the bene fits of prohibition are incalculable. Pitted against the amount received for license for the sale of whiskey the ■ 4pßSlflftSF worse than wasted in the pur? chas^of it towers above it*out of all proportion. This is a tax similar to the mud tax paid by having bad roads, and is in no sort of way offset by the license money, in dollars and cents. Tne vast amouut of money spent for whisky diverted into other chanels will assist greatly the development of the State and add to its permanent wealth in tax paying property, not to say any thing about the wholesome effect on labor of all classes. If this can be ac eomplished by prohibition, and tem perance people point to the prosperity of those communities where it has been rigidly enforced as a convincing argu ment, a state prohibition law will not only prove a moral blessing to the State but will aid greatly in its industrial progress. * The ways of Governor Glenn are sometimes as inscrutable as those of ■providence. As, witness his reprieving Frazier Jonei for 10 days within a half hour of the execution, and after Jones hi* said his last prayers and prepared for death, and coupling with the re prieve the statement that he did not intend to commute the sentence to life imprisonment. In our opinion he made two mistakes. If he will not commute the death sentence it was wrong to arouse a hope in the mind "of the con demned murderer, anJ bordering on Cruel to have him again undergo the awful agony of preparing to meet his fate. And again, it was too important a matter to risk so small a margin of time for its accomplishment—the send ing of the reprieve. Perhaps he can "explain." Indeed does the hand of fate seem to have marked the death of Judge Hargis, the boss of Breathitt county, Kentucky, who was killed last week by his son, to whom he had set such a bad example. - Knowing no law but his own will, judge Hargis gratified his desires with an utter disregard of others* rights and his life was but a bloody trail tlhrough the annals of Breathitt county. And the ß , when none dared say bim nay, to S hot down by his ownbloorff Verily, Vengeance is Mine, I will repay, saith the Lord." BRYAN THE STANDARD BEARER. The principal charge brought against W.J. Bryan at the beginning of his remarkable career was that he was too advanced a thinker and that the policies he advocated were not practical, for the times. In the rapid evolution of things the great majority of the Ameri can people have "caught up" with him and are demanding the putting into practice at once the reforms which he has advocated. This is evidenced strongly even among the rank and file Qf the Republican party by the enthu siasm with which they applaud Roose veit when he recommends those things Bryan has, with pen and voice, been fighting for years. That in itself is vindication. Further, many, we might say nearly all, of those leaders in the Democratic party who have either been 4 lukewarm towards the Nebraskan or openly fought him have, in part at least, espoused his cause and are now work ing in harmony with Mr. Bryan and the great body of Democratic voters, to the purpose of bringing about his nomination and election. For it is well known of all men that if those policies are right that the great com moner stands out preeminent of. all American statesman as the logical one to have the putting them in practice on account of his conceded honesty and the sincerity he has shown at all times in advocating them for the common , weal. i Though the Democratic party is more united than it has been forlyears and is freely admitted by Mr. Bryan's enemies in the party that he will be nominated, yet there are some' who continue to speak against him and to these the following from The Columbia (S. C.) State, a newspaper which has not always been a Bryan supporter, in a lecture to The Charleston News and Courier, one of those who continue to rail against Bryan, is submitted for thoughtful consideration: "Mr. Bryan is now the choice of the Democrats of South Carolina, of the South, and of the United States. It is as certain as anything can be in politics that he will be nominated by the Den ver convention to lead v the party. He is now its standard-bearer. The work that is done by Democratic papers against Bryan between now and the July convention cannot be undone after that convention. \ "Those that assail Bryan now are as saulting the Democratic party, because he is now the only leader the party has. Our Charleston contemporary may say that it cannot affect the result in South Carolina, and that the South will sup port the nominee of the party regard less of his personality. That is quite true, but because it is a Southern paper and is supposed by the uninformed to represent political sentiment in South Carolina, The News arid Courier's at tacks on Bryan are gleefully reproduced by Republican and assistant Republican papers in the doubtful States. .That helps to create the impression that Bryan will be knifed in his own party; and that, in turn-, kills enthusiasm. Lack of enthusiasm means lack of votes on election day." The continued discrimination in freight rates [.against North Carolina cities in favor of Virginia cities, by the railroads, is indefensible from any standpoint, and it.ili becomes the Vir ginia cities, which owe so much of their prosperity to North Carolina, to lend their aid to the railroads in the manifest unfair scheme. It may prove a policy of "self preservation" that will act as a boomerang. ' The fun has begun in the Republican ranks for control of the National con vention. T:*e Florida Republican State convention sends a Roosevelt (or Taft) delegation and an anti. It is evident that the Strenuous One will need all his strenuosity. . I Are you a stockholder in a home build ing and loan association? If you are not, come and let me convince you that stock in Rocky Mount Homestead and Loan Association will pay you a better rate of interest on your small savings than any investment you can make. The 12th series of stock will be open for subscription February Ist, 1908. R. L. Huffines, Secretary and Treasurer. Marked For Deatb. "Three years ago I was marked for death. A grave-yard cough was tear ing my lungs to, pieces. Doctors faied so help me, and hope had fled, when my husband got Dr King's New Dis covery," says Mrs. A. C. Williams, of Bac, Ky. "The first dose helped me and improvement kepi on until I trained 58 pounds in weight and my health was fafty restored. ' This medi cine holds tfce werid'e fceaS«f xmmmm* coughs aa i celds an i lung op* Sbraak diseases. It prevents few The Rocky Mount Record, Thursday, February 13, 1908. Rheumatism I have found a tried and tested cure for Bheu. taatism! Not a remedy that will straighten the distorted limbs of chronic cripples, nor turn bony powths back to flesh again. That is impossible. But I can now surely kill the pains and pangs oi this deplorable disease. In Germany—with a Chemist in the 01 tT of Darmstadt —I found the last ingredient with Which Dr. Shoop's Rheumatic Remedy was made b perfected, dependable prescription. Without that last ingredient. I successfully treated many, many cases of Rheumatism; but now, at last, it uni formly cures all curable cases of this heretofore much dreaded disease. Zhose sand-like granular wastes, found in Rheumatic Blood, seem to dissolve and pass away under the action of this remedy as freely as does sugar when added to pure water. And then, when dissolved, these poisonous wastes freely pass from the system, and the cause of Rheumatism is gone forever. Xhere is now no real need —no actual excuse to suffer longer with out help. We sell, and in confidence recommend Dr. Shoop's Rheumatic Remedy GRIFFINS DRUG STORE. STATt NEWS. Three attempts were made last week to wreck the Norfolk & Western trains, near Roxboro. Kailway postal service has been es tablished on the Norfolk & Southern trains between Raleigh and Nbrfolk. Friends of J. Elwood Cox, a wealthy manufacturer of High Point, are boom ing him for the Republican nomination for governor. Forty-three of the 46 applicants be fore supreme court passed the exami nation successfully and were given license to practice law. A crowd of 25 older students at the A. & M. College, Friday night, hazed 10 freshmen, using nitrate of silver which was painted on their faces. i sCapt. Frisby and son who were .re ported to have been drowned in Pamlico sound during a severe storm two weeks ago, are alive and well. Their boat was wrecked and they had a narrow es cape. W. W. Ashe, son of Capt. S. A. Ashe, has been appointed State fores ter for North Carolina and hi will, as his first work, examine the State board of education's timber lands in eastern Carolina. The Cape Fear Lumber Company's plant at Wilmington was destroyed by fire Saturday morning, entailing a loss of SIOO,OOO and throwing out of work 200 employes. The fire is supposed to have been caused by friction under the band saw. In a fire early Sunday morning at New Bern, which destroyed three col ored people's residences, at a loss of $3,000, William O'Brien, who attempted to re-enter his home to casnl out his household goods, w and burned to death. Thos. R. Blalock, a farmer of Dur ham county, was killed Saturday by a tree falling on him. He was felling trees in a piece of land he was clearing and one lodged against another. In getting it down he was knocked to the ground and the tree fell on him, killing him instantly. In Mecklenburg county Saturday night, Henry Mcllweny, a negro, mnr dered David Lewis, another negro, with an axe in a most cold blooded manner. He cut Lewis' head open in three places and cut his stomach with the' axe in as many more. He then coolly took the axe and chopped some wood for Lewis' wife, who came running out of the house, and then made his escape. The Norfolk & Western has filed its answer to the complaint of the corpo ration commission before the Inter- State Commerce Commission, in which it admits that lower rates am charged at certain Virginia points, than in North Carolina towns, and defends itself on the ground of water compe tition in the -first named State. A general denial is entered these rates are unreasonable or unjust. When all was in readiness Saturday morning and within a half hour of the time for the execution of Frazier Jones, for wife murder, at Greensboro, the sheriff received a long distance tele phone message from the governor re prieving Jones until Feb. 18, that another hearing jnight be had on the petition for commutation to life im prisonment. Jones had said his last prayers and prepared himself for death when the sheriff announced the reprieve granted him. If you have Catarrh, rid yourself of this repulsive disease. Ask Dr. Shoop of Racine, Wis., to mail you free, a trial box of hia- Dr. Shoop's Catarrh Remedy. A simple, single test, toll surely tell you a Catarrb tarufcb well worth your Inowiag, Write W-day. Don't suffer longer. Grifla's Drag Store. FLORIDA-CUBA During these cold winter months A Trip Via THE ATLANTIC COAST LINE , Would be just the thing to make life worth living. Superb trains, excellent schedules and tickets which offer every advantage possible for a pleasant and attractive trip. For full information or pamphlets call on your nearest Ticket Agent, or write, ' W. J. Craig, • T. C. White,; Pas. Traffic Mgr. Gen. Pas. Agt. Wilmington, N. C. #®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®>®®®®®® I The McL-emore Tailoring; Company and Queen | I City Pressing' Club i # I*eads All Others in Fit, Finish, Workmanship, Cleaung, Pressing, Altering, Repairing 5® £ and Promptness. 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By buying from a home dealer you have a guarantee that the article is what it is represented to be, for a . home dealer can't afford to misrep resent. Besides you can do as well at'home as you can by buying from foreign dealers. EVERY ARTICLE bought from me is guaranteed to be as represented. I have a large stock to select from and the prices are as low as you can get any where. 2*. Geo. L. ParKer « 58* JEWELER *9s * Main Street Rocky Mount, N. C, 1