THE ELM CITY ELEVATOR 7 VOL. 1. ELM CITY, N. C„ FMDAY, MARCH 28,1902. NO. 33. Wilcox Fonnd Elizabeth City, N. C., March 22.— “Guilty of murder in the first degree,” said the jury of Jim Wilcox.' He stood up and heard his doom fearlessly. His nerve still did not forsake him. It was 10:10 o’clock. Several hundred people followed Judge Jones, who told the sheriff to ask the jury if they had agreed. The i«i8- oner was there, hands folded, com posed, scanning the faces of the jurors. C]erk Jennings asked if they had agreed. Derickson was named as fore man. Wilcox stood up and held up his right hand. No man in the building was more brave than he. I was watching his face four feet away, as the foreman Slid the words that meant death. Not a muscle of his face moved. Other people in the room were nervous. Some cried. Lawyei: Aydlett shed tears. It was a solemn scene there in the yellow glow of the oil light. The Judge said April 25 was the time Wilcox should die, be tween 10 and 3 o’clock. Elizabeth City, March 20.—Solici tor George W. Ward spoke eloquently and ably for the State in the morning, and Mr. Aydlett concluded for the de fense in the afternoon. Over a hundred men and women marched out of the court room, by pre-arrangement as an expression of feeling against the defen dant, when Mr. Ay^ett began his speech. The ill-timed demonstration in the court house is calculated to hurt the fair name of the town. It had been worked up but to an extent fiailed. Something over 100 people, among the number about 20 women, marched out. I cannoi believe that the better class of people endorse such conduct. A re action is bound to follow. A boy rang the fire bell soon after the exodus and several hundred more poured out. There was no fire. It seems to have been part of the programe. The good men who believe Wilcox guilty and want to see him hanged.condemn it. Elizabeth City, March 21.—^The jury took the Wilcox case at 4:80 this afternoon, after hearing the charge of Judge Jones and the t^ious,reading of the evidence. It is understood that hi&honor will not receive the verdict tonight even if one shall be reached. The city is qniet. GENEBAIj news. North Dakota and' the Canadian Northwest are in the throes of a terrific blizzard, three continental railroad line being tied up. Former President Grover Cleveland, who is now the only living ex-President of the United States, was 65 years old Tuesday. While playing cow last week the 4 year-old child of Charles Haners, of Parker’s Glen, N. Y., was almost butch ered by his older broth. The street ^ar strike in Norfolk seems to have entirley collapsed. Yesterday tne cars were operated regularly and fJl the military companies were withdrawn. Fire broke out at Hoboken, New York, on Tuesday, the 18th, about the piers and among the vessels. It start ed among the cotton on the piers and caught the steamer “British Queen,” which was totally lost. Sever^ other vessels were damaged. The loss is es timated at about a million dollars. ' ‘‘Tfred of Being Licked.** Trojan’s Notion. The paper over in Norfolk, Mr. Sapp’s Pilot, used a fitting expression, “The Democrats are getting tired of being licked. ” Though it does ap pear as if they would be getting used to it’by this time. The party has had but one President since Buchanan. And it will not have another one un til they drop Mr. Bryan. One thing good, however, about the party is this, that whether successful in mak ing a home run, it does well as a short stop. But any way Mr. Sapp’s idea is good. Still, even though the Re publicans do stay in pretty well, things are not so terribly distressing as they might be. One thing is certain, the law of gravitation in the material universe is still in good shape and so long as that keeps intact we will go on our way rejoicing and hope for the best. Providence and gravitation are one and the same. It is a good prov idence that has brought us safe thus far. And if the Republicans were the worst of men, the Bible says “Fret not thyself becauise of evil do ers, neither be thou envious against the workers of iniquity.” The na tional Democratic party will never win until it has laid aside some of the weights which has handicapped it. It courted Populism. With itself in the arms of an erratic leader it was shorn of its strength in the same de gree that Samson lost his power when he placed his head in the lap of De lilab. She fannied the Nazarite to sleep and the host of God was deliv ered into the hands of the uncircum cised. So one man who, perhaps never voted a national Democratic ticket by his winning ways captured the whole business and still clings to the wreck he wrought. It is com mendable, though, that he is willing to go down with the ship he scuttled. 71111617 Trntlk*. Every tickle makes us chuckle, A little widow is a dangerous thing. You can’t eat your cake and keep " If it’s your wife’s first attempt,keep x« Never put a ^ft cigar in your mouth Make love while the moon shines He is a wise man who never lets mo wife know he can piit up shelves as well as a carpenter. WHO CBVC1FIE1» GHlftlSTT Uabbi Blncliy of Says It Was Mot the Hebrew Peorle, bat tlie Priest* aad the Romans. CblcaKO Recora-Herald. ‘The crucifixion of Christ was the result of a conspiracy between the pilfer ing, parasitical priests and th^ allies, the Romans authorities. This combi nation of hypocritical priests and cor rupt ^vemment officials Tvas as great drain upon the people of these days as are the modem capitains of our mo nopolized industries. Hence they branded him anarchist and put him to a most ignominous death.” Thus concluded Dr. Emil G. Hirsch in his address on “Why Was Jesus Crucified?” delivered to a la]^ audi- at Templa Israel, Forty-fourth street and St. Lawrence avenue, last night. ‘Christ touched the greedy, material istic prests in a tender s^t,” said Dr. Hirsch, “when, on entering the temple. He overturned their table and drove the money-chaagers out, exclaiming that His house was to be a house of prayer and not a den for thieves. The priests ^enceforth saw in the courage ous Na«urene an enemy whose truthful tongue should be forever stilled by death. One has but to read the Bible intel ligently to leam conclusively that the Jews had absolutely no part in the legalized murder of Christ. The very word ‘crucify’ is not known in the Jew ish language. Crucifixion upon the cross was the Roman method of execu tion. The trial of Jesus was in viola tion of every established Jewish law. Christ was crucified on the eve of the Passover festival, we are told by the Bible in one place. In another the time is said to have been on the day of the festival. It is a principle of Jewish law that an execution cannot take place either on the eve orthe day the Pass- over festival, nor upon the Sabbath day. What is more, no man could be put to death, according to the Jewish Law, save on the tesUmony of two witnesses, and capital sentence was never passed then unless these two witnesses showed that they had previously had cogni zance of the crime and warned the per son against oommittiiig it. It was not a crime among the Pharisees for a man to claim to be thew Son of God. Every man was confiider- ed to be the son of CkM), and in that age hundreds claimed the power- of healing by the laying on of hands. Many even claimed to have restored persons from the dead. Christ’s ideas were akin to those of the Pharisees who sought to establish a national indepen dence for their race. They were nation alists, similar to the Zionists of to-day. The priests were antagonistic to the national ideas of the Pharisees. The temple at the time was a vast slaughter house—a house of blood, made so by the levitical laws. ‘The Roman empire, the historical robber of all ages, lent its soldiers to the priests to force the collection of their unjust revenue. Hence the lust for ^Id was directiy responsible for the crucifixion of Christ, who denounced the greed. “Yet, in the face of this abundance of evidence showing who the real mur derers of Christ were, the boys of the streets of the world to-day cry out at the passing Jews, ‘Christ killer!’ ” Trojan’s Notion. Apropos of the mention that life is a game reminds me of a night some time ago in the sitting room of a ho tel in a North Carolina town where I was waiting for a midnight train. At one table were four young men play ing a game of car^. The termin ology used from time to time led me to understand that the game was “set back.” They were nice looking young men of the traveling i>eT8ua- sion. They didn’t say any bad words and there was nothing in them shock ing to me. But I did pray in my way that not one of the crowd should ever have a “set-back” in life. But even though they don’t hamue the cards themselves there is many a “set back” in life’s game. However, it does turn out often that a “set-back' is sometimes beneficial and an inspira tion that nerves one to start again and many behold a winning hand. At another table there sat one man playing a game by himself. He ap peared to enjoy it. For an hour or two he manipulated the cards. As he walked put of the room I saw a paper in his pocket with these words printed at the top, “Christian Advo cate.” Perhaps this brother is a con stant reader of this claep of literature He looked like a good man. But he playeil soltaire. So do we all in a sense. If not with cards then by other means. We know that every man who wins in the game, or strug gle, must do a lot of playing by him self. He must be alone to think out the problem, to untangle the threads. May the Lord help the solitary workers! A Topeka man started recently on a trip to Paris, Rome and Cairo. Some bachelor friends accompanied him far as Kansas City. His entire baggage consisted of one small valise. Curious to know what his equipment was, one of the friends opened the valise and found that it contained one night shirt, one collar, one pair of SQCks and twp quart botties of whvhey. It is strange hpw some men will Igad themselves down with clothing that way. Jane: “That Mr. Shallowpate is at he door. Shall I tell him that you are engaged?” Mina I^kie: “Show him into the parlor, Jane.” “Yes’m.” “And, Jane, after he lap his box of chooolatM on the mantdpiece tell him I’m out.” Bli.li ABF>S 1.BTTBK. Atlanta Constttatlon. I believe the millennium craze has subsided for awhile. Within my r^l- lection it bobbed up three (M* four times and excite good people all over the country, for good people wish it to come and live in hope and expectation. I^e- member when William Miller, of Mass achusetts, had all New England excited, for he was a very learned man and a sincere Christian and believed all that Jie professed. For ten years ho exhort ed ^e people to be ready for the com ing of Chrut in 1843 and even fixed the day when they would see ffim descend ing from heaven in magnificent glory and esobrted by Moses and Elijah and a retinue of angels. He had over 50,- 000 devoted converts and the night be fore the promised day they arrayed themselves in white taimeat and sang and shouted and prayed until morning and then climbed the high hills and the tree tope and the spires of the churches to meet Him as He neared the earth. But He didnt come and it nearly broke theu hearts and they liked to have per ished to death, for they had given away all their earthly possessions. Next came Dr. John Cummings, a very learned minister of London, who wrote a book on it and fixed the millennial year at 1863. We were fight ing over here about that time and the millennium had to be postponed. The millennium means the reign of Christ upon the earth for a thousand years, when everybody will be good and there shall be no more death nor pain nor sorrow, and there has hot been a cent ury since His crucifixion that the religi ous people have not been looking for His coming. The Christians got their belief from the prophedes of D^el and from St. John and St. Peter and later on from Irenaeus and Justin Martyr and they dehghted themselves with dreams of glory that was near at hand. Some of them declared there would be no more winters, no more nights and everlasting wells would run with honey and milk and wine. Jerusalem would be rebuilt and the fruits of the earth would be colossal and never dying. One notable writer said that every gra^ vine would have 10,000 branches and every branch 10,000 shoots and every shoot 10.000 bunt^es and every bunch 10,000 grapes and every grape would make 25 gallons of'wine. Good gracious! how thirsty that fellow must have been. But the millennium dident come and by and by Origen, a very wise and good man, came along in the third century and declared that there would be no such grapes, but that Christ’s coming would be altogether spiritual. Still His coming kept on being predicted and when the refwmatio% of Luther and Calvin came about tHey said that the pope TTOB the anti-Christ and the millen nium was near at hand. Next came Oliver Cromwell, who excited his fellow- eis with a prediction of the millennium and so it goes on and on and now it is about time for another just as soon as we have done killing off the Philippines and England has killed out all the Boers. Well, now all these niminations about the millennium were provoked by what 1 have been reading about the recent discoveries of oil all over the country. One t)iought brings on another and if the coming of C^st is near at hand and His reign is to be a spiritual one for a thousand years and there is to be no winter or night or sickness or pain or sorrow we won’t need all this oil, neither for fuel or light. And so I don’t believe the millennium is very near. If all the people are to be converted and become good it will be a long time off, for it is a slow process and all the coal and oil that is in the bowels of the earth will be needed. It wasent put there for noth ing. Missionary work is going on more rapidly then ever before, but it is like a drop in a bucket of water. We have got 20,000 missionaries in heathen lands and tiiey are aided by 80,000 na tive preachers and teachers, but these 100.000 will have to convert an average for each of ten- a year to make a mU- lion, and there are over a thousand mil lions of heathens now and more coming on. But they do not convert half a million a year, for the last report gives only 4,000,000 all told. Last year we spent $20,000,000 on them and have now over 1,000,000 children going to Christian schools and have 23,000 churches and over 1,000 secondary schools besides medical collies and training schools and hospitals and asy lums for orphans and the blind and the insane and the lepers. They have al most everything tixat we have got and now have protection in Constantinople and Pekin and Beirut and other great heathen centers. The work they have done in the last ten years is ama^g and the abduction of Miss Stone has in creased their zeal. Thirty million dol lars has been promised for this year and they say that if we cannot convert them we can at least civilize them and teach them the doctrine of a clean shirt and a comfortable home, and these are the first lessons in religion. The last official report tells us ^t more than half the pupils are girls. For centuries womfen and girls have been under the ban and were of no more consequence in the household than dogs or b^ts of burden, but now they are being lifted up and treated with humanity and re spect. If the work of our missionaries accomplished no other good but the rescuing of women from the degradation of ages it is worth ten times its cost. Cost! what is the coat but the surplus of our wealth, and that surplus is not ours, but Gtod’s, Libraries and colleges are good things to build up and foster, but how much do the miUioniures give to the cause of missions? Most of this charity we are told came from those who are not worth one-tenth of a mil- hon. It is a lamentable fact that the more « man has the more he wants and the less he gives atfoy in proportion to his wealth. The parable of Dives and Lazarus was intended to alarm the rich and selfish, but most of them say give me a litUe more money and I will ti^e the risk of losing heaven. Paul said to ^Hmothy: “Gair ia^not godineas, bat godliness with contentment is great gain. We brought nothing into this world, and it is obtain we can carry nothing out and they who would be rich fall into temptation and into fbol- ish and heartful lusts that cast men in to perdition. The love of money is the root of jdl evil.” There is a sermon to ive by," but it is hard to do. Somehow I can’t help wishing I had a little more then I have got—not for myself, bat my wife would like a carriage and horses and ride azpand and take the grand children, and she would like to have some money of hvown to give away and buy little presents without asking me ev^ now and then for a dollar or two. She does hate todo that and I don’t let her when I have any to spare. Bax Abp. Tlieai a Cluiaee. K;ioxTlUe.8eixtlnel. It is astonishing how the public looks jipon the newspaper fta a free horse to be ridden to death. People will pay money for a ban^ for lights, janitor, go to a job printing office and buy thousands of dodgers, pay boys to de liver them, pay performers in the enter tainment, if they are professionals, or pay some manager to get up the affair and give him a large p«»entage of the receipts, pay all their bills—in fact, pay for ev«ything except that which is most valuable to them—to wit, newspaper ad vertising. And if the newspaper is un willing to devote nu»« notice to such entertainment than liberal news notices it comes in for mutih abuse. And yet why should not the newspaper charge for its advertising space just as the owner of the hall chai^ges for its rent, the bill-boatd man.chtuges for the use of his bill-boards, the lithographers: charge for furnishing posters, the job printing office charges for-the dodgers, and the outside parties charge for their services? The newspaper has only two sources of revenue. One is subsciption, the other advertising. The subscriptions to newspapers are so cheap that they little more than pay the cost of white paper. A Bsk la Bla Kar for Yfars. Oreenabm Beoord. A gentieman from the eastern part of the State called on Dr. Baum yester day and told him that he had been troubled with his ear for many years; that he had an idea that something was in it, but that a number of phy sicians had examined it and said he was wrong. At times he suffered greatly from il and wanted him to ex amine him. Dr» Baum makes a specialty of the eye, ear and throat and he made the examination asked, finding and removing what is known as a ground beetie bug. The patient said he remembered distinctly that one day he was reading when something flew in his ear, but he at first thought it did not remain, but flew away. Soon after this he experienced trouble. This, he says, was 25 years ago. A MMIe Pccallar, t« Be Sare. Barllngton Hew*. During court at Graham last week Judge Neal fined two of our dtizens for caring on a convosation in a whisper while court was in session and threat ened to fine any man who should so much as eat a peanut in the court room, and at Hillsboro Monday he sent a man under the influence of whiskey to jail. These things were all right. We l^eve in heepng order and preserving tLe dignity of the court, but— In Greensboro a few weeks ago Law yers King and Barringer, during the trial of a case, became engaged in a heated conversation and wound up by filling the air with flying law books, ink botties, etc., etc., and the judge failed to see any violation laws of order of the court room, or any insult to the dignity of the bench. IBVKBS WOHAH*a PBITOLITT. Bev. Peter* aaye Social Pieaaaree Har navy Urea. DMbH Waat the Job. A bookseller in Cleveland advertised for a porter. A big, muscular Irishman walkeid into the shop and glanced around; finally his eye rested on a big sign over a table with books: '‘Dickens’ works all this week for $4.” The Irish man eyed it thoughtfully, then edged toward the front door. The floor'Walker asked pleasanUy if there was something he wanted; and 'the applicant remarked with a backward glanpe toward the *(H come in t’ git th’ job, but Oi’U not care f’r it. Diclrens kin wurnick all th’ week f’r four dollars if he wants to. Oi’U not.” And the vis itor strode vigorously out. Fooled th« People tor tt Veara. Pktebsbubo, Va., March. 21.—^Et- trick, a small manofacturing villi^ near this dty, had a genuine sensation today in the discovery that John Green, a person who has posed before the world for 85 yearsas a married man, was awoman. She died this morning from a com plication of diseases, in the 75th year of ker a^, and the discovery wiis made by neighbors who were called in to pre pare the remains for burial. The wo man came to the village from Raleigh, N. C., atout two months ago, and be longed to the laboring class, Hortcnce-Htad. The Elberton, Ga., Star says that haM times have overtaken some people in that section, and gives the following from the record: “One n^pH> includes in a mortgage •one daai^ter, named Laara, 15 years old.’ Another one mortgages a bowl and latcher, three straw ticlu, ten bed quilts, ten she^, three sets pillow cases, set kniyes and fraks, set of spoons, three "The Woman of the World” was the topic of Rev. Dr. Madison C. Peters’ sormon at Immanuel Baptist Tabw- nacle, his text being “She that liveth in pleasure is dead while she liveth”— I Hm., T, 6. Among other things. Dr. Peters said: Not lightheartedness but frivolity is here condemned. One of the joys of earth is themirth of womanhood, but the sad thing is that the blight of frivolity is crushing out so many fine possibilities and noble aspirations after an unselfish life. The pleasure spoken of here need not be sinful; it may in itself be harmless, but the danger is that a woman may so surrender herself, body and soul, to the finified fooleries of fashion and the supreme demands of social life that her existence will soon be turned into a living death. We have no sympathy with those who twist and pervert the word of God unto tm- necess^ rules for interference with Christian liberty and conduct. Yon need not wear sad unsmiling looks. Yoaflife need not be set to the tune of the ‘Dead March in Saul.’ Every woman’s mission is to be the bright phantom of delight that God made her. But there is danger that ‘trifles light as air’ may absorb her life. •This pursuit ot pleasure, falsely so- called, is nothing more nor less than female dissipation. Is that a hard characterization ? I confess I know of no other word than dinipatioh, which implies the fault of character I wish to warn you against. ■ I see in society dead men and women behind glittering dia monds, dazzling robes and empty laughs—dea(| women—dead to high aim; dead to leal purpose; dead to her children—she dismisses them to the care of servants that her round of gaiety may be continued uninterrupted. “A great and increasing evil among us is the attempt to live in a slyle be yond our financial ability as well as station in life. This spirit of social rivalry and envious .extravagance is rapidly developing an extravagance among us which is demoralizing society and injuring the rising generation by the contempt which it throws upon those sober virtues of diligence and economy so characteristic of our fathers and mothers. “Yet I believe that in many instances the men are to blame for the do-noth ing lives of their wives. They make their homes mere places to eat and sleep. Many of our rich women are practically deprived of the society of their husbands, and, not knowing how to use their time, they find themselves seeking pleasure elwwhcre than at home, and before they know it they find home, if not disagreeable, at least lonesome, and they are brought to a state of mind that engage? all their faculties is discovering modes of enjoy ment, rather than methods of useful ness. “How the dissipations of fashionable life sacrifice health! It is quite a lux ury to see a society woman of 35 in the enjoyment of vigorous health, with a frnh natural color. Even our school girls often do double duty in the after noon that the evening may be given to pleasure. “Permit me to make a few sugges tions: Have an aim that is worthy of all that is deepest and strongest in woman’s nature. Beauty in drees is a good thing. The sloven is a sinner. Be careful to have your dress and all its belongings well chosen and in good taste. You-owe this to the man you love. You owe it to God who has put robes of beauty and glory upon all his works; but do not give drew your best thoughts, the most of your money, and for it n^lect the culture of the mind and the claims of others on your ser vice. Care more for disi>osition than for iress; be disturbed less over an ill fitting bonnet than a forgotten God. “Goethe said, ‘What the women leave unfinished in our moral educa tion, the children complete in us.’ Children are the incarnations of the smile of God—God’s apostles sent forth day by day to breach love and joy. If you have no child, go out and adopt one, and you will have a fountain of love, a be^ of light and a fresh flower in your heart and home. Determine to be a goixl mother and a useful wife. Make home a sea^of holiness and hap piness. “If you fill that sphere with an in fluence sweet and saca^d, your mission in life is worthy the incarnation of an angel. The strength and stability of our republic lie in well-trained families. The home has ever been the nursery of great men. (3od give us mothers who shall realize that the mightiest sphere of influence and sweetest spot on earth is home!” —Dr. Robt P. Pell, of CbhimlM, has been decte^ ftmdent of Converse GoU^ at Spartimbaix. 'Speaking of narrow escapes,” ob served Mr. Chugwater, reaching for his second cup of coffee, “did I teU you I was in a train the other day that came within three feet of being run into by another train goin^ at fuU speed?” “For mercy’s sa^ke, not” exclaimed Mrs. Chugwater, * ‘Bow did it haiqpen?” “The tnun that came so near run ning into ours,” he rejoined, buttering another round of toast, “was on the other track and going the other way.” It was several minutes before Mrs. Chugwater broke loose, but when she did she made up for lost time. irhat*s IB m IlaaMt Tesa—^I’ve written Mame Woodby an invitation to my tea. I suppose I must. Jess--YeB, but you’ve spelled her name “M-a-m-e.” Tess—That’s so. She spells it “M-a-y-m-e,” doesn’t she? Jes Oh, no; she did three months ago; bat it’s “M-a-i-g-h-m-e” now. nc PBBBiBBmns i.awii or bas- TBB HmBAT. Everybody knows that the White House is the home of the President of the United States and his family and that the greatest men in all the w(^d are glad to be recdved there as visitors. But how many of you know that R—tAf Monday is Childrai’s Day at the White House? Every yew on that day all the child ren in the aty of Washington, rich or poor, are invited to (day Easter egg games on the President’s lawn. It is a beautiful, green, sk))Hng lawn—^for the White house is on top of a hill—and you may be sure that the children love to play there. From early in the morning until late at night they keep ccnning and coming, big children and fittie children, hopping and skif^anglhid jami^g, all carrying littie baskets, ready for the big Hunt. For, hidden in the grasses and under the bushes, and everywhere, are great Easter eg^ of ev^ shade and hue. And don’t the chil^n scramUe for them until the baskets are all filled! I once heard a Senator say that you could hear the haimy laughter three bk)cksQff. Then, after the baskets are filled full of brignt c^ored eg^, the real fun be gins. The egg rdling ! Two children stand together on the top of the big hill and each rolls dovra an Easter egg. The owners run down the hill almost ipidly as the eggs themselves. Then they pickfup their and com pare them. The own» of the egg that is hurt less than the other by the fall gets both ^s. Then they play “cock.” I suppose that ev^ boy has played that game at one time or other. £«;h child holds an egg in his hand so that only Uie small end is visible. Then the two players knock thdr eggs together as ha^ as they can until one egg is cracked. Then the one who holds the strongest egg wins the enured one and dther puts it in the basket or eats it right away. When an egg Iveaks another it is called the “cock of one,” when it has broken two it is called the “cock of two,” and so on. If an egg laeaks the 'cock one,” then the victorious one is called the “cock of two”-Hhe number of the broken u always added to the winning ^g’s score. At about half-past ane o’clock the Tifsident gives a reception and hun- d.tds and hundreds of children give up tiieir iday^or a littie while to shake hands with him. Prestdoit Roosevelt mU enjoy this ceremony, for it is said that nobody likes children better than “Teddy” does. Hallea Gaae at White Hoaee. Washingtoit, Match 20.—^A del^i^ tion from Chariotte composed of Messrs. E. A. Smith, George B. Hias,*J. P. Wilson and W. T. Jordan, ci^ed on Postmaster General Payne this after noon, accompanied by Senator Pritch ard, and ask^ for Mullen’s retention as postmaster at Chariotte. Every mem ber of the party, including Mr. Mullen himf>elf, had something to say to Gen eral Payne, tnrhom th^ gave assur ance that the postmaster did not drink habitually, and that they had every reason to lielieve he would not do so again. Upon receiving these assurances, together with the statements that the business men of Charlotte desired to see Mullen retained, Gteneral Payne agreed to lay the facts as they had been pre sent^ to him bef(»e the President. Thus the whole matter will be placed in the hands of the Chief Executive, who may be asked to render a decision to morrow. John M. Sharpe, one.of the applicants for the Charlotte postoffice, is here. Hethodlata, North aad Soath. Baltimore, March 21,—^The first ses sion of a joint commission representing the Methodist Episcopal Church and the Methodist EpiacopidChurch, South, began to-day at the Women’s CoU^ in this dty. The conference is private, A member of the commission of the Northern Imnch of the Church said today that the result of the conference will undoubtedly be far reaching, and that it will be impossible to predict the scope of the genc^ result. Following are some of the items that will Iw brought up for consideration: Unification of minion woric in all foreign fields; strengthening the vari ous posts of the two Churches by thorough organization and equipment; the establishment of a joint theokigical seminary in the foreign field: a propoution to cstaUish a joint book concern and publishing house in China; the establishment of secular and regions pi^iers in the foreign fields. For impersonating a ghost as a joke, Truman Meta^,a young Sullivan coun ty farmer, residing at Weymart Centre, N. Y,, has been compelled to pay deariy. On Friday night when his frien^ Frank Chipman, whom he knew to be super stitious, was returning home driving a Slated horse, Metzgar, enshroaded in a white sheet and a ghastly mask, wnped out in a lonesome qiot in the oadway and uttered an unearthly yell. The result was that the horse became unmanageaUe, and the driver was thrown into the ditch, tweaking one arm and otherwise injuring himself. The affrighted horse alter wrecking the wagon ruiched home, Metsgar, horri fied at what had h^ipened, threw off his disguise an4 assisted Chipman and secured medical aid. He has settied the damage to the wagon and doctor’s bill Iqr the payment of A PBBCMV8 HBHOBT. Tontb’s Oompankm. No heritage which a son can poMM is worthy to be compared tor a moment with the blessed consciousness of hav ing done all that he could to fother and mother happy dnring'.their lifetime. ^ impressive little irtory to which nothing need be added was lo- centiy told by a man whose form is now bent and wjlioee hair is white with years. Whra he was a boy of twdve he was retunung one evening from the hay*' field, where he had been at woric wimsh daybreak, when his fathw met him with a request that he go to town toT do an errand for him. Any one who has lived on a farm, and who knows what a. day’s work, “from stinup to sundown,” means in haying time, will understand how the bpy felt. “I was tired, dusty and hungry,” sai^the rfd man. “It was two miles to town. I wanted to get my supper, and dress for the singing class. “My first imimlse was to refuse, and to do it harshly, for I was angry he should ask me after my long day’s work. If I did refuse, he would go himself. He was a gentie, patient old man. But stMnething stopped me— one of God’s good angels, I thinlr, “ ‘Of course, father, I’U go,’ I said,, heartily, giving my scythe to one of the men. He gave me the package. “ ‘Thank you, Jim,’ he said. I was going myself, but somehow I don’t feel very strong to-day.’ “He walked with me to the road that turned off to the town, and as he left me he put his hand on my am and said again, ‘Thank you, my son. You’ve always been a good boy to me, Jim.’ “I hurried into town and back again. When I came near the house I saw that something unuraal had hppened. All of the farm-hands were gathered about the door, instead of being at the milking or other chores. As I came near, one of the men turned to me with the tears rolling down his face. “ ‘Your father,’ he said, ’is dead. He fell just as he reached the house. The last words he spoke were to yoa.* “I am an old man now, bat I have thanked God over and over again in all the years that have passed since that uour for those last words of my father —‘You’ve always been a good boy to me!’ ” Raleigh Ow. Atlanta Oonatltatkm.' 'There is trouble in Bladen county be cause of the unlawful acts of a number of pec^le in cutting and destroying the wire fence between that county and^ Columbus. In the latter county there is no stock law and cattie run at la^. Kaden has the stock law and built a 40-mile wire fence along the Columbus line. The people who oppose the stock law have cut 10 mile of this fence and are now destroying other sections of it. They tnis week, after cutting a couple of miles of it, posted notices stating that any persons who repaired the fence would be “given rooms in h—^l.” Gtovemer Aycock, upon infnmatitm of this, often $200 for information which will lead to the conviction of any of the fence cutters. Most of the latter live in a part of the county known aa “the neck,” and are described byla native as -‘half savages,” They hafo bought r^:ular fence cutting tools. The output of gold at Johannesbur]g shows a fair increase, the product in February, according to the report (d the Transvaal Chamber of Commerce, hav ing been about $1,620,000, again aboat $1,420,000, in Jan^ and $800,000 inDecembw, This is at a rate of about $19,500,000 a year, supposing that the [HOgressive increase of output month t>y month should cease. When the war b^an the product was something over $80,000,000 a year. As the suiq;>ly of lator obtained from Portuguese East Africa increases the mines expand ex pand their operations, so that the out put a year hence may wdl apinoximate the maximum. In some reqiects the conditions of cheap production are more favorable then they ever were before. Supplies, such as dynamite, are lower in price, and railway rates aad duties are fairly satisfactory to the mining interests. JudgeChariesA, Moore, of Ashville, will be a candidate for Associate Justice of the Saprane Qoqrt. Advices from Asheville state that rights of way are be^ taken fora road to lead from Asheville to Rutherford- ton, a distance of 30 mike. It is ru mored that the road is to be built in the intoest of the Seaboard Air line, as the western terminus of the Sea board’s ^^mington, Chariotte and Rutherfordton line. For a number of years there have been rumors to the effect that the Sea board wished to get an entry into Ashe- vUle, but they have been discredited m account of the indirectness ot the line by B^therfcndton eitho' to the sooth w the east, and the expensive duuraeter of the work which woald be entailed by tiie construction of the road. The inesenceof Miss Maty Johnston, author of '*Aadrqr,“ in John H^ins infirmary ia sajid to be due to the fact the! she is having nerves kitted in her head toobta relief from s^ere head orcottoB ou. A Charlotte manufacturer said re- centiy: “For a long, long time, after cotton oil was put upon the market, it was the fashion to Mdl it by someother name. There is a company now in Savannah, Ga., putting the oil on the market for cooking purposes and for salad purposes, without any ptetence that it is anytUng bat eotton seed In this way the oil is going all ri|^ land is finding a good maik^ Thia pioneer company is the Western Oil ;Comiikny, ei Savannah.” —J. M. Brown, Esq., o Albemarle, has been af^xwted by Hon. Theo. F, Klutts as his private aeoetaiy.