—Will I terri- e Way era and drop- whea 106 am 4 55 km 9 15 am 10 50 am 5 45 pm 8 55 pm 11 2G pm +6 30 pm «%pm 9 2s am 11 55 am 140 pm 210 pm 3 56 pm 618 pm 10 35 pm 3 OS pm 10 32 pm 1 35 am 3«am 7 50 am Bally No. 38. 8 40 pm 9 30 am 1123 pm 1 56 am 4 06 am 4 50 am 8 34 am 1106 am 12 42 pm 1 4 ■) pm 3 00 pm 5 35 pm 6&iam t6 45am tsOOpm 5 10 am 800 am No. 66 8 00 am 3 56 pm 7 30 am 114ti pm sou am ■ 8 25 am »22 am It 3oam 12 ■'tS am 145 pm 4 07 pm 4 55 pm 8 3ti am ll25r>Ja 2 56 am 6 30 am No. 78 at ailruad, at Bowmore Air Line 9 IHirbiun oad leaves rives Sojt- >. m., Kii>8- 1; iOa. m., [ at 11 03 a. irmele s -i’ aele 9 15 a 0:» a. m. VOL. n. i^^AAAAAAAAAAAJ an old PAVORitE battle hymn of tne republic 9r Wwd Bow* JUL.IA WARD HOWB was ham In New Tork dty May 27, IM*. At tlM«9s of MTvntMn ah* was an anonjrmo^ contributor t» the New Tork Ma«aa1ne. She marrl«d Dr. Samud a. Howe of Boston In IMS. Her first book of poem% "Passion Flowers.” was puUlshed witbout ■icnature in UM and was followed in 1867 by a second volume. Her third volume of poetry, publish^ in U68, contained thajpoed printed below, which waa written in beleasnered wadiinKton in Noyember, USl, and first given to the pid>Ho in the pages of the Atlantip Monthly for ~ ■ M INE eyes hav# seen the fi0brj of the cQming'of iJm Lord;. He is trampllBg eat the tlnt&i^ wli^ the grapes of wratU are 8t»e^; He hath loowif tKe fat»fid Hghtning of Us terrible, swift sword; His trath is marching vn. I have seen him in tiie wat^ fires of a hundred droling camps; They hare builded Urn an altac in tbe erenlng dews and damps; I can read liis righteous sentence by the dim and flaring lamps— His day is marching on. I hare read a fiery goq>el writ in burnished rows of steel: “As ye deal with my contemners, so with yon my grace shall deal. Let the Hero, bom of woman, ernsh the serpent with his keel. Since Gtod Is marcliing ».'* He has sounded forth the tr^pet that shall nerer call retreat; He is sifting out the hearts men before his judgment seat. Oh, be swift, my soul, to answo: him; be jubilant, my feet! Our God is marching on. In tbe beauty of the lilies Christ was tXHrn across the sea With a glory in his bosom that transfigures you and me. As he died to make men holy, let us die to make men free, While God is marching on. £LM C iQ histnry twre giv«i 1^10 wider dtMsremjeB of opiniofi a^ toore healed defai^ uno&g hisforiaiis man tbe ttpriain^ the North Gan^^ logulators. No man eeniayy ^ hii»- ap as a judge of other men’s I, whether he Mvea «NiteBip(»% neously wiA tfaena or whether he «om« after. In the former case he is mcm tq>t to be oontrdled and infloenor ^ by pr^udioe dCh6r.in fayot of or a4- terse to the motires he would judg#. aiul hence in&partiality is impoesil^; i]^ the latter case he meets with nothing hut oold facts an(^ it is impoosihle to lay which of these facts h^, illiiatratik ^e motive of the actm>-^liidi acttpa Ppg da^. fi* Bsasy of the young write, to jM about il^ daj^ that : wffl answer l»i«By that t&re are no dof Aiys. R Ife nbthtng bat a sopeniti* to us from tba andmti. Iba Dog star has its time to unear in .4he and rise and set UiEe oth« jtsn. bat it is a very irregular time and so what we «all dog days may begin the first of July or mi^ di^ later: The rising of Qicias in a line with the sunbei^ now on the 8d of July and will oontiniie until the 11th Aiignst. - Those forty days were bdiM«d by the anaents to bring very hoi ind salivy ireatherand mafg mwligniwtiiwssos, battfafahas A Trlnmplial Areli Tor Sehley. Baltimore Sun. The incorporation of an association to erect a memorial in this eiW to Admiral Schley is a very prbper inbve- ment, and the people of Marybmd should see to it that the acnociation does not lack funds to pdt their deugn into execution. It is the purpose of the association, as announo^ in The Sun today, to erect a triumphal arch commemorative of the achievements of Admiral Schley and his officers and men at the battle of Santiago. This arch is to be of artistic deu^ and placed in some conspicuous position in this city among the people by whom the hero of Santii^ is known and be loved. A place is to be provided on the arch upon which at some future day a statue of the Admiral may be erected. Many of the leading citizens of Baltimore are identified with the as- Bociatiop, which assures the sncoees of the movement. As soon as the news of theremakable victory of our navy over the Spanish off Santiago reached the United States the people, knowing that Schley was there in command and that he was in the thick of the fight, hailed him as the successful commander and the hero of the most signal victories in history. Notwithstanding the machinations of a clique of bureau chiefs and clerks, the people of the whole United States, with that unerring instinct upon which popular government largely rests, have continu^ to honor Schley down to tiie present time. And in iJl the trying times since tbe conclusion of the war, amid all the provocations and all the vituperation and malignity of which he has been the object, in all this time the Admiral has never uttered one word or done one deed which tended in any de gree to diminish the love and confi dence of the people. Admiral Schley is a son of Maryland and a member of an honored Maryland family which has for many generations been identified with tke State. He entered the navy half a century ago and has given all these years of his Hfe to the service of his country. The record that he has made in that half a century, indepen dent of his great achievement at Santi ago, carried him to the highest rank in the service, and now furnishes a com plete answer to the charges and ind- endoes of his enemies. It is entirdy fitting that Maryland—Schley's native State—should see that the memory of his service to the country should be kept alive in imperishable stone. Smitb Says HUl Will Oe« It. Goldsboro Cor. Cbarlotte Observer. Graven county has within her con fines an astrok)^ of note in the pe^n ot Isaac Hughes Smith, familiarly known in legislative circles as'“the colored gentieman from Craven.” Smith is aJk) a noted politician and in Newbem, his home town, runs a bank ing and loan establishent. Knowing of the accuracy of his previous fore casts, I dropp^ in on him in his pri vate office tiie other day and sought knowledge. I had heard the occasion of a banquet given in his honor by Recorder Taylor, in 1892, at Washing ton, D. C.,^owIsaac told the assembled guests, who were all Beid men, that McKinley would be the Republican nominee and sweep the county. I had heard of his subsequent prediction of McKinley’s election for the second term, idso of hn private notes of warn ing to the President to' stvoid crowds; that the planets foreboded to His Excd- lency impending danger and the like. So I concluded to have him set at rest this uncertainty as to who would be the next national standard-bearers and which of the parties would triumph in the next national election. I ask^ Smith who would be the Democratic nominee in 1893 and quickly came the “David B. HiU, of Albany.” “Who the Republican nominee?” “Roosevelt, most assuredly.” “Now, Smith, which of these gentie- men will be elected?” I asked, and in; no uncoiain tone came the reply: “David B. HiU.” “Do you really think so?” “No, sir, I don’t think so, I know it; fate has decreed it and no power on earth can prevent it.” Emboldened by such positiveness I asked, “Will Wm. Jennings Bryan ever be President?” To my surprise Smith replied: “Yes, in 1912, but all depends upon Bryan’s attitude to the Democracy in 1903 and 1907. Fate has decreed that Bryan shall be Pres ident in 1912, but it is possible for Bryan’s will power to defeat the decree of fate.” oil On Oil in various forms has been tried of late in several countries to produce firm dust-free road surfaces, and is re ported upon with curiously favorable unanimity. In America heavy unre fined petroleum heated to 80° C. pro duced an excellent surface; with Ultle dust in summer and no mud in winter. The petroleum was durable and found to be cheaper than watering. In Al giers olive oil and napththa have been in use since 1896. Dr. Guglielminetti, the Lancet reports, has induced the authorities of Monte Carlo to make an experiment with coal tar, which like wise seems to have given satisfaction. The material took a long time to dry, in the end “became so hard and com pact that it was difficult to break up. After 40 days’ traffic it was damaged, and had resisted the wear and tear of wheeled traffic.*’ Apparentiy the expense of this process is very moderate. Extensive u e of the motor car in the Riviera makes the settlingof the “dust plague” a matter of moment. EUleigh Cor. Cbarlotte Observer. It will be readily recalled that last year when the Legislature was in ses- rioQ, there was plenty of talk about a bill to regulate the labor of children in factories. Many thought then and think now such a bill ought to have been passed. But a great number ^ of the mills prepared an agreement, which they submitted, to the Legislature. That agre^ent was accepted. It was spread upon the journals. It is a very solemn pledge and covenant. Who has broken it? There have been mors from time to time that some the mills were violating i^. T^y The Observer correspondent asked Labor Commissioner Varner what were the facts in the case. He repli^: “A number of the mills have not lived up to the i^reement.” It is not an agre- able piece of news to print. People will ask which mills violated it, and that will certainly be an interesting queition. Tbe Will of ProvldeBce. Senator Burrows says he has a new story, and heife it is: “There is an old darkey who works for me. He lost bis wife— No. 4—the other day, and I was sympathizing irith him that they would meet in heaven, etc., when the old fellow broke in: “I know dat, Mars Burrows, I know dat. I ain’t makin’ no objections. It were de act of a all-wise and unscrup ulous Providence.’ ” irire of Semtor PrItcliarA Passes Away at mtmore. Asheville, N. C., Aug. 2.—The death of Mrs. J. C. Pritchard, wife of Senator Pritchard, occured this morn ing at the Clarence Barker Hoflintal Biltmore. Cancer was the cause of death. An operation performed month or two ago brought only tempo rary reUef. About a week ago she was t^ain taken seriously ill and was mediately brought to the Clarence Parker Hospital for treatment. It was fraud that in another operation lay her one chance of -recovery and it was performed yesterday morning. It thought that Mn. Pritchard was doing well after the operation until late last night #hen she was found to be siiik- ing rairidly. Her husband was _ with her, a few relatives and dose friends Rhft was unconscious for an hour or two before her death. flnence; which were colored by foreign events over which the actor had no oontroL The judgement of history is tiierefore always a colored one. But one thing can te relied upon with cer tainty. WhsBCfer the vast majHity ot the people of aoommnnity either ac tively at pas^yely take their stand fimuy for (Hr against a certain move ment we may be reasonabiy assured that were all the truth known, there would be found something back thor poatimi which would vindicate their actions, it matters littie whither they may lead; for the final outcome of such a movement may generally be laid at the door of those who oppose it, especially if this opposition be a strong er force than that contrcdling the movement itself. That such was the case with the much-praised and overiy-abused R^[u- lators, we are not at lib^y to doubt. The large number of the inhabitants who took part in the up-rising repre sents a still larger number who gave their sympathy and moral support pas sively. Even no smaB part of the men the government led i^ainst the Begula- tcws after the latter had bera guilty of many exoesnvdy imiMopra tacts—or rather should we not say dnven to these acts?—showed thw sympatiiy for the position taken by their rebellioos ooun trymen by* their refusal to fire upon them until compelled to do so in self- After the Regolators were defeated, their enemies, determined to hunt them down, were onahle to collect bands sufficient fbr the purpose which did not include many secret friends of the fugitives to whom they rarely failed to give timely warning by which they might esci^. We have as a result of this condition anny stories of daring deeds and for^ude thnlfihg with in-^ terest and hamog a certain historical value.' Not tiie l^t ijBteresting of these sto ries is that of “^e Black Boys of (k- barrus” ^ narrated by Wheeler, m^ng his preparations for marching against the E^uhitorB, Governor Tryon had ofdnred from Charleston, 8. C. several wagons loads of gunpowder, ffinte, blankets, etc. They were sent to Charlotte to be forwarded from that place to Hillsboro, the seat of govern ment, It was with great difficulty that CoL Moses Alexander, one of T^n’s best officers who had charge of the transportation of these buh>1&, could obtain wagcms sufficiMit to send them on, so much in qrmpathy with the R^^ulators were the inhatntants of that r^on. The firiends of the Regulators were on the alert to prevent the supidies from reaching the Ooyemor. A small party from that part of Mecklenburg county which afterwards in 1792 went to fmrm Cabarrus, consist ing of three brothers, James, \^^Uiam and John White, tog^her with Robert Caruthers, Robert Davis, Benj. Cochran, and two half Imthers, James Ashmore and Joshua Hadley, undertook the task of stopping the wagons. Accord ingly they bound themselves by a most solemn oath to remain true to each other, to see the business through to the end and nev«r to divulge the secret on each other, followed by an invoca tion oi the direst evil upon the head d him who dioidd betray his comiades This done they blacked their skins so as to conceal their identity and late in the afternoon set out on their expedi tion. Traveling with all possible speed they overtook thie wagons about mid way between Chariotte and Concord, encamped on the side of what was then called Phifer’s HiU. Immediately the Attack was b^un They drove off with ease the few wag oners who had been left to guard the supplies and to give the alarm in case of attack, who were taken so completely by surprise that they thought only, of thmr own safety. The wagons were overthrown; the kegs stove in; the powder, etc., thrown into a large and^e blankets, tom into strops, were used to make a train of powder to the pile, into which Major White fired his pistoL The explosion was of oDurae tremendous and every article of the su]^lies destroyed. Such an outrage against His Majes ty’s authority co^ not be _ witlioui the most searchii^ invest^ar Threats availing nothing. Gov- Ibyon offered a pardon to any one who would turn King’s evidence against the rest. Unlotnnatdy it almost imposriUe to get together into any secret enterprise (rf dangex body of men without including at least one Judas. The Kack Boys peculiarly unfortunate in having two Ashmore and Hadley; 0., FRJDAtv AUGUST 15. IMS. tively to their nanat»fe, fad when itr was finished rose to his fe^ ^iensd the door, and in a witheriaf^ eontempta- tone said: Modi against my feelings, I am compelled by the Govema^a prodama- tion to gnuityon yourpaidons. If jos- tice were done, hanging would be too good for such treacherqqe dqgs. Bat rest sssoi^ there is a justioe that -pun ishes the traitor. Go; if fwever again cross my path I’U omsh yw as I would asnpent. Thedooriso|ien.” . The two wretches retira4*:0iesUaUen. As he was in duty bound to Col. Alexander raised a guard aid. aet out for the home of the Whites, whieh stood eti the bMnk of Bocky rivar. >Ga- ruther% wbo was a bfottMK-u^^W. the White boys, wss there ai jfinie. Before they were aware of the house was sunmuided^ ly amongjthe gtuuds were SOTenJ men in sg^pathy with the Re^ latoff, and so did not wish to see the KadcBoys captured. One of them was ordwed bgr 4kL Alexander to stand guard at the door. He porposdy moved dowly to obey the order, since under no military obligation to follow the commands of the c^Scer. ‘Take all day, will you,” angrily ex claimed the colonel “I’ll have you lashed like a d^ if this rascals escape. A quarrd, witii the consequent delay, was just what the guard wanted. He replied hotiy, “Get somebody else to do your dirty woric if my way don’t suit you.” Seeing his chance another of the guards passing Mrs. White, whispered to her: *Tell ’em to make a break—through the door—r not see ’em—quick." Mrs. White was not slow to execute the command. Caruthers, the first to receive the warning, sprang through the do(» and dashed fbr the river. He was pursued by the other gua^ but was in the river before they could catch up with him. In the meantime the White boys taking advanUge of the confusion, left the other side of the house and was soon lost in the woods. Chagrined and angered at his fkilare, Col. Alexander became all the more determined to capture the Black Boys. Soon after this some of the hand were in the fidd harvesting their crop. The Royalists hearing of thdr whembouts c(^lected a band to cai>ture th«n. As they rode into the fidd one of the sup- poei^ Royalists gave a secret signal to the fugitives to warn them of their danger. Springing on their horses they dashed away in flight. All succeeded easily in eluding tl^r pursuers except Robert Davis. He was closdy follow^ and was in imminent danger of being captured. Not paying as strict atten tion as he should have done to the route he WSS taking, he soon found himself in a dangerous situation. CAose at his beds rode his enemies; before him was the river, its banks steep and high. To turn was to ride into the arms of his pursuers; to dash over the banks, 80 feet in height, seemed instant death. Davis look^ to the right and to the left for an avenue of esci^. Every way waa dosed. His foes were dose upon him. Not a friend, who could render aid, was in sight. As his enemies dosed nearer upon him, his imagination perhi^ps pictured a gallows. A glance down the the steep rugg;ed bMik and his mind was made up. Better death in an effbrt to eeo^ than death on the gallows. Gathering his rdns, without the trem- Uir^ of a musde, he gave the com mand to his horse. The animal leaped into the air, landed safely into the stream and bore lus master in safety to the oi^msite bank where his foes dared not follow. So by the aadstanoe of n^hbors and by tiidr own daring and vigilance, the Black Boys managed to keep dear of their enemies, who finally becoming weary of fruitiess pursuits, gave them up as a vain task. With the exception ot the two traitors, all of those engaged in the adventure of the BladTBoys of Cabarrus afterwards served with bravery and credit in the army at the Revolution. In the case of the traitors Providence deariy showed a hand by sending upon them the evils th^ had invoked upon their own heads by the betrayal of com panions. Ashmore is said to have fled the country, lived a wretched life, and died as miserably as he lived, without comforts and without friends. Wheeler says that he himself knew Hadley. He remained in the country a drunkard and a brute. For his brutal treatment of his family, his neighbors, attired in female drees, went to his house, drag 1^ him out of bed, and on his bare jack gave him a severe beating. “He continued through life the same miser- aUe wretch, and died without any friendly hand to sustain him or e^e to pity.” Well did Col. Alexander say, to them, 'There is a justice which punishes the traitor.” R. D. W. Conneb. Wflson, N. C. wm. and chews it as a cow chews and swal- jom her o^|d. He feeds on his con- it. Biu.Asp. P. S.—All hail to Evan Howdl—The addier, the editor, the friend in need. I ^ve known him intimatdy since his childhood. His good father was mar ried in my town and I tUi^ I am diQ onlj^fiidnlf man who was irt the wed ding, thon^ I was then but a chikL All hail to mjr fnend. He Imw the right to run for mayor and Atlanta will honor hersdf by electing him. B. A. A director of the pentfeeolianr /Pf* they expect it to mate«M,OOd iSoW this year. pSiM amount it has ever desirous of availing themsdves of the pardon, out unknown to each other, to hrtnqr their companions. Acddentally* they met on the threshold of CoL Alexandnr’s hdise. Each met the other shs faeedly^ Not a w»d was spoken eidler; a glance was enough. They understood each othtf. The cowardly sMi that found a lodging place th^r hearts found ea» in the other a kindred qiirit aqd tiiiifcn together with iiredstiUe magno- tisia. OdI. Alexander liateoed lonth's Companitm. A Massachsetlp firm prlnti thia fiurar gra^at ttie t(^ M its letter head: Errors—^We make than; sodoesevery one. We will cheerfoUy correoi thaoa if you will write to. us. Try to write good naturedly if you can, but writp to us anyway. Do not complain to some one else first or let the matter pasa. We waot first opportunity to make right any injustice we may do.” The little Armon deserves a mde andlMoe. 'few peo{^ that have not had occasion' at some lime in their Kves to r^ret the |iendingicrf a hazah-ur hasty aot» ^mpUint. It may bfrnecepsaiy to as- aert «xie^s rights in subsequrat letlpn» but there is no better rule of correspcMi- dence than to make the first one good James P. Bakw, a switehman on the Ihxithem Railway shot himai fioase of Eoima Williams in Charlotte last Saturday aflenKxm atl2‘.SOo*do^ ^e died from the effects of the jroond. «t at. Peter’s Hof^tsl. oncertain and in ttie course of time it will rise in the winter: Now a more ahottt thia wonderful star. You know that we have eight playlets that bddng to our solar eystem. They all revolve around the sun just as the earth does and the nearor the planet is to the sun the faster it travels.. Neptune is 16,000,000 miles distant and it 165 yean to get around. But ffirius is away outside of our solar system andis 120,000,000,000 of miles from us and gives400 times more light than our son. It ia the largest and brightest jitar in the heavens. It is called the D(^ star because it appears to be in the tail of the constdhUion that theandents named Major Canis or the Big Dog. They were a smart people and we still keep thdr mi^ of the heavens and thdr names of the stars, but they had no tdeeoopes and did not know that there were any stars or suns except those we see with the naked eye. But now young people listen. It is now establsAed and proven that there are miUions of stars and solar s^tems afar off in space and that ours is the smallest and the most insigiuficant of them all. We are nothing and less than nothing in the scale of eristoice. It has always been a mystery to me why the Creator of the boundless universe, that has no limit, should have chosen this littie worid of ours for His greatest work, the Creation of man in His own image, a littie lower than the angds, man who sinned and fell and was re deemed by the sacrifice' of the Son of God. I don’t understand it I cannot comimhend it. This littie wcnld is not bigger than alcannon ball compared with some of the planets and stars afar out in space. It has but one little moon that does not condecend to show us but onedde ot its anatomy. Hie other night we went out to Mr. Gran ger’s beautiful home to look at the fuU moon through his great tdescope that cost $5,000--^d is mounted in a high observatory with a dome that revolves as the earth revolves. It nifioent spectacle but the view of Jujh- ter with four moons and Saturn with bis rainbow ring and seven moons was much more beratiful and impressive. Of course those planets must be inhab ited, for the Creator would not have surrounded a dead worid with such luminous and beautifhl satellites. We don’t know anything hardly and it me with disgust to see yoong men strutting around like peacocks—acting lice they made themsdves and knew everythmg and expected to live always —when the truth is they don’t know where they came from nor where they are gmng and can’t add an hour or day to thdr existence. I have but littie hope for a vain or a conceited man and a vain woman is no better. A conceit ed man is dose kin to an idiot and woman vain of her beauty should some times remember that she had no hand in creating it for it was God given inherited. “Oh! why should Ae spirit of mortal be pro^?" Of all the teults of which humanity is guilty that of self concdt is the last to be forgiven and the hardest to reform. I ruminated on this yesterday ^rhen I read what Roosevdt said in his speech at West Point. The editor who pub- lishee it speaks of him as our well meaning but impulsive i»eddent. He should have said our “concdted and erratic president.” In speaking of the great men whom West Pdnt had gn^- uiUed, he said, “I claim to be a his torian and I speak wLat I know to be true that West Point has turned out more great men and more statesmen the-n any other institotim in the United It was self-conceit and ignor ance that provoked stich a monstrous absurdity, for Colond Sprague, of Tale coll^, hiu recently ehallenged him to the proof and has shown beyond all cavil tlMt Yale can number 10 times the great men that West Point can number. Among them 1,883 ministers of the gospd—78 justices of supreme courts, 17 chief justices, 546 doctors, 89 governors of states and 88 United States senators—beddes these Yale has sent forth an army of educators, established 480 colleges, 160 for women and 8,000 high schools while West Point has sent «Nit none but soldiers. Teddy ought to be ashamed of him Self, but he wiU not be.- He is not yet ashamed that in his so-called history he M^ed Mr. Davis an arch traitrar and rqpudiator and tdd what he did when governor of Mississli^, etc. ffis atten tion has been called to these malignant jcalumnies agaii^ a great statesman and whose curriculum at West Pwt that he ordained when secretary of war is still in force and who never was a member of the kgidatnre nor governor of MississiHiL No, ha is too cdtadted to take back anything or to ^[lologiae for his mistakes. ^Hie man he slander ed * ■ ■ ■ _ ‘ Ues, bat has widow lives and there are tboosands of veteraas all over the south who cherish who now hold his slanderer in soimme ttefeoQtempt. Yet he daims to be a his torian! When a gentieman fin^ tiiat he has unwittingly wroi^ed another he Passlac *r «hs Houston Post: A wrihter in The New York Mail and Express calls atten tion to the disappearance of the dude. The man of faahion is still with us, but but he is of the athletic sort nowadays, audnctof thejBMoidte type to whieh fhe dude bdonged. The dude was the descendant ot the Uood, tbe bode, the incroyahle, the macaroni, the beau, the fop, the dandy and the swdl who de listed past generations. He dressed as his i^ecessors did in the height of fsshion, usually going a good deal beyond it to attain what he bdieved was an aristocratic a|^>earance. His oners were of the blase kind, affect ed to give him what he bdieved waa an air of superi»ity. Instead of being aesthetically beautiful, the dude was Jhe VanoB awaty cans md in conveation a^ IS m. at the court hoose Sstiudajr. tiMeaeepiioB of me wMlBr took hqt little part in the the coBventioiis « nvdy (rfcokMed n Nine new rural fi«e dsiiwfy nalip have been added to the nnmbsr in tftii Staie. This makea iocty^iiiia Mit roBtn for Jnlyir and inoraaMa tte fMlI only weak. The stage docnr Johnny is still with us. He is a college bcqr usual ly and is harmless. We have older men who are dubmen and men dder still who are roues. But the {H«vailing type of fashion, young and old, no longer resonbles the dude. The man of fashion nowadays is athletic, broad- shouldered, an outdoor man with on his cheeks and the sun and wind in his manner and in the sparkle of eye. What has brought about the change, and why has the dude disan- peared? The writer in The Mail and Express gives the credit to the American giri. “I,” says the American giri “with my littie wish, I killed Cock RotMu.” Surdy this is a wonderful illustration of the power of woman and the way of a man with which King Solomon found too wonder ful for him. “Cherchez la femme,' the French say—“Look for the Greater proUems that of the dii^pearance of the dude are solved by the implication of the rule of this Gallic proverb. Wnmt W Tan Knawff 53155 Here are some questions about things you have seen every day and all your ife. If you are a wonder you may posnbly answer one two of fhe queries offhand. Otherwise not. ' What are the exact words on a 2-cent stamp, and in which direction is the face on it turned? In what direction is the face tamed on a cent? On a quarter? On a dime? How many toee has a cat on each fore foot? On each hind foot? Which way does the crescent moon turn ? To the right or left? What color are your employer’s eyes? The eyes of the man at the next desk? Write down, offhand, the figures on the face of your watch. The odds are that you will make at least two mistakes in doing this. Your watch has some words written or printed on its face. Yon have sera \hese words a thousand times. Write them out corectiy. Few can do this. Also what is the number in the case of your watch? How high (in inches) is a silk hat? How many teeth have you ? What are the words of a policeman’s shidd? How many buttons has the vest or shirt waist you are wearing? • How many stairs are there in the first flight atjrour house? How many steps lead from the street to the front door of your house or fiat? What is the name, signed in fac simile, on any $1, $2, ^ or 910 you ever saw? You’ve read dosens of those namee. Can you remember one? carriers alone in North Osrnliiia. The erand Chapter of Boyal Anh Masons of North CaroBnahave daeidad toeducate a h(ty at Ae Agrienllnialaad Mechanical G^ege. Tl^ hafva aslsal* ed a hul now in the 0£tord-^)iphHa Aeylum, Eston Benno, a cr^pla. Young Renno will enter the eoDefa in September. He n said to be very tft and bright. CuratOr%imlqrtf theState Unaeuw, » recdved a lag rattkanaH tnm Macon county. He will kaspU .alhe in the Museum, for several then kill skin anh stuff iL The anakia is neariy four feet long and has ei|^t 's. It is of the I. the Banded rattler and* is in condition. Jacob Hicks, the oldei living, who ran the fint tween Greensboro and Winston, died in Greensboro last Friday. Be waa visiting his daughter, Mia. LUakar. He learned to read and write irtMttOVSV sixty-four years dd, when orden waaa given for all who could not to ntira from the service. Dr. Gatling, the famoos invanlor of the rapid fire gun, is jnst completing the inventim (rf an aotomobila plow» which dispenses with the polUnf o tiia bdl cord over tiie back of a psatif— mnl^ enabling the farmer to dt in tiw carriage and drive the ma«hina aD cmK the fi^ with ashemuch eaae aadoca ia B re^ang machine. It is estimated that dz thoosaad peo ple attended tiie annnal pionie of Barium E^[irings Orphanage at Moflasa ville last Thursday. Prof, Alex Gra* ham, of Chariotte, delivered the oration of the day. Hon. Lee 8. who was xi the program, to attend on account of ersl hundred dollars were reaSaad for the orphanage frbm the sale of hmdwa and refreshments. While on his way to the depot at Derita, a station.a few milea north of Chariotte. to take a train for Ohaiiotla late last Friday night, Muzray AkoE* ander, a young white man Kvaa there, was held up by two bnriy negroes. The n^;roes qirai^ from undSTBtnali skirtii^ the road a short diatanoe Uom the station, and me grabbed the yooaf man by the throat. The other nagio started to assist his companion, iriien Alexander polled his pistd and ired it point blank at the negro, whoaa Uaek fingers encircled his throat, With a groan the wounded negro sank back into the arms of his companioa and Alexander ran for his life. ■latoB'sasi Sweetwater TeleidKme. One of the brethren went to Knox- vilte last August and fell by the waydde —^hegot down there. After several mon^ the news of his fall reached his rural home, and he was hrongbt up be fore the church. Brethren,” he said, “I admit I got drunk in Knoxville last August, but I didn’t mean to do it. How I have suf fered in my consdenceand in my pride, God alone knows, and I trust He has fcxgiven me. Brethem, I want you to forgive me. I didn’t go to get drunk. I took a glass or two of light wine with a friend, and later took a bottie of beer on ice, and then”—^ “Brethren,” interrupted a good old Inrother in the amm comer, “I would be wiffing to forgive the^kMrother for his fall if he would make a dean breast of it and tdl the truth. But I move we turn him out for lying. He has lied to us. Who ever heard of ice in August?’ And they turned him out becsose he dared to say that he had seen ice August. ' •eatk Cawsea ky Ha( Plas im I Piovldeaee. B. I., Special. Leona Jeodie, for two years a norice at a convent in Flushing, L. I., is dead after a long and myrterious Ulness which had baffled medical sdence. A^ autopey was performed and in the re gion of the heart, and pierdng the pericardium, waa found aheadlesssted hat-pin four and a quarter inches long. In the stomach was found part of an- otiier hat-i^ one and a quarter indies long, headleas. The young woman had complained of pains in the stomach since 1896, hut she died without having aoentioned the canae of her iUness. Governor Aycodc to-day disjpoaad oC an extremdy intereat^ caae by eom-. mnting to Ufe imprisDiunant in tta , penitentiary the death sentence ai Richard Haton, odored, who waa conricted of and-aanlsnead ta ha. hanged at SaUdNuy. Biffihaid Haas* ing, convicted at tfa« same time, waa bulged and on the scaffold dedared baton’s innocence. Oofvenior Ajmdk ^ys in lus roaaona for His guilt is too onoertain to his execution. Hie evidenoe him was that of the woman iriio only saw him in the nnoertain H|^ throngn an open do(». At first she failed to identify him and the ofBeer tamed him looee on her statement. He proved an aliU by a witneas who proved a food icter. The trial fudge eamestly recommds the comasatatioa, aaid says that but for an impfiedondMdaaA* ing that the sentence would be com muted to life impriaonment, ha lAmld have set the verdiet aaide. Bbton proved a good character on the triid. Ifany of the lawyers and other zepn* table dtizens of the county reeoauaand the commutation and moat of thaas express grave doubt aato his gidlt.** —There has been about fifty people hastens to jqpolo0iae, but a oonedted strudc dead by Hghtning in N«tiiCuo- iffiot rdls the moiad nnd« his tongue I Una in the pak month. Lohdoh, Aug. 7.—A man of name of Wootcm waa arranged before a Magistrate yeeterday on the ehaife af poai^ng in Windsor Park, taking tab* iHts betonging to the King. He plead ed in defence that he went into tike park to deep and the rabita ran into hia po^et and were snffoeatad. Deqpite thisdefenoehe waa aanlsMad~ to two month’s I A magarine called Suooeaihaa basa engaged in the profitable diveraoa of finding out who are tiie fifty greatsat hving Americans. The list wwaada up throng^ the medhua of a piiaaaon* test. Theodore Booeevelt, Qaaaar Caevdand, Vt^Uian J. Bkyan and Cbkt Justice Mdville Fuller cwnpoae tibe M of statesmen. The list of siaealers ia made up oi ei|^t diatingniahed naaaaik All but one belong north of Maaoa and Dixon’s line, and the one sdected from the South is BodurT. Wariiiai* ton. TheaeyeUow journal psiae eea- tests are invaiiahty pwdaetiia a( wMiderful, not to say fusairiih, rsaalls. Success’ list of 1^ of the grsatear is a marveL Ithaanot attracted near aa Charlotte Obeerver.