tannin in:tnniinniit ;;i ii 1 1 1 1 1 1 u mil ii r The Medium ; ; Through which you retch (he ' people of Madison County ; : ADVERTISING RATES ON APPLICATION ; : iiiiiii I U bed in the County 1 a year. in Ad-Vance I Job Printing Tr. mplly nd Nutly Don X i ii ii ml POLITICAL REFORM AND THE GENERAL UPBUILDING OF MADISON COUNTY. "it ' ; VOL. IX. MARSHALL, N. C, FRIDAY, MAY 17, 1907. NO. 21. ladison County Becord. A Floating Distillery. A resourceful distiller was the Con naught man who prepared his mash as he might legally do on ehore, placed It on board a hooker fitted up as a distillery, and then sailed ont on the pathless Atlantic while the -whiskey making was in progress. Then he landed with the liquor. After a 'long hunt a force of ipollcc In curraiis, or canvas canoes, at length laid the marine distiller aboard and called upon him to surrender. The answer was a shout of defiance and a blandishing of oars which the crew of potheen makers threatened to run through the frail skins of the carraghs. Only when the police of ficer declared that he would not hes itate to shoot did the outlaws sup render at discretion. D1RECTO RY METHODIST OHUBOH Rev. R. J. Parker Pastor, Services every Sunday, mor ning and night. Sabbath School every Sun day morning. Prayer Meeting every Wed nesday night. PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Bit. CO. 0at, Services e-Tery Sand t 11 a. m. and 7:89 p. m. Sabbath Schdol at W ft. m. Fraya? mefttinjc tyedMitof n&t a 7:30. BAPTIST OHtJBCH filT. J. W. SUTTLB, . . . PastOI. Servievi every Sunday at II a. m. anil 7:30 p. m. fthmtk SaMoaI e.t 10 a. m. Prayer maatiag Tuesday era- ;atT:u. MARSHALL A0A6IMT llva Roes MoCoD,...PrIaipal TOWN OPHOKR9 Roam N. Oatok, . . .. . J. A. Oraiomilks, Chief Police. LEWIS J. BALEY, Attorney-At-Law. MARSHALL, N. O. Practice in all the State and federal Courts, also in the Pen ion Office and other Govern' oaent Departments at Washing' ton, D. 0. CHAS. B. MASHBURN ATTORNEY7AT-LAW Marshall, N. O. Wfll practice in all the State and Federal Courts, also in all Government Departments In Washington. Especial atten tion to collections. ZACHARY & ROBERTS ATTORNEYS- AT-L A W. Marshall, N. O. Practice in all the Courts of the 15th Judicial District, and in Supreme Court of North Carolina. J. H. HUNTER Marshall, R. F. D. 8. 'h-t Practical Surveyor and No tarjr Public. All work prompt- ' tj and accurately done. idelity Lodge, No. 148. Marshall, H. G. Meets every Thursday night, U cordial welcome to all v&lft- i lac KnichK X VAN DAVIS. C.C. t II. HENDfcRSON,K.R. & S. ' JJLGndg er, w I. N.Ebbs, kenevllle, N. C Uet Springs, N.C GDDGER & EBBS, " ITTOKNEIS IKS COUNSELLOBS " ii AT LAW. C Will practice in all the Certs pf the Mate.' - Collect tis a specialty NORTH STATE NEWS Items of Interest Gleaned From Various Sections FROM MOUNTAIN TO SEASHORE -Y- Minor Occurrences of the Week of Interest to Tar Heels Told in Para graphs. Our State at Jamestown. Raleigh, Special. Commissioner General Pogue, of the North Carolina Jamestown Exposition Commission, was her6 last week. He says that he finds that it requires constant atten tion tokeep things on the move. The management of the transportation de partment has been simply chaotic and he spoke of one car of show cases for North Carolina which have been load anil unloaded seven times. Then, too, the official decorators and carpenters have been outrageously behind with their part of the work. He says that if the freights had been delivered within ten days after arrival at the grounds and if the decorators and in stalation -had -been completed by the contract time, practically all of the North Carolina exhibits would have been ready on the opening day. No less, than 180 of the North Carolina cotton mills make exhibits and have shown a very great degree of inter est in having their department com prehensive and it will illustrate all the kinds of textile work done in the State, some of which will be a sur prise to North Carolinas and to the general public. The furniture men will have two exhibits and will show splendidly what the State is doing in this line, notably in the manufacture of artistic furniture which will con vince people that they need not send to Grand Rapids or anywhere out of the State to get beautiful designs and excellent workmanship. The North Carolina building at the Jamestown Exposition is to be turned ove; by the contractor May 2oth. It is nut known whether there will be uny iemMiies of abdication or not. The building complete and furnished will cost something like $20,000. Three rooms have heen furnished as a private contribution a parlor, as reception room and living room. Mrs. George Vunderbilt furnished the re ception room throughout all the ar ticles in it being the products of the Industrial School, at Biltmore. She has at her own expense had this room paneled in oak. She takes a great deal of interest in the whole affair and no room in any of the State buildings will be more attractive than this one. One of the best known furniture man ufacturers in the State furnishes an other room and it is hoped that other manufacturers will follow their ex ample and furnish other rooms, as it gives public spirit and at the same time ilustrate in the handsomest fash ion what is being done in the Stale. The North Carolina building will be in charge of some specially appointed persons or perswi all the time and during North Carolina week, August 12th to 17th, Governor and Mrs. Glenn will be in entire control of it, as the commission will for that week turn the building over to them. It is ex pected that on Thursday of that week, there will be a general reception on a very large scale, as that will be "North Carolina Day." A Large Bequest for Guilford College "High Poinf, N, C, Special. Mr J. E. Cox, one of the trustees of Guil ford College, has received the encour aging news from Chicago that large bequest has been left to said college from the Fowle B. Hill estate. Mr. Hill was related to James J. Hill, the railway magnate, and has relatives in North Carolina. Norm State Notes. A splendid monument to Cleveland county s Lonieuerate soldiers was unveiled on May 10th, Col. Locke Craig was the brilliant orator of the occasion. State Veterinarian Butler, who went (o Polk county to investigate the alleged case of glanders, finds it was not that disease but merely an abscess of the tooth. - John Bethel a notorious negro was shot and killed while attemnting to CSearje from tlift-' convict - rumn nf Wake, county near -W ake- Forest. He ( J r ' P 1 o scumuiTu m iuur jtrs ior larceny.- . He escaped from jail some years ago, leading several other pris oners. .v,.i. c -.) f Insurance Commissioner Youngrules that no life insurance romniinv rininir business in North Carolina shall issue any special or board contracts or sell env stock in connection with its nnt. icies. This is to prevent rebating and is wienaea to piace au citizens of the State noon the same basis as far n life insurance contracts axe eon earn Gil. ' i, . ; - ..... 'V. " 1 . i N3RTH CAROLINA CROPS Condition of North Carolina Crops for the Past Week as Given Out by the . Department Conditions for Week Ending Monday, May 13. There was a deficiency of tempera ture during the past week, very near ly every day being partly cloudy. The temperature averaged slightly below normal, and the precipitation some what above nonaal. The highest tem peratures were1 generally recorded on the 7th; from that date the weather grew steadily cooler until the 12th when the lowest temperatures oc curred. No frosts were reported, but the cool weather has been very un favorable. Rain occurred generally on the 8th and 9th, but local showers occurred in some places, especially ii the western district, vary nearly every day from the 7th tp the 11th. Sevtye thunderstorms occurred in the Cen tral District on the 8th and 9th. While the rainfall was not excessive, still the previous rains were abundant, and the continuation of the wet weather gietly delayed farming operations. A. H. Thiessen, Section Director. Mrs. Patterson Suicides. Salisbury, Special. Persons from Mill Bridge told the pathetic story of Mrs. Bina Patterson's suicide Fri day eveging at her home ten miles from Salisbury. The stories vary in that some of them represented Mrs. Patterson as cutting her throat in a room and dying quietly while the oth ers declared she was in the yard and after slashing her throat ran after her children, whom Mr. Patterson had told to give the alarm to the neigh bors. Mrs. Patterson lived about lo minutes after committing the deadly deed. She was conscious a portion of the time, although is appeared that she was entirely deranged. Laboring under the delusion that she had done some great theological wrong, ahe scrawled as she rapidly bled to dearp these -words: "God revealed to m er' the day that I have overthrown the kingdom of God." Mrs. Patterson was Miss Bina Lingle, belonging tT that brilliant Rowan t'amilv, whose sons and daughters have iraortalizod themselves. Pjju.-brothei;, Rv. Df. Y"-ii;r l.i.ij;,'c', fit Atlanta, is one of the South 's foremost ministers' and her brother, Rev. W. II. Lingle, is a missionary to China. Dr. Thomas Lingle, is president of a Weste-n university, Mrs. Patterson was in her days of lucidity a delightfully gifted and brilliant woman. It is be lieved that Mrs. Patterson's tempora ry insanity resulting from cumulative sohows. Within tiio past yea she has lest mother and sislei, Mrs. .1. A. Mc C.i'jbiiis dying veiy recently. Charles Ramsey Granted Bail. Asheville. Special. Charles Ram sey, the Madison county officer who, on the night of Saturday, April '11. shot and killed Claude Ball at a "box supper" at Laurel Fork, Madison county, has been released on $2,000 bond for appearance at the next term of Superior Court or Madison county for the trial of criminal cases. T-he release of the alleged slayer of young Ball was through habeas corpus pro ceedings. The day aftef the killing officer Ramsey was arrested and sub sequently placed in jail. Recently at torneys sought their client's release and a writ of habeas corpus was is sued. Considerable interest it is said, will attach to the trial of Ramsey a', the next term of court. Joe Ball, fa ther of the slain man, is a very in fluential citizen of Madison county, where officer Ramsey is also well known with a large family connection. Charlotte to Gastonia. Gastonia, Special. J From Gastonia to Charlotte by electric railway that is one of the posibilitieg of the next year or two. Not only is it a posibil ity, but the construction of such a line seems highly probable. The basis for this statement is the fact that a pro posed route for such a line has been surveyed. Mr. W. L. Law, chief en gineer for the Four C's, and his corps of a afsiifctant reached Gastonia Thurs day afternoon, the terminal stake be ing driven down about 6 o'ocloek almost in front of the Falls House. Mr. Law stated that the route as sur veyed by him takes in Mount Holly, McAdenville, Lowell and Gastonia,' the length of the route being about 69 miles all told. State News in Brief. Dr. J. W. McNeill, of Fayetteville, of the Bickett commission, will visit colonies of epileptics in several States North nnd West. A Special committee composed of Dr. McNeill and the sup. erintendents. of hospitals at Morgan ton, Raleigh and Goldsboro, will care, fully investigate and report on best plans for handling epileptics. -. AtLumberton on Friday a moun ment'of imposing elegance was unveil ed. ; This shaft was erected under the aospiees of 'ie Daughters of the Con federacy to the memory of the Con federate soldiers of Robeson county. f Late fletes 'Brief MINOR MATTERS OF INTEREST Charles H. Moyer, president of the Western Federation of Miners, who is indicted for complicity in the mur der of ex-Governor Steutienberg, of Idaho, is said to have served a term in Juliet Pentitentiary. ( apt. A. Krech, of the Hamburg American liner Graf Waldersee, died on the voyage to New York. A shortage which may run up to $100.0('0 has been discovered in the Syracuse '(N. Y.) treasury. The appellate divison of the New Y'ork Supreme Court has affirmed the sentance of one year in jail and a fine of !f."00 gainst Lawyer Abraham II. Hummel. The rail manufacturers ami the rail roads me to name a commission which will determine whether the quality of rails needs improving. It is said that the railroads will spend $1,000,000,000 during the next year for improvments. In the Southern Wyoming moun tains it has been snowing for 24 days and the temperature has been below zero all the time . Friction attributed to too much mother-in law has broken out in tho family of Frank Jay Gould. The May music festival at Y'o.-k, Pa., is declared to have been a big suc cess. A son and heir to (he throne was born to the King and tueen of Spain. Americans accuse the Guatemalan Government of perpetrating un speakable outrages. Earthquake shocks were fell in Aus tria-Hungary and at Irkutsk. Sibera. The Czar has signed the $:t,000,000 famine relief appropriation. Paris critics are at war over Rich ard Straiiss' musical drama, "Sa lome. " A reception by the President, din ners by Secretary Taft, Secretary Hoot and Postmaster-General Meyer were among the events given in Wash ington in honor of the Italian and Japanese visitors. Edward B. Moore, of Michigan, was appointed United S.lates Commissiou er of Patents. Mr. Roosevelt called off the Cabinet meeting in order to take a ride in the woods, where photographers took his picture jumping fences and ditches. The presentation of the memorial gates at Jamestown Island by the Co lonial Dames of America took place at Jamestown. In an address before the Negro Bap tist Convention at Staunton, President K. H. Bowling said any preacher who had two living wives is unfit to preach the Gospel. A cable from Naples says: Enor mous clouds of ashes appeared from the sea, darkened the sky and fell on the town. Considerable apprehen sion was felt when it was realized that the clouds were ashes and cinders from Mounts Etna and Stromboli. A similiar phenomenon was noticed along the southern coast and caused panics in several places. A snecial from Bristol, Tenn., says: Felix Kidd, 28 years of age, was shot and tilled at Alta Pass, N. C, Sunday afternoon. No details ean be learned. William Quinn, ehief of police of Greenville, Miss., committed suicide in the presence of his daughter, Mrs. Houston, who tried in vain to take the pistol with which he killed him self away from him. Quinn, it is as serted, had been drinking heavily. Jud Rook and Jno. Rook, aged 9 and 11 yea;- respectively, were killed by a train on the Ocilla & Yaldosta Rail road Sunday afternoon. The boys were driving in a wagon . Franc H. Jones, the defaulting assistant teller of the Charlotte, N. C, National Bank, returned to the city and .surrendered himself to the authorities. He was held for federal court on a bond of $10,000. Thirty-one people were killed and manjL more.-fatally., wonnded in the wreck of a special train in California. Two Italian women were killed with a razor in-New- York and the husbaud of one a barber is accused of the crime. Charles Young, the 14-year-old son of Charles Young,of Berkeley Springs W. Va., was struck and , instantly killed by Baltimore and Ohio express No. 6 about two miles west of Han cock Thursday. The boy was walking on the track and did not hear the ap proach of the train. - I In m$mmmmmmmmmmmm, k IpjlpPAY BY CHECK, lllly Pay yow bill in buaineie-like manner, by cheek. It freatlyttoilitatc the conduct of yow bnslneu, both private and mmerciii while at the same tlm your fund are abso lutely safe. Baiinew conducted through a bank 1 always more digatned. Een if y use yon money from week to week aad month ii few? 11mm ptfOfsMBEaski to month, h, it (AtmoA turned cWkt are legalreeeipU (or every Ml) y W . 4 PER CENT. INTEREST PAID ON TIME DEPOSITS I! M( H IVW.; II II l,7 7 B & B B & B "OLD VELVET" "MARK ROGERS" FOUR ACES" FINE OLD RYE WHISKIES J 4 M SOLD BY Madison County Dispensary Man-hall, N. C. Frank Emmett. on trial for con spiracy against the Government, in Pittsburg, told how defective boiler tubes were palmed off on the Navy Department. Jamestown Exposition directors completed satisfactory arrangements for borrowing $400,00(1 for the Expo sition. George Grant Mason. "Silent" Smith's principal heir, who is said :o resemble the latter, will move to New York and "reft." Affidavits were filed in the Eddy suit intending to support George Glov er's couteueions. Efforts to make peace between the railways and strikers in San Francis co were begun by Mayor Schmitz. Monroe County West Virginia, con- templates the issuance of .$100,000 bonds for the building of macada mized roads. Ambassador Bryce poke on Mon day at the Jamestown Exposition to an immense crowd of people. Strong Sentenced to Three Years. Macon, Ga., Special. After delib erating 21 hours, the jury in ,t lie case of L. D. Strong, charged with the murder of Henry Smith returned a verdict of guilty of manslaughter and Strong was sentenced to three years imprisonment. Notice of appeal was filed. Strong shot and killed Smith, it is alleged, because of Smith's un wai rantable conduct toward Strong's sister. , More Than 300 Men Desert. Hamilton, Bermuda, By Cable. The British eraser squadron comand ed by 'Rear Admiral Neville, which arrived at Bermuda from Hampton Roads, reports that wholesale deser tions from the British ships occurred while they were in American waters. It is estimated that over 300 men, in cluding many chief petty officers, de serted. For the apprehension of a vhief yoeman of signals, a reward of $500 is offered. Charged With Criminal Neglect. Philadelphia, Special. On the charge of criminal neglect which re sulted in the death of his 1-year-old child, George Osbom, of this city, a faith cure adherent, was sent to pris on by the coroner to await the act ion of the grand jury. Rev. Robert N. Bauck, pastor of a branch of a Christian Catholic church, founded by Dr. Dowie, of which Osborn is a member, admitted on the stand that he instructed his flock to rely entire ly on prayer in cases of sickness.:, r CAUSE -OF THE FAILURE. . To what dtd' the critics attribute the failure of Ms' last opera." , ' ;"The music wasn't reminiscent aad U the jokes, were new." MUwauke Sentinel - . - ' . z mm i tint Bank. The JfEWST GLEANINGS. The South is predicting fifteen t eighteen cent cotton. General Joseph K. Hudson died at his home in Topeka, Kan. Prince Fushlml arrived in London and. had an audience with King Ed ward. About 10,000 persons took part in a Moyer-Haywood-Pettibone parade in Boston. William T. Stead outlined a plan for an endless chain of peacemakers throughout the world. Two Japanese cruisers and one Chilean cruiser joined the fleet of warships in Hampton Roads. The Southern Pacific Railroad Company cancelled its traffic agree ment with the San Pedro line. Americans are flocking to London both from the United States and from Europe on their return from foreign tours. The Turkish Government conceded all the American demands, chief of which was that concerning the treat ment of sohools. Conservative interests in France are troubled over the spread of so cialism and the Cabinet's attitude to ward the labor unions. It was said that there were 10,000 professional criminals in New York City, and-that the police and courts were unable to contend with them. Bishop Burgess in a sermon at St. George's Church, Hempstead, N. Y., put the blame for Rector Cooke's elopement on the laxity of the times. The Interstate Commerce Commis sion, acting under the new law, or dered ' a reduction in the United States Express Company's rates on cut flowers. . Southern business mea-returned to New Orleans from a trip to Panama, where, they say, the Government rep resentatives agreed to purchase more supplies from the Southern States. Schooner Moo e Towed to Port Badly Injured. Norfolk, Ya., Special The three masted schooner William Thomas Moore was towed into Norfolk after a collision off Hog Island with the Cuban steamer Bayamo which struck the Moore with great force, taking otf the schooner's bowsprit and badly damaging her bow. The Moore was bound from Charleston, S. C, for New York, lumber laden and the Bayamo wa's bound from New York to Cuba. Instead of increasing the rates the telegraph companies should reduce) them. They would gain such a volume of new business that they would more than make up the dtfferenceTTC should be the settled policy, maintain the ' WasMngton Star, of these corpora tions to attract business; to tramthe1- people to use the wire more, tre- . fluently, o inylte them by the offer , of low tolls and good service to tran sact more of their hnsiness by tele graph than . before. , . The telephone -companies have learned : the . lesson of profitable rate reduction, and it l a - strange spectacle now to find the telegraph corporations ' pursuing the Hazardous course of Inviting regula tive legislation by their defiance of. -the spirtt of the times, , - ' sf - f ;1