the dunn]
__ < •$« •
YOL. 11 ^=======:==========:==:=====^^^=s^==' V A ',.■■"■■■ ■■■ . -- '■—--^.1=
— ■ __*_Dunn, ». q', Mjp2th, 1916
--WAI Jk i LHicOKi
“•* H. Butler. Ho* of , Kofi*.,,
. .soldier, Speaks to Wrld the Tie
Which Make Ours a United Coaa
try.
Perhaps the largest crowd eve
fathered at that </ulet little tpo
since the battle of SmithviUo wa
fought on the «th of March fiftj
year* ago, was present Monday af
ter noon to pay roepect to the 41
heroes who died upon that field ant
are buried in Chlrora ceniotry. Th.
occasion wu momentous. Man]
memorial day ceremonies had beet
held there In the half century rinev
«iooe followers of the Stare anti
Bar. wore laid to root In the shade
of the oaka under whose spreading
bow, they fall In defense of the Con
federacy. Many notable orators had
spoken Share in eulogy of the alaep
bor044 »nd their comrades who
llead to rebuild the South. Upon
tbil occasion though, the address
rams from the lips <rf one whose
father had fought on the “othor aide"
and the old soldiers, their wires,
sons and their daughters were curi
ous to know what this man would
">y
Bioo H. Butler, a native of Penn
•yivania, whose father fell whilo
following the colors of the 11U>
Pennsylvania Infantry, a man who
wh<> hai «w»e down to old Carolina
U wrmt fortune from IU soil, and
to enloy th# bloasinga an unselfish
notore has so boonleously heaped
upon this fair land. Was that orator
*»d his offering doligfatad every per
“o »ho heard it. Ha said:
MY FRIENDS:- We are gathered
her* today to pay a tribuU to Lhal
memory of a type of manhood that
mm um earliest days of history has
bald ttia admiration of their folio*.,
Thnt type i. the man who sacrifices
Uma^ for the defense of what he
believe, to be the right and the com
B*°" good. Wer la • terrible my*.
■rtth the intelligence and
human rata poaaaaaei war
«*onW ba . factor of mod.™ pr»c
titan It la hard to understand. Yat
desbutttva war the
of you are not awn~e
of it, bat in the war whith left these
mounds oat hi front of «s my people
were on the* other aide. Over the
fire-place in my houae hangs a sword
and a canteen. Where the swords
and can teens In your houae* have the
letter* C. 8. A. these in my horse
have U. 8. A. Yet it is none the lava
fitting that I should be here with y >11
today, for today, my neighbor*, my
friends, aadtherefore my people nr.
your people.
Men ask me my view* aa to the re
sponsibility for ths war in Europe
whethar Germany la to blarre, or
Austria or Bueaia ,or England, and
I tall them neither of the govern
ment. is responsible. A climax of
conditions arrived in the affairs of
Europe, and war broke with a nud
dannesa that startled the world. I
have no particular sympathy wi.h
either country In this struggle, for
each is alike the victim of conditeni
in this strugglo, but I can appreciate
tha heroism of tha soldier* that fight
under every flag that Is engaged
Twentv vear. sen 1 was In Constan
tinople, now the ambition of tho >1
1M foreea, and I want acrata tba >p
par and of tba sea of Marmora to
Wait tba British cemetery where ara
buried tha Kagllth soldier* who fell
la tba Crimean war at tba battles of
Balaklasa Sevastopol and Inkarman.
The same thought impressed me
there that baa impressed me in many
other cemeteries where the soldi*™
of other war* ara buried. It makes
no difference what, tba nation, what
tba conflict, what the flag. The sol
dier who back* up hi* idea* of right
by marching into tha faiv of a crn
noa needs no further statement of
hi* rtory than that as *ua a sol <!er.
O-at an tba hill* of L*. «lr c nroty
are tba neglected graver of aoldiara
of ha revoWUon who fa'I in Jw Wtt
Ut ai Ramsoar'e Mill. In I'rsnkfort
Kentucky, 1 saw the monitnm'. s jO'r
the dead who ware trwfll :<ark
frjn. Magics. It U tha same every
where In the finely kept cemetery
at Cbarlaaten, South Carolina, I
pointed to my boy man who had boon
on one aide while hie grandfather
had bean an tha other, and 1 im
pressed on his mind that It waa no
personal quarrel, hut a matter in
which each man had lard down hie
Ufa aa tba msaint* af bis devotion,
that a atas who will offer all, no
matter whether be lias in South Car
eiina lowland* or tba Kills of Penn
sylvania, must have tba utmost oi
Ms veneration. Your people and nr)
people wars tha victims of condition
extending hack to tha day whai
slavery waa forced an tha colanlat
by Spain and Oroat Britain. War ii
War. Nothing ran ha said In defenei
af it. Bat It is past.
A few day. ago I am* coming oa
af Ralatgh and at tha station a vat
ana from the aoldiara boats tame 0
i the lama train bound for tha waat
"rr- of tho state. An old man
| ab«.v« 80, cheerful In .pits of tha fact
i that in front of Petursburg hi* collai
. bona and shoulder blade had beat
•hot through leaving him unable t<
raise hU arm from that day to this
• f showed him to his tram, got hire
W**n** “ he was right deef we ai
i erected right tnurh attention. Bui
he was an old man, who needed Kelt
and encouragement, and whenever 1
«* an army coal 1 know I have
found a mao who ha* proved up lc
tho right to require eomo things
from his fellow*. Then it occurred
to me that It wee our folks on the
other side who had made this man a
wpple from his early manhood, to
hi* old age, and a little ratribuliun
tvs* always in
order.
There is nothing that 1 pay more
willingly is the way of Uses than
the pittance that goes for pension,
to the Confederate soldier* of the
State, especially whan I think how
rauih the SUL. pay, to the pension
roll of the federal government with
nothing in return. Al a Northern
man I would My that in all decency
the money that is reattributed to the
pension fund from the Southern
HUtes should be paid to the veterans
of the South, regard leas of whioh
Bag they followed. If we of the
north cannot taka care of our own
*• •fcouM »«t compel the other fel
low to help, and if we can take car*
of our own Wa should permit tha
money the others pay to go to caring
ror their own. My father fell u
1884. Ipaid the price that a boy of
•even has to pay when he is left one
of a family in extremely modest cir
cumstance, and it was a long uphill
■truggU. Some of you have ssij
that in the North w, knew —-c_
of the paultiat of war. I wil] ta'I
you that wherever war puU its foot
rnark the pcnalUe* are felt without
mistake. Wherever you And war and
that war is fought by man who leave
mothers and WIT** ud children be
hind yoe And war exacting it* pea
*JL*«*- I have alluded to the heroism
of the men who g* out to defend
their Ideal, with their Uv^
have read tha pgama eg the mdrW •
think tha world does not understand
the work that fail to k# lot of the
women of the Confederacy. But thv
world understands pretty wall. It
understands bora use war la war
wherever it is fought. TVs wirnon
of the North understand tha hero
ism of the women of the Confelera
cy, for it was of the same type that
was manifested by ths woman of tha
opposing section. The legacy of
war U widows, orphans and poverty.
It it the same whether in North Car
olina, Pennsylvania, Belgium, Poland,
Prance or any place. And because
it is the earn* every place, because it
was the same In Pennsylvania a* in
North Carolina, wa who can yet re
member, understand very wsll the
heroism of the Confederacy. You,
bare, who arw_oid enough to remem
ber understand*squally well the hero-!
tarn of the woman of the North. War
hat no redeeming features and it
plays no fivorltas.
As lime roils on we get new per
spective of things. As a country wo
do not hold to tho views ws did Af.v
years ego. Por Instance I am n Arm
xliavtr in State i right*. • And I
Ind, that eort of a mixture here and
here and all tort# of other klnde of
mixture*, where fifty year* ago mem
were definitely aligned In nnmixed
Form againet each other. We are a
nation, with a big M, pa waa ahown
In th# war with Spain, whan Fita
hugh Leo and Jo Wheeiar wad# right
In front of the foe*, and when Worth
Begley, the North Carolina boy, west
down, we made It a Pennsylvania af
fair just aa yea made It a North Car-|
oltna matter.
One day I waa talking to a Cana
dian In Lon don about mattora in
America and ha said that our civil
war waa not yet ended, and that if
•one day dttleultiea xhaodl break
out between the North and Canada
the South would revive the old com.
tact. I aald to him, "My"friend. You
do not understand. The old Penn
aylvanta wild r»l regiment and the
eld Louisiana tiger* have fives place
to a younger generation They nr*
moving back aad forth across th*
herder and getting aeqnalntad aai
marrying, and by the time wo ham
roared up a little brood with tigs
and wild eat Msod both in their vein,
Seelsehub hmeetf will have no bus!
nee* tackling the U. 8. A., and don*
you make the fool mistake of tryin.
It."
Thirty year* ago I lived in Knox
vine, Teaneeeee. There on th
thirtieth day of May a friend cam
to mo and eald, "Yank, coma wit
m».'
Wo wont oet on th* itroet »'v*.
I roresaion waa forming which led th
, way to th* handaomo F*d*i*i cvar
to* > Just outaid* the city, foe Knoi
t rifle waa one of the disputed plac
. during the strife. PL Saawderr wi
i (Coatinned en Page Two.)
V
$
MAY CALL SPKC1AL TERM
Congested Condition of JokMNs
Cennty Docket Make* Term V
Necessary, . .i<
i SmithAcld. May 8—On account a
the rongaated condition of the John
•tor county civil docket, Uoverno
Craig bei been asked to call a »p<
ci«l term of court to be hold, here be
ginning July 10. The governor ha
designated Judge W. M. Bond, o
KHxabeth City, to hold the ur«
w">ch will be for two weeks.
The new city administration whid
We* elected lest Tuesday without op
povjlion was sworn In Thursday. J
consists of L H. Allred, mayor; N
T. Holland. H. P. Stevens, 8. C
Tumsge, N. B. Grantham, H L
Skinner, J. D. Underwood end J. W
Stephenson, aldermen. Mr. Alfred
ia the first meyor to be electod by
the popular vote in over 30 yoars
The last session of the general as
sembly changed the charter so that
this could be done.
Mayor Allred, who has been a mem
ber of the lost three general os Been
biles, succeeds James A. Wellons,
who had been Iheyor for the post six
years. He has given the town s live,
progressive administration end re
Gres of his own accord with the pluo
dlts of the people for the line service
he has rendered tho town. 81nee he
became mayor six yean ego grano
lithic sidewalks have been put down
In the business part of town, end an
up-to-data electric light, water end
sewer system installed. Daring the
poet six yean more money has been
b’wetml in bsliding operations in the
town than had been durng the pre
ceding 20 yoars.
' ~at Uadrn SchoeL
Luidan. N. C.. May 7.—Wednesday
evening, Thnnday and Thursday ST
•nln* marked the rioting of the moat
•“ee-Mful year of the Linden Grad
ed School; and tha axerctsaa through
o® war* of tha flghaat typa and ra
•■**»d great credit oo both faculty
»d (tndeeta. Never kkg 1MMM
A “ - - - -—-I
upper grades, subject, ‘THamonde
and Hearts/’ This was rendered to
wail that it would have done credit
to a regular theatrical company. The
play, together with several musical
selections, constituted 'the program
of the first evening.
On Thureday tha audience 44|s de
lighted with the vocal and instrumen
tal selection*, after stilch Prof. Pet
ton Introduced the speaker of the
day, Dr. W. A. Harper, president of
Eton Col lego. Prof. Harper’s ad
dress was of the highest order and
full of wisdom and good instruction*
Ha mad* a good impression upon his
hearers, and has made for himself n
srerm place in the hearts of thapeo
pla of Linden. After the address,
dianer was creed, end it is only nec
essary to say that Linden hospitality
prevailed end that good things were
in abundance.
On Thursday afternoon the chief
feature of entertainment was a ball
game played between the local team
end Godwin, ending in a score of tan
to three In favor of Linden. Both
teams Disced good ball but Beard
pitcher for Lindon, wu ontiroiy too
much for tho visitor*, hit pitching
together wth the hatting of tho locals
wore the features of the game. In
all. It was a good, clean game, and
we ware delighted to Hava Godwin
team and so many ether Godwin peo
ple With DB.
On Thursday night came the clos
ing exercises, which began with reel
tatlona, dialogue*, etc., by tho chil
dren, followed by an operetta, “Fete
in Flower land," The costmaoe of
the young ladies wore beautiful, and
the songs and acting gava evidence
of superior training. This closed
tho common cement proper, bat all
warn delighted with e abort speech
mode by Dr. Melvin, who stated that
the committee had met and re-eleetad
each member of the faculty for the
ensuing year. This announcement
was mot with hearty applause.
Unclaimed Letters. Weed ending
May ■> IIIL
1. Rrockerton, James
2. Brown, Fade
S. Blliott, Alford
A Durant, Willie
A Johnson, Bert
> A Joyner, lewis
f 7. McDougle, Jessie
A Moore, Sherman
t. Stewart, W. V,
5 10. Strickland, Harry
* 11. Bass, Miss Lottie
* tl. Bard, Mr*. Cora
It. Ollliam, Mr* Emmor
1 1A Tow, Mrs. Annie
' 10. WilHsme, Miss Alberta.
I. __
<• Blue Mood may bo all right for m
* called aristocrats, but tho old-foal
* I limed crimson brand Is good seos|
for msn who de things.
Wu
>•(
Karty
reached
Lb*
cava rafiaha
wu a (till (a
Creak near
(taps were
wfcaraatKNtta of “Su*.
•cMa-laa' fa, taIT
branch** sod whera
it U conTament 'ntayj
lay in wait for «* op
at the a till, bat aa lata in
doing ao the oficara • flnimiUii to cut
ay th* atilL Flu f* barrsla of boar
wu poured out and t ho atill war cot
to piaeaa. Only tha* worm wu left
to tall th* etory and f*>at amt carried
to Raleigh, where it—, Will no* likejy
crawl back to it* M d taastar. A
new pomp wu al*k£ broke up in
which they need for, . Pumping wmUr
to their place of b«x Inaaa. Iamadi
alely after thi* eaptcjr* author atill
waa alghtad In aMthpr (Hyae*i«n from
Angier bat whan thr' oOeen arrkrod
the atill had Jut hr pan morad to
other quartan acdiVWy —‘raait this -
one. Chief 8 tall ha* Mom aome good
work in thu Una, W Akh and ahoodl
be congratulated, aad .It ia hoped he
will ioon nut *rwit a tkt* — —1« ■
'■ever*** that la enartin* a* no I
destruction to manfrtnd. _Fcqjny
Leaf. 1 | -
- -1
. An sngagsmart ’ rill* !• a (trl’sli
Idea of a round of piss aura.
No girl ehqold aittiu a knsband
until ah* is abls to fatart a round
sua^nt^qwajj*^^^,
• J a
CHAPEL HILL LETTO
Nuwi at Thaw Who Woo la Spell
lag Control
Chapel Hill, May 11—The spalling
tort conducted by Prof. N. W. Walk
er, State Inspector of Ugh school*,
was participated in by 179 high
schooli and. 6,619 boys and girls.
One handled and fifty schools ren
dered reports of the results of the
tout in which fifty word* In common
use were submitted us the efficiency
beets. The number of trials in the
last was 926,660, and of that num
ber there were 96,102 failures. The
•rerag* grade attained by the State
wee 09.87 per sent.
The honor roll consisted of twenty
pupils who made perfect grades. The
beys and girts and the schools they
represented thus accredited ere:
Piers Canaday, of the Henson school;
1 Nellie Fleming, Boonville; Lillie Al
I ken end Jennie Bloom, Durham; Go
dona Pope, EUan Uaultsby sod Mery
Clerk, Fayetteville, Rowans Evens,
Henderson; Charles Blackburn, Ker
nereviUe; Marguerite Sullivan, Bailie
Hoover end Floyd Mace, Lincoln ton;
Fannie Green, Lowe’s Grove; Kath
ryn Ilamphrwy. Philadelphia*; Cran
berry Tucker, Plymouth; Annabel
B ponce, Seven Springe; May Bias ton,
Shelby; Lilly Pye, Startown; Mamie
Deal. Wadeaboro; lei* Buchanan,
Webstar. Of the individual schools,
Kittrell heeded the honor rod with
a percentage grade of 89AB. Cool**-1
me* high school was a cloaa second.
The list at words sebmfcted Were:
Wednesday, preparation, Connecticut
religious, laboratory, neuter, twelfth,
cylinder, yield, asperate, else, relieve,
which, foreign, conceivable, achieve
meat b*Mfttta4 ghangeablet plea
t»ou», friered, pitiable, breadth, rec
ommend, descendant, aenanadate, oc
enrranoe, refarrad, government, buai
naaa, praeada. ember***, until, re
eatra, eh eaaee, appreciate, receipt
Pehnary, prejudice, license, ridieu
In*, privilege, parallel,
****8 •P*De«i correctly '(1,17
out of 6jtn ehmtaaa
PrcT*d «■ « eahataatlm
T* „ ^ batter apollor,
. j. Th*m***' of eaaee li
girls made the highest grade,
»»• M, whlU only » times did Um
h°n.in th* pnrteular. Th,
number of cam. in which boy. mad,
*“ #0; *•» Irirl,
mad. the loweet grad, in id
—8. R. Winter*.
*f,***° Heliaeo* School Cemauace
maaL
An inriuuoa u, the Dupatch from
_. *,^co'1 Holinaaa School Com
maneamont contain! the foDowing
program:
*"*<•»/. May 16. S:00 P.
rtOaching by Her. N. J. Holme*
Monday, May IT, 1:00 p. m__i
Kserdaaa by the School
Tueeday, May It, 10:00 A. M^_
P^ing by Rev. N J. Holmes
**** P. M.—Exercise* by the
Itanawnll fackaon and Joan of Arc
Utarary Societies
IM -""""" ^
WadDMday, May 1*. 10:00 A. Mr
P'^ekHMT by IUt. N. J. Holm...
1:M P by jju.
^ P ** Drama—R*ul T„.
Oar action. .eMora tony wit* on,
It»od Intention.
Th. flirt)
W. harm Am word of ana William
Shekotpeerc that to deader a follow
man ia a moit disgusting and die
graceful way of speeding the abort
•pen of yaare alloted to kaman* here
below. But goeeip la wore*. The
line between goeeip and slander may
be aa imaginary one, bat slender
sometimes rtaoe to the dignity of a
crime, while gossip is just a laay
ves; not that gossip* lot any gras*
grow under their feet, but goeeipor*
ere never interested la any work of
aft ar ut science. You never saw a
reel goeeipor who would help a way
ward child or taka aa Interest la any
of th* small or groat problems of
vale* to humanity either ia tho solu
tion ar the experiment The goaeip
has but on# ambition and that ia to
be th* first one to tall a place of
news. Th* gooaip cams not whether
It b* troth or falsehood, whether ft
wrecks a home or breaks a heart.
Jaat so it keeps going and as it go** |
of enure* It grows. A born gossip
eosld no mors rap sat a precious mor
rt of "aowe* exactly as U was told
than a politician could tall the troth
la regard ta Us record. Little
"harmless* additional details make
it sa much mess interesting.
If gossips would Stick to the exact
truth ia their raia rspstitisns they
would thereby develop an* of th*
most valuable moral and mental
traits of th* raco—integrity. If gos
sip* would derolep late beings of o '
act rectitude, they would ho forced
thereby to cease from troubling and
mold very toon discern tho meanness
sad psftlasas of their raeatisa aad
would forsake it iaatantar. Lying is
yet so one will hey tM. more atrra
uoeaiy then e readi-mod fouip and
no ono will more rigorously eeaeri
that whet they ere telling U axed
troth, "not that they ere vouching
for it, oh, no, but it wee told to tea
exactly that way."
Albeit after long years apeat in
ro—ining Om MvonMctr bu loii
the ability to MO the truth. He reel
* ty baUeree what he tail* te be th<
1 .truth., pa really bettors* what hi
" MB* and la Irmly cwnrtwuod tel
! if**1 ^te^UaWi^r^bi.**^
«tor. and he cares for netlaag else
. **oept to get away end repeat the
■torr to aome one elae.
^■‘P ha* wracked more homaa,
mad. more drunkard*, ruined thr
tencee of mere young people end
the tedding „/ ter,
ten may ether known view of mmn
Women used to be caliad the
I'Sdpm and it wea one* the prac*
lies of an aaligbteaad society to duck
them. Aa they went under the cold
water they rualiaed aonwwhat of
tew meamteea and it I. tel «unr
te*» tey ruforamd. Women
HO- drm4ii?L TW are timeocn.
aiul tedious. They glory to the down
fen of a youag awn or woman or
any lap*# on the part ef a beaiaeae
r^»t
uoo. formerly their excuse wn
tet they had no otkm way 0. ™
the time .way, te new with ^
club duties, her church work, her ao
S* mnd W Ms end family,
the ordinary women be* enough to I
' -'■■nuw, to that I
» bfHiaitt nnia. Ii
advanead in tW,
' - -** amra thaa in any one
direction daring the past decade
If wa have acorn and hamh word,
for a women goaaip where ahall WT
°°k. *T *“«'»*• ***** «>ough to
condemn that mo* despicable of all
numin wretches -the stale eoaafo
Bank faUarae have bean charged to
*"! yaalca are hie work and met,
uT ”? ***** “d triumphantly
| Uvto* down , dark past are broken
and wore* than mardarad by hla mie
*T*bU gtoa h, making public mm,
fact ar suspicion ha haa “heard."
lnarlm * U,n*r teaa that, aat to
Son Frsneieeo, during tha program
«f the graft prosecution, haa—aa
ha could aat kaap i, hla own mtoera
bto car*-, something ha Imd kmrd
about a pr—pectiva juror. Tha man
waa living . aaafal life with a wtfa
*ho trusted him and H w— a far
greeter degrees to tha attorney who
broke daw* that aaa'i atractura of
Ufa aad crumbled Ms hopes, than tha
troth -aid aver ha.
kia peat record was, whan ko *bm
""•**•■* did what any man -.
j*J* would bava
••Mad to da, and after tka axcMa
"T* * **/” **< ***1. a dead
J—ay theaght aad aald: “Ha—y aat
hla pity It waa oot fatal." The man
had not courage to malm another af
fect aad tha poor fallow killed hhm
self tha aama day. that proving what
•*"■■* “ wh- J-t ba
tka too to epraod tka “new*."
Ttmo have boon eceea. of sack to
•taiuaa. aad It la a pity that satiety
haa not avalvad eoam taniehjnw.t 1I
Urn molo gmaip wha ref.— to alWrv
a maa'e past to ba fbcgatt—
1W* wh a lawyer la Kaw Kag
W ** "*• • "7 r*m** au
*“ teotenerd U iha worUxma. far
ptety Am. After ha (tew
up and «u admitted to tha her in ihe
eemmm.it, whore kis raeard arm
known, ha went wart in tha heaa than
b« could ranch . higher pteeahi |T
J!**"■*•• '~tU h* h-rfUa i.
W* boom mate. Ha had tha .ttriitj
to run for edict and tha mate — - ■
rn.' character ra.rderara .Lhu!**!!
tha fkct that ha Imd aaca kma-Vn
H tehmd him. wtm^L
r^mtHr the many aten a man
wap tacstelt and net ha "caarlted.’
*• rmaamhar how amah mm.
m a villain a maa may ha wha date
"•* break a ctatate; It a.
M injorticc, tat igm
ba hanpy tf they know ,
•Pteten untem they pafctteb R ml
**aat near tha am aa a ohaal ateote
•ter kin putrid reward aa ha pall* It
into tha Nght ad day.
It la a dlmruMlac rah teat aad whm
te think af aH Urn Maa thhma la tha
world aad tha ♦'--inn it if kilo.u
>tet thing, wJ might da aad htraaU.
BIOS H. BUTLEK
SI’EAKS TO CIAMBW
PirwrJeuMlW Trite Dm BwM
er» That They Have Unlimited Op.
psrtaaltiee. Awaithag . lateJUgsat
Blau H. Butler, tha farmer Jap,
nelist whose booster articles te the
State press have attracted the atten
tion of the entire world te the tmri
Kills of North Carolina, was hare
Monday night to address a meat lag
of Ute local chamber of commerce,
aad it is certain that tha members
of that excellent organisation sever
listened te a more interesting or a
more practical talb than that dellv.
trad by him.
Mr. Butler aaid that ha had been
told that an S4nch flower pot full of
Ha matt—or Jarvis--soil had hami
known to prodace several hundred
thousand ten* of hay. He was net
prepared to refute that atalamwrt,
but he was certain that this section
could bo made a orach mere prodae*
lira one through tha introduction and
am of mere latefligeat and me-* In
tuntie* methods of tilling the a*R.
He bed just been taken over the
country surrounding Dana aad was
surprised to And that fully flea^i .tbs
•f the bast soil to ba included te tha
proposed county of Jarvis eras lyi.rf
idle. Bt pointed oat that lhaes
lands should be used* to twlrlia.'o
tteir jar* toward placing tha otua*
try v • era K has every right to be,
and rat.: that tha only v tufa- :*ry
way u. get them under -u': nation
was to tndare the coating of good
farmers from parts of tha country
leas fevered by nature. He, htaMrif,
Its climate In his western ha*
•ylvanui horn* oatwro had subjected
Wm to the mom rigorous hardships
In winter; snow covered the ground
from early fall to late spring; the
ground from to • depth ef aevnral
feet; water pipes mere always burst
ing, and in many mays life la Us
mountain home waa mods iwpiiasanl
Ha earns south, discovered dm sand
hffls of Las, Meat* end Hoha. reeog
oiaad tha great paidhOMu af that
_
<* <*» North goad, aterdr -
‘-ufli.vot^kWwLJZr^Tr*;
S*- ***** h*r* ** they morn shewn
Ih* peaaibllittet which await istalli
**"* davelopmant. Stock rebars. to
bMee growora, followers ef eve
binnch of tha agrcoltaral ff—~ «,
parts ef tha country ara wailr
°nly la be shown. To that comman.
Hy of ea stars North Carolina which
Mr. Duller is a good roads entha.
•iaet nod knows the value af modem
thoroughfare* as community build
?'ur. r°*<U "* <**“* tar
uplift among rural dwallay, than
any othar mjrsory, and ha said that
Urn people of this kmality woukj dp
well ta follow the example <f thoee
of other ports at the country where
r0od ^ building had proven so
K»not a boon to an —y Good
tha cold North a single mile of good
e**u tmm *M0» to tlC^M
5r«its**- - h* b-n*
Dun®. -*t Mr. Batter. U a might,
f0*1 tawn; Ha pamabiUttes are UIHa.
itabta. Wth the remarkable to
rouroes around it davatepad ta their
£•" rapacity. It thould be one of tha
SouUi'e greatest loams. And ha ex
pte** to mo it move forward at a
•noth more rapid rate whan Us poe
r* •w»haa to a fall raoBaattea of
•Ml is In store tor thavn.
Tha Rev. Baylaa Coda foMawad '
Mr. Batter with a Aset and wkta
•pssch upon pood roads.
the value of goad roods,
wi,b his boaters far a grm
sat in thorn.
I ANTED - Read
I i. «# OW®* ^ • f,n* *» toot State, and
I hto to toi. .*«,» .Worth
I S ^ *"“r* * Wr Ow-l.
I * *"d "Wl. —Oroalaad to town school
1 ,“** b • ** **tl*on to Ohio and will
1 f* M> ^"“r l» North Carolina and who
I to -n- "ttZtLZZVL*! t'nom
I - dtot farmer of Ohio aa
j| l ^OTB WAM, ruw Maaacar.