W. F. MA1SHALL. IUU* uU Pr»»riet—. vol. xxrv._ POINTS AND PARAGRAPHS _ON TOPICS OF THE TIMES. Under thl# he*4 will he printed from lime to time noteworthy tfUrraicw on theme* ol current (m.-rcAi They will he ut«fl from v«bllr oddr*aB«». book*, mutasioen, orw*twyrr*. in feet wSereeer we way And them. Sotur time* the#* eeUdlont will accord with air view* nod tbe view* ol Mr read ere. eometimra the op polite will be true Nat hy reaeoo ©( the tabled mailer, theetytr. the autborabrp. or the view* eapreeaed. each will hare an element of timely inter** to make it a cotatptcooue utterance. A Fact That Speak* Strangly. PmbyttrtAn Standard. The drink bill in SontU Carolina is a little over two dollars per capita. In the United States it ia ten dollars per capito. One fact like that speaks louder for the dispensary system, in spite of its abuses, than a thousand allegations of saloon newspapers. ur . ■ -m. .JL1-" ?■ ■■ ■ 1 A Bloady Record. rntUiTiUi Qbacrrci. Judge Bryan then remarked that he had it on the best authori ty that in North and South Caroliua for the past few years there were more murders in proportion to population than elsewhere in the United States, and that if tbe same average were maintained all over the United States, the number of murders for the past year in this country would have been 13,000, more people than were killed in the Philippines and Cuba during tbe late war. Oroatar Diveraifyiaj* la the Sooth. Wiubtaflaa Foil The southern land is capable of producing a greater diversity of marketable products thau the lands of tbe west and northwest, the centre of consumption it inure accessible, cost of living is less, and the climatic conditions more attractive. These are some of tbe reasons for tbe marked increase in population of the south. It i is an evidence of the new spirit of the south, an indication and a promise of still greater development of her marvellous resources. As to Preachsra. New Yovk Prui "Show me ten preachers," said a woman the other day, "who have even a suggestion of sympathy or pathos in their voices, or who read tbe service with any degree of impressiveness, to say nothing of common intelligence, and I will show yon ten churches filled every Sunday to the doors, but with congregations that are interested and in thorough accord with their respective ministers." Surely she is right. So much for just a bit of intelli gence; just a touch of human sympathy. Pappias. Richmond Nt«> Leader Nothing in natnre is more gorgeons than poppies. Growing in a wheat field they make discs and great plashes of scarlet, gleam ing in a sea of rich gold rippling heavily as the mid-summer breeze glides over it. Brilliant and stately, tlicir broad petals face the sun unabashed and unafraid. Yet, when we gather them, in a moment they arc withering, united, lifeless things. We seize tbe flower, the bloom is fled. Burns, who knew nature, chose tbe poppy as the emblem of pleasure, dying and fading as we reach it, hanging dull, lifeless, and unlovely iu onr grasp. The Way Te Check Crime. StaUrrtlV* lutank. The only way to check the vicious-inclined is by holding up to them constantly the terrors of a broken law; the only way to stop criminals from perpetrating crime is by enforcing tbat law to the limit. Of what avail is it to talk to a hardened criminal about the blessedness of living uprightly and walking circumspectly? The only thing he regards is punishment and only the fear of pun ishment will deter him. So long as he thinks he can escape tbat he will, unless checked t>y the hand of the Almighty, continue in bis evil course. Punishment won't stop him, you say? Then let him suffer punishment all his days. What right has the criminal to breathe the air of freedom and inflict punishment on others. No. What is needed is an end to this infernal sentimental non sense about not punishing crime, and if the preachers would put a good sprinkling of hellfire in their sermons it would help the cause along. _ Taxation In Clflss. Chaitam SccotdJ The taxpayers in the country have no idea how much lighter are their taxes than are the taxes of those who reside in the cities. The rate of taxation in nearly every city is at least twice as high as it is in the country. The rate of taxation for city purposes alone it usually more than the combined rates for State and coun ty purposes, and is frequently twice as much. And not only is the city rate of taxation so high, bat the valuation of city property is usually nearer its “true value in money” than that assessed on country property. ThU high city rate of taxation and high valuation of city property are not pecnlUr to North Carolina, bat applies generally throughout all the 8tates in the Union. The average State and county tax combined U about seventy cents on the one hundred dollars worth of property. ThU U about the average tax In most counties of thU State, and yet the city tax alone in most of our cities is almost $1.50 on the hundred dollars worth of property— more than twice ms much as the combined State and county taxes t Ha Safety far fha Ifagro Out at his Place. SWt—j Nawa-Iaaerr. Yet we cannot blame the white people of the South for being extra sensitive on thU subject A small element of the colored people and their friends at the North seem to be determined to be eggressive in these matters. Many negroes of the wealthier and more intelligent class have the habit of riding in the Pullman cars. They do it constantly. It U impossible to boycott the Pullman cars, but some of these days thU habit will cause an outbreak which will make everybody sorry. Whether there is sense in it or not, the skin of the Southern men will creep at the idee of hav lug his wife or daughter sleep in the tame berth that perhaps a negro man occupied a few hours before, or eat from the same china with which a negro guest was served. Every approach or attempt at the assertion of social equality between the races makes a condition of high tensioa which a very small Incident may snap into a deplorable and far-reaching tragedy. There la no sense (a mealy-moat bed talk or trying to shy away from (acts which are hen and must be faced. 7 • We are not discussing the sense or the justice or the propriety of the race prejudice, but we are talking of the facts; and the facts •re that there U uo safety for the negro as long as he attempu anywhere or in any way to assert his social equality with white IREDELL'S FLOCK OF SHEEP. Hr. Archer Telit el a Year** Ea perieaca—la Tborengkly Sal* laded Thai Sheep Husbandry la • Paytag lavaatmanf Here— A Better Shewing Under lm* proved Coodltlena. S»bo»I Archtr (n OUlMvint Lmd—1% A lew days ago a gentleman •aid to ns, "Well I used to read about that flock of fine wool sheep, but lately I bear nothing from them. What's the matter? Arc they not doing: right?" When a person ts busy at work that most be done, writing is generally put oil. That haa been my aituatiou. Then onr wool that was sold early in June to the Chatham Manufacturing Company at Elkin. N. C., was not all delivered till late in July ou account of harvest. 1 wanted to sum up a year's business ac curately but l can only do this approximately, as the keeping was tarnished by Mr. Aderholdt and Mr. Gibson mostly from their farms and not closely weighed, measured or priced. The expenses were more than they would have been had the farms been bandied a year pre vious with a view to keepiug sheep or feeding stock. This year handling the sheep on them is not coating so much as last. 1 have just finished an article for the Charlotte Observer and 1 may not do better thau quote some parts of it and abridge other parts for The Landmark. Last year the wool from 200 ewes and three rams brought us ?175.75 or about $1.85 per head. his year oar wool from over 100 late lambs of last year went in with the ewes’ wool (which al ways brings down the average) ana the whole clip, including a little pulled, wool estimated, brought us about $425, or $1.45 per head for the flock, young and old. Here is a falling off of 46 cents per head, seemingly, for the flock, young and old. Up to the time of our division of the flock between Gibson. Ad erholdt and Archer, before shear ing we bad lost seven and a half per cent. (15 sheep) of the flock and part of that from accidents. Diseases thst are contagious, or that arise from heat, rains, storms, water, the soil or its pro ducts, have not Caused us to luse more than I have seen lost in other countries from the same causes. Parasite worms, the great en emy of sheep husbandry in all countries, and which affect the animal so often in one or another of ita organs, have not abown them selves any more dangerous or destructive here than I have experienced elsewhere. While such insect life is known to be more destructive in the warm Souththan in the cold North, yet I have seen them infest flocks there and carry them to death equally destructive with cholera in swine or fever in cattle. Once in the spring we were frightened with the discovery that we had the disease and some of the yearling lambs began to run down ana several died be fore we commenced vigorously to rive all the sheep, both sick ana well, rosin, sulphur, sul phate of iron, etc., clean out the sheep quarters snd disinfect their troughs and racks. These remedy menus were completely efficient and the enemy yielded as quickly and good health was restored as soon ss I ever saw it anywhere. Alio a friend who ha common sheep wrote me about that time that hia lambs were beginning to die from what 1 considered was the tame trouble, and I rec commended the remedies. He wrote me that not one died after be commenced treatment. So I do not consider this flo<;k more subject to Iocs from disease than such sheep were elsewhere where I have kept sheep,nor more sothau the common sheep of this country when kept in Urge flocks. Bat going back in my story to the 40 cents shortage per bead on fleeces. The lambs were less sad all shore less because they should have had more to eat and been cared for better in summer and fall. Hot one of the same lambs we sold shore less tbaa tea poandathoogh one of them, sold to Mr. Forsythe, of Greensboro, was selected from among the least we bad. the flock, young and ok), fed on tbs grains,grass es sad fodders common to this country came through the year in as good health as I have known them to do under similar conditions hi other parts of our countv, b substantial evidence that the abeep business in this country with flat wool sheep is u success. Had the lauds wbe re these sheep were kept been brined up with improved grains ■ml grasses more especially for stock feeding, ss they are this year and doubtless will he from now on. and had the excellent sheep barns that were finished only at the close of last year been up for nae from onr start ami the sheep sheltered In them sad under trees from the hot snu and bleaching rains as they have been all this year, I am confident they would easily have shorn over 10 pounds average, young and old. This at 20 centa—the Crice received—would be $2 per ead, what ] have alwaya claimed and yet claim this flock will do with fair treatment. Two mends in Ohio having the same kind of sheep and class of wool much heavier than ours, this year wrote me they sold at home at 22 cents for the whole clips. Bat the Chatham Co. were liberal with os tor a factory in the South not working so much flue wool as coarse. Another evidence fa that our three Merino stock ratns, being boused aud fed about as they would have been in Illinois where they came from, shore in aggregate over 25 poouds more than last year—one dipping 30 pounds, one 32, and one 38 pounds, and I am confident that nGoliab,,*the last noted, vrillclip over 40 ponuds next year. What 1 say must not be con sidered in the least as a reflec tion on my partners, for they are not only my friends, bnt strong adherents to the business—have built fine sheep barns and are adjusting their farm operations to sheep and wool growing. I must give them both credit for having their sheep, taken as a whole at this time, in better con dition than miue are, for they are succeeding this summer with their sheep. Smtksrtf in k«r Coffin. Olford Lcdcn. One day last week a colored woman who was supposed to have died at Lincoln Hospital, Durham, was placed in a coffin and shipped to Person couuty for burial. At Deuniton junc tion groans were heard in the coffin, which frightened the by standers, but finally the coffin was opened aud the woman's hands clutched her throat and her body was warm. It was left open for a while, but it was sup posed when the groans ceased she had smothered to death. Orlm bat Effective. Charlau* Chnmlcl*. Two negroes who are em ployed as porters on Southern and Seaboard Air Line trains, respectively, met on Bast Trade street the other day and en gaged in a discussion as to the number of passengers bauted by the two roads. The Seaboard darkey described at length the heavy passenger traffic of his road, saying it excelled all past records of railroads in the South. Tb5.^uthf™ employee waited nntil his friend was through and then squelched him by saying: "Shah, nigger, you don' know what you’re talking ’bout. Why, we kills more folks ev'ry day den your road hauls.” Whit • Little World! Baltimore Near. The conspiracy between science and invention to de crease the site of the earth con tinues. When Christopher Columbns, having decided that India could be reached by (ail ing westward from the coast of Spain, set oat with the Santa Maria, the Nina, and the Pints, ; this terrestrial ball waa ao small thing. At the rate at which be traveled to the Bahamas, it would have taken him con siderably more than a year to circumnavigate the globe, ex clusive of stop* at way stations. Indeed, nearly a century after Columbus’ first trans-Atlantic voyaxe, it took the greatest of the Elizabethan seamen, what with tempests, mutinies and other delaying things, nearly Unce years to make the circuit. But then came lamer and faster Ship*, wide knowledge of enr rents and winds and courses, then steam as a motive power on land and sea, and the globe circling record dropped with big Hiiupa Not ao many yean ago but that many Baltimorean* »• a result of the fictitioiu Pfciticju Pogg*t re markable adventures, great con troversy arose as to whether the trip around the world really could be made in AO days. Those who ridiculed the idee were brought speedily to e realization of their error, sod now Mr. Henry Frederick, a citizen of New York, has girdled the globe hi 54 days, 7 Sours and 20 ml n Utea. He waa s( *tply travel ing comfortably, too, he says: aot rushing. It's a little world we are living in. ON CATCimO COLO. Same Staple Way* by Which tl NiyheAnlM You Lira CantuM. Habitual colds arc doc to as ill-kept skin ou tbe outside and dyspeptic mucous membranes on tke i aside, tbe result of indiges tion or constipation, coupled with carelessness. Cold water, proper food, and common sense are tbe founda tions upon which n cold earn must rest. A cold sponge hath one to three miuntes long with a brisk dry rub immediately be fore and after, it excellent— usually that is necessary to keep the cutaneous circulation alive and tbe skin reactive to sadden changes of temperature. For those unaccustomed to cold water, tolerance can. be gained in three weeks’ time by the use of water at any comfort able temperature, making ft one degree colder each day. until U can . e employed without dread ■* cold aa »t will run. Salt may be added to the water for Its stimulating effect, or alcohol; witch basel is also useful. Cold water intelligently used does not steal vitality, bat fos ters it. It stimulates the nerves that control the expansion and contraction of the blood vessels aad regulates the cutaneous cir culation. The dry rub is a fair substitute for those who cannot lake the cold sponge. For cold feet, wading ankle deep iu cold water in the bath tub for one or two minutes be fore retiring will be found effect ive. If reaction does not net in after brisk rubbing, wrap the feet in [flannel; they will soon thaw out. Do not use hot water bottles or other debilitating forms of heat. Cold hands may be treated on tbe saute principle, bnt they have to be kept in the water, usually, a ranch longer time. Some colds axe due to micro organisms that attack the air passages, but this is tnacb less likely to happen in a person whose powers of resistance hsve been raised by dietic and hy gienic measures. If colds resalt from dost in the nasal passages, as sometimes happens, the nostrils may be washed out regularly with some warm alkaline solution, and with as much satisfaction aa one brushes the teeth. This is prop erly a part of the mofolng toilet, for those at least who suffer from cstarrh in the atmosphere of neat cities. Operative inter fearmoce on the nose and throat may be required for deformities or disessed tissues which act as an exciting cause. The inside and outside skins of the body are so much in sym pathy and so dependent on each other that any disorder of the one is sore to react upon the other, and this is especially true of the alimentary canal and the skin as a whole. Over-beating when tired, over-eating in con nection with over-exertion, in dulging in things known to dis agree, are among the causes of colds; for taking cold is ordinar ily nothing bat a successful at tack from without; an attack that succeeds simply heciuse the skin, which resists, is not properly supported from within, or lacks tone itself. One should "keep moving” when wet or chilly, and not stand on a street corner or else where without taking *l.-ep breaths. The lungs osea in tins way act as a pane to drive the blood along. Thb practice, with the others named, will re duce to a shadow the liability of having to entertain this unwel come guest periodically. A gentleman who has traveled over a large portion of the coun try recently finds that along tha macadam road and the rural free delivery routes the people of tin county are greatly Improving the appearance of their homes by painting their booses and out houses and by cultivating grass plats and lawns and yards around their houses, and otherwise beau tifying them with flowers and shrubbery. So msch for good roads and rural free delivery. So long ea people live an Isolated, ■hut in life, it is natural that (hey should often be carelees as to the outward appearance of their hoatee but good roads and rural free delivery bring them closer together and work marvel one change in many ways. Peo ple who have given thought to the subject ere of the opinion U»at good roads and rural free dellyefycaa be depended epos to check the influx of rural pop ulation into the towaa and cities, aad thns save the country peo ple to themselves. WAISTINCS. They are at Yeager’s. * * • The new waisting* are here. If you have not seen then there's one pleasure yet ahead of yoa—coore is aadleathern. They are new iu fabric, new in colon aad caloraoaibiaaS^^T •olutdy new In patteraa, aad .Imply bewildering in variety”’ Se if®! ®°* ^h*t lylti yoa, aad If yoa are seen veiypattfetdar yoa adll find a patten here that aeita yoa perfectly. Thao look stall the other pattens and act that tbcre's noaco&er like voare-tha water qya--ara73,JS NEW SKIRTS. Hart also yoa wQl had the newest styles In walking shifts sad NEW HOSIERY. „ Prettiest line of plain fhO aad wtater hosiery ever shown la Gastonia. Our children’s aad ■isass* hosiery at 1 p«W for <5 eta ' nMMgw la sizes from 4’a to »a. fa tha beat iw ofcrefl ia this * * * Mbs Paths, oar expert milliner, has serl—te aad vfB mu have charge oloor millinerydepartment ^ JAS. F. YEAGER, »——wtt the price of the ready acetal, wtather Ow mdcrgescp hepptoe at peer hoeoe or at poor oriUe. Betkeriogthe (ertfeaty aet. a’pfceoe ie peas-head fan economical coevcaieoee, is poet store ee eflke a soaepoaUac Urestmeat. Both are good tftiaga. The Flodmoot Telophseo aaafl Telerrsph Company is ready to install it* glmfli service fee pee. r •' 1 I KING’S MOUNTAIN MILITARY ACADEMY, Yorkvllle. South Carolina. Cadets Conn* put of caktued. refined, social cinda. serart'rw's^a^m'1; •ball at all times conduct as a gentleman orleave A safe place for yonr boy. Cal. W. O. STBPHBWSQK, Sept SAVING MONEY! - Cr»lt 4 Wlhon's CKA10 < WILSQH.