“ w. P. MARSHALL, Editor and Proprietor. VOL. XXVI. WilWII ■ I. X . >1. ■ . „ 6°lo® 5e5B5555SB^S5B5BB555558 I THE —JIT^ CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK GASTONIA, N. C. CAPITAL - - - - 300^000 With ample capital and Northern connection* we are prepared at all tinea to extend our enrtonu.rn any araonnt ol accommodation dc»lred at Hie legal rate of internet. 0*. Wc never charge cuatomera carrying balance* with u* above thia rate. Our 3 cuatoincr* accorded every eunrteay end accommo dation that Bound banking will permit. Y»uf baiiad— It roptcthUy Untied. I A* G. MYERS, Cashier [ 0°|q jMjjiiimijjHHwwiHMmasa laaeiaaiaaiaiaaiiii. . t Save Your f t Horse Money t 1 4 I 4 4 | Why not invest your horse-money in some of out ^ t splendid unbroken stock and thns save from $35 to $50 jl on every purchase? It is like getting that much pay 4, 4 for simply breaking the animal to harness. 4 4 During the past week we have had a good trade in 4 JL our unbroken horses and mules and they have given ^ JL good satisfaction. Plenty of both broken and unbrok JL eu stock still on hand. See our stock at once. Terms JL 4 always fair. JL 4 4 t 4 | ± Craig & Wilson J 4 4 4 4 ♦ i4 4 4 4444 4 4 M ♦444 44444 NOTES OFTHERAILWAYS Burlington's Plan to Run Trains by Telephone. FAST TRIP 07 A MOTOR OAR One m Ik* dates raatts MsSt Italy. Ikm Hites m Iteat, tart of War V* St sap Ors4l OsawtS at miitl Cara—Vatar BstlrssS VlsSset mm tUa taltaaspslla Ssstkars, Tba BurUugtou railway It preparing to giro a practical test of Ota opera tton of trains by telephone, says tbo Kansas City Times. Tba work of ■triaging additional wires between Kansas City sad BL Joseph Las been begun, and by lata fall every station will have been equipped with a new telephone service. Tbo phones will connect with a system of wires which land to tbo dispatcher's office In Bt Joseph aud to tbs ofipartataadeat of terminals' odlce In Ksaaaa City. Wban the eervloa la started trains will be operated on tba Mock system, nslog the manually oontroUad signals far train orders Hurllngton odbriale ha llo vo that tba service will give better satisfaction than use of the telegraph. A limited telephone twice between Kune*. city aad St. Joearfa la new in ••• by tbo Darlington, but uo effort la made to control tbe movement at trains by It ezctotfve e< ttw teWwraph. Tbe pboaee are need bow by station a (elite ta talk over beelaeee matter* that come a» la Uie!r oOeee. lb# tale phene at the Bean Lake etatlon ta new need by eooductun Vo eaU tbe die patdtor'a eSIe* far order*. There I* he operator at Beaa Lake. A. T. Perkloa of St. Joeaph. superintendent of tbe Une hatweea Kansas City aad St Jo eeph. who wa* at ton Kaaaaa City Co lon depot recently, aald: "material far ronetraetion af the ad dlthatal telephone aerrtee ta oa band and tbe tier* ate being trallt. VTo have never made an affort to Mack train* by telephone, hat wa batters n a goad ptaa aad wUl gfva It a trial at least. Wa da not ptopoee to do away with the tola graph. JEheae wtrea are always bwy and will freqneatly ha need for securing train order* when the tote phone wtrea are baay. We believe toe telephone le Jvnt a* *afa er even safer then taletoapb. Kettbar taatremant re eorde Me miaaige*. hat plain talk la •fton better toaa toe talk of e tale hay. We hope te bare tbe wtrea all af ton ffwtoitV patrk^te^ the MewMfeah WertlL^ the ca the Hi* 111 lino, and the car dlmbed U with the greatest case. Superin tendent of Motive Power TV 111 lam IL MvKrett. Jr.. Ita designer, was at the throttle. Ueoeral Manager Mohler end a party were on heard. It waa tiu uiunluetu opinion that the motor ear waa dvr lined to drive tbn locomotive out of huahuma on local passenger traf Be. 'Ur. Holder waa so plruaed that ha luvtmrtcd Mr. MeKeca to procead at oueo w|ih tlw voueiructtou of two now van trllh eugluee ef 200 horsepower. Tfco prreent car Is of 100 horsepower. TUcee new cars win be oo a different principle. the motor being constructed to carry the engine. the lighting plant, u luggage room and mall sectleai aad a trailer being used to haul paeeengers. A braliMuau In the Bants F# ranis i stopped by tlw aide of aa uaitarstuad . box car. which seemed ta be a dwarf beside ft big furniture car beside K. ray* the Kanaai City War. The brake man wrote ou the smaller car with chalk; Hush, little boxcar; Don't yeu cry. You’ll be aa alevmler By and by. "The way the capacity of freight ear* U bring Itu reared.’' eftl| U. T. Ulce. chairman of the state beard of railroad conumailaaara. "It wouldn't surprise me If the brakemao's com rent! came aaar hilling off the attua tloa. Within the last few years the «tra nf ordinary bos cars has i». emu-wl In k-uglb an Uto way tram tueutjfoar to alnty toot and tb* ca parity of raal ran from 40000 to 100, 000 poooda. Tbaro baa baoa a big la orraar lu tho ktaa of Hr* atoefc can, but cut to tb* aarao nstrot aa In th* otbrr itaaaaa of car*.” TTbut la tlalmod will b* ooo of tb* loo next and blgbcwt rlndncta cuuatmct* ad la tb* Ualted ntato* la to b* buttt by th* IadtanaiwlU gombrth Railway aoupaar «•> tt* **w Indianapolla tin* oaar Btootnltold, bid., aaya tl>* Chicago Chronic k» Tb* atraatar* will bar* a auxttoam bright at m tMt and a l*agtb at MtO fa*t. Magteaara of tb* mhuta Central otnaiwa) thro* tnootba la trying to gat a root* through tho dUtiirt (hat would aarag* a ravin*, tort th* big via>1 oat wai tbo only way of too dMVutty ft la oxpertad that th* wot*. win anaanma atx bmoBw, and tb* ecat will ho *300 000 Thta win ba th* Mggrat rortlaotrlag work o* th* nr* road, whlrb win roman la dlaaapolla with th* mala Hu* *f (h* nn**t* Contral railroad at HwHo city. A qoatat tarlctml of tbo Brltlah a*. KMUttoo'a rooout train jowrnry ta Ho lawtfo »*a Iho Mortar af aaaaa «*• trichn at Martial! a tattoo, which atalta ad with atatatr gait along tho train, gaagtog ta at th* itolioi. tort dtodata lag lb* affrrad dalatto*. ^toUNUawha* gadH», A H0BI1BLE SIGHT TO SEC* M. Fag lag Or sham and Hit Cal 11a Dag da a Msam Trick to a Colored Faaala CycUd Tho Dag Tatra tka Damssl'a Draaa all tad tbo Calaaal Laagha at Her Predictaaat. Ckulolii OtMmtt, "I law ■ horrible sight, the other day," said Col. Peg Leg Graham, of Pinevillc, Saturday, as the boys foie-gat hexed to bear him talk. "What waa that colonel?” asked an Observer man. "One day just about noon, when the cotton pickers were coining in for dinner, I stood on tny front porch and, looking down the Steele Creek road, saw something strange ap proaching. I couldn't 6gme ont what it was for quite a while. The old woman cattif out and she suggested that it was a balloon that bad lit on the ground and waa trying to move off but I tried to think of • fair that week but I hadn't beard of any close by; I knew that the Mount Holly fair, the greatest [Mr ever held in these parts, bad burst, and it was too early for the Mecklenburg fair. But the thing looked like a balloon all right. As we watched, it kept coming towards ns. It waa pulling the long grade above iny house. I became more in terested. 0 "We see so many danged new things, these days, in the way of automobiles that T know what to expect. Vixen, my old collie dog watches for ■utomobiles and it takes two days to quiet her after one passes. Sometime ago, way in the night, I beard her holler like tbe veiy old Nick himself had her ana in a jiffy, she broke through tbe front door, tore through the bouse, burst out the back door and ran clear away horn home. 1 never heard such s jacket os she kept but I knew what had frightened her—one of those confounded automo biles. The next morning, when 1 got up, she was still far from home, on top of a hill, in tbe held, barking as if she bad treed »°mething in the moon. I jailed her and she came run ning, but every fuss turned her back and made her hark. When l succeeded in getting her to the bouse and calmed her. she went to the road to scent for the bea»t that had scared her. I Followed her and there in the dirt saw the track of the auto mobile. "Bat, I am leaving my story. Yes, me and maw, watched that thing come up the hill. It be gan to look like some body on a wheel, but I had never seen tbe like before. About the time it got within 200 yards of the bouae Vixen came tearing out, with bristles tip, growling and bulking. She was mad. I knew then that it was a negro on a wheel for the old collie naturally hates a negro and a wheel. Bnt, bless my soul, the negTO proved to be a great, big fat woman. The wind had gotten beneath her aldrta and had them blown ont like a balloon. The old thing was having a mighty hard time. She couldn’t nde well anyhow, much less in a gale. Old Vixen spied her and went for her with a vim. Me and the old woman were still on the porch, looking her glory, kound the wheel ■he ran. Brat in front and then behind, grabbing at the akirta. * 'O’—way f rnm here!' ■hooted the negro. "But that jnat made old Vixen hot, ahe rushed in closer, and ■bowed more teeth. The negro was afraid to light and her skirts were becoming tangled in the wheel. It was better than a ■how. Well, air, when one side of the skirt was tied and twisted io the wheel Vixen caught hold of the other aids and In two ■bakes of a dead sheep's tail the poor old colored woman was without a dress. The wheel held on to a*pert of the skirt and Vixen fetched the other part to me. There stood the rider with nothing left bat her wheel and pod name. Maw ran in the boose while I lay down on the porch and laughed. The negro left her wheel lying in the road and sprinted to the nearest ne gro cable. Maw sent her down another skirt and the wheel. Vixen la opposed to the new women. I aew that that day. "But I tell you it tare was a right to sec. I haven't laughed so much since the war. The fanner gets eysn with these darned msebmea that scare his horse now and then." Snbeeribe for the Qastonia Quim CARNEGIE ON LEARNING Why the Steel King Oppose* University Training. OBSm FOE PBOnSSIOKAL WOKE »«« "• fall tl rants a Maa I'M ■aalBM* tat llakta a Orsiau a KaUtfau tWMtlM -n. call* nut FahMs taktal lanlM't VHtlatl last is at las. Aa Amrrlcaa who was rsoautiy • !»••* at Andrew Caraa«to at tUibo CMUa asuda to tb« Kew York World tram Bcetlasd an mcosaat at tils visit •» ths (tori kin*, from width the fat towlac. a cuavoraalloo at tha brsak fsst ttbir, is aa sxesrpt: Zb* subject at odacatum earns up. A •ansi Hatch baron dectsrad that msay psuplo art eraradocatad. “Taa," remarked Mr. Oaruonto. -Load Bear bare, who trail Ora langaanoa, knows too muefa." I* ragty to a qoosUso the pbUuaaphar of Okiba lasandtad out Utis wajr: “One of the aberratiour of tko an* to the aacrtic* of time to aadsat rlea toea on the part at yean* ors i»spar ln* for a business carasr. A nu with a university education to n mas lost to com merer. A young man who ba |Us baatoass at ainktsrn i* vary niseh hatter aff than ha who spends torso or few years tn a uatrerstty otodyin* •M nubs ns who Mead XOOO years ana. ntunymn emrmUhe* amen* Mvsgas tn the classics t* no preparation fur a man •elan lato the Iran, steal or eoai kart naan Uraak and lotto ata a* mors aa* than Otertew. exesyt to the few. Why ahonid Fnalisb aaUera bar* to laa» tha lotup of vtr*0. Horace and (leers r HtonUati cOeere study cmmi wura ttw result? They MX foolish courage. Instead of each* thameol*** they allow themes! rm to be abet aad aay they ara dying ter their country. I prefer aa attcwr wbo woald maka as Intelligent run whea aacaaaaiy »»d then coma back and Ure ter bis eoontry." "Da you condemn nnlrarahy educe tioe ter nil?' “By no amena. I aa spooking of the aaaleaaaosa of aalracaity educate* far tec young man wbo has ta make Ufa way la lira. Tha tnsa wba la boro ta wealth can da aa he pleaaaa. Ha baa no Interest for tua. Ha rarely amounts Is anything anyway. Tboau preparing for prof casinos 1 pursuit should go to tee nnlratuHy by all nsaana” “Da you maka any exception7" “Tea; clergymen. “Unt vanity edacities Injure* then. U lend* them to higher criticism. They begin to pick flaws In the BtbU. Tha nacoaat they begin teat they are deem far; tbey are bo good for rwUgtoo. They lead to lateUedaal aad religious an archy." The Carnaglcs ware oatartnlalag a boose party. la addition ta tea learned tord Baay, tea Dutch batrm, who wrete books, tad aatna eminewt 81a rs who had came to prase at aa addwma. tea gaawta ware an acevmpilsbod arch daaaen of tbo ctnuvh of wegteed a genial Vow York physician and Ua son ny wife, a bright American girl, who kept tea ball rolllag. aad lfra. Cama gic’s slater, who plays billiards oetan tttcally and bant* (ha man at tea puna. A remark by He. Caraagla about looking to tha mamas of tea people to rare aerial Uli led ta a ceovarsattoa ape* democracy. "Ate yoo Mill as devout a batterer In tea people aa srbm you wrote Trtum gbaut Democracy.’ Mr. Oaxnaglcr I "Tea,* be rapUaA ’Tears barn mad* me lava teat mar* aad mom If democracy doe* not succeed, than teats ta no hope tec humanity. Tha classes have failed; now domoc r«cy ta grttlag a show. I bora no tear for democracy ta America. Whan thing* l**gtu to go seriously wrong (here the people sat team right with n •addon Jerk. “What to tea grant** A ns arias a In "Tba pabHc acbool hoeeu “Whet makes America ao Croat r “BuualHy aad Urn that that It* foau daUeu vu laid by a rnlnntolag race." hykbeaa*? “Ka It laeraaaaa. I an mere re pnbHcaa (baa If I bad bean beta ta tmirtn, far I raauaa Mbr (ba aoaaa lo* uf the ward republic. Tba treat thine to ta bo a amaaa sad aot a aab Jaat" from tbts (ba eenveraaUoe drift* ta tmpmmu Tamla* t» oaa * bla goaata wba bad tba staff of a social re form* la Mac. Mr Corooglo soldi “I bare tba ba* tempi ante toctera ta Scotland. 1 lira aa lain*I of M par coat la tba* wayas today man arba cede to me at the aad * tba year ■od Van me they baas been total ab ■tataon. It wort* tike a (ton. Tbay ara all tampan ta; all bare money la (ba ba*. Uy roue chauffeur mlobt retire tomorrow, and tba Interest aa bla money would brine la 9000 a year.'’ "Do tbay soar ptetaad ta bo abataJa era wbea tbay ara aa*" 1 asked. “Its. A SeetriMaaa will a* Ua ta yea. Da kaewa bla Bible and bis Bane. It may ba tba Btbla, bat I *t* It to tba laffaeare of tba aatteaal peat, who tanfbt them that 1 mas la a mu far a* that.'" A «M% 9m*. A fM pro rale* with yeaag *rta to the deerftaff * jewels, the am totter* * wMd> ape* e asm*, (ram itmdii toll aarUaeaa. Tha Mae Me* free* rerts. Fat a atrl earn* Thames e temu**, I hyacinth, three amaraUa, aruby aad a aapyhIra array* la prayer enler aa* ba satssaaS, Subscribe for tke Gasstts WARTS SIMM FOB BS SDR. Cuticle (or Grsliiaa_ •» fsllew-eik'. WUe Saye fee waa Peeled tea Hack. QkatluUm Olww. Spokane, Wash.—Oct. 13.— Georg* A. Lovejoy.aa Elk, who was selected to furnish cuticle *}’!! * Wlow Blk’s wife, Mrs. Pied B. Sc tries, suffering from •event bams, yesterdsy brosgbt *«»•■ C. P. Thorns* tor $10,000 as tbe value of 30 inches ol ‘.klP hc **r» ‘he doctor peeled ofi his legs while under chloroform. Mr. Lovejoy asserts that it was represented to him that tbe surgeon would take from bis thighs only two or three strips of cuticle three or four inches long and three-fourths of aa inch wide. After the operation. Lovrioy found that the fronts of bis legs between koce and hip were stripped of skin, sod it eras ten days before he was able to leave the hospital. Mrs. Scarlcs was burned in an accident with a lamp at Lewiston. Idaho, and was brought to St. Lake’s Hospital, Spokane, for beat* meat. A number of Rika volunteered to furnish cuticle to cover the burned places, but Lovrjoy proved such a promis ing subject that while under chloroform all the skiq neces sary. except some supplied by Mr*. Scarlcs’ husband and brother, was peeled oi bis legs. ceufol. bat the women wu so weakened from long illneu that •be died. Soring* lank Incident*. A n«ed little newsboy ca tered • Pittsburg bank one day and boldlv invaded the private office ol the president. ■Say, mister,” he said, "can I pat souse money in this bank?” ■Certainly you can,” the pres ident answered; "how mack do yon want to deposit?" ■A quarter!” exclaimed the youngster, palling a handful of pennies and nickels oat of hit pocket. The banker took him over to the receiving teller and introduced him with all the def erence that he would have abdwn a millionaire. ~ The boy left the city sooa af ter opening the account, bnt be kept adding to bia deposit from time to due, and as he was nat urally bright and shrewd, every thing he undertook prospered. He i■ back in Pittsburg now, the bead of a successful manufac turing concern and one of the bank’s most valued customers. a * a A year ago a proud young fa ther out In Michigan sent $25 to open an account for bis first born son, then leas than n week old. "The hoy'll need it some of these days,” he wrote, "and we may aa well begin to save for him right off.” Six months later a tear-dlmmed letter came asking to withdraw the money to pay the little fellow’s funeral. a a a A working woman in a little town In New York sent a dollar bill in the name of bar daugh ter, six yean of age. "She’ll be married by snd by,” she said, ■and ought to have something to start life on.” That was nearly two years ago, and al most every week sioee a dollar bill baa been added to the ac count. There’ll be a sang little marriage portion for the young lady some day If nothing hap pen*. • a a Not long ago a woman living in Illinois sent $5, with explicit instructions not to let ber*old man know about it, as he’d be •her spending every cent of H for drink.” -V ..14. M.UvI.bD.bUr. That the New York Life bu charged up $1,103,930.14 for "law expenses" since 1900. el w b i c b "Judge’’ handled S470.8Z7.9Z at Albany presumably lor the purpose el defeating '‘strike** legislation, is at coce instructive from the •taadpoint oI the poBcy holder and stimulating ferns the point of public morale. . It brings alee the that the Mew York in recent years mast seated a magnificent aS'lrasrSFls haps it Is net tee Isas ansa new for Mr. Jemma to broaden his capacities and insert the probe. The New York LegfsUUu* has bees ratten—no other word aptly describes the condition— mnee long before the days when ■Mr. Theodore Roosevelt first became coaspicnona by Ms as* saufespn the lobby; and there are doubtless soma members, uf the old regime still doing busi aem at the same eld stand in spite of Urn present reformers. After dm investigation of insurance nutters, if tbc re formers could tarn their search tight upon their own body's recent behavior the result would probably be one of the greatest boodle exposures of this era. The half has never been told— indeed, scarcely imagined—of New York’. l«ri.l.t;„« CMeMCkarat. Then axe but few States la ibe country which excel North Carotins in the extent of her Balnea work. Every iadkatios b that the nest national Boraca convention will be held U Char lotte. At present there ere hot two cities bidding for the meet* tag and these are Albany, N. Y., and Cherlotte.:^Tbi» matter rests with'fihd national executive committee which is to meet in New York city in January. The fact b worthy of note that of the nine executive ofietn two of these are from this State. Mr. R. V. Simms, of Raleigh, b first vice-president ol the or ganisation and Mr. J. P. Flow era, ,of Charlotte, general sec retary. At the national con vention held in Detroit, Mich., lam month, Mr. J. P. Flowers was tbo only speaker south of the Mason and Dixon line on the programme. Mr. clovers b an old Lowell boy, and bis Gaston county friends retake in the good ha ta accomptisbisg sod in the honor* which Imvo come to him in his w®nt» An Pnwkima Pattest. &r. Fred K. Cooke, who »*• c«tly located in Durham, for tbo practice of hb profomton, had quite an nnwelcotee patient a few days ago. Wo am from the Durham Herald .that Walter § ► c3vf»f«»IItattreS, . w yom