iffflfltf Commercial Printing Letter Heads, Bill llesils, Noe Heads, Statements, Business Cards, Envelopes, etc., Exeouted Neatly and Promptly. It Pays to Giv THE PEOPLE Rti invitution to traje with you. The best way to invite thorn is to ad- Eg vertise in . THE TIMES. &22S2222E VOL. IV. WALTER B. ESLL, Editor. ELKIN, N. C, TIHJUSnAY. SEPTEMBER 24, 18. & H0T2. Publishers- NO. 50.. yM m it i m i 1 1 BRYAN IN HUH CABflLJNA Multitudes of Enthusiastic Silverites SVleet Him at Every Point. A GLOWING TRIBUTE TO VANCE. Said There Were Personal as Well as Political Rea sons for His Visiting North Carolina. TAR HEELS CAUSED HIS NOMINATION. Asheville made grent preparation for receiving William Jennings Bryan. Tuesday evening and night the claus began to gather from the highland. Prom every available camping-ground in the envirous of the beautiful hill city, camp-lire could be seen glowing cheei fully In the cri p September air, the Round of the enthusing banjo was Lear J, while the merry mountaineers were gathered around it, talking Bryan and free silver at 16 to 1 and jubilut ing over the good time coming, after (he inauguration of the Nebraskau on the 4th of March next. When the liryau special reached Asheville at 2:35 p. m., it was met by tiie euthusiivttio escort provided by the energetic Buncombe county Demo crutio e.tucutivecoiiiniittee. The Bryan party were ushered into carriages, and the procrihiou formed. A mounted escort of ladies ami gentlemen, the la dies under the lead of Mrs. Col. Rura bongh. led the way. The Bryan car riages came next, containing besides Mr. Bryau, Chairmau Clement Manly, of tne Deinoeratio State executive eoin- 4 y William Jennings Bryan, Democratic Candidate for President mittee; Chairman Hal W. Ayer, of the Populist State committee; Chairman Frank Carter, of the BnnoombecouDty Democratic executive committee. The rest of the carriages came next and the mounted escort of one thousand horse men after these. Five hundred of these horsemen came all the way from Greene county, in east Tennessee, bringing three days' rations. The line of procession from the - '"c- - - " t Depot street to Patton avenue and thence direct to the Battery Park. The streets were lined a'l along the way with men, women and children, eager to seethe distinguished Nebraskan. Flags flying from windows and porches and the people who viewed the procession from house tops and those who packed the available standing-places along the route kept the candidate constantly bowing bis bead. The stand from which Bryan spoke was erected in a curve of Sonthside avenue as the street bends around Mc Dowell HilL The side of the hill had been a corn field, and the people brought newspapers by the thousands spread them upon the oorn hills and sat upon them comfortably. The crowd formed an exceedingly pictuesqne sight, a gionp of color the women in their holliJay attire relieving the denser blackness of the crowds of men. The acoustic properties of the spot were faultless. The hill, which trended northward and south ward, enrved, amphitheatre like, and the speaker's voice as the sound waves strnck the bill before him, re bounded and fell in showers of grace ful oratory over the people in car riages, who were behind him, the stand dividing in two the great crowd. In testing these aoonstio properties the day before, a man on the top of the hill, 60 or 75 feet distant, heard, with xexfeot esse, a man speaking in ordi- 1 nary tones of conversation at the bot- I people . were gathered. Soma esti ! mat us placed the number as high as 15,000 The immense throng remind ed one of the pictures of the multi tude on the Oriental hillsides, which were fed with the loaves and fishes in the olden time. On the stand besides the members of the Bryan party were: , Col. A. T. Davidson, Maj. W. A. Outhrie, C. B. Watson, Locke Craig, R. U. Garret, W. W. West, J. S. Ad ams, Prof. Eggleston, J. P. Sawyer indeed nearly all the prominent Dem- cratio citizens of Asbevme, as wen as many ladies. As the Bryan cavalcade came in sight down the avenue, the crowd rose to its feet and cheered. As the speaker mounted the stand, as high above the people's heads as an old-fashioned pul pit, the crowd again roue to its feet, cheering wildly, the ovation lasting several minutes, and the demonstra tion was repeated with intensified vigor after the candidate's introduction by Locke Craig, Esq. an elegant iutro- duction, by the way, eloquent, grace fully delivered and just of the right lengtn. After the prolonged outburst of wel come bad subsided, the speaker be gan: He said: brtan's speech. "I have a reason for coming to ortn Carolina which is personal aside from ray interest in the electoral vote of this State. It was the State of Carolina which at Chicago before I became a candidate, before my own State had taken any formal part in pre senting my name it was the State of North Carolina, which, by resolution. decided to give me ananimous vote of the North Carolina delegation in tha't national convention. (Great cheer ing.) I appreciate the honor which they have been willing to do me and therefore it gives me great pleasure to come among these people w hom they represented, and what assistance I can, if any assistance be neeeded, to secure the electoral vote of this State for the free coinage of silver at 10 to 1. (Cheers.) I am glad the canvas of this State opens in this county, which was the home of one of the grandest publie given to this nation not alone by North Carolina, but the entire country Sentor Vanoe. (Great ap plause.) He whom I delighted to honor and I am glad I stand among his neighbors and friends advocating the same cause he so eloquently advo vated and I cannot more thaa impress upon your memories the words he so often spoke. Let me read you a few words from it: "The great fight is on. The power of money and its allies throughout the world have entered into this conspiracy to perpetrate the greatest crime of this or any other ae, to overthrow one balf of the world's money and thereby double their wealth by enhancing the value of the other half which is in their hands. The money-changers are pol luting the temple of our liberties. To your tents, oh Isreal 1" (Applause.) 'He foresaw the struggle in whioh we are now engaged. He realized its magnitude when many others did not. Those words oame from him as words of command. 'To your tents, O, Is rael.' And the oommand was heeded by the Demoeratio party, and they en gaged first in a warfare within the party to rescue that party and the party name from the hands of those who were using it to advanoe the interest not of Democracy, but of plutocracy. (Applause.) It was a great contest. I venture the assertion tliit never before in the history of this country did any party have such a contest within its ranks as that which ended at Chicago. I venture the assertion" that never be fore in the history of this country have the voters themselves had so much to do with a conten tion as did the voters of the Demoeratio party with the conven tion at Chicago. . This question was submitted to the voters.- The Demo ocratio idea has been that the party is but the instrument of those who com pose it, and derives its power from the will of the voters who number them selves members of that party. Yet it is often the case that theparty machin ery or bosses have more to do with shaping the policy and making the nomination than the voters themselves. I am proud to be the nominee of a conveution which represented no machine, no bosses, but the unpur chased suffrage of the voters of this country (Great Applause.) A few months ago the most sanguine Demo crat did not believe that success this fall was more than possible. The most sanguine Democrat felt that four years of gold standard administration had destroyed almost the possibility of suc cess. But the voters of the Demoeratio party determined to make one final right and determined that if die the party must, it should at least maintain the honor of those who believed in the right of the people to govern them selves. (Applause.) The result is just what it always is if people lay aside expendiency and seek to do their duty and accept oonsequences. Iu trying to right the Democratic party won a possibilitv of snooess which it never could have hoped for it it had consult ed expedience. (Applause. ) I, for one, said, whenever our oppo nents would bring a pledge that the gold standard Democrats would take. it would be time enough to ask free silver Demoorata to make pledges, I stated in answer to an inquiry that I would net support for President a man who wouid in the Presidential chair continue the present financial policy and mortgage the United States to English ' bondholders. (Applause.) "I said it because I meant it. I may be wrong in my judgment, because none of us are infallible, but my judg ment is the only judgment that can control my conduct. (Applause.) Now when the Secretary of the treasury de nounced me as a Populist and said I said I woaldn t support the nominee. 1 replied that I did not expect him to support the nominee it he were a free silver man. The time came when he was put to the test, and the only dif ference between him and me was that I ws candid enough to tell the people I would follow my conscience, and he tried to oontrol a convention and then bolted when be failed to do it. (Great applause.) I have sent him no letter begging his support. (Great laughter.) The highest compliment he can pay is to oppjse me, because then the world will know the Secretary of the Treas urer whom I appoint, if I am elected, will be as different from him as I can find. (Great applause.) "I do not dispute the right of any Democrat to vote against the Chicago ticket, it he thinks its success will ira peril the country, but what I ask is that these men who have been pretend mg to oe xemocrau shall now, wtien the Demoeratio party has been rescued from the people's spoilers, leave the name and not attempt to take that name with them iuto disgrace. (Cries of "right") They call themselves true Democrats. No true Democrat ever nominated one ticket for the pur pose of voting for .another. (Great applause.) The speaker continued in a sarcastio vein to poke fun at the Indianapolis crowd, calling them "assistant Repub licans." He made his previous argu ment that the Republican party was really in favor ol silver and bi-metal-lism because it had declared for intei- national bi-metallisin. "Then yon will hear that under free coinage we would be flooded with ail ver until money would be so cheap we would not nave any use for it, and when you have been frightened as bad ly as you can be that wy, they will tell you this cheap money wiH run the dear money out and it will take fifteen years, with our mints running at full capacity, to make money enough to take the place or gold, and that will make money o scarce that a silver dol lar will be harder to get than a gold dollar. (Laughter). You can't have too little and too much all at once. An opponent once put that proposition to me in a debate down in Alabama. There I was 1,500 miles from home among strangers. I had to answer on the spur of the moment, and I just blurted out I would make more mints. (Laughter). He hadn't thooght of the possibility of making more mints. After making that explanation a law yer told me be was glad I had called attention to it, as he had never thought of the possibility. In order that I may not leave any special cloud on the lawyer, I want to say, in another State a doctor made the same remark. You can understand how a great man might be nnabie to think of so small a thing as opening more mints." Another ovation followed the close of the speech. Although the candi date was almost worn out, the crowd was so persistent at the depot that they clambered into the car windows and insisted on shaking Mr. Bry an's hand. As the train pulled out the candidate, waving his handker chief, received another ovation. BIITAN HONORS VANCB. At the special request of Mr. Bryan the train stopped at Blaok Mountain, because it had been the home of Vanoe. Mr. Bryan spoke to the people assem bled there and then asked to have Gornbroow the Vanoe home place pointed out to him. At Old Fort there was a large crowd. At Marion bonfires and tar barrels were burning, and 500 people were spoken to by the candi date from the rear platform. At Mor ganton there were 1,500 people pres ent, many of them being ladies. Hickory's Demonstration. It remained to little Hickory to sur pass any demonstration in the State so far in proportion to the size of the town. At least 10,000 people from all over Alexander, Burke and Caldwell heard Mr. Bryan speak from a stand erected in the quadrangle near the ho tel. The enthusiasm was great nd Mr. Bryan spoke for nearly an houi. At Statesville Mr. Bryan spoke to 2,500 people. The speaker's stand was a hundred yards from the train and was decorated gaily in red, white and blue, and two immense bouquetc of flowers were on either -side of the speaker. The introduction was done in a neat speech of about ten words by W. D. Turner, Esq. The speaker was so hoarse here that utterance seemed really painful. Mooresville had a thousand people and bon flies. The speaker was so tired aud voiceless that he could only show himself to the disappointment of all THE SKI AN BSCOBT. On board the Bryan speoial were Col. J. 8. Carr, Clement Manly, Hal W. Ayer, Chas. D. Molver, Geo. S. Powell, T. J. Allison, Evangelist W. P. Fife, Maj. E. J. Hale, Marshal O. J. Carroll, P. M. Pearsall, Lee S. Overman, R. L. Durham, Oapt S. B. Alexander, R. L. Cooper, Theo. F. Kluttz, Walter E. Henry, E. L. Shu ford, Congressman A. C. Shuford, Jo sephus Daniels, F. M. Simmons, Judge A. C. Avery, Heriot Clarkson, Locke Craig, W. D. Turner, Dr. F. E. An derson, R. N. Haokett, W. E. Chris tian, 0. T. Smith, Biblical Recorder. A. Boshamer, M. O. Sherrill, W. B. Gaither, D. M.'Boyd, J. N. Long, Spier Whitaker. Maj. Guthrie came down from Asheville but got off at Hickory, At Statesville, W. 0. Dowd, II. Baruch, T. R. Robertsoa, Will Robertson, Dr. I. AV. Faison got on board, and at Mooresville ex-Senator Jarvis joiued the procession. Bryan at Charlotte. Charlotte has had her Bryan day. He arrived in the "Queen City" last Wednesday night, and was greeted at the Southern passenger station by an immense crowd of admirers. The pro gram was not carried out as scheduled by the committee, owing to Mr. Bryan's request that there should not be any demonstration on bis arrival. In spue of his request thousands flocked to the station to see the next President, bnt the Pullman palace sleeper was side tracked on the outskirts of the city, where it remained over night. Early Thursday morning an engine brought the car into the station and the inevi table crowd was there. As Mr. Bryan appeared under personal escort of Col. H. C. Jones, a shout arose that was heard up town. He and his party were escorted to tha Buford Hotel, where an elaborate breakfast was served. At 8:40 the escort cf honor, the Uni form Rack Knights of Pythias, and. the Second Regiment band had been drawn up in line in front of the hotel, while the carriages waited at the Fourth street entrance. A mighty cheer from that side of the building annonnoed the coming of Mr. Bryan. The band struck up a lively air, the oorps of mounted marshals cleared the way and the march to the park was begun. In the handsomely decorated carriage, drawn by four black horses, were seat ed Mr. Bryan and Gov. Elias Carr, Mayor J. H. Weddington and Col. Julian S. Carr. On arriving at the postoffioe eorner, Mr. Bryan and escort alighted from the carriage aud iu sin gle file made their way slowly through the narrow lane that had been opened to the speaker's stand. Promptly at 9 o'clook Wm. J. Bryan stepped npon the platform, escorted by Maj. Robertson and officers of the Uniform Rank Knights of Pythias. After Mr. Bryan had shaken hands with all who were on the platform. among whom weie Gov. Elias Cara. Col. Jule Carr, W. R. Henry, and rep resentative citizens of Charlotte and the State, and several ladies. Major Robertson stepped to the railing fac ing Mint Street and in a few words in troduced Gov. Carr. Governor Carr spoke briefly, as the crowd was clamoring for Bryan. He said: 'I have the pleasure ot intro ducing to you today William Jennings uryan, tne next JJemocratio Presi dent.'' The crowd here interrupted uim and said, "say next President." He amended his words by saying: "He will be the next President, be cause he will receive a majority of all parties. (Cheers). I will not keep you waiting, as this is Bryan's day, and not my day." He took his seat and Mr. Bryan rose amid pro- loDgeu cneering. Mr. bryan stood and quietly stir. veyed the crowd, and instantly they quieted down. As soon as all was quiet he began by saying: Mr. ( liatrman and Fellow-Citizen.- I think I can make myself heard as the advocate of a financial policy which is miepennent ot any loreicn Dower. I stand on a platform which is a eoon4 Declaration of Independence, and feel that here in this county it will be recognized because of yotir having made a Declaration of your own. I msy fiud in other places those who wan t to accerjt a financial policy made by foreign powers; but the people of Mecklenburg county believe that the United States can make a financial pol icy of its own. (Cheers.) Pointing to the hornets' nest, which was suspended near him, he said: "Here the enemy will find a veritable hornets' nest I am not speaking against any for eigner. I would despise any English man. Germau, or any other foreiguer who would submit to the United States dictating a policy governing them in their domestic relations. The Repiblioan platform sets forth a policy never opeuly set forth before, They do not advocate the gold stand ard, bnt have pledged themselves for a double standard 'as soon as the for eign powers will help them. If they oame out boldly for a single standard we could meet them but they do not do so. The gold standard advocates never made an open fight in their lives, but do their work Bfter night. (Uheers. There is a great deal of talk about the two yard sticks. I do not mean that it is mentioned in the Republican platform but it is beiog used in the camimieD. A yard stick measures lenclh and cannot chnuge, but a do! lar measures value and may change. You all know that a piece of iron shorter when it is at zero than when it is red hot. So, if you had a yard stick that would be tioe as long when it was red hot as it was when at zero, you would co t the store aud want the merchant to measure your goods with your red hot yard-stick, but he would step to his refrigerator and take out his zero yard-stick aud measuro your uoods. So, as it is necessary to have a yard-stick of uniform length, it is necessary to have the dollar uui form. At this point there were calls from the crowd on the south side of the stand and Mr. Bryan stepped to the railing and repeated in a measure w hut he had just said, and added this: ion can mike a dollar purchase a great deal more by making them scarce and on the other hand make the purchasing power less by making tuem pleuuful It cannot be disputed that the money must keep pace with the population aud industries. Mr. Bryan produced some typewrit ten manuscript and read some extracts from a speech of Senator Sherman, made on June 5, 1890, in which he ad vocated increasing the circulation as the population increased, bnt now he had forsaken that policy and was the leader of the Republican party and that portion of the Demoeratio party who want to elect a Republican presi dent. (Cheers.) "Senator Sherman favored increas ing circulation at the rate of $54, 000,000 per anuum and according to his policy we should not have $250, 000,000 more money in circulation than we have now. The circulation the 30th of June, 1894, was $1,660, 000,000 and has decreased each year since until we now have $1,506,000,000. notwithstanding Sherman said it should increase. I am not surprised to find Republi cans on this platform with me today who have changed and are going to vote the Democratic ticket. They want an increased eircuJa'idn. "In North Carolina the Republicans have made more capital by denouncing this administration before this last platform was made than out of any thing else, but now they are standing sponsors for the same administration Henry Clay is the only candidate for the Presidency who ever came to your State and spoke prior to my visit. In a speeeh on Jan. 20th, 1840, he said that a diminuation of the currency would make hard limes, and people oould not pay their debts. Have you ever bad this condition in your life time? Cries of yes, yes I Clay said that a diminished currency made purchases scarce, and that in turn caused falling in prices and fall iug prices make hard times. Yon must stop falling prices to make good times. I must close as there may be need of speeches in other places. He here paid the late Senator Vance glowing tribute which was greeted bv prolonged cheers. He spoke of the last speech Vance made in which he favored free coinage and said: I know the people will be true to his memory. We appeal to the masses to support the ticket and we know they will do it He closed with a few words as the time was up, and although the people cried for more, he was quickly escort ed from the stand to oatoh the train. 25,000 at Greensboro. At Greensboro the largest crowd tbst has met Bryan was at Greensboro. There were about 25,000 people there. The streets were jammed. Three or four bauds were there and hundreds were on horseback. At Concord. At Concord fully 2,500 people met Bryan. He was escorted to the stand and made a brief address. At SlLbi!-y. At Salisbury a crowd of 5,000 peo ple shouted their welcome to Bryan and applanded bis speech. At Lexington. At Lexington Bryan was met by 4,000 people and made an address. A gaily decorated platform had been pre pared. , Tbe Gadgrind system la the Ideal system tn advertising "facts" are the tb'Dgs wanted, and the advertiser mJk aj them. At Hurllngton. At Builington 1,500 people greeted tbe candidate, who spoke from the platform about twenty feet from the depot. It was oue of the neatest short speeches yet made. He created a laugh at the outset by saying that it was the general custom in presiden tial campaigns to send the audiences to the candidate, but the Demoeratio party, under these hard times brought ou by the gold standard, had adopted the policy of sending the candidates to the people. ... At lllllsboro. At Hillsboro 400 people were briefly addressed from the rear platform by Bryan. A spectacled, smart Aleck by the name of Brown, a book-seller there, rode a horse caparisoned in yellow paper in front of the car. A Bryau escort man slipped up and snatched all the McKinley tapestry off the horse, leaving the gold-bug foam ina with raae. At Durham. A crowd of about 4,000 greeted the speaker at Durham. Mr. Bryan, after his rest at Col. Carr's, was introduoed by R. B. Boone, and soon had his audience cheering wildly under tbe spell of his oratory. Demonstration at Raleigh. The demonstration at Raleigh, which was reached at 7:10, was mag nificent. The Bryan party reached from the depot to the stand in Nash square through a long line of torch lights, led by the band. The crowd was hard to estimate in the darkness, but it was immense and the sea of faces viewed from the platform seemed endless, aait stretched away in the darkness. It must have been over 10,000. Floods of light made the platform as light aa day. Mr, Bryan was greeted with a splendid ovation. He said his North Carolina trip had been so well man aged that he felt better than when he first entered the State. His mention of Vance's name was wildly cheered. Hie rebuke of the Republioan party's attempt to array ministers of the Gos pel against the cause of free silvar was scorching and eloquently severe. Ra leigh's demonstration was altogether worthy of tbe capital city. Bryan was given an elegant supper at the Park Hotel after he spoke Many ladies lined the stairways to see him as he entered. Hal Ayer made the speech of introduction, and a good one. At Scima. ' Bryan spoke to 400 people at this point, where bonfires were burning. J, T. Ellington introduced him. At Ooldsboro. The Bryan special rolled into this city on '1 hursday night amid the boom of an anvil salute, and a blaze of eleo trio lights. Tbe candidate barely showed himself and then retired to rest. At 10:30 o'clock Friday morn ing the speech was made from a high stand on East and West Centre street A solitary soldier of the Goldsboro Ri fles stood watch near Mr. Bryan as he spoke. With bayouetted gun at par aderest, he stood motionless through out the intense and soul stirring bursts of oratory as useless, as ornamental and as patriotic a factor as tbe sentinel who perished in the freshet of ashes at Pompeii. But he did his duty. Mr. Bryan was so completely rested here that his voice bsd regained much of the church bell strength and sweetness with which it raLg through the utter most galleriee of the Coliaseum at Chi cago, (lathered around tbe stand was between five and six . thousand people. At Wilson At this beautifi'l elm-shaded eitv ha briefly audresned 2,500 people who in tensely absorbed in the words of the speaker. . Farewell at Kocky Mount. Mr. Bryan and his party reaohed Rocky Mount, tbe lust place at which speaking was to be held in North Car olina, at 12:45 p. m. last Friday. He mot with a royal reception. The same feature that cliaiacterized the Asheville demonstration tho processional was employed there. Two dozen carriages and 500 horsemen escorted tbe candi date to the fair crrniinds. whnra ha spoKe trom a piattoriu, similar to araoe- track judges stand, directly facing the grand stand, tbe latter being paoked with 1,500 white-clad, fan-fluttering la dies. Some 6,000 or 7,000 enthusias tic Tar Heels heard ihe speech. 1 he representatives of the press went to Mr. Bryan shortly before reaching Kocky Mount, aud asked him if he had any last message for the people of North Carolina, iiir. Bryan, reclining as usual, smiled and replied with alacrity, "Yes, tell them this: I have had .a very pleasant time iu your State and while I have spoken at a number of places, the trip has been so nicely arranged that I could rest between times and am not at all fatigued. I have not only enjoyed the trip but also my association with the silver wen whom I heve met from time to time. "I go out of the State feeling confi dent that those who believe in free sil ver will Ii nd some way ot consolidat ing tho vote so that we will present a solid front to the gold forces in the coming election." The Virginia Bryan special was in waiting at tbe above point, aud as soon as be finibbed bis speech the special steamed out for Richmond, where he addressed a large assemblage of Old Dominion free silrerites. Fire Loss for July. July's Ore loss In the United BUtes aud Canada amounted to (9.033,250. Though generally a fiery month, and although It be gan very fiercely, the fire loss during Its ro.i.-se this year was less by t51,750 than In 1805. while In 1894 the loss In tho month lut gone by u 16,U07,OO0. The vrar to datx hows similar BK"tV"e or IosmsUisq for the same period of laj-t vear, belug I.SM, BOO. airnlnst 75,&82,0O0 In 1895 and t77,2u,-B001U18M. NORTH STATE BRIEFS ELECTION LAW. The Chairmen Agree or. -he Construc tion as to Keglstrat Ion. - Tbe following has been given out by Chairman Manly, and is .signed by him, Ohairman Holton and Chairman Ayer, as official: "It is agreed by the undersigned that the following is the proper con struction of the election law of 1895, act 95, chapter 159, and we request tbe members of our respective parties to follow the same: "1st In construing sections 9, 10, 11, 12, 13 and 14 of said election law. "That all persons are entitled to register on Saturday, September 26th; on Saturday, Ootober3d; onSuturday, Ootober 10th; on Saturday, October 17th, and on these days only, between the hours of 9 o'clock a. m. and 4 o'clock p. m., exoept as herewith pro vided. "On Saturday, October 24th, no act shall be done in regard to registration, exoept the right to challenge between the hours of 9 o'clock a. m. and 4 o'clook p. m. any elector whose name may appear on the books. "On Saturday, Ootober 31st, no act shall be done in regard to registration except to hear and determine all chal lenges made on October 24th. The hearing shall be had between the hours of 9 o'clock a, m. and 4 o'clock p. m. in all precincts except those in incorporated towns and cities, when the hearing shall be had until 9 o'clock p. m. "That any person who comes of age between October 17th and election day, or who is entitled to register by reason of his residence in the State or county, being of sufficient time re quired by law, whioh time ripened after Saturday, October 17th, shall be entitled to register on election day and vote, and suoh persons who offer to register and vote on eleotion day may be challenged and such challenge be heard on eleotion day." Chairman Manly says tho election law is complicated and contradictory, but that it is the purpose of the Demo orata to see what the law truly means and to aot npon it. While it is not of the Demoeratio making, but the work of Populists and Republicans, he wil lingly consented to act with the other chairmen in the effort to see what is the true construction of the act OOTTON, 63 PKK CENT. State Report Shows a Remarkable Falling OK The September crop report of the State department of Agriculture has been made up. The most notable showing for months is the falling off in the condition of tbe cotton crop. Tbe percentage in the August report was 90 4-5; at that time the extent of the damage by drought was not taken fully into consideration, as the effect was uot known at the time tbe corres pondents made up their reports; the report stated that the condition of cot ton then was several points lower than reported. The reports received this month told the havoo wrought by the long dry spell. Tbe average is now only 63 per cent. In 1895 at thio time it was 78. The other figures are: Corn 79), against 90 in August and 95 a year ago. Tobacco, 76) now, against 85 1-2 in August and 90 in September, 1895. Rice, 77; peanuts, 79; sorghum, 85! sweet potatoes, 82;padtures, 74;apples, 32. The crop of apples is about as near a failure as it has ever been. The peach crop is so small that no special report is rnado this month. Last month the average was only 32 per cent Regulating Railroads. The Board of Railroad Commission ers of this Stite, met in Raleigh last week to look into the matter of regu lating railroads. It appeared that the fourth sectiou of tbe Interstate Com merce Act, known as the long and short haul clause, was violated by one at least ot the corporations interested. This commission has no jurisdiction to remedy this, but lor each offence re ported will see tbst it ia properly brought to the attention of the Inter stnto Commerce Commission and ask for speedy action by it It is ordered that all railroad companies doibg busi ness in North Carolina who have or may put in force cut rates to and from points in this State to and from points outside shall so arrange their local freight tariffs that the same relative re duction shall be given to local business aa has been or may hereafter be given to through business. It is also ordered that the standard passenger rates shall be in force on and after tbe 24th day of September, 1896, as sollows: First class, three cents per mile;second class, 2 cents a mile. All parties interested will be heard as to the reasonableness of these rates on September 22d. All exceptions to be filed 03 or before that date. The plumbers' strike at Asheville is off, the men returning to work. The str kers accepted the old scale of wages, but with the understanding that they shall be given the increase asked when there is a corresponding increase in busine The Republican Campaign. The Bepublican nations! committee has decided to send campaign speakers of na j(jral prominence out through tbe silver producing States and th Pacific slope. The advaoos of these exponents ot Republican principles will be ex-Congressman Butter wortb, of Ohio. He will sneak in Wyoming September 2H(h and 2itth" and in Colorado September 80th. From there be goes to Ore- gon. where be expects to deliver three Bjieeehrfs, and thence to California. Other Seakers are !eing communlcate1 with and ' will he sent West when negotiations are complete.