V 1 ' J . THIS PAPER ISSUED TUESDAYS AND FRIDAYS, ONE DOLLAR A YEAR.,'"- Volume XV : Lenoir. N. Tuesday, August 19. 1913 No. 82 - " ' ' ' .. i .... - .. - i-.i - , i . .. - 1 . .i . - m -i. .. . .. i i COUNTY CORRESPONDENTS Items From Our Regular Corre- pond en U and Neighboring County Paper. FAXCIX POST WUCHT MADE 20 POUNDS. (Charlotte Cbaerrer.) For the past several days. Postmaster J. H. Weddington and bis associates hare been busily engaged in Retting ready for the extension of the parcel post service, which goes into ef WATAUGA. (Watauga Democrat.) Mr. and Mrs. F. M. .White" nerof Lenoir R. F. D. 2. are feet today. The fact has been visitors at the home of Mr. mentioned on several occasions Hartzog in East Boone. that today and hereafter the Mrs. Squires and daughter, of welRhl of P1' of fourth class Lenoir, mother and sister of the mail ,or deliTery within the Rev. Mr. Squires, who preached firet and wiU " in" the baccalaureate sermon at creased from 11 to 20 Punds' the closing exercises of the A. Rate of postage on parcels ex- T. 8., on July 11, have taken ceedingfour ounces in weight board at the home of Mr. B. J. will be five for the fir8t Council for a few weeks. P0130 and one cent for each tw0 additional rounds or fraction Mr. W. C. Coffey, Treasurer tnereofwben intended for local of the Training School, received deU very and five cents for the first Dound and one cent for week a warrant for $15,000, to each additional and frac. be applied to the construction of tion thereof when intended for some new and much needed delivery at other offices wjthin buildings. This is the annual fllfc ftnd znne The following rule is given: 'The-rate for local delivery shall apply to all parcels mailed MR. DRURY COFFEY PASSES AUTOMOBILE A PROMOTER Uaeful and Valued Citizen and What it Ha Done for Blowing Bra re Confederate Veteran Answers Final Roll Call Rock and The Beautiful Mountain Country (By Old Harrygraph) Green Park, N. C, Aug. 13. year, MEM BLOWN INTO KITS DYNAMITE. BY amount appropriated by the last legislature for this purpose. The conditions at the home of at a postoftice from which a rur Mr. Ninevah Foard, in Cast al route starts, for delivery on Boone, are most deplorable, such route, or mailed at any The father, mother and two point. on such route for delivery children are very sick, the I at any other point thereon, or at household duties all devolve op- the office from which the route on two little children 8 and 10 starts, or on any rural route years of age. Mr. Foard is starting therefrom, and on all amply able, and willing to pay matter, mailed at a city carrier for much-needed help but so office, or at any point within its far it has been unprocurable, delivery limits, for delivery by I carriers from that office, or at IMUdgU 1'MUUUg, DVJU Wi IUi I W K Farthing nf Rver Dam. any offioe for local delivery left on Wednesday of last week for Montana, where he will loin cles in Paragraph 2, section 34 his sister, Miss Rachel, who has Parcel P08 regulations, when in- been teaching in the West for 0lO8ea ana wrapped in the man t.h nit. t..A vMr A e ner prescribed by the last years. have so often said before, we are indeed sorry to tee our bright young people turning their backs on dear old Watauga when they are needed here so badly. sen tence of fhat paragraph, will be accepted for mailing to offices within the first and second rones." VflLKES. (Patriot) We are informed by J. A. El- Vote To Reject The PropoaitioM. Raleigh, N. C. Aug. 12. Ov er a hundred business men, rep resenting twenty-two counties voted unanimously at the Just ledge, keeper of trie county Freight Kate Association con home, that Joe C. Keller, aged ference here today to reject the 71 vears. and Ellen Pardue, aged proposition of the railroads for 62 years, inmates of the county an adjustment of the interstate home, journeyed to Wilkesboro freight rate controversy. The last week and endeavored to get rate offered would not put the a marriage license. Register of State on a competitive basis. Deeds Foster being uncertain They adjourned in a body until whether to issue the license or noon to meet with the Governor not, appealed to the county at- and' other State officials, torney who was undecided as to Chief Justice Clark took oc what course should be pursued, casion to say that the proposi The Register appealed to the tion is a gratuitous insult and Solicitor who was of the opinion disgrace to the intelligence of that they could not marry unless the people of the State. John they left the home. The license Mitchell, of Hickory, even want was not issued' and they went ed to reflect on the corporation back to the home. commission, but got small com- T.,MiftVnJkw.i9nr.w.lr tort, the, commission, being ft i , i some prisoners who were in the up stairs room on the west side of the jail made an effort to es cape, and, but for the timely dis covery of the fact by the guard that was placed at the jail by order of Judge Cline, the seven thanked along with other au thorities. The Just " Freight Rate Association recognized the proposition as an evidence of progress, but went no further. A small boy of Roberts', who was with Hanes at the time of nrisoners who were in the room the accident, had his leg broken. AnM Wa made their escane. Hanes leaves a wife and several r, mQ.,a J children and two brothers, Dy - Louis and Henry Hanes. nrisoners had secured a pocket knife and they were using it in J- M. Spicer, of Austin, who mi 4 was nere raonuay uuuruieu us rive Ui. MW B - , j i v . mat a nne nve-year-oiu muie oe lVU(aU IAS JUi X Va t w uviiuauiu was struck by lightning while in the barn last Saturday after noon and was killed. Lightning an effective way seven are under setence roads. Larkin Hanes was killed Fri ' i . - 1 . . -i f 111 UW" win no day at Martin KODerra sawmiu, al80 8truck Abe Holbrook's on Tumblljig' Shoals, 'Mulberry dwelling house but fortunately township 'In some , way he no one .was injured seriously. caused aibrk, that was holding The storm in that section that i (irr,w ,,r trt Wm afternoon was unusually severe a pack at lumber up, to become one Pollowing Mr. Spicer.s loosenpa, wirowiuH mi visit, C. M. PhUlips, of Benham, pack vpon him and crushing him hn the same section of the county. to death. He was terribly came in and told us that a horse bruised and broken and he died owned by A. C. Phillips of State on thd lumber yard, altnougn ne iioaas, was also Ktuea oy ngtit spokelfew. words before he died. jning Saturday afternoon, Mr. Drury D. Coffey died at the home of his son, Mr. F. H. Coffey Saturday evening at 6 The automobile, this year, has o'clock after an illness of only a 1 demonstrated the fact that it is few week. For several months a developer and promoter almost Mr. Coffey had been in declin- equal to the railway, when it ing health, but not till recently comes to carrying passenners, did his friends and relatives be- and annihilating time and dis come alarmed about his condi- tance. Autos have given the tion and realize that the end was Blowing Rock section the big near. He was one of the old gest season it has ever had, landmarks of Caldwell County, and the indications are they will and the announcement of his largely increase every year if death will bring sorrow to many the roads are kept in a good con- homes, especially among the dition. Right here is a strong older citizens, who loved and pointer for the turnpike corn- honored him, as their comrade pany. Good roads will be the and leader. success of Blowing Rock. And Drury D. Coffey was born in better the roads the greater the the Mulberry section of the crowds and more extensive the county in 1838, and was soon travel. recognized as a leader among The sale of the Wall-Leak pro- his people in both social and po- perty up here some fifty lots litical life. He was honest as a on the 11th of this month, has citizen and always spoke his given a new incentive to Blow- convictions. As a public ser- ing Rock. The lots are beauti- vant, he was the champion of the fully located just across the rights of his people and always I avenue westward from the popu guarded their interests most lar Green Park hotel. They zealously. When the Civil War were purchased mainly by citi- came on, tie immediately voiun- zens from unariotte. and some teered and went to the front as I from Durham and Chester, S. C a memoer oi uompany ootn There is already talk oi many North Carolina Regiment. He handsome new cottages to be was made Sergeant Major of erected. Some have already this company and distinguished made their plans, and it is safe himself for his prowess and de-1 to say that in a year or two all votion to the cause. He was in this most desirable property will many engagements, but was be adorned and beautified with only wounded slightly one time, handsome buildings. The time having a finger shot off. J is not far distant when this wil After the close of the war, he 1 be the most popular summer re returned to his home, and began sort in the State. I Blowing life anew as a farmer. He was Rock has a climate peculiarly its soon honored by his people by own; nothing anywhere else like being elected County Commis- it or to be compared to it And sioner, and so successful and nature has done all it is possible wise was he in handling the af -1 to make it beautiful, and mag fairs of the county, that he was nificent in mountain grandeur re eiecied seven consecutive When tne outside world once terms, serving in all sixteen gets the idea of what is b re the years. In 1887 he represented people will come in overwhelm Ualdwell Uounty in the lieneral ing number. The increasing Assembly of North Carolina, and tide has already set in, and here he distinguished himself Blowing Rockites might as wel for the boldness and aggresive- prepare for the coming multi ness with which he championed tudes. The sun does not rise or the rights and cause of the com- set upon a more beautiful coun mon people, He moved from try, and the great orb of day this County to the State of Kan- and painter of the clouds, seems sas in 1892, where he lived 15 to appreciate this fact by the years. In his old days he felt gorgeousness of the colorings he the longing to return to his na- flings in th6 pathway of his com tive County, and in 1907 he re- ing every morning; and tints the turned and took up his residence draperies of his mountain couch in Lenoir, where he lived till as he kisses a beautiful world his death. good-night' in a crimson blush; In 1868 Mr. Coffey was mar- leaving the beholder to admire, ried to Miss H. E. Collett of this wonder and praise the . hand county. She together with two Divine. sons, Mr. D. S. Coffey of St. Paul, Minn., and Mr. F. H. Cof fey of Lenoir; one daughter, the wife of Dr. Robert Coffey of Portland, Ore., one of the most noted surgeons on the Pacific Coast; and three sisters, Mesdames Charley Coffey and H. C. Coffey of Lenoir, and Mrs. M. E. Moore of Manhattan, Kan., survive him. He was a member of the Ma sonic fraternity and until his death was the oldest living mem ber of Hibriten Lodge, A. F. & A. M. Ne. 262. The burial was with Masonic honors, the funer al services being conducted from the residence of Mr. F. H. Coffey Sunday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock by Rev. C. T. Squires. The body was laid to rest in BellevleW Cemetery. The pall bearers were Major G. W. F. Harper, Capt. Edmund Jones and Messrs J. L. Nelson, H. L. Houck, E. F. Reid, C. A. TutUe, M. N. Harshaw and F. P. Moore. NEWS ITEMS OF JNTEREST. Waynesville, Aug. 13. As the result of an explosion at Sun burst shortly after 6 o'clock last evening, George Franklin and Jim Gaddy are dead. Scarcely anything was left of the bodies of the two men, both being lit erally blown into bits that were scattered over the earth. Por tions of the bodies are still lodg ed in the surrounding trees. The accident occurred at the lumber operations of the Cham pion Lumber Company at the head of the Pigeon river, the present terminus of the Tennes- SO & North Carolina railroad. All the men had left and gone to supper with the exception of the two named, who stayed be hind to set off some blasts. At the eating shanty the workmen noted that the blasts did not go off together, but that one was delayed and, after waiting a while, a cousin of one of the men became alarmed and went to the scene of the blasting. Only the scattered remnants of what had been the two men were to be found. The largest piece of Franklin that could be found was a por tion of the skull and hair that was identified by his son. No recognizable portion of the body of Gaddy could be located this morning. A piece of his belt with fuse attached was found lodged in a tree several hundred feet away. It is sup posed that the men after wait ing for the second blast to go off, went to investigate and ap proached the charges of dyna mite just as. the explosion oc curred. Franklin was a man of 42 and leaves a wife and eight children. Gaddy was also about 40 and without a family. tJoth were experienced men, and had been residents of Haywood county for some years. Interetmf Reading Matter of Local and National Affairs in Condensed Form. SPECIAL LIVE STOCK SERVICE BY SOUTHERN. Made Brare Fight. Baltimore, Aug. 15. After Get The News twice-a week for$l closed It undergoing more than 200 op erations during three years for the removal of a growth in his throat that interfered with his breathing, George McDowell, 31 years old, formerly of Spar tanburg, S. C, died at a hospi tal here yesterday while the surgeons were making a last at tempt to save his life For the past 18 months Mc Dowell breathed through a sil ver tube inserted in his throat. He had been under so many op erations that he became immune to the effects of cocaine and the doctors were forced to use oth er mean's. Freezing was, resort ed to and then chloroform to deaden the pain when they worked on the growth which had baffled every physician call edinto the case. The doctors knew that it was a muscular growth of some sort, but could not tell what kind. It was such that it contracted - the man s windpipe and at times all but Atlanta, Ga., August 13. To enable growers in Western North Carolina, East Tennessee and Southwest Virginia to promptly forward live stock to Eastern and Southern markets Kind to Virginia feeding grounds the Southern Railway has ar ranged to operate a weekly fast special live stock service such as was operated last year. The service this year, however, is to include points on the Virgin ia and Southwestern Railway between Appalachia, Va., and Bull's Gap, Tenn., and will cov er a longer period, beginning on September 4th and continuing until December 31st, according to announcement made today by Live Stock Agent F. L. Word. Each Thursday, during this period trains will be started at early morning hours from Ool- tewah Junction, Harriman Junc tion, Bristol and Appalachia. These will be consolidated at Morristown, .leaving the New Line yard at 2:45 p. m., arriv ing Asheville at 9:25 p. m Trains will also be started from Murphy, N. C, and Rosman, N, C, on the Transylvania divis ion, arriving Asheville in the early evening. At Asheville the stock will be made into trains and run special to Spencef which will be reached before 10 a"m. Friday. Here stock will be fed, watered, and rested in the Jom modious and modern plant which the Southern Railway completed only a few months ago. Henry Clews, the great finan cier, predicts flourishing, busi ness during the coming fall and winter months. Durham will likely be made the headquarters for hospital experiments in the study of pel lagra in the South. Owing to dry weather the corn crop in the great corn belt of the west is thought to be cut short nearly a third. The state appropriation of $15,000 for the Appalachian school at Boone has been re ceived by that institution. The creameries in Shelby and Mopresboro, in Cleveland coun- 1 ty, pay out annually to thp far. mers over $57,000 for milk and cream. Dr. Hennessee who was tried for killing Pitts in Burke last week was acquitted by the jury after deliberating over the mat ter for nearly two days. The Wilkes county blackberry crop netted the pickers over $66- 000 this year, according to a statement of Mr. W. H. Horton, in the Charlotte Observer. John Carver, a white man re siding near Lumberton, was ar rested and jailed on Thursday v charged with assaulting bis neice, who is only 14 years old.x Representative Henry D. Clay ton of Alabama has been ap pointed United States Senator from that State to succeed the late Senator Joseph F. Johnson. The people of Black Mountain like those of Blowing Rock, are placing cots on porches and in tents to accommodate the great crowds of people who are in that town. The store of H. J. Olive, in Wst Ashevilte was broken into last Thursday night, the safe was blown open and nearly $100 was taken. There is no clue as to the guilty parties. The first definite effort of the Democrats to secure an agree ment for an early vote . on the tariff bill failed in the Senate on Thursday, when the Republi cans served notice that consid eration of the measure wpuld continue indefinitely. The Carolina Municipal asso ciation closed its fifth annual convention at Wilmington Fri day with the election of officers and the selection of Charlotte as the next meeting place. Charles A, Bland of Charlotte was re-elected president. George S. Nance a , traveling man killed his wife in a hotel in Hamlet last Friday night and tried to burn the body, flome guests discovered the fire and extinguished it before it did any damage. He had crushed her skull with some kind of a beer bottle and said he struck her in self defense as she was trying to cut him with a razor. He had several hundred dollars on his person when arrested, supposed to be his wife's money as she was engaged in selling perfumery for a Knoxville firm. Nance is in jail and will not talk, while the body of his wife was taken to Knoxville by rela tives for burial. The flower of a family is some times' found in a sack. Every once in a while we hear of some man drowned in a bath tub. Some people should learn something about new thing before trying it.