mm. v Three Cents the Copy. INDEPENDENCE IN ALL THINGS. Subscription Price, $1.00 Per Year in Advance. VOL XIII. COLUMBUS, N. C, tHUIiSDAY, MAY 30, 1907. NO. 5. invested in Atlanta, Georgia, Saturday w t m With Appropriate Exercises FMENSC CROWDS THERE re-Long Friend and War Compan- )n of the Dead Chieftain Beard rith Greatest Interest in Impres- ive Ceremoniee at Atlanta. itlanta, Ga., Special. Thousands Georgia's citizens, with added hun- jds from other sections of the ith, gathered Saturday at the uri- g ceremonies of the splendid listrian statue of the momory of John B. Gordon. Almost with- the shadow of the State Capitol at crowds gathered to hear the ora- tas and eee the monument unveiled. the parade which preceded the remonies a long line of soldiery and he organization marched through principal downtown streets, Itched by thousands of spectators, e oration of Gen. Clement A. Evans atives. The ceremonies were presiaaa over, by Gov. Jos. M. Terrell, who in troduced the monument for the State of Georgia. After the invocation the history of the Gordon Monument Association was read. Then General Evans was rintroduced. Following the address of General Evans, Mrs. Brown and Mrs. Smith pulled the cords which freed the mon ument of its covering and the cheers of the crowd broke forth. When si lence was restored in part the address of presentation was delivered by Capt. N. E. Harris, of the monument committee and the address of accept ance by Governor Terrell followed. A poem by Major Charles W. Hub- ner and the intrduction of Sculptor Solon H. Borglum of Norwalk, Conn who designed the monument, preced ed the benediction which closed the exercises. The parade preceding the unveil ing was one of the finest semi-military displays of recent years in At lanta. The first division, of which there were six, was commanded by Brig. Gen. W. S. Edgerly, U. S. A., death, and when $10,000 had been raised by the John B. Gordon Monu ment association, the Georgia legisla ture appropriated the needed $15,000 to complete the work, taking: over the association's fund and naming a con- mission to act as the State's agent. In a competition entered by half a dozen well known artists, Sculptor S. H. Borglum of Norwalk, Conn., won the award, his work being highly commended by those who best knew and were intimately associated with Gen. Gordon, among them his wife and daughters. The sculptor's task, under the criticism of such judges, was no easy one, and its completion has been the almost constant work of The Statue Described. The statue, standing 20 feet from base of pedestal to top i of head, was appropriately unveiled -by Gen. Gor don, two daughters, Mrs. Carolina Lewis Gordon Brown of Vermont, and Mrs. Frances Gordon Smith of At lanta; and as the cords released the veiling folds, "Dixie" rom the band was the signal for .another "rebel The dedication poem was read by its author, Charles W. Hubner of Atlanta, followed by music.' in whish participated a chorus of several hund red voices. After the formal delivery of the statue to the State by Capt. Nathan- FEMJXINE NEWS NOTES. a twelvemonth. The statue was eastjiel E. Harris of Mac4 in behalf of in eopper bronze in Brooklyn, N. Y., the commission, and its! acceptance hi and forwarded to Atlanta' April 2d, arriving here May 9. The statue' represents Gordon as he is best remembered in the years, short ly before his death when, almost upon the same spot where it will stand for generations, he sat mounted and re viewed year after year on Memorial Day the ever thinning hosts of those who followed him in battle. And there it will stand for years to come on the northwest corner of the State capitol grounds, in reviewing attitude while past it will march on each Memorial Day to come those who join in tribute to the recollections of the past. Upon the front of the pedestal will vajvpear the one word, in bronze let ters : 4 Gordon. ' On either aide , of the pedestal will be set a bronze bae relief, three by five feet in dimension, representative of the most conspicu ous features in his career. The one represents Gordon at Spottsylvania mum nm. I 1 u A M mm. dH OkVEB mm IM mm mm mm mU Wm mW mm mwmm mm W m J m m W ft W R0IC BRONZE EQUESTRIAN STATUE OF GEN. JOHN B. OORDON, C. fl. A., WHICH $UR- muunruiO A V TUOT GEORGIA GRANITE PEDESTAL, WAS UNVEILED UPON THE STATE CAPITOL GROUNDS, ATLANTA, GA., SATURDAY, MAY 25, 1907. a response by Gov. Joseph M. Terrell, the ceremonies concluded with the introduction to the audience of Sculp tor Borglum and the benediction. Gordon 's is the only monument up on the capitol grounds; A marble statue 6f United States Senator B. H. Hill, which formerly stood at the junction of Peachtree and West Peachtree streets in Atlanta, was re moved into the rotunda of the capi tol building away from the elements and youthful vandals. V. ii MRS. McKINLEY DEAD. y Wife of the Late President Passes Away Peacefully. Canton, Ohio, Special. Mrs. Wil liam McKinley, widow j of President McKinley, died at her, home here at 1 o'clock Monday morning. The end came peacefully. At the McKinley home When death came there were preent Secretary Cortelyou, Mr. and Mrs. M. C.-Barber, Mrs. Sarah Dun can, Mrs. Luther Day, Justice and Mrs. William R. Day, Drs. Port mann and Rixy and th$ nurses. The funreal will be held Wednesday, and will be in charge of her pastor, Dr. Buxton of the Methodist church. Millionaries Indicted. San Francisco, Special The grand jury indicted six millionaries on charsres of bribery and attempted bribery and returned additional ia dictments against Abraham Reuf and Mayor E. E. Schmitz, Frank G. Drum, Eufree . Sabla, John Jlartin, Abra ham Ruef and Mayor $chmitz were indicted on 14 counts each, charging that they jointly bribed' 14 of the IS supervisors m the sum 'of $750 each to fix the gas rate for 1906 at 85 eents instead of 75 cents. G. jMumbseji, B. Green, W. I. Brobeck arid Ruef were indicted on 14 counts, ejach charging that they jointly attempted to bribe 14 supervisors in the sunji of $1,000 to vote a trolley franchiseVto the Park side Transit Company. Judge Coffey fixed bail at $10,000 on! each of the 126 counts contained iii the indict ments. -i 2J Contest on New York. Cotton Ex change for Control. New York, Special. f For the first time in 11 years there is to be a con test on the New York cofton exchange for control of the management. News to this effect was made known on the floor of the exchange when two tickets were posted for the annual election, which will take place I on June 2. James H. Parker will head both tick ets, but for other offices there will be a contest. It is understood that the question of reform in epntracts will be an issue. T - life-long friend and war compan f the dead chieftain was heard 1 efreaUst interest and as the two nghters of General Gordon nulled cord and unveiled the statue, the rains of Din ran? out and the Prds of the sono- hv the multitude pgled with the old " Rebel Yell," Pm the throats of veterans who N?ht under General Gordan and Lee programme for the unveiling "monies was as follows: iDvoahon Music. History of the Gordon Mounment Fociation, by Captain William L. Nation. G nveilinw Wit nf. IT' , n-j , m of Atlanta and Mrs. Caroline ;wis Gordan Brown of Vermont, filters aon,,..! n j Iti ' liiei oy Dana. Musi c.-.' ..... Terrell ' Governor J' Pr.UctiOn of Sfiulntor Roro-lnro. ,retion. r A fefl : HDQK PRESENT. e of r day was tne Pres" ederaff' ardon widow of the m nr' burton Smith, of At- enaoJ lrs- Bishop Brown of od MaW r? unveiled the monumeiit enerai 0 ?ugh A- Gordon, a son of "'uun and several other rel- commanding the Department of the Gulf. A battalion of the Seventeenth Infantry stationed at Fort McPher son, and two regiments of Georgia State troope the fifth and the second made up this division. Other organ izations of unattached military com panies, various camps of Confederate veterans, Daughters of the Confeder acy, sons of Confederate Veteraus and numerous civic organizations completed the long line. Gen. Gordon was regarded as the typical Georgia soldier and there was no man whom Georgians, in fact those of all the South, more delight ed to honor. Then, after the war, in legislative halls, executive chair and upon the orator's platform he car ried the message of peace and fellow ship to every section of the country becoming ,in fact, a national charac ter admired and loved wherever he was known. Indeed, not a few sub scriptions to the fund with which the monument was erected came from those who stood in opposing ranks in the sixties, and with each came a message of admiration and esteem for his nobility of character and gener osity of heart. This monument was erected at an approximate cost of $25,000, of which $10,000 was raised by private sub scription among comrades and friends largely in Georgia, but also in other Southern States and in some instan ces, as noted from admiring friends in the North. The project was first undertaken a Jittle more than three on the 12th of May, when, before his entire division, he forced Gen. Robert E. Lee to the rear, and probably saved the intrepid Confederate leader's life, an act which has figured in poetry, song and story. The other is repres entative of three important phases m Gordon's lire, soldier, statesman and patriot. He became governor of Georgia and United States senator, and no Georgian has ever been better known on the lecture platform than 'as he up to the day of his death. The unveiling ceremonies took place at noon, Saturday, May 25, and were preceded by a military pageant in which there joined troops from oil parts of the State, while federal of ficers and troops from the depart ment of the gulf and Fort McPherson W. S. Edgerly, commander of the de partment, and his staff having ac cepted the invitation of Grand Mar shall Robert E. Park to take part in this function. The military broke ranks at the capitol grounds and join ed the vast throng of officials, civic bodies and citizens who were there to participate. The invocation by Rey. Wm. F. Glenn and music were followed by a reading of the history of the John B. Gordon Monument association by its first president, Judge W. L. Calhoun of Atlanta. The principal address was delivered by Gen. Clement A. Ev .ans, the ranking Confederate chief of the United Confederate Veterans. Gen. EVaas participated with Gordon in the Spottsylvania incident and was Terminated Without an Agreement. Atlanta, Ga,, Special. ' The Con stitution will announce Authoritative ly that the negotations? which have been pending for some Itime for the ! acquiring by the Seaboard Air Line of traekage rights overjjthe Southern Railway between Macon and Atlanta have been terminated - without an agreement. The terns offered by the Southern were not acctable to the Seaboard, according to tjU report and further negotiations hae , been sus pended for the time at Ifast. NEWSY GLEANINGS. year, ago. just after Gen, Gordon 'si has comrade and lifelong friend. For Contempt o Con Charleston, Special. -4 Sam; Bricks, formerly a merchant of Dillon, was brought to Charleston having been ar rested at Ardmore, Oklahoma, on a bench warrant, chargir-jg him with contempt of court, in paving failed to carry out an order of f Judge Braw ley in bankruptcy proeedings. In February, 1906, Brick affairs were in court and he was dircted to turn over the sum of $1,500 to the trustee. Instead of doing so Brick boarded the tram and went West an lived under the name of H. Simofis. He was brought here by two deputies of the marshall ot the Southern district of Oklahoma and delivered to Marshall Adams, who placed him fa jail. Brick will remain a guest of 8 Capt. Grad- dick until he purges himself of con tempt and there is noij telling how long he will remain in jjnu. . 1 All Business to Stop During Unveiling of Davis Statue. New Oleans, La,, Special. An ap peal to all Southerners briefly to stop business and all moving: wheels at 2 p. m., June 3, the moment of the un veiling-of the Jefferson Davis statue They have a new verb in London to suffrage. "She was arrested while suffraging." The Nurses' Associated Alumnae meeting at Richmond. Va., elected as president Miss Annie Damer, of New York. Mrs. J. B. Henderson is at the head of the crusade against the use of intoxicants by society people at the national capital. Dr. Frances W. Moneil resigned as president and member of the Wom an's Press Club and sent a statement to each member giving her reasons. Princess Camilla von Wrede will not be prosecuted for stealing silver from hotels in Berlin, medical experts saying she .is not mentally responsi ble. New York women are showing a strong inclination to revive the craze for Panama hats, and milliners are sending orders for big supplies of the fine weave. At a charitable matinee given at The Playhouse, London, Kitty Chea tham, an American actress, took the house by storm with her negro and children's songs. Saveral houses in the financial dis trict of New York City have their confidential orders attended to by women. They are in cnarge oi ine private telephones. When Mrs. Roosevelt returned from the isthmus last summer she brought a genuine Panama, and her first appearance in it was a signal to the do-likewise clan. Mrs. Augustine Castello de Ro mero Rubio, the mother of Mrs. Diaz, wife of the President of the Republic, died in the City of Mexico after an illness of a few hours. Lady Henry Som'erset, who haa made the temperance cause her life work, has announced that she will retire from public life and will ba heard nd more on rmbHo platforms. PROMINENT PEOPLE. Records for snowfall in April were broken. Paris is face to face with a snail famine. k Spain's royal babe was named Al fonso Pio Cristino Eduardo. The death record of plague In In dia for six weeks is 451,892. ( The United States Patent Office is months behind in its work. Ballooning as a recreation for Women finds much favor In France. Secretary Root, speaking at Yale, defended the raising of campaign funds. Professor Gustav J. Stoeckel. first head of the department of music at Yale, is dead. Canada is agitating for an all British route to Australia by way of the Dominion. The Texas Legislature has passed a bill levying a tax of fifty per cent, on dealers in pistols. The battleship Kansas was placed in commission with appropriate cere monies at the League Island Navy Yard. Baron Ozwa, a special representa tive of the Mikado, said that Japan hopes for an alliance with the United States. ...... Chinese officials banquet Rodger at Shanghai; say that America's gen erosity in famine relief has healed all breaches.- The earnings of thirty-five leading railroads for the second week of April aggregated $9,658,620. In the same period in 1906 the earnings were $8,482,529. The Presbyterian General Assem bly resolved to hold its ministers to strictest account for observance of the church's teachings on divorce, and to prohibit their marrying di vorced persons whose union is for bidden by the rules of their own denomination. Edward Everett Hale is eighty-five years old. Richard Mansfield sailed for Eu rope. He was so ill that two valets half carried him up the gangplank of the steamship. Secretary of the Treasury Shaw will receive a salary of $25,000 a year as president of the Carnegie Trust Company. James Lane Allen's old home in Kentucky is again for sale, Senator Bailey, of Texas, the present owner, having advertised it. President Roosevelt speaks several foreign languages French. German, Spanish,. Italian and Danish, besides a smattering of "Gaelic. ' Rear-Admiral Evans, commander- in-chief of the Atlantic fleet, declared the United States should keep six teen battleships each in the Atlantic and Pacific. Governor Hoch, of Kansas, has ac cepted a number of assignments from a lecture bureau as high as $15 0 a night, the season's profits figuring close to $15,000. General Funston by waiving his right of promotion in favor of Gen eral McCaskey, notwithstanding his own seniority, has set the service an admirable example. Allan L. McDermott, who repre sented the Tenth New Jersey District in the last Congress, has retired from public life. He is one of the best known Democrats in New Jersey. John W. Gates, who for a while has given up the pursuit of the bulls and bears in Wall Street to go boar hunt ing in France, regards no article In his wardrobe with more pride than he does his $10,000 fur overcoat. WHAT HE WANTED. Mr. Hayrix (in swell restaurant): "Kin I git my dinner here, mister?" Waiter: "Certainly, sir. Will you have table d'hote or a la carte?" Mr. Hayrix: "Well, yew may gimme a leetle of beth an' be shore an' put plenty uv gravy on it" Chicago News. Are a Necessity in the Country Home. The farther you are removed from town to railroad station, the more the telephone will save in time and horse flesh. No man has a right to compel one of the family to lie in agony for hours while he drives to town for the doctor. Tel ephone and save half the suffering. Our Free Book tells how to or ganize, build and operate tele phone lines and systems. Instruments sold on thirty days' trial to responsible parties. THE CADIZ ELECTRIC CO., 201 CCC Building, Cadiz, Ohio. 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We need a ttldmr Mmmm in every town and can offer an opportunity to make money to suitable young men who apply at once. .59 PUNCTURE-PROOF TIRES ? " " n m .80 PER PAIR NAILS. TACKS OR GLASS WONT LET OUT THE AIR (CASH WITH ORDER $4.55) NO MORE TROUBLE FROM PUNCTURES. Result of XX years experience in tire making. No danger from THORNS, CAC TUS. PINS. NAILS. TACKS or GLASS. Serious punctures, like intentional knife cuts, can be vulcanized like any other tire. Two Hundred Thousand pairs now in actual use. Over Seventy-five Thousand pairs sold last year. C DESGRIPTSOK9 Made in all sizes. It is lively and easy riding, very durable and lined .uside with a special quality of rubber, which never becomes porous and ivhich closes up small punctures without allowing the air to escape. We have hundreds of letters from satisfied customers stating that their tires have only been pumped up once or twice in a whole season. They weigh no more than an ordinary tire, the puncture resisting qualities being given by several layers of OH, specially lain? acit scdshuud commgoiyicu wncn luuox uu uuuiu Notice the thick robber tread "A" and puncture Strips "B" and "JD," also rim strip H" to prevent rim cutting. This tire will outlast any other make SOFT, ELASTIC and EASY BIDING. m prepared fabric on the tread. That "Holding Back" sensation commonly felt when riding on aspha or soft roads is overcome by the patent "Basket Weave; tread which prevents all air from brio smieezed out between the tire ana tne roaa inus overcoming aiisncuuB. inc icguuu pnvc m wine tires is SS so per pair, but for advertising purposes we are making a special factory price to the rider of onlv l4.So per pair. All orders shipped same day letter is teceived. We ship C.O.D. on approval. J4.80 per pai Yon do not pay a cent until j'ou have examinea ana iouna mem siuciiy as represemea. 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