o THE RALEIGH ENTERPRISE. Thursday, August 24, 1905. . 2 THE RALEIGH ENTERPRISE. An Independent Newspaper Pub lished Every Thursday ' '.'-BY : J. L. RAMSEY, Editor and Prop:, Raleigh, N. C. Office of publication, Law Build ing, 331 Fayetteville Street. Subscription Price : One Year, in advance, $1.00. Single copy, 5 cents. A blue X mark on your paper shows that your subscription has ex pired, and is an invitation to renew. Remit by registered letter, money order or check. If renewal is not received within a week, paper will stop. Entered as pecond-olass matter May 12, WW, at the postofflceat Rale'ftb. i. c, under the Act of Congress of March 8, 1879. An Egyptian has sued four of his wives for divorce at one time. He may not claim it, but we think he is entitled to wholesale rates. The tiddlers' convention at Pullen Park next Thursday is for fiddlers only and those who attend to enjoy the music. But we hope a few vio lin players will attend and hear some real music. In answer to a young lady in quirer, we will state that a surprise party and a surprise marriage are not precisely the same thing. A sur prise party is singular, while a sur prise marriage is plural, there being two surprised parties, as a rule. Recently a lady passenger was car ried by her destination, and she had to spend the night in Raleigh. Of course she sued the railroad, and some of our envious neighbors are jubilating. They take no account of numerous suits which would be brought if the railroads should fail to get other uassengers to Raleigh. An American circus is stranded in France and the two hundred em ployes are in a bad condition, as work is not easily secured in that country. But certainly this government will not allow them to suffer. However, the government has no fund to re lieve stranded Americans in a for eign country. The tax valuation of property has increased nearly $200,000 in Anson County in a year. Anson is a good county. But, unfortunately, an in crease originating at the hands of tax listers is never taken seriously, for when a county is after money it can easily increase the value of prop erty, However, we trust that Anson is forging ahead. Pretty soon you will hear that Ra leigh has not the hotel facilities for handling the Fair week crowd. The Yarborough, Park and Carrollton will all be open. The three can care for more people than the hotels of any other town, Greensboro not ex cepted. Then there are other smaller hotels; numerous boarding-houses of a good class, and many private homes will be open that week. The crowd will be a record-breaker, but no one will fail to find accommodations. NICE STATE OF AFFAIRS. The open session of the South Carolina Dispensary Investigation , Commission has brought to light financial reports which show that the Dispensary has not been the money making institution that some claim it is, or, if it has made money, it has been gobbled up by the hangers on. It was brought out that the Dis pensary Board owes over $500,000, has orders outstanding for more than $200,000 worth of "goods," and has only $1,200 to its credit with the State Treasurer. It is claimed, how ever, that they have on hand in local dispensaries about $338,000 worth of goods and considerable stock in tho State Dispensary; also a lot of "ac counts," real estate, teams, office fix tures, etc. However, unless the real amount is kept from public view, it' is doubtful if a profitable balance sheet could be shown. In the assets more than $65,000 in "railroad claims" appears. That is a pretty large amount of such claims, and it' is not likely that the accumulation will grow much less. STILL IN DOUBT. It is understood that the peace plenipotentiaries have practically agreed upon everything except the matter of indemnity' and the disposi tion of the island of Sakahalien. There has been a virtual deadlock for a week upon those questions. During the past three days it is believed that President Roosevelt, acting for this country, France, Eng land and Germany, has been in close touch with the envoys, and with the Czar and Micado. Long messages have been exchanged, and there still seems to be hope of peace, though the envoys seem hopelessly apart. No one doubts that Russia is willing to pay a large sum, but the amount Japan insists upon, the cost of the war to that government, is a stag gering amount. However, while ne gotiations continue there is hope, and it may all. end well any day. George Vanderbilt sold some cat tle at his Biltmore farm this week. Twenty-eight Jersey's brought $6,855, which is quite a help to a poor farmer like George at this season of the year. The yellow fever is spreading. Four places are infected outside of New Orleans. The quarantine regu lations in nearby States are so strict that business and traffic is nearly paralyzed. It has ever been thus when yellow fever exists. The Joys of Inland Bathing. Quiet inland bathing offers you no such extravagant opportunities to be a poseur. If the water is warm, you loll in it at your ease; your mind is soon stupefied by the sensuousness in which you are enfolded; the interest of your sleepy eyes does not extend beyond the gentle ripples that widen away from the slow, submerged strokes of your arms. After a while you roll over on your back and drowsily, execute at intervals a lan guid "shoony" lest motion, while you look drowsily up into the void. Now and then you will raise your arms and flap them down through the wa ter like a pair of sweeps; it is only a tired sort of effort. And finally, in the supreme abandonment of in dolence, you lay your head back, far back, until the water creeps up about your eyelids; you stretch out legs and arms motionless, and lie, breathing tranquilly, sensible of no other movement in the world than the slight flux and slip of the water upon your heaving: chest. Then may you realize, perhaps, something of 'the lark's sensation when, with wings outspread, it hangs suspended be tween earth and sky. He who has never thus suspended himself idly in still water, with fathoms below him and infinity above, has not ex perienced one of the sensuous de lights of existence. Unfortunate man, who goes to his grave believing that there is nothing better than bed for weary limbs and a jaded brain! Arthur Stanwood Pier, in the Au gust Atlantic. The Making of Calls. As regards calls being made by new residents of a few months' standing upon new arrivals, some lit tle hesitation is experienced as to whether they ought to call or not, being themselves but recently estab lished in the neighborhood. Actual ly, they have the privilege of call ing upon those who have come to reside in a place later than them selves, if they care to avail them selves of it, and unless they do so, they must wait until circumstances bring them together, that is, meet ing at the houses of the neighbors or in connection with parish affairs. Temporary residents have no hesita tion on this head ; they are not ex pected to call upon each other a3 residents do upon newcomers. They make acquaintance in various ways in the first instance, and follow it up subsequently if inclined so to do. Oftener than not they do not come across each other during their brief stay, and they meet so seldom that the acquaintance does not develop into a calling one. In country towns, temporary resi dents are seldom called upon by tho residents in the town. The exception to this is when they have a "friend in court" in the person of one of the residents, who can ask several oth ers to call, or who can introduce them at gatherings. Those who take houses for short periods can not ex pect to be called upon as a general rule; indeed, in some communities no notice whatever is taken of their arrival or departure, and they are left severely alone. In others, those not very much to the front are glad of the opportunity of making their acquaintance, and introduce them readily to their friends. When first calls should be returned is another knotty point to be deter mined. No one wishes to call too soon, neither do they wish to call un duly late upon those who have been kind enough to call upon them. With in ten days, again, is an average time, and three weeks the outside lim it for so doing. These first calls are surrounded by some little amount of worldly-wise consideration in the matter of returning them, and not infrequently the names of the callers are submitted to one who knows a little about their bearinars. Whose call should be returned at once, and whose call might be deferred until a convenient season, are matters de cided by the friends in question ; failing this friendly aid, the decision is left to chance and what judgment can be brought to bear upon it through environment and personal observation. Jane Armstrong. No, Anxious Inquirer, the state ment that the Democratic party is seeking for a Moses to lead it out of the wilderness is not equivalent to saying that it wants a dead one or a patriarch for its leader. It is simply equivalent to saying that they are in need of an angel. Haverhill Gazette. The grand jury at Washington continued the investigation of the cotton leak scandal, but with secrecy. OPINIONS IN A NUTSHELL , We really don't see how Uncio Russell Sage can expect the Lord to wait until he reaches par, when he can be had at 89. Boston Journal. While there may not be as much whiskey sold here as during the time of open saloons there appears to be plenty to go around. Durham Herald.'"- ' The voting out of the dispensary by Union County, S..C, is but' one of the indications that the people of that State are going to do the great moral institution to death. Char lotte Chronicle. ;. ; The country wagons will soon be bringing in pumpkins instead of wa termelons, and not long after that it will be time to call the 'possum dog. Charlotte Chronicle. Famine in Spain, famine in the United States ! Only ours is an aw ful and unassuaged hunger for freight cars to carry the harvest. New York Evening Mail. ; ,.' The pacification of the Russian peonle is proceeding with gratifying results from the autocratic point of view. Forty have been killed and more than 200 wounded in the latest lesson. Pittsburg Dispatch. " The "paternal" character of the Russian Government may be seen in the sentence of Sienkiewicz, the Po lish novelist, to imprisonment in his own house. It is like sending a child to bed in the daytime. Springfield Republican. The reputation of submarines is so good that the President should trust himself on the bottom of Oys ter Bay in the Plunger. Why not let some of the candidates for the nomi- nation distinguish themselves. New York Evening Sun. . . It is authoritatively stated Sena tor Gorman is not in poor health, and has no thoue-ht of resigning. We should say not. The only thing that will retire him from politics will be a lack of votes to re-elect him to the Senate. Pittsburg Gazette. Captain Jansen, of a Boston fruit steamer, reports that the Gulf Stream has shifted two points of lat itude farther north. The Russian peace commissioners will refuse to believe it. They find Baron Komura colder every day. New York Even ing Sun. ";. A lot of crooks taken in by the New York police on suspicion of be longing to the wire-tapping gang were well-dressed, gray-haired and respectable in appearance. That combination justly arouses suspicion over there. Boston Herald. j-'! Mr. Roosevelt's obvious abhorrence for a trust in food products is per fectly logical, considering his posi tion on the question of race suicide. If people are to be brought into this world the cost of nourishment must not be made prohibitive. Kansas City Times. " '...: When we stop reading in court proceedings of pistol toting cases, "judgment suspended on payment of cost," and instead the proceedings shall read "12 months on chain gang" it will be a wonderful help to cowards to leave their pistols at home. Our Home. s It is to be' considered that Japan is to-day in a position where she can enforce absolutely every demand she makes of Russia. Russia is not asked to give up anything! she has possession of, save the indemnity. An indemnity is not more costly than war, and it is all that Russia has any choice about, Louisville Post,