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. /* & : v" - . r Casting the I Next to Fly F fection of Art By W. C. Harris SREVIOUS to the Civi dulged in, except to of the Mississippi Ri try lying between t the estuaries of the almost innumerable the art of angling w West of the Alle a method of handlln one in a hundred Eastern anglers can fa nf thh Jirt of ATI ll> *9 UIO J/C4 4VVMVM v? - , or in the stream, and with a swoop of and with a spring of the tip impels c tng an ounce or more, one hundred circle made by the rising bass; and tl strike the spot aimed for, even if no bi turn such accuracy been acquired? B me, the practice has been handed do' Writing exponent of it was born. When considering the rapid advan ?f angling by Western fishermen, the fruitfulness of local fishing waters si 41tlon prevails everywhere in the reg of the Canadian provinces, and froi lope. In every State one or more sp trout, native or introduced, will be Ohio and east of the Mississippi the bl and the pike, the long nose, ravage tt life. In Northern Wisconsin the Eagl f that giant pike, the mascalogne, w irooring capacity. So great is the thirst of many fish fish that the railroad running into or fishing season, a special daily train f< snascalonge fishers in their journey c one specimen of this kingly species Sporting News. ? ?7 * Trade Schools Month in Trade Than Year in La By James M. Dodge T has been well said ? ~~ I time has evolved a s< m 1 is destined to grow ai I Cw educational lines thai Jfc I V trade schools. Loca By I W the Drexel Institute, ? 'i onnntrv nro schools O grow more rapidly t ual training school, : past Within comparatively few years tl tng, making itself manifest and findin prorklng order, registered its want, an developed. This training is now being try. in shops equipped with the most methods, and supervised by instructc prith the importance and far-reaching 1 Is systematic and individual, and I fe< ?f such training is of more value than a large shop, in which he is as likely 1 It has been said that a three year average of but a few hours a day are d pray compare with three years' time that this is a popular error. In shop 1 titlon of the same task, to no ultimat tils skill being quickened, it is dulle prhich is unconscious in its operation, needle, he can talk to a fellow worknu places and matters, without in any w tact sometimes his pace might be actx having an exciting effect upon his ner the old lady, in chatting with her frii prlth the dullness or animation of the repetitive routine work is not desirabl and aptitude. In the trade school he nderlying principles of his work, and himself with the various tools requin theories in which he has been instruct* ^ J, V The Farmer m By E. S. Martin - ? ? TTf rmAnf c4oo<?r TrJnffti jjicai oivuuj nowadays are, feedii keeping warm nowac in the country it m large family, constan to the wood yard, ai quarter of an acre, men with a horse-po that was almost as 1 There were other stirring days wh bouse was filled, involving ice cutting oa? hitching on behind loads and going ter there was the momentous and gori timing time! They kill a pig every but that is mere mechanical routine w There was nothing so very slow a as the Civil War. I suppose soap-ma as household spinning. In those time respecting families made soap. Our pressly for that use, with a big cisteri rere leached, and convenient tubs fc tome substance is soft soap of the pr pleasing exercise it used to be for the its undulations. All the superfluous f; into soft soap in those near-by old tine j. | Longevity is men as make a study 1 say that man's years are 1 ^ y I convention of these men fr ^ J in this city this week, and SfjSSygj that of increasing longevity These actuaries of grea know what they are talkii Ideal in generalizations. When they s figures can give it, and figures, necoi llcClintock and others of these statis may reasonably expect to have a Ion decade ago. Better hygiene, more thorough kn thorough drainage, less drinking of li have combined to make the twentieti than existed a generation ago. The A peratc and more intelligent. It is no I jto be puny and delicate. Short ski] jawimming, fencing, even boxing, have !?f the race fit to bear strong sons am tpart of our public school systepi and i nromen of Europe and America. Hence, we are gradually beginning pf we wlIL tr* . Minnow ishing, the Perin Angling J War angling as a pastime was not ina very limited extent, by residents west ver; in fact, it may be said that the coun? he eastern slope of the Alleghanies and 4+inr>+;s, ti*oc thn hrnn/1 arp.n with its r aimuuv, ? iio iMv ?? fluvial and lacustrine waters, in which as nurtured in America, glianies they have brought to perfection g the rod in casting the minnow that not follow or perform, and next to fly fishing gling. The angler Siands on the bank, the rod from right to left, or the reverse, leftly and lightly a live minnow, weighand fifty or more feet to the dimpling le Western angler nine times in ten will igger than the crown of a silk hat. How ecause, as an old Milwaukee angler told svn and followed generations before any ce in skill and indulgence in the pastime >ir great advantages in the number and lould not be overlooked. And this condon north of Milwaukee to the ice line n the Mississippi River to the Pacific tecies of the forty-two varietal forms of found, and in those sections north of aek bass, both large and small mouthed, le lakes and streams of their minor fish e Lakes and other waters are the home ith its many variant names and fisli-delermen for the blood of this noble game near its native haunts has, during the ir Northern Wisconsin, to accommodate ?f over 400 miles to capture often only of the great tribe of Esox.?Illustrated ' * 4 A A / A 4 School of More Value rge Shop that "Time determines all things," and ilution which, though but in its infancy, ad be the most important development in t the world has ever seen. I refer to the lly we have some splendid examples? the Williamson Trade School, the man* f this character, which undoubtedly will han any educational institutions of the and others. But scattered all over this lis lack of opportunity for proper traing the law of supply and demand in good d fortunately the method of supply was given by many institutions In this counmodern tools and employing up-to-date rs of marked ability and fully imbued benefits of their calling. The Instruction ?1 Jully justified in saying that a month a year's time spent by a young man in ;o absorb error as truth, s* course in a trade school, in which an evoted to actual manual work, can in no spent in actual work in a shop. I feel work a man may spend months in repee advantage to the worker. Instead of cl. He very quickly acquires tne stem and, like the old lady with her knitting in, or think and dream about far-distant ay lessening the rate of production. In tally quickened by some mental emotion rous organization, in the same way that ?nds, will knit fast or slow In harmony conversation. It is quite obvious that e for a young man of natural ambition escapes routine but Is Instructed in the does enough manual labor to familiarize ?d, and to prove the correctness of the ?d.?St. Nicholas. > i ^ * Wilder r jobs on an American farm in the North ng the stock and keeping warm. And lays means hauling coal. When I lived eant cutting woou. it meam, iui uui t teaming day after day from the woods id a wood pile that must have covered It meant, towards spring, the coming of wer and buzz-saw to cut firewood, and nteresting an operation as threshing, en the lake had frozen hard and the iceand more teaming, and more precari; back in empties. And early in the win7 killing of pigs. Oh, that was indeed a second, no doubt, in Chicago nowadays, ith no quality of sport in it. bout the country winter in days as late king as a domestic industry is as dead s of wood fires and wood ashes all selffamily had an outstanding kitchen exalike hogshead behind it in which ashes >r holding the soft soap. A very handoper consistency and complexion, and a young to stir it with a stick and watch at of meat from our kitchen was turned ies.?Harper's Magazine. J & JS? Increasing of statistics relating to life and death, gradually growing longer. The fourth oin all parts of the world is being held the first general subject discussed was it insurance companies should certainly lg about. They are not accustomed ro say a thing it has all the certainty that rding to the proverb, don't lie. Emery ticiaus declare that a person now living ger period of life than those of even a owledge of self-care, purer water, more quor?all these things and many others a century man a finer physical product raerican people are becoming more ternlonger the fad for our women and girls rts, wheeling, riding, golfing, walking, contributed to make the coming mothers i daughters. Physical culture is now a i part of the daily life of most men and to live Izsger. We may do even better, I / 4 ??? i jammm ???? WORK OF CONGRESS A Lot of Discussion and Little Practical Business. Tho House Thursday adopted a resolution directing the judiciary committee to Inquire into the official conduct of Chas. Swayne, judge of the United States District Court for the northern district of Florida, and to "report whether the action of the House is requisite." Mr. Lamar, Democrat,' of Florida, offered the resolution, announcing that he desired to impeach Judge Swayne. A lively debate was had before the resolution was adopted. A number of the members o nthe majority side sought to have the resolution referred to the judiciary committee, that a recommendation might bo had from that committee before voting on its adoption. The minority solidly supported Mr. Lamar in bis opposition to the motion to refer, and several Republicans voted against reference. There were but f?w dissenting votes on the motion to adopt the resolution. The first o fthe appropriation bills? the pension bill?was reported to the House today and notice was given that it will be called up tomorrow ior consideration. Mr. Lamar, Democrat, of Florida, rising to a question of privilege after announcing that he would offer a resolution in which would be embodied a joint resolution of the Florida Legislation, said: "In pursuance of that joint resolution I desire to impeach Charles Sawyne, judge of the United States District Court, for the northern district of Florida, with high crimes and misdemeanors." The rosolution, after reciting in the preamble the reoslutlon of the Florida , Legislature, says: "Resolved, That the committee on the judiciary be directed to inquire and report wnetner tne anion 01 me nsuse is requisite concerning the official misconduct of Charles Swayne, judge of the United States District Court for the northern district of Florida, and say whether said judge has held terms of his court as required by law, whether he has continuously and persistently absented himself from the said State, and whether his acts and omissions in his office of judge have been such as in any degree to deprive the people of that district of the benefits of the court thereon to amount to a denial of justice; whether the said judge has been guilty of corrupt conduct in office and whether his administration of his office has resulted in injury and wrong to litigants of his court." The resolution further authorizes the judiciary committee to send for persons and papers and to do other things essential to the investigation. The birth of the republic of Panama and its recognition by this government was the subject of a spirited debate in the House. Mr. Dinsmore, Democrat, of Arkansas, during the consideration of tho pension appropriation bill, severely criticised the administration in connection wun me canal, and Mr. Hitt, Republican, of Illinois, chairman of the foreign committee, put in a generous defense of the President and his Central American policy. Mr. Williams, of Mississippi, the minority leader, replied to Mr. Hitt, declaring that the minority did not condone the part taken by this government. Nearly the whole of the four hours' session was taken up in a discussion of the Isthmian question. No conclusion was reached on the pension bill. Mr. Dinsmore said the Panama republic had been established and that it exists by the power of the Pnited States and that without that power it could not exist. Nothing had, he said, been gained that could not have been gained in a straightforward way. True Bills Found. Omaha. Special?The United States grand jury late Thursday afternoon brought in true bills against former State Senator Lowe. Bartlett Richardson. a cattle baron of the West, and all of the officers of his company known a3 the Nebraska Land and Feeding Company; former State Senator Frank Curry, of Custer county, and about 15 other indictments. A. C. L. Syndicate. New York, Special.?Members ol the syndicate which underwrote $35, 000.000 of the 4 per cent, bonds and $5,000,000 stock of the Atlantic Coast Line aRilroad at the time that com pany acquired control of the Louis ville & Nashvillee road, have asked for a 14-months' extension of the syndicate agreement to February 18. 1905. J. P. Morgan & Co., syndicate managers, will agree to the extension npni'iiHnu 11 maioritv of the partie.1 to the syndicate agreement consent To Invadr Panama. Colon, By Cable.?A rumor is in circulation here to the effect that 3,000 soldiers have left Cartagena for the purpose of invading the Isthmus. No details are known, and the rumors cannot be confirmed. It probably had its source at Port Limon, Costa Rica, where it was brought by steamer from Cartagena. The only possible means of approaching Panama is by narrow and difficult mountain passes through the Indian country. The United States cruiser Atlanta is now off the Indian coast. Venice Inundated. Venice, By Cable.?As a result of the extremely bad v.eather, with a violent wind, which has prevailed for some days. Venice was almost entirely under water for a few hours Sunday. At the piazza of the Cathedral of St. Mark, the flood rose to a height of four feet, while inside the cathedral the water was so high as to threaten serious damage. Gondolas had to be used from sbop-door to shop-door, until bridges were improved by the fircImen, the ordinary bridges having disappeared. The water gradually subaided ' ' FIVE MEN KILLED Two Engines Overturned While on Heavy Grade A BAD ACCIDENT ON THE B. & t Nearly All of Twenty-Four Loadc Curs Overturned and Much Propert Loss Sustained. Piedmont. W. Va.. Special.?Fi\ men were killed and several injured b ti.e overturning of two engines, attact ed to a heavy Baltimore & Ohi freight train on the seventecn-mil grade Sunday near this city. The dca arc: Engineer Ernest D. Ervin, 2S yeai old. Cumberland, Md. Engineer Emery Ervin. 56, of Tur neliton, W. Va. Fireman Walter Miner, 32. Fireman J. E. Carter. 28 North Cai nlina. Biakcman John Hayes, 23, Stauntoi Va. The more seriously injured were: Engineer Machael Ji Gibhon, 3 years old, of Cumberland, Md., fatall crushed. Fireman E. C. Buckler, Terra Alt; W. Va.. legs, arms and head cut an bruised. Erakemen B. F. Bollinger, Graftor W. Va., seriously wounded. While descending the seventecn-mil grade, the train, to which were at frw-hpri two eneines. left the track. Th engines and nearly all of the 24 loauc . cars. tumbled Into a ravine, and too all the treinmcnt with them. Th tracks were torn up for nearly a hun died yards, but. it Is thought, traffi will be resumed late tonight. Five More Killed. Ottumwa, Iowa, Special.?Five per sons were killed and ten injured, bu none fatally, in a wreck at 9:15 Sun day morning on the Chicago. Burling ton & Quincy road, three miles west o Albia, Iowa. The west-bound passenge train was in some manner derailei while running on to the Cedar creel bridge, and five cars were wrecked b; a collision with the steel girders of th bridge. The wreckage immediately tool fire, and several of the victims wer badly burned. Just what caused th accident is a mystery. Killed ?-or nis nunc;. Goldsboro, Special.?Buna Capps. t.h white man who was assaulted and lef for dead near A. L. Sasser's farm about five miles west of Goldsborc Tuesday, died Wednesday night with out regaining consciousness. Dr. Thorn as Hill, county coroner, was notifiei and held an inquest over the remains From the evidence the jury found tha "Capps came to his death by a blov from a blunt instrument in the hand of unknown parties." Capps was 4 years old, and leaves a wife and fou children. The motive for the crime i supposed to have been robbery, a Capps was returning home after sell lug cotton in Goldsboro, though he hai less than $10 with him at the time. ' * Daearv/P Rill. I~avor ruicai i\bsvi Washington, Special.?The Senat committee on forest reservations ha reported favorably the Appalachiai National Forest Reserve bill. Th committee held its first session sine the reorganization, and Senator Over man, who is a member of the commit tee, told his colleague that they coul not do a wiser thing than to put thei stamp of approval on this wholly mer iiorious measure. The committee, at ter some discussion, finally concurre in the North Carolina Senator's opin ion and the bill was reported favorabl; by unanimous vote. Mr. Burton i chairman of this committee, and it wa Le who introduced the bill a few day ago. The Camp Wrecked. Huntington, W. Va.t Special.?F. A Johnson, of Lynchburg, Va.. a forema on the Norfolk & Western Railroad, a Kenova, was thawing out dynamit when a stick exploded, wrecking th Tnbnson had both legs blown of tump. ?... John Black, colored, had his bod blown to pieces, some of It landing 1 a tree 50 yards away. Others were it iurcd. but not fatally. ^ Chicago Gets Convention. Washington, Special.?The Republ can national convention will be hel in Chicago, beginning at noon Jun 21, next, the Republican national con mlttee reaching this conclusion Sa ndiourning subject to cal U. uaj f u?.v. ? _ Pittsburg and St. Louis were t'n rivals of Chicago for the convcntioi Each city was well represented i oratory before the committee, an each also had cash offers to mak Pittsburg offered $100,000, Chicac $75,000 and a hall and St. Louis $4( 000 and a hall. The vote stood 4a fc Chicago. 7 for Pittsburg and 1 f< St. Louis. News Items. Mr. William Astor Chanler, of Ne York, society man, explorer and e Congressmen, married Miss Minn Ashley, a well-known comic-opera a tress. Mrs. Marie Muriane, of Boonton, 1 J., fought Copantoni Nugilo until si killed him because he threatened 1 kill her daughter. George D. Woods, president of tl Bank of Colfax, Iowa, committed si cide. I FOREST RESERVE BILL ? The Outlook Bright for the Establishment of a (Ireat Park. a A special dispatch from Washington City on Wednesday says: Men high in the government service as well as those prominent in other walks jt of life will again actively interest themselves in behalf of the Appalachian Forest Reserve bill The issue - ... 44 will be clear-cut wnen tne measure y reaches tbe speaker and any adverse action, should there be such, will be taken over the protest of directly ininterested and in formed men from -all rC parts of the country. At the session J of the American Forestry Association, 0 held here the bill was heartily endors 1 ed by a formal resolution, after reie j marks of approval from various gentlemen. Secretary of Agriculture Wil.. son presided over the meeting while among the active participants was Dr. Schency, in charge of the forestry divlson of the George W. Vanderbilt estate. Tiio resolutions declared that Southern forests were of national importance in their influence upon the j tueam-flow and timber supply. Wood and Crum Again. 0 Washington, Special. ? President *-? -^-4. 4.^ y nuuseveii .uunua/ soul iu iuc ocuuic the nomination of General Leonard t Wood to be a major genral of the d army and the nomination of 167 other army officers whose promotion is delt pendent on that of General Wood. Accompanying these nomination were e those of about 25 civilian appointees, including that of Dr. W. D. Crum for e collector of the port of Charleston, 8. d C., and some members whom the Presk ident nominated in the last recess, e These appointments are considered by - the President and his advisers to be c recess appointments, the question of their status having been discussed thoroughly by the President with the best lawyers connected with the adt ministration and in Congress. In con| elusion, it has been decided that between the time of the falling of the j gavel on the extra session, signifying r the conclusion of the extraordianry 3 session, and the calling to order of < of the Senate in the regular session of y Congress, an appreciable lapse of e time occurred. In this time the ap t nolntments technically, were maae. e They are regarded by the admlnistrae tion as recess appointments, and the Rppointees, therefore, will receive the pay and exercise all the authority of the rank to which they are promoted. e t Can't Tax Sewing Machines. Washington. Special.?The Supreme (* Court of the United State3 Monday de' cided that sewing machines may be sold and shipped Into North Carolina r} without requiring the payment of the . tax of $3..'0 required on the manu'act ture and sale of those machines in the State. The opinion was rendered in the case of the Norfolk & Western Rall5 road Company vs. John R. Sims, sheriff r of Person county, N. C. The case arose s In connection with the purchase of a s machine by Mrs. 0. L. Satterfield, of . the town of Roxboro, in that State. She a nr^orpri it frnm Chlcaeo. and it was a v- ??? _ sent "cash on delivery." There was an effort on the part of tj?e authorities to collect the license, on the ground that, as the money was paid in North Caroe lina, the sale was really made there. s The State court accepted this view of a the case, but they were reversed by toe day's opinion, which held that the de8 cision was an interference with interState commerce, and that the sewing ~ machine could not be taxed as long as a it remained in the original package. Needed Appropriations. Washington, Special.?The Secretary y of the Treasury has transmitted to s Congress the estimates of approprias tlons acquired by the government for 3 the fiscal year ending June, 1905. The appropriations a3ked for aggregate 5624,502,146 as against 5589,189.112 ask ed for the year 1904 ana ibuo.zso.wv, the amount of the appropriations for ' that year. The estimates in detail foln low: Legislative $11,687,255; Execun tive $320,000; State Department $3,133,c 960; Treasury Department $168,659,064; e War Department $131,259,033; Navy Department $105,825,410; Interior Department $163,093,386; Postofflce Dey partment $10,824,759; Department of n Agriculture $6,729,880; Department of i- Commerce and Labor $14,932,955; Department of Justice $8,035,440; grand total $624,502,146. I Manufacturers Meet. d Charlotte, Special.?The meeting of p a large number of prominent cotton 1 manufacturers here last week was an ^ event of great interest not only to the j manufacturing interests but to the p whole community as well. Plans were ^ discussed looking to tne curriiimeni of production A'ith a view of either inn creasing the price cf the output or re,J ducing the cost of raw material. A e. umber of plans were taken under eon-0 sideration. A large number of looms j and spindles was represented at the " meeting, ant prom.. ?.nt mill men )r think that good results will follow the )r meeting. The manufacturers adjourned. subject to a call to meet in Washington City next In a Wreck. v, Washington, Special.?Powell Clayx ton, ambassador of the United States to ie Mexico, arrived here from Mexico c- City. He came to attend the meeting of the Republican national committee, * * * * ??- - --- A r_ [ ^ of which he is tne mnuuti nuu ' kansas. Yesterday morning the train . on which he was a passenger was wrecked near LaGrange, Ga., but he escaped with only a slight injury to his 1? head. He will remain a few days, and 11 then will go to his home In Arkansas. He expects to leave for his poet on January le t. ' :'1 ; FIXING FOR WAR. * ! ?? .L 1 Our Army and Navy Making Preparations for Conflict # REPORTS MAY ONLY BE A SCARE r ! Qen. Reyes Said Movement of Colombian Troops Was Without His Orders. ? Washington, Special.?Dr. Herran. the Colombian charge d-affaires, has authorized the statement that if the troops from Cartagena have landed near the mouth of the Atrato river, as reported by the French steamer which has arrived at LaGuira, it is directly in [ opposition to the advice of both himself and General Reyes. General Reyes i stated that the LaGuira dispatch was ! the first information he had received of the reported movement of Colombian troops and he declared, however, that 1 if it is true as stated such movement lias iun.ru piatc il yvaa wiuiwut au; v/*ders from him. Upon coming to Washington as the special representative of the Colombian government, General Reyes temporarily relinquished the command of the Colombian army, the duty falling upon General Castro, second In command. General Reyes confirmed the statement recently made by Admiral Coghlan in a report to the Navy Department that prior to hla de- N parture for Washington the Colombiantroops made no hostile demonstration, nor would they until he was heard from. The general has been fully Informed by the President himself as to the intentions of the government of the United States respecting the isthmus. He was told by the President, as was set out in the President's message to. J Congress, the United States had deter-' ,,|j of the new republic of Panama against , ali comers. While this guarantee is contained in a treaty now pending bofore the United States Senate and as yet unratified, the administration has for some time past been acting upon the theory that the understanding is in full force. Therefore all necessary preparations have been made to exert wuaiever pil/Sll'dl IUICC ma; uc ucvw sary to protect the isthmian transit. Colombian troops will not be allowed to cross the frontier into Panama; or, If they cross they will be ejected in due time. The policy of the Navy Department with respect to the entry of Colombian troops into Panama was said today tobe to prevent a conflict before It com- i menced. To this end, the naval com- j manders In those waters have been instructed to keep the Colombian troope at a greater distance from the isthmus at points where a fight with the Panamaian troops is likely to occur. In _ all naval operations, it may be stated on authority, the Department is still ' - H x X? -a 10l/? J guiueu uy tne ixeaiy ui ?0*0, uuucr which the United States guarantees to keep transit across the isthmus open. A broader interpretation of the duties and responsibilities of the government in this respect had now been given to this treaty by which the protection of the United States will not alone be confined to the canal strip, but to an/ part of the territory of Panama. Fight to the Death. Memphis, Tenn., Special.?Two negroes employed in a large wholesale grocery house killed , each other here in a hand-to-hand fight George Rawlins and Kirk Allen?one armed with a ( hatchet, and the other with a knife? ?fought over a trfval matter, and Rawlins was hacked in a dozen places with the hatchet of his opponent one stroke piercing his brain and causing instant death. Allen was cut frightfully, and died a few hours later. Convicted of flurder. Birmingham, Ala,, Special.?Frank Adams, a negro, was convicted of the murder of Dave Lee, also a negro, and was given the death sentence. Both men were convicts, and were serving terms for murder?Adams 30 years and Lee a life sentence. The murder occurred several months ago. and the five witnesses on whose testimony Adams was convicted were all serving life sentences for murder. Student Commits Suicide. Ann Arbor, Mich., Special.?Russell H. McWilliams, of Kansas City, Mo., a junior literary student at the Univer sity of Michigan, committed suicide s Wednesday at the Sigma Alpha Epsllon House, of which fraternity he was a member. McWilliams slept in a room with E. W. Sutton. Sutton was awakened by a shot and rushed over to McWilliams' bed and found him dead with a, bullet through his heart Sutton could uoreason for his chum's act except that he had seemed somewhat morose the t?OWl laai ^ n KJ ua;w. To Accspt Carnegie Offer. Greensboro, Special.?The city alderman voted unanimously to accept the Carnegie offer to build a $30,000 < library, provided the city would guarantee $3,000 per year for its maintenance. The matter has been hanging fire two years and the action tonight was the result of a petition asking that it be adopted, signed by a majority of the qualified voters.