Newspapers / Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.) / Jan. 11, 1904, edition 1 / Page 4
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THE CAROLINA WATCHMAN. iyM.vHrSTEWABT. - - EditOJV NO STEP BACKWARD. NEARLY 50.000 CAPTURED. KAISER WARNDD THE CZAR. BRODIE L DUKE INSANE. aTCHMAN J -i Published Every Wednesday at ounscriptiorr.t'rice $l.uu tier year, ffrictly cash iir advance. U NIQjUk BE L Salisijby,'N. C, Jan. 11, 1904. The crooks keep straight when the straigbtB keep ihe crooks. Anuexehange speaks of a ''Long Wireless Connection which we suppose has reference to a poor third cousin. Some Sensible and. Tlnelj Remarks on tie Emigration EiH. We shall not believe this Legis lature will pass a bill creating any knows we do not need anything of the sort. : ;. ;, ; We have a plenty of ignorance and vice in our State now to con sume all the money, all the teach ing ability,! all the preaching and praying which the State has at its command. More of the vile) sor- ry adventurers wm iorce tnem- Japanese Preparations- in - Manchuria, Expressed tioaMs as to Ontcome of i Hur- Port Arthur Inventoried. . . L rled War With Japon. Huaushan, Manchuria via Muk- VieLnaj Jan. 6, A curious il- den, Jan. 5 The Japanese rein-1 lustration of the Czar's inacessi- office for an emigrant agent; God 'cements are now concentrating billty to counsel wai mentio ned . v . -. arnnnd Rfinsinn: Ktl milpa north-I . - , i ; ' i - " i to ma toaav in a Quarter wnicn east of Liao Yang. This fact taken oaQDOt be' -suspected of German iiuoonjuncuon wnn une reports oi oohiHsm. Some ten days before thp completion of the railroads in outbreak of the war in the far uorea and tbe bridge across the Ya iu river indicates that the Jap anese have again transferred their to the right flank. 'In are continu ing the erecting of fortifications attention the j meanwhile they. ,. Judging by the signs on Council Street, Salisbury has more "First Class Restaurants" than any city of its size in the South. selves on us man wb .wbuwiwiuui, ilorth and west A light railroad any tolling or baiting on our part. wa9 kid during the last few days south of the village of Houhenow. The Japanese continue to bom bard Poutiloff Hill and the vil lages west of it. fokio, Jan. 5. A report today from Geh. Nogi's headquarters largely increases the figures of the" surrendered garrison and intimates What- do we want with them? What account have those who have already come, under the auspices ofr an agent ever been to the State? : Talk about the objections to the negro ne is ten times better tnan the average foreign emigrant . The -r Japanese at Port Wheat aas dropped l $c per bushel owH3gJbo"TeportB of a large crop on hand. A case of the Western farmer having grain- to !burn and wiirurn to gain ' , c : :u I " uvlttSO luiBiKuu wiuni xir wiuu tha the forces handed over to the his own trod, his own social and religious ideas, which, for the most part, are the rankest forms of socialism and anarchy. He a We suppose New York's public school are up to the average and . believe allgood people ; will re joice when it is learned corporal punishment has been banished by them. The Raleigh Times suggests $hatt a pile of cottqn, covered with plank for protection, would make a Handsome ornament for the ,frorit yard. Iijwould indeed, and it wouldTshow its owner was with 1- - - i the i boys in the fight for better prices. Of course, this holding business can be joverdone as you now one needs to look out for his interests regardless of making a show. jiever thought" of remembering the Sabbath dav to keep it holy. On the other hand, he just as soon dig coal, melt. iron, or work in a blacksmith shop on this day as any other. , Our love of county, our church es and school houses are not in all aOur homes, our flag, our his tory and sacred traditions more taan broken ldoirtbtnem. They are little more than the skum of the earth, many of them fleeing to escape the punishment for crime, while others are leaving a pauperized land which is badly ana" wickedly governed, and hence Arthur will be 32,000 exclusive of 15,000 or 16,- 00 "sick and wounded making rough total of 48,000. The report is as follows : As previously reported the trans ter ot the objects mentioned in Article II of the capitulation compact took place on January 4th and the transfer of the forts and battef ies had been completed. 'The prisoners will be assemb led at the investigation relating ese prisoners is so complica fed that the result cannot be re ported at present. i Reports received up to date are as follows: "Eight generals, four admirals, 57 colonels and majors, 100 cap tains and commanders, 581 army captains and lieutenants, 200 naval have no idea of what makes good h- tenantB , - , officiats qq . . , , ,4 citizensnip. This State tried this business once, and it was such a huge, such . CURRENT COMMENT. Another good way to solve the "race problem" down South might be to. let thfl South do the,.Bolving. --Chicago Tribune. .. The man who has the moBt ad vice to give about the negro prob lem is usually tne one wno is so far from the negrqthat he wouldn't know the problem if he were to meet it iu the big road. State. Today th Legislature meets and we hope its work will redound to ; tne. general yfeltare to say this is agood deal like th speak er who began to give his audience good advice and ended, as the conclusion of the whole matter, by saying, "Everybody do right. Let it be hoped that all the legis lators will do right if they do, jda harm, but only good, can come to the State. Charlotte Observer, "General Booth,' of the- Salvation Army; t nas been Holding a series of meetings Jm Germany, which have" had a -total attendance of a dismal failure, that it actually abolished the office in order to get clear of it'. This was the only real sensible move connected with the whole transaction. The fact that the matter is now being agi tated is a symptom that somebody is pressing' toward the pie coun ter. We do not believe this Leg islature will touch it with a "forty foot pole." America for Americans was the slogan of our fathers, and the preservation of this doctrine has saved the South from much of the wretched expe- armv officials. 109 surgeons, 20 chaplains; of the rank and file of the army, 22,434; of theankand nle of the navy, 4.&UU; army non- combatants. 3.645: naval non combatants, 500- 32,207. "Besides these, there are about 15,000 or 16,000 sick and wound- ed in the hospitals. The volun teers are chiefly included in the list of non-combatants. "One hundred saddle horses and 1,860 draught horses were surren dered." war m East the German Emperor, alarm ed bv the information received concerning the respective strength and degree of preparedness of the Russian and Jananese forces, tel egraphed to the Czar in approxi mately the following terms : . ."I beer of vou to reflect before T O . tr- i 4 T engaging in a war , wiin j apan. From;: every precise ; information which I have received concerning the forces of which Japan can dis pose, the state of her prepara- j - i tions, and also the forces ot wmcn you can dispose, and which you can maintain in Manchuria, hftvfl dmibts about the result of the war. "I bftcr of vou. therefore, to - o i ' . think well before definitely re fusing the Japanese conditions." To this appeal the Czar is said to have replied that the Japanese conditions had not been refused, bnt, that "in anv case all neces sary measures already have been taken to assure the triumph of our arms.! ? I cannot guarantee the; authen ticity of the text above given ; possibly it may have been modi fied in the course of oral trans mission from diplomatist to diplo matist, but the fact that an. ex change of messages of this nature ook place between Emperor Wil liam and the Czar before the war is certified to ma on an authority so good there seems no reason to withhold it from publication. Th awful plight of the Port Arthur garrison, as impressively yet'comprehensively told bv Gen. Stbessel1 in his dispatches to the Russian emperor a day or two be foret his surrender, emphasizes the fact that there has been no ameli oration of the horrors of war. Torn to shreds by eleven inch -shells, dying by the hundred with scurvy, and lacking the ammuni tion necessary to enable even the few men able to bear arms ta offer nr.. defence, the brave commander He h Confined In s Sanitoriura for Treat ment. Oitorce Asked. New .York, Jau. Q.The. com mitment of Brodie L. Duke; half brother of J. B.' and B.J N, Duke, tobacco capitalists, to a sanato rium for examination as to his sauity, .', and the sensational de velopments growing put of the case, were investigated today oy District Attorney Jerom j The aflBdavit on which the com mitment was issued was made public today by ' Justice Wyatt, who was the issuing iustice. It bears the name of Victor J. Milch , of tbis.city. In an affidavit Milch recites that on certain specified days of the present month he saw Mr. Duke in a hotel, and "he ap peared to be in an abnormal con dition and deponent verily be lieves that said Brodie L. Duke is disordered in his senses and unfit to be at large." Assistant Dis trict Attorney Lord said he under stood that the management of Park Avenu'e Hotel, where Mr. and Mrs. Duke had been stopping, had first made complaint, which resulted in Duke's removal to Bellevue Hospital. Forty thousand dollars worth of securities found on Duke were still in the office of. District At torney today. Mr. Lord said : Maurice A. Strum, told Assist ant Attorney Lord today that Mrs. Duke was suffering from ner- vous prostration, and couia not come to the District Attorney's office for two or three days. Law yer John D. Lindsay announced that Lawrence Duke, son of Bro- 4 ' die L. Duke, had instructed 'him r I' to bring action for the annull- menk of Brodie L. Duke's mar riage to the former Miss Webb. Mrs. Duke says his family of fers -her $300,000 to annul the marriage. She was formerly a tenderloin character. . CALENDAR - 1905. SIMlT-tWlT 1! ' 8 15 22 29 5 12 19 26 51 12 19 26 2 16 28 30! 7 14 21 "41 n 18 25 2 16 23 30 6 13 20 27 6 13 20 27 8 10 17 24 10 17 24 31 7 14 21 28 7 14 21 28 4 11 18 25 2 9 16 23 30 6 18 20 27 4 11 18 281 - i i1 8 15 22 i 8 15 22 20 5 12 26 3 101 17 24 31 j 7! 14 21 28-' 6 12 19 i26 2 0 16 23 2 9 16 23 30 3 10 17 24 25 81' 6 13 20 27 .4 11 18 25 J 'i 8 15 22 2 7 14 211 281 4 11 18 25 SlI 28 29 10m 18 25 2 9 16 23 29 30 4 io;n 1718 24; 25 31 7 18114 20'21 127.28 1112 1819 25 26 15 21!22 28.29 was forced to run up the white flasr. It seems a pity that such STATE NEWS. 1 The 12-year-old daughter of riences which'hava cursed other John Criswell, who lives on the bravery cannot always be rewarded sections of the Union. Our own Hyatt farm, near Bridgewater, with victory, and yet, the beiseig- Miftd laaf. wAfiWrnm thft pfffict.a of era were necessarily-as brave in .-.- t. - a Our children and grandchildren a mad dog bite 21 days before, will soon possess the land, and She was bitten by her little lap. there is not more than they wiljf dog, phich, it is reported, was require. If .a man shall come bitten by tbe Hoffman dog, which from another countrv and as an I went mad and was afterwards individual, or as a family, seeks a home, let him be judged and dealt with on his merits. This is different and far better way than to dump them in agent fash ion bv the solid "car load.' If a neighborhood of farmers want 2U,UO persons. At tfyj last on?, help of this sort, let them look in Frankfurt, the largest and out for them and sAlnt nrmh nan- most -fashionable building was pie as they are willing to bring in bucket8 in a shaft became crowded witn ; leading citizens, contact with their own children. Jews and Christians, millionaires, ThiB i8. the safe and rational way professors,, students, employers to Belect neighbors, but this can- and workingmen sitting side by side. Women" in tasteful gowns and gentlemen in evening dress i .. w - filled the boxes.- News and Cou not be done through an emigrant agent. We believe and hope this Legis- found dead in the Bridgewater section as told in these columns at the time. It is said that the little girl died in great agony.- Morganton News-Herald. Concord, Jan. 6.-Fred Leon ard, a young white man, was kill ed at the Miami Mine yesterday shortlyxafter noon. Two passing en tangled at a shift about 250 feet from the surface and Leonard went down to see and correct the trouble. The rest of the story is unknown. From this shift he was thrown, or fell, to the bottom of lature is two sensible, to dig up the mine and there picked up dead rier, S . j f.Viia na.rn.aa a aannnA fima Pol. UZ Unr nnolia4 IVtA A Washington soothsayer pr- eigh Times. - body was turned over to an un- dicts the consolidation of the Re- ! .4 I dertaker and sent last night to publican and Demcratic parties Ralslgh Gets $20,000 FfOlfl DispeDSSIlf Gold Hill, where the young man this year. He evidently -assumes from Roosevelt's big plurality a ' long step already has been taken in that direction. -Baltimore Sun. c ' The Norfolk Virginian Pilot says ,more Lake submarine boats The board of aldermen in see- are reported to be ready for ship- a repommendation that there be Iment to Russia. Some lake will an increase of the salaries of the 7 ... I be a good place for them to stay and do; their diving, too. " had a wife and two children. He sion last night received from the was aboufc 25 e&1 of ae- management of the dispensary a check for $20,000 representing Human Ufa is Cheap. the firofits for the quarter ending Mt. Vernon, Ohio, Jan. 6. tilst. Along with the check came Probablv the smallest sentence . .. I mt - ever heard of for killing a man was imposed here this morning. - tThe Baltimore Sun says a Mon . umental City girl disappeared - from home a few waeks ago and was given up for drowned till she 1 came home and said she had drift ed off and gotten married. It is not j stated rthere was any relief when the tied came in and it was manager and clerks ot tne dis- John May. who Bhot and mstant- pensary. ly killed Grant Jupiter, in this Another' feature of the meeting city. some time ago, was let go by bearing somewhat on the affairs of the dispensary was the intro duction by Alderman Separk of an amendment to the city ordin ances so that druggists or others weapons who fill prescriptions for intoxi the jury ona $15 fine and costs. May was bound oyer to court for manslaughter, but the grand jury only found an indictment against him for carrying conceal- sto' mine the fortress as were the inmates in defending it. Chur lotte Observer. Try The Wathman, 1 year 50c. Big Lot Whiskey Lost. Columbia, S. C , Jan. 6 A hoop on the Richland. Distilling Company's 6,000 gallon capacity tank broke and all cf the contents with over $3,000 worth of whiskey were lost, save the little the em ployes scooped up with . buckets from the floor, which was covered a foot deep. One man narrowly escaped being drowned in the del uge of whiskey. Statesville, Jan. 6. The post office aiiOlin, Iredell coUDty, was robbed on Wednesday night of $49,85 in cash. Mrs. Delia Stack, is postmistress, and keeps the of fice in her house. No cine to the robbers1 has been obtained. STATE NEWS. Wadesboro, Jan. 7. Fire con sumed the following buildings in Rockiagham this morning at 2 o'clock : Hinson's livery stables, with 32 horses; Daniel Gray's blacksmith shop; Hinson's & Porter's building filled with mer chandise and groceries;' Davis Grocery store ; Mrs. William's dwelling house. Miss Elizabeth Crocker, one of the State's most accomplished pi anists, spent Wednesday in Salis bury and returned to Greensboro last night. Miss Crocker has ac cepted a position with the Frix Music store and will come to Sal isbury, in a few days to make this qity her home. Greensboro Re cord. ; f Charlotte, N. 0;, Jau. 5. Will Springs, tnV murderer of Rural Officer S. jE. Cole, was captured today atort Mill. S. C, while eating dinner on a farm where he had obtained employment- Springs was ;brought hero tonight and jailed. He offered no resis tance to "the arresting officer and freely admitted his crime. Springs killed the officer Sunday after noon wliiu3 the latter was attempt ing to urrest him for . a trivial offense. Thousands Refuse to Enlist. , St. Petersburg, Jan. 6. The mobilization for an army from the western provinces has been unsuccessful. ; Thousands' evade the summons. Seven hundred out of a thousand, summoned at ran- jdom, failed to appear and the same proportions prevail in other centres Two thousand-nine hun dred out of three thousand Jews in one Polish district did not appear and even the remainder had to be driven to the place of mobiliza tion by Cossacks. 16) m m Standard of flerit" in every town in which they are sold. wears a Shoe, knows the satisfaction of a good Shoe, and also the satis faction of knowing where to get another equally good. That is why every wearer of Burt Shoes testifies to the fact of their goodness -not only by words alone,' but by continuing to buy our shoes. u v rr nrr -il . r i n n n discovered that the girl was still catmg liquors snail pay a city afloat. Wilmington Star. license tax of $50. Raleigh Post, A Hone Paper for Home People by Hone 111 N. Main Street, Salisbury, N. C, and Elsewhere - i Ia 4
Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.)
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Jan. 11, 1904, edition 1
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