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. .;-... M'JtTlKW. If.-, THURSDAY, FEB. 2, 1905. H. A. LONDON, Editor. i. J. The Lsgialature. has now been in session one-half of its constitu-1 tionai term Of course during its remaining second half many more bills will be passed than during the first half of the session. The Senate had its first inter- loof Tlmrsrl.nr rn W u, , J , the billto increase the salary of u. 1 . M 3 i ii1rrAQ he Snpreme and Superior judges to 3,500 a year. After quite a urotracted discussion the bill J fiAnnfa rm majority, the vote being 24 to 23. . . . i i i . . rj cn The House had quite a lively debate on the bill to repeal the l.i'il .oaor1 flio Av hpfnrA to re- payment of $34 stolen by the Ke- publican Chief Clerk Martin. Al- though the House had passed the Senate bill to give this relief, yet n the very next day it passed by n large majority a bill to repeal that law, which had been so quick ly enrolled and ratified. When this renealiuir bill reach- , x, . .. iZ ed the Senate a motion was made to lay it on the table (and thus cut off debate) but that motion ttocnt flM n,l f W11 made a special order for yester- tuows thorou-niy the engineers , T, , . la.i l i work, as well as chemistry, forti- day. It was unfortunate that any ficatioQ methodSf aud sanitary bill was introduced in this Legis- jmprovements Russia could not lature for Treasurer Lacy 's re- find any better defender for a be lief, as a similar bill had been in- sieged citv. In recognition of his Uloriouslv defeated in the last Legislature. The accidental "anti-jug" law has been repealed, but a bill has been introduced for a new law on the subject so as to cover the en tire State. The Southern Inter-State Cot ton Convention held last week at New Orleans was largely attended, and it is hoped that important and beneficial results will flow therefrom. It was in session three days and its proceedings were deeply interesting. An organization was perfected to be known as the Southern Cot ton Association and embracing all the cotton producing States and territories. Its object is to regu late cotton production, cotton sup ply and financing and especially cotton marketing, using every ef fort to secuie broader markets and to limit the production to the demand at remunerative prices and to reduce to a minimum all expense of handling cotton and its products from the time it leaves the field until it reaches the con sumer. There are to be State and territorial, county and parish and jmb-divisioual associations all re lated to the parent system. A resolution was adopted "That the officers of this convention will be required and instructed imme diately to formulate a plan to pool 2,000,000 bales of the present crop and retire the same until October 1, 1905." . Another resolution was also adopted to reduce the acreage in cotton this year 25 per cent and to buy 25 per cent less fertilizers. If this is strictly carried out we may expect cotton to sell for ten cents a pound. The Newton Enterprise has ieeu publishing for several months a series of articles written by Mr. "William A. Day, of Catawba coun ty, who was a private soldier in ihe 49th N. C. regiment during the war between the States. These articles are written without any during the war in a most graphic and realistic manner. ' They are exceedingly interesting, indeed of thrilling interest, and give a bet ter and clearer idea of what a Con federate soldier endured than any book that we have ever read. The simple' facts narrated by Mr. Day, or rather the facts so simply narrated by him, of almost every day occurrence are of thrill ing interest-and give the reader an idea of the many hairbreadth escapes; the many sufferings eu duredriud the many dangers that were survived by the writer and all other Confederate soldiers who went through the war. He nar rates and mentions as an every day occurrence how this and that comrade was shot dead by his side, and the fearful sufferings endured by him and his comrades without c()mplantv ; No pel-son can read these articles without having a most exalted opinion of the hero- ism of the Confederate soldiers, attempt at literary style, but are jmarkmanship was not very 'good written in a plain and simple way, ' and no one was wouuded. -When civing his'everv dav exneriencps Officer Sorrell reached-the scene . . . . . " 1 1 ' nud it is to h hoped that.alUhese j neg-ro, Alex Watson, who fired arif.-l?3' when complete .will belabont the tirhe that Graham did,:. fuey-iQAy'h&ve a wiuer circulation, i.x V-av a. .a - frvm co f Genera Stoesseli's Career. Perhaps the onlv Itussian repu tation' which has'stood the test of the war with the Japanese, in the l estimation of. the outside -world, iis that of General Stoessel, the ! heroic defender- of Port Arthur-. ,Now that the defense of the fa- ; moU8 fortress has passed into history, the commander of the gallant json has become a UtttlOLlftl Uciw, niiooc uaiuc win handed down, in song and story, to future fenerations., Anatoli Mikhailovich SStoessel is the subject of conflicting biog raphies. He is called a Itussian, rap a Swede, a Swiss, a German, a Jftw Tfaer6 .g not mnoh to bfi m a - t- . T 1 -a -v i n i n M llim. Bntu, Jol, 10, MM, ! m St. Petersburg-; o a laanly ot Swedish origin, so much may be SaiCl lO V'i UIIOWU,- t a - 1 I -he was e.du- .CatCtl 'Sc,00if ju the Kussian capital, in tn t.ho 1'iw rv n irarv ti,e Sftme class with en rppatkiu, and entered th 1864. lie served with lg89j and a major-geueral in 1899. 'x'he next year he became com- mander of the Ninth East Siberian Sharpshooters' Brigade. IWhis service in tue campaign agaiusc the Boxers, in 1900. he vas made a lieutenaut-g-neral. In Febru- taK 1AK,BOl"u , " r"luW ow, 1Q, wi;r u wa1. ,iiu T i gau affairs, inasmuch as this coun- ififelS I' ItltryopnBtbeir forcible appro- poiutea commauaer fit rori a - thur, and soon afterward was made ' nrW ftf HlA pnh-Vft armv corps orcierea to the-defense of that fortress. General Stoessel is l reallv a military scientist. He i cyiien, xumpeiUL a of aid-de-camp to the Czar, and the German Emperor has given him the German order of "Pour le Merite." From General "Stoes sel: Russian Defender of Port Arthur," in the American Monthly Review of Reviews for February. Russian Offensive Movement Foiled. St. Petersburg, Jan. 30. 11.50 temnt to break thronJh the .Tana- ' neseleft wing and outflank Field iaoctrl,ie1' ,nailKO,: inopean put to .light. Marshal Oyaraa's position on the 1 Power sll:11 acquire or increase its. , It is estimated hat he Rus Shakhe river; seems to have failed territorial possessions on th:s j siaus have nearly 300,0,)0 men and entirelv. Few details, however, continent, permit European pow- over 1,100 ptns in position and it are available beyond the inform- ers to seize customs houses and regarded as likely that the Jap tion contained in the official's dis- coll?ct lK),t .lues where Central or i'auese are fully as strong so that patches. Fwld Marshal Oyama, South American countries repudi-; the expected general engage i af fl,P Wfa of fl.A s;ii,L-l, jrtte their just debts, ,r Shall the : meat takes place any time soon. river, appears to have answered the Russian advance with a coun ter offensive movement; but no great disposition was shown to carry the warfare into the terri tory held by the Russians, At the War Office there is an inclination to lay the chief blame for the failure of the movement to a sudden change of the weather to intense cold, 20 degrees below zero, with a high Avind which drifted the snow aud rendered it hazardous to expose the troops to camping in the open plain, and al so impeded the transportation ofjvlce aml consent o the beuale guns, snpplies and the wounded. I autl shali 1e ratitieii by , a two The operations entrusted io the thirds vote of the Senate. The second army, under General Crip- ("Administration objects to the term penbenr, was the capture of Saude- treaty as applied to the agreement pas, whTch in Russian hands would ' witn San Domingo but theconsti- serve as pivot for a flanking move-! tuiion.il lawyers in the upper ment against Field Marshal chamber insist that any agree- Oyama, but Sandepas proved too : mellt made between the" United hard a nut to crack, but the Jana- States aud a foreign power is, de check of the Uussiaus hurried no ; their reinforcements ant id assumed the offensive on the Hun river as! well as along the railroad and the government Mandarin road. The Russians, however, appear-to have been completely successful on the defensive, repulsing all the Japa- nese attacks. Shot at Everything. Special to Raleigh post. Durham, N, C, Jan. 30. Clif ton Baxter, a negro, created cou- approve the agreement. More siderable excitement in the streets over a considerable naval fleet is early this afternoon by pulling" r.ge p.isto! an(1 shotiug at every thing in sight. Fortunately for the negro attempted to shoot him and was knocked down by a citi zen .who went with-tlie officer. The negro was then overpowered and locked up, --The negrft is now charged with assault with deadly i those who hannpiiprl lnu u-mr Uia weapon, carrying a concealed aou cioseiy approximating war. r; - """ wwi0. weapon and with resistin- and Senator Bacon has introduced in lt 18 expected that the Japanese abusing an officer. After his ar- the Senate a resolution inquiring will soon begin a blockade of the rest it developed that Baxter went of the President if any agreement fort of Vladivostock, ItiiHsia s on on a rampage last December and-lias been Entered into with San lemainiug port in the h ar Last, that there was a warrant for simi- Domingo ami if so, the character; a remnant of the Port Ar- lar conduct as that enacted today. The defendant works for a rail road and every pay-day, or as soon after as possible, he has been rais ing all kinds of trouble. He will be tried tomorrow on four charges. Homicide at a Festival. Special to Charlotte Observer. Fayettevillo, Jan. 30. On ,Fri- Court Jias denied him a new trial. ' calling out of many more ' reserv day night, in the extreme western "m ' ists and conscripts is contemplated part of the county, while a negro - .4 ' - The strike situation in- Bussia festival was iu progress, Abe; -A bill allowing the Supreme has greatly improved so far as ac Dolleman was shot in the abdo-1 Court to grant new trials-in capi- tual bloodslied is concerned, and men. rluincr in 9V Tninnfoo Hio t.al msps Ilnrtn flisi.nvPl'V of Dfiiv. in v ;.,,.... Li. ante-mortera statement the. fatal shot was firprl was that . .. by Alex I Graham, who escaped . .. . i, 1 J - u.J i jaii. , Washington Letter. I From lit tteaular 0.t rairtniiif J Washington, Jan? 2G, Bo5. , with resrard to Santo Domingo situation.- in ; Manchuria, where constitute the chief topic of dis- j nearly a million men, witrh 2,500 enssion among Democrats in Con- j guns, we,re drawn up in battle ar gress this week and the comment -j ray. Now," however, the centre of Fs generally unfavorable to the iiiublic interest has. been largely methods which have been pursued. : shifted again to the hostile camps An authorized statement has been ! along the Shakhe river near Muk iven but at the State Department ' denv Whether with the design of announcing that the United States arousipg the . patriotism of -the is about to take control of San people at home and thereby divert Domingan affairs, collect the en- j their attention from the strike and tire customs of the Republic, turn. the bloodshed incident thereto, or over to President Morales 45 per as a natural outcome of his plans, cent of the gross receipls for ad- General Kuropatkin lias Buddenly KWaSaj edness, Which includes $4,481,250 a battle, of even greater import due to citizens, of the United than that at Liao Yang is imrai States. The total indebtedness of nent. , It js stated that ": Kussums Kan Tnmincro is estimafed at !5:32.-! have, made - preparations for the fJ.J IJtri. LCiJU .f 14 L11C HIVH.UU- . - . - . . . nnf Ipss th;ui Si OOOOOO a ve-jir can non iwin nri ; ;0 fm4 liar acsf imatail . rwit)t'n( ait immense' unmber of Al'fl 1 l 11 flUU lb AO 1U1 IIH A WOULUcwi.vt t tsl11 I . i . . -.1. ii TT..;i,1 171... to. .wl I n-niiii4ofl ovoii msi f ii r Iisirlr irnm i irmv in wllL1 LUV kjuiiktxj. KjiLt-o . ouri ..wv,.. ,k.vt' - 'the front as- Harbin, some 200 i1i.tinnHnn ""u,"l '"J- w " i .. . be applied on-the;-. indebtedneHs.: stated at St. Petersburg that Geu It. is explained by .the State De- eral Kurppatkiu intends, to drive partmeut that the representatives the Japane .from their Winter, of those foreign powers to wkose tquarters and that, an . efft?rt .will citizens San Domingo .is dnde.bted ..bemadOjCut jorJapan have ursed upon this government, municatjon along both lines to the ithe propriety of the United Btates', priation by European nations,, and that faciug- tliis alternative' the Administration determined to adopt the former course.' It is r. moreover, i nat the.UmteStates is acting on the ! request of President Morales wlio appreciates the hopeless insolven cy which confronts his country and who regards a virtual receiv-: ership held by this country as San Domingo s only salvation In addition. to the official state ment made by the State Depart ment it has been declared by of ficials of that Department that conditions in Venezuela present- an almost analagous condition and it is intimated that eventually a f on the 2th instant, when Kuro similar course will have to be pur- patkin advanced a full corps upon sued with the Castro government, j the Japanese position, and one which has nought to evade honor-I victory is claimed for the Japa able performance of the obliga- nese. tions imposed on it by the Hague) Advices from Tokio indicate Tribunal. The chief questiou in- j that the fighting of Saturday add volved is this. Shall the United ; Sunday resulted in victories for States, after declaring the Monroe UuiteU estates itseit con; pel the j n may Oil in ii:e nature ot a Ue. pavment of such just debts to ' cisfve coutlict. Tin? thermJ:neter European creditors and insist that no reprisals shall be inade jii this continent by any iiuropean power? "Zero, tint both armies are uouot Hubordiuate to this qasMO 1 iess pretty Kveit acclimated, and m however, ' althougli attracting1 position to do great slaughter. 'greater attention at the pr.sput time, is the question of how hr the President-. shall go in determ- ining upon so :uo:nentous a policy and carrving it into effect without consulting the Senate. The Con- stitutiou provides" that all treaties shall be made by and with the ad-i facto, a treat v, irrespective of the . 1,ame applied to it by the State department. ' 1 Iu the present instance Secretary1 the of President aud the State decided upon the policy b pursued With regard to to ban Domingo' without consulting a single member of the Senate and it is unofficially, but apparently crediblv. stated that terms of the agreement with San Doiniugo will take effect February 1, although no mention is made of the possi bility of the Senate's refusing to being assembled in hah Domingan waters, seven vessels ieiug; al- ready in tliat vicinity and several more on ine way. -iseports trom the island assert that there areih- dications of revolt a'gaiDstfc the tifwi 'trOtnrpuWles at home, agreement eutered into by l?re' ' P-rtspmlkio tell of work dent Morales, in some of the ports beiu- 4ut .!he warships in to be turned over to the United good concbtipn and plans, for the States in the event 6fhich Amer-vnew -vessels, to; take the place of icau forces will have ' to interfere those . destroyed. I ifteen sub and the agreement so iormally maie boats will be provided this eutered into may. result in a con- ar, and ten of these have already ' 1 1 1 of its orovisions. This resolution. nur neet took reluge Home months has been sent, to committee but aZ J'pan is apparently conceu the indications are clear that the tratiug-heiv forces- for a decisive llepubliean leaders. are no.t wholly.. blow. during the coming spring, at ease over the situation.- A. ntth; -ai-tny, under command of "r m ' ;LTeatenaut General " Kavvamura, - '"" ; whose position has "been that of Ex-Mayor McCue, of Charlottes-'commandant of the" Tenth Divis dlle, Virginia,' will be hanged ou ion in the Japanese Var Depart the 10th. of this month for mur- ment. All men under 4f vpmis r.f I dering his Wife. The Supreme "1 - r- T i I I 1 I evi ndence, passed the House by one ajonty Tuesday. :r ; ; nri ' . -": In a face" hist Monday -at ,Or ..,! S.M.. 1 ni iv o n'tia marl in iii 2-b iaiiiS2i(iS-ly" an autouicbiie. f The JapaneseRussIan War. - Krom Tlie Charlotte Observer, 3aa. SOU,; . '"ri weekflallyesere turned unon pvprfts tianspinii"r in St. Pfttprshnro- lo the neslect of the .,T,Zl i " M,Z, T ZZt ,b r""" ""V " : 1 . j 1 f L I J. miles, north ot Mukden. It is sea X'': v;( V ': "nwXZi nTTr, magnitude, Vas -in piogiess on J.naHrrt!! nnd 27Jb, and. over 1,000 wounded ltussians had been taken" to ; Mukden up to Friday night, It seems that despite the cold, conditions are favorable for y ; , wi . " - haul, am the livers are solid to a depth sntficient to allow the ready passage of soldiers and artillery. There is little news from Tokio regarding the present operations in Manchuria, and this lends color to the idea which seems to be cur rent in St. Petersburg that the fighting in the Far East is largely forced by reason of the serious situation in Russia itself, A dis patch from Field Marshal Oyama tells of the beginuing of the fight the Japanese, the Russians being in the vicinity -of Mukden at tkt-s t'unefr.etiai"ftFctnsiderably below Itussia being without a capable ib'l, !::is (Hi! tiie one hope of driving the Japanese back through Manchuria w hence they came, and this is apparently 'too big task for K nr. put kin's army, which in some quarters regarded as hot i a positiori to more than hold its ovum cate or a general move- ment, A St.5 'Petersburg corres- pondent -oP a London newspaper hears that there ius been si rious mutiny among the Russian troops "at Mukden, -'owing to the priva- tiuus they had to undergo, and it is assorted that the Japanese along tlie Sha river are keeping the Russian troous lully acquaiut- td with conditions at home. As bearing on tuts alleged situation ai Jiusuen, uie oc. A-eiersouri correspondent 01 lhe Ijomlou Telegraph asserts that Ivuropat-kin's-offensive power is seriously hampered by the'obstiinite reluc tance of the soldiers from the European provinces to advance ."gainst te -enemy General Ivu- '"I""""18 "'"' is also saiu to suffer from a sh(jrta"e of food. and a dispatch of much graver import, but the contents of which are unknown, is said to have reached StvPetersburir during the past week, and caused a hurried counsel'of the war party. These chiuizs7 add still further -to'the iu tiniation trom St:' Petersburg that Kuropatkin has taken desperate chances' in frder to 'de.tra.ct " atten- ri'ivnn urn 1 a mtin niit timt .u .age in Jaitan m e flnllincr '.,! fi, returnin? to work, and the author- ft jities appear to have the sit uatiojff 1 . .... . ' v pteny well in band in St. Peters burg and Moscow. The strike, however: is spreading- and Hip news if obi Poland'ia : no means' reassrmncr The attempt of xm armed men to. oppose soldiers with nndern firearms has , of course fafled, and revolution in the form of street, demonstrations such as those undertaken Suaday a week ago with such bloody results have in most cases been abandoned. In place of open rt volt, however, we have stories of many plots to overthrow the government. Rus sia is naturally a hot-bed of secret plans to cause a "revolution, and a London dispatch to The New York Sun says there are . millions of conspirators in the Czar's domains at this time, and it is said that m.ueh of their energy is being de voted to ti e military, and the statement of the St! Petersburg editors to Prince Mirsky that the time was at hand when the gov ernment could no longer rely on the troops is regarded as the truth. The Czar, himself a w.?ak man, is said to be entirely under the dom ination of the Grand Duke Vladi mir and . Sersrius, his brothers, who are. represented as playing the part of the power behind the throne with a great deal of satis faction. It is the general belief among European students of the situation that Sunday's butchery was sought by the grand. ducal coterie with the view to bringing about a crisis in Itussian affairs. The situation in Russia, While apparently' Jess critical, in the matter of the shedding" of blood, is yet by no means one of tranquility. - Fatal Fight at a Circus. New Orleans, Jan. 30. At a row' at Baldwin, La.', Saturday night If you are unable to visit our during the performance of Keeds Optical office and consult our spe circus there, Charles Peterson was cialist, we will sei.d you free a sim killed and Martin Ashley Baldwin pie method of treating your eyes at fatally wouuded. According to home on receipt of a postal card. reports some or the audience was ridiculing the performers, when the latter became indignaut aud attacked the scoffers with shot guns and circus stakes. Peterson was beaten to death. Ashley was j shot three or four times. Both! of the men were onlookers. A- deputy sheriff assisted by a num ber of citizens, succeeded in ar resting and jailing twelve of the circus people said to have been implicated, including Mrs.- A. H. Reed, owner of the circus. Her husbaud escaped, taking the circus receipts with him. A Guaranteed Cure For Piles. Itchine, Blind, Bleedin-or Pro- Wl11, e f' h 2nd and 3rd, tnulinsr Piles. Drn-gists refund nal ,in3lt M,arcl? 81 h,' w"h thue Pr'V, inoneyif Pazo Ointment fails to ,,tfe of extension to March 1 8th cure anv case, no matter of how upon myment of fee of one dollar. Inner standing, in G to 14 davs. For Military Companies and Brass First application ives ease and Bands, one cent per mi e per capita rest. 50o: If your druggist hasn't it send 50;'. in stamps and it will be forwarded Wi'st-paid by Paris Medicine Co., Stf JLouis, Mo. A FACT ABOUT THE "BLUES" What Is kaewn as the "C!usV is seldom occisiencd ty ectua! ex'st Ir.Z cxtcrra! conUionf,' but In the Srcnt majority of cases ty a disorder" edUVER THIS 15 A FACT which may be demonstra' ted by trying a course cf mm Bin Tbey control and regulate the LIVER. r I"hcy bring hope and bouyancy to the mind. They brinz health and elastic ity to the body. TAKE KO SUBSTITUTE. v ' Ar TfE, .Xy,.. American - EVIEWoREVIEWS The more Magazines there arc, the more Indispensable is The Review of Reviews "Indispensable," The one magazine I fed I must take. "The vorld uader a field-glass.' "An education in public affairs and current literature.' tSiese are some of the phrase one hears from noted people who read the Review of Reviews. The more magazines there are, the more necessary is the Review of Reviews, because it brings together the best that 13 in al! the moil important monthlies of the world. Such is the flood of periodical literature that nowadays people toy that the only way to keep up with it is to read the Review of Reviews. Entirely over and tbove this review ing section, it has more original matter and illustrations than most magazines, and the most timely and important articles printed ia any monthly. Probably the noit useful section of all is Dr. Albert Shaw's ilxustrated " Krog Vess of the World," where public events and rry-s are & thoritaiively and lucidly explained in every issue! ' Rlany a subscri1---' department alone is worth more than thtj price' of the raa-azi , u-:qe cartoon department, depicting current hbfcwy in caricature; favorite. The Review, of "Reviews covers live contir.cnls, ard y:t is'TA-.erican, fina and foremost. Men ia public life, the members cf Con-r-ss, profession men, and the great captains of industry who must keep " up wlJi ths times," intelligent men and women an uvti :cu, iiu.w u-v.u-wu THE REVIEW O? REVIEWS COMPANY 13 Astor Place, New York rT--tfcssTaaalMMssMsMMIsTeanrffa To T&e Laxative Bromo Qniirine TaWets. v Seven Million fcoxes sol4 in post 12 ; - Wcn't Let Negro Trcops Go. Atlanta, Jau.; 29.--NegTo txoops from Georgia will not be allowed to attend the inauguration of President Roosevelt, March '4. Governor Terrell will not grant permission to the . colored troops to leave the State. V The Lincoln Guards, of MacoD, commanded by Sandy Lockhart, have already made arrangements to attend the inauguration of the President, ...but when formal re quest for leave of abs?nce of the company is made, it will be denied by the Governor; on the ground that he does not want the State of Georgia represented on such an occasion by negro troops. Fire at Portsmouth. Norfolk, Va., Jan. 29. Almost a score of buddings were destroy, ed or seriously damaged by the fire whicli started in C. R. Nash's ice warehouse, on Queen street, Portsmouth, erly this morning. The loss is placed in tie neigh borhood ot $50,000. But for the heroic work of 250 United States ; marines, sent by Admiral Harring ton from the navy yard with a yard fire! engine,- together with as sistance' rendered by a' Norfolk ; engine company, the entire busi ness section of the city would have been swept away. The fire start ed at 1:30 o'clock, and was not con trolled until 4 o'clock this morning. FITTING GLASSES. he Rapport Optic 1 Co Durharn, N C SPECIAL RATES TA WMfHTMCTAM. f r j- iu wAaiimuiuii, v. v. . VIA S, A.. iRaiLWAY, Account of the President's Inaug uration, March 4th, the Seaboard announces a rate of one fare plus 25 cents from all points on its line to Washington and return. Tickets ,or nre ? 1 ncKer- We have double dailvserice from principal points in North Carolina without change to Washington, trains consisting of vestibuleci day coaches, dining and sleeping cars. For farther ii formation as to rafep. sudulss and time-tables ap ply to CtlAS H. G VTTIS, Traveling Pas. enirer Agent. Rakigh, N. 0. 1 Send aiods!, sketch or p!to cl iaverticn ior 1 free report ce pafentahility. Fcr fn c boos Howto SecursYS fi HE Bi! fl DJ v.rttb 5 a ?S3-r 'As Year Monthly , . j 5"p5yS aud Foreign t Patents anc J ' 1 Cold in One Day months. - ibis Signature Almost Killed-by Engine Washington "M n t . William Latham, fireman on ? steamer "Albemarle," na " J escaped death yesterday whiu y duty. Latham was usiU a L bar to facilitate the movement i the engine which had stopped f! the moment, and startino- Cn r OTnoctarll,, .P : -i- j rufjiue caught Hi ; iron bar in" its turn and thi Latham with great force a-aW the machinery, cutting a ffa"sb i his head and otherwise brnisin! him severely. Drs. Tnylne "$ Brown ren1rprl inctant I Washington Hospital, an institn j tion recently organized here. Every Citizen OF oughc to risad THE CHATHAM: RECORD which for has been doing its utmost to build up our grand old county. THE RECORD Is the " OLD RELIABLE," that can be depended on not only for ;the ' ' ' .'. ",v I Latest News but for its advocacy of all measures that will ty?st promote the prosper ity of all the people. SEieSCRIBE H0I7. Onh 3 cents a w-ek. 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The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, N.C.)
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Feb. 2, 1905, edition 1
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