Newspapers / The Caucasian (Clinton, N.C.) / April 4, 1912, edition 1 / Page 2
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9 c State Nerts. A negro In Wilson waa fined $10 and costs, or thirty days on the roads, for cruelty to his horse a fey day ago. Mrs. C. C. Green was last Monday apolnted postmistress at Othello, Ashe County. Telegrams from Mitchell and Avery Counties to-day state that as a result of conventions held, delegates were unanimously Instructed for Roose velt. Webb Jeffries, a negro of Moore County, stabbed and probably fatal ly wounded Mr. J. W. Moore, his em ployer, last week. The negro Is in Jail. In Greensboro on last Friday night Clyde Brooksher, a negro, shot and killed another negro at Brroksher's home. It is said that the shooting was accidental. Webb Jeffries, who stabbed and probably fatally wounded John W. Moore, near Carthage last Thursday, was captured in Stanly, Randolph County, Saturday. On last Tuesday morning near Scot land Neck, a negro named Hawkins shot and killed another negro named Cotten in a row at a disreputable house In that vicinity. A charter has been issued for the Pamlico Co-operage Company of Washington, with capitol stock of $25,000, by A. M. Drewery, George T. Linch, and C. P. Freeman. The contract for the erection of a Carnegie library building in Hender sonviile has been let. The building it to cost $10,000, and will be the handsomest brick building in Hender eonville. Daniel Koonce, an eighteen-year-old boy who lives near Tranton. Jones County, committed suicide by shoot ing himself last Monday afternoon. He was disappointed in a love affair, it is said. At a gold mine, near Cando, in Montgomery County, a few days ago, Jim Ward, a negro employe, dropped seventy-five feet through a shaft to the bottom of the pit and was killed instantly. Charlie Robbins, the man who cut and seriously wounded a man named Copp, in West Durham on Friday night of last week, was caught in Greensboro Saturday and carried back to Durham. Mr. W. L. Bryan, of Boone County, it is aid, is getting up subscriptions for the erection of a monument to the memory of Daniel Boone, which is to be placed on the site of Boone's cabin in East Boone. Mrs. Ellas Carr, widow of the last Governor Carr, died March 29 th, in Washington, where she had gone to visit her son. She was seventy-two years of age. Her remains were tak en to her former home in Edgecombe for burial. Investigations in the case of Len C. Smith, who was found murdered and lying near the track of the Nor folk Southern Railroad a few days ago, near Farmville, have resulted in the arrest of three, who were bound over to Superior Court. The case of Warren against the Seaboard Air Line Railroad, which was concluded in Durham last Thurs day, resulted in damages in the sum of $12,000 for the killing of James Warren who was killed in the Hamlet yards last year as a negro excursion train was leaving the yards. The body of a young man about twenty years of age, was found near the railroad track ( Atlantic Coast Line) at Hayne, Sampson County, April 1st, by two travelers, E. A. Bullard and Francis Parker, who were in a buggy going to Hayne. It is supposed that he was killed by the train. The body of an unknown white man was washed ashore on the Cape Fear River, about two miles from 'Wilmington, Sunday morning. The body had been in the water, it is thought, for more than a month. There were no papers or anything in the pockets to give any clue to his identity. A United States Government In spector who was in Greensboro with in the past few, days examining the court records relative to the granting of naturalization papers, finds, it is said, that not . more than one out of ten naturalization certificates are le gal. He says it is just so in many other places. . r Saves Leg of Boy. "It seemed that my fourteen-year-old l)oy would have to lose his leg on account of an ugly ulcer, caused by a bad bruise," wrote D .F. Howard, Aquone, N. C. "All remedies and doctors' treatment failed till we tried Bucklen's Arnica Salve, and cured him with- one box." Cures burns, boils, skin eruptions, piles 25c. at all druggists. KILLED IX A CYCLOXE. Wayne County Vlltl by Heary Storm That Does Considerable Damage. A special sent out from Goldsboro, March 29, says: "A cylclone storm passed over the city this morning doing little damage here, but wrought great damage throughout the Patetown section of the county, blowing up trees from their roots, demolishing houses, barns and rendering destruction to everything in Its patch. Many horses, mules and cattle were killed. "Two little boys, fourteen and eleven years old, respectively, broth ers, and the sons of Mrs. Fanny Woo ten, a widow, living with her fath er, Mr. Cutrell, near Patetown, in Stony Creek Township, this county, took shelter In their grandfather's barn to play, while the storm was on and while there a Sudden cyclone wind passed, demolishing the barn and killing the older boy and seri ously injuring the younger, break ing one of his legs In two places. Other great property damage was done in the wake of this wind, but full particulars cannot be had at this hour." -J'oliceman Arrested on Charge of Murder. A Waynesville, N. C, dispatch of April 2 says: "Robertson Rogers, a policeman at Clyde, has been brought here under arrest. It is alleged that he killed Lee Wells in the McCracken and Wells shooting affair last Friday night." Headless Body of Grandy O'Berry Found Near Hayne, Sampson Co. A dispatch sent out from Fayette ville Tuesday night says: "From developments transpiring to-day it has been learned that the young man whose headless body was found on the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad track near Hayne yesterday morning was Grandy O'Berry. of Fairmont, Robeson County, and that he met his death by falling from the train on which he was traveling to Wilmington." Veterans Make Conscience Contribu r tions. Washington Dispatch. The , Treasury Department to-day received a contribution to the consci ence fund from a veteran of the Civil War to pay for a blanket retained by the veteran at the close of the war. The $5 contribution was accompanied by the following letter addressed to Secretary MacVeagh: "When I was discharged from the army in 1885 I had two saddle blank ets, old one I had picked up. So I turned over one and kept the other, which I should not have done. So I will send you $5, which1 I think the Government is entitled to." The letter is signed "One of Uncle Sam's "Veterans," and the envelope bore the postmark of an Illinois town. Two weeks ago the department re ceived a draft for $200 sent by a minister for a conscience stricken veteran who appropriated a mule from the Government at the close of the war. The Prohibiton Law and Drunken ness in Charlotte. Statesville Landmark. In Charlotte Saturday night some son of Belial went about the streets and gave liquor away to all who would take it, and many there were who accepted the bottle when it was put to their mouths and fell by the wayside. It must have been that way, for the Observer says the amount of public drunkenness in Charlotte Satuiday night was aston ishingly not to say disgracefully large even for the "metropolitan city of Charlotte." Exactly a score arrest ed for this offence were arraigned in the police court Monday morning, not to mention the great number the police didn't find or who -were able to navigate and thus escape the clutches of the law; and when asked where they got their liquor, they all with one accord said: "It was give to me." Democracy Doesn't Seem to Want a Southern Man. Charlotte Observer (Dem.) In the Macon Telegraph's opinion," the noun dwag is apt to become the emblem of the Southern Democracy, and with much justice, because no noun dawg was ever kicked aroun' with such impunity as the Southern Democracy. "The poor animal," sym pathizes our contemporary, "is so used to being kicked aroun that it sets up a howl the minute some one suggests a purely Southern man for the Presidency expecting the kick." Shot Convict to Halt Him, But Killed Himx Instead. A dispatch from Rocky Mount dat ed March 30 says: "News reached this city about 10 o'clock this morning from Nashville that the office of that place, while in pursuit of a convict who had es caped from the county gang about Christmas of last year, had shot and killed the negro, he dying instantly. The man's name was Will Richardson who was sentenced to two years on the roads some time ago by Recorder Thorpe of Nashville." . Genera Netis. An earthquake shock was reported in Syria Monday, causing enormous damage to life and property. John Arbuckle, the noted coffee man, died'in Brooklrnjast week. He was seventy-four years of age. Senator Gore, of Oklahoma, was attacked by a crazed Pole while the Senator was speaking last Saturday in Waukeza, Wisconsin, but was not injured. Mrs. Yin Harris and her son Char ley, of Somerset, Ky., have been ar rested, charged with the murder of Mr. J. W. Whitaker, a half-brother of Mrs. Harris. A levee at Hickman, Ky., broke a few days ago and the tow a was flood ed. Hundreds of families were driv en from their homes, but no loss of life was reported. Henry Hafner, a Civil War veteran, seventy-two years of age, shot him self last Saturday in the Soldiers" Home in Philadelphia. It was saiI he was despondent. Miss Susan L. Monroe, of Fall Riv er, Miss., died a short time ago and left an estate valued at $100,000 to her favorite horse, which she had owned for twenty years. Jasper D. Farmer, a merchant of Bowling Green, Va., was found with his skull crushed near his store on Monday last. The surroundings bore every evidence of robbery. A ton of powder exploded in the mill of Laflin & Rand Powder Com pany at Wayne, N. Y., Monday and killed one man and wounded two others. The shock was felt as far as New York. ' Major-General Frederick D. Grant, Commander of the Department of the East, is reported to be suffering from a throat trouble similar to the illness from which his father, General U. S. Grant, died. i Newell Sanders, chairman of the State Committee of Tennessee, is spoken of for appointment to the vacancy in the Legislature made by the death of Senator Taylor. Mr. Sanders is a Republican. The breaking up of the ice in the Platte, Loap, Elkhorn and other riv ers of Nebraska, is said to be causing the worst floods in that State for many years. Considerable damage has been done to property. Rev. J. Frank Norris, of Fort Worth, Texas, charged with the burn ing of the First Baptist Church of that city, of which he was pastor, sur rendered to the sheriff and was re leased on a bond of $1,000. Harry Stewart, assistant superin tendent for the Carnegie Steel Com pany, Pittsburg, Pa., was shot and seriously wounded by a workman whom he had dismissed from service. The man immediately shot himself dead. J. P. Cambrell, Jr., the young man who was accidentally shot by his cousin John Gambrell, near Ander son, S. C, a few weeks ago, died in the hospital at Anderson last Friday. The young men were scuffling over a pistol. Frank Whisonant and Joe Brinson, negroes, were found swinging from rafters in a blacksmith jShop in Blackburg, S. C, a few days ago. They had been dead several hours. It is supposed that they were victims of mob violence. Roland Johnson, a thirteen-year-old boy of Bessemer City, made an at tempt to swing on a moving train in that place Tuesday, when his foot was caught, dragging him under the train, injuring him so badly that he died in a few hours. Damages of $36,000 were awarded the Peoples Tobocco Company of New Orleans against the American Tobacco Company in the United States District Court, in the anti trust suit, for alleged conspiracy to destroy competition. R. W. Doolittle, planter and mill owner of Newton, Miss., and D. W. G. Allen, of Wayside, Miss., engaged in a shooting affray at the railroad station of Newton, a few days ago, and as a result, Doolittle is dead and Allen is thought to be dying. As a result of a wreck on the Nor folk & Western, near Wytheville, Va., Monday, Engineer Samuel Petitt wa3 killed, and Robert Mason, who. was in charge of the second engine, was badly if not fatally scalded. The engines were overturned and nine cars went down a bank. The four Senators from the new States of Arizona and New Mexico this week became members of the Senate. All are lawyers. Marcus A. Smith and Henry F. Ashurst, who are from Arizona, are Democrats, while i nomas a. uastron and Albert B. Falls,- of New Mexico, are Republi cans. , , CONFESSES TO WHOLESALE MCUDEIL Xrsro Girl Aire! on Charg of M ordering Thirty People. A d U patch from LaFayettc, La.. March 2. says: "Officials In LaFayette an4 tkree other Louisiana towns to-night are searching for evidence corroborative of the sensational confess of the sen sational confession made to-day by the young negrtss, Clementine Barn abet, of participation in the whole sale 'axe murders, which have start led this section. "Seven negro families, a total of thirty-five persons, have met death by mysterious midnight assassins in each case armed with an axe, in Southwest Louisiana towns and in j Texas within the past fourteen months. "Clementine Barnaget, nineteen years old, to-day confessed that she was the principal in annihilating four of these families, with a total of seventeen persons. She said oth er families had been marked for death and would pay the 'sacrifice. "There were five members of the gang,' two other women and two men, according to the Barnabet girl's story. She gave the names of the two other women but declined to tell who the male members of the gang were. The namesvof the two women are unknown to the local authorities but a systematic search Is to be made in the towns where the murders oc curred." TWO KILLED IX CYCLOXE. Many Houses Unroofed and Other Damage Done. A Philadelphia dispatch of April 2 says: "Two women were fatally injured, scores of houses unroofed and more than twenty-five were completely de molished by a windstorm of cyclonic velocity which passed over that por tion of Camden, known as Cooper's Point, and swept down the Delaware River to the center of this city, doing thousands of dollars worth of prop erty damage. "To-night Camden is In utter darkness, all the electric lights hav ing been turned off and the streets in the northern section of that city piled high with debris and telegraph poles. "Mrs. Annie Cleary, of Camden, and Miss Annie Behren, of Phila delphia, who were riding in a street car in Camden were caught beneath a building which was demolished by the storm and both were so badly crushed that neither can recover. "In the section of Camden where the storm was most severe, entire blocks of dwellings were unroofed and the occupants driven to the street." Distiller and Storekeeper Arrested on Charge of Bribery and -Fraud. A Richmond, Va., dispatch of April 2 says: "Clarence B. Wood, President of the Broad Rock Distillery Company, in Henrico County, was to-day indict ed by the Federal grand jury on six counts charging bribery. The pre sentment charges that on six specific occasions Wood gave sums of money to O. T. Burroughs, a store-keeper employed by the Internal Revenue Department in the distillery, with the purpose of influencing him to allow fraud to be practiced against the Government. Burroughs was indicted Monday last charged with conniving with the distilling company to de fraud the Government of part of the taxes on the spirits it manufactures." President Wins Fight for Control in Indiana. Indianapolis, Ind., March 29. President Taft has won his fight for control of the Indiana delegation in the Republican National Convention. Eighteen of the thirty votes the State will cast to-day are pledged to the President. Eight are pledged to Col onel Roosevelt. Yesterday's five dis trict conventions increased Taft's to tal by four and Roosevelt's by six. Two Congressional Districts have not yet named their delegates. "The results in Indiana, with its far-reaching influence, because of the State's pivotal position in poli tics, means the renomination of the President on the first ballot in the Chicago convention," said Harry S. New, Republican National Commit teeman and Taft leader, here to-day. '.'I believe that two of the remaining four delegates to be selected will be instructed fo rthe President giving him twenty of the State's thirty votes." Woman Lawyer Will Defend Negro From North Carolina. A New York dispatch under date of March 30, says: "Judge Swan to-day in general ses sion assigned as counsel to Leroy Poindexter, a negro charged with murder in the first degree. Miss Lu cille Pugh, a young woman lawyer. "The assignment of Miss Pugh was made after the young woman had made a plea, saying she was will ing to waive the State fee of $500. She said that Poindexter comes from the same part of North Carolina that she does and that he appealed to her for aid. ' . . Poindexter is under indictment for shooting Thomas Brown, a white man during a fight." Fortunes in Faces There's often much truth la the saying "her face is her fortune, but it's never said where pimples, tkia eruptions, blotches, or other blem ishes d if 2 gare 1L Impure blood Is back of them all. and shows the nee4 of Dr. King's New Ufe Pills. Try them. 25 cents at all dfuggiats. Farm Topics lrises In Hoy' CVrn Huh. To All Members o fthe Corn Club: I wrote you before that we should have additional prixes and I am now glad to announce two additional prize in each district under the same rules as the first list I sent you. These new prixes are two free trips. In each district, to the National Corn Show which will be held In Columbia, S. C, in January, 1913. . The Southern Fertillier Associa tion has appropriated 1500 for this purpose. The boys who win these prizes will each get $25 to cover all Milam Is cu&ranteed under the pure food and drugs law to con tain no opium, morphine, strych nine, mercury, potash or other dangerous or habit forming drujrs. Thus you take no chances with your health when you take Milam. I will alwa7s take pleasure in recom mending Milam for Uric Acid troubles. C. T. Barksdale. former U.S. Postmaster, Danville, Va. For nearly eight years I suffered with rheumatism at times unable .o walk. I am taking Milam with great benefit sls I am now able to walk and suffer no pain. Mrs. Ira R. Preston, Abingdon, Va. Rheumatism affected my heart until I could not lie down without such pain that I could hardly bear it Milam has made me feel like a new woman. Mrs. J. P. Brown. 635 N. 8th St., Richmond, Va. For 13 years I was confined to my bed the greater part of the time with rheuma tism. Milam has been a Godsend to me. I now walk about my farm the swelling his left my limbs and joints reduced to normal size. F. L. Gristle, R. F. D. 1, Chocowinity, N. C. It will do you no good to put It off nothing to gain, all to lose. Act today.. Ycur druggist has Milam or can get it very quickly from any drug jobber. THE MILAM MEDICINE CO., Inc., DanvilU, Va. (G(D)(ffl HaM(D) Are not sold by the special sales people that you hear so much about no w-a-days. The margain of profit is too narrow to admit of cutting and slashing prices in the way they do. Quality regulates the price in pianos just the same as it does in any other article of merchandise, and take our word for it, that if you purchase a good piano yon will pay a good price. You cannot obtain anything of any value without paying a price in proportion. The person that claims he can sell you a four hun dred dollar piano for two hundred and fifty is simply mispresenting the true value of his instrument and is not a fit person to deal with. You take no risk here, and get just what you pay for every time. CEMICE IN SPRING WOOLENS For Suits or DressesBatiste, Fhncy Suitings andij grades of Serge which is in hiy HpmnH now. ranae from 15c in the Cotton Serge to 50, 75, and ns. Woolens. t : " o 1S ""ens ana urasnes. w'", te'i oV,5' 35' 40 311(1 5c. Sheer Dress Ug S iored Linens 27-ia, soft thread and sjg R,oer,T Ses' Pant Liens, 27-in. 20 and 2 DlOUSft I .in on IK OA Or i or- YD. v and 50c. oo-m. urasCi5 WRITE FOR SAMPLES Del! fce Bonsc Dvc!d get ia money, totf takes the trip. We expect fife Ut7 nlng boys from aU JJ States to be at ih- . will rw fnl.V.i . t will stay in one bsn:-, i cat u re ox tn trip t:j v school. Two or hr i rill be tpent la Ju4tttc V and live stock azs4 z rj lous exhibits of th .w"X.t5! I believe lb rnxn fered In the State, will have a great Us corn grown In the ra ing 1512 and win mlTM lions In corn Judiaac. J should do all in hi wf, , of these trips. " 3 ' We now have Men - each to pay his exj tlonal Corn Show bi!e . M will get the cash priiei J '7 tti4 lours very truly, I- O SCiun Special A Kent Sa r,.? West Raleigh, N C. You take no chincei money either, for if sT t course of six bot'Jf not benefitted you cia rny money back for the aUtcs. No dispute no arruffitu-y are the judge. aot aw8! I have been a great sufferrr iii rheumatism and for several yean sa. able to attend to my duties ronLco- ously. Six bottles of Milam mid 1 1 man of me. Claude Curling. U L IUj SI, Norfolk, Va. I spent oyer 13.000 for rheumatic ,a no benefit wbstever until 1 tried Ux. It ha done all you claim for it ta at case. L, H. Wade, corner Church tU Lee Sts., Norfolk, Va. For a long-standing and acrrmW ease of rheumatism I am glad to itr I n ceived more benefit from the uu of MJta than all the other treatment errors over a period of ten years. C P. Birrtr. withvW. M. Ritter Lumber Co.. Hutt ton. W. Va. Since taking 6 bottles of Milam icy rW matism is entirely sone. my coiTulei' and a p petit 4 improved-1 wouldn't uu $50 for the good it has done me. JL xt Bride, Danville. Va. STYLES In5l to Sice-i czi Vlaitftost
The Caucasian (Clinton, N.C.)
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April 4, 1912, edition 1
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