Newspapers / The Davie Record (Mocksville, … / Aug. 2, 1899, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of The Davie Record (Mocksville, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
: MirrTTT TV. J e it .....,,.,, would be a more satisfying event if it were not permitted so many encores. The condition of the wage earner, estimated on a purely material basis, is about thirty per cent, better than it was twenty years ago. The injury of a golf player, by be ing struck with a ball, opens up a vast possibility for denunciations of that came as brutal, denioi alizin g and perilous to life and limb.. IecImu corn is now extensively used in making smokeless powder. In this way it may yet be necessary for Uncle Sam to bring this valuable cereal to the serious notice of some of his es teemed foreign relations. As Admiral, Dewey receives a salary of $13,500 a year, whether on eea or land, and, according to present arrangements, it will not be necessary for him to pay anything for bis board during the first year or two after his arrival in this country. The Pittsburg Times draws the fol lowing lesson from the unusually dry weather that has prevailed in the Eastern States: "The drought that has been burning up the crops east of the Alleghanies furnishes another ob ject lesson on the importance of re foresting the tracts laid bare by the lumbermen. To automobile is not a "fad." It is nn inevitable and logical development of the great idea of the nineteenth century Damely, that mechanical power is superior to animal power. The automobile is surely destined to supersede the horse for all practical purposes, as the steam engine has superseded the treadmill. The Chief Inspector of Music under the English Education Department says that the profession is overstocked and that a crisis is at hand. Out of 15,000 voices tested by him only about twenty-five were first-rate. All this is reassuring from a scientific poirit ?w. It is just as well for the pub- .Aat only the fittest should sur vive. Can there be any doubt that auiorao biles are destined to take tho place of farm wagons, to the incalculable ad vantage of the farmer and of all who depend upon the farmer? The first cost is much greater of course than that of a wagon and team. But so is the first cost of a reaper greater than that of many "cradles" the first cost of a steam threshing-machine greatez than that of a barnful of flails. It may take some time to realize this re form in its fulness, principally because invention has still much to do in per fecting the new application of power. But the result is as inevitable as was the banishment of the horse car. BEDDLNGFIELD WINS. .. Dp, sljihe suggestions laidjjefore the EiecutiveCosimitte3' of the Piin- American exposiyon in Buffalo is for the holding of "a municipal congress, which it is Loped will be attended by not less than 10,000 men interested in the betterment of the human race, and in connection with which there would be exhibits of general informa tion and statistics of the systems of governments and the methods and ex penses of administration of city de partments, representing the leading cities of the world; also a display o those thiugs which go to make up i modern municipality, such as the most improved street pavemeuts in their various forms and etages, with the nmahinery for making and laving them. The world is divided into two par ties those who play golf and those who wish they knew how to play it. The game is not a fad, nor yet is it a craze, and assuredly it is not simply a fashion. It is a healthful exercise Which sUmnlniA AiH rnr.a one wish to : :? i Judge Jttoore Decides the Abbott-Bedding- field Case. The decision of Judge Moore in the Abbott-Beddingfield case, for the office of Corporation Commissioner, was on Wednesday sent to Clerk of Court Russ, of Wake county. This judgment is in favor of Mr, Beddingneld and Dr. Abbott is taxed with the costs of the case. Dr. Abbott appeals to the Supreme Court. He is given twenty days to make up his case on appeal, and twenty days are allowed the plaintiff to file a counter case. Judge Moore's judgment in full is as .follows: State of horth Carolina on the rela tion of D. II. Abbott vs. E. C. Bedding- field judgment. "This case, by consent, coming on to be heard at this term of the court and a jury trial having been waived, and it having been agreed that the judge should find the facts in case any dis pute as to the facts arise during tho trdal, and no such dispute having aris en, and ths plaintiff's relator havin admitted at the trial that the General Assembly, on the 6th day of March, 1899, after the passage and ratification of chapter 164 of the Public Laws cf 1399, elected Franklin McNeill chair man, and Samuel L. Rogers and th ie!endant, E. C. Beddingfisld, members of the North Carolina Corporation Commission, after hearing the case and the argument of counsel for both par ties, it is upon the allegations and ad missions contained In the pleadings and said admission of the relator con sidered, ordered and adjudged by the court: First, That the office of Railroad Commissioner, formerly held by plain tiff's relator, D. H. Abbott, was abol ished by chapter 506 of the Publi( Laws of 1899, and that the said D. H. Abbott lost his interest therein. Second, That the office of Corpora tion Commissioner is an office separate and distinct from the office of Railroad Commissioner; that it was created by an Act of the General Assembly c-f 1899, and filled by the election of the defendant thereto; and that the defen dant, E. C. Beddingfield, is entitled to said office. It is further ordered and adjudged by the court that the plaintiff's relator take nothing by his action, and that the defendant go hence without delay and recover of the relator and his sure ty on his prosecution bond, the cost3 of this action to be taxed by the clerk of this court. It was agreed that the undersigned judge might take the papers in this ac tion and decide the same, and sign judgment out of the district and after the July, 1899, term of the Superior Court of Wake county as of said term, and said judgment is accordingly sign ed at Asheville, on this the 25th day of July, 1899. FRED MOORE, - Judge Presiding. The plaintiff's relator excepts and appeals to the Supreme Court. Notice waived. It was agreed that the appel lant should have twenty days after the filing of the judgment in the clerk's office to serve his case on anDeal and hat the defendant should have twenty days thereafter to serve his counter ase or exceptions. Undertaking on appeal in the sum of $25 adjudged suf ficient." ' ' " iFREDMOORE, Jul ypfFfciamg. THE CLEVELAND STRIKE. Boycott Relied Upon by the Unionists to Win Their Fight. STRIKERS ESTABLISH RIVAL LINES Mayor Farley Opposed the Action of the City Council to Interfere In the Strike -Over One Thousand Soldiers in the City Boycott of the Street Car Lines Almost Universal A Car Blown Up. Cleveland (Special). At a special meet ing of the City Council the purpose of which was to start an investigation of the differences between the strikers and the street railways looking to an adjustment, Mayor Farley opposed such action vigor ously. He claimed that the work of a special committee on investigation would interfere with the plans of the Executive , UNREST IN SAN DOMINGO. Murdered Chief Magistrate is Laid to Kest With Military Honors. United States Government Is Watching; Closely Germany's Attitude Toward the Island Moca City Attacked. Puerto Plata, via Hayti (By Cable). The late President Heureaux-, of Santo Domingo, was buried with military honors in the Cathedral atJSantiago de los Cabal- leros. The funeral services were attended by a large number of people and were con ducted with great solemnity. The people seem to sustain the Govern ment, which continues redeeming the paper currency, and no revolution appears probable. The city of Santo Domineo. however, is in ti state of great unrest, and business there is entirely suspended, the people fearing an outbreak. A Dana or armed men attacked Moca. where President Heureaux was killed, and fired several shots. It is reported that the MAP OF THE DISPUTED ALASKAN TERRITORY. (The dotted line traces the boundary the United States Government maintains la the cor rect one. ine neavy piacs una muiuaies iuo uanaaiau craim.j Canal make a considerable difference according to the Canadian or the American point of view. The Canadians insist that the starting point of the measurement should be a line between the two headlands at the mouth of the canal. Canada has made this con tention to obtain a tide-water terminal point on the canal, while the United States Government has been firm in its claim that it is entitled to complete control of the coast and absolute shore jurisdic tion along the Lynn Canal, the entrance to the three overland passes to the Yukon gold fields. TOWNOF CALAMBATAKEW General Hall's Troops Have a Sharp Fiffht With Filipinos. GUNBOATS TAKE PART IN ATTACK THE BOUNDARY DISPUTE. The Auglo-Russlan agree ment of 1825 fixed the bound- nry ot tne Alaskan territory purchased by the United States irom Kussia as either the mountains "situated parallel with the coast" or "a line par allel with the windings of the coast and which shall never exceed the distance of ten ma rine leagues." "Ten marine leagues" meas ured rrom tne moutn of Lynn libJy of his won-tech- off his ton gue. COnsciOUS Of his snnrinriU i, . leaves the aforementioned barbarian with the bitter feeling that he is out of the swim, is an antediluvian, a poor old fossil, of no value to philanthropy or society. woman in Catskill Mountains has discovered that if she etands be- A a Dtu u-ee miested with caterpillars nu diows a conch pillars drop North State Items. A special from Black Iountainvsays: The house of D. H. Knupp, nea this place, was burned at four o'clock Tues day morning. Mr. E. Fogette, ai ar chitect, perished in the flames. )Mr. Knupp saved but few of his effects. The cause of the Are is unknown. The Wilson cotton mills cleared30 per cent, profit this year. uver $z,uvv win De ottered in prizes for trotters, pacers and runners at the State fair.- The Agricultural Department is now paying one cent postage on each copy 3i its tmuetin. ittis is very expensive and counsel has been employed to try to secure a reduction to newspaper rates, or better. A negro on an excursion from Dan ville to Winston recently was pushed ff a oar near Reidsville. He fell on his head and broke his neck. A severe storm visited the northern part of Iredell county last week and did great damage to crops in Eagle Mills and Harmony townships. juiius Alexander, colored, charged ssault on Mrs. Julius i has hppn mrffrintaA n-ieuuurg criminal ' -re sentenced to hang August 24 Lightning played a strange freak a few miles above WHkesboroMonday "uuuwu- mere were three norses tide in the fo.1 the crushing out of disorder. He said tho only result could be to keep alive the agitation, and that no good purpose would be served. Several of the Counctlmen fa vored the appointment of the committee, out wnen tne resolution came to a vote it was lost. The presence of a large body of troops In the city has prevented any serious di3or ders. Adjutant-General Axliue is in com mand of the military here, and places the force under him at twenty companies, ag gregating nearly 1200 men. A car returning from Euclid Beach Park was blown up by dynamite. The explosion took place a short distance north of the Lake Shore Railroad, about two miles east of the city limit's. The front truck was de m olished and the floor of the car shattered. There were no passengers on board and the motorman and conductor escaped with out injury. A btate law exists which declares that a defendant arrested for carrying weapons. upon proving that he believed his life, lib erty, or property endangered while pursu ing any lawful act, shall be discharged. Several non-union men. arrested on this charge, have been discharged under Jh& hci reierrea to. .. The cars, are traine ' operated on nearlv all lin.es on nearly the usual schedules, but not many riae in tnem. tne bovcott of the lines by the working people being almost universal. The strikers themselves have a large number of buss lines parallel ing some of the more important nnes of the Big Consolidated Company. The boy cott has extended to the soldiers. Mer chant refuse to sell them anv sunnHes and representatives of organized labor re- luse to patronize anybody who take sol diers' money for anything or supplies any of his wants. The following communication, siarned bv the leaders of all the more important labor unions in the city, was issued: "To the Sympathizers of the Striking Bail- way employes in (Jieveland: "We, the members and representatives of organized labor unions, appeal to you to pjeH.se reiram irom using abusive lan guage, the throwing of missiles of any kind, or the using of explosives against the Big Consolidated Street Railway Com pany's property. "Although some may think this course will help the strikers, we know It is doine- the union street carmen an injury, and is detrimental In more than one way to them. We beg that you srlve vour support in other ways than unlawfulness." i he Mayors of the suburban villages held a meeting, at which the presence of troops in Collinwood and South Brooklvn wa discussed. The Mavors of both those hamlets said the ti oops were not needed. The troops were withdrawn from Collin wood on the promise of the Mayor to pre serve order there. forces supporting the assassin have been augmented considerably. Tho Govern ment has taken measures to put down any insurrection. TO PKOTECI OUR INTERESTS. The Nw Orleans and Maehias Ordered 'to Santo Domineo. Washington, D. C. (Special). American men-of-war will be on hand to look out for American interests in the event of a revolu tion and any undue foreign interfereuce following the assassination of President Heureaux, of the Dominican Republic. As a result of a conference between Sec retary Hay and Secretary Long telegraphic orders were sent for the cruiser New Orleans to sail at once from Newport and the gunboat Maehias to sail as soon as re pairs are completed from St. Thomas for Santo Domingo. No speciflo iastructions have been given" .-.. r..nna Wida Through Flood! to VIU . " f " Drive the" Filipinos From Calmbi vTir- Soldier Killed and Eleven Wounded Spanish Prisoners Rescued A Health Resort to Be Utilized. Manila (By Cable). General Hall de feated General Malabar's garrison of 300 Filipinos at Calamba after a sharp running fight, cutting through the north and south avenue of the Insurgents. The American losses were four killed and eleven wounded. The expedition was under the super vision of General Lawton. four hundred Washington troops armed with Krag-Jor gensens and Hamilton's Mountain Battery left Pasig and joined Captain Eltenhead with 450 men of tte Twenty-first Infantry, 150 cavalrymen and the army gunnboats Napidan and Oeste. At 8 o'clock in the afternoon the gun boats skirting Tallm Island headed south west, deceiving the Calam'oans into be lieving that they were Intending to at tack Santa Cruz. Suddenly, nowever, iney ran the cavalry and the men of the Twenty first Infantry ashore a mile north of Calam ba. A twelve-foot rise of the lake had flooded the insure ents' trenches, hence there was no opposition on the part of the enemy until tne cavalry were at me river. The insurgents then fired volleys at the Americans. Captain McGrath and Lieu tenants Bates and Swan secured a casco, on which they ferried the cavalrymeu across the river. The cavalry then advance! upon the town, while the Twenty-first detachment plunged through the marsnes ana circiea tho foothills to the west, preventing re treat of the enemy on three sides. They then swung to the southeast, flanking the enemy, who retired into the town, where, after fighting in the streets, they escaped south to Santa Tomas. The Washington troops, under the cover of the Napldan's six-pounders, landed in water neck deep and got stuck in the marshes to the south, consequently they were unable to co-operate with the other troops. A hundred non-combatants in carriages drawn by bull teams escaped to the south unmolested. The enemy removed about twenty-five of their killed and wounded, and iilso took with them forty Spanish prisoners. Thirty of the prisoners, includ ing live women, were rescued by the Ameri cans and conveyed to Manila. Calamba, which is on Laguna de Bay, is a position of strategic Importance, and will be permanently garrisoned. General Lawton and his wife and son were inter ested witnesses of the affair from a launch, and were under fire. Lieutenant Larsen, commanding the Napidan, discoverod the Otalora, a lost insurgent gunboat, partly dismantled and concealed by fish traps cov ered with bamboos. General Lawton, on board the Napidan, visited Los Banos, to the south of Calamba. He found there a deserted Spanish hos pital for rheumatics, with hot springs and marble baths, which be recommends to the use of the army. Professor Worcester, of the American Commission, accompanied General Lawton and congratulated him on his discovery. ! WHITE TO THE POWERS f An- cavs W'e Canno'; AMERICA WILLINGTO ARBITRATE. , - Savs That the Monro AmbaM.d Hamper Arbitration Doctrine - 84te,ThlU W. C- ln Aoy D8;ree;weep A, Monroeism Bot Consent TJmep .HI, interview Wtno rnhlel TQ3 Lo.vpos W ' M00rtg long con- spondentof ;D'. White. United versation with Ar States the American delegation, in which the 1 TV nfter referring to tna earnest :Tllc.n people for a co- WHITE. EOS. AJfDBEW D. (United States Ambassador to Germany. AN Woman ECCENTRIC BURIAL Chair, and Died In a Rocking Was Burled in It. Pawlino, N. Y. (Special). Mrs. George S. Norton, wife of a well-to-do contractor of this place, was buried sitting in a rock ing chair, which she requested should ac company her to the grave. A large crowd was called out by the unusual character of the proceedings. The box which she had ordered for her burial was not made until after her death prebensive arbitration scaeme, us rrovea bv the constant petitions and resolution of large meetings hold ia all parts of Amer. lea since the coniereace nss uu siuiuk, said: "I believe a vast majority of our peopl will welcome our arbitration treaty aod see in it a serviceable plan from tho oa'. Bet and a germ from which a mora con plete system will ba evolval by futur conferences. As time progresses, wltho-it doubt, references to the tribunal will b aome increasingly natural and normil. ant thus we may hope tohiveeveryftdvitati claimed for obligatory arbltratioa wifioa' its overwhelming disa.lviutnea. Bi it could hardly be expectod that ws f haul 1 be willing to accept the requirement to sweep away at once, here and now, the policy of Monroeism. "If any modification is enr made of that policy it must be made by th) United State, after it has had the fullest opportunity to study thesubj9ct la all its bearings. rVjcu change cannot be made here by Implica tions in a treaty made distinctly for an other purpose, and it is import. iut that there should be no doubt on this point." Mr. White then referred to the "deep, almost religious conviction in the hearts of the American people against any foreign entanglement." He added, however, that the declaration ot Monroeism would leave the United States policy exactly what it had beoti heretofore, and would not in the slightest degree hamper the operation of the arbi tration plan. On the contrary, the Unite I States would fully and faithfully co-operate in tue judicial settlement ot international to sneii, the cater- the ground ft.. Duenei to be gathered up and de stroyed. A well-beaten drum is said to have the same effect. It is surpris- vuusiutsnng tne number of small boys in the world, and the number of parents that give their small boys drums, that this simple remedy has not been discovered before. Blowing the conch shell may hereafter become a favorite way of utilizing the energies "l sraa" y- And it is possible that the small boy of the future May come to regard making; a noise when it becorBs obligatory with the same abhorrence that he now does bein till. Then the caterpillar will uo or four sd.in Bran n,, ui "7 nas Kmea and the others un uurt. Strang in i - j. mere was no u,ou lDe Darn as to where the bolt mi ii. "ft!! G6er' f WatMa county, had 42 head of sheep last fall. They were . 6uuu sicck and he treated them well Irom the 22 ho e,vi,i An weu' A ,io " .w""n ot wool. - - - j b aKU zip en m u j whirr. ior rr hi :!u ana now has 20 K Told f fnr I PUfdS at fiVe mthS Old Cn t tCents per PUEd. or $6.70 Good for a North Carolina lamb Burwell P. Bullock, of Vance cout.1v granted a pension of lit I moSh A special from Shelby says: News has JUSt reached here of a shooting "e ilroad. A negro employed m the grading whose majne could not be learned sho and dangerously wouaded a whS muxv or joche, also an employe Z f?? Degro mediately fled and Is being m,r.,d a .7 JX . ohM c; x , vvuv, witu Diooidhounds, THEIR HONEYMOON IN JAIL. A Couple Accused of Stealing Finery Tor Their Wedding. Somerviiae, N. J. (Special). Fred Van Kirk, a young man from Lamincrton. and Ihis brid am spending their honeymoon tn the Somersfrpunty Jail. Van Kirk re sided 3i U IWjodfather , Cornelius Van ik.iru. une night the young man tookbia graaaratner's Sundav iet nis prospective bride. Thev were "'ff then they hurried toTewa k atod 3 father became exler! A warrant was ici icc.j . .. on th ,uriM Driae :r . j. s "l uaving stolen iuo nouuiag, ana county jail, too. PlDn.. ree Trad, DEADLY The Contrail. . e p.. . . Tn ili ... '""to. "Numerous til An.. . have suspended b5Caa.i,1,i:i sets wftro nnt .. vti!n'. uul I'll m ah: . - to meet tho denurU 0 ci positors. Los, and f ? vaded every branch on'l This wa, the condiL. irv iic Of I tr . "V power oi t ie un. . . uaue, a it was fcet priest of that economic fit '1 H was tho condition rf .i.:." f railed darwj the entir. .K tion. The words oi tbe u 2 message would Lave condition of tbe country daring those four yewi they wouU hare beea rf character over agai0,t . wuuiuou 01 tbits uuj uuin miico iue eaactat. trast between free tralo .,i tioa. If any skeptic thinki comparison is for any rea5. f let him follow out tbo liae r. ' Let him turn back to th t1 which existed diriug Harp;':"' ministration, when the M k'' was in force, and he will of affairs closely rescmbljQ". ent prosperous times. Le; the message sent to Coars ' cember, 1892, by ex-rre;-ijt son, and bo will fiu l a j the eituation which won'd f Let him go back a3 far asLe will find invoriably tbe (sjm' between tho results of prate-' those of free trade. The -of the "state of the Uuion.V iu presidential ineages dc' operation of a protective tir.;J description given during r" sional lapses into free tn' lished eide by 6ile, vos!:; deadly parallel for free tnU- The Scer cf Couimnv. I England to-'iir Ii fleet on the occa'i, b::t bfrt a carrier is enuteiy une u ; that ehc at o:ie tiaie enormous resources of co'i With the disappearance of t. leadership must depart, C. and cheap steel vill trj scepter of cotnmerc to t:' States and will deprive Gr; of the ability to pucccfoful; in luauufacluriug. It ist:' Erilish to delude tliCuiSoh; belict mat luev ijv?e qualities which will onsu inaiulaiii their position h , There Mas a time wLe i u. miht have been made, K experieuce liai if;ii jn5:;i Englishuien are not bfttr: bo the luauufitcturcrA of t than some other peoples the30 must bo nmnbereJ V cans, who, with an enrj mechanical injenuily, -u session of enormous fttjre fuel and iron, inuetwiuiatL for commercial piimtcr. 5 ciaco (Cal.) Chrcuicle. The way we have bf ea the markets cf the woiM i' few mouths leds one tot some American will s ou be c t . t 0 r t . t; ii h t ' tJ tl o P n tl . ti T S( Ml Zt in Li Al b ai t tb re "au ' (h V fo; to . be Ioj cu W( Id. ib let thi at thi HU tee CS de wii aa bei exc of i fro - I difficulties by means of the age gov anl abundant'y shows, declared Mr. White, I crines to Frfice wnd fr?i xtUxllALi O' MKS. NORTON IN A ROCKING CHAIK. (Services in Pawling Cemetery, where the body, enclosed in a great square box was lowered into a vault by means of a derrick.) ftnftfv tnv she was landed in the Four Negroes Hanged in Baltimore. Four negroes-Cornelius Gardner, John Meyers, Charles James and Joseph Bryan MdrheTM thejaI,yard at Baltimore, ua.. tuenrst three named for outrageous assault on Annie Bailey, a negro gfrl of o S??!1?' and Xwtov the Murder hved K a WOman w,th whom oe nd either of the naval commanders. Tele graphic Instructions sent them simply directed the protection of American in terests. The New Orleans Is commanded by Captain Edward Longnecker, a capable and discreet offloer, in whom the Depart ment has the greatest confidence. The commanding officer of the Maehias is Com mander Leavitt C. Logan. German Interests in the Republic are considerable, and President Heureaux was strongly backed by them. The future of tbe Bepubllo may depend largely uoon the course taken by tbe foreign element in this crisis. The course of th German Govern ment in the present crisis will be watched with considerable interest by the American when her husband told the carpenter tha her request was to be followed out to the letter. The box, which was made of sea soned chestnut, was 4 feet high, 6 feet long, and 2 feet 9 inches wide. It was made in two sections, the lower division being 2 feet 6 inches deep and the upper part, or cover, 2 feet high. The box was lowered into the grave by means of a derrick. Tbe grave was walled with brick and a covering of flagstones was put over the coin before the grave was filled. . MORMONS They ESCAPE Get Away While From virreinaaaBak Jacg LYNCHINC. a Georgia Mob Creek. -A special neurtani'i Death Ounnlnelv Tlr.t. KiifosTow, Jamaica (By Cable). Advices .v 9 Domingo to a Dominican here describe the existence of a well-planned and widespread plot by adherents of l1!?6-? t0 dePose President Heureaux, wnicn it was thought was sure to succeed. . -the assassination of President Heureaux is regarded here as an indication of the success of th plot. that it had never manifested the slightest desire to interfere with or hamper arbitra tion proceedings. WEYLER It Mlgjht HINTS AT REVOLT. the Re- Accomplish, He Pay generation of Spain. Madbid (Bv Cable). In the course otth debate In the Senate on the bill fixing th strength of the army. General Weyler madi a remarkable speech, which Is Interpreted as being an exhortation to the populaoe to combine with the army againct the Govern ment. Alluding to the recent rlotouf 'imp Unwarranted Allegation of German Pre-. xne announcement that Chiof td. Chambers has left Samoa is receive ifw t'hti s.at,,9faetion by the German press Wf thp6(;-ar?,that hebas beQ the tool' or the British rrnani fhco Ten Thousand Men Oat. Ten thousand men were thrown out of employment and work was stopned on hundred buildings in Dhina second day of the strike of the union brick makers of Cook County. Bricklayers an I nod earners were forced to quit for want of material, and, following them, carpenters were compelled to lay down their tools. demons'. which -9 General might ; Rpain cleared added th. COU req f car: i . SOUTHERN RAIU 1 ft Ui i qui inei incl bea Condensed Schedule of ra( thai In gffect Juno ll. b. I'Vf Ves. i.v 'I No.12 No. as I f - - Northboood. l. Atlanta. C. T. " Atlanta, E. T. " Norcrots " Buford " Gainesville... M Lula - Cornell. Ar. Mt. Airy Lv. Toccoa - Westminster " Feneea " Central Orccnville . . . " 6partanbarf. " Gaffneys M BlacksSnrg . . " King s Mt.... H Gasfonia Lv. Charlotte Ar. Greensboro.. Lv . Greensboro. Ar. Norfolk Ar. Danville . . . Ar. Richmond . Ar.Washinrton - Baltm'ePRB. M Philadelphia New York . 0 ou I 1 I 2 22' xil tVI: 2 it p PJ I' 8 W pf t ft 6 22 pi Vf lis iV 1 7 oi p un 8 is p; fron: 10 4T p.--. 11 45 p I 8 20 ! ipj n M p' r si SOW a tre . bagh 7 W a,' oo mi SSX "I w P ions a 10 ai a 10N a 1 35 a 11 SJ 1163 a 1281m 12 62 p 1 40 p 2 84 p 8 87 p 4 20 p 4 88 pi imp 8 28 p 8 80 p 8 82 p arb;i son, Ga., says the three Mormon eldr who were taken away from the home of William Cunnard at Kewton Factory In Newton County, escaped from the mob while crossing a creek in that county, and ar now safe near Jackson. They swam down tha Sued by the mob, finally escaping, and making their way through tbe country to the home of friends. He u-li t Tha nri.l. ... tfWMt could Umta " An Infant With a Fire Craze. Four-year-old Willie p.nnH.i , -et fire to his father's wagon shed at Beth lehm, Penn.. and it wa j . Kiuuuu. A fnn diva n on ,; for hi glV1 5,m matches when he asked 'or them ani hnva hi. . . w.v.y uia oars. An nonr Inrpr lat vear " "r M8? "iggw nre than wit i.yn v . Ib? bisr bara Wtts destroved and horse. u wvocl" "ws British Fla Lowered in Crete. The government of the island of Crete was formally handed over to the Cretaus biheBritish authorities, the British flag w. ? ?aallv lowered. The emigration of Mussulmans continues. France'a Wheat Prospects Good. jThe official statistics show favorable crop Prominent People. .- Lord Rosebery has brought up his chil dren as strict Presbyterians. ,",5'l!lsSor University has conferred the nonsrary degree of Doctor of Laws upon bir Henry Irving. .Th.e ?ate 'or the Inauguration of President-elect Hadley. of Yale, has been de cided upon for October 8. The favorite author of Senator Frye, of aiaine, is Raskin, and the Senator rarely travels witho ut a volume of this Writer works. . L-mJ,'nor Tanner, " of Illinois, recently meaa RdCo'orado Mountain lion which ; l,P d of the tail. Lynchad an Innocent Negro. A negro was discovered at Lindsay, In East Feliolana, La., in a cornfield. For some reason he was suspected to be Val Bates, against whom a charge of assault nas been made. He waa nhni n....-i. several fields by armed men and finally vau&D mwm rm n rr. a rtt n h htdd uans- to lynch him. but the negro climbed down out of the tree. As he did so he was Are 1 wn " ?6ad- H,s clothia marked J.o.43. An .investigation disclosed that t&e dead negrc was not Sates, but an inno- v!,nMun.ai1ue Tho .had e9cPed from room ino. 43 of the Louisiana State Insane Av lum at Jackson. ' -7 OE5EBAL WEYLEH. ations in Barcelona, the aim of sto obtain provisional autonomy, Weyler declared that revolution ccomniisu the regeneration oi At any rate, revolution sometimes the political atmosphere. h hat the country had been pa. Nster Canova. 'del Castillo and Is was not vet ,a Rna ttCeG?t.J!pato! hintlno- at rm,y rouked i"iiiiing at a mllftarv r in. t... ae Minister ..i ;"V": .A.uo fice of th 7" laJfua ?' Drlvaf-Ki.Trr""' "oa "ot to l u; -""xuium. ne assurnd th. l" anvbodv r . . would be fnexorlhV.A. u "VJ I Z Bonthboaad. f v v v v u ' " 'Philadelphia. " Baltimore.... " Washtngton.. Lv. Richmond . . . 8 42 8 0 an a 12 3 m ne i Ist.Mlj Vrs. "rg No. 88 No. 87 K n, Il1v. iPallT. I XTU- Lv. Danville nvTNorfolk . Ar. Greensboro a. the War Da. that a detach'. rinht With Ban!. I. -v. . whs reports to t, Washington. 2ft?7lS -der In the moi.nr.Tn- 'L.. WD' upon h K..ir "u. was 'Vposiuon"::"'0..! seven captured. 10 uo 10 49 12 2 l 23 T.v fraenahoro Lv.Gaatonia.. " King's Mt.. .. 'ksburg .. 11 81 c"ney? 11 4 EMwrianonrr 2 "eivllJe.." " Central Seneca Westminster " Toccoa " Mt. Alr comeha.;;;;; Lula ' Gainesville " Buford.... ;; . Noreroag . Ar. Atlanta, K. T Ar- Atlanta. O. T A a. m. 19 11 mT 8 80 a 6 86 l ?K ' 6Zi ml 9 20 P d 12 Plan 11 W P.y 6 02 oj 5 SOa'TT)!' lT51!.:5i pi,.07.. ,v. K8S: fk 11 84 a l 12 UO n 4li.t ' 'i83 'p ce a io ai i ik J.rtr c 810 al 8 were JLfiL4V . Chesapeake Lia '. noo- F western Vestibnl,0!"! sleeping cars btr, ic Thron' Lnetgert, the Wife Murderer. Dead. AdolphL. Luetgert, the wealthy saus agemaker of Chicago, who was serving a life sentence in the penitentiary at Joliet a ",rt1h murder of his wife, was found dead in bis cell. Drs. Werner and O'Mally f i a .PBtmortem examination, which ..v,.uaau iuo iaot mat jjuecgort died from atty degeneration of tbe beart. A few imiuin u nign iinetirirt maiu "'a C ReCeI F"rt '"i uinaiMii. wIia ..ii.i. i .. )leaiaa-s. '.'ulatlon of Naw vAfc - 183.608 aW 0rk confession, in which he said that he klllei ' v n J VIA had for her. v uo vu. account oi ids trrAAt iova i. India's Doable Affliction. Tha plague Is causing many deaths In Of tml'a OTOpa rllQtllfig (Of .?he direo. ,. . -v '... . 183.608 WrtlOM WscaJoorch?dh9'ter' N' J tfcit 252 had defective T2loiUdreD Bb0W6i The Indian OnrA.,, . ushki, In Beluchlatan :ri.nM "nexed tjui for the terrltory-to4-VaVl'jK nThA ot the British A,..,t No.. 87 inH AriJor killed Wtto5:7ff A : - .11.1 mnrM v. . . - Washington AtiV-- ior "'' pjasstftoronhfaiCrrv " Da I Inf ton and Atlanta. Dmei' bt oetween Greenahr .VY v;Jn SJ'f runs aoiM tir V5"d Stataa J leans, vi. So -tn arf nd L. N. "xrj'wr- A. V w and corW .V" nPoaedi Passenaer. of all claL '"ii0? room sleeping cmri hJtl onriat Tuesday and 4 andu nnd north '"&ANK8.0ANNOV w f Third V-P M.CA . Wki-V. Mv, Traf) 1 paaa. Am . "-a.au .vfftL. Aas'tOaa lP tn - - ws
The Davie Record (Mocksville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 2, 1899, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75