ILY ;1H.i: EZERYKEENING EXCEPT SUNDKY. Vol. II No. 141. KINSTON, N. 0., FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 15, 1809. Price Two Cents. i , DA PRESS; '1 ' ' ' r'.-i ...... -t i '.; Interesting North Carolina Items In Condensed Form. It Of IteinsThat Wilt Interest North Carolls- lans. Sobs News, sons Politics All Of Same Interest to True "Tar Heels."! It is expected that about half the members of the governor's staff will accompany him to New York and par ticipate in tb, "Dewey Day"; ceremo nies. .lneuurnam ueramnas enterea upon ics eieventn voiame. it nas steaauy im- it 1 Tl. 1 4 - ! proved ana is a cream to me live town m m - ' . j i - t a . 1 in which it is published and the live men who conduct it. State Treasurer -Worth, upon being asked the question whether the $10 tax on laundries applies to Chinamen-and negro laundresses, replies that it 4oes not; but only to steam laundries J. P. Caldwell, editor of the Charlotte Observer, sailed from New York Tuesday on the North German Lloyd steamer Konecriu Louise for Europe to take a short vacation of rest and recreation. The space formerly . occupied by the State board of agriculture at the State fair will this year be occupied ; by a monster furniture exhibit participated in by all the furniture factories of High Point, of which there are twenty-one. . Wilmington Messenger: Advices from Cape Hatteras are that the Merritt Wrecking company's expedition, sent there to save Diamond Shoals lightship, which was stranded during the recent hurricane, is experiencing great difficulty in t the work of salvage. Should ; the weather become bad it maybeimpossi ble to save her. The Smithfield Herald tells of some fine farming in Johnson county. Mr. Polie Gardner will make on ten acres twenty five bales of cotton. The Herald says that the estimate has been , endorsed by the' opinions of old and experienced farm: ers. 1 . upon in acres more.ne estimates that each acre will ( net one bale-rthus resulting id the phenomenal yield' of 40 bales upon 25 acres. , A very peculiar case' of hydrophobia , is reported by the AJbermarle Enterprise. Abeut two years ago . a dog, seemingly in play with Charles Little, a young man who lived in Stanly, , county, dropped some foam on Little's hand.. Sores broke out on his hand. -The dog ; provedVto be tnftdJ Some time aim Little "started to I mad. Sometime ago Little "started to Albermarle, but after going a few miles refused to continue further. Later he beaatne mad and. was carried to the hos pital at Morgan ton for. treatment. The hospital phyeican diagnosed the disease aa av very plain case of hydrophobia, and the young man died in terrible agony last Friday, v M. D. Brinkley was found at Winston Wednesday morning shot la the head, and. died that night. He leaves a wife and four children. It is believed that after he was shot he was robbed, as it Is thought he had about 200 with him and it was missing. -. Eight -white men suspected of knowing . something about the shooting were arrested . Wednesday to await an investigation. Thomas Beed, Bob Cobler and Tom Hudson were tried before two magistrates Wednesday on the charge of being implicated in the ki'Iir j of Brinkley. The evidence against Beed is damaging. The three defendants j were committed to jail without bail to await the criminal court.- Thomas Hud son, one of the three men charged with be ing r onsitle for the death of Brinkley, has nia3 a confession. . He eaid Thou. Reed shot Brinkley;' that they engaged in a fight when Brinkley threw one hand to his hip pocket, ' whereupon Reed fired and Brinkley fell. They did not stop to see how bad he was shot. Hudson says they were all drinking. Raleigh Cor. Charlotte Observer: Some of the old students at the Agricultural and Mechanical College played a practi cal joke on sixty of the freshmen last Sunday, by telling them they were under orders to go to the Baptist Tabernacle I to attend the morning service. Four stu dents, in nniinrm nnd . with nrmn. nn. peared tbe ;qo I victImB t0 the church. At the capital sauare three of the escort ''fell out,' saying they had to go on guard duty there, but one went on with the, freshmen and quite a stir was created as they marched into the church. The solitary escort departed and the freshmen were left to get back nnnrotected. Thev told the president Uhat thev did not like their escorts thus I " ieavw them LaGRANGE NEWS. The Fbek Peeps Bubkatt, LaGiunge, Sept. 14, 1899. Mrs. H. E. Dillon returned from a visit. to Wilson today. Miss Lula Whitfield began teaching private school Monday, 11th inst. MissLfllieKirkpatrick will begin teach ing music at home Monday, Sept. 8 th. Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Copeland, of : Kins- ton, are visiting at Mr. Shade Wooten's. There will be preaching in the Presby terian and M. P. churches Sunday morn ing and .evening.'-?;r,' Miss Katie Matthews, of Newbern, has returned to her home - from a month's visit at Mr. W. L. Hardy's, in Trent town snip, one maae many inenas annng ner stay, who will miss her. Rev. D. H. Petree spent several days here this week and succeeded in enlisting the co-operation of the business men of the town in establishing a newspaper, to be edited by Mr. Petree and called The LaGrange Sentinel. Mr. Petree has the energy, brains, newspaper experience and the support of our business men the nec essary elements that make success. A pair of horses, belonging to and being driven by Mr. Bob Wyman,of Snow Hill, got away from him near Mr. D. W. Wood's and ran' here, where they were stopped by running against the postoffice, crash ing the pole through the window and throwing one of the horses. .With the exception of a broken pole and the scare Postmaster Miller got, who shijt the door to keen the horses out, the casualties were slight, t ' Mr. T. Haywood Best arrived on the freight this morning with the remains of Ma Krffhr. f r. TK : J: TWf' xxrhn HioA In Baltimore Wednesday morning, and left . , . . . at once tor uest . nomesteaa in ureene county, where the remains will be inter red. Mr.'Best was a good man, and be- IVUKVU w vuv v SAJVVV VIUIUUICUV ICMU- I a I Hies of Greene county. A profusion of xnbst-beautiful flowers, artistically ar- ranged, with a white dove perched above' them', accompanied the corpse. . . ' i .... ...v. ntf Slmonton Postpones Decision. AsheviIIe,N. C.Sept. 14. Judge Simon- ton will not, decide the tax case within the next twenty days. He has given the at torneys that much time to file brief if they bo desire. No commissioner will be appointed to take further testimony. He considers this as a full hearing, and any appeals from this decision must be to the circuit court of appeals. t- natter SU?s, EIs, Etc. The Free Press has taken the agency ! for one of the largest rubber stamp and seal factories in the country, and is pre pared to show cuts of and quote low prices on ruDDer stamps oi all kinds, check perforators, corporation and ioa- -y public scala, steel stamps, stencils, eto Hi Matters of Interest Condensed Into Brief Paragraphs. - 4 mm Tin Pith of the World News Tbtt Might Interest Oar Readers., Sons Is Fresh, Some May Be "Salty Bat Not Spoilt. A new American base ball association is being mooted. - 'V j Many prominent men are In attendance at the anti-trust conference io. Chicago. The Transvaal's reply to the last note of the British secretary has been received and is said to be unsatisfactory. War seems almost certa; . The D. S. warship Paraguay captured. a Filipino schooner at Baleraae,Philippine Islands, recently, after a sharp engage ment, though there were oo casualties. Western farmers are intensely stirred over the power of the trusts and are now uniting to fight them. There are said to be 5,000,000 in the fight against these robbers and oppressors. 4' A negro was lynched at Ty Ty, Ga., Wednesday night by 200 men. He was positively Identified as one of the two negroes wno assaulted Mrs. Jonnson Tuesday. Search for the other negro continues. TThe Washington department of agricul ture reports the condition of the cotton crop as worse uian ever mown perore. 0q September 1st It was 68.5. ' Wheat is also bad off 68.5, as compared with 84 last month. : - . , At Salem, Mass., 200 girls employed in canning factor! 98 received 4 cents per bas ket for peeling tomatoes. They asked for 5 cents, and when it ' was refused, they struck and paraded the streets, brandish ing their knives. ". ' ... Advices from Kaliscb, in Russia Poland, say tnat S J persons were crusnea to death in a synagogue there, caused by the upsetting of a lamp. The victims were all women and children. Many oth ers were injured. A cyclone swept over the island of Ber- mudaTnesday night. Houses were blown down and others were unroofed. No lives were lost, but heavy damage was done to public and private, property, fruit and cedar trees. ; The causeway was in jured badly and the government house was damaged. The storm was the worst known there since the. hurricane of 1880. In fact many of - the inhabitants say. it exceeded the gale of 1880 in violence.), ' The White Star steamship Oceanic ar rived in New York, after making her first voyage across Wednesday She is 704 feet i . . .u , jnw rfi a KiMfAttf tAoonl ntrA rvfnflv' mmi. 1" ti ' 16 tenng 11 mw tons.. Jier engines were designed to develop 45,000 borse-power. Her coal capacity is about 6,000 tons, and she consumes about 500 tons of coal daily. She is rigged with three masts, and is equipped with two funnels, each of 20 feet diameter and 80 feet above ber fire grates. - ) ,;: Wvr; ' : At Indianapolis, Ind., Wednesday, Mrs. Lula Jenkins filed three suits in the Uni ted States court . against the sheriff of Ripley county and citizens of Versailles for damages because of the lynching of her husband in 1897. ; Mrs. J enkins de mands heavy damages Her husband was lynched with four other men, and Mrs. Jenkins charges the sheriff with aid ing and abetting the mob. A long list of citizens of Versailles are set forth as mem bers of the mob. The transport Tartar has been detain ed at Hong Kong by British authorities because of being overcrowded. It had 1,145 American troops and 55 cabin pas- sengers. It is a British ship, but was chartered by the U. 8. government Some discharged volunteers are said to have complained at being overcrowded, cans ing clearance papers not to bo granted. Since the above was put In type the Tar tar has been allowed clearance papers. It is expected that she will proceed at once to the United States. t To the Town Authorities. The streets are very dusty The sprinkler's getting rusty; The folks are complaining Wish it would go to raining And lay this awful dust. The merchants are kicking; To their wa res the dust is sticking. They should have some protection From this great dust infection. Please lay the dust. No w, our dear city fathers, This dust surely bothers . The clerks who are dusting Because the sprinkler's rusting. Please lay the dust. The above poetical effusion was banded us to publish by a "kicker.". Sometimes people kick without cause and sometimes they don't. This is one of the times when they don't. The authorities should "raise the dust", and lay tho dust. This is no joke. Will Be Pardoned Eventually. Paris, Sept. 13 Much surprise is felt here by unfounded rumors afloat in London that Dreyfus has been pardon ed. It is fully believed here that he will be pardoned once the court rejects his appeal. It is considered a foregone con clusion that it will be rejected. It is be lieved that a pardon will be granted prom ply if Dreyfus avoids requesting the minister of justice to allow his case to be carried to the court of cassation. Conditlonal Demand, for the Pardon of Dreyfus. Boston, Sept. 13. The Post today an nounces that it has received the follow ing private dispatch from Paris: "Gen erals Roget and Mercier have offered on the part of the army to demand from President Loubet the pardon of Capt. Dreyfus, if the Jewish committee will drop the matter, and on the condition that Dreyfus shall live away from the large cities of France for three years." Amnesty to Bo Granted Dreyfus and Others. Paris, Sept. 14. The judge advocate of council of revision received the dossier today. It is believed the council will render its decision In a fortnight when, it is rumored, the government will im- mediately gram amnesty to every one connected with the Dreyfns affair, includ ing Dreyfus, Colonel Picquart, M. Zola and General Mercier. 1 '' ' He Toole the Hint, s 1 1 1 General Harrison," in 1889, sent Dr. Bedloe of Philadelphia "to Canton as consul. During ' his term the doctor was spending a month or two in Wash lhgton and was largely in evidence In social and political circles. About this time the Gridiron club gave a dinner and both gentlemen were guests. The doctor told a few stories early in the evening, and later on the president made a speech. ? "1 was charmed," he said in his soft, graceful way,' "to hear the clever anec dotes from our distinguished consul to -I mean from Amoy." Then he passed on to other topics, but the doctor took the hint, and the next steamer carried Mm back to bis post ' It was not the first time that Dr. Bedloe had experience with presidents at club dinners. Once President Cleve land was a guest at the celebrated Clover club In Philadelphia, of which the doctor is a famous wit The Clover ltea always interrupt their guests when they rise to speak. Knowing this, Mr. Cleveland began: "Go on,-gentlemen; I am prepared for the worst" There came an Instant's pause, and the doctor cackled shrilly: "So are we." Philadelphia Post I ill Filipino Congress Returns iThanks ? For Offer ofAutori my, But ' ! r Proposal to Enlist Chippewa Indians at Scouts for Service Against the Filipino ; Insurgents. Morong Is Abandoned on Account of Unhealthlness. "f,i Manila, Sept. 18 The correspondent ' here of the Associated Press has obtained acopy of the reply adopted by the Fill- t pino congress to the American offer of an ; autonomous government. The author of the reply was Ambroeio Rianzares, who was offered a position in the supreme ' court, but who failed to appear and was ; supposed to be detained by the insurrec tionists. The document repeats the ar- v gunvAnts contained in the receut appeal to the powers for recognition; and the j . Filipino congress claims that Americans were the aggressors in the war, and con" r eludes:.; " . , , t. "Notwithstanding the foregoing, in which we could have accepted your sov-' ereignty and autonomy if we had not seen by the behavior of the Americans in " the beginning that they were strongly opposed to us through race prejudice, and their high-handed methods of dealing with us, made us fear for the future in your bands. ' Finally, we thank yon for your ' offer of autonomy under sover eignty." Chippewa Indians for tho Philippines. , Washington, Sept. 18. Col, JarntM H. Tillman, of South Carolina, a nephew of Senator Tillman, was at the white house today, and asked the president to author- fee the organization of, an independent company of Indian scouts for service in the Philippines. It is proposfd to make Mr. Tillman, who wa colouel of the First South Carolina regiment during theSpan ish war, captain of the company, and Jos. H. Woodbury, ' Hole-in-the-Day," chief of the Chippewa Indians, of Minne sota, first lieutenant, and some member of the regiment of "Rough Riders" second lieutenant , It is said that many more than a com pany of Chippewas are ready to enlist, in case they are allowed to go to the Philip pines as an independent organization. It is understood the president referred his caller to the secretary of war. ; -; v Morong Abandoned. Washington, Sept. 13. Morong, one of the points on Laguana de Bay, captured by Gen. Otis some months ago, has been ' abandoned, and the garrison sent to Ca-4 Iamba, the latest point on the bay to be captured. Morong is said to .be a very unhealthy place, and of little. value as a base of supplies'.' The insurgents south of Calamba are : believed to be moving east and are said to be concentrating at 1 Sauta Cruz, on the southeastern shore of,, Laguana de Bay. , , , , National League Games. Wedxesday. , Philadelphia, 8; Cleveland, 0. Baltimore, 5; Louisville, 6. ' Boston,!; St Louis, 11. Second game- Boston, 4; St. Louis, 7. " . Washington, 7; Cincinnati, 2. Brooklyn, 7: Pittsburg, 5. Second game Brooklyn, 7; Pittsburg 1. New York, 8; Chicago, 8. Game called on account of darkness. Roberta is the CnUl Tonlo yoti want because it cures. 250 a bottle. No cure, no par. Pleasant aa a Florida oramre. - Wholesale and retail by Temple-Marstoa Pros; Co J. E. Hood and uenrj uunn. Any sort of printing cheap at Tee Fszx Pbe8S ofUce. D n niirmnniin fll.UK H A IllllblllUllllV 11