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Tm : Duly,- Kee-, Sress J VOL. VIr-NO. 34. . ' KINSTON, N. C, mCJRSDAY, MAY 14, 1903. ' " . . PRICE TWO CENTO. GENERAL NEWS IMS ? J- 'hi' , Matters, of Interest Condensed Into . V ; Brief Paragraphs. , 1. . ALIHLE ABOUT HUMEROUS THIKGS 'The Pith of the World' News That Might Interest Our Readers. , An Item Here and There. About : four thousand persons are , killed each year on London's streets. . Great excitement pervades the cot tori market. May sold at 11:31, July .at 10:91 and August at 10:55. , The governor of Pennsylvania has ' signed a bill making: it 7 unlawful to employ children under 16 years of age in or about the mines, v . ' Mrs. Roland B. Molineaux estab lished a Jegal residence in South Da' kota yesterday and will begin pro -ceeaings lor divorce immediately. The New' York police are making ev 'ery effort to find the man who sent the infernal machine to the Cunard dock on last Friday. It is believed now that . the guilty man bought a suit of clothes in xtaieign recently. . . A report of the Porto Rican judiciary . committee opposes a change in tne pres ent form of government in the' island declaring that it now escapes taxation for national purposes and that the en- . tire revenues are used for the benefit of the Island. Berlin, May 13. At the Vatican It I, is now considered certain that while Archbishop Ireland will not be created a cardinal at the next consistory, he will receive the red hat at a consistory to be held at the end of the present .year wnert a new Kngnsn cardinal will also, pe created,. William H. Jackson, a Maryland . Republican member of congress wilh ask the discontinuance of a post office to which a negro has been recently ap ' pointed. 'Congressman Jackson ' says the post office is a nnecessary. The postmaster is the first colored appoin- i tee in Maryiana-Vvftw.::..?:; i,- New York, May 13, The i backbone - of the subway strike was broken today wnen worK was practically, resumed Although the Italian workers are hold' ins; out for two dollars a day it is be lieved a majority of the strikers will 1 return. There is less violence than la the first few day of the strike. The new arbitration treaty- lust ar- ;( ranged between Mexico, Bolivia, Ar . gentlna, Peru. San Domingo, , Guate mala, Paraguay. Salvador and Uru guay has . been signed by President Diaz and , the diplomatic representa- ' uves m Mexioo ot tne countries men tioned.' under this .treaty all contro' versies between these countries - are to be submitted to a board of arbitration unless the grievances are such as to imperil the, honor or independence of either nation. - Lanorte. Ind. . Ma v. An oner ation for tne removal of an eye Thursday at the Holy Family hospital brought to light a most unusual circumstance, one .wnicn in medical annals is considered .a rarity. After removing the right -eye of Philander Loomis of Westville, which for eleven years had been totally blind, it was found that it had turned . into a stone. The formation of the stone Is accounted for by the fact that the blood in passing through the vi trous humor had deposited lime salts, . which in time had made the stone as large as It now Is. , , ; . ', Richard Henry Stoddard la Dead. ! - New York, May 12. Richard Henry Stoddard, the poet, died today at his residence in this city. Mrs. Stoddard died less than a year ago, and his son, , i Lorimer stoddard, is also dead. Mr. Stoddard was the only one of the fam ily left. - '-f-.'M ::'v For a week past he had been con fined to his bed with rheumatism of the heart and ills incident to old age. Mr. Stoddard was born in Bingham, Mass., on July z, X82o. . Hew Slelsh BUa Art HUt, Toe- making of sleigh bells is quite an art," says an iron founder. "The little Iron ball is too big to be put in through the holes in the bell, and yet It is Inside. How did it get there? The little Iron ball Is called the Jlnglef When you shake the sleigh beU.it Jin gles. In making the bell the Jluglet Is put inside a little ball of mud, just the shape of the Inside of the bell. ; Then mold Is made, just the shape of the outside of the bell. This mud ball with the jinglet Inside is placed in the mold of .the outside, and the metal is poured in, which fills up the space between the ball and the mold. , : i "When the mold Is taken off, you see a sleigh bell, but it will not ring, as it Is full of dirt. The hot metal that the bell Is made of dries the dirt so that it can be shaken out. After the dirt is all shaken out of the boles in the pell the little iron J'let will still be in 'the beli ami vvi.f ring. It took a good, many years to hlnk out bow to make a sleigh bell." " END Or THE i HACKNEY. Hair He. The MlnUter'a Family. - At a conference of ministers of one of the smaller American denominations the question off the Insufficiency of some of the salaries was being argued. One brother who was stationed at a mission post made a strong plea for an, increase in salary. "To properly pro Vide my family-with the necessities,' he said, "is a serious problem. 4,How many! children have y6u?'' asked a sympathetic brother of ; the cloth. have four boys, and each one has a sister," was the prompt reply. Iuiuie diately the sympathetic friend took the floor. "How is it possible that our brother can provide even the barest necessities for his eight children" "I did not say I bad eight children; the boys have the same sister." . A Defease of the Saaalah Wemaa More awful rubbish is written qbout the people, especially the women, of Latin cou ntries tha n of almost any thing else. , .Take them all, the spar kling daughters of Andalusia, the no bly grave women of the Castiles, the enchanting Valeuclanas. ; the ruddy cheeked women of the Asturias and of Oalicln, the robust and wholesome Catalonians, ' the : proud Aragonesas, and they make up & national grouping of women bard to surpass for charm and verve. Mexican Herald. la Weva Oat ta the Sen-lee I soeiety. ( Ti e prancing, high stepping hack neys that draw the shiny carriages' of the rich are often driven the pace that kills, ? In 'Horses Nine"; Sewell Ford tells the story of such a horse and his mate and how they were worn out The author says: Seeing them come down the street, heads tossing, pole Chains , jingling the crest and mono gram of the house of Jerry glistening on quarter cloth and rosette, their pol ished hoofs seeming barely to touch the asphalt, you might have thought their lot one tof be envied. . But Bonfire knew better.. 'H?; He curved his neck and threw bis hoofT high, whether his muscles ached or no; in winter be stamped to keep warm, in summer to dislodge the flies; he did . his work faithfully early or late, in cold and In heat, and all this because he was a son of Sir Bardolph and for the reason that it was his na ture to. Had it been put upon him he would have worked in harness until he dropped, prancing his best' to the last - , ' ' No supreme test, however, was ever brought to the endurance and willing ness of Bonfire. They Just kept him on 1. the : pole; nerves ;. tense, muscles strained, until he began to lose form.; His action no ; longer had that grace and abandon whlels so pleased Mrs. ; Jerry when she first saw him. Long standing in the cold numbs the mus cles. It robs the legs of their spring, Sudden starts, such as are made when you are called from line after an hour's waiting, finish the business. Try as he might Bonfire could not step so high, could not carry ,a perfect crest. , His neck had lost its roundness, in bis rump a crease had appeared. ; : v At last the inevitable happened. Two young hackneys, plump of neck, round SHOT IN HIS ROOU r ' ,. , , .vaw...'.; Percy Jones, is Insurance Agent, Shot ; Last Kit In Wilson. ' FIFTEEN MEM EKTERED HIS. ROOM i And : Notified Shot Him to Death. Had Been to Leave tha City. He Used to Live Here. f At a result of an awful tragedy that occurred in Wilson last night, rercy Jones, an Insurance agent is dead, John Allen, of Wilson, lies in the hos pital, shot in the shoulder, 11 young men of Wilson are behind prison bars Charged with murder, and four other young men of the city are fugitives irom justice at this hour, 2 p. m. t Those in iall as learned by The Free Press by telephone are J. B. Piver, Lawrence Morgan, Bill Ward, Tom Best, Bill Barnes, S. J. Walls, W. P. Croom. John Pittman. W. H. Rich and two others whose names were not learned, all young men about town, and John Alien Is in tne Hospital witn bulletin his shoulder received in the ihooting. . " '. ; . ". The circumstances are as nearly as ould be learned as follows: : I Percy Jones, an industrial insurance agent, who hails from Arkansas,' and 3 'ho claims to be a close relative of x-Senator Jas. K. Jones, " of that state, was notified yesterday by a man Wilson, named O. L. Whitley, that he must leave the city before midnight under a penalty of summary punish ment being dealt out to him, on ac count ot some unwholesome sentiment attached to him concerning gambling. r Whitley was placed under a $200 bond for his threat until the coming Saturday when there was to be peace i Warrant proceedings Tbrought against Aim. Jones failed to leave town as in structed, and last night between IS and Insanity Fatal to Negro Race. NORTH STATE HEWS Atlanta, May 11. Decidedly the most sensational feature of the con- fartnna nf rhnrUlna and nnworttlnna was the statement made by experts to-1 Clipped our tuat iuo uegru racw la iu uautrer of being destroyed by Insanity. The discussion was brought about by a naner read by Dr. Sea rev. suoertnten aentot the Alabama pltalter tbe QDD AID UTERESTISS HiPPEIIIGS. lUSUUB, uu ciiiuieu uiun cajicii-i and Gulled From Ou I:rt . Carolina Eicnanges. -7- .'''" Salary aad .Wacea. ,'! :-v Daughters Yes, pa, there are . two young men who have asked me to mar' ry, and both are nice fellows. Father And are both, in a ,wny to support youT , . Daughter I think so. Phil tells me he has aNttdy salary, and George says he Is receiving good wages. . , y. Father You choose George, and yon will, make no, mistake, I think. At any rate, it's safer to marry a man who has wages than one who has a sal ary. Boston Transcript He law the Flajah.. ' Little Elmer while out walking with his nurse saw a blacksmith shoeing a horse and upon returning home said. Mamma, I saw the man who makes horses today." ' ( ' "Are you sure you CldT' asked mam ma. "Of course 1 am," replied Elmer. "He had one nearly finished when 1 saw him. He was just nailing on its behind feet" Chicago News. - - HIa Trial. 'Ah, Sam, so you've been in trouble, eh?" "Yes. Jim." "Well, cheer np. man. Adversity tries us and shows up our better qualities." Ah, but adversity didn't try me. It was solemn old Judge, and be showed up my worst qualities." '... of quarter, springy of knee and hock. 1 o'clock 15 youmr men went to his room ana Jones was Killed, and in tne shooting, John Allen, one of the par ty, was shot' in the shoulder. 1 All of those captured by the officers were placed in iall pending trial which will be held this afternoon. - Percy Jones was in Kinston last fall working Insurance and is remembered by quite a number of people as being . straight-forward v young man. He were brought to the stable. Bonnre and his mate were led out of their old stalls to return no more. They bad been Vorn out in the service and cast aside like a pair of old gloves. S POSTAL ODDITIES. ' With one exception there has been a deficit In postal revenues every year since 1835. f Thousands of letters are mailed ev-; ery day without the vestige of an ad-1 dress to indicate for whom they are in- the case against Whitley to come off tended. N . I Saturday and was in communication MaiKmatter of any Mn4-iridiVdr?w: ence showed that Insanity was increas ing among the negroes at an alarming rat. "Before the war the negroes were of the most splendid physique and pos sessed of the finest health of any race in the world. This was due to the fact that the negroes were forced by their masters and their mistresses to be cleanly and to live a sanitary life. "But conditions have changed. With freedom thrust upon them the negroes were left to hustle for themselves. They had no money and were forced to go scantily clad and live upon food cast aside by the white people. With out any one to direct them they became filthy, and the conditions under which they have lived have been unsanitary. As an evidence of how they live I call your attention to the fact that only re cently a house was raided by the po lice in which 17 negroes, men, women and children, were found . It ving to gether within one small room, without a single bedstead and only a handful of dirty, unsanitary bed clothing to sleep upon, s No wonder their health has been impaired and no wonder there has been lineal deterioration. "Insanity has been the result, and today this affection among the negro race is increasing witn appalling rap idity ' What are we going to do about it? Send them to hospitals after they ha ve gone insane and let them dieV If there is any such thing as genuine philanthrophy, if there is .truly a dis interested and unselfish desire on the part of the delegates to this conference oLEeopi A'J Y5r tne country, let us take steps to change the conditions under which the negroes are living and thus avert the increase of insan ity, which is - making such inroads upon the negro race. V ; Other southern - physicians agreed with Dr. Searcy. , , Gossip Gathered from Manteo of Importance Heel Readers. Murphy T to Our Tar Russia Was Dumfounded,. New York, May I2.r-In the light of information from several sources Rus sia's abandonment of her aggressive attitude in regard to Manchuria, which stopped at the Nunn and Cherry hotel ' was announced yesterday, ' was Inevl visited the lodge while here. , - Mr. Emmet Wooteni of Wooten & Wooten, was retained as counsel , in in a vague and indefinite way; such as to "the most prominent physician," etc.. Is not deliverable. Benjamin Franklin, first postmaster general, boasted that under his admin 1st ration ail the cities of the country had been provided, with a weekly mall, One may mall a letter destined for foreign parts without prepayment of postage. It will go forward to destine tion, and the recipient will be required to pay double rates for the privilege of reading it If he values it sufficiently. . At the Chicago post sofflce a record is kept of the different ways of spelling the name of that city on mall address es., At last accounts 280 varieties had been tabulated. , Among the less Intri cate of these are Zizazo, Jagjago, Hipa ho, Jajijo and Cbachicho. Was Maa Made Fer Mlereheaf : Some contend , that the earth, w a made for ants rather than man, since the former are so much more nuiner oua. others still, reading about bow many million . bacteria Inhabit - every cubic inch of air and water, are in clined to assert that the world aud man, too waa made for tbem. Each variety of j living creature probably thinks everything made for it-Balti more Sun. -t Paint Your Bujory for 7 5o - to $100 with Devoe's Gloss Carriage Paint. It weighs 3 to Sozs. more to - the pint than others, wears longer, and gives a gloss equal to new work. Sold by B. W. Canady A Son. : SMntlM " xThe Kind Yob Haw tn BocgW :; Slgostsis f OAOTOIl X A. . Boai-i th ' ijfi 1hl KM Yon Have lwars Botjllt 'xxxxxxxxxxxxx Did you say DRUGS ? Thai HOOD'S! Soaiethlnsr la the FUlinsr. ' "Do you know you can tell a man's disposition by his teeth 7" asked the girl who believes In signs, bumps and paim reading. ; ;,. - "How interesting!" said her compan ion; who did not believe in anything. "Then Jack must have a golden dispo sition." .' Acala Oar tfcaeer Laas-masre. .: "Queer language, isn't itT "Why sor ' , . "Because of sickness I bad to send my shorthand writer home yesterday." "Well?" "That left me shorthanded." Cleve land Plain Dealer. M M H M M te M M M M H - M See Our Nice Line CANDY M M M H H The world has a million roosts for a man, but only one nest O. W. Holmes. . Twe of a Klad. - "I took great pains with that pud ding we had for dinner." remarlted tne young wife. - . "And so did I. my dear." rejoined the husband as be poured out a double dose of cholera mixtureChicago News.-' 4 "' 4 ' ,t,-v ''','; 4"4-4i4':' vh The Nojvel Reader, Coddle Whenever I see you, yon are reading a novel. You don't mean ;t say you remember all of them? Short Dear me. no! It's because I don't remember them I like to read them. Boston Transcript ; M H M M M ... M M Too Great a ItUk. ' In almost every neighborhood some one has died from an attack of colic or cholera morbus, often before medi cine could be procured or a physician summoned. A reliable remedv for these diseases should be kept at Land. The risk is too exeat for anyone to take. Chamberlain's Colie, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy has undoubted ly saved the lives of more people and relieved mure pain and suffering than any other medicine in use. It can al- ways he d'pnded upon. For sale by J. L. IIoou, ih'ii'''it. We take pleasure in testifying to the merits of Pepsi-Cola; it is all that is claimed for it. Delicious, refreshing, satisfying and cooling. Does not effect the nerves. Contains pepsin and will relieve Indigestion and nervousness. Try it. concerninff . the ease. J ones also had - a case against the city of Wilson and the bondsmen of the offi cers who arrested him- some time ago on a charge of larceny and which he showed to be a mistake and was not tried for. For this he was to sue the city for, damages and had retained Wooten Wooten, of this city, to assist in prosecuting the case. Mr. S. J. Walls, one of the men con cerned in the shooting was a former resident of, this city and is well known nere, Having been proprietor or a tall' oring estaoasnment.; Manchuria Free to all Comers. Paris, Ma v 12. The Russian charge a air aires, m. nancon, nas given reas surances regardingManchuria. He nas issued an omciai notice that all Man churia is open to foreign travel and adds tnat passports are no longer nec essary. ; 1 :: n:v . There were 600 Russian soldiers at New Chwang, who were removed about the date fixed for the evacuation, and the ' same number returned to New Uhwansr. It annears that the Ruasian force which returned to the Liao forts merely used the forts as temporary resizing piaces, wnue journeying soutn ward to their station on the Deninsular. The United States consul at New Chwang has arrived here to confer with Minister Conger. - ' Denies the Charge, ' Buffalo, May 13. National Commit teeman JNorman . Mack - Issued statement today denying that he fa vored any particular candidate for president, either ex-president Cleve land or anyone else. All he said in St. Louis was, that Cleveland was accorded a cordial and spontaneous reception there, and that at the proper time he (Mack) would favor the candi dacy of a New York Democrat for the presidency. Territory added to Great Britain. London, May 12, Colonial Secre tary Chamberlain announced in . the house of commons to-day that as a result of the British military opera tions in we soitoto nano districts. ending with the capture of the emir of Ksno, 100,000 square miles of territory has been added to Northern Nigeria and would be administered by the cov- ernmeni oi inai territory. ; 4 1 Be s v' ) ' f J AT A L L G O DA' FOUNTAINS The Most Satisfying, Cooling, IJefreshing, Invigorating and Delicio-113. : : ; ; i.'OT INCITE THE NERVES ? . - ill .ilTeiiSl4 iili Dill HaTSlTia table, says the sun's ijondon corre spondent It had never been the inten tion of the Russian government to press to the point of war its pretension In Manchuria outlined in the so-called terms of evacuation submitted to China. It was hoped that opposition to these demands would be confined to formal protests from Great Britain and Japan, and that bluff would do the rest. Serious Interference by the United State! was utterly unexpected, while the great national ; indignation which the trick aroused in America amazed, well nigh dumfounded, the Russian officials. It required two or three days for St. Petersburg to realize the full significance of American public opin- railroad about ion. ine moment it was understood that a fatal mistake had been made the Russian policy ,was reversed.-. Rev. B. B. Culbreth, one of the old est members of the North Carolina. Methodist conference, died at Can Tuesday and was burled at Mt Olive Wednesday. Guilford county Tuesday voted by av handsome majority to issue 1300,000 of bonds to macadamize the publlo roads. The bonds will run for thirty years and bear 4 per cent interest , Local freight No. 64 on the Southern struck a horse and buggj near Cow pens Tuesday morning, killing the horse and demolishing the vehicle. In the buggy was a lady who was tossed into the air, but miraculously escaped without a scratch. . - , , - Travel over Neuse river bridge at Newborn was stopped Tuesday by the barge C. C. Dale, of Philadelphia, which was towed by the tug Helen, of Philadelphia. The barge ; became un ruly, running into the draw and wreck ing it Much of the iron work went to the bottom of the river. The corner stone of the splendid new main building of the North Carolina, Methodist orphanage just west of the city of Raleigh, was laid with Masonio ceremony Tuesday afternoon under the most auspicious circumstances, and it is expected that the building will o ready for occupancy by the early fall. Ralelffh Post: Mr. Robert C. Strono- returned yesterday from Fayetteville where he went as attorney for the Western Union Telegraph Company. Miles Hall instituted suit against the company because he did not receive av telegram relieving his anxiety about a sick relative. The casewaa continued. At the same term a suit against the Seaboard Air Line for 940,000 dama ges for failing to furnish a shipper cars was compromised by : paying the piaintiQ-7du. , A Washington dispatch says: '"The immigration officials of the treasury have decided to have the 390 immi grants taken from the barkentine Verav (Jrua III. which went ashore off Oera- coke Inlet. N. C, inspected at New bern, N. C. The revenue cutter Bout well with the immigrants aboard haa arrived at Newborn. An inspector and an interpreter from- Baltimore have been dispatched to make the inspection. The agents of the Vera Cruz at New Bedford, Mass., to which port the barkentine was bound, have been noti fied to have a representative at New bern.'.' , Scotland Neck Commonwelth: The body of a white boy about 15 or 1& yeara ui o was .luauuverou tin uie three ' miles north of Jacksonville Inundated. Jacksonville, Fla., May 13. The rain, which fell incessantly all day yes terday and all last night assumed this morning about daybreak almost the proportions of a cloudburst, and when the citizens prepared to leave for their places of business, many of them found their homes completely surrounded by water. Many were driven from their resi dences or forced to go to upper stories by the water that in some cases reached the level of the first story window. In all as much as one square mile of the Down was under water. Fully half a mile of Bay street, the principal thoroughfare of the city, was under water and much damage was done to stocks of goods. On this street a mule hitched to a wagon got beyond its depth and was drowned and tha driver attempting to cut it from the vehicle, nearly lost his life. Skiffs and later in the day a naptha launch was plying on Bay street, removing people from their submerged homes. Store to Elevate Negro. Little RockV Ark.. Mar 13. Oov. Davis received a letter yesterday from Chicago, signed by Julius T. Hirsch, which said: It la tha Intanttnn with tha M nt Andrew Carnea-le and under the aus- plcles of Booker T. Washington, to establish in Louisville, Ky., or New Orleans, La., a large department dry goods store, exclusively with colored help, in order to elevate the colored race and educate tnem in tne commer cial pursuits of life. Will your excel lency be good enough to give me your view upon tnls unique enterpriser" Tne governor, m reply, said tnat be considered the social elevation of the colored race all nonsense. He believes the negro would do mnch better if let alone and that his natural place is in the field. :.:..,...-:.::- GREATLY ALARM ED Br a Peraiatent Conch, but Permanently Cured by Chamberlain' Conch Remedy. Mr. H. P. Burbage, a student at law in Greenville, S. C, had been troubled for four or five years withacontinuous cough which he says, "greatly alarm ed me, causing me to fear that I was in he first stage of consumption." Mr. Burba?", having seen Chamberlain's Couph Remedy advertised, concluded to try it Now read what he says of 'I soon felt a remarkable change and after using two bottles of the twenty-five cents size, was permanently cured.-' Sold by J. E. Hood, druggist Enfield on last Sunday moraine. The body was horribly mangled, and more than one train may have passed over it a Captain Wiley, the section mas ter, took up the remains of the body ' in shovels, as it was scattered forsome distance along the track, and brought it to Enfield where a coroner's inauest was held. The body was identified as thatof Clyde Lucas, of Dunn, N. C The engineer who first identified him, saw the boy In Richmond before bia train left there, and he told the engi neer that he intended to beat his way south. It was a southbound freight train, No. 209, and it is supposed he fell from the train in the night t Statesville Landmark:. Some days ago a girl who says she is under four teen years of age, daughter of a man. named Johnson, who lives in Eagle Mills township, ran away from home and went to the home of her relatives near Olin. Her father went there in pursuit of her, carrying his gun and. threatening to kill the arirl. it is said. News of the matter came to the ears of Capt. J. A. Stikeleather, who is a jus tice of the peace, and he questioned the child with the result that he issued a warrant for her father, charging in cest and rape. Before the warrant was issued, however, the brute took alarm and fled, and it is reported that he has gone to Wilkes county, from whence he moved to Iredell about three years -ago. A warrant has been sent to Wilkes county for him. ' ; - Wilmington Messenger; Messrs. Daniel Gurganus and W. R. Tettertoni of Bath, were in the city yesterday. ' Both of these gentlemen were candi dates for mayor of Bath, and when the votes were counted out last Tuesday, each had received 26 votes for this high office. After the result had been ascertained Mr. Gurganus appeared before the poll holders and claimed that he had been elected, as the bal lots for Tetterton were illegal, not be- -ing the size according to law. This constituted Gurganus contention. Both of the gentlemen were here yesterday to consult an attorney. Several prop ositions were passed between them. Yesterday afternoon Tetterton made a proposition that they go before the board at Bath, state the facts and let the board decide the contention, Gur ganus accepted provided he could state he was the legally elected candi date, but he would resign for the sake of harmony and then the commission ers could elect whom they chose, pro vided Tetterton agreed. What will be the outcome of this fight is not known. It Is most interesting. When you want a pleasant phvsio try Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets. They are ensy to take snd pleasant in effect For sale at J. 11 Hood's drug store.
The Kinston Free Press (Kinston, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 14, 1903, edition 1
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