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n n 11 ii li i iUii ii', ;il;'.JiiL- V PUBLISHED. EiZERY HFTERNOON . EXCEPT SUNDKV VOL. VI.-N(X 72, EINSTON, N. 0, SATUEDAY. JUNE 27. 1903. PRICE TWO CENTS, GENERAL NEWS ITELIS i' - ; r , Matters of. Interest Condensed Into :. Brief" Paragrapns." A LITTLE ABOUT KUIEROUS .THUGS The Pith of the World's News That ' MljrM Interest Our Reader. An Item Here end There. '' July cotton closed yesterday at 13:10, August at xz:9, uecemoer at w:ua, and January at 9$?. ' Havana, June 26. The signing of the anal treaties between Cuba and the United States has been posponed until next week because or toe delay ana in?.- from the Questions raised . at Washington .. , " Washington, June 26. Published re ports that President Koosevet . was taking part In the framing of the tariff , plank, to be adopted by the itepubu- cans of Iowa at their coming conven- tion are denied here and it can be stated authoritatively that the presi dent has made no suggestions with re ference to tne JLOwa tariff platform. Washington, June 26. Sir Thomas Llpton, the persevering contestant for America's cup, was the guest of honor at tne white bouse today. The affair was ' strictly informal, the visiting yachtman arriving unostentatiously at the executive mansion in a carriage shortly before the luncheon hour, ao companied only by his chief designer, wiuiam nre. . At yesterday's cabinet meeting Post' ster-Lreneraiayne-occupied consid erable time in discussing future plant) . i . ... - a .. i .m a.t . . - mi. . ' rjiauve vo tne investigation. j.ne re ports the -postmaster general con tamplates - retiring from the cabinet are untrue. He has plotted 'out his future work, In connection with the investigation of bis department and is anxious to nnisn it.. , , v. Richmond. Va., , June ' 26. Lester Wilcox, a sixteen-year-old boy was shot, by a soldier, In Fulton, the lower end oi the city . about nine o'clock to ' night for crying "scab" at a car. and refusing to desist when ordered to do so. . He ia wounded in the hand and hip. The hand is badly mangled. The boy was brought lip town on a street - car and taken to the city hospital. Charleston,' S. C June 26. The steamship Rancagua. Captain Soren- sea a, from Hamburg, 4,500 tons kainit, arrived here today. The vessel is the l"" ship that ever entered- a south ' Atlantic port, having a capacity of 9,000 tons. She came in drawing '27 feet of water and had four feet under keel at full tide. The ship will dis charge her cargo and proceed to Nor folk for coal when she will take on an other cargo and return to Charleston. Three young ladles, all students of Converse College at Spartanburg, have entered suit against the southern rail . way claiming 91,999 damages because they were unable to board the vesti bule at Spartanburg, several weeks ' ago. The railroad will contend that the plaintiffs in these suits were-oollege "girls; that they were busy kissing and hugging their schoolmates: and that i they acted as if they had all day to . board the train, when, in reality, they had only a few minutes. "I have been troubled for some time with Indigestion and sour stomach," says Mrs. Sarah W. Curtis, of Lee, Mass., "and have been taking Cham berlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets, which have helped me very much so that now I can eat many things that before I could not." If you have any trouble with your stomach why not take these Tablets and get well? For sale at J. "E. Hood's drug store. , V X IX X4XX XXX'X XX XX M M M M Book M ? M H N H M M ii and Stationary jj Store . M In connection with the n . . . f i . . mi ' H lvrug oiore we win run a First Clas Bool Storo at our Gorctan Street Let us know what jour this line. wants are m We can serve M M vou to the best adva OUK FOUNTAIN IS KEPT ICE COLD lee Cr T Lire:. II 'W Eatim1! Beat Baeraawt, " '. - ; The best thing that Emerson has left li us Is his spirit, fine and high, stern and sweet- uo took ate ut . a royai way, and bore hlmaelX toward the ' eternal tiivctfkH'M"' with suMna v wyiii cr anil ! ' uauuu uop. i.CTM7, wuica are wh!ch glmpv that One man bis most characteristic work, have their took from another 100,000 bale of cot chler Value not as Jwelationa pf -the ; ton at 13 cents a pound, sixty-five dol moral order, of life, not as discoveries; lara a bale or a total money transacj of the final meaning of things, but a tion of 18,500,000. , i- v , i disclosures of his own spirit ' .There M j ; This Is.helieved to be by far th ltf these essays ad Immense mass' of lrjreUndIIdul transaction in tM ,u i cotton trade of this country. Not only truth, ottered in picturesque and mem- m for fa fl im9 h,; orable words. Ihere is In em also torT of the cotton production , ona an immense mass that Is not true. : The j man noir virtually controls the a sltuat Emersonian hit and . miss ' are upon tion. ' That is, out of a total supply every page, and side by side with a ! at port and interior towns of 300,001 coiden and perfect sentence one finds sonorous eccentricity, .The origin vt this strange-compound of oracle and imposition in Emerson Ilea In the con fessional character of his writing. . Ho speaks from wlthln and his generalisa tions hit or miss according as his per' sonal experience 'embodies a law of humanity or a mere idiosyncrasy. That Emerson speaks so often and so royally for man Is his great dlatiuctlqn. That he' speaks so frequently for the idiosyn. cratlc, the isolated and vain is his chief (autc e uave a nj(ui to uotu aim i bis best, and through the richness and majesty of Ihe confession . we are brought face to face. with the confessor. Bev George Ai AtlanUc ' -.' Gordon, P. D.lQ " . Cera Brecdtaar Field.. . ; " In breeding corn a small field usually an acre in size is used. The land is pre pared and the seed bed. treated as for the ordinary field. ' They -are usually about 120 hills long and thirty rows wide. Each row Is planted from a sep arate . ear; The barren stalks, poor stalits and all undesirable stalks, such as su. kejrs, are removed befor4the tas sel appears.. ne neia is protected or Isolated, so that no mixture tan take place frontotber varieties or from any source. ' In the fall these' rows' are husked separately, and the seed for the next, year's crop Ms selected from the rows giving the highest' yields per acre; of best composition, with the least bar ren stalks and of the best type. In this way the yield per acre of the variety Is Increased, the .quality Improved and the type preserved and developed." By this plan. we are able to give personal at tention and direct selection to the In dividual stalk and ear, which would be Impossible In a large field. Cosmopoli tan. "V ., , f, l," , V , " T T. r-' A niKk Priced Frieae. ' , Lord Alvanley, a noted wit and high liver in England a hundred years ago, Insisted on having dn apple tart on his dinner table every day throughout the year. : On one occasion he paid a ca terer $1,000 for a luncheon put up In a basket that sufficed a small boating party going up the Thames. Being one of a, dozen men dining together at London club where each was re quired to produce his own dish, Alvan- ley's, as the most expensive, won him the advantage of being entertained free of cost. This benefit was gained at an expense of $540, that being the price of a simple fricassee composed entirely of the "nolx," or small pieces at each side of the back, taken from thirteen kinds of birds, among: them being 100 snipe, 40 woodcocks and 20 pheasants in all about 300 birds. '- A Cool Soldier. Remarkable for his self possession even In the most trying moments of battle was the famous Marshal MacMa hou. One day he was dictating a letter to his secretary In the midst of an ac tion when a shell from the enemy's camp fell directly upon his tent and exploded within a few feet. Pale with fright, the secretary sprang up, leaving his letter. . ' "What's the matter?" asked the mar shal. The shell," gaspeJ tie frightened subordinate. "And what has tie shell to do tlie letter you are writing! Go on wiii your work, sir." HIa Apology. ' Mrs. Minks I don't want to make a scene, but that man over there Is star lnsr at me very offensively. Mr. M!riks-IIe is. eh? I'll speak to him. Mrs. M!nks (a few momenta later) DM he ni oV.r'zo? Mr. M::e; Y-a-s: be sail be was lor!;!;;.; f jr Lis mother and thought at f"ct hn ' co to t'.e four'aia i-t'. Ii and s how re-r-i: - r Rid delicious it j i : i. i .1 it you Lave Cio g a I a -. 3 for '!.: 5 ci One Man Controls Market. i i ni iur&, uuq ji. iu ineir tvwk i of the cotton market C. W. Lee ii Co says) These are history making day notice tor about lou.uuu bales oi cot- tsn In irnA L Klrwlr ' vam (ua over aw.wu oaies is ownea oj w. r Brown. Of New Orleans and those In-. terested with him in what is now be Ueved to be an attempt to corner the cotton market and diotate prices dur-r ing the remainder of the season. f i There have been times when indivi4 duals bava contributed largely to tM marking up or marking down of prices in the other parts of the country, but; oever has there been anything similar to that at present., j P M ' i' ' )i l'i il I''-.- j i.'V.'.'m" Hop-Ski p-and-J urn p With Llghtp Ing.' ; Chrlott Otwerrer. j r fc?re6 with Mr.' Jim Bell andColJ ; Neely in aaylng that litrhtnimr ia a J most curious thing," said Colonel W, , H. Torrence vesterdav. "Whv. th other day, when my son Charles, wa carrying papers The Chronlcle-dU' ring the heavy storm, he got right In the middle of the remarkablest lot of lightning that anybody ever saw. v The streaks of lightning came so close to the ground that Charlie lust had ' to hop 'em one after the other, and when he got home he was so tired he could hardly stand up." -. ' vi' ! t ttracleaa 4a.' 1 f 1 '" The calceolaria aeed is . so minute that the actual cost of producing'. the finest strain exceeds 'ten times the weight of the' seed In pure gold! .The outlay . In . growing , double begonia seed la so great that a liberal allow ance for a five shilling packet Is meas ured In a tiny spoon with an outside diameter of three-sixteenths of an Inch. ' And yet In that tiny spoonful there would be enough seed to pro duce more than a hundred stately be gonia - plants! Naturally such very minute and precious seed baa to be handled with ettreme care, and as a sudden draft from an open door won! 1 scatter perhaps 100s worth the coun ters where utlt--' seed- aEftACketed are closed to -traffic and so arranged that not a puff of wind can ever enter. London Chronicle. - ' ' - Timber Books. There Is at Cassel a library probably unique in the world. ' It is bound in timber, printed on timber' pages po. slbly from wood blocks and deals ex clusively with timber, The library in question Is the Holzblbllstek, which was compiled at the end of the last cen tury by Karl Schleidbach and la com posed of about 500 volumes made from trees in the park at , Wilhelmshohe. Every volume bears On a tab-not In timber, but queerly enough, in moroc cothe name of the tree from which it waa obtained. There are plates of the tree in all stages of Its growth, and the letterpress Is a treatise on the forest ing and natural history of the tree. The Panama, silk Tra. One of the greatest curiosities of the Panama isthmus is the vegetable silk tree. It is a plant that grows from fifteen to twenty feet high, and in ap pearance does not differ greatly from other trees, but the Inner bark Is a per feet silky fiber, long, smooth and strong. The natives separate It by some method best known to them selves, the process somewhat resem bling that of beating flax. When once" it ia separated and spun Into threads, it can be woven into a fabric so closely resembling ajlk that It is difficult for any one not familiar with It to dis tinguish, between the two,' -'',: ,.'. Types of. Mind, There is a feminine and masculine type of mind. The former depends chiefly on memory and H reproductive. The Iattor relies -on ri-iisouinsr and. is creative. Th mind of the man of sci ence is niiisculine, that of the clergy man feminine. Not every woman pos sesses a f 'tr.inlne ti'nd, though many men have I.; tie el . There Is a 1. I Inhabitants and i. Bombay's p.;-u;ai; ii: Day with (ib'l ! i-r with 3. n N the most crowd?d of i"v i t! ir-r-'.l. Who i lie? - - VTh" is it tr.at n;a-s t.e Fewer-gallons, wears Iciuvr p iict?" . ' IMS. i . Race Trouble at Wilmington;' ' ' Wilmlnjrton, Del, June 28. The city Is quiet this morning, but there's the air - of suppressed excitement, and everybody fears more trouble with the Begroef" "t.-'j- .v.j,:, ; .-..., ?.. Governor Bunn has returned to his home in" Wyoming but left affairs in such shape the militia can be called out should it become necessary.' , William Creamer, the negro ahot In the riot in the negro district known as "The Coast" late last night, , died to Delaware Hospital, this morning. Sev eral negroes were shot. In different parts of the city during . the disturb ance last night. Creamer's death, so far, ia the only fatality. ; Two police men were shot bat not seriously hurt, r The fiercest fight oocured about mid night on North street between Walnut and King. A gang of armed negroes, a hundred or more, had assembled there and acted In an aggressive man ner. A party of white men came along immediately ana there was a clash. TM negroes opened tire, but bitf, no body. Sergeant McDermott and squad of policemen were quickly on the scene. The sergeant started to ar rest a negro, who fired at hint, the bul let grazing the sergant's cheek. . Sev eral other shots were fired at the offi cers, who soon clubbed the negroes In to submission. - ' 1 Creamer was shot about twelve- thirty In a row near the Pennsylvania railroad station. It Is thought a negro area the ratal shot. ' A,Fourth of July Message. ' Washington, June 24. On the fourth of July the president win send from his home at Oyster .) Bay the message, formally opening the Facile cable to the Philippines. The message will be a . greeting aocT- congratulations to Governor Taft at Manila, who in re turn will send a message back to the president. . A message can now be sent around the world in the following way. : From New York to San Francisco, to Hono lulu, to Midway island , to Guam, to Manila, to Hong Kong, to Singapore, to Madras, to Bombay, to Aden, to Suez, to Alexandria, to Malta, to Gibraltar; to Lisbon, to .Azores, to New York. . - . 'Vice President Baker of the Postal Telegraph ' company entertains the most eansmine expectations that his company will girdle the earth within minute both ways. - . : ; i j t Cotton Too High.. Lowell, Mass., Juhe 20. Mills con suming cotton in the New England States are closlnsr on account of the high prices, resulting from the pro longed speculation ana the practical corner which now exists in the floating supply, - ome oi tne leading mills, however, bate , a- limited -supply ; on nana wnicn was oougni oerore me an- normal advance to, 13 and 14 cents took place la the near by options and these plants were enabled to Operate as usual. ; in. tne, r au ; iviver aisirici three corporations have shut down, while next week seven additional con cerns will close for one week. ' In Law. rence many looms In the ' Pemberton mills have been closed on . account of the scarcity of cotton, - Tillman and Attorney.' . New York, June 25.-rTbis evening's Sun says editorially: "It appears that the lawyers whoap peared for former Lieutenant Govern or Tillman, the murderer of Editor Gonzales, carried a revolver In each hip pocket. This person whose name is Buchanan is a brother-in-law of the accused. He attacked the newspapers in a way that would have delighted Gov ernor Penny packer tf Pennsylvania Apparently the defencexwaots to - have the trial held In some place where the standard of education is low. .'It's a ftity that the case has not been "decid ong ago. . , Its not only in negro cases that justice should be swlft.'v, : ; President DetermJned,';':v'.:'j-'i - . Washington, J une 25. The an nouncement ot the determination of the president , to present the Jewish petition to Russia is regarded as a fore runner of serions disagreement with Russia, : J-'r rr; '-:. ! This ffovernment has been unofficial ly advised that Russia will not review the petition and that It would result in breaking off diplomatic relations if this government should become insis tent. . r " ' ' ' The Russian minister, Count Caa sinl, has tried desperately to prevent Roosevelt from taking action on the petition, but the president believes it his duty to forward it. Opposition Disappearing., , Washington, June i". Cablegrams received here today say opposition by Colombia congress to canal treaty i9 disappearing and predict ratifica tion within a week or ten days. Secre tary Shaw has deferred his trip abroad to pay out the $.1.0,000,000 for the canal. - - ... Cotton Gins in Porto Rico. San Juan, June 2-5. Five cotton ns have arrived here from the Uni:d .: and will 1 i"ameJiately Install Ti py are t!.a first gins to reach '(rto o ia f rty years. Ihe CO"-"n i r f t'.e i; Iar. I nowcover 11,- i p. d v.. ear i li b'.-inglncrea. v. '. t and I r 'J 1 as t'.e e .a i .1 . ! t!) t...'. ii f T s: T I v t 'at i. i i .it xt ' v . ' Some More Tmsl Topics. ;Ma. EDiTORI.am sorry to see from our esteemed 'citizen-jurist. Judge Allen, reports that crime la on. the In crease, I am afraid the true causa Is too; lax administration of the fourth commandment. A child - who loves and obeys his parents will make a good man and citizen. "Spare the rod and spoil the child," Js an old but true saying. ''r ';, ', 'i '''', Parents, ministers and teachers make this your solemn and greatest duty to Instill' the golden, principles of the fourth commandment into the heart and brains of the rising , generation and I will guarantee less crime and mora happiness. Let us all Hye up to the great four cardinal virtues of the world,"Vla: - Peace, charity, justice and mercy, and all will be well' here and hereafter. -i v,' ' f Let your .children learn a profession where brain and hands have full swing. The professions of law and medicine are overcrowded, ? at least here in Klnston. ;. w-; .'''.$ . M ,v.'r. 'x-'-, n- When the writer first came to Kins ton in 1850, then were truly good men uvmg here, such as the f arrotta washingtona, . Dibbles and many others. All : have . Joined the - silent majority.' - , . Our venerable and honored -citizen. John F. Wooten Is the only one of the old guard left from - ye olden times Mr. Wooten do you remember Col Blakeley, then the postmaster? What a strong whig he was! and I believe a good man he was too. The postofflce was then in my brother's store and I learned to know more people then than I would now In a long time. These were tlmea too when Mark Twain would have called it "roughing ii," ana so it was. - - - Whiskey retailed at 20 cents. . Ice often , not to be had for love ' por money. - The reader can guess the con sequences. - Change, change la the eternal command of the Almighty Crea tor, mveu this little globe of ours on which we poor atoms are making such a russ win change to make it a mighty cold day when you are left out in the cold. But we .all have plenty. Why noma me mortal spirit oe prouai There's but a step from gayety to the grave, till our tempest tossed bodies get a rest ' when life's fitful fever Is over. Look up any clear night, and behold how the heaven proclaim his glory. - , , More anon. ?' 1 ' ' Yours, . m g: exnstkiw. Serious Shooting Affair. Mr. C A. SDrulll. &crnnt of the At- lantic Coast Line at Dudley, was shot yesterday m the abdomea-'whue la the office of the railroad freight depot,: Mr. J. Kornegay, an Innocent specta tor, received a pistol ball in his right arm maxing an ugiy out not serious nesn.wouna, 4-c i. :;&':'': 'r'y'if' The man who did the shootlnir Is Mr. j . m. xj. j) leids, a son ot Mr. w. is. Fields,: All the parties live In Dudley. .thecal physicians attended to Mr. Kor negay 's wounds, but Mr. Bpruiu was put on the north-bound passencer train. which came along about an hour after ward and sent to the railroad hospital at Kocicy Mount. ' -The shooting grew out of a difficulty between SpruiU and Fields, occurring in tne omce. ' : - Mr. BDrulU savs: "l had imsuln tin my mind the first time I saw him I would take up the matter with him and settle it with him. While the local freight was stanoing at the depot this morning at 11 O'clock Fields walked into my office and I approached him on the subject, intending to give him a good thrashing If he did not make amends. When I got within 3 feet of him, and before I had time or oppor tunity to strike him, he pulled Out hit pistol and began shooting. The first shot struck me right here, (Indicating the spot in his left side), and . he was so close to me the powder burned my arm. i caught hold of his left arm and he fired again, the second shot striking Mr. Kornegav on his arm and makimr an us:Iy wound.- I then turned loose and ran. He fired another shot which went wild as-1 waa going out of the door Into the wareroom, He.foUowed me and fired still another shot. : Cap tain Jones, of the local freight, had reached Fields by this time and knocked his arm up and the shot went up in the top or the building. Fields left the station and: I went back and tele graphed the company to send a man in my place. I learned just as I cot on the train that policeman Hatch had ar rested Fields." ' I, Profit of The Reunion. - New Orleans, June 26. The Confed erate Home in New Orleans (Camp Kifholal ) S12..'i.t rlnhflF- Wn nf the Confederate reunion held" here last month. This is the balance that the committee found on hand after set tling up all accounts. Someof the com mittee wanted to save the moneyNfor the next reunion, but It was decided that under the agreement It had to be given to the Confederate, veterans. Great Strike. ; . t New York, June 23. Every work man BKiued or unskilled, employed on buildincrs in course of construction or und'riro;r repairs in this city went on striae tday. The tie up it com- t- 1 and it is now a fiht to a finish. (" :i are united and their seven s t f 1 l.eness has not served to iksi. -Ir courage. One hundred .1 -' .y five tvousaad work-LaLen :t el the day. C b'i, I rai-. , snil Furni Qui. kly rivaled. CI. :;::.' -rlala's Paia T' Is aa an t' : Ic 1;..:;, 11. l b;;II-l to e ' t r . s ' i ' -. ( . s . r t - 1 I v t i i : 1 rr:1. '-. - i " - -' . . ; ! ' HORTHI STATE UEUSi Clipped ud ; Called From Car J XX :1s . Carollax ; Exciirsr C ,T ' ODlV-iKD IITERESTKC HIPPESIICX ; Gossip . Gathered from . Murphy. Tto . Mantao of Importance) 10 "Our Tar : Hel Readera. 'th f-fi. i Mi ' " ? Capt. C. N. Allen, of the board ot agriculture, was offered 13 cents av. fl pound for his 13 remaining bales of:, ootton, the highest figure in 20 years. ' . Jasper Cox, of near Asheboro, eesa- mltted suicide at bis home Thnrsdsm.. .. The cause of the deed la unknown,: L'y was prominently connected and thai ' county loses a good citizen. - -1 I The Dumber of rural free dellvenw mall routes In this State la now 3V this being an increase of 60 since th. first of the year. There It no increase; this month, v ' ; The Rhododendron Ino, formerly . the Brady House at Blowing Rock; with its entire contents, Including soma boarders' clothing, was destroyed by 1 fire Thursday night The fire 'was caused by the explosion of a Jamp. .The pay roll of the Southern . RatK ' road at Spencer amounts to upwards of 175,000 per month, and is at pre seat ' some .larger than formerly, as the wages of all mechanics was increased - . during the last month to the extent ml, . about thirty cents per day. , , J. J. Swain, a young white man ia Durham, attempted to end his life with i a small pocket knife while in a fit of . delirium tremens. He Imagined eae , mtes were pursuing him and tried to elude them by killing himself. He la, of a good family from Henderson. ; A great deal of work Is in progress - at the - Agricultural and Mechanical College, in order to get everything Ua readiness for the summer school for teachers, which begins next week. A. large force Is employed, going air over the buildings. The auditorium- ' will seat 1.500. and oner chair hav beeh placed in it. At least 300 teacher. - are expected. - ' Phlladelohla and New York canlta.- lists who are Interested in newspaper properties in those cities have mader overtures to parties residing in Wash ington N. C. and the village of Grimea land for the purchase o( a largo area, of property. It is learned that it a ' the ; lntpnnon or tbe rrtrt1-'' -t to ertv.e a la.id vapbc ii u l. - -facture the newspaper fibre par-w. U is further stated that' about i-0.C J will be Invested in the proposed pi act, , Isaac Chauncey, a young- white tnan,. working as sawyer at the Freeman, & Hodges mill In Washington, was al most intantly killed Thursday. Chaos . cer in some manner got caught In tow-belting- in the machinery room andr, -was hurled through the air. One ley was entirely torn off and the body lacerated in every portion. The mau., . was hurled through the air so quickly that death waa almost instantaneous. ' He uttered no word. Those around, him hardly heard a groan, they say, ' so quickly did It all happen. It is confidently expected by Grandl Master H. I. Clark and Grand Secre tary John 0. Drewry,v of the grand. lodge of masons, that the corner-stoixs of the Masonic temple at Raleigh wiU. be laid before the end of this yeax Francis D. Winston who is now tour ; ' ing the State, is having great bucobmi in raising the 130,000 of the tl20,(t: v cost of the temple, the ; other 'JO.C-J' having been taicen some time ?o. Masons all over the State are taking- . a srreat deal of Interest : in the temla- and are delighted with the plan, which, Is for a very noble building. 1 ' Peter Now King. " - k - ? Belgrade, June 25. Kin? Peter f3 Servia took the oath of office befora. ' the Skupschtina this morning amid taa greatest enthusiasm. After the cere- . mony the Kin?, reviewed his troops. rn his sight at the review were Cols. Mia chits and Maschin, the conspirators, fact which caused much astonishment. v ITie oath read as follows: "L Peter- Karageorgevitch, on . ascending th . throne of the Kingdom of Servia and. assuming the power thereof, swear by Almighty God, and by all that Is hoi- -lest and dearest in my life, that I will- protect the Independence of Servia and, , the unity of its . government. That JL-' will govern in conformity with the con stitution of the country and the laws, and that in all my undertakings and. . dealings, I will keep the welfare ot my . people oerore my eyes." . . Hia Last Mopa Kealiaed, (Prom the Sentinel. Gebo. Hoot) : In the first opening- of Oklahoma- to settlers In 1S89, the editor of ihla paper was among the many seekers after for tune who made the big race one ss day ia April. During liis traveling about and afterwards his campm? upoa his claim, he encountered much had water, which, together with the severe heat, gave him a very severe diarrhoea which it seemed almost im possible to check, and along ia Juc-9 the case became so bad he expe-etn.1 fcj die. One day one of his r.-' v,bor brought fclm one small buf.V f C! a; ber:a:-. 3 Col to, C tio.eraand Li. rrf. Uefuas & L-t hope. A l.Ijr ' e was piven L;::i vh: he was rcl. about oa t'-e touc1 ia cr-t a-o and ia a f-w n.i-uv s t: -? c..-. us plated, l'i : t t . f : r s was 1 I hor t :- 1 bl 1 I
The Kinston Free Press (Kinston, N.C.)
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June 27, 1903, edition 1
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