Newspapers / Salisbury Globe (Salisbury, N.C.) / Dec. 12, 1900, edition 1 / Page 1
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ft' ? i Weekly Sun Weekly Sun IS ONIT ft PEB TEAB. L BE DEVOTED TO THE . BEST INTEREST OP THE FARMERS Strictly In Advance ? OF OWAN COUNTT, NO FAEMB SnOULD BE WITH OUT IT. VOL. 4--NO. 39 Subscribe at Once; SALISBURY, ;N. C, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 12!Yl9QQ. - ' -Ypfice7j$i'Per Year ...... i- . ' - -"--- - w- wan ' H- . t r ! - McKINLEY PROSPERITY. The prosperity that Mr. McKin- ley and his campaigners 6aid would follow if the administration was re-endorsed is showing itself to splendid effect by the almost daiiy encroachments or reaching 4- r 1 i ..,. T1! , 1. UUl Ul IUD LlUStS. 1UU ICUCUl IU1 - chase by the American lobacco . . Company of the P. H. Hanes To- kpcn Wnrka. r Wintnn. is r sample of the promise. We get this idea from the fact that it, isl stated thRt the bavins of this en- vci pi ioc will imun iiul ui ouj M'r K ment a number of well-known to- , . TT - Dacco salesmen. j.ne nanes KAm- any traveled nny-six men.n is star- ed, however, that a large majority of them will find employment with tuoucrv piupiuiuio. It is easy to see if a half dozen men are thrown out of jobs the march of nrosneritv is hnstlincr along at a smart speed. lnis is only one instance, near home, and soon after the election, where the combine is getting in a lick. We may expect, with such progress, that by the time the administra- tionends everything possible will be taken in by the trusts and not a few men, but mmy, will be out of jobs. This, then will be good times under Republican rule. Servant Girls to Strike. New York, Dec. -A. Mrs. St. Justin Bciale, who will organize a servant girls' union to-morrow, said to-day that a general strike of servant girls is threatened. 'A large number of them are ready to io f-ut as soon r..s the union l foi Li:ed,' iid Mrs. Beale. A meeting of strvnn's will be held to-morrow night Titt 45 Uni ' versity Place, at w hie T Herman Robinson, ge- r ral oi iraniz r for American Fe.L-iMti m ui Li'oor, will be the p: nc!; il speaker. The new union will t o called the Domestic Servants' Union. "Girls who wi rk for society people aud hotels are badly treated," srd-Mrs Boale. "Many of the.u Luve 'hard work and awful eUepitig places. Tutir fare is b.id and tcanty. 1 have worked as a hotel servant girl myself as an experiment, and know what the life is " -An initiation fee of $1 will ad mit a servant girl to the union, and the dues will Be twenty-five cents a month. Child, Match and Powder Keg A Fatal Explosion. A Jackson (Northampton Coun ty) Special, 3d, to Raleigh News and Observer, says: A terrible explosion occurred here this evening at 6 o'clock, completely demolishing Matt T. Edwards' store and killing Ed wards and his five-year old son, Waverlv. There was only one other person in the store at the time, Edwards' ten-year-old son, who escaped with slight injury. This boy says his little brother was playing about a keg of powder just received that was on the coun ter, and it is supposed that the child struck a match on or about the powder. Timbers were blown hundreds of feet into the air and fell at some distance from the building destroyed, "The shock to the town was ter rible. The scattered timbers were set on fire but were soon extin guished. The Dai-yitJg Business In a recent epe?ch, ex Gover t nor Hoard, cf Wisconsin, said that "in his Rtate dairying has been brought to a hih state of perfec tion, and' through it the value of lands have been considerably in creased. He told of one county w?arnnsin where, prior to the X LA I v 7 troduction of dairy farming, the lands were worth only $18 per acre for wheat growing, but which has now been raised to the value of $61 per acre by dairy farms. Iff that county there are now .onejightof franchise, htve done the hundred creameries and dairy j negro half so great an evil as was farms doing. a business estimaiea at upwards of $5000,000 annually including all products; and the owners of these farms have not less than $2,000,000 in cash on de posit in the banks." It takes a corkscrew for some fellows to screw up their courage. EDITORIAL SQUIBS. Beckham's plurality as Gov ernor of Kentucky is officially an nounced as 3,689. ,v - The Southern Industrial Con- veDtion , at New Orlean . declared in fav0r of trade scho Is in the I C.,iU I UUUIU James C. Sto we, United State Consul General at Cape Town, predicts tnat the tsoutb Atncau PVar will end in four months. i resident McKinley aspured a ui.i i.: xri " "e,euon OI v giuia mres I mon that ha ia nnnQa 1 1 i ki 'o. .1 ... ing oouthern representation tsenator btewart intrluced a . ... . .. , ... bill in Congress creatin? a Philin pines Supreme Court, with five judges appointed for life at 20, 000 each per annum. oenaior naie, or M'une, wants his party to go slow, ''re duc taxation, stop extravagant expenditures and cut down appro priations. This is a voice crying in a very large wilderness, indeed. The wave of prosperity has struck the divorce lawvers of St. k,. One hundred and sixty- two cases were fifed on one day last week and sixty -two were granted on the same day. St. Louis isn't going to let Chicago get ahead of her if hustling will prevent it. , The sending of 8,000 more British troops to Africa, to rein force the 200.000 now entratred there in a war that is "ended," looks very much like the United States raising their army to 100,- 000 to carry on a war in the Philipines that is "over." -A man is not necessarily bad dimply because he does not think a ) ou do. You may come to think as he dors, and then you will be self-condi mned. It is better to judge a man by his motive rather than ly- what he fays and things. A fu fin who governa-- itio 'ie by high und un-elti-h motives is a good ni;n, no raatUr whether he is against or with yrou. Spi'cial' alier'ti n is called to an article on tho ri st age of to di's Sun, in reforoncb to keeping the bide walks clean beside im proved property where the town bad them pvtd, ihe same being See 142, i tl;; ordinances of Sal isbury. This ordinance, it was agreed bv the a!deiu;en, at their meeting last night, shall be e .... . ... A torced and citizens wno win oe reached by it will take notice. From the New York Tribune, Republican, the Sun copies the following, which is of interest to the colored people of this section: "An ingenious set of swindlers is fleecing ignorant negroes by per suading them to contribute small sums to promote an -effort to pre vail upon uongress to pension former slaves. The number of colored men and women who were in bondage in the Southern States a the time of Emancipation Pro clamation, and who still survive, is by no means in considerable. Of course, there is no conceivable possibility that any of them will ever obtain petition0, and the trickery of the rascals who get money from them under false pretences is of a particularly de spicable sort. Such fellowsiwpuld steal pennies from a. dead man s eyes. Hurtle them tf to jail." "What Hurt the Negro. The Ethiopian, a South Caro lina piper, edited by liov. E. W. Williams, a well-known colored man, says in a recent editorial: "The greatef-t blow the negro has ever received, and the one from whose damaging effects he will never recover, was given him by congressional enactments. It was the unconditional imposition Gf the right of . franchise, for which be was in no way qualified. No government has ever done a defenceless people a greater in .jury. Ve do not consider . that j those states that have passed amendments to their constitutions j abridging the privilege of some of ; the citizens in the exercise of the done him by the national' govern- ment when it imposed this right upon him.'' That Tennessee cyclone is said to have actually blown the hair off a man's head without injuring the scalp. And it cost him $40 to get another wig. NEWS OF WEEK. THURSDAY. Hon. Wnn Wirt Henry, grand son of Patrick Henry, and a dis- tinguished member of the Vir- ginia bar, died at Richmond yes - terday. An anti-English demonstration took place in front of the British Consulate at Cologne, Germany, iq which citv President Jvrusrer now is. The Irishman Canal Commision reported in favor of the Nicara- guan route, which, it is estimated will, cost $200,540,000, and Gov- ernment ownership and control. An engine on the G and Trunk Railwav near Enrlew6od .Innn- tion, Ont , yesterday crashed into a handcar on which were five sec-. tion men going to their work. All were killed instantly; Yesterday afternoon Hon. S. Davis Stokes shot -and instantly billal Hair w vvki ;n o street duel at Williamson, W. Va., Mr. Stokes being also dangerous ly injured. The cause'which led to the terrible deed is not known. The English steamer Rossgui, which has been lost off the coast of Jersey, was engaged in the ser vice between England and St. Brieuc, France, foundered last night. According to report only 11 persons out of the 40 on board were saved. Fourteen miners in West Vir- ginia who put up a job to blowup the boss, fixed their dynamite, and stood at the mouth of the shaft to see how the boss fared when thev - j touched it off. They didn't meas ure the distance well and fourteen of them were killed. Greensboro, principal of the high A dispatch has been received at scho1 at Wilmington, was pain Manila from General Funston giv- ful,y injared iQ a runaway. She ing an account of a two-hours' was out d"vin2 with a physician, hght in the woods of Santo Do- and 300 rebels commanded by Sandlco. The American force, consisting of 30 native scouts, commanded by Lieutenant Jerni- gan, attacked the rebels, who re- treated, men killed, including the rebel leader Aguilar and an American negro. FRIDAY. Thirty-two miners who wer6 entombed alive at Dunmore, Pa., dug their way out. According to the official count made yesterday Bryan's plurality in Kentucky was 8,089. Much damage was done to prop erty and several lives were lost in gales along the Atlantic Coast. The powers have agreed to de mands to be made on China in ac cordance with the plan of Secre tary Hay. General Knox had another fight with General De Wet in the Or ange State, and British reports say the Boers retreated. . John Bullock, under sentence of death, for the murder of Chief of Police Wa'sb, of Freehold, N. J., was captured near Portsmouth, Va. Dr. Thompson, of Williams port, Pa., and Adam Biiley, of Panther, W Va , were shot and instantly killed Wednesday night by James H. Chambers, a promi nent merchant of Panther. Iq an altercation in the Hol stein Woolen Mills at Salem, Va., yesterday J. P. Booth, the ship ping clerk, aged 22, was stabbed and killed by Geo. Cunib, aged 16. The connections of both are well known people. Mr. Kruger arrived at The Hague from Cologne yesterday, He met with wonderful receptions everywhere. Immense crowds gathered at all the stations, the burgomasters made speeches and the school children sang. Mr. Kruger made many replies. Popular Across the Pond. French papers are alarmed oyer reports of the retirement of Sec retary Hay from McKinley's cabi neti Mr. Hay has made a verv good secretary of state for foreign countries. Baltimore World. Any woman can keep an ex pense account, but only about one woman in a hundred can make it tally with her cash. HAPPENINGS IN THE STATE. Interesting Items of Recent Occurrence in North Carolina. The State of North Carolina has this year granted charters to more than 250 corporations. The most 1 important of these are of course, cotton mills Ed Robinson, a white boy aged 14 years, was burned to death several nights aso at Clinton. A lighted lamn in a store was over- turned on him, saturating him with burnin oil The grand jury of Duplin court is considering the Populist libel cases separately. A true bill against George Butler for criminal libel has been returned. He will prooamy De tried tftis week. Inere are m&uy witnesses. At a recent meeting of the Win- ston aldermen C'ty 'Engineer Magruder made a report to the effect that the city's Pr esent waler PP1 is not e(lual to the demand I 1 1 ii I T a 1 uu urgea mat me noaru tase some action to relieve the situa tion. At the N. C. Conference at Newborn a resolution offered by Rev. E. A. Yates, endorsing Rev. Dr. J. C. Kilgo and Messrs. W. R. Odell and B. N. Duke, and pledging them the support of I T . 1 k0DIerence in tne present trouble, was adopted. The track which was torn up by the freight train wreck near MaydaDi OQ the N. & W. road, has been repaired so trains can Pass- The en-ine aml four coal cars are sti11 in tBe Pond and the hody of tne negro brakeman has Miss Florida G. Worth, of near who left her holding the horses while he went in to see a patient. f 1 i 1 jerked the reins from her .hands and broke into a run. They ran seven squares at the top of their 1 'm4-l-k e-,m-vic V - I rtlkfft cc" W1,,u lV 7 u brought up against a telephone pole and threw the lady out. She sustained bruises on her head and body and a severe nervous s-hock. Newspapers for Warmth. A newspaper wrapped around the body under the coat is as good as an overcoat for warmth. A few newspapers spread between the quilts of a bed, will make up for a lack of bed clothing upon a cold night. No one need suffer from insufficient clothing, day or night, if a few newspapers are at hand. Dr. Overton. America Leads the World. The United States are now the leading nation of the, world, lead ing all the Christian nations, save Russia, in population, leading ail in wealth, progress, resources, and enterprise. In the magnitude and growth of its external and internal commerce it exeeeds them all, in the rapidity with which it puts armies in the field and navies on the seas it exceeds them all, and in the systems for the betterment of the individual citizen. and the community it exceeds them all. Wilmington Star. When the Trouble Began. The trouble between Mrs. and Mr. Lease began away back there years ago. She says she never loyed him. but one day when it was raining he refused to let her take an umbrella which had been left in the store six months before and forgotten, and she had to go home in the rain uuibrellaless. That froze him out completely. But as he isn't any more devoted to her than she is to him, he is probablv glad that old umbrella was left in bis shop Wilming ton .Star. A day for toil, an hour for sport, but for a friend, a life is too shorts Emerson. The business of the lawyers is picking up in Chicago. Within the past six weeks twenty-five per sons have been killed at the rail road grade crossings. The Castellane baby has $385, 000 worth of bric-a brae. What a picnic that babe will have if turned loose in reach of so many things to play with. CHILD TORTURER IN JAIL. Inhuman Step-Father ;in P anger, . o; Mcb Violence- . - . Lexington, Ky., J3pV46.--Xhe Sheriff's officers, haying charge of. Gibson, the child torturer, ctutr wilted the mob and landed- Gib son ia jiil at Maysville Several days agd Gibson ran a iru u i poKer uowu .ine mroai o .1 L. A. .. I 1 t fit- - 1.1 18 n;nath-(ld btep-cbild and then set the house a-fire tof cover up his crime. Gibson and'his wife had quarrekd on account of the child IMPORTANT -DEC- Esiang llemalns at te'l. of the Chiaese AfJij. - . . - Pekin. Dpc 6 thl Hung Chang yesterday rtceivedT an imperial edict ntiiiouncing I that1 General TiuDg Fu Hsiang had been strip ped of all his honors and offices but allowed to retain command of his army and hail Been ordered to Kansu province with five thous and of his men. , . ' This is the mosti Important de' cree yet issued. JohnL Sullivan Sewed Up. John L. Sullivan has been .ill nearly five weeks, in a New York hospital, where he underwent an an operation which nearly caused his death'. His illness, ensued up on his eating seven broiled chick ens within four hours. He Ah us describes the operation: "They cut me open in the feide, 15 inches long and ,11 inches dee No ether; no chloroform. ' They were afraid of -my heart. . Ha! They found out afterward my heart was as strong as when I was 18 years old. "Well, they cut me open and fixed me up. , As l'ni told, I've got part of therskiaof the tail of a kangaroo seweel into my insides, also a lot of fiddle- stringal They can't sa John 1J isn't full of music bet your last dollar on this there are 120 stitches inside of me. They've put a lot of bandages outside to hold me together while the stitches are taking hold and keeping in place. "Then they kept me flat on my back in one position till the soles of my feet were full of pins and needles. But 1 wouldn't move. I stuck to the rules of the game as Dr. Bodine gave them to me. You can't kill a good man, you know." Wonders of the World. 1 It is estimated that the follow ing are the li great wonders of the world. Those of the old world were: 1. The Egytian pyramids, the base of the largest covering Hi acres of ground. 2. The mausoleum erected by Mausolus, the King of Caria. 3. The TemDlo of Diana at Ephesus. 4. The wall and hanging gar dens at Babylon, said to have been" 87 feet thick and six miles long. 5. The collossus of Rhodesa brazen statue of Apollo 105 feet in height. 6. Statue of Jupiter Olympus at Athens, made of ivory and gold. . 7. The Pharos of x Ptolemy Pbiladelphus, a light house 500 feet high on the island of Pharos, in Eyypt. The wonders of the New World are: 1. The art of printing.' 2. Gunpowder. 3. Optical instruments, such as the telescope and-microscope. 4. Steam engine. 5. Labor-saving machinery. 6. Electric telegraph. 7. Photography. Philadelphia Record. . Worked Over Sound. That Thanksgiving proclama tion by carpet-bag Governor Allen informing the Porto Ricans that they ought to feel greatf ul for the "blessings of good government" which are being thrust upon them sounds very much like a worked over copy of those used on the south some thirty odd years ago. Atlanta Journal. The old woman who lived in k shoe is probably the only one who never complained of its being too large. IE05 Wflto-Bpter.-d: p.(IUEEirS . SHORT SPEECH..' EvSnlvi Behind;,-: Dec. 5. The MfeeKfer Tf on -Workf ;were burned e;affy.tBri8 npornihg.; Falling walls bnried'several firemen. iThree juen Were taken out of I the roibs injured-and. rthe fourth, TroftHph SnJhfibT tuna 'bTlln1 -n- -rw3 v - The loss is heavy and many peo- ' 'i --.- pie are thrown out of .ploy - ment. Big Deal on Fodt. ' - Newlork; &VaJl Stre'ei chase of the-Mid vale Steel -Works and Cramp Shipyards at Philadel phia. vJSumor says the price of the Mi'dvale Works is seven and a half millions " : Fope Operated Upon. ome, Dec 6.-7- The Pope again submitted to the surgeon's, knife, being operated upon .for a small tumor under the arm. Dr. Mazzoni performed the operation, which- .'wks entireJJ - successful. lte rope's condition is reported Poor Contribution for Poor. - I 'Parish-Dec 6-Boxes for thefe overed with water. eceptidn of offerings to the poorL?$ i "l . -u , . . iniujuuu iue river ana was caused were placed at the beginning ofk-- . ,,. , , v : the inauguration, and remained till the exercises closed. It was expected that a goodly sum would be realised but when the boxes were . opened vesterdav it was onnd that thftv Anntninpfl nnltr tJ I Disposed to Mediate. Paris, rDec, 5. The Aurora says, under reserve, that the Swiss BrTtainarrdthe SauthAfrican Ke publics. ' -A--.. The Kentucky's Men. Constantinople, Dec. 5. Capt. Chester, Lieutenants L. Scott and AJoffet, and Ensign Palmer, of the battleship Kentucky, will remain here until after the reception Fri day. Other officers of tke Ken tucky are expected to visit Con stantinople. W hue at binyrna Captain Chester exchanged visits with the Valo (Governor) and naval authorities. The Government has stopped all telegrams from Smyrna with regard to the Kentucky. No Arbitration at Present. The Hague, Dec. 5. During the debate on the budget in the second chamber here to day Pre mier Pierson declared that he could not, at present, foresee the Psychological moment when The Netherlands would be able to pro pose arbitration between Great Britain and the Transvaal. Want Eagan Retired. Washington, Dec. 5. Great pressure is being brought to bear upon the President by military of ficers to retire General Eagan. To Accompany Roberts. Capetown, Dec. 5. Generals Kelly-Kenny and Hamilton' will accompany Lord Roberts to Eng land. The Loyalists are making elaborate preparations to welcome Roberts when he arrives here. Miners Entombed. Scranton, Dec. 5. Fifty-one miners are entombed in a cave-in at Na yaug mine. Rescuerers are working. Czar Doing Well. Livadia, Dec. 5. The Czar passed the last twenty-four hours very well. Convalescent follows a trenerally favorable course. The latest news from Washing ton is that a two-million dollar appropriation is to be made to en large and improve the White house. Make way for the Em pire! Raleigh News and Obser ver. The sales of ' tickets for Sarah Bernhardt's five weeks' ran in New York eggregate $100,000 a night. Sarah gets $1,000 a night. She says she likes this country. 1 London, Dec. 6. The Queers speech read in; Parliament to day was the. shortest tin. rcdrd. She says: - , My ... L.ordar Gentlemen: - It having. become necearv in I iL - . .-" "' 1 1 uriuerr provision lor expenses-: of I - V i 13 .14 ill 1- UHIUUlT'IIJ '1.111111.11 Africa an'd China .1 tummnnpd von LtoaVpeciaT etsionin order ifl,nt HtgptfclmeniiSvreqmred f orXthis purpose' "YJhi- wdl 'not - enter, "tn the.-dlsdusUorw-V tter. matters .aweeckathayodan; AS36 and Six Coal Can Boll toi aa Lm bankment Into a Pond. - Winston balem, Dec. 4. A special to the Sentinel to-dav from Mayodan, near Madisonrsars: A bad wreck occurred one mile above here. at:45 this morning. The engine and six cars, loaded with coalt of tho through freight from Roanoke to Winston, were de- raiLeU and the engine and four of the cars rolled down a thirty-foot embankmeut intb the pond of the Mayodan Cotton Mill. The en- , . . - .. . M hiftside on the tr&ek. The engine struck this and the derailment fol lowed v- TJaengineer, Mr. A. G. Spen- cer,'s0ok;to hjs post and strange main Af 4n .Miio rn tin nntil . 4- "strucK Dottrji," and walked out unhutlis fTreavan, H, P. Seay, camebulith onjftbruised knee. Only twwifinget a-r have been found of IlaVyey Coleman, the col- br akeman.5;It is known that that fie- is under carsria?i-,i' - - Engineer SpencerTsfeyshitsJ was only running at the rate of eight miles an hour. when the acci- dent occurred. He' is confident that the accident would have been far worse ii be had been running faster. The track was torn up for fifty feet. A large force of hands are at work repairing the damage. Linney Wants Position. Congressman Linney has filed a formal application for the position. of Commissioner of Internal Reve nue. benator .fritchard has en dorsed him. The general impres sion is, however, that Collector Yerkes, of Kentucky, recently de feated for Governor, will be ap pointed. Washington correspon dent Charlotte Observer. A Rich Feast. Mr. William L. Elkins, Phil adelphia's representative at the Paris Exposition on the United States commission, entertained his colleagues at an elaborate dinner Monday evening. The banquet was given in honor of the return of the commission to this country That it was a feast worthy of Lucullus in his best estate is sh6wn by the following statement of its cost, which we clip from the Philadelphia North American: 600 dozen pink carnations $900 400 strings of asparagus vines 600 30 dozen bridesmaids' roses 105 100 pink hydrangeas 100 100 orchids 100 Decorations of centre table 300 Mural decorations of banquet ing hall 200 10 quart bottles Chateau Yquen 100 15 quart bottles champagne 120 6 quart bottles Madeira GO 5 quart bottles Romance Conti 60 5 quart bottles Porto Rouge 75 Liqueuers 50 36 dinners 720 Engraving cards 110 Grand total $3,600 There were exactly '36 guests, so that the average cost of the din ner per head was $100. Correct. The man that brags about him self the most is not the best man, nor is the loudest talking fellow the smartest. They do say that an empty wagon makes . more noise than a loaded one. Lexing ton Dispatch. - EUCTORS-OF.THT STATE MEET Bat, Will Hav.toireetAgain-rllr. r Uvermair Ctiairaaa. -j iThe Raleigh correspondent of - !'-. the Charlotte Observer Eays:-' , The electors for North Carolina A met here at noon to-day, in Goverti hor Roaseirs ' office : and' elected -x Lee S.';. Overman, chairman and v Charles L." Abernethy- Becfetarye me Jaws of the State-and the na tion conflict ras. to - the '"electors meetings.. A-Sbate law," enacted f lastyear'i proYides that the electors!-?5jc'x snouia, meetvtne nxst - laiesday ..ii Detember- The;;"obfect of this was to fill vacancies- id case" there were any and take that ciafter , out y '".,.V;.--- of the Governor's handsv The act- of lS99also. provided that the elec--. j. - ' ; tcfr- should - meet ' to-morrow to I- TT fc3 cast the Tote, after jSatin been commissioned to-day by the Gov- - ernor. I5ut they cannot cast : the : rote then, as an act of Congress !'(f i islature .of a State shall fix the - meetinglace of the electors but hat the time of meeting is to be the first Monday in January. . The Legislature undertook to fix both time and place. . " - n r y The. following presidential elec- ors were present to-day :: D. H. McLean, Lee S. Overman j C. L. Abernethy, B. C. Breckwith, W. A-Guthrie, J. R. Blair, )V. S., Pearon and John M. Campbell. T. C. Wooten and II. L. Cook ar rived this afternoon., W. C. Dowd is expected to-morrow. Messrs. Overman, Breckwith and . Aber nethy were appointed to arrange f programme when the vote is cast. ; B. C. Breckwith is to carry- the re turn of the vote to Washington. . Eagan Restored and Retired. ! Washington, Dec. 6. Brigadier C General Chas. P. Eagan, coramis-, .. sary general of subsistence, Who -has been under suspension since : - ' February 9,1899, by sentence of : of court-martial, for alleged intem-ri '' . perate and abusive langnagetsoTi :f connection wim tub. .uimj nuux nyestigation, was to-dyrestored ta duty-; andf immediately af ter fAw; hvard'wartria op ,the retired list 0f the army. TheWarEnded- Gen. MacArthur says that 70,000 men will be needed to bring peace in the Philipines. Mr. McKinley thinks from 45,000 to 60,000 will be enough. And yet Mr. McKin ley solemnly in the same message tells us that the war in the Philip pines ended last spring. Raleigh News-Observer. Krtiger to Holland. Cologne, Dec. 6. Kruger start ed for Holland on a special train this morning. Towne Goes to the Senate. St. Paul, Minn., Dec. 6. For mer Congressman Charles A. Towne received from Governor Lind, late this afternoon, the of ficial documents which entitle him . to a seat in the United States Sen-, ate until the State Legislature, which meets in January, can elect a successor to serve the rest of the unexpired term of the late Cush man K. Davis. An old woman named Jenkins recently resided near Brownsville, Tenn. , who raised a good deal of poultry for sale. She set a hen on a dozen eggs and in a few day a went to see how Biddy was get ting along, when she found a large snake in the : nest. Mrs. Jenkins did not flee in affright, as might be supposed, but, un dismayed, she dispatched the f ser pent with a stick and out of it se cured the stolen eggs, which she sold to a country grocery. The average woman 'would a lot rather have her husband lose , a thousand dollars in his business than to have a picture glass fall off the wall. Philadelphia Press. Many a man who gives up his money freely for foolish whims disputes the price of necessities. "The Tongue of Liberty" is the title of a late novel. Of course the heroine is a married woman. WANTED ACTIVE ' MAN OP GOOD character to deliver and collect In North Carolina for old established-manufacturing . -wholesale house. $900 a year, sure pay. Honesty more than experience required. , r Our reference, an bank In any city. - Enc close self -addressed stamped envelope . Manufacturers, Third Floor, 33i Dearborn ' St., Chicago. . . , .1 V, v 7 1 : V
Salisbury Globe (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 12, 1900, edition 1
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