Newspapers / Salisbury Globe (Salisbury, N.C.) / Dec. 26, 1900, edition 1 / Page 1
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.iS-sgia I THE T II E Weekly Sun I ' : V . ' ' - . - I" : : 1 , ..: , i y . r- Sum - i 18 ONLY $1 PEB YEAR. Strictly in Advance . v NO FARMER SHOULD BE WITH IXOUT IT. HAZING SLOULD BE STOP PED. The military court of inquiry, which is now in session at West Point investigating the subject of haziog, got through a mass of evidence yesterday and expects to have all of the testimony collected by Saturday evening. The name of former Cadet John Breth, of Pa., who it is alleged Newspaper, ZDevotedjr t tlie "best Interests of Ko-wan O0-u.33.t3r VOL. 4--N0. 41. SALISBURY, N.'C,, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 26. 1900. Price, $1 Per Year EDITORIAL SQUIBS. Altoona, died IS months ago as a result of brutal hazing at the West Point Military Academy, was associated with that of Oscar L. Booz in the inquiry yesterday. The evidence brought out showed that the haz ing had been of a brutish kind and of a more or less dangerous char acter. Such we should say as not elevate those engaged in doing the "fun-" Ta show the way the hazing is conducted we give the evidence of several of the students. Cadet Cowles described the having ordeals in the summer of 1S9S and said he had attended rat funerals, took cold baths, joined in bowl races, underwent the "wooden Willie" and "eagling" haziDg methods, and had taken a couple of drops of hot sauce from a spoon. Cadet Kruxm, of Ohio, said he had tl ' 'qualify'' in the mets hall by eating 85 prunes at one sitting and swallow a bowl of molasses and six slices of bread. Cadet Keller, of New York, said the worst thing he bad been or dered to do was to shave himself with a bayonet. Cadet Chtis. R. Jennings, of Conneticutt, tcs itied that Cadet Caples, of Missouri, made him put out his tongue and Caj:es dropped five drops of hot sauce on it. It did not hurt r ehke" him. another time he h:d to stand on his head in a tub full of water and say: "We've met tha enemy and The Sun has said nothing of this matter before other than giv ing it as news, but. it belitves uaz- A bill to give the suffrage to women has been introduced in the Porto Rican legislature. The first political party un der the American regime in Lu zon is being formed by Filipinos. The Seaboard Air Line road is to be ballasted from R chraond, Va.. to Tampa, Fla., waIi stone 24inches deep. Holiday shoppers should keep an eye upon the advertising columns of the Sun. New sug gestions are appearing every day. The vote cast in West Virginia at the November election has finally been received. The plural ity of McKinley over Bryan is 21,068. Our next Legislature will be overwhelmingly Democratic, but Tennessee beats us, it is said that will be all .Democratic, save one a Populist. A movement is on foot, says the Greensboro Telegram, to erect a colonial monument at Guilford Battle Ground to cost 11,000. Al ready $375 has been subscribed. Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt, the president of the Woman Suf frage Association, predicts that a woman will be President of the United States before the end of the twentieth century. If it takes sixty thousand sol diers to hold the Filipinos in sub jection after the "war is over" in those islands, how many would be required to suppress a genuine rebellion there ? . The. Mormon conference is now in session at Goldsboro. There are thirty elders in attend ance besides the presiding officer, President Br-n. Rich, of Chatta nooga, Tenn. There is a good deal of origin ality in Dr. Mt-redith,. pastor of a Congregational church in Brooklyn N. Y. He has req nested that his At ! salary of $10,000 be reduced to $8,000 because ihre has been a failing ff iu pew if.ts. While we are talking of build ing a "dozen or more new battle ships, torpedo bouts, ttc, the statement is ttScially n,ade that sve now have many more vessels than we have crew toman them. map ofitfte Southern .' system, showing in . detail the Southern avstemand connecting lines. The; Richmond limes, says a new ahd-most attractive feature of the map is the location of all battle fields of the South, which are marked and the many margins are filled with much matter of descrip tive and historical interest. The map is valuable for ready refer ence. An official return of the .British forces in South Africa shows that on December 1 the army there consisted of 210,293 officers and men, of whom 142,- 893 were regulars, 33,000 colonials 8,000 yeomanry, 7,500 volunteers and 18,900 militia; The killed to date were 3,010, wounded 13,886, dead from disease or wounds 7,- 786, number in hospitals in South Africa 11,927. While the war is in progress in South Africa troops have had to be found . also for a war in Ashanti and another war in China. All which illustrates ing tc be a barbarous habit and one that should be stopped where ever it prevails. the burden of imperialism which our thoughtless jingoes are . anx ious for us to shoulder. Commenting on the objec tions of Senator Pritchard to re ducing Southern representation, the Boston Transcript says: "Mr. Pritchard's utterances are more candid aud emphatic than those of Southern Republicans generally but they gain most of their y I poriance oy Deing oniy prema ture. This isja fact that needs to be borne in mind" by Northerners in considering the Southern race problem, for it would take only a very little discretion, very little haste in the North, to bring the secret solidarity of . Southern whites into the open and to reduce the white Republican party, now struggling but still a growing or ganization, to a political nonentity. Think what we of the North njay, say what we may at. banquets and other such occasions of the solidar ity of the Union, the South is sol id in opposition to what it deems 'negro rule.' " Iavestigating Hazing Case. West Point, Dec 19. The jarmy court, investigating the Booz hazing case, convened this morning, all members being pres ent. The first and second classes will be summoned to testify and the inquiry will probably extend un'il the end of the week. This morning a score of members of the second class who were plebes with Booz were summoned early and will be called upon without delay. Cadet Linton today denied to the Court of Inquiry that Booz was hazed. He admitted, though, that hazing was carried on. Col. Hein testined that there were posi tive orders aeainst bracmo or .any ''form of hazing. G rover Cleve'aid says "the great need of the Democratic party is a return to first principles." fhe Rileigh News and Observer thinks be ought to know. It was under his leadership that we left them in 1894 and got the worst beating the party has ever receiv ed before or since. .Death From Hydrophobia- . .' Durham, Dec. 18. Eight weeks ago the 5-year-old child of Wm. Craig, colored, in North Durham, was bitten by a mad-dog. A mad stone was applied and the wound healed. Five days ago the child became tick at the stomach, would drink no water, foamed at the mouth and finally died in great agony. Charlotte Observer. NEWS OF WEEK. THURSDAY, r John D Rockefeller ha made another gift of $1,500,000 ito the University of Chicago. A dispatch from Vienna Reports recent Moslem excesses aga3st the Christian population in the Central provinces of Turkey whee 300 Christians have been killedf In a bead on collision between two street cars at Ashland, Ky., yesterday three persons were fa tally hurt. Five were severely bruised, while half a dozen more sustained sevce cuts and bruises. At Hope, ind , the Cirzen's Bank was burglarized earlyVyes terday by three men, wh de stroyed the vault with a heavy charge of nitro-glycerin utA se cured, it is said, $18,000. .r No trace-of the robbers has yet leen found. Landing the arrest of a white boy for some trivial affair. A crowd gathered and Lewis was in the midst. Suddenly he drew a pis tol and fired at the marshal, kill ing him instantly. He escaped from town, but bloodhounds brought from the county seat soon ran him down. The posse is still put suing tiid two Lewis boys and their cousin. The trio were in the vicinity of Wolfe river, to-day, and the capture is regarded as cer- tain. Intense excitement orevails at Gulf port te?d some hotheads are talking f moving on Mississippi City to tske out and lynch old mau Alyin Lewis. As a result of the trust dv the necro church it GuU') )it was burned last night. - f " " - ' ' mfi.. . r EAILEOAB WAR AT.fiJCPBy BIG COAL MINE FIRE. Three Collieries Badly Damaged by Raging Flames- Capt Cibficf Jhe Southern, Ar ros'ed "by tha Mayor. Birmingham to Have a Steel Car Factory. Birmingham, Ala , Dec. 19. A contract was signed today by President J. M. Elliott, of the Southern Car and Foundry Com pany, with the Tennessee Coal and Iro? Company by which the for mer company is to erect a pressed steel car works here with an annual capacity of 6.000 complete cars. Hi.very portion oi the cars are to be constructed from the steel and iron products of the Birmingham district. The car plant is later to 1)3 enlarged to make passenger cirsas well. - 500,000 Browides a Day. The one-cent piece is coming to the front. There is such a de mand for it that fourteen coining machines in the Philadelphia mint are kept running over time to sup ply the demand. They turn out 500,000 a day, and efforts are made to run the output up to 800,000. Not satis6ed with this some financiers are beginning to cry out for half -cent coins. Willmington Star. i. It is quite probable that Mr. Bryan will get more experience and fun out of bis paper than cold cash. The census report does not credit any town in North Carolina with as many as 25,000 people, but only one town is shown to have gone backwards. North Carolina has no big cities but more prosperous farms, villages and towns than perhaps any other Southern State. If this lynching of negroes in Indiana continues, says the Ral eigh News and Observer, we will move to re-orgruiz ; the Red Shirts and send them up to the Repub i can State to protect the negroes against the fury of white Republi cans. The South will not supinely j see such lawlessness rampant, The Ashevilie Citizen says the m opinion is growing in wasn- ington that the administra tion will either have to change its present policy iu the Philip- pints for a moie pacific one or else make up its mind to con tinue a perpetual war with the in habitants of those numberless is lands, at a cost of 100,000,000 annually. . The Wilmington S'ar says it is somewhat remarkable that while some people in this country pre fer goods made in Europe, a good many people in Europe preier goods ji ade in th s country. These people are practically better Amer icans than the Americans who prefer foreign stutf. Dr. Richard H. Lewis, secre tary of the State board of health, says that Gerald McCarthy will go to Lincoln county to investi gate the t phoid outbreak. He says in the smallpox outbreaks in Caswell and Granville counties, the type is worf-e than during the past two years. The smallpox season is now beginning and he looks for many cases. The Southern. Railway has just issued a very attractive wall The Hickory Railroad "War Over- Hickory, Dec. 19. No further move was made by the Southern Railway force to lay a side-track on the disputed territory here to day and all is quite in railroad cir cles. As soon as the trouble arose last nierht the Southern officials dispatched an engine to Newton and brought up their attorney, L. L. Witberspoon, Esq., to rep resent the interest of that road while Director J. A. Martin, of the Carolina & Western, erected a tent on the disputed territory and offered to receive freight for shipment over his line. Charlotte Observer. Cashier Found Denver, Dec. 19 Wm. Hen derson, the missing cashier of the First National Bank of Greely, was found this morning in a town near El Pasco. Last night Columbia, S. C, was 'visited by the most disastrous fire in 20 years. The Jerome Ho tel andfthree large mercantile es tablishments on Main street and fonr smaller ones on Assembly street were destroyed. The total estimated loss is $142,000. The famous steamer Alpha, whose tinatithorized trip to Cape i'ome last May brought her into trouble with the Treasury De partment at Washington, has been wrecked on a reef and not a i-es-tige of the vessel lemains. . ijrler managing owner, captain, .purser, two engineers, two able seamen and a stowaway were drowned.. The State Department at Wash ington has received a cablegtum from United States Charge D'af faires Deaupre, at Bogota, statwog that a great battle has been fau-tht at. Girardot Point, Magdalene River, Colombia, which lasted tvo days and resulted in a decu ve victory for the government. I is reported that t00 were kiffedn' d many hundreds woiindedr At Hopewell, yesterde , lArthqr Spear Metzgar, a st<fsu glass manufacturer of Newark, N. J., shot and almost TiDstantly killed Elsie Dinsmore Metzgar , an actress, and, then - shot himself, dying in a few minutes. Metzgar was about 38 years of age and a German. The woman was 29 years years old. The day before the tragedy the couple had their pictures taken together by a pho tographer in Badford. Metzar leaves a family at Newark, N. J. It is' reported that Gen. Knox has been forced to abandon the pursuit of General Dewet owing to the situation created iu Cape Colony by the Boers crossing the Orange river. It is said that. 3,000 Republicans have entered Cape Colony and a similar number have reached Philippstown. The report adds that Dewet, with about 4,500 men, is northeast of Lady brand and that an attack on Winburg is momentarily expected. A pitched battle is imminent be tween the British under General Clements, who has been re-en forced, and the Boers under Gen eral Delarev. The British losses at Nooitgedacht, according to the official accounts, were 82 killed and wounded, with 44 missing and still unaccounted for. FRIDAY. Hickory, Dec. is. The sensa tion here U night was the arrival, at 10 o'clock, of a Southern ma terial train, equipped with all necessary inaterialr for laying a sidetrack between the Carolina & Northwestern and Southern Rail way, in the station yard. A large force of hands was at once put to work, but Director J. A. Martin, of the C. & N. W. road, was soon on the ground, whereupon he or dered two Narrow Gauge freight trains sidetracked, one of which is now off the track. At this hoiir it seems that the Southern will fail to accomplish its object. Later. Mayor A. A. Whitener has just had Cap4.-'W. T. Dobyns, who is in full charge of the Southern force, arrested for blockading the streets. Capt. Dobyns has given bond for his appearance before his honor at 9 o'clock to-morrow morning. The work has all been declared off for the night and everything is quiet Charlotte Observer. Wilkesbarre, Dec. 19. Fire in the Laurel Run, Pine Ridge and Delaware coal collieries at Mill Creek, gained steadily during the night and drove the fighters back some distance. It now threatens to be the most serious fire the dis trict has known for years. ."'.Starting at the junction of the three mines it spread in all direc tions and is eating its way along the workings despite the efforts, of two hundred men to stop it. It may prove necessary to shut down. the niines and flood them iuprocess which would cost many thousand dollars. THE BOERS' MISTAKE. Caused Many Burghers to Die Terri fic Explosion. Pretoria, Decern bea 19. Many Burghers have been killed owing to a blunder made by fighting Boerf. They set ti e to a lot of stores abandoned by the British at Nooitgedacht included a lot of amunition, which the Boers sup posed to be quartermasters' Sup plies. A terrific explosion occurred and many were killed. THE EDUCATIONAL COMITTEE. Authorized by Teachers Assembly Named by Picsident Thompson. THE WAR TAX REDUCTION BILL. Will be Changed so Bank Stamps Remain. Check Washington, Dec. 19. Thirty millions is the limit in the reduc tion to be made in the war taxes. That is the fiat of the Senators in charge of the revenue bill passed last week in the house. Senators Aldrich and Allison after a con ference with Secretary Gage are convineed that a greater reduction would be unwise. The plan which it is expected to be adopted in the Senate is to accept the house bill as it stands w ith the exception of restoring the tax on bank checks. Prca of Hose Advanced-.-Charlotte, N. C , Dec 20. The Southern Hosiery Yarn Spinners Association met here. and advanced the price of ydrn&'faTrif'a cent per pound. All mills rep resented araia a flourishing condition. Brokers Assign. New York, Dec. 20. Lewis A. May & Co., brokers, suspended 4and afterwards assigned. Steamer Disabled. Ponta Del Gada, Azores, Dec." 19. The North German-Lloyd ' steamer, Iner, from Bremen for New York put in here. Her ma chinery is disordered. She has (30 passengers. Da Wet a Good Ope. Gen. DeWetis the problem that puzzles the Britishers. They don't understand how he can jump on their crack regiments and wal lop them so, nor where he gets his food, ammunition aod imfor mation. Wilmington Star. Kruger's Eeception. Amsterdam, Dec. 19. Kruger's reception to-day was a tremendous ovation. All business is sus pended and the city is gayly decorated. Big Price for Stock Exchange Seat. New York, Dec. 19. A new record was made on the stock ex change to day when a seat sold for $51,000. 'Peter Sells, the circus man, was granted a divorce from his wife. The amount of alimony is under stood to be $30,000. Advices received from Cunama- to, on the Gulf of Caraicao, says the Colombian .revolution has been crushed. William Zslter, who married a colored woman at Pittsburg, Pa., yesterday, was guarded by police nearly all day from crowds that wished to tar and feather him. The police are still guarding the home of the couple. No Extra Cotton Report. New York, Dee. 20. Special advices received by Supt. King, of the cotton exchange, from Wa hiugton state that the statisti cian of the Agricultural Depart ment will issue no extra cotton re ports. His next statement for the season will be the final report. Administration and Philippine Pol icy. It is to be hoped that the Wash ington correspondent of the New York Post is correct in believing the administration will change its Philippine policy. The Post says: "The country may well c:n gratlate itself if a change of atti tude toward the Filipinos is forced upon the president and his cabinet by Republican dissatisfaction with( the prospect of indefinite hostili ties in the archipelago, as was foreshadowed by our Washington correspondent yesterday. After having complacently- swallowed for nearly two years the fictions of General Otis as to the app"roacff ing end of hostilities (officially an nounced in 1896 on March 17, April 3, May S, May 18, August 12, etc ,) it appears that the ad ministration is , at last awakening to the fact thai the military out look is 'very serious.' Coming as this does at the very moment when congress is upsetting the whole af my reorganization, it can hardly be pleasant. It may even be that the Hongkong correspondent of the London Daily Mail was not without some foundation -for his recent sensational dispatches as to the American inability to make headway in the islands and to pre vent the traffic in arms and am munition. Be this as it may, it will be a cause for widespread re joicing if it appears that the ad ministration has really been able to grasp the size of the problem before it. With an understanding of the situation arrived at, it may be well that other remedies than extermination will suggest them selves to the cabinet and to the Republican leaders." President D Matt. Thompson, of the N. C. Teachers' Assembly, has announced the names of the Educational Committee authorized by the Assembly at its meeting last J une. The committee is com posed of Prof. J. Y. Joyner, of Greensboro; Supt. C. Tjf Coon, of Salisbury; Prof. J. C. Horner, of Oxford; ; Supt. J. I. Foust, of Goldsboro; Pres. L. L. Hobbs, of Guilford College; Prof. W. H. Ragsdale, of Greenville; Principal Butler, of Statesville; and Mr. Josephus Daniel, of Raleigh. The work of this committee is to present the recommendations of the last Assembly to Legislature and urge their enactment .into law. In fact, the work of this com mittee covers , the whole field of educational reform in North Carolina. Weekly Sun WILL. BE DEVOTED TO THE BEST INTEREST OF THE FARMERS OF ROWAN COUNTY, Subscribe at Once. MINE CAVED IN. Letting a Portion of Pittston Settle Down Much Property Damaged. Pittston, Dec 20. The Penn sylvania mines in this city were the scene of the most serious cave in the history of the anthracite re gions early to-day. A loud report, followed by set tling of the surface, startled the people in the upper portion of the city. People, ran out in alarm, several buildings falling to ruins. Great crevices a foot wide mark the streets. A number of prominent business houses are wrecked. The mines are filled with water which rushed in from the ' Susquehanna river. The mines were almost destroyed by the accident. Several pump runners had a narrow escape. The loss to property is very heavy. THE HAY-PAUNCEFOTE TREATY. To be Voted on This Afternoon--Amendments Proposed. INVASION OF CAPE COLONY. By th& Boers is Spreading Heavy Cannonading Exported. Capetown, Dec. 20. The inva sion of Cape Colony is spreading. It is reported that the Boers have occupied Colesburg, near Orange River Colony. People here are much disturbed. A mixed force of a thousand was sent north last evening. London, Dec. 20. A Johannes- bf,4ispatcb, "T dated yesterday. .Bays: ."Heavy, - cannonading is heard this morning north of Kru- o-ersdorD. where a battle is ex- pected to take place between the forces of Clements and Delarey." Washington, Dec. 20. This af ternoon is the time set for the senate to vote in executive session on the ratification of the Hay Pauncef ote treaty. Three o'clock is the hour for the balloting to! be gin. A canvass warrants the as sertion of the treaty's friends that the necessary two thirds has been secured for the ratification of the treaty. The only amendments as sured of adoption are two agreed to by the foreign relations com mittee known as the Foraker amendment, striking out Article 3, which invites adherence to other powers and declaring this conven tion supercedes the Clayton-Bul-wer treaty. Then will borne the fight to the amendment to fortify the canal. The foreign relations com mittee say they have enough votes, pledged to defeat the. amendment, Fifty-eight, votes constitute two thirds of the Senate necessary for a ratincation. . a. majority vote only is necessary for the adoption of the amendment. Another Plot to Kill McKinley. Washington, Dec 19. Chief of police Sylvester is informed of an alleged plot to kill McKinley, Roosevelt, Hanna and Depew. Hanna laughs at it. The police, however, are watching the reput ed conspirators. Two men in formed the authorities but as one had joined the conspirators, to nrotect him. their names ate witheld. . An Hxception to the Bale- "But, of course, a rich mati can take nothing with him when he eaves the earth," said the tall passenger. "Well, I don't know about that," remarked the little man at the end of the seat. "A Columbus capi talist who died suddenly last week eft his safe locked and they had to get a convict from the peniten tiary to open it. It looks very much as if the dead man took the the combination with him." Cleveland Plain Dealer. v Robbers Pail to Eob. Lincoln, Dec. 20. Safe blowers endeavored early this morning to rob the treasury in the capitol building. Their plan was to kill the watchman but the latter opened fire and a battle with re volvers followed. The robbers were put to fl'ght and bloodhounds are now tracing them. Natural Gas Explosion. Pittsburg, Pa.,. Dec. 20. An explosion of natural gas, at Beaver Falls to-day wrecked a number of houses and seriously injured sev eral persons. It was caused by a leak in a gas main'. Practically all the legislation to be enacted at this term of con gress has for its object the spend ing of money. Every circular printed in Magdeburg, Germany, must be approved by the police before distribution. They have no curfew law in New York, but the Supreme Court has decided that a woman should be home by midnight. If she makes a habit of staying out later than that she must carry a night key and no expect her husband to sit up to let her in. Talk about cheek! The Wis consin man who borrowed money from his father-in law to pay ali mony to his divorced wife and then skipped with it, certainly tkes the pake. Gulf port, Miss., Dec. 20. Lew is, the young negro who last night shot and killed Marshal W. E. Richardson, was captured this af ternoon, 8 miles from town. A mob which had followed - the bloodhounds used to track the murderer, immediately took Lewis from the officers, dragged him back to town and hanged him to a tree near the scene of his crime. Lewis' father was also captured, but probably will not be lynched. Early last evening Marshal Richardson was expostu lating with a negro who was de- It is said that a few newspapers spread between the covers on a bed will be equivalent to a blanket or two and that a newspaper around the body under the coat is as good as an overcoat, and yet there are some people who do not think much of newspapers. Wil mington Star. A woman in Syracuse, N. Y, has increased the population of that town with four sets of twins,in succession. The Editor's Christmas. Our Thanksgiving dinner was fine, two jay birds " and a yaller- hammer; but we expect to beat that on Christmas. We have our gustatory and masticatory organs and functions fully attuned and in exhilarating expectancy of having a big fat crow, two meadow larks and a nredatorv kildee. Now this menu would make good king Ar thur pause and reflect that he couldn't beat it. Lumpkin, Ga., Independent The Kinston Free Press says: We learn that there was a teriffic explosion at Hookerton Wednes day. The colored Odd Fellows' ball was blown up. It seems that a room below the hall was used for storage and in this room was a keg of powder. The buildjng caught fire some way, and before the pow der could be removed the fire reached it and the explosion occur ed. Every building in Hookerton was shaken, and people for a dis tance of ten miles felt the shock. The Chicago Record says: "Five hundred Chicago ministers will usher in the twentieth centu ry with a grand Christian rally. Clergymen of all denominations will assemble in the Methodist block, Clark and Washington streets, on the morning of January 7th and will devote the entire day to the discussion of religious pro gression during the nineteenth century." For the first time since 1814, when the British burned the Capi tol, the British flag was draped inside the House of Representa tives and hung on the from of the-Capitol on Wednesday last at the Centennial celebration of the founding of W ashington. The looting of China by the allies demonstrates that all Boxers are not Chinese. It is a disgrace to a so called Christian people. Winston Journal. The bar room, located just out side the corporate limits of Kern ersville, was broken open and rob bed Monday night by unknown parties. The owner stated that the thieves carried off about fifty dollars' worth of fine liquors, most of it being in bottles. The negroes in Georgia pay four per cent, of the taxes and have forty-eight per cent of the school population. A woman uses ftp the best part of oer life trying to get into so ciety and the rest of it trying to keep other people out. It is folly to draw a bill on a blind man payable at sight. Cornelius L. Alvord, the New York bank man who got away with $600,000 can give his lawyers a steady job. They hive found 51 indictments against him, hut they haven't found the money.. Events in the Philippines, South Africa and China make it appear that Peace has to be coaxed a long time before she consents to spread her wings over the land. When a man sues for $10,000 and gets a 6 cents verdict he con cludes that he had a sort of pica . -i a - . yune jury mingtojo Star A western man, speaking of a cyclone, said it would have blown his house away had there not Deen such a mortgage on it. A big fortune awaits the inven tor of a sewing machine that will collect rents, repair family breaches and mend bad manners. Woman's revenge on man for being jcreated a woman is the af ternoon tea. ' WANTED ACTIVE MAN OF GOOD character to deliver and collect Jn North Carolina for old established manufactur ing wholesale house. SUUO a year, sure pay. 1 Honesty more than exper.ence required. . A 1 :.l at;i I On r reference, any bank in any city. En- tO aeai Wltn. Wll-jcloae sell addressed stamped envelope. Manufacturers, Third Floor, afc yearoorn St., Chicago. '
Salisbury Globe (Salisbury, N.C.)
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Dec. 26, 1900, edition 1
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