Newspapers / Salisbury Evening Sun (Salisbury, … / March 25, 1898, edition 1 / Page 2
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SALISBURY DAILY SUN. (DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY.) joe x. roueche; i CLINT. N. BROWN. J Proprietors. SUBSCRIPTION BATES : One Year, Six Months, Three One Month, One Week, $4.00 2.00 1.00 .35 .10 Delivered by Carriers to any part of the city without extra cost. - For ad veriising rates apply to the publishers Office oveil Burt's shoe store, on Main street. Entered at postofflce s seconOHclass matter. Railroad j Guide Below is a connensea scnedule of the departure of passenger trains from Salisbury by tbe sr.nedule wbicb went intoffect Feb. 27. ! 2nd division. No S, Local, leaves No 36, Fast Mail, leaves . No 12, Local, leaves No 38, Vestibule, leaves No 32, Florida limited. 2nd DIVISION. SOUTHBOUND. NORTHBOU ND . I 7:10 a m 10:48 a m 7:50 p m 9:35 p m 12:42 a m No ,37, Vestibule, leaves 8:17 a m No 11, Local, leaves . 9:37 a m No 7, Charlotte, leaves 8:00 pm No 35, Fast Mail, 'eaves 8:50 p m No 31, Florida limited 2:44 a m 3rd DIVISION. WESTBOUND. Noll Local, leaves . 10:05am: No 15 Chattanooga, leaves 8:50 pm No 12 Local arrives 7:40 p m No 16 Chatanooga,arrives 10:30 a m YADKIN. No 48. (Ex. Sunday) arrives 9:30 a m No 47. (Ex. Sunday) leaves " 12:30 p m Saljsbury, N. C, March 25, 1898. i - . . MANY POPULISTS REPLIED. The Raleigh correspondent of the Charlotte Observer says in this morning's paper that many Populists yesterday replied to Congressman Pearson's letter which inquired if they proposed to fuse congressionally with the Democrats. The jcor respondent says one of them told him: 4 4 We want no gold bugs;! we want no one with ; your currency record. The Populists had better stand alone and let the Republicans and Democrats fuse." i . We are glad to note this dispo sition on the part of our Populist friends. Many ofj them, as is seen, appear not to j want to fuse with the Democratic party. Please execuse us though from a fusion w7ith Republicans, as sug gested by lone of the Populists. In regard, however, to the re plies, as noted above, it is well to wait until Mr. Butler speaks. If he desires' fusion with the Repub licans why that will mean fusion, all protest to the contrary. There never was a more boss-rid-den party than the Populist, and if Mary Ann says fusion, or any thing else, it will gOjWith the great majority of its adherents. This has already been demonstrated. Speaker Reed has - received from a constituent in his Maine Congressional district a letter from a farmei saying that his farm is worth about $600; that there is a mortgagee of $400 on the property and that he can't make both ends meet and pay oil. the incumbrance. He therefore asks the Speaker to see if he can't get the members of Congress to subscribe $1 apiece toward liquidating the debt. Mr. Reed ha passed the hat. Hoi . Thomas E. Watson, who was nominated for Governor one wee i ago,f by the Populists, is out in an open leter declining to accept the honor. After saying that he could not be elected, no matter low the ballots went, he announced that tics for good. - T he is out of poli- Rep resentative Marsh, chair man of he House Committee on the Militia, called upon Secretary A-lser and urged that in the event of hostilities with Spain, the re course o dieirs b the Government for sol- the I State militia, who i ' . - should be invitOd to' volunteer for the country's defence. Senator Bacon introduced a resolution in the Senate that while the government and people of the United States national material honorab honor will mantain their and protect their interests, they intend in the present emergency to use every e means ta preserve peace. i Tqe ! ' Washington corres pondent of the London Daily News says that! President McKinley de clared t White there w determined to sible power hi ) a recent visitor at the llouso: "I believe that 11 be no war, and I am prevent it if pos the means in my all Tin have been- received ' by the Sur geon-Geperal ee hi ndred applications of the Navy from young doctors of the country wil ling: to enter the service as assistant! acting surgeons, but compara tively few wish to accept perma nent commissioned rank. v 1 I I Ge representative from Alabama, is 61 yeard itol by r who was icral Joe Ayiieeler, the I of age, but he recently astonished the! visitors to the cap- tannirisra race with a friend on a bicycle. and cool anul The ! American appetite for frog is increasing, and the indica tions are that the Frenchman . will have to take a back! seat as a ban queter on froggy, j The epicures of this country lastjyear consumed about 1,000,000, for which they paid restaurant prices about $150, 000. Frog culture lis becoming an established industry, in which New Jersey so far holds the lead. But the Wilmington Star savs the Jersey frog isn't a circumstance to our fully developed Eastern North Carolina croaker. ! .Gov; Atkinson, of West Vir ginia, has just returned home from a trip to Richmond and Washing ton. He said that he had several conferences with officials at Wash ington,fand that the general opin ion is that it is scarcely possible to avoid war with Spain. Everyr thing points to War, he added. , The session of Wake Superior Court, criminal term, next week, will probably be lively. The Sea board Air Line and Southern Rail way people will be called up to be spanked for. issuing free passes in 1895-'96-'67. i ! t -Maine's principal crop is safe now. She las harvested and housed lor export 816,000 tons of ice. THE OHIO FLOOD. expects to sit up in the rake the mercury runs up. in the profits when -f-Mr States Chapel 'Baylor, of the United Geological Survey, is a Iill for the purpose of de- ous points in erminirig h true, meridian. These lines are to be established at vari- the State. TIt is Ieariied that E. A. Hol- ton, Republican State chairman. and also Congressman Linnev. are ardent aspirants for the Federal jud rrfsh & " confirmed. p in case E wart cannot be Jonn Bull has recently become so frieri will wa 1818 an build w lly td the U. S. that he ve the understanding of d not object if we wish to irshins on the lakes. f i The Water Over Fifty Feet at Cin i i ; cinnati Lives Xost. I Cincinnati, March 24. At 10 o'clock to-night the. Ohio, river at Cincinnati registered 51. feet 2 inches, i rising an inch an hour. Reports from northern West Vir ginia, at the sources of the Mo nongahelaj bring news of heavy rains last night, and of a rapidly rising river to-night. All up river towns report the Ohio rising rapidly. Loss of life is reported at Ham ilton, Ohio., where the great Miami swept away two cottages and drowned six inmates, namely, Mrs.' Charles Whitman and her three small children; and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Springman. Zanes ville reports the drowning of the infant son of Mrs. Charles Wuest, and of a man known as Deacon Jones; also of the drowning- by the upsetting of skiff of "Airs. James Brennan anjl child, and John Leach, and the drowning of Mrs. Mary Church and Timothy Jones. j . Arrested In Tarboro. Tarboro, N. C, March 23. The sheriff of Abbeville, Ga., ar rived l here this morning with a bench warrant for the arrest of Jas. G. Mehagen and T. J. Latham, the former cashier and president of the Bank of Abbe ville. The warrant charges these young men with defaulting $12,000 of the money of the bank .-depositors" at ;: Abbeville. ' This warrant was served on Messrs. Mehagen i and Latham to-day. Mr. Me hagen was in town and Mr. Lath am was in the country. Neither one of the parties made any j at tempt to escape but ave them selves up to the ' sheriff of this county. They left this afternoon for Raleigh where the case will be heard to-morrow bef ore Judge Clarke, of the Supreme court. - 1 Virginia Gets a Contract. Washington, March 24. The bureau of ordance to-day awarded contracts for supplying .1,597 cast-iron projectile for seacoast fortifications. As rapidly as com pleted they w ill be shipped to the Various places at which they are needed. Two Virginia companies were given the contracts, the Petersburg Iron Works and the Tredegar Company of Richmond. The awards were distributed as follows: One hundred and eighty seven 10-inch solid shot and 745 12-inch mortar shells, the latter of 800 pounds each, to the Peters burg Company, and 165 of the twelve-inch mortar shell of 800 pounds each and 500 twelve-inch mortar shell of 1,000 pounds each to the Tredegar Company. Anot ler phase of the cigarette smokin g evil is attracting the at tention of Cincinnati physicians in the fease of Joseph Savage, a youth of nineteen, who is now in one of the city hospitals. Through s,mokin Savage forty cigarettes a day contracted an ulcer which destroyed his eustachian tubes, and helnow exhalessmoke from his earfes as well as from his nos trils. Take i All Drug Cure. 25c. TO CURE A COLD IN 0NE DAY- a'xatlv Bromo Quinine Tablets! gists refund the money If it fails to Shave at the Climax. Virginia Ready For War. A Richmond, Va., special says: Gov. Tyler and President McKin ley have had a correspondence in regard to the part Virginia would take in the event of war. The Governor, through the Adjutant General, has ascertained accurate ly the spirit of the State troops and found that the State guard would respond promptly to any call made upon them. The troops have ' been prepared quietly for any emergency and the equipment for. life in the field put in order. There is much enthusiasm among the colored troops in Virginia over the prospect of helping the insur gents in Cuba. Two new compa nies of colored troops have been organized with a view of active service in the field and the colored contingent will be a considerable factor if a call is made. ' NEWS OF THE DAY. Telegraphic News Condensed for tke Conven ience of Hasty Readers. The village, of Waldo, Ohio, has been washed out of existence by a flood. I Nearly 1,000 immigrants were landed at the port of New York yesterday. Gen. John B. Gordon arrived at Staunton,! Va. , and was accord ed an enthusiastic reception. The Klondike bark Helen W. Almy was capsized in the Golden Gate and forty lives were lost. Spain has informally inquired at Paris if France will mediate at Washington! alone or with other powers. I Two robbers held up a train in California, blew up the express car and drove off with a registered mail pouch. .i - ' I ' - Some young ladies in Winston are collecting funds to. provide headstones for unmarked graves of Confederate soldiers. A. B. and O. passenger train was thrown from the - track near Zanesville, Ohio,, by a washout. The passengers were rescued by boats. There is more talk in Madrid of an international court to settlk the Maine dispute. Spain, it is said, would prefer Swiss, Belgian or Swedish arbitrators to English. The large; bridge over White Water river Richmond, Ind., has been destroyed. The city electric light plant is flooded. Many people have been homes. driven from . their John Oliver, who -shot and kill ed his niece, ! Kate Oliver, wascon victed of murder in the first de gree at Baltimore yesterday and was sentenced to eighteen years in the penitentiary. j - The greater part of the east and of Canton, Ohio, is under water. Heavy damage will result. A cloudburst' soems to have struck near Shcrrodsville, as portions of railroad track are entirely washed away. Four thousand persons have been driven from their homes at Zanesville, Ohio, on account of heavy floods and very few have saved any of their household ef fects. More than fifty persons are reported missing. Striking New York cfgar ma kers, numbering 350, went back to work yesterday. They had been out a week, protesting against a reduction in wages of from 25 to 45 per cent . ; Their demand for a return to former prices was grant ed. Rev. J. II. Williams, a: colored preacher of Masocutah, 111., has applied to the courts of that place for a mandamus to compel the county clerk, to issue to him a license to marry Miss Lavina, a 19-year-old white girl of his con gregation. The' heavy; rains of the ptast few days have caused all rivers, in Missouri to rise rapidlv. The ) a vers Osage and Gasconade es pecially are pouring floods of water into the- Missouri, It is ex pected that by to-morrow all low lands on the I Mississippi as far as the mouth of the Illinois river will be under water. At St. Charles the Missouri has risen at an alarm- ing rate. - . BOARDERS WANTE D A few more lady, or gentlemen boarders can be ac commodated by addressing lock box 126. House admirably located. FOUND A pair of shoes, in rear of postofflce. Owner can get same by paying for this notice. - - with modern improvements: For par- : ' ii x ii .. iv tiuuiuif can it umuouin oince. Millions Given Away.. It is certainly gratifying to the public to know of one concern in the land who are not afraid to be generous to the needy and suffer ing. The proprietors of ' )r. King's New Discovery for Con sumption Coughs and Colds, have given away over ten million trial bottles of this great medicine, and have the satisfaction of knowing it has absolutely cured thousands of hopeless cases. Asthma, Bron chitis, Hoarseness and all diseases of the Throat, Chest and Lungs are surely cured by i it. Call on T, F. Kluttz & Co., druggist, and get i a trial bottle free. - Regular size' 50c. and $1. Every bottle guaranteed, or price refunded. , W : -0- & A Square Deal for ; : a Eound Dollar. Spring; will soon be here. - ' , I" . The money tied up in our winter stock must be ' released for spring and summer buying. That's why you can buy two shoes for the price . of one. You needn't be surprised if you see som one else buy a pair of winter shoes from us for less money than you paid a month ago you needn't imuK we cnargeci you too much. - ommpamiyn. Buirt Slhoe -Salisbury, TOC3SS. S Everything Bright and Pretty ! We will tell you through Wednesday's paper w hich day we w ill open, Thursday or Friday, and will be glad to .show you through our stock. Come and see it, as it will do you good to look through a o'mripllete lix!lew We will conduct; a strict CASH BUSINESS. OUR MOTTO: "Underbuy and Undersell for Cash." Very Respectfully, D n iliMIlo Mammoth Furniture Emporium. Words fail to describe the' beauty of our Furniture -in design, up holstery or perfect finish. .Our Library ..Tables, Book Cases, Leather Couches and Leather Chairs are rich and ornamental, as well as durable and eminently useful. Our' Curio Cabinets are w7hat the collectors of specimens ftixicHT i87 . need. - Has the largest stock in the city to select from, and while his o-oods are New, Stylish and up to date in every particular, his PRICES ARFl THE LOWEST. A Specialty. He has a line of CASKETS, BURIAL ROBES, Etc., unsurpassed, in the State. Personal attention given to . ELIBALLIING AND DIRECTION OF FUNERALS : n n " i. n a nj m The line of Mens' Ladies' and Childrens' Shoes we sell is unexcelled. They combine all the excellence of the shoemaking art as to style d finish--look well, wear well, sell well. PRICE WAY DOWN! i
Salisbury Evening Sun (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 25, 1898, edition 1
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