- , f - . - ; 1 r mi- i SEMI-WEEKLY ...- to : -: . ; . v'- . fy.G..-y .x -' ,v THE fteiVDS Cyiit6'nn7.. ;:-.. I III - V, Vol. 15. Salisbury, N. C, April 8, 1902. Ac;3Tun:LvT0; VttSM: a bill Rcip- wjlssal Districts. P. "bbond,' ya.ti April 3. A big iu tbe Democratic party has n precipitated by Governor , .Montague, who," wi$h the closing Boesiou'bf "the legislature this eve .niug, ;. eentrin a message vetoing tjie bill reapportioning the con- The Governor claims that the bill . is contrary to state and federal4 law add is inimical to the best in terests of the commonwealth. Opponents of the reapportion ment claim that the state was so redistricted by the bill as to make the 10th district, represented in Congress by Major Peter Otey, Republican, as a punishment' for his opposing the machine. TRA1H ROBBERS AT YORK. 6o!og to Africa to Raise cotton. . Four stalwart young colored . men'rom the South, one of whom is accompanied by his wife, are in the.city on their way to Africa. i where they will live. permanently, joining XouLOth.crs whp; went out last yeajr as mop! agriculturist, .. hoping to show . the natives of .logo, on the west.: uoaat, how to raise cotton "by the latest Ameri can methods..: v - ' ' AH of thes'e instructors, or'mod els,n;a8 they are called, are fr m the Tuskegee Institute, over which Booker -T. Washington presides. They are iu charge of J. N. Callo way, of Tuskegeo, who, employed by the Germain Colonial Economio Society," took out he models of last vear and started a cotton plan tation of .100 acres. Togo, Mr. Calloway says, is . ' about the size of North Carolina . It is a German possession. Cotton is grown there in a crude way by the less than half civilized natives, who, however, are willing to4work and take great interest in the model farms and farmers. New men from the South will be hired tvery year to become cotton' raisers in Africa, but Mr. Calloway says it is not proposed to start an emigration to that country. New York dispatch. T&ej Hold cp a Traia la Uisscarl izi get Poor! Paid for Heir Troolile. St. Joseph, Mo., April 4 Pas senger tram Io. 13 on the Bur lington road which left St. Joseph for Denver at 11:40 last night, was held up three miles north of the city limits by four masked men. Railroad authorities assert that the robbers did not g6t any thing, although on 'this point conflicting reports are in circula tion today. Several rumors have it that a large amount was secur ed by the. bandits. The robbery, or attempted rob bery, took place 15 minutes after the train had pulled out of the Francis street station in this city. The-'scene is very near the place where, on the night of September 24, 1893, four young men of this city made a futile attempt to rob a Burlington train, two of the par ty being shot down. On that oc casion the railroad authorities under the leadership of W. C. Brown, then general manager of the Burlington's Missouri lines, ran a dummy train loaded with policemen and deputy sheriffs, tlje scene of the trouble i i- ; - i t i iq xne ronnera were taxen oy surprise, their plans having been tipped off by a treacherous con federate. In the attempted robbery of last night, after holding tne train 35 minutes the bandits allowed it to proceed. The men compelled the engineer and firemen to attempt to cut off the. baggage car. This attempt was successful ; thereupon the baggageman was ordered to open the door. This was done. Then a number of shots were fired at the trainmen, but none took effect. The : 'engineer ran his train to the next station and reported to the officials in this city. A dozen -detectives were at once sent to the scene, but thus far no clue has been found. ukcdnshtutiqkal. His Tens Anti-Trust Law Knocked est Bi Ccart's Decision. " ; Austin, Tex., April 2. The Court of Civil Appeals, third dis-, trict, today handed down opinions in the cases of the State of Texas against the f Waters-Pierce Oil Company on appeal from McLen nan county, and the Shippers Compress and Warehouse Com pany, on appeal from Travis coun ty, affirming the decisions of the lower courts and declaring the anti-trust acts under - which the suits were . brought to' be uncon stitutional.. . i , The suit against the Waters Pierce Oil Company was brought by the state to recover penalties UASOli AIID DIXQH'S UIIL COHCnTO 311?. ; - THE FC?LEfS i7irj. .. . la Ai:tisr S:za bUrestl I:?:rc:ti:a RerdUi lir. Prica, sijs Ttsrt till ta a Harked - Ttls Old Lasizarl. : Art Earlj AlTi::a!a Fri v mm m 1 1 mmm. i ill 1 1 1 ii in II fciiT Mini I iv i ill K j n n i x-v i ri on n I I ii II u r Tna ti tti a rmT w rm a nil arm - O - - -m-mmmm wm w I ' " V, A U Wf - . I - W U V. W . UW U 44 W i lUg( . . sentimental interest-attaches to Price has sent the following letter People's Party, ol the. f United Mason and Dixon's line, which is to the press: I connot empha- States, a new political party was. being resurveyed and remarked size too strongly Tthe strength of formed here today, composed of by authority ofj.the legislatures the present cotton situation. Re- reform elements opposed to . the iof .Pennsylvania and Maryland. Iceipts indicate absolute exhaus- Democratic and Republican par- Uriginally it was intended merely tion while exports, which are to las a mark of boundary between day againdouble the receipts, re the possessions of the Penn fami- fleet the eagerness of the demand, ly on one side and Lord Baltimore The .only large quantity of cotton on the other, but in later years I that is lelt available to meet the . A - tis. The platform of the. new. organization f embodies the plat form adopted at the conference held in Kansas .City last' Septem ber, when'a call-for- a "convention it became the frontier between enormous demand is the stock at I was issrd'to unite reform forces, tw warring sections whose armies New York and . New Orleans. At pushed desperately forward to other points existing stocks are Jcross'it. Prior to the breaking out nearly all sold or contracted for. against Plutocracy.0 -It - re af- -;. firm, the i :rit of the declaration v s. - of the. pri:. t oi tne war netween thn nt.A.t.pa Mn. I it annears to me now tnat the i iifttinnni rnnv. son and Dixon's line marked the physical impossibility of getting ple'C party, in b;01118 0 nortbern boundary of slavery and enough cotton to keep the world's aiid Cincinnati. autne e rrzmspiGdl&i the 01 xne reo maha maud the. trust acts bf Texas are unconstitu tional. - for violation of the anti-trust statute of 1899. . f the southern limit of abolition- spindles going- will be apparent I for'the iul'Tative and Kerendum Under the decisions of the Courti ism. . On one side of the line was I sooner than I anticipated. and T I an'd the'.:eoverrirflGntou'if't5hip of . - I mi- Vi 19 m iliM m y-v l-i a1 w Cm I .If L I ' - . ! 1 f a ' a ni iwiiu nuu uu buo utucr Blue vtuuiiiuuo w ' uciiovo . m a vcijr i ail puunc UtHJliea cases today, all threeof the anti- "the south," conflicting elements prompt reflection .of this fact by I pal planks;' "While separated by an bf divis been a gulf between. . Prnt Hnrtt TnrrV I Ownership. r3arv.t)f L LonnY thA" Mason and Dixon s line was old. w, . 0 wi ' , , . ' ' Wilmington, April . 8, Wil- nearly a century old. when the . . . . .. . i . . mmgton ana tnis immeaiate sec clouds of civl war lowered upon - , . , - rrmm ' . , tion has been visited by three frosts it. The gentlemen who surveyed ... - , , i. i m ir j i tais we& ana tat It. ( l ino M O orr onH Inrnmi n U Tt; oeginning -w iook Conditions Is Texas. . j v Laredo, Texas, April 3. Judge McLane and District Attorney; Hamilton who have returned from Carizzo, where they went . to hold a term of the District Courtj for Seapata county are reported tq have declared that the v people of that country are in a most deplorable condition and thai some relief must be given to bene- fit their situation . ' Judge McLane is quotod as hav ing said; "There is no fodder ioj the horses and corn was five cents a pound (Mexican money.) The stock are sopoor they can scarcel walk. The water holes are nearly all dry, wui last out a lew ecss longer and when the water fails what stock is left will not live a week. ' . , I "We travelled 140 miles," said the judge," and in that distance did not see enough grass to fill ated by an imaginary mark an immediateand sharp advance party; "the Tptkn .TujsUi'tL rision, yet as assaredly sepa- in the market. - SociaIi?, thaTVefrendu;n LeaguX in interests as if there had the "Uuion Labor Vparty, PiTolictp on, were commissioned m 1763 and they completed their task and were discharged in 1767. At in tervals of five miles large stone were set up to mark the boundary between the lands of Penn and Ijord Baltimore. The stones were brought over from England for the purpose. On one side of them was engraved the letter "P" and on the other "M,:V the former facing north, and the latter south. re arms of the land s proprietor The intermediate miles were marked with smaller stones bear ing merely the initials. Years ago, more than half a century, trucxers are the least bit Ownership, partyof t. Louis', the Prohibition patyarid ;th Unitsd Christian party represented on the floor of the convention , accredited or by J volupteej dele- . gates, only twaffiftioh;al-organlz-. .' gloomy over th9 continued coid ' thut spell. For two mornings ice has. appeared in exposed places. - The truck farms are suffering 'v&d it is feared that much damage has resulted, v especially .in decaying the season. Truckers in this sec tion must have early seasons for marketing their strawberries and vegetables, or else they will not be able to get good prices after 4-Vin tti.V frrxm rrf rr oaotinn admoTxe begiutf topour -uahe market. is oi tne land's proprietors, m.-j i.a. : slight. So for the cold's greatest injury to the truck planters is in delaying, the seasoji. . ' Public vOwnership v .'party, ;ha4v given their delegates any authori ty to" form an alliance. . . . . -. It it the hope," hdweveiyorthe . Allied People's Party, that tithe f reform forces wUl'decide to nnita with the n w ofgikjtzition. - j Jfce conve;ition waR practically. .,.; dominated by the.Jople'spirt ; At times discussions 6f 'a livety. Uessages To Mid-Ocean. Marconi still continues to pr . form he impossible and McClure's ' V . . . . secreiary pi m ! IMaazine to report him. The n j account in the February McClure's 1 Mnrconi's experiments at St. John's, Newfoundland, Marconi, himself declared to be the best popular account ever written of his work in wireless telegraphy. Now, iu the April issue, Henry Herbert McClure tells the story of the wireless messages received on board the"Philadelphia"on her now famous voyage. These messages not only broke the dis tance record established at St. John's, but also for the first time demonstrated the practical utility of the system over long distances; for these messages consisted of words and sentences, not,' like the others, of a single letter, and they were actually printed on telegraph' typo, not as at St. John, barely detected on a telephone by a straining ear. The writer of the article is a personal friend of the inventor, and the account is often given in Iarconi,s own words. Rowdies on'a Lark. Reading, Pa., April 2.- Sixteen young men. sons . of reputable citizens of this city, were arrested this afternoon for terrorizing a country school, rioting, destroy ing property and threatening the teacher. Henry, C. Kissinger, e Bern School Board, is the prosecutor. ! Miss Helen DeLong is the teacher of the Bern School about a mile north of this- city Her al legation is that the young meli who were in the country, boasting a spirit of deviltry, entered the school in a body, behaving obnox iouslv and disorderly, shouting and terrorizing the little ones. After smashing a neighboring hot house the young miscreants escaped on their bicycles. Jus tice Snyder held each of them iu $200 bail for court. one's hat. Nothing has been growing in that country for two years." . . ety. nature took p'ace and fora.tim'eV".: it seemed that ihe movemont wat" r- - ... m mm about to fail, owing to the un willingness of a number of the People's party delegate! to make any concessions' to the other reform-forces present. In the plank on money the plat form1 adopted favors 'scientific Frost fa The South- 1 Ten years ago it appeared likely ' Th8 B",S RfPal"d- tnat the historic boundary would 1 London, 4. rUtcnener today money based upon the entire become lost, or at least involved reports a heavy engagement near wealth of the people of the nation in doubt. Recently the Pennsyl- Dreikuli, in Western Transvaal, and not redeemable in any spe- vania and Maryland legislatures on March 81, in which 1,500 Boers cific commodity, but to be 1 6- ordered the resurvev and the new under Delarey and Kemp were gal tender for all debts, .public Atlanta, Ga., April 3. Frosts marking. The engineers are now completely routed by a force of I audprivate, and to be issued by engaged in the work British under Generals Cookson the government only without the About a dozen of the old stxmes and Keier. The report reads: intervention of banks, sufficient have been found. Some "of them "Our forces were reconnoitering in quantity to meet the requ ire were performing prosaib duties, toward Hart river when they ments of commerce Louisville Instead of standing &R ppntinel. struck the gun tracks and caught dispatch. Severe at JSJlOXVllle. KepOrtS i: u.x , I nnfli fha Ttnora roanltinrr inn from Macon Savannah Augustaj ly diyided gbctio , they were Unning. fight of eight miles weregeneral last night in Tonnes? see. portions of Mississppi, Ala bama, Georgia and the Carolinasl The frost was heavy at Nashville; Charlotte and Wilmington and In Fator of T& Park. Washigten, D. C. April 2. -Senator -Simmons was invited to attend and address the National Charleston, Memphis and Meridian are to the effect that the frost was light. The damage to the fruit crop in ueorgia, it any, was slight. , Heavy frost occurred last night in the yiciuty of Chattanooga! Tenn'.v doing some damage tcj fruit. Up to last night the damage: by previous frost had been from 26, to 50 per cent rn Southern Tennes- see and it is feared the heavy frost last night will cause an average of 50 per cent loss to fruit growing sections. serving as door steps, as lining through the bush. Emerging in for bake ovens, as horseblocks the open country the British were and the like. The persons using advanced upon by large Boer rein them protested against giving forcemeuts, who attacked our them up, not because of their his- flanks forcing them hastily to en torical interest, but became they trench positions. Fighting ensued . 1 1 A - I A. 1 wereBervinga purpose. However, in cioso quarters uutu mo enemy they;were finally secured, and will was repulsed on all sides. Delarey be given their old places, firmly and Kemp and other Boer leaders secured in bases of ; cement. In vainly attempted to rally the men. cases where the old stone mark- wh? retreated northwest and south ers are missing, iron posts will be "offering heavy losses. Our cas supplied. The work of locating uahies were also severe. A party t.hn iin hoon tirta hn i of the Canadian Rifles held their 2y Sargent To Succeed Powierif. , Washington, April 4 Frauk Sargent, president of the Brother hood of Locomotive Firemen, saw the president today aud was. ten .dered thVpoaition otcommissioner General of Immigration. Mr. Sargent accepted the offer, but he Uail Sharks Uai Sooa Go Free. j Washington. April 4. It is Good Roads Convention at Char-J reported in ya8hlngton today that lottesville, fa., to-morrow and the relase of the Cuban postal, has accepted the invitation, but authorities convicted of theft has: his absence in North. Carolina will begun. prevent his being there. In an order issued March 15th, j Representative Will Kitchin haa but for some reason not made pub-' had a new postoffice established at lie until . yesterday Governor the Yaiicey Copper Mine, in Per- General Wood has issued a pardon will shortly be crowned with suc cess. Savannah News. post till every man was put out of action. Farcers la Cottca Sections Discocrased. Savannah, April, 8. Early cotton planting in this section is threatened with two drawbacks, one the wet weather . and the un- ' Saul Tea Frca Deatk. "Our little daughter had an al most fatal attack of whooping l cough and bronchitis," writes Mrs.' W. K. Haviland, of Armonk, N. Game Present la Soata Carolina. Hommett Brothers, of Illinois, have purchased 1400 acres of land on the line of the Southern Rail way in South Carolina for the purpose of establishing a game pre-, serve It is said that theegentlemen will establish a reserve on the plan of the Yellowstone National Park, where bison or buffalo, deer and all . kinds of large game will be pro tected, withau effort of replenish v. ing th9 forests with game. This information will be received with pleasure by those who have enter- laiuea iear mat me native game species would soon b$ extinct in this country. The land that has been bought is iu forestry and shrubbery boundaries and it is the intention of the projectors to be gin the importation of game at once. It will eventually .make son county, named Crews. .. The House Committee on Agriculture will favorably report the Appalachian Park bill aa soon ascertain data is furnished. There will be no minority report. The district to former Postmaster Thompson of Havana, who was convicted of complicity with Rathbone and Neely. President Pal ma is expected, in accordance suitable condition of the ground A 1 J 1L .1 ior wors, ana me aiscouragemem KiuifB New Discovery. Our niece of the farmers .owing to their J who had consumption in an ad- small fields this season. Reports I vanced stage, also used this won- from several sections confirm the aer"" meaicine ana uxiay sne lculcul,rB that nartof th or,f i;v failed, we saved her life with Dr. .i ,r. .J. , uzarc range in ville Citizen. ' ' Miuoari. Ash- is previous statements about the Ur- "di dines3 in preparation of lands, and King's New Discovery as to no the indifference on the part lot her medicine on earth. S:ffirsiB!;:rtAl:;::L Richmond, Va.f , April. 4. The cotirention today adopted the suf- conference issue Tnfwl- 1 t - r 1 1 rdance nitt i an old custom ,to cf th. farmers in some coun by Hble for coughs and .olds. te J;1 TU aadecreeof general amnesty r and S LOO bottles? cmmntvwl hv committee in a yote of bl to 17. attornevship of t his inauguration, and it is con-1""1' .f"6 ftll dmt: l Trial hottu. fr Twelve Democrats voted with the s'a AUt.:4.,. : .a AlaV trna far .Tna uaoawv oeuevea m xiavana mail . .enformto close up Speucer B. Adams, of Grusboro, r'uSJD SKfi T' AaU .hie buiucH affairj before he yesterday, bat it is .aid teMlay punUhment recently imposed .eroara ii Dredicted in Sonth Car 11.1 1 a t Y I.. .. . . mm I . . . I fm w vv A Vt 1 4mWa mKa 4 K A 4i m,m. I V... M ..la-.J A W i3C I T A. 1 I I D Mother Worm Pyrap maket child beaJ r vr et-eum m worms vm oaks i&en tu. At ltoa ttmd. T. LIT rr,. uvb mfpuoncani, . ine conven' tion adopted a reaolulion provfd ing for adjournment today until May 22. The committco on , fnal revision will sit during h9 m?rJg