Newspapers / Salisbury Globe (Salisbury, N.C.) / May 19, 1903, edition 1 / Page 1
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VOL. 16. No. 64. Salisbury, N. Cv May J9, 1903. Established 1887. PRESS PUZZLER. VOLCANO PLAYED HAVOC. MILLS MAY STOP. EATING CROW. EXCITING SCENES. THE BLEACHEO JONES Governor Pennypacker 6iv?s His Approval to the Hew Libel Law. . Governor Pennypacker late this afternoon signed the Grady-Salus bill, known, as the "press muz zier." He gives his - reason for approving the bill in a long state ment which is in the nature of an apology. He says-: ' "The questions raised by this bill are of grave importance. They affect; large business . inter ests, the freedom of speech and the press, the right of the citizen to be informed concerning current affairs and the conduct of govern ment, as well as his right to pro tect his reputation and home from . the injuries that result from care lessness or negligence, a well as malicious false reports. They are of importance for the further reason that, whichever way decid ed, the fact that they are raised indicates "widespread dissatisfac tion with existing conditions, and their correct decision is likely to have an effect within and without the commonwealth." The governor says the bill will not interfere with legitimate journalism, but he scores yellow journalism. He says the measure subjects all preliminary iuquiries as to facts and their subsequent publication to the test of care. There is -no interference with "privileged communications," The bill is sweeping in charac ter and requires the utmost care in publication of news items'. It prohibits cartoons, ; makes, it necessary for all : proprietors, managers and - editors : to ; print their names at the top of the edi - tarial coluuin. and altyatfrom $500: to $1,000 fine! It. includes all newspapers . pub lished in Pennsylvania. Harris burg Pa.', dispatch. ,'. "Under the Southern Cross." Mrs. Tiernan, ot Salisbury, well known as ;Chrsitian Reid, novelist, whosp ' Land of the Sky " made the .Western North Caroli na mop-a tains famous and popu lar as the tourists' resort, has - I. s panted permission to the Cor- f ir r i n . X" 4- rt m-w ' Caiia4vt . rn n State Normal College to present in Greensboro her drama "Under the Southern Cross," which has been jreeeived so - f avorably in the cities of the State and elsewhere. The Guilford Chapter of the Daughters of the Confederacy will unite with the Cornelian So- ciety of the Normal in giving the opportunity to witness this drama next Friday evening, May 22nd. Greensboro Record. " Had Enough of Railroad Riding. Amctag the passengers on the passenger train which suffered from a "side-wipe" wreck Satur day was a white woman who lives fourteen .miles from Greesboro. After things auited down she walked off the train and proceed ed to Greensboro; fhe conductor told her it was four miles to "the city. She said that made, no difference, she preferred walking. Later she was heard to "confide to " a friend that it was her third and lastjme on a train. That she never did think much of railroad riding any way. Although four teen miles ffo"m home and with out a conveyance, she. took her chances of - getting- home some other way than riding on a train. Greensboro Telegram. To Cure a Gold in One Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All druggists refund the money if it 'fails to cure. E. W. Grove's signature is on each box.1 25ci The Coffee Plantations In Guatamalla Are v , Burried Under Ashes.. 'News brought here from Guata malla by people who have seen the ruin wrought by the recent erup tion of Santa Maria volcano con firm all previous reports. The situation could hardlv be fore seen. . 4 'All the coffee plantations in the vicinity of the volcano," says Manuel Hurtado, just arrived from Guatalama, have been de stroyed for all time. Ashes from ten to fifteen feet deep cover the country. In the neighborhood of the volcano ashes are so deep that only some of the tops of tall trees can be seen. Scoria an? ashes cover 1,000 square miles and at a depth of 7 to' 15 feet, and five thousand square miles to a depth of from one to five feet One third of the entire coffee crop has been destroyed. Mexico City dispatch. Big Wheat Crop tn Kansas. Reports from all sections of the JCansas wheat belt ' are most en couraging, The State will this year harvest the biggest t crop in its history: Everywhere the soil is full of water and theweather has been cool and especially adapted to growth. During the last three days more than one inch of rain has fallen over the entire wheat belt, and reports from farmers and grain men agree that the total crop this year will reach .90,000 000 4 bushels. This will exceed by 21,000,000 bushels the yield of any other year in the State's history. Topeka, Kan,, dispatchi - - The Request Should Have Been Granted. The following,, taken from an exchange, is given as a verbatim copyof a letter " recently address ed to Judge Neal by a man under indictment for retailing: - "As i am charged with Retal- mg i wisli to say that i had bin fflicted with cronic RHeumitizm for moer then 4 years and hav bin advised to use whiskey with Erbs and minrel and ii february of last year i ".sent"" my keg 20 miles and bought 5 gallons whisky and when i got it the. nabors was sick or got sick rite strat.- i devided my whisky with the sick til it was gon gan i sent my keg back 3 or 4 time3 til up in the summer when I quit keeping Env for mv own use as itemed to create sicknes in the naborhood. And as I had been gittin wors all the time for 4 years until now when I am con fined to my bed and chair aiid hav rmt little hope of Ever gittin any better i herein beg the Hooer of the the Cort to discontinue the case, i hav no money nethar had i Eny property to get Eny mony out of i hav not been able to do Eny 4 work in over 3 years there fore i think it best for the county, Yore informent aught to pay the cost as he is thought to be A man who has made and sold "Hundreds of gallans unlawful. ; "J. H. Fowler,!' ANY CHURGH or parsonage cr, in stitution supported by voluntary contribution will be given a liber al quantity of the Longman & Martinez Pure Paints whenever they paint. " Note : Have done so for twenty-seven years." Sales: Tens of 'millions of gallons ; painted near ly two million houses under guar antee to repaint if not satisfacto ry: lne paint wears tor . periods up to eighteen years. Linseed oil must be . added to the paint (done in two-minutes). Actual cost then about" $1.25 a gallon Samples free. Sold by our agents, - Rowan Hardware Co . . Salisbury, N. C. Try tha Truth-Ikdex only $1. The High Price of Cotton Is Becoming a - , Very Serious Matter. Owing to, the high prices of raw material some of the cotton": mills In this city and vicinity, employ ing many thousands of operatives may shut down. The --dotton manufacturers say one of three things must happen, the'price jiqi the ir raw materialj'must t decline, the manufactured article must rise, or the mills must closeJ V At the present quotations it isclaimYYtate The resolutions provide that o-nods can be made only at a loss. -Some of the concerns are fortunate enough to have a goodly supply of raw stock on hand, purchased some time ago at a reasonable figure, but even in such cases it is said that this can be sold to greater advantage as it v is than manufactured into cloth or yarn. The local mills are said to have, as a rule, a better supply than those in many other sec" tions; but of course do ntft pro pose to run at a loss. " . . The present stringency is due to a corner in the cotton market by New York capitalists and not on account of last season's cropj which was unusually large. A prominent Utica cotton goods manufacturer stated this after- noon that while eastern mills could endure the prevailing high j rates lor any leugou ui hujc, iuo local concerns were fairly? well stocked. The situation seema to be as uncertain to the local manu facturers as. it is to the public. Utica N. Y.i dispatch; . - : Kicking On the Beer. - There seems to" be imr": where and in what auaniti'.i c not appear; Yesterday .the state chemist! - Dr. B.'AV. Kilgore gave j out the statement that a citizen had Kmnohfn. hnht.lft of hoar to the J laboratory and asked that it be analzedV,stating at the' same time that.'nnftnt.it,iea of this beer had drank by a number of people, who had afterwards suffered fronr sick- stomach and indigestion and it was 8uspectedthat the sickness was caused by the beer which was bottled and on sale in Baleigh. ? A careful analysis of the beer re vealed the fact that it was heavily charged with preservatives, especi ally, formalin and salicylic acid, both of which in such quanties as were found in the beer" would ef- ! f?ct e TT h ast thf Par" ties who drank the beer had been effected. ; The state . chemist would . not give the name of the parties at whose request the beer was analyz ed or what brand it was, the'only clue given being that it was bottl ed in Raleigh and on sale here.-r Raleigh Post.- Couldn't Stand to be Jilted. Paris, May 15. Jilted, for the second time.within a few months, Mme. Amma Calve, the famous prima donna, is suffering vfrom aconite poisoning. Her condition is said to be grave. Only her physicians .are admitted-.to her apartments to-dav, and they re fuse to discuss her condition. The X Rays. Recent experiments,' by practi- thb 'aid of the X Rays, establish it as .'a fact that Catarrh of the Stomach is not a disease of itself , cases can be cured, and-hopeless Dyspepsia Cure enable the ; stom but that it results from repeated resignation is no longer neces- ach and digestive organs to digest tkULCioco m luuigoomuui -vn sary. lurs... .uui , uiag, . v iui- anu assimilate an 01 we wuuie Can I Cure My Indigestion.?. ;Ko- Chester, Mass,, is one of the many some food that may be eaten into dol -Dyspepsia Cure is curing whose, life was saved by Dr. the kind of blood that rebuilds thousands. It will' cure you -of indigestion: and dyspepsia, and prevent or cure - Catarrh : of the btomacb. Kodol digests - wnat you. eat makes" the stomach sweet.- Sold by Jas, Plummer. The Alabama Republicans Receive the Col- , orel Brother Again. - ; "The state Republican executive committee met here today, pur siiant to a call- :by Chairman Wellman, and resolutions .wsre adopted practically - nullifying the action taken at the state con vention here last September when it- was decided practically that no . negroes could participate in the councils of the Dartv in the R&at all qualified electors uuder the state constitution, who prom ise to Isupport the Republican ticket and will - abide by the par ty bidding, will be allowed to. par ticipate in all conventions. There are several thousand qualified colored-voters in Alabama, This decision has been carried by the Roosevelt administration! It was the causa of much conten tion in this state, j A " resolution was adopted endorsing " Roose velt's . administration. Birming ham, Ala., dispatch. : ' Industrial Education Now The Fad. ' It is - interesting to see how many professions and occupations are represented by the students in the Agricultural and Mechanical Oolleerfi- -Industrial education - n cla8se8 of people. Lawyers ; and doctors, merchants and manufacturers, bookkeepers and salesmen wish their sous taught some : skilled labor, as well as carpenters nd contractors, mechanics and eugin- Gers Of the fai U :nzethe Agricult Of the families that patro- Agricultural and Mechani- rrajority are en gag e j next - most ...rcu tne . nifcrciiu'jio 'ffhere are" 253 farmers, 49 merch- ants, 20 manufacturers, 20 sales- men, 1 doctors, . 10 lawyers, 14 carpenters and contractors, 13 . - . . . ... I machinists, 12 cotton manufactur erss 10 bookkeepers, 10 insurance agents, 9 engineers and lumber dealers. In all 82 trades, .occupa tions -and professions are repre- Rented by the students of the Agri cultural and Mechanical' College. North Carolina is rapidly becom ing a great industrial; State. Raleigh dispatch. Labor Conditions at Omaha'Serious. Omaha, 15. Labor conditions here have become serious during the nast twentv-fonr hours, and there is a- feeling of anxiety oyer what- might occur. . There has been a number of small riots all over the city. Fifty deputy sher ins patrol the streets. Jb our men were hurt in a demonstration of the strikers, who insist -that the non-unionists not be employed. . NefiTO innointed Consul. President Roosevelt- has aP" pointed C, H; Payne, of Hunting- ton, W, Va.., a negro Republican politician in that state to be IK S. consul at St. Thomas, Danish West Indies, f He , will succeed a negro who was appointed by the late President McKinley in 1897 Disastrous Wrecks. Carelessness is i responsible for many a railway wrecK and tne same causes - are making " human wrecks ot sutterers irom inroat uuu : uuug .ti-juuico. - jjuu otuuo n;annna... fnT nnnanmnf.inn Coughs and Colds, even the worst King's New Discovervi ; This great 1 remedv is guaranteed for all Throat and Lung diseases by all druggists.' Price f50c, and $1.00. Trial bottles free. . For sale by all druggists. Shorts are Frantic and ff the Boom Lasts Several Failures Will Result. - a .c - , . ... - V'" New York, May 14. Exciting scenes were again the order on the floor of the cotton -exchange to dav." Frantic shorts were in evi dence, rushing about wildly in an effort to cover.- There were ru mors today that it the boom con tinued several failures might re sult; ; . " - While the opening Liverpool cables were not so strong as was expected, prices in the market of that cAty quickly advanced and before' the local market started were 11 points above last night on near positions , ' , Liverpool's strength was re flected here in a higher opening, though late months were irregu lar, owing to wet weather. After call July and August met heavy realizing sales under . which they declared being also ' affected by a slight reaction in new crop months at Liverpool. July rose 21 points in New Orleans and August, 20 points. Odd Fellows' At Sea. The grand lodge of Odd Fellows held-its final session to-night and adjourned to meet next year at Durham. Today the visitors were guests of the entertainment com mittee on a trip down the Cape Fear river and out - to sea a few miles, the steamer Wilmington having been chartered for the day. The day was delightful on. the water. Stops were made at all points of interest: Especially pleasant and instructive r was the visit to the government f ortifica- tioii at Fo$- Car 11 rT" r and the two - companies giV b &n exhibition of artillery drill.' " :tc; ' ho ont.iro rfciir uroa . muan - rT7QT t nieaRro. One renresentative - .-; . IT . . - trom Watauga county nad never seen a boat before. Tonight the grand lodge met in closing session and' finished the remaining' busi ness and received the last reports from committees. Wilmington N. C. dispatch. Not a Sick dai Since. "I was taken severely sick with kidney trouble. I tried all sorts of medicines, none of which re lieved me. One day I saw an ad. cf yoiir Electric Bitters and de termined to try that. After tak ing a few dose I- felt relieved, and soon -thereafter was entirely cured, and have not seen a sick day since. Neighbors of mine have been cured of Kheumatism .Neuralgia, , Liver and Kidupy troubles and General Debility." This is what B. F. Bass, of Fre mont, N. C. writes. Only 50c, at au "S&. 1 1 1 - tv Caught In a Beit And Killed. Salem, Mass., May 15.--The machinery of the Salem tannery of the American Hide-and Leath- er Company stepped . suddenly shortly after work began this morning, luyestigation . proved that Charles Nordme, a workman, had been caught in a belt and kill ed.'-' -. The Wastes of the Body. : Every seven days "the blocfd. muscles and bones of a man of average size loses two pounds of wornout tissue. . This waste can- not be replendisned and tne neaitn and" strength kept up without per- f ect-digestion, wnen tne 8 torn- auu uigcBtivo uigaua xaii uu L-,k lofa qnrn- Viaoifh rrixroa wav. and disease sets un. Kodol tne tissues and nrotects the health and strength of the mind and body. Kodol cures Indigestion. Dyspepsia and all stomach trou bles. It is an ideal spring tonic. Sold by James Plummer. of Ten Thousand Deluded Lost Lie Scatter-. ' ed Oier the hot Scorching Sands v of King Credit's desert wastes. Right there is the cemetery where lie Ambition's jeweled babes. It is the common'end of the haughty rich and lowly poor. - The bloat ed bond-holder and the heaving, struggling ranks of poverty, the conqueror and. the conquered go hand in hand marching to defeat in its depths of ruin. - This only goes to show that spot cash, when you sell, spot cash when you.buy, is the only way to get value received for the life-blood . that falls from your brew in big cold sweat drops. 'Tis the almighty dollar that presses values to the lowest notch. 'Tis the weight of dollars only ." that saves you from the sheriff's lock and key and your family from despair- The biggest" stock you ever saw bought on credit is like a last year's bird nest, a poor thing indeed. Spot cash is the lever we use to press down values and how well we do it. is attested by our figures. We underbuy, we under sell.. You have toiled and waited. . At last your opportunity is here and you have the judgment - to' know it, See the argument below against which no element can prevail : " ' Webster V unabridged diction ary of the English language, 73c. Webster's pocket and school dictionary of -the English lan guage, 10c Webster's high school diction ary, containing all the new words, '23c, -: . ' - ; " .- ; - r Arlington-' edition silk -cloth "Tr.d"- Wwr containing- - all the peii,;ArabiMa :. Nights, American ; Poets, Blithdale 'Romance, 'All Aboard, Dodo, Pilgrim's Progress Paradise -Lost, and 'many others 10c" each. The 10c line paper novels at 5c. ' Memorandum books B, 5 and 10c. . ' Envelopes 1, 3, 4 and 5c. Writing tablets, 1, 8, 5 and 10c each. , 2 bottles good ink 5c. Kubber ""tip lead pencils 1; 2 and 4c. - Good steel pens, any kind in-- eluding vertical, 5c a dzenV Pen-holders, swell shape, 1, 2, and 5c. . Pins 1, 2, and 5c per paper. : . Thimbles 1, 2, and 4c each. r Goodlarge 'combs 5 and 10c Picture frames and mirrors, 5, ' 10, and 15o Perfume, god quality, 5, 10, -and i5c. '-Scissors ;5, 10, and 25c. 'Flue stops ornamented, 5c. School bags 10c. . Slate pencils-soapstone, 5 for.lc. Umbrella rib protectors-save -your umbrella, 4c. Whisk brooms 10c. 1 qt coffee pot- 10c. 3qt. "12c. 10 qt; dish pan 10c. 2 qt; milk cup 5c, 6 qt. bucket 10c. Ice shavers 5c. . Large gold hand waiter or tray 10c. Machine oiler-pump bottom 8c. Table knives & forks 40, 60, 80 & 90c set. ' - . Tea & Table spoors 3. 6. 13 & 25c set. : -Pocket knives 5, 1015 & 25c. Pad locks 5, 10, 15 & 25c. . 3 piece bread knife sets 15c. "Coffee pot knobs lc' - Steel gimlets 2 for 5c' ' Clothes wires 9c. . ' Clothes pins 3c doz. 2 boxes tooth picks 5c. Kitchen side lamps complete 20c. Night lamps complete 10c. -"i Large decorated parlor lamps 69c. Bead top lamp chimneys: 5c. And so it goes ; Remember your money back if you want it. Your true friend: ' 115 East Innis street. SP0TSH.
Salisbury Globe (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 19, 1903, edition 1
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