Newspapers / Salisbury Globe (Salisbury, N.C.) / May 26, 1903, edition 1 / Page 1
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IN MEN'S ATTIRE, DROUTH CAUSES CONCERN, A BRIDE SIX HOURS. WAS NOT A MOB. CAUGHT A WILD MAN. THE BLEACHED BORES Escapade of a Pretty Young La in Hunt r ington Creates Sensst'c-?. Huntington, W. Va , May 20. Miss Genevieve LighteR. daughter of one of the most prominent citi zens of Gallipolis, Ohio, was ar rested here in company with " a young man, while she was parad ing the leading- avenues of the city garbed from head to foot in male attire. - . Miss Lightell, who v 3ii Id with in a month have graduated from a State college here, is quite pop ular in social circles, and as she paraded up the avenue, cano in hand, and cigaette in month, she presented a striking appearance and tipped her hit-right and left to charming young girls, Who did not reconize her. - She was soon arrested and hust led to the police station in a pa trol "wag 3u. She wept bitterly as she pleaded with Judge Lallance for freedom, which, was finally granted. She will be sent to her o home in Gallipolis tomorrow. The affair has caused a stir, in so cial circles here". v Double Tracks tor tha Southern. Officials of the Southern Rail road are straining a point to have much of the line between Wash ington and Atlanta, double-track ed early next If all. An increased - . . force has been oraered to work by President Spencer, add now more r - than 2000 men are excavating through hills and upbuilding in valleys for track beds at several . - , joints in Virginia and North J Carolina , Engineers have been 'W at work mapping out improye 0 rrnents and. now many oi the cur ves in the line will be removed - tmder their direction, deep cuts" . . through hills, bridges and other changes being made to replace - . Superintendent of Construction Dodson has secured possession of seven of the largest steam shovels obtainable, and other machinery, and nine new construction engines to assist in the work. They have been shipped south,' and he said , i j ob lOi. Kick j ilia u . oajcuiicu j have them at work betore the end of the week. " According to ' present plans double tracks are to be laid. first ' in nnn treated districts, and later in the fall these sections are to be connected.- Washington Times Sheriff's Posse Riddles a Negro. ' Corinth, Miss., May 21. After an exciting battle, Mose Hart, a negro, wasshot to death hear here last evening by a posse of citjzens. 'Hart had been arrested for carry- - ing concealed .weapons and when on- trial before Mayor Young, he used insulting epithets. Marshal Bell was directed to keep order, whereupon the negro drew a re volver and fired upon the efficer. Hart broke from the court room and escaped to a house near the cemetery. A posse attempted to dislodge him by ahooting into the structure, riuany iuo nouse wb ; i tti: 1 1 ii. - i fired and when the negro emerged he Was riddled With bullets. Not a Sick day Since. "I was taken severely sick with kidney trouble. I tried all sort's of medicines, none of which re lieved me. One day I saw an ad. cf your Electric Bitters and de' termined. to try that. After tak- Dyspepsia Care enable the stom ing a few doses I felt relieved ach and digestive organs to digest and soon thereafter was entirely cured, and have not 'seen a sick day siiice. Neighbors of mine have been cured of Rheumatism Neuralgia, Liver and Kidney troubles and General Debility." This iswhatB.F. Bass, of Fre mont, N. C. writes. Only 50c, at all Druggists. Complaint General in Middle Atlantic States - and New England. ' Washington, May 21. Officials of the Agricultural . Deuartment ....... w - M. show some concern over the drouth in the Middle Atlantic States and New England, and the weekly re ports, received today, of condi- tqns in the East only emphasize the seriousness. "The general absence of rain," says the weekly crop report bulle tin issued this noon, "in the East and over a large Dart of the Lake region and OhiD Valley has inten sified the drouth in these districts in consequence of which crops have made slow, progress and planting and germination have been greatly hindered . ' ' Early vegetables and small iruits are ieic go oe m. tne greatest j 1 I f t M I I - M i i I danger, and the Government re- ports lead the officials of the de- panment xo peiieve, lrconiinuea for another week or iortmght, the drouth will seriously affect neany an iarmers irom tne umo Valley to the North Atlantic Coast. Planting has been entirely sus pended in some farming districts. All surface crops are suffering in New Jersey, and especially straw berries, Shipping Cotton South. For the first time in the memo ry of the traditional oldest inhab itant Philadelphia is shipping cot ton south . -Theyarn mills reserv ing th raw material are owned by Philadelphia capitalists and woldj have to close down entirely but tor this s apply, which Js n ecessa riiy umiteQi xne cottpn: market is cornered by speculators in New York and the price prevailing is so high that the mills cannot use it. At the convention of SDinners held at Charlotte last week it was announced that certain grades of cotton, as yarns ana wraps, were selling in the open market for less money man ine con oi manuiact- ll ' X 1 1 ure, tne nxea cnarges, commis sions and interest all represent ing net losses. The cotton shipped to the south nas been in -storage nere- ana in New York for some months past, ana it is oeiievea tnat tnereN is enough of it to keep the mills con trolling it in operation until there is a break in the cotton . market - Philadelphia dispatch. A Hard One for Senator Money. A new feature has been inject- ea into tne senatorial campaign at Grenada, Miss., by . Governor Lougino, who severely criticized his opponent, Senator Money, for not having the proper regard for consistency in his viaws on the race problem. Me .pointed out the contrast between Senator Money's speech in the Senate on the Indianola 'incident, and the record, wherein it i3 shown that he twice voted for the confirma tion of Minnie Cox: as postmis- tress. New Orleans dispatch. The Wastes Of the Body. I ' . t? eaTfln A t.Ka hl mQacles and bone8 0f a man . 0f ovora lntfH twn nnnnrto nf wornout tissue. This waste can not be repleudished and the health and strength kept up without per fect digestion . When the stom ach and' digestive organs fail to perform thsir : functions, the strength lets down, " health gives way, and disease sets up. Kodol and assimilate all of the' whole some food that may be eaten into the kihd"of blood that rebuilds tne tissues and protects the health and strength of the. mind - and body.. Kodol ! cures Ind igestion . Dyspepsia and alii stomach trou bles. It is an ideal'spring - tonic. Sold by James Plummer. Nurse Who Marrted Her Patient Soon Lett a Widow. . Profeesor T. Allgemon Rose; a well known educator of Durham, N C, who for --the past yeat has been in charge of Matthews acad emy, at Matthews Court House, Va., was married .today to Miss Margaret Johnson, a trained nurse of Harrisonburg, who had faith fully nursed him; through a six weeks , illness of typhoid ' fever. He was thought to be-on the high road to recovery and was so much better that his brother and sister, who had watched by hi . bedside, returned to Durham yesterday. The ceremony was performed, at his bedside bv Rev. 0. M. Yerger, the Episcopal rector. Six "hours later Professor Rcse was dead and - a .- . his bride a widow. -1 be marriage was an entire surprise to Profes 8or Rose's friends. The announce ment of his death and marriage reached his home together. , The kr i d a hAlnnwT to a well kn own familv in Harrisonburg ana is VOung and orettv. Richmond Va dispatch. Mere Opinion. ' . No woman ever really got .mad at a man for calling her a flirt- J One good thing about the pret ty grass, widow is that she doesn't always want to talk concerning the cunningne8S of her baby. An egotist is one who thinks he is just as bright as you are, and he doesn't try to conceal it. - The progress of the world is-re- markable. The lady who. would nftvftr t.hink of fpavm -thn- without nb-A- be the'-- gfanddacIitzr of a l.::... who drank his coffee- out : of the saucer - Genius has ragged cuffs' but talent wears fine linen. ' - Some people still speak of their "arms and limbs." They are the same ones wno reier to wiaow ladies" aud wthe la griDne." Chicago Record-Herald. The Kind of Talk Needed. Rev. H . K. Bover, the pastor of the First Methodist church. preached a stirring and timely sermon on honesty.' He said he once knew a mau who would go in church en Sunday and make the most feeling and moving prayers, who spent the remainder of the six days of 'the week cheating his fellowmen: and this class of hvnocrites were aouronriatelv de- scribed. People who secure goods or money, says Mr. Bover, with no intention ot payms or wno make no attempt to .pay honest debts, are worse than those who break in at midnight and stealj and will stand less chance in the hereafter. .' This is the sort of talk that is needed, and if the, clergy would indulge in it a little, more fre- quently good results might follow. -Statesville'Landmark. : Disappeared From Home. . Roanoke, Va'., May ,20. George TTT , 1 1 1 w . Austin, a weii-Known carpen ter, disappeared from his home here on March 24, and for nearly two months his wifeaud children have not heard from him. When leaving home he told his wife he would return soon. He has three children, one married daughter. He was 40 years old, and his wife is almost distracted, fearing ha has met with foul play. - . . ... v Jo Cure a Cold 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. 25c. - Oply Two Men Eugaged (In the Hold:up ! . ateailatm. i ' Washington, May 20. Post- master General Pavhe today, re- chived the official report of the i(yestigation into the recent in- jmidationv; of John Allgood, a colored rural free delivery carrier aj) Gallatin, Teun. ;.The repirt says that only two persons were involved, and tnat t5e sentiment of the community d?d not uphold their act. The carrier is afraid to resume, believ ing his life would be endangered, bat Inspector Conger, who made ttje . investigation, behevas the cerrier would be safe. The carrier tninks he knows who the two men were who held him up and warned; hem not to continue, but the in spector says their, identity is un certain. An irregularity in tbe appointment of Allgood has been discovered, - and ; the matter has Keen referred to the civil tseryice coin mission. Senator Bate of 1 Tennessee today urged resumption oCservice on the suspended route, 1 XI 1 J 1 A ..." M IT . onxt tne postmaster general. aeierr- ed action:. X Cleared ,$1,210 onvone Cow. , W, ""F. ' Harper, of Coutentnea Neck township, owns a cow that has been giving milk since Febru ary 15th, 1892. She. started with a production of two and oiie-half gallons of milk per dav. The cow is .a perpetual; milker, and was a fihe . investment. ,Mr. Harper paid $10.70 "for ber, sold her calf for $10l- and has ; had mi Ik from cr for! over eleven .ioii3 ox miL. per aay, tne . f II ...1 .T' cor has" yielded 8,030 gallons of J milkjduring the, eleven years and of the report widely circulated to estimating the value r of the milk day- that he was about to resign, at twenty cents per gallon, which MrPayne would not treat the re is easily; obtained for the lacteal port seriously, merely saying with fluid in this section, we have .. ' , ' . - . $1,606. Deducting $3 a month for. the cow's support, or $396 for the eleven years, the cow has $1,210 to her creditj besides $10 for the calf . Kinston Free Press. Chunks of Ice Fell. Guthrier, Okla., May 21. A destructive wind and hail storm visited , southwestern Oklahoma, so severely burned that it is fear doing extensive damage in the vir ed she will not recover, in a fire cinity of Granite. Chunks of ice early today destroying their an inch in diameter fell, ruining crops oi all kinds and playing havoc with property.' Thef public school children were-thrown into a panic and loss of life was nar- rawly averted when the. windows of the school were shattered by hail,- i I ; ndiuuii lllc ricdbUcid.: ; i 'j il: n 4' ;- l The Missouri Court of Appeals has decided that a pastor cannot enforce the collection of his salary by law, but must depend upon the 'good conscience" of his mem- bers to make it up. Preachers will have to Bee to it hereafter -..: I that they have good conscientious flocks. ' ' ... - .- - V. M A A- -. - . : - Disastrous Wrecks. Carelessness is responsible for many a railway wreck and the tsame causes are making ' human wrecks of sufferers from Throat and' Lung troubles But since the advfint - nf Dr.- "FCinc?'s Nftw Discoverv for Consnmn t i o n. Coughs aha Colds, even the worst cases can be cured, and hopeless i . ... . .-- . - resignation is no longer neces sary. - Mrs. Lois Cragg, of Dor- antee to repaint if not satisfacto chester, Mass,, is one of the many ry : The paint wears for periods whose life was' saved by Dr, Kiug's . New Discovery.. This great remedy is guaranteed for all ihroat and Lung diseases by an aruggi8ts. i rnce uc. ana $1.00. Trial bottles free. For sale by all druggists. v v Kthis Long Hair and Amuses Himself by Throwing Stones at Houses. In . the'person of a man giving his name as Francis Colvin the. Wood county officials have a pe- culiar captive. He was caught after a long chase by an officer near Norths Baltimore, and his appearance bore out the report that a wild man was loose in the neighborhood. " He was half naked, his hair and beard were long, and shaggy, and he amused himself by hurling great stones at hohies and heav- ing great chunks of earth high iu- to the air, standing, under the shower of earth and gravel when it came down. He was is wild as a deer and ran with remarkable swiftness. Colvin was lodged in' jail at North Baltimore and yesterday afternoon brought to this city, where medical men examined him. " He said that he came from Trumbull county, and that he was. a friend of President McKin- ley. He said that 'he had com- 1 niencea walking some years ago and had not stopped. His clothes he said, had worn out long since, and he did not believe that he needed any more. He has lived on weeds aud the refuse he could collect at night around farm houses. He will be held pending a furthtr. investiga tion. Bowling Green. O,, dis patch. ' . v Laughs at tbe Rumor. ".Washington, May v 21. When P-va4-vi ortl. C rtnninl .DnvmA ed to the ArlingtoirHoteliofei la'M' - Lhe touna a dozen newspaper men waiting to ask him as ta-the truth a laiierh that if he doe3 resisn he Z . C3 will not do so until the Presidwut returns to Washington and that he will vthen tell the newspapers about it. Minister Bued to Death. Richmond, Va., May 50. Rev. Henry Storley, Baptist minister, waa burned to death and his wife home.. Mr." Storev had -been ill and it is supposed that he arose in the night to get some medicioe and dropped a lighted lamp.' His body was terribly burned. Mr. Storey had served congregations in Kentuckv and Iowa. i - -. The Machinists Strike. St. Louis, May 21, All the machinists in the city belonging to the International Association of machinistr went on a strike to day after negotiations for. several weeks to secure an advance of 10 I per cent. Over 2,000 men are out aud between fifty or-sixty con cerns are affected. The employ- ers offered to concede an advance of six per cent : all around, but this was rejected. ' ANY CHURCH or parsonage ct 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 twen- ty-seven years. Sales: Tens of millions of gallons; painted near- - ly two million houses under guar- i . .... . - no to eighteen years. Linseed oil must be added to the paint (done in e two minutes) . Actual cost then about $1.25 a gallon. aammes iree. sold bv our agents, Rowan Hardware Co Salisbury, N. 0. of Ten Thousand Deluded Lost Lie Scatter ed Oier the hot Scorching Sands of King Credit's desert wastes. Right there is the cemetery where lie Ambition's jeweled babes. r It is the common end of .the haughty rich and lowly poor. The bloat ed bond-holder and the heavingiv straggling ranks of poverty, the conquc-rer and the conquered go hand in hand marching to defeat in its depths of ruin. This only goes to Bhbw that spot cash, when you- sell, .spot cash when you buy, is the only way to get value received for the life-blood that falls from your brow in big cold sweat drops. 'Tis the almighty, dollar that presses values to the lowest notch. 'Tis the weight of dollars only that -saves- you from the sheriff's lock and key and your family from despair. The biggest stock you ever saw bought on credit is like a last year's bird nest, a poor thing indeed. Spot cash is the Jever we use to presB down values and how we$t 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's unabridged diction ary of the English language,' 78c. Webster's pocket and school dictionary of the English lan guage, 10c. ,; . : . : Webster's high school diction ary, containing all the new words; 23c. :-v : - , bound books, containing ' all the old . favorites." and many new ti- - ties, such ai Last Days of Pom peii. Arabian r: 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 3, 5 and 10c. Envelopes 1, 8, 4 and 5c. , Writing tablets, 1, 8, 5 and 10c each. 2 bottles good ink 5c. Rubber' tip lead pencils 1,2 and 4c. Good- steel pens, any kind in cluding vertical, 5c a dozen. Pen holders, swell 'shape, 1, 2, and 5c, Pins 1, 2, and 5c per paper. Thimbles 1, 2, and 4c each. GoQd, large combs 5. and 10c Picture frames and mirrors, 5, 10, and 15c Perfume,' gnod quality, 5, 10, and 15c. Scissors 2, 5, 10, and 25c. Flue stops ornamented, 5c. School bags 10c. Slate pencils-Boapstone, 5 for lc. Umbrella rib protectors-save your umbrella, 4c. Whisk brooms 10c.- ' 1 qt coffee pot 10c. 3 qt. " " 12c. 10 qt. dish pan lOof 2 qt. milk cup 5c. ( 6 qt. bucket 10c. Ice shavers 5c. Large gold hand waiter or tray 10c. : : ' : Macnine oiler-pump bottom 8cl Table knives & forks 40, 60, 80 06 seii. V I 1 1 fc . A. Tea & Table spoons 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 , , Large decorated parlor lamps 69c. ' . ; Bead top lamp chimneys. 5c. And so it goes, f Remember your money back if you want it. ' - : - Your true friend. 115 East Innis street. SPOTCASH. - - 9
Salisbury Globe (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 26, 1903, edition 1
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