Newspapers / The Statesville Mascot (Statesville, … / Aug. 22, 1901, edition 1 / Page 1
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.WB GUARAKTga TWICE AS LARGE A CIRCULATION IN IREDELL AND ALEXANDER COUNTIES AS THAT OP ANY OTHER PAMPER PUBLISHED. r j. : ; t be viii. STATESVILLE, N. CU THURSDAY, AUGUST 22,. 1901. NO, 88, A - - - ' ' - - tIIJ 1 1 " r - - - - i av Mil A Word fT. Suffering Women. No one but yoursd res k; eufleriM ou $o Umpouji. tpu sazner r it tant BKeum low jonr health and baa? NSC U n is noerWv rXfna It c4t9ibmj tfaat f fV eU jtM otrf lapMa the btM of all year tro. iWt 15 ray I 9t3 eruaffy yow btocd a&d bring VJ Sie fcJoert oi naita pacx mta yo kdfu. JL&cu noiw contain qa&rt. I pi th I'iM-vn. fk QUART BOTTLES, Paiofel aoa harwuj UtMM. IrrankfitT. LnettiVaL WMtaa. StarttttT. 1 rial nl the I tenia. Cbacaxe of Kte In Iran lrmIrl all CJ nKai kalr krnaAl ui I JvikiTt WT'S fcAKiJsTAIuLlA. It U a real puoou &r Beadxtka, patsa la Ua laft 7 auraiw weaiiaqpi, nrtvi-aow puu, MKitaaaa. lacracfea, lrregnlei- aotloa ot oa . i mtUm of feraatk. ifeaoratal (Uaekargaa wit finbii aiaaatraatlaj ennKnc ! soi aSC of f set. aoraaosa ai tfca braaila, neuralgia, aterina aaplaOnaat, aad ail tnaaa a w-.iocn wbtok aaakf Mm vn wbmiS Ufa ao miaaraMa. WafLTa a book Jatt 4 1 li(ru UiAanautKM. Yfca want II Ita fre. THE MIC iaA"RTOua CO." Detroit, Mich UrerettM Nr L. er s. The 7smm Uttte Lhrar Ptfla. Iarrtag of Popular Yeung People at ConrlcU to ba Pat on the Marion MountMoira Kailroad - Mooreaville Enterprine. Raleigh News and Observer, I6lh. Wednesday mornioff at 9 o'clock. ! Sust. Mann and Direetor Hack?tt. at the home of the. bride 'k mother at ' of the penitentiary, are now in the mount iVlourne. Miss Bessie Bell west tijakintr Dreoarations for send- and Mr Charlev Temnlftton worn ini? to that section some? 41)0 or riOO A 1 T i-k i attnf. The happy young: couple leit immediately for Asheville to spend ar few days' hooaymoon in the convicts to build the proposed rail road from Marion to the Tennessee line. It is the intention of the peniten Uarv rnanageraent to call in all the convicts now oat at w.irk in th Truthrlly PredlcteaiJlB Own Death. Umsi!er camos and sud them to affoUs.ra., Special, 16th. 'C this road, wbiiih aiakH aoullcation :E, W. W. Walke6 j fur &00 ein They wiii greatly re- Iuherited $2S,000 and Killed Herself, ; New Haven. Conn., Dispatch, 17th. B-CBU!.e her hus'oand went away j for a h;wn battle with the Connect icu. National Guard asrainst her jwi-hes and request, Mr.. Arthur rrcker. of Niantic, killed herself today. She placed her husband's jsbo'Kua, with the muzzle against Jber side, and then by a string tied j to the trigger discharged the gun," ! orhir-h blpv tvbole in her body. ; Mrs. Crocker ba-' just inherited a : fortune 'of $25. (WO and was very nwv( f'vzv ber affairs. exnrea nrpmoni tin that ho nM uuc elen. H 18 almost as cost 1J UiQIUtallUlUt; Ck Sliidll die on his forty-sixth birthday came true last utght, when he expired at 8.30 o'clock, in Franklin, Va., where he was rector of Emmanuel P. E church He was taken with fever two weeks ago. and be felt from the first that the end would come on the anniversary of his birth. f lj Mimcn k VRdrrsen and TylorsviIIe Drug To THEORTIl CAROLINA Itate- Normal - and - Industrial - College. ' LiicrMy, Classical, Scientific, Commercial. ' lnd"0trial Pedcgcgical and Knsioal. , i w ui-.ll exj-nseii $ic to f 140, for non-re sidentt of the State $160. Faculty of 30 mewhara , ; h i" iliservatioii "ohutil of about 250 pupils. To secure board in the dormitories all fce ,.1 ; j ln-itioiis should le made lefoie July 15th. Seslon opens September loth. 1 ,:r:udenie invited from those deririE competent teachers and ste nographerB. 'm omli'tjue and ottier kifcrniation address- - President CHARLES D. MclVER, Creeneboro, H, C. Mailer Oeta Hi Divorce, Miami, Fla., Dispatch. 16th, Henry M. Flagler, the multi mil lionaire oil magnate, has secured a divorce, under the new Florida stat ute, which provides that insanity of four years' standing is sufficient ground for a divorce. The case was heard in chambers by Judge Minor S. Jones, of the Circuit Court. For mer Governor Fleming, Mrs. Flag ler's guardian ad litem, represented the defendant, but there was practi cally no defense. Mr. Flagler is 72 years old. Et-r.BME Morrison, Vice Pres. n. if. Ausumt Sec. A Tros. Statesville Loan & Trust Company, States viLi.E, N. A Fatal Dael in Pitt County. Graenvilla, Dispatch, 16th. , News reached here today of a double murder near Gardner's Cross Roads, in the southern section of this county. William Gardner and Mack Dixon, both white, quar relled over tome small matter. Gard ner drew a pistol and shot three balls in Dixon's abdomen. Then Dixon knocked Gardner down, took the pistol from him and shot the two remaining halls into Gardner's body. Both men died in a short while. CAPITAL, $2o,000. V. K. Staela, Kugne Morrison. Dr. W. J. Hill. JTH. WycoiT, C. Aipaugh, B. Clark. A. B. Saunders, D. M. Ausley. U. Sete. If. t. j vr lu tsiieral banking business. Receive money on deposit subject to check, make collec i W-. drttfts. certificates of deposits etc. Accounts of corporations, merchants and Individ 1 and erery accomodation esteuded to customers consistent with safc aid prudent j"""5 SAYINGS DEPARTMENT. I TT- taviuus Department of the Statesville Loan & Trust Company will ba opened on Jaly It pfsvi.ie u safe and profitable place for the earnings of all persons in either small or larga i nita. ami will lie operate asa Savings Bank in every feature. This department will ba open t it-caivim; !-;iing-i 1'epos its daily during business hours and on Saturdays from 6 p m. to 8 p. I laKrret at the rate of $ par cent, per annum, payable on the fir tt dav of A)ril. Jiilr, 0-t aid B v. sf each ears, will te a'lowed on deposits, but no interest will be allowed on any arnouat, dc said amount has been to the credit of the depositor at least three full months and on no at imts lss than $s oo standing to the credit of a depositor. The current interest due each de si;at will 1 addcu to the principal, on the books of the Company on the first day of April. Jalv, lobar and january of each ye ar, as then forming a part of the principal is entitled to iuterest as iepoait af the same amount, A. Strange Case In Wake County- Raleigh News and Observer, l6th. There is a pitiful case in jail here A youth named Raines, not quite 18, and a girl named Eason, a little over 17, came here from Johnson county and tried to marry. They could not cet license, so they went to work on a farm here, and stayed there three weeks when they were arrested for adultery and jailed. The girl's fath er has been urged to come here and assent to the marriage, but has not done so. He will probably be forced to come. The girl is in a delicate condition. The money is on deposit to pay for the license, the costs in she case. etc. 11LI 1 mm w 1 Landle all klnda of Graaite and Marble known o the trad? and ike best quality. - Best Material, First-Glass work The First National Iiike Vance Catfish ' Columbia State. The Oconee county crowd of 2,000 which listened to MoLaurin with unanim'ous approval one day last week has not only begun to.dwindle, but one who was thre writes to a County paper that there were shouts and cries iu opposition "Commer cial Democracy. " Andjt now turns out that the Traveler s Hest Demo- oratiar club's resolutions censuring ortrl T .rTXTaxi! Pr1ftfl ihe State Executive Committee cjj.v. " - WNr f.umlW attend! 7 eUat members of tbe 240, two o i th fttsrht were ODDoaed to the reso lutions and the chairman and secre tary did not vote. Traveler s Rest is orettr close to Paris Mountain, but it is evident that the Senator's influence has not yet permeated the vallev on the ODoosite end of the protuberance. c. b.wsb: Bank Cf STATESVILLE, N. C. received to i Meeting of State Board, of Education Raleigh Correspondence 16th. The State board of ed ucation met todav and accepted the contract o r, r , , n I ' M I (1 r li:t II k I I. P CCi -a-' .a--vw--w - - . j it . t nn timo flonntitc Mntipv loanpu on pqoq pecK on WKDt. int., , .u ' & . Pft,lpnt5n " nn cUvPV Burdette '& Co.. to furnish r . . I . 1 . ..M. H.lll I .III' 1 f ! I V 1 I 1 1 I I.LI ..l.l,.ll I 1 I' 1J LMIV. fcv -''- - - " - T lt)l:aitril 11UU DCISUlioi o-"""." , I a. a. i l. ,i : . iMorl ot nwpct. ratt-e. Accounts OI UOTOOr certain leit-uuuao. aliens Met chaHs, anufactmers aid Individuals solicited and received ion tie most favorable terms. OFJj 'icju A 0ri , Pjesident, J.G. IrTlT, VUe Preideiir -fSEO-JH-BWOWrV. Cashier. -. Eclipse Portable Circular Saw Mill !Whh simultaneous racket setting i oi,1 t.lil.c. nahlp rnnfl feed, the i9 L I.'tZ lost sensitive feed ever put on a saw nil!, alt.0 Frick Company's ENGINES AND BOILERS, Portable on wheels or sills. Sta titntrv engines and boilers, any ize. asd the irreat hill cliraDins fitlfBsa traction engine. Gotten Gins at low prices. A vV-Erumer. Statesville, N.-C. Over Poston Bros The board also adopted Overton's Primary Applied Physiology. The W. C. T. U. some time ago called the attention of the board to the fact that the act of 1891 bad not been complied with as to a work on phy siology with at least 20 pages devot ed to alcoholics and narcotics. The ooard has adopted Steele's Physiol ogy. Its adoption of Overton is subject to agreement as to the price at which it shall be furnishedtte public schools. The American Rook Compauy is the publisher. The board decided not to adver tise immediately for a North Caro Una school history, for a work on civil government or lor one on agri culture. It is understood that Capt. S. A. Ashe and Judge Walter Ulark have such histories in preparation, and others may be working to the same Duroose Ihe work on civil government prepared by the late vtaior S M. Fintrer has been a text book aM it is said it is being revis- ftd and brought UD to date. It is also understood that a- work on.ag riculture is in preparation. All this interesting information is obtained from a member of the board. camp as a larg one ' The eonvicts to be furnished this road will be p,ifc there at once, tho crops now beir.r about '"laid bv.' tinfl work on Thr riifwl will ha r-iofiorl i - - - - . . - u u . . ... v W p O 1. 'j I I . 1 J i-. - u . .. : y c3 iiwaoiui. auia wuib, i. the directors h -pe, wiiFenable them to maka'the in-ritutinu nrettv near y self substairing during the fall months, despiio the disasters to the crops on the S?;ite farms from raius and river fi esl 's. Mr. W. E Crosland. one of the di rectors, was in Raleigh yesterday on his way to the State farms . He goes there to inspect the crops, as certain the Good damage and have the cotton gins pa, in order for the crop soon to be gathered. 'We had originally 1,500 acres of cotton on the State farm," he said. 'Only abont lH)uacres of this was eft b' the flood, and on it we hone to make S00 b.ikjs, possibly more The weed was never finer than it now is,-and my experience is that because of this fact we always in wet years, over estimate the crop and in dry years we under-estimate it. On the Tiliery farm the flood damage was small: we will raise 400 bales there. of which the Slate will get 200 On the Anson farm we'll raise about 50 baU-s. The sunerviso- thinks we'll get 60 or 75 bales, but I doubt it. Croos in Vinson are the worst I've ever seen. At least 25 per cent of the cotton crop in that county was abandoned, and what is left is, as a rule, poor. And as for corn, tbere'll not be enough raised to last two months. Th farmers there are in a terrible fix. "Oa the Roanoke State farms we planted about 1,100 acres of peanuts, but the rains and freshet;? have loft us only about 300 acrea"and even on that the stand is poor. The-corp. crop is very fioe, though the acreage of that also was reduced bv the floods." Mr. Crosland savs his own crop in Richmond county was never so poor since he's been farming. He has 200acres in cotton, but doesn't think he'll make much over half a. crop un- ess the fall is a remarkably favor able one. Ahernetby's sliolt Scheme Raleigh-Sews and Observer, 16th. The Philadelphia papers are filled with accounts of what is termed a gigantic school fraud, put in opera tion by a former iSorth Carolinian. The North Carolinian referred to is Arthur T. Abernethy and the school which he proposed to establish was to be known as the National or In ternational Free School Associat'on. The money to operate this "fcchool" was to come from free will contribu tions. The great purpose of the soiaoolwas to give thousands of fre Msoolarshipa m vafToae scooois, m cludioii board in various parts of the country. Money has been collected from all over Philadelphia by means of glass bowls, with an opening for coins, placed in drug stores and prominent places, with appeals tor uonauons These bowls are similar to those us ed in Raleisrh for contributions for Saint Cuke's Home. Manv of the most Dromineni men in the country were named as trus tees, among them Lieutenant-Gov ernor Woodruff, of New York: Car dinal Gibbons. Mayor Van Wyck and Attorney-General Elkins In the list is the name of Governor Aycoek. Some of the parties whose naaies were used were seen and these b iid that they had given no autnority for the use of their names. This sat the pap'ers to work and an exposure of the scheme was made Governor Avcock, whose nam 3 is used a3 a trustee- has no connection with the-affairV He was written to by Arthur T. Abernethy, who askea him to become a trustee of the asso ciation. This was before Mr. Ay cock was inaugurated as Governor Mr. Avcock declined, asking to be excused because of the great edci tional work that needed his atten tion in North Carolina to which he nrorvwed to irive his attention. A no time did he consent to act t rustee of the "Free School Associa tirn"rf Ahftrnfithvand the use o his name was unauthorized. Oeitlng the Price of Their Treaohwy Raleigh News and observer. rVL.in! uamf mp! Wnere did we hear that ? He is the Populist from An- who voted for Pritchard under promise 't getting1 a Federal office. was atn"inte-d timber inspector in tne West and. then guager. The Wadesb-ro Mpsenger now says be is scheming to b postmaster at Vjfadesboro. ard says Pritcbard has promised him a place Everv moth er's -;nri of thp crowd in 1807, who played 'he Judas act. has obtained their thirty pieces of silver, and tbev are calling for more. A IlloiKlloes Duel In Greenl)or- -Greenslwro Dispatch. 16th, It is said that two youne men of this city went out on .the "field of honor" lat evening to settle a per-sonai'ditfe'-enee. Revolvers were the weapons chosen, and the fight was pulled off according to the regu lations of the code duelio. Unknown to the young duellists, the seconds, who wished to see no blood spilled, irot together and loaded- the revolv ers with blank cartridges. When eachof the participants hadfired five times without striking his antsgo nist the seconds called tha-duel off and explained why there had been do blood shed. Both-of the youDg men retained their nerve through out the ordeal. He Willed That His Money, 60,000, Shall Be Burn-d. The Storm at Mobile. Mobile, Ala,, Dispatch, 16th. -The tmo-'cal torm which came up out of the South Wednesday and in creased in force during the day fol lowiug is believed to ha ye been se vervt in the vicinity of Mobile. Here the wind blew at the rate of 70 raiie an hour for some time. Va-rUiM-i;.'i,.rts of the drowning of ib. r.( tU. nay have reached here, bm it ii imrossible to confirm them, oing to ihe complete demolition of all means of communication The pleasure yacht Ariel, bound for Fish river with n party of Mobile people on board, is reported to have pound ed to pieces on the wharf at Battle's, on the eastern shore of the bay. Nothing has been heard of the crew. The pleasure yacht Mayflower, of thistity, with a party of prominent people on board, has been heard from. All on board found refuge on Cat IslaDd, but the boat was wreck ed Nothing has been heard from Fori- Mervar; tonight. Two com panics of f-o-ist artillery are sat iou-c-d there.- The barracks undoubtedly received th full force of the blow...- No Ci.i-imunicat.ion can be had 'with any ot the islaDd in Mississip pi Sound, jst outside the bar, 40 miles bel. w here. Any ' news con cerning ibe fate of the islanders mut ccnt bv boat acd this is anxi ously awiiiied. The frua steamer Harald, from Puerto Cortez, arrived in iate to night. Hhe reports seeing a two masted schooner G5 miles southeast of this port, totally dismasted. The captainof the schooner declined as sistance. Logging camp and mill manufac turers have suffered considerable loss by the breaking of booms. Saw logs and sawed timbers drifted into Mobile all day. much of it coming up on Royal st reet, three blocks from the water front. The Dixie saw mill and themuis of Heironymus Bros , located at Magazine Point, were badly damaged, pari.- of the plants being blow d away. .Nn' estimate of St. Paul Dispatch, 17th Fifty t.h'Mlnr.d d-:: bv H Y ?c-it. of " the damag this T,ime. in Mobile . is possible at ! i r :r. in cash If ft 't. Mine, be de-! to the ICtyiiv;; wh' dii 1 s' royfd b ' Trn-: f his Sf.;it had accumulaed about. JliO.ddO hu-'!v in cah. To his ser vant giri he left 5,000. bn h nepb ' a-, his nearest and ouly known relative, is cut off without a cent The b"-quest of money tu i . t servant was in return for the care sh gave him during his last il'ness. ' "After a!! .my funeral ex peases fit-e paid, " savs he in his will, "I direct, that my administrators gath er up all of my cash in bauK. and in Custom Hrmse Rascality. New York Dispatch, 16th. Appraiser Wakeman said today that he had called in the goods of a number of silk importing houses and was making an examination to see- whether the goods' had been uroper- y appraised. This is because of a belief that certain examiners in the employ of the government have been making latge sums of money from the importers by passing Japanese aiiks. with ucder-yaJuations. If the tinder valuation and uader-weighing have been practiced steadily, as ai red, the government has been de frauded of large sums of money. One examiner is alleged t5 have re ceived $3,000 a year from siik im porting farms, another was sent to Europe, and another had-come into the possession of. valuable real es tate. CLEARANCE -:- SALE ! From this date until closed we will offer our entire line Men's and Boy Straw Hats, Ladies'. Misses' and Children's Oxfords, except "Queen Quality." Ladiesl Ready-Made Shirt Waists At Cost. Ramsey, Tomlin & Bowles. Patterson Building. ' " Center Street. Actual War i(l Venezuela. .1 . San Tuan, Porto Rtco, Dispatch, i6tn. Mail advices received here - today from Caracas, Verezuela, under date of August 10, give accounts of numerous engagements in the State of Tachira between President Cas tro's forces and the revolutionists. In General Castro's official bulletins he mentions the Colombian 'army He reported enga 'ements since the hattle of San Cristobal, July 29 at Pirineos. Las Felipas, La Parada La Grita. Encontrados, Colon and T,at Tumbres. all in Tachira. The Venezuelan casualties, according to Castro's official bulletins, were Gen eral Rosendo Madina and four col onels killed and 300 men killed or wounded. Madina was a prominent man. He was formerly a Governor and Senator. August 8 there was atr-encounter at Las Cumbras with a second force of revolutionists The News Caracas correspond ont. writing August iv, says anoin r army has invaoeu v euezueit. This second, force is reported to number 5,000 men. Friday these troors attacked Las Cumbres and i i m i : A x reauisea. .me uiiu ui- The"S;nu at Xew tJrleans. New Orleans Di-rsUch. 16th The sto1-!.-! has passed and seems 'o have u-k ' no great damage any where exe along the river below the city, six fatalities occurring ritur the rivj-r's mouth. In the city the only irjary was o the Lake Side lo the section flooded by ; acaual bank which tas re morning. Rice and t.s on the lower coast ;y injured. The inhibi- n'eheve that they were a tidal wave combined "e. The lives reported it half a mile above ouar- KArn trews. tj- ev,Iola MininS Company, of High Point, working the Condor mi he, has a capital slock of $1,000,- Charles Lyle, who was arrcitd in Roanoke, ra., has been jailed in Charlotte, charged with the murder of Lanier.- A cow belonging to John G. Mc Laughlin, of Millard Creek town ship, Jecklenhtirg county, ale a piece of d. namite one night lat week and-died. big no tKr ii . maue. an B. Frank Sprinkle, a. dealer of Reidsville. has assignment. He was the can nominee for sheriff of ham county in 1900. 'r Over 200 horses and moles have died from the epidemic of blind shaggers in Hyde county. Great numbers are still sick. It is said the disease is spread by mosquitoes. Wm. Monroe, the negro rapist, was tried in Charlotte last - Thurs day for the crime committed on Tuesday, was quickly convicted and was sentenced to be hanged by Judge Hoke on September 13th. Paul Cum mi ngs, a four vear old boy, was killed at his father ' saw mill one day last week. The child was playing in the yard and started a log to rolling and was cauyht un der it and crushed almost to a jelly. Miss Lila Jones, a prominent ac tress and daughter of Cot H. C. Jones, of Charlotte, and Mr. Frau ds Bruguiere, a millionaire of San Francisco, were married Thursday at the home of the bride's parents in Charlotte Shf; reM'fts ate; ?ru- break : 0 o.-ea oer orange far -were sews : tanls t her. struck by with a eye; lest were I. fiii it-xrtrr .as over- Clergyman a Shoplifter- Boston Dispatch, 17th. In the 'municipal court thi moru- tntr Joseph Larsgiev pleaded guilty to stealing a chatelaine bag from a department store, lie was fined$10, which was paid by an etder lady unknown to the police. Every effort was made to keep the matter secret, bur. to day it was 'earned that Langley was pastor of i 11 ' 1 ! . r a small cnurcn near Liostoti, ior which he. had labored hard on a -mal' sal ry. His three children ar.d wife requir 1 . . U.. .. .U. 1 u eo mule U'.oe.ey iiinu, i:te cuuidi could afford to pay him, believing it his duty to God lo labor for iha church, even though deprived of actual-necessities, he did' not leave. It grieved him t-'t think his wife and children eoulrf not have the things thy ionyod ?o ttiuh to have. Yesterday he glitter of t.h gilt' i?h.itl oig ctuht. his rye. Thf tempva'ioa vis to strong and he yielded. Mrs. Rosa -alker. h-r 10 vear old daughter, Ida, VVaiker. Miss Birdie Cbuden and i iss Eila Cobden were drowoed. Tiie crew of the tugboat Biloxi sougM refuge a few hundred yards aw&v and two of the. sailors Uiaine Davidson and Peter Yea weredrowned and t h4 boat lost. The Louisville & Nashville Rail road is s:;U badly crippled. No trains have come in or gone out over the line since the night before last. The subsidence of water, howeyer, makes it probable that the damage ta the tracks wilt be quickly repair ed. A lai -e. number of cotton and other busireos men are stilT bottled up on the c -ast and unable to get "to their offices.. The Northeastern road has hid some trouble but the Illinois Cet' ral has aided both the Louisville & Nashville and North eastern iu handling their passenger traffic. The Croo) well liner Comus, reach ed the city today. She had no trou ble in the 'storm and reported no Jack Christian, grandson of Stone wall Jackson, accidentally Shot him self while at target practice oae day last week. The ball entered under the nose and lodged near the eye. It was extracted and the boy is getting on nicely. A mob surrounded the jail in Char lotte last Wednesday night and wanTed to tynch Wm. iouroe, the uegro rapist, but Sheriff W allace cd his guards were enabld to dis perse the mobk without bloodshed. ;everal speeches were made to the mob by lawyers. The Confederate Veterans at Wrightsville elected officers last lhursday as follows: CommandefrT- .oaj tren. Julian b. Carr, command er i-irst Brigade. Gen. J. G. Ha . A sod TMn(. . - Gecman Syrup is the special pr scMptiou of Dr. A. Doschee, a cele brated German Physician, and is acknowledged to be one of the -most fortunate discoveries in medicine. It quickly cures Coughs, Colds and all Lung troubles of the severest na ture, removing, as it does, the eause of the affection and leavinglhe parts in a strong and healthy condition. It is not an experimental medicine, hut stood the t.est of yftnrs, jfiv iiig tifaction in evervcase; which il rapidly increasing gal. every sea son .poBfirms. Two rxwilion brtrtk" see ariuualiy Boscbee's Owrraa vrri4 was intrrduced in tb United St'.es in 1S68. and is now sold in ev.-.ry town and village in fb" eivil-:z- ed -Aorld. Three doses will rli a-v oi'dinarv-eoeyh Price 75 eents. Gi- Green's Prize Almanac. For s:.Uhr V F. Hail. - Chipiey, Fla., had flOVOdil fire last Thursday morning. The tiro was of iLcendiary origin and m ikes tbe third which has visited the town... within tbe past GO days. A Powder NUI Explosi-in " Removes everything in sii'ht : so do drastic mineral pills, but both are mignry fiangerous. Bon tdyivi-nite the delicate machinery of your body with calomel, croton oil or aiocs pi'ls, when Dr King's New Life Pills, which-sre gentle as a .summer breeze, dothe work perfectly. Cures beadaahe, constipation. Only 25 cents at W. F. Hall's dru store." Fire early one day last week de stroyed the temporary" water works crib two miles out in the lake at Cleveland, Ohio, and ten men were burned to death. "My baby was terribly sick with rhe diarrhoea," s-ays J. H Dcak, of Williams, Oregon. "We were una ble to cure him with he doctor's as sistanee, and as a last resort we tried Chamberlain V Colic. Cholera" aud Diarrhoea Remedy. I am Uid py to say it. gave -immediate relief and a complete cure " For sale by Stimsnu & Anderson. Henry Watterson, Jr., son of his father he of the Louisviile Courier Journal, and Se'norita Blanca Castr nova, of Cienfuegos,- Cuba, whom Lieurenant Wattersonftiet while on duty in Cuba, were married in Phil adelphia last Thursday. vessels iu ress. Dr. J. N. Thomas, of the quarat; tine station, boarded the Co in us aear the mouth of the river and told Captain Frauklin that an unknown schooner 1 a small boat had been wrecked in that vicinity and six lives lost. No serious damage was done at the quarantine station. Cap'ain S eveuson, of the Esther, which arriv-d today, brought up with hitfi'C-iptain Samuel J Dunham and lour m tnoe.rs c i ;n crew oi me Killed by the Traiu. Ati.vilt Special to Raleigh News and Observ er, 14th. Jake Garrett, a white man livin Pint Rock, was killed thi evfnincr bv the eastbound train o the Souirhern between- tiot priugsi and Paint Rock. Heliad been to Marshall where he had a case in court suing the road for killing his little, girl. The cate was not to come up till the last or the week,-so he started home on the 3 o'clock train. He had a ticket to Hot SDrings, so the conductor says. The conductor put-him off twice af ter leaving Hot Springs, but ne claims that it was at. stations each time. The engineer oh the 7 o'clock train saw him kneeling with his head on the rail at the very spot where his little girl was killed but was unable to stop in time. Gar rett's head was badly crushed and hi left ear cut off He was brought to Hot Springs and left in charge of . . , ,1 - . - Dhvsicians wno saia ne was uyiu and would not live twenty minutes Voleanic Eruptions Are grand, but skin eruptions rob lifeofiov. Bueklen's Arnica Salve A cures them: also old. running and tfever sores, ulcers, boils, felons, corns, warts, cuts, bruises, burns, scald's, chapped hinds, chilblains Best pile cure on oirt h. Drives out nains ana acnes, umy so senis a - i .. 1 O J 1 00 iu uy ;ctn thft armies have not yet box. Cure guaranteed. et. W.-'F. Hall, druggists ; A Gang of Watch Factory Thieves Discovered. Waterbury, Conn , Dispatch, 17th. The arrest of Edmund Busch, of New Haven, for the systematic theft of wa-tech parts from the New Haven Clock Company, where he was em ployed, is the first step in the con viction of a gang of dishonest em ployes of the various watch com panies of New York, New Jersey and Connecticut. - For years all these concerns have been robbed by employes who were n leaiue with' New York thieves. Th? Ne"w York people marketed the stolen parts, and they were m bled in. secret on .the East -Side, and sold to fence factories' at any reasonable price Most of t he-goods we.se shiDted abroad, where cases of foreign make helped, to disguise the manmacture. "''-.' t is authent ically esti mated that thmirands of dollars worth of these carts were stolen in Waferbury and New Baven r.tid Phomistonand that the amounts stolen from the low priced watcli factories of Brooklyn, New York tjityandNew jersey is beyond estimate. The Waterbury Company- has had New York detectives in this city and In other places, and the result has Lbeeo that many of the employes have, Tfor -months been under survehaLC3. Busch had in his apartments parts complete sufficient to make 400 watches'. He was a trusted employe, did Bcpair work, and had had access to all parts used in the watches, tug BiioAi -.The .-X"! capsized duritiir ihe "riii and the live res cued tueu m iie their way to a tree to which thev c'ung until rescued. Cantaitv Stevenson reported alss; that he saw a hipJrrmast, possibly & trailer s, s'icsing out. 01 tae water aboe' Liine guiles from Southwest Pass. He v. s unablfe'-to identify the vessel. saw none of her crew. The Esther n.id as passengers Juai- Y. CairiU;. family of 12, and four servants, all of Belize.. They ha-: been at the quarantine station sev eral days ar d passed safeLy through the storm. - ot Lienoir; commander Second Bri gade, Gen, W. L. Loudon, of Pitts oro: commander Third Briyade. (en. James M. Rav. of Asheville: commander Fourth Brigade, Gen. M. Parker,' of Enfield. : All these another ChargtTJtgliinst'SloSiKht."" Creensboro Dispatch, 16th. iheUbservtr correspondent was-rf this afternoon shown quite a lengthy" tetter from a man in Ohio, who wrote to say that the H. P. Mac Knight operating in Greensboro was undoubtedly the H. P. Mac Knight against whom an indictment is pending in that State. The wri ter says the forgery was committed against a man by the name of Mc Night also, and that, while the ainou.nt is small, the prosecuting witness is anxious to push the case. Information was aslied oancgrning the cost of serying a requisition in this State and it was stated that an officer-. vould probably come to Greensboro for MacKnight at an early date. Iu the letter were en- losed two photographs which could easily be identified at likenesses of IvlacKnight. i he letter went on to say that MacKnight and his wife were divorced iu July, 1900, and that jicKnight had practiced jaw in Columbus, Ohio. A page from his copying book, containing the copy of a letter written to 1. J. Murray, of West Newton, Ohio. onMarph 23, 1899, and beanug MacKnight s pro fessional card, was enclosed. Ihe writing is said to be the Greensboro MacKoight's beyond any doubt. Che only difference noted is in the spelling of the name, the "a"having been dropped from MacKnight. Ihe additional information that Mac Knight had served time in the Indi ana peaitenti'-jiry was also imparted. P. T. Thoma, Sumterville, Ala., ' T was suffering from dyspepsia when I commenced taking Kodol Dyspepsia Cure. I took several bnulesand 'an digest ' anything." Kedol Dyspepsia Cure is the only preparation containing all the nat ural digestive fluids. lURf-Vm' fT.e? ; stomach;; entire re'fmso.-. .t An- derson. .' Jones Pays th6 Cost- Winston Special to Raleigh News and Observer, Judge Starbuck, who is holding Wilkes Superior court, today rend ered a decision in the case of II. F Jones, ex-member of the Legislature from Alleehanv county, convicted ofoeriarv. Jones is released up agreement to pay his county $35,44 thfi amount collected twice b him. Before the last warrant was paid Jones made an.-affida.vit that the first one was lost before gqIIcc tion, but it -was proved', that t had been settled. Defendant- is also re quired to paj the eost of the t rial, which- will amount to $500 A mob of 50 men entered the jail at Tuscaloosa, J.la . Thursday niir'nfc determined to lynch Henry Pratt, colored, charged with outraging a 1 it tie white girl. The mob demand ed the keys of the sheriff,, but he se euved a shot gun and the mob left; In cases of cough or- croup- give the little one One Minute Cough Cikre. Then rest easy and have no ItftF. The child will be all fight in - rlftfe white. It never fails. Pleas ant i take, always saft, tu and alraot inst&ntacfton? - ffpct. S'inason & Anderson. Cresceus and The Abbott trotted a race at Brighton Beach track. New York City, Thursday. Cres ceus won in 2.03, the world's trot ting record in a race. O O. Buck, Beime, Ark . says: . I was troubled with constipath d antil I bought DeWitt's Little Ear ly Risers. Since then hisve beep entirely cured of my old complain T recommend them Stimson & An derson. Hi t-lfe Was Saved. Mr. J. E. Lilly, a prominut .citi zen of Hannibal, Mo., lately had a wonderful deliverance from a fright ful death. In telling otit he savs: "I was taken with typhoid fever. that ran into" pneumonia. My lungs became hardened. I was so weak I could a'feven sit up in bed. Noth ing helped me. 1 expected to soon die of consumption, when I heard of Dr. King's New Discovery. One bottle gave great relief. I continued to use it, and now am well strong. - i chu t say to much in raise. i his is the surest ands quickest cure in the world for all throat and lung trouble. -Regular izes 50 cents and $1.00. Trial bottles free at W. F. Hall's drugstore; every bottle guar anteed. . Fish to Throw Away. Whatcom,'" Wash., Dispatch. 16th. The largesr. run of saliuon known in the sound for years is reported from the San Juan fisheries, which i-i i ? T7! supply the souna canneries, r rom one trap 50,000 fish were liberated oecause the supply was too great to oe handled. Even at 1 cent a piece the fish could not be sold. j Seine men in -the vicinity have caught as many as o,UUU fish at one haul, and were compelled to throw thousands back for want of facilities to handle such a huge catch. Can neries are running at breakneck speed, but are unable to keep up. Old fishermen say the present run is the heaviest ever known. Labor is greatly in demand at the canneries. Wages are high. Even tittle girls employed a? helpers are making $3 a day. Fish are piled upon the cannery doors and hundreds of thousands are :efc in the traps for several days. l'hey will keep altve and well in the traps IOF a wee. . - This year the salmon are running in countless swarms to' every river entering the sound They can be seen .-passing through Bellingham U3yr almost to the wharves of What com, wnere tney nave not oeen seen for years before. ; mere rs no ques tion that this season's pack win be very large. The Storms last week were terri bly destructive on the Gulf 'CoasV Many lives were lost. Fifteen meu bers of a man named Cobden's fami ly, living near the mouth of tbe Mississippi river, were drowned There was great destruction of property. 1 John Dion, pugilist, died in Low ell. Mass , Friday as h result of a ficht with Charlie Armstrong Friday night Armsrongi.s under arrest. - , Mrs. S. H. AH port, Johnstown. Pa., soys: ' Oar httl girl almost stwinglod to death wth croup. The doctors said she coe'dri't live" bufc she was instantly relieved by Ore Vfioute tough Cure. Stimson & Anderson. Capt "M. R. Land, aTfrelght cov doctor between Charlotte aid Atlan ta, was rua over and kilted by ?n engine at Mr. Airy, G , Tnursday night. His train had started and he got in the way of a '-helper" en gine which was coming to his relief. I Hair b My hair came out by the hand- B I ful, and the jgray hairs began to H 1 creep in. I tried Ayer's Hair Vigor, g 1 nd it stopned the hair from com- B : stopped ing on and restored the color." Mrs. M. D.GrayNo. Salem, Mass. The Strike May Be Averted. Kalt Kiver, Mass., Dispatch, 16th. That seme of the cotton manufac turers are not anxious to precipi tat a general strike became appar ent to day, when some of them de cided to hold off from signing the and agreement to reduce wages Septem it I bse 1 upon baing asked to put down . - 1 T.I . . i nvisi. nomaa .nm a piniainRii iiimi- marveious meutcintsp-uct -r ,v tnev OICl not wish to appear as icnu h ers in the movement, but whatever the reason, it appears that there is a growing faction desiring a cur tailment instead 'fit a reduction in wages if a strike is to follow. " There's a pleasure in offering such a prepara tion as Ayer's Hair Vigor. It gives to all who use it such satisfaction. The hair becomes thicker, longer, softer, and more glossy. And you feel so secure in using such an old and reliable prepara tion. tl.M a battle. All drafT"- T VMir Arnfririftt cahlKt SttPPlT TWlf i aena us one ca-"",. , ii "i. a a bottle. Be sore inatiTo un J. mr iwurriit expresa omee. Aaaresa, .1 . ... n m. l-i . - i -
The Statesville Mascot (Statesville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 22, 1901, edition 1
1
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