Newspapers / The Statesville Mascot (Statesville, … / Sept. 12, 1901, edition 1 / Page 2
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wor PtTBUSHEUi WEEKLY twill h nnfi.rif'd uuou a. ntad thy to be the successor of that, long line o! great and good men who have tilled it in the past. HTATKMKNT OV Tllfc! AN Vli r,US C. Inspired to Kill Hv tlmmaGoWtnan's The President's would be assassin has given out a long statement, ON 'e dollar a year. A t'atig or negroes met Tuesday in 1 among 'other things he says: fe 6 h . , "rini-imr tli kt fii?( vears I have passeu , "r;"-r:-r.- tnnMna.,,n had as friends anarchists in Chicago, A. D. Watts, Editor & Peopeietoe Entered at the Pstoffice at StatesvilleNC secondclass mail matter. 'Phone No. 35. Statesville, N. C, Sept. 12, 1901. THE ATTK UPTKD ASS ASSIN ATION OI' T1II3 PKKSIHKNT. THE LATE-IT. President McKinley Continues to Improve. - By 'Phone to The Mascot from The Charlotte President McKinley -continues to P be extracted. Every indication points to his speedy recovery. Friday afternoon the country wa- ;Wkfid and saddened by the news 0 these fool negroes of Baltimore that an anarchist had shot President William McKinley twice in Buffalo, and that the wounds were serious. In thp Nation's sorrow for its suffer ing head and indignation at the dastardly crime which sought to '.take bis life there are no sectional or party noes, coutueiu uicu Democrats have vied with their brethren of the North and the Re publican party in their expressions of sympathy for the illustrious vic tim, in there prayers for his recov ery and in their righteous wrath a gainst the cowardly would-ba as3a cin nnrl the demieabie school of which he is a member. Sii.ce the wounds were inflicted the president has got along nicely and it is now felt that his life will bi spared. If the prayers of a whole people fcr their chief magistrate will aval!, his recovery is certain. The enormity of the crima is in tensified by the treachery of its & a church at Baltimore and resolutions requesting tDe Unlea cievelaud, Detroit and in other States Senate to expel Senator Till- western cities, and 1 suppose I be- naan ofSouth Carolina. The resp- came more or less bitter, i never iti, .WW that the Senator is had much lack at anything and this , . ni-pvwl iinon me. It made me mo -an abettor or murder ana rapine nvious. but what started. and ask that he be expelled that t. ftrl2ft to kill was a lecture I heard the lives of our public officials be SOme little time ago by Emma Gold- RtiA waj in Cleveland aftid I ..... .t anfl nthpr anarchists went to near n 4 . . rt kiir. Y-wrc nt-i i n m i m- SiiWa.,j - . t- h she get ma 0U fire. verseness oi nis ieacuicg:s cinu ca- "Eitrht davs ago while 1 was in am Die." Nothing has happened in Chicago . I read in a Chicago news- a long time which will do Ben Till- paper of President McKinley 's visit c mnrh tmnd as the resolutions to the Pan-American Exposition at l I (A 11 10 1" w- pwv ' Buffalo. That day I bought a ticket to Buffalo and got here with the determination to do something,, but I did not know iust what. I thought of shooting-the President, but I had not formed a plan. "Not until Tuesday morning did the resolution to shoot the President take hold of me. I could not have improve. The bulletins yesterday conqueredit had my life been at and last night were most favorable, stake There were thousands of TJ . u,.t u. uoii .:n itfion e in town on Tuesday. I heard THE PRESIDENT OUT OF DANGER it was iresiueuu s titty, tuuac people seemed bowing to the great ruler. I made up my mind to kill t.hnt ruler. I bought a 32 calibre Tht Crim bo1 He Punishment-. ' Atlanta Contitution, . If President McKinley does not die his would-be assassin will be guilty under the laws of this coun try, of simple assault with attempt to murder. In the eyventof his death the offense will be homicide, or mur der in the first degree. The eyes of the law do not regard the killing of the nation's chief executive as a graver crime than the killing of the lowest negro. It is simply murder and as such merits the "extreme pun ishment the law cau inflict, which is death, and in iNew York state death by electrocution. The murder of a king would be regicide, a far greater crime in oth er countries than simple homicide.-) But in America there is no provision made for special punishment of the assassination of a president other than as a private individual. Demo cratie form of government does not exalt the person of its chief execu tive above that of any private citi zen. It is contrary to the policy of the government Deeming that the death sentence is the worst possible punishment and that in case of as sassination cf the first magnitude it would be speedily meted, no further charge of arch treason, etc., is add ed. But, as in the persent case, when the dastardly attempt only bv the intervention of Providence has not proved fatal it is disappointing to know that according to present law the limit of Dunishment for such an tfAl'JjOHSV'lL.liK 'iGVS.. The school committee for Tavlors ville public school will meet Satur day morning at 8 o'clock, in the store of E. C. Sloan,. Esq., to hire teachers or contract for school. R. P. Cobb. Esq , left Tuesday for New Jersey, where he goes to ar range for his Wilkes county hunting club. Mr. Cobb goes on the Nor folk, Va., excursion from Statesville and from there he goes north by steam boat. Jno. Robinett, Garland Ingram and Chas Watts, three Taylorsville young men, have gone to Statesville the past werk to work. TT.o ti.i.1 HMaToi.a cone nt KnVstODDed STOWing, glVe Col. G. W. Pio . vers, went to Eur- Li Q' an(J he will grow big Trinity College aud Fred will eater and Strong like the rest. Trinity Park High school. & for 'Site. GhESdron - Give them oil cod-liver oil .i . -..u It's curious to see tne resuxu Give it to the peevish, fret- r,.i uua nA hp laiierhs. Giv'- 1U1 V,Xllii, o it to the pale, anaemic chile and his face becomes rosy and full of health. Take a flat- rhosted child.1 or a child that him Chattanooga DISC PL ow This is not a new scheme. .Mrs.' Dr. R. C. Matheson and hs- U 3een done for years. on a visit to Dr. Matheson's fatter Of course you must use tne and mother, Mr. and Mrs. R. P. ' Scott's Emulsion iujiucsuu. I - D oil. Mrs. P. L Steek visited friends is the one. All lUe Doctors Say Ha Will Recover Vice President and Cabinet Mem bers Leave. Buffalo, Dispatch, loth The corp'ri of eminent surgeons aod physicians in attendance upon the wounded President today com mitted themselves without reserva tion to tne opinion that their patient was out oi Ganger: ana mat mere v'lre uo complications threatening bis life. They did not give assur ance of his recovery collectively ov er their signatures in au official bulletin, but they went a long way toward it. individually and separately during the da' each of them, with the exception of Dr. Rixey, who did not leave the Miiburn resinence, placed himself squarely on record, not privately to he friends of the President, hut nuhliclv th much the . . i -j -y banKercmei in uit. acrCaC cf the- press, that the danger hand as though he would shake tne point had passed and that the Pres nresident'a hand, and as Mr. Mc- dent would survive the attempt upon TfinioTf wan p y t mini n if his hand the I . , ... ... ...j -- "Of course we will all feel easier treacherous anarchist snot mm h ek uas naSsed."Dr'. ncBur the dean of .the corps. We Prpsifipnt. MrKinlev has endeared would liiie to see every aoor lockeo t,;m"tnfi,0 Am0ri,M tpnnlp. r,( nil aud double locked, but the danger ULIU W i.J.lUVL 4 'UU u w I M I 1 sections. A devoted Christian man, fair grouuda. 1 tVesidoni. when g was complishmjr.t. The president was holding a reception in one of the ex position buildings when the anarch ist, Leon Czolgosz, a native Ameri can of Polish descent, of Cleveland, Ohio, approached with a pistol con cealed under a froiii possible Complications is now very remote." A.s an evidence of the supreme faith he held. Dr. mc- Burney after the morning consulta tion made a trip to Niagara Falls and this evening returned to New York. Ele could reach here aijaiii ia ten hours if the unexpected should be a change for the worse. The lit tie piece of lead in the muscles of the back is giving the physicians no concern whatever. Unless it should prove troublesome to the President later on he will probably carry this grim souvenir. of the anarchist with him to the end of his days. The doc tors say that once encruSted it can do no harm. The X-ray machine is ready for instant use, however, and if there is the slightest inflammation of pain in the vicinity of the bullet an operation will be performed. ROOSEVELT AND CABINET JIEMBEHS LEAVE. The Vice President, members of the cabinet, senator Manna aaa other distinguished friends of tb President who have remained here he still longs for the land of Dixie regard the physicians' opinion to and "old marster," where the usual day as practically conclusive and an salutation which greets him is: "You, Jim, you black rascal," but in a tote which means a dime, a dram or tobacco for the asking, Let the negro quit politics and frown down the brutes of his .race, aud he will always find the white men of with a good kind heart, William Mc Kinley is loved a3 few of our preji dents have been, and in his battle for life the Nation waits with bated breath, almost exultant at the good news which how comes from the sick chamber,yet too anxious to feel easy until all uossibilitv of danger has pass - Jim Parker, the negro, who prob ably saved the president's life by promptly knocking down his would be assassin, regrets that the attempt was not made in the South, where the- anarchist- would have been promptly lynched. Jim likes' the Southern way of doing things. This leads us to remark that the Ameri can negro is at home nowhere but in the South. Let him go North and be "mistered'r by Yankees, and exodiis occurred, considering thei oresenca no longer necessary. Vice President Roosevelt left this ever. icg for his home at Oyster Bav Senator Banna returned to Cleve iand on business to be . yone tw days, ar.d Comptroller Dawes went bacK to uashington tonight, Abner Mclvmey, tne President's brother, too South his best friends and pro- will remain a few days longer, but lectors, just as they have ever been its the past. There is a suggestion that Jim Parker be rewarded for his promptness and bravery in Kand ling Czolgosz and it should be done. An appointment to. wait about the executive mansion with a good sal ary for life would be a fitting re ward, The country should be made too hot to hold anarchists and socialists. STheir teachings are foreign to the his family have returned home, and Mrs. Duncan and several other rela tives of the President have gone Judge Day, long and closely associ ated with the President,'returned to an ton this ailernooii. - The !iv memoers oi the cabinet still here will remain a" few days, rather friends who have been intimately associated with the President for several yeans than as public officials Emma Gold man Arrested in Chicago, Chicago Dispatch, loth. Emma Goldman, the anarchist spirit of American institutions, even queen, under whose red banner Leon if unaccompained by crimes such as the one at Buffalo last Fridaj'. A law should be passed at the next session of Congress requiring pros pective immigrants from foreign governments to exhibit certificates from the authorities of the localities from which they removed that they are not members of anarchist or so cialistic societies before they will be allowed to land on our shores. Congress should also pass a law banishing every man and woman in the United States who is proven to bo an anarchist or socialist. Among our rocent insular acquisitions a :r srut-a ( i;iv: :i'ooiin .!'.:, ', i ' 1 : i , . v ill hi fluu ill And a sentya-'.'b in reality tn i riT'd , '..:f 1 Hv pro a'C'r;.j.ii3. wiliv York lii-.vs, it v.:h;ir$e , I revolver and loaded it "On Tuesday night -I went to ihf- i fifiuder l.-ibut ten years confinement close to i tv: j i got intb- thoji rounds, but a, aira d to i'."n-;- i o many men ;u hjs uo'.iy.gniti '.uu ;i watched him. 1 was not afraid oi hem or that I should get huvtr iut. f raid I might be seized aad that my hance would be gone forever. . "Well, he went-; waj tuut naie nd I went houie. On Wednesday weut to the grounds and stood ieht near the President, right un dor him near the stand from which he spoke. '1 thought half a dozen times of hooting while he was speaking, but could not get close enough. I was afraid that I might miss and then he trreat crowd was always jostling and I was afraid lest my aim fail I waited until Wednesday and the President got into his carriage again and a lot of men were about him and formed a cordon that I could not get through. I was tossed about by the crowd and my spirits were getting pretty low. I was almost hopeless that night as 1 went home. "Yesterday morning I went again to the exposition grouud. Emma Goldman's speech was still burning me up. 1 waited near the central entrance for the President, whowere to board his special train from that gate, but the police allowed nobody but the President s party to pass where the train waited, so I stayed n . - i : i -i ooigot ciaims ne stands, and whose words he claims fired his heart and his brain to attempt the assas sination of the President, was ar rested here shortly before noon to day. bne disclaimed all but the slightest acquaintance with th President's assailant: she denied ah solutely that she or anarchists she knew were implicated in any plot to kill the President.' She said she be lieved Czolgosz acted entirely on his own responsibility and that he never claimed to have been inspired by her, as he is quoted as affirming. The President, she averred with a yawn, was an insignificant being to her, a mere human atom whose iife or death were matters of supreme indifference to her or to anv ana--- suitable island - can be found for a chist, Czolgosz's act was fooiih penal colony of the undesirable ver- ?et she declared it probably had its minof the class of Czolgosz, Emma H?1011 iQ ery icb the n u j vi p0ie had seen about him. Violence Goldman and the rest. It's time for she said, was not a tenet in the faith our government to deal with anarchy of the anarchist and she had not ad- and socialism with fa mailed hand, vocated it in Cleveland, where Cjsol- Longer delay is dangerous. gosz has said he heard her nor else- m , where. Partisanship has been laid aside , Miss Goldman arrived here Satur- for a week and we have all simply ?"?fni? fr0m SJ' W8". Her Kqq . . . 7 immunity from arrest while in the been Americans. Before we divide Missouri metropolis and up to to day into hostile camps again it is well i Chicago afforded her much amuse that we renew our patriotism. As me-nt- SQe told in sentence punctu ' partisans we accuse the other side ftef with laughter of her capture fQ. t-k- j , to day. In her conversation -ftith of everything mean and rascally, reporters-and she talked with them but the fact is that the worst admin- at length twice during the day t he istration of our government in all excitement she was laboring under our history has been better than the was ,suPPressed and only once did she best of pother sovernment tan "ffiMS h" time. .Uit us be Democrats and from the office of Chief of Police Republicans, if we will, but we O'Neill to the cab which was wait should strive to see to it that our in o convey her to the women's an Democracy and Republicanism make 1 t, Harrison street station. U5 hpifor Arr.L For a moment he hecame.a woman us better Americans. pure and simple and cried Iq ft Vice President Roosevelt has mTent' however. this exhibition of j - Jooseyeit nas aistress was over and when she put measured up to the full requirements her foot oh the step to mount into v. u.g twsiuuu uunaj; me trying vuc . j iaj;o sue was again Eimma the grounds all day waiting. "During yesttrday I first thought of hiding my pistol under my hand kerchief. I was afraid if i had to draw it from my pocket I would be seen and seized by the guards. 1 got to the Temple of Music the first one and waited at the spot where the reception was to be held. "Then-he came, the President the ruler and I got in line and trembled and trembled until I got right up to him and then I shot him twice through my white handker chief. T would have fired more but I was stunned by a blow ia the face a frightful blow that knocked me down and then everybody jumped on me. I thought 1 would be killed and was surprised the way they treated me." Statement of the Georgia Negro as to the Attempted Assassination Buffalo Dispatch, 8th. James B. Parker, the Georgia ne gro who knocked down Czolgosz the moment after he shot the President was found to-day and gave a graphic account of the tragic occurrence. "I was next in line behind the an archist who shot the President, " he said. "I tried to get in frontal him several times, but he pushed m oacK witn nis eioow. A little gir had just shaken hands with the President whpn the assassin reached him. Czolgosz had the revolver cop cealed in a -hankerchief which was wrapped around the revolver and his hand. Czolgosz did not extend his left hand, ?.s some of the newspa pers report, IheJPresideat thought Czolgosz's right hand was sore, and put out his haod to take the anar chist's left hand. As b? did so the anarchist fired twice. I struck him on the nose with my right fist and reached with my left baud to take the pistol from him. Several of the marines thought the officer was the man who did the shooting, but he pointed to where . I had Czolgosz down on the floor and said: 'There is the mau who shot him.' Czolgosz raised his pistol again to shoot eith er the President Or myself, but at that time I choked hirn so hard that he couldn't shoot. I struck.b.im so hard that the blood gushed from his nose. We struggled some seconds before the Secret Service officers reached us. Then one of them, I thiuk it was Foster, struck him and said: 'Youd d scoundrel, how dare you shoot our President?' want ed to cut his throat, but they took him from me. "I believe that my striking Czol gosz kept him from shooting until he emptied his pistol and probably prevented the President from being wounded again." Parker considers Atlanta as his home, ha having lived most of his life there, working in the North at intervals. He says he only did his duty but does not relish the way in which the Secret Service meQ have attempted to create the impression that they overcame the assassin. He only regrets that he was not al lowed to kill Czolgosz. "The twenty thousand, white people there ought not to have expected a nigger to do it all, he said: 'borne of them ought to have helped me kill him. We would have fixed him quick in Georgia." z z v. -ce'diiigs-dev present or assauir. wu.!i uir."i.out to uiuruer The prostcutiou wi:i iak piitce m the county where th crim wat co.Qin)lted. ; If the Ptt-'-ide:it, c'i his assassin will be elf ctrocuid. 15 the shooting docs not prove filial, ven though it shonid injure n?. ictim permanently,, tho 'secu-ne- ould legally be but ten yerrs. Prominent legal authorities .stall- that aqj amendment to the present aw would be unconstitutional if ap plied to this case. Criminals must )e tried according to the law at the time of their crime. Laws could be made to punish with death any attempt on the life of an officer of the nation, whether successful or uot, aud these might onsistently apply to future in stances, if theie be any. But in the present case authorities agree that however just and advisable it might be morally, that legally such act would be unconstitutional. On a charge of insanity Czolgozs might be permanently incarcerated It is sa'e to predict, however,that tne American people will devise some means adequately to punish so terrible a crime, or rather to punish the offender with the limit of sever ity, fr no sentence could possibly be in proportion to the crime. at. Charlotte last week. Miss Nannie Millner returned to Richmond, Va., Monday after speed ing a short vacation at home here. R.."Z Linney, Esq, met his daugh ter, Miss Blanche, .at Lenoir last Saturday and brought her hone from a mountain visit to Boone. W. B. Matheson ar.d daughte", .Viss Lucy, went to Boone last week. Mtss:: L'jcv remained over then? wi h hr -.H':. .Vrs F. A. Liianey,. io sptT-d ii iV -n weeks. r n, ttsq-,. a ivnoxviuf, , was here lat .wk with ex-Congressman ' !'...; 'i . lawyer jv .! v ovr an Ahe county lawsuit sLM.-)f land .5 and. the Ballou cop- Ir. H. G. Miller, cf Meck- u'ir cosint y n !eri:iri ejehrd her" in 'lie ctiurcu tsuouay His Xamo Pron.Qnceii "Choalgoth. Raleigh News and Observer, i ilh. Since the attempted assassination ot i'resiaent iVjciumey every news paper reader in this country has been trying to learn the proper pro nunciation of the surname of Leon Czolgosz, the man who shot him. ftiauy win recall tuat tnere was a similar interest and the same diffi culty in pronouncing the name of Guiteau, who assassinated President Garfield. . It seems that the letter z in Pol ish is pronounced much like our h for William M. Doyas, official inter preter of Polish and Bohemian lan guages in the U nited atates immi gration office at Baltimore, and him self a Pole by birth, says that the would-be cssassin's name should be pronounce "Choalgosh." "The word is derived from a Pol ish verb," said Mr. Doyas, "which means to drag or creep or crawl Used as a noun, it means a creeping crawling thing, such as a snake. In the present instance thenameseems most appropriate. " No AnaieliUts Here. Raleigh News and Observer. - "There are no anarchists in North Carolina," telegraphed Governor Aycock to a Nortben, paper. The v. do not grow in our soil. We have men who sometimes commit crime, but that is chiefjy when they are un der the' influence of mean liquor, and they are those among us who ned the rigorous punishments prc-scrib cd in the criminal code. But v.e produce no anarchists who use the stiletto and bold meetings plotting the downfall of the Republic. Our civilization has its yices, but they are open and above board, and men guilty of them do not declare them to be virtues. While thee is no anarchistic fungus growth in this State, the peo ple of North Carolina are interested in common with the people of all the States in uprooting anarchy wher ever it is found, and its people are ready to do whatever can be done to put an end to harboring in this Republic these enemies of liberty regulated bylaw. H. Matheson io this week weighing and inspecting bark fn ol. G. W. Flowers at the bark yard. Tavlorsviile needs a furniture factory and roller flour mill, fc'au't some movement be started to get- these two enterprises started Chas. P. Matheson went to Le t oir Tuesday to look after sorao vork on store buiidiugs. War On in South America Washington Dispatch, 7lh. An official cable announcement that the Venezuelan fleet is bombard ing the Colombian town of Rio Bach was received at the Colombian egation today. Tha bombardn.ent is regarded by Colombian authori ties as an unraistakaVie aud open act of war. Rio Hacha is on the North coast of Columbia, a short distarc-3 from the Venezuelan border, and is so located as to command the penin sula west of the Gulf of Maracaibo. Sovereignty over the peninsula has Scott's Emulsion neitnerj looks nor tastes like oil because we are so careful in making it leasant to take. Send for free sample. qt'OTT & liOWNE, Chemists, 409 Feal St., N. X. 50c and fi.oo; aL druggiata. nu.ino i? r..fniflrht. a mail con- tractor of Homer, N. Y.; remarket! xiriv. o, nofh when he heara iu o:Ar.-t- 'M'.TTtnlav waj shot. I nm ir.A rt if. " It was report- OlUi 1UU VJ UVM - 1 j ed to the postofflce aepanmem-, h s nnntraet has been taKen awj from him, r...r.H sf Chronlo Diarrhoea After Thirty Year of Suffering. , "T suffered for thirty years with diarrhoea and thought I waspast being cured," says John S. Hallo way, of French Camp, Miss. "I had spent so much time ana money a w suffered so much mat x naa given :u all VinrAs of rfioverv. I was so fee ble from the ecects ot tne aiarru.e& that I could do no kind of labor. could not even travel, but by acci dent I was permitted to find abottle of Chamberlaiu's Colic. Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy, and after takiag several Domes iam enttrtijy vuicu of that trouble- I am so pleased with the result that I am anxious that, it h in reach of all who suf er Guaranteed to beLightest in Draft, Simplest in Construction and to do the best work of any DUc Plow on the market to day. We also have the Improved Chattanooga Steel Beam Moldboard Plows ard a full line of impairs. See us before buying. Evans Hardware Ooiup TROUSERS. TROUsEBs as I have." Andersen. Fo? sa'e by Stimson & Good Hoies For Safe. We will sell a few good horses within the r.ext t?n davs for cash or on time Come an see them. WHITS & DANIEC Sept. 12th 1901 Twentieth Century Medicine. Cascarets Candy Cathartic are as far ahead of ancient pill poisons and i liquid physic as the electric light of the tallow candle. Genuine stamped C.C.C Never sold in bulk. All long been in question, but the Queen druggists, ioc. Regent of Spain awarded it to Co lombia as a result of an arbitration three years ago, and this has been accepted by both countries. The information reaching the Co lombian Legation shows that the Venezuelan fleet expected to make a juncture at Rio Haeha with a consid erable force of Colombian rebels. But this force was dispersed and the town was stroDgly garrisoned by government troops. When the Venezuelan ships arrived at the port they failed to make expected junc ture and instead found the Colum bian troops in possession, this it is asserted has brought on the bom bardment now reported. We are the exclusive selling agents for the Famous Dutches t sers Every pair warranted. Will pay 10 cts. for each supet.d . bu'tn, ou cents it they rip at waistoana ana i.uu u tney rip any wnere c. e. Ga a pair. All Summer Weight Goods at Cost. Fall and winter stock arriving. Thanking you for past favo-s. are, - very truly, . Sloan Glothinp Co To Oi mm ale ami Retail f i Notice to Creditors 'AA'IXG qualified as administrator of the estate of Minnie Karcard, deceased, the undersigned herebv notifies all persons holaing 1 claims against saitf estate to present the sar--e to hiin for oavment within (i2)months from date of this notice or it will be plead in bar of their recovery, - C. C. THaKrli, This September 10th, 1901. Administrator. J, B Connelly, Attorney. NEW ' Seed Wheat ! WE WILL PAY TO DAY XT T : ,1 ri i.u. k j -m --;-j . i w ul'ku uiauituernes uu. per pouuu. cor irieu Apples, 42. r.rDOai! r or w ooi ziu to due. per pound. AND WILL SELL GOODS AT WHOLESALE PRICES. Good yard wide Domestic, 5c. Good Calico, 5c. yard. Will pay highest market price for Dried Fruit and Wool. you or sell. See us befe - Yours truly, . N. B. Mills & Company days or the past week. He grows - upon the country, and the feeling is becoming more and more general that, if the worst should happen to President McKipley, the great office Golaman, the "hiffh nrifistoss r,f a. archy,"asshe has been styled by her followers. . Bow Are Tour Kufaeyi t pie tree. Add, bteriing Kemeflj CQh Chicago or (. X. Xhi Nejiro Must be Tired of Lilo. Raleigh News and Observer, 10th, A telegram received last night by the News and Observer announced that a negro detective from Phila delphia had arrived in Anson county with the avowed purpose of running to earth the men who lynched Luke Hough and thereby swootiogin sev eral of the $500 rewards offered by the Seattle organization calling it sfelf the Council of the World. It is more likely, however, that the negro will find the climate of Anson just a bit too hot. for successful work along his line, and that he will speedily decide that his fortune lies in some other direction than that of catching lynchers. Carrie Nation ltaiscd a Row. New York Dispatch, 9th. Mrs. Carrie Nation narrowly es caped personal injury Sunday night at Steeplechase Park, Coney Island, after an intemperate attack upon President McKinley. She was about to conclude her lecture, wheu she raised her voice and exclaimed: "Bill McKinley deserves to dir. He is the friend of the brewer aod the drinking man, I have no car.; for him. 'He deserves just what ht got." She had hardly uttered this senti ment than she was greeted with jeers and hisses. Many of the audi ence arose to protest. Indignant comments were heard all over the auditorium. Several of the audience advanced to the platform with men acing gestures. The thousand peo ple who were present were unani mous in their expression of con tempt. Mrs. Nation's manager, seeing the situation, tried to induce the woman to leave the stage7 Julius Harflarr, of Newark, N. J , proposed three cheers for the Presi dent and the assemblage gave them with a will. Mrs. Nation became furious. "You hell hounds!" she cried. "You snakes, you can jeer .and hoot as you like!" Her "manager at this time insisted that Mrs. Nation beat a retreat. He got her away from Coney Island without any further scene. Mrs. Nation had announced that she had made her last appearance in Coney Island. Knd is Not Near Raleigh Kews and Observer. Gen.' A. S. Burt, pleasantly re membered by the North Carolina volunteers oi the Spanish-American wrtr, vho served under him in Jacif: f-onvitle, has just returned from the Philippines. Ilf sayshe does not expect to live to see the end of the war in the islands; not that he con templates early death, siucj 1im hale and hearty, but he says i . 'U destined to be a long war. Tbe.v ure thousands nfF1 i-he say, who would pre! i. .- iife of oatdiis and guerillas, to a life of industry and labor. Mauy of them have gne into the; Ti?ouutains, where they will remain, emerging only to pillage and plund.T. The erini. of forcible annexation must be paid for by this govern ot ct. it ba-j hi ready cost, our best blood and millions of tnom'y aud the end is far oif Cotton Crops of 18dO and 1900. Washington Jiispatch, jih. Ihc vVea'her Bureau today issued a .statement- cf the cottou product of it'-ju riL-u. aiso gave a statement com paring the production of that vear ith the. produetioif of 1899. 'The statement shows that in 1900 there were produced 10,43(119 commercial hales a agu-iust 9,(545,974 cotntner cial bales in 1899, Tha showiug by States is as follows in commercial bales. 1900. 1899. Alabama 1,061,678 1.103.690 Arkansas 828,820 Florida 55,059 Georgia.... 1 270,597 Indian Territory 288 114 Kansas.,, ,.. 151 Kentucky 133 .. 70 4 75 ..1 055.96S .. 27,2SJ .. 509,345 116 625 730,782 Includir.tr h(i follow ing va" . : ' b'ullz, Bearded Fuicaster. Rod lay, Beech wood Hy brid, Purple Straw, Cur - red's Prolific, Beardless Fuicaster. Gojden Chaff. Virginia G::av Winter' Turf O'. Home Grown S-ed Rye, Cii'Vi-r and Gras Seed. M. K. Steele, President. EnoKNE Morrison, Vice Pres. D. M. itur Statesville Ijoan & Trust Oompiiiy, Statesville, N. C. DIRECTORS: M. K. Sftele. Euirne Morrison. Dr. W T. Hill. T-. H. Wvcoff. C. M. c ele, U Alspaugh, B. Clark, A. B. Saunders, IT. M. Ausley. This Comoanv tnnui-t a ffpnpnif KlilVi'ntr hr.Bin.ci mvium mhn.v rm (IpTIP t 8S-'. .ucv-, uian.es couecuons, issues Gran's certificates ot deposits, etc we solicit u. I Corporations, firms and inriivirinals V. cHall nlAacul tn t.a r- fv,n, V.c fnr'rT 'alHE 311 uir cnanges, or opemns; new accounts. AU business intrusted to us will receive proc ptuo- aiiention, with the utmost liberality consistent with safe and prudent bastes. , avivuuis iuo smau to receive courteous welcome. Three per cent, allowed on Saring (Deposits, compounding quarterly on am i ' ' Deposits Of 3 cents and OWr mnv ht madoin thia H.narfi..nl A.irintr I,,...- . - .--m. TRUST DEPARTMRVT Wo or. ,,o,ri. .iT.f -r., .SminiaV '& Guardian and Receiver. INSURANCK DEPARTMENT Policies written in first class fire insurance coa-.:viiu- BLUESTON'E ! BLUESTONE ! This w anted. L u;Ktanit .... Ussour:.. N .rth Can.!; . Ok!ahfm;i. ........ S-ut.h Cat'oiina. Tenncs-ee Texj.s Utah.. Virginia... 227.601 3.536 506 3i ,11,833 .719,453 56,571 1,296,844 160,321 131 934 70S oC8 1,264.048 19.377 473,155 84.345 876,545 215,175 2,658,555 High Ppiat ia to have a $50,000 trunk factory. 9,230 The increase in the 1900 croo ovpr that of 1899 was 840,205 commercial bales, being 777,633 eqaivalen 500 pound bales. Anarchists anl Traitors. Raleigh News and Observer. The best thought of the ablest statesmen of America should be di rected toward securing such legisla tion as will make anarchis's punish able j as t as men guilty, of treason are punishable. We should uot wait until the anarchist has fired the bullet, but ha should be arrested when conspiring and inciting to deeds of violence. Every anarchist meeting is a conspiracy against the established government an i Should be dealt with just as cons i-cies plotting treason are dealt with. It will not be an easy matter to draft laws to this end, but there ought to be wisdom enoegh to devisi" such legislation, State and national. Anarchists and traitors arv pniiaL -ly dangerous and ought to be sum- partly ueaii, wun. . Pre.sb Cut.tcr to be deliv ered jroinrit.lv and rr.irn. i j - ly Must be fresh and Persons having a fcurp.us will please call aod ,C3 us. iariy. sweet GROCERS AND SEEDSMEN. STATESVILLE PRODUCE MARKET CORRECTED BV . " ' cooper; gill COMMENTS OF THE WESR All produce In good demand. Buying Pr ices basis no. i qcalitt Cabbage, per ft ....... . Rstrafiour sack ..... Family " sack . . . . . " " " Meal-:boltcii 44ftis. per bus'iet " unbelted74S fcs V "..'" " new Corn old- 56&S. per bushel ." " new .......... - Oats 32B3. ' " Peas clay . V. V " " mixed .... Potatoes Irih ..." ''. Sweet. Onions select, per bushel . Lard N.C . Tallow ........"."" Beeswax .....11 Hens per B " . Roosters per B Chickeu Spring small pr ft " " Turkeys per Ib.'ff " Ducks " Guinas each ...".'""" ' Geese Butter Choice yeUow " '--- " Fair " " Honey stramed, per ft" " 55 : '- comb, per ft ..'. " Eggs hen. ........ guinea ...""" Wheat .... Rye ...... " I !." Feathers new Hides dry, per 3. I ' ' green-' .... Wool washed Apples driedquarters, bright " !! bright sliced . . . - fa"cy bright sliced . " extra " green per bushel . . Peaches peeled, bright. J " ' " " '-'-'.' Bacon Hog round, pe? ft' ' ' ' " Ham. . . . " Slides . ... Shouldem . . . ! " i. 00 60 55 60 60 60 40 83 " 55 75 75 75 8 3 20 6 ;6 6 7 4 to 6 10 7 7 13 8 75 45 IO 7 5 3 4 4 4 1. 00 o 7 8 t STATESVILLE COTTON .. fcTATESVIULE, N. C. Strict Good Middling . tSood Middling MiddUng Tinges ; " Stains I arketfirnt " ' : " MARKET. Sept. is; xooi, 9 m. 8.25 g,20 : : 8.15 fi.lo 85 UNLESS YOU WANT TO BUY A PAIR OXFORDS. . In order to make room for our fall stock wo havn rWidd i.ioiTe-ours of low shoes at the following prices : Ladies' Tan Oxfords, . ... . Regular price $1.50 u0j Ladies' Tan Oxfords . . 9 00 " t? Ladies' Tan Oxfords, . . . " 2 " Ladies' Tan Oxfords, . . .- " 3 0 " Ladies' Patent Leather Oxfords, pointed toe, " " 3 00 " Ladies' Black Kid Oxfords. DOinted toe. regular nrin.ft f2 50 J3 00 " Ladies 'Black Kid Oxfords, medium toe, " " 1.25- 1.50 ,l u Misses' and Children's Oxford Ties and Sandals reduced in proprtio11' These goods must go and it will be to vour intftrest a see us b. OV'M ing.t The above goods are good and solid and are worth tvntf"8 price. Truly, Sloop & Miliar, . The S.! Shirts -:- and -:- Neckwsaf If you need a Shirt or Tij we can sure save vou money and give you value. BIG -:- KEDTJCTIOlSr -:- UST -:- SH& - to make room for our fall stock. Give us your order for Groceries. Yours to Please, Fry & Phi'3f- Chalk. Crayon and all kind of color ed Crayon, Slates and Slat Pencils. School Books and School Supples. ' AX -l... R. P. Allison's Book .4 Novelty -' Any teachers desiring a printed list of the new schoc -books can get one by coming or sending to me. - R R ALLISOIJ.
The Statesville Mascot (Statesville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 12, 1901, edition 1
2
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