Newspapers / The Reidsville Review (Reidsville, … / Aug. 17, 1900, edition 1 / Page 1
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THE REIDSVILLE REV EW. VOL. XIV NO. 49. REIDSVILLE, N. C, FIUIWY, AUGUST 17, 1900. $1.00 PER YEAK. T1IKKK IS NONK HK I I KK THAN I'M K & CHAMPION Hi MOWERS, & BINDERS m AND it REAPERS. We have u full stock and would like von to examine these whether you art ready to buy or not, THE PRICES ARE RKiHT. and wo will put you on the road to prosperity if you will use them one season. W. M. PARKER. Guilford Lumber M'f'g C o., OKEEXSHORO, X. C, Are better prepared than ever to furnish their customers with ill kinds of building mateml. We operate a large plant Ht .Mieborn, X. C, lor the wanufaature of all kinds of Lumber, Daors, Sash, Rud one at lireuiisboro, and can till orders ou abort notice at the lowest prices for good work. Win dow and door frame., mantels, all kinds of turned and fcn.ll work. In fact all the lunber of every description tht goes in a house. All the mail orders from the smallest to larcest will rfU't'ivt nnr Turtiinnl wHtit ii m Ih.n't foil 10 write i un ihd get our price before buying. All work guaranteed, j , 6 ,my ttjlel"ue ehargeson messages frntn all points in the Keids-I ville le.rphouo Excbanro. I farmers attention i R G.GLADSTON, . IVi, . MANUFACTURER in the County Uookinghmn, i8 better prepared tbisyeiir to furnish Tobacco Riru Flues thau ever, having rented Ford's old stand in addition to his present premises, aud is now ready, aud will bo the entire season, to fill all orders for Flues. Also. Tin, Iron AND Felt Roofing, fluttering ami Spouting, Sewer and Water pipo put in tin short notice. Remember the Old Stand, Scales St. Also new stud op. poeito Wniker' Shw Mills, where you will find John W. Clark R. 0. GLADST6N. 3d AMON'S Is Tasteless and Quarantaad io Cure Chills ond Favor and all (ialarial Troubles. Pocs Not Contain Qninine Nor Ot.'.ier Poison. Does Not lnjnie the Stoaiarh Nor Effect the Hearing. W. A. WkLfirtr ft Son, Pimn Hoi, Tel., say: "Ramon's IYpin Thill Tonii- is the 1ip.it wo h:ive rver hjndliyl. My presrrihes it ii h- ractic, and Bays il is a inp on pv cii' i ionic wmon a onim ran take PrWM) FiROWN !' ;. I.O.. I'm" 8 Shop Buggies to Beat the unvcY nmnwini! iuj miiuuL -WrtiaTrargood Buggy - for We will sell you a Buggy cheaper than anybody in Rockingham. at DENN Y'S OLD stand THE HARDWARE MAN. m L m Reidsville.N.C. wiinout injury to the stomach. Vs. lirnn'M;i, fenn. i i uniiiinniiL jj - 2&50 WiUaMigkUjireaxa CHINESE WAP NOTES. Restlessness is iuereasiug in South ern Cbiua. TIip German army will use American horses in Chimu Canton officials are enlisting Chines fcl $0 a mouth, twie the usual amount. Russian troops have captured the town of Sakhaliniu. ou the Amur Riv er. Japanese newspapers denounce Km peror William's vlndictiveuess toward China. Filthy camps of some foreign troops lit Tieu-Tsin are proviug a menace to heal til. A third brigade has been ordered to China from India, about ti'.XH' men being included. A J i nk. has been seized at Canton with seventy rifles and 10,XK) cart ridges u board. The American giinloat Princeton has sailed from Amoy for Shanghai to protect Americans. Admiral Seymour has forced th Viceroy of Nankin to give h'm au a'; tlience, after twice refusing. The Czar lias raised all commercial tariffs except those provided for by treaty to produce war money. The Herman mission at Namon, Chinn. has been destroyed, and Wu-' chow is no longer safe for foreigners. A liny officers seeking horses iu the, Cubed States for the Anicrk-uii and German cavalry have difficulty id get ting animals. One hundred Chinese reformers; have sailed from Vancouver, B. C, for Macao to consider raising an army lo assist lhe allies. British Consul I'fazer and the for pign community at Chung-hing have left for the coast, after being warned by the ioveniinent. I'nited States Consul Fowler, at Chee-l'oo, China, has receivej the original of the famous Conger dis patch, proving it to be genuine Allies H iving On. London. By Cable. -'The alliel troope,," sas tne Si. Petersburg cor. respondent of The Time, "having on August 'J. occupied !o Ti Wu, . ave now moved on toward Mu Chang, without m'oUng any grey, opposition. The artillery Is being moved satisfac torily, in spite of the bad roads, whicli the ,!a penes aie engaged in repairing. "The Chinese nrr now concentrated at Using Hop sien, where lighting may be especlrt.'' Senator lngalls Sinking. Atchison, Special. Former United States Senator John J. lngalls, who la in 1-a.s Vegas, N. M., for his health, is sinking rapidly, lite son, Sheffield, has started for the- bedside of his father. A telegram from Mrs. lngalls, received here announced the serious condition of Mr. lngalls, who has been in the, Southwest tov ovor a year suf- J fering from throat pffectlon. Oswald -Often '.orfei". proprietor and owner of the N'ew York Staats Zeitung, Lc sorioiibly 111 at Elk's Park, N. V. An Operators Histjke. Criand Rapids. Mich.. Special. The most terrible wrck in the hist ry of the Grand Rapids anil Indiana tail road oc ii rretl about ." o'clock Wednis tlay. at I'ierpin. :'f miles north of Grand Rapids. The Northbound Noilhlind Kxpre-s (oliided head-on with passenger train No. '1. hven lives vere lost, tind many p:i-;etigers iejip -e.l. cue fata'ly. Both mgines aud ih tiaggase cais were completely d'':uo! ished band at price went up MPAMY. ANOTHER NEW PARTY Ho Political Meetings in Nfress al Indianapolis. DEATH OF C. P. HUNTINGTON, Famous Railway Magnate and flultl Milliounirc Pass Away llntxptct fdly-His L.fe arid Work. Indinanapoll'. f ppeial . The first day's session of the nari i.ial Third party convention wa,; d voted entire'j to addresses, no formal action being taken beyind the appointment of a ommittfe of t'nrce to conf-r with the anti-imperisllsts, The sentiment a inong the independents wa? String against the c ir lid uies of b '.a McKln ley and Rryan. It is said a third tick et will be the ouicorte. although there is a desire to combine with the anti- imperialists, if possible, and there i? scar -ely a pojsibllitj of the anti-impe rialists noiiiliittlng a ticket. The convention Of the "indeptnentx" was talle to order in the Commercial Club rooms by Thomas M Osborne, of Auburn N. . The number Of d. 1 rgates m not large, but enthusiasm was plentiful. Mr. Osborne stated thst the committee calling the convention was appointed in July. "We have cho sen." he said, "to be known temporari ly al least by lhe name of the National Party. Both ihe old parties have grown srlfl -h and corrupt. We are here to ( omprnmi. e not only in matters of judgment, hut in matters of conscience In plac of Lincoln, Sumner, and Chase we have .McKinby, Piatt, and Manna, ami in ,ilve of Ti'deii and Cleveland and Uu. -ell vvp havs Bryan, Altgebl anti Tliiman. We fsvor a platform favoring ami imperialism, sound mon ey and civil sen-be reform. With much of the movement of the anti-imperialists, or ' liberty congress," which meets here, we are In sympathy, but to the Nime time we want it understood that we are entirely distinct and sep arate from them." L.uis R. Ehrich, of Colorado Springs. Col., was then presented as temporary chairman of the convention. Mr. En rich was frequently applauded during the reading of his address. A Kniirood Alagnate Gone. '-.a (liiettc Lake, N. Y., Special. C. P. Huntington, president of the South ern Pacific Railroad Company, died at his camp. Pine Knot, in the Adiron dacks. at about midnight. Heart dis. ease was the direct cause of death. Ap parently well on retiring at 11 o'clock, he wa tskep suddenly with a choking spell, which was quite common with him and which was not thought to be serious, but he became woise. As soon as the seriousness of (he attack wa realized, a mesenger was dispatched to the neighboring camp of Governor I;iinsherry. for a doctor, and h was on ! ;;-id in half an hour. Mr. Hunt iiigln, died without, regaining con-scioiisnes-, not more than three-quarters of an hour having passed between the attack and his death. Mrs. Hunt ington and Mr. Huntington's secre tary, G. K. Miles, were at his bedside at the time of death. A Man of Millions. New York. Special. Mr. Hunting ton's death bad little effect on the general stock nurket Bven his own rtocks. chief among which was South ern Pacific, were hardly disturbed. Some large lots of Southern Pacific came out In the initial transactions, hut they were promptly taken by banking interests known to represent the late tnl.iionaire and as a result, the price of Southern Pacific s.mn rallied from it.s one-point decline. It seemed to be the general opinion of those conversant with Air. Hunting ton's affairs that he had left his prop erties In such shape a-s to permit of easy handling by others. Wall street estimates the fortune of Mr. Hunting ton at from $40,000,000 to 150,000,000. How Far From Pekin? London, By Cable. The only news fc'hich takes the advance upon Pekin further than Ho Si Wu, comes from Paris. The l,ondou morning papers contain nothing to confirm the French report that the allies are within 11 milwt of Pekin, although a Che Fu dispatch is printed sajMhg that they were within 27 miles of the goal ob Saturday. Fllipptnos Take Courage. Manila, By Cable Reports from th Visaya Island shows that there has been increased activity among the In surgents there during the laat sii weeks. The American losses In the island of Panay last month were greater than in any month since Jan uary laat. General Mojico, In Lftyte, and General Lucbac. in Samax, are harassing the garrisons, shooting Into the towns during the night andamt bushing small parties, firing and then retreating upon the larger bod let. The riels possess an ample supply of am, munition and are organized to a con THROUGHOUT THE COUNTRY. The South. Pnr nnrtic iftfttlfit in a triple lynch ing W. R. Brooks ra-a sentenced to life imprisonment at Falee-tin, lexaa. Baltlmoi?, td Is for a second time In partial darkness. th linemen' strike having been revived. The destructive fire in the Dismal Swamp is still burning on the southern side of the great wilderness. wRere none of Sunday's storm was felt. It is doubtful whether it will b extinguish ed until the fall rain sets in. Lumber ing men and neighboring railroads aro still suffering. Charged with an Intention to dyna mite the Italian parade in honor of Kin?( Humbert Alexander . Hrescc, an alleged Annrebist. was loeek up at Richmond, 'a. The North. The" laying rf the new C.errran cabl-i to lhe Azores was started from Coney Island. New York, Anxious to avence Pk!.i outrrgrs several soldiers ftoncd a Ch.:. t res taurant at Chigago, 111 and V.vo of '.hem were locked up. A 38-inch water main burst undei the sidewalk In front cf the Hotel Tou raine. at Boston, Mas?., and the flood did $75,000 damage. Sailing on the steamer Deutsi hlmd from New York for Hamburg wer? Char'emngne Tower. Cnlted States Ambassador to St. Petersburg; John Wanamaker, and R, Th.imas, pirsiden. of the Krie Railroad. In a jealous rage, C. S. Reighard, a coal wagon driver, shot and killed hU wife at T.dedo, O.. and then killed him ke:f. The Prohibitionists have placed a full State ticket in the field in North Dakota, heided by O. Carleton, lor governor. Frank Ha vis, a colored bootblack, was shi t and killel by Iti-vear-oh! Henry Young on West T .venty-flfth si New York, George 1). .Jaikson has dieiined to accept the Congressional nomination unanimously given him by the Demo crats of the Tenth Ml-hlgan district. The breaking of a flnnge on a wheel caused a. trolley car at East rr.-vldenro R. I., to plunge against a tree, and V. persons we;e badly Injured. Former State Senator John F. (V Malley was a quitted at Chicago. HI , of the charge of atiempting to kill for mer Alderman William Syman. Acting Mayor (lugger.helmer hfl' ap-p-)intfd e-.tudf A b t; (T cttln'r ctvn mi t.ioiKr ( f ch:n i' s fo tb" borough? rf Hri ok'yn and b'uien' , N'ew Vor. I o avoid being n tiippcl i y b : . i ren:s, flfte' n-.var iild .lo.i i sua it si oniniitted sui ide !iv drinkinn -aibolic a. Id at N'ev York. Charged with onibl nc !'r.fi. Harry H. Hond, late cincinnr.ti manr"?''r or the Guaranty Title and Trust Com piny, was arrc-te( ;;t Toled' O. Foreran. I, rl and Ldy Minlo will vi i: Daw son soon. The Canadian government will abd ish the obnoxious ten per tent, royalty on go'd at Daw-on and establish there an aay office While, the Hntlsh cruisrr Charybdis was castiug anchor In the St.ralt.s of Belle Isle on Sunday Roatswain's Mate InglU was caught in the anchor chain and torn to pieces Haiti has notified Washington that, she now requires payment of duDes ou all imports from Santo Domingo A great demonstration was given to Sousa's Rand at Munich. A confirmed case of bubonic plague was removed from a s-teamer at Ham burg. Misc:llaneous. The India Famine Relief Fund, of the New York Committee of (me Hun dred, has reached $200,o:'0.lik. Charged with Insubordination, eight sailors of the British ship King.; Coun ty are In irons aboard the ship at Pen sacola, Fla. Telegraphic Briefs. Postmaster Joseph J. Hamilton ha been nominated for Congress, by the seventh Georgia district Republican convention. By primary election held in the fit. Mississippi congressional district Hon. John Sharpe Williams was selected as the Democratic nominee for Congress. He had ho opposition. W. C. Adamson was nominated for Congress by the Democrats of the fourth Georgia district Wednesday. SCROFULA thin blood, weak lungs and paleness. You have them in hot weather as well as in cold. SCOTT'S EMULSION cures them in summer as In wlntefTj It is creamy looking and pleas ant tasting. ;oc. and ft j : U druggUu, Baking Powder Made from pure cream of tartar. Safeguards the food against alum Alum baking powders arc the rcatt menacers to health of the present diy. DOYM 8AKINO PO0CP CO., MEW yvOK. THE CRISIS NEAR Intense interest in the Present Chinese Situation. SOMETHING EXPECTED TO HAPPEN. Conger Has Not Received Any of Pis patches Sent Him by Our Govern ment, Washington. I). C, Special. Tho Ur.s'icn of the Chinese situation has bccn intense throughout the day, for it is apprehended by officials that the crisis has reached au acute stage which cannot be continued many hours without bringing word of mo mentous import, determining either for good or evil, the entire course of event.s. It has been a day of extreinei anxiety, of watching and waiting, with only meagre and fragmentary Information as to the military and diplomatic phases. One of the new de velopments, was the statement that messages are being received from Min ister Conger which are not trans, mitted through any of our officials in China, or through the Chinese min ister here, but directly to the State Department. These messages come by the way of Tsi Nan. Some of them (,ntiot be fully deciphered ami for this reason the statement cannot lie defi nitely made that the dispatc .es sent by the government to Minister Conger arc received by him. So far as tha nnssagts have been deciphered, there is no indication that Minister Conger received any information or dis patch; s from our State Department. Nothing could Im- learned of the con tents of i he dispatcher received, al though it was stated that th.-u-e were quite a number from Minister Conger, some coming from the consular of ficers an 1 General Chaffee, besido those which come direct. The mtv eage transmitted through Minister Wu was entirely decipheicd in thej State Department. Dining the coutsr of a conversation between Secretary Root, and Baron Yon Sternberg, the German charge de affaires, Mr. Root gained considerable information con cerning the route which has yet to tie traversed by the all.-'d armies. Baron Sternberg told him thai Tung Chow was a cry .-trong place, and if the Chinese ..-.my should make a stand at this point, the international forces would find it quite difficult to over, come the forts and walls. While it is not known what resistance may have been, or will be rcade to the advance to Tung Chow. Secretary Root anil other offi. ials would not be surprised to learn of a very serious battle at this place. Negroes Mobbed in New York. New York. Spcdal.- A mob of sev-e-al hundred pcr-ons formed at 11 o' clock Wednesday night, in frmt of tho hon.e of Policeman Robert J. Thorpe, cf Thirty--evr'Kh street and Ninth av enue, to wreck venire nice upon ttv; mgroes of that neighborhood because one of their race had caused the po liceman's death. Thorpe was stabbed and bruised last Sunday night by sev eral negroes when he wa at a meeting to arre?t a colored woman. The man who inflicted the most of the Injury is said to be Arthur Harris, a negro who came here several weeks ago from Washington. In a few moments the mob swelled to 1,500 people or more, and as they became violent the negroes fled in terror into any hiding place they could find. The police reserve from four stations, numbering four hundred in all, were called out. Th rcob of white men. which grew with great rapidity, raged through the dis trict, and negroes, regardless of age or sex. were indiscriminately attacked. Scores were Injured. Bird population in declining In ererj Stale In the Fuion exempt three, viz.' North Carolina. California and Oregon Iderable degree.
The Reidsville Review (Reidsville, N.C.)
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Aug. 17, 1900, edition 1
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