Newspapers / Polk County News and … / Nov. 2, 1905, edition 1 / Page 1
Part of Polk County News and The Tryon Bee (Tryon, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
Three Cents the Copy. INUfcHfcNPtiNGEM AL1. THINGS. SubScriCfrn PriccvSl.QQ Per Year In Mvnnr VOL XI. P.fYT TTIfRTTC TNT " n nro fTDcrv A V iwtAtttih rYr W "NO. 28. STRIKERS TIE UP ALL OF RUSSIA Revolutionary State of tie Em-, pire Arouses the Gray est of. Fears. . ff. Conger rativei Suddenly CLange Into Preachers of Democracy All Classes Are Affected Wltte Warns Workers Who Denounce the' Czar and the Got ernineut The ''Marseillaise" Being , .Suns; in the Streets Younc Ulrl Leads fellow-Peasants. ": ,t ' " St Petersburg, Russia. A ' strike more sweeping than any of its prede- 1 rssors has checked industry and traffic in almost every province of the Rus sian Empire. Hardly a wheel is turn ing on the railroads, and! famine threatens many cities. ...The. workmen in the factories have made common cause with 1the ' eh'girieers, and the agrarian movemeut shows signs- of. re newed vigor. - " : ,. .... . - -- r i . Rioting , and- bloodshed are., reported from many provinces. Moseqys ' is prac tically in a state of siege anarchy pre vails . at Riga, r Warsaw, tXodZ' arid Odessa are in revolt, and there hare , . . - , . been encounters atthe-apltar and at EkaterinosIaV. .Some of thel popular leaders say that 'the "strlkeIs a test of strength in preparation for a great tip rising at the close othe yar., - ' This city is isolated;-not a train has been; moved. ; Warsaw is:' cut off and Moscow is in a state of siege. ' The situation is so grave that the bu reaucracy for the first time since the massacre outside the Winter Palace last January has admitted its power is threatened. ' 7 '-" Count , Witte, acting as the spokes ican of the Czar, made a remarkable statement. Since his return from the United States Witte has been the fav ored servant of the Emperor, and the significance of his' present utterance may be judged from the fact that Nicholas has chosen Witte as his proxy to preside over the Ministers when they listen to a deputation of strikers. Witte : wound,- up a long speech of advice to a delegation of striking railroad men with, this porten tous sentence: ' "'" 'Remember, the Government may fall but with it you will perish also by playing into the hands of the bour geoise you are fighting." s s f , To Tie Up Whole Empire. ( a , s3 It is impossible. almost1 to grasp the extent of the present uprising. The movement is being directed by the So cial Democrats, and the immediate ob ject is the tying up of every mile of railroad track in the' empire. So far 5) the success of the. malcontents has been astonishing. The railroad service has been crippled and the Government powerless to move troops. The post office authorites issued an order that; no registered mailwas to be accepted for transmission abroad. Mr. Eddy, the American Charge d' Affaires, in structed Washbgton that mail com munication has been cut off from this city. The British Ambassador, Sir Charles Hardlnge, who hade farewell to the Emperor preparatory to starting on his mission relative to the Anglo Kussian entente, was unable to get a train, and after being delayed, for fif teen hours started by steamer. f The spirit of revolution has affected the entire populace. -The "Marseil laise" Is being sung in' the streets. An incident showing the revolutionary drift is reported from Moscow. A crowd of strikers was breaking at the station there before a line of Cossacks, laying on brutally with their kiwut hen a girl with hair streaming over lier shoulders rallied the workmen. She fell on her knees and cried for the men to fight not for material gain but for human liberty In Russia. The strik ers responded by presenting a solid front to the Cossacks; who were with drawn by the officer in charge when he law the crowd could be dispersed only hj the wholesale sacrifice of lives. : As Ue soldiers were retiring, the strikers burst into the "Marseillaise," and - a stirring demonstration. The girl was , hoisted, on the shoulders of two men," and was hailed as "Joanf Arc." ' How complete is the tie-up of the railroads may be gathered ffrom; the fact that Prince Kllkoff, the Minister of Railroads to get from .MoscowT to the capital, had to drive 'the engine himself. Kllkoff is beloved of the rail road men. It is estimated that there are now 00,000 troops in the city. All KuMla In Rebellion. ' Men who but yesterday were pillars of the Government, types of discretion ud parages of respectability, "stand forth to-day as preachers of democracy.' fanatical proselytes, .enemies ot capital and friends of labor, tPriests writeito papers bleslngthe strikers and flailing th advent of a new era. Bank ers publicly: proclaim their approval of ' the men. who have organised tthe pas sive resistance to the .autocracy; and capitalism. Even military men stand PETERSBURG PANIC up pumiciy to repent their errors or a lifetime and bid their newly found brethren to be of good faith. Prince Meschersky, for forty years an official preacher of autocracy and obscurantism, has become a stanch con stitutionalist. Even ? General Trepoff, who in practice is a policeman, has ac quired the reputation of being a liberal in theory. - t ...The panic of the- bureaucracy is shown by the attitude of Count Witte, who declined to meet th delegation of the strikers inl his official capacity. He spoke al aprivate individual, and he sought to conciliate the men. ; He said that while all their demands could not be granted, that the more important- issues . would be conceded. He added that a law permitting greater freedom of meetings than that on the statute books of Italy ; and Austria Hungary, and providing for the free dom of the press had already been drafted. . 5 Witte's speech was greeted' with groans and derisive cheers. The dele gation on returning to a 'mass meeting of strikers and students reported that the mission had only served to give proof of the obstinacy of. the Govern ment. The meeting unanimously passed a resolution denouncing Witte and the Czar and demanding constitu tional reform. So the situation rests. The empire from St. Petersburg to the Black Sea and from the western frontier to the Ural Mountains is aflame with revolt. It is 'being circulated here r that the railroad strike is only a plan of the So cial Democrats for a preliminary test of strength, but it appears as if the movement has grown into an assault of a united nation against the auto cracy of the Czar, h t Oi MISS ROOSEVELT HOME. Back From Her Long Journey Tired, ' a1 " ;. But Not in- I? M ' i New York City. The Harriman spe cial arrived at the Erie Railroad depot in Jersey City at 7.42 o'clock at night, with Miss Alice Roosevelt, Miss Mable T. Boardman, Miss McMillan,, Con gressman Gillette, of Massachusetts, and J. C' McKnight on board j 3Ir. Harriman and family left the special at Ardent N. Y- iust the other side of Tuxedo Park, where Mr.. Harriman. has a summer home. A am nil rmvrri . mo rl a nn 'Tir?n(!na lltr of Erie Railroad employes and commu ters, was lined up on the dark platform when the special of five cars rolled in to the station witli Engineer J pon nelly in the cab." It had been reported that.Miss Roose relt had been sick on the train, and some imxidy r-presed Aiaong- those who were Vwaiting. She looked tired, but by no means ill when she stepped from the train. ; . ! OUR WONDERFUL GROWTH. No Other National Treasury Has Ever Held so Much Gold. ; - Washington, D. C In his annual re port United States Treasurer Treat says the continued increase in the cir culation of money is a matter for just f pride. and has attracted the admira tion and attention of the financiers ;of-the world. z X i 4'V'--i ' During the year the general stock! of money grew $79,605,729. making a per capita circulation of $31.08. . ; There was a continued increase in the proportion of gold and national bank1' notes In circulation, and no.otherigovr ernment has ever held so muchlgold as the $748,425,023 in the United States Treasury in the middle of October. vSIX DIE IN A FIRE TRAP. Hotel For Patients at Hot Springs ; Burns at Night. ,( "T Hot Springs, Ark. Six bodies have been taken from the ruins of a railroad hotel at Elm and Olive streets ;here which was burned early ih the morn ing. Those identified are: . Harry. -Bradley, a waiter: Edward Snyder, a porter; Mrs. Mack, a musi cian, and A. L. Mann,, a railroad con ductor believed to be from Denver, Col. ; . ; W .-wi.. iiv, The hotel was a two-story frame building," and was patronized by inva lids and cripples who were under treat ment ,. There was only one-narrow exit. . ' :.. MILITARY BALLOON IMPROVED. French Minister of War Reconnoitres Vcity in Half aniHoun; Toulon, France. Minister ? of War Borteaux participated in ;the jnost suc cessful trial of the Lebaudy military dirigible, balloons -1 Accompanied by a number uf officers he made a half-hour trip in the balloon and reconnoitered the i whole range of fortified works and the city. CATHEDRAL DOME .FALLS. Crushes Whole .Edifice", at Monterey, i-'fcInto a Heap ofRusr ' El - Paso, Texas.-The! dome on the great cathedral hi Monterey, Mexico, fell, crushing fhe church into a; heap. i The edifice was one of the landmarks of Mexico. , It was built In 1792, rAs far as ; learned there was no one Injured by the collapse of the dome. t Coal is Active. 7 Coal is experiencing the usual,.active fall demand," hampered, however, by inability of shippers to fill orders, ow ing to lack of cars. ; f : v s v i Bank Clearings Stable. f ,Bank . clearings now comarewith large totals a yearago, and gains are small, in fact trifling. ' - ... . Building is Active. ' RnllfUni? fa tivA hevond nrecedent - both in the large dtie and In they co'n try; ROOSEVELT'S TRIP CLOSES New Orleans Has Most Demonstra tive Day in Its History. ; .:4 NARROW ESCAPE IN COLLISION 1 4 ' ' The Entire South, Gave the President Sochi a Welcome as ' No Other Chief Executlre Has Brer Received Before . Bet urns hy Sea Official Boat Hit Dnrlne the Nljfht. ,: ' New Orleans, La. Roosevelt day in New Orleans was the greatest day , the city has ever seen. ' 'L : ; 4 Theodore Roosevelt was ytxeceived with an enthusiasm never shown for any former visitor. ' The reception of President McKinley a few years ago was mild compared with the greeting ,to the present Chief Executive,, ,and the carnivals of past years .were mere mockeries. . -The crowds .were greater, the enthu siasm more intense and . genuine. It reached such a height as to nullify the program,, and, instead of a formal re ception and parade, partook of a popu lar demonstration ,that swept every4 ihing before it. ,-. s Much of this was due to the local out burst resulting from the popular belief that it was to the President and his prompt action in giving the assistance of the United States Marine Hospital Service to wipe out the yellow fever that escape from an awful, epidemic was due. 5 , ; "Hurrah for Teddy," greeted him at every corner, and "run for. President again and we all will vote for you," was hurled at him with an earnestness that made an impression, although he frequently 1 shook his head. It is doubtful if any - man was ever more popular in New Orleans than Theodore Roosevelt. v " -; . The President' was welcomed not simply as the Chief Magistrate of the Nation, but as the saviour of New Or leans. This idea pervaded the wel come and all the speeches made during the day. The President seemed to ap preciate this fact, and his warm praise of the fight against the fever here and his promise to do all that he can possi bly do to prevent it ever getting in here again aroused the utmost grati tude, the expression of which the po lice and militia could not control. ; r The ; crowds in v the streets "were So great, that the.niilitary and civic par ade, 'which hadbeen carefully ar ranged, could not force its way through and at Lafayette Square, facing the City Hall; .where it had been arranged that the President should speak to the people, more than 50,000 .persons as sembled and such was the crush that the .President deemed it advisable to materially cut down the speech he had J intended to deliver. ' : 1 It was well he did so, for the crowd was unmanageable, and a catastrophe kJlke that which attended the corona tion of the Czar some years ago was threatened. There were numerous ac cidents. dozens of, fainting women, and the President, realizing the situation, after a few words told the crowd to go home and be good. He left bya side door of the' City 'Hall tQy;avoid the crush, while the crowd lingered there for several hours in the hope that,he would return and resume his speech. There has been something of a hew order in this trip of the President, for the character of his welcome, in every place he has visited, has seemed more Western than Southern noisier and breezier than has been the case when a Republican President; Tlsited this part of the country. After traveling through four States In Dixie, Mr. Roosevelt must believe in the unmistakable , sign that the South claims him just as loudly as the East; where he was born, or the West where he spent several years of his young manhood, i Here in the extreme end of the black belt the President has been as cordially received as in any other State he ever traveled through, and in Florida and the other Southern States the' receptions have signified a good deal more ! than the traditional courtesy of the people or tne south. ; At the end of nine strenuous hours of varied entertainment President Roose velt at 6.30 o'clock at night boarded the lighthouse? tender Magnolia and began his return Journey, by ; sea to Washing ton. D. C. The lighthouse 'tender Magnolia, while conveying President Roosevelt down the Mississippi River from New, Orleans to Jhe-Gulf, where he was to board-the armored cruiser west vir ginia for his "return to Washington, was in collision about midnight with the fruit steamer Esparta. - Both ;ves sels went aground on the jiver bank. and . the ; Magnolia was disabled. " No one was injured. . , The , President was transferred to the revenue cutter Ivy, and he resumed his trip and boarded the West Virginia, on schedule. time. TRAIN ' DESTROYS BRIDGE. Cars Drpp Into a Creek and Many Ter- , " sons Are Injured. Lexington, Ky. Twelve, persons were badly Injured at night on the 'Southern' Rail way when part of a train was hurled from a ; wooden bridge seven miles from Lexington into creek-forty feet below; The tender, mail- and the baggage coaches and the smoking car were splintered and thrown into the creek. The tender of the locomotive jdjnped the track about 100 yards from the bridge.. Engineer Phillips i threw the throttle wide open and barely succeea- 1 , dd In iettlnz the locomotive across the 1 were battered down by the cars. BITS fSEIS , WASHINGTON. ... ; , t ThV annual report of Charles H. Treat, United States Treasurer, showed a Temarkable Increase in the country's financial resources. V, 5 ?1 IThe United States Supreme Court decided that George E. Green must olutionary days in North Carolina, es stand trial in. Washington on charges J Tvallv h' -mvii, of postal fraud. ' " The ; Philippine Commission paid the Dominican order $3,325,000, closing the friar land deal. Desertions from the enlisted force of the army are on the increase. -The re port of the Judge-Advocate-General shows that something more than ten percent of the total fenlisted force has taken French leave. ; OUR ADOPTED ISLANDS. Insurgents of the Cotabato Valley, in Mindanao, P. L, threaten to kill all the Moros friendly to the American Gov ernment- , ' ; ,', Manila-chas been free from cholera for many days. . ?, . The annual report of the only rail road in the Philippines shows earnings- of fifteen per cent, on a capital stock of $5,353,000. . The .reorganization . bil now before the Philippine Commission providing for reducing the departments of the Government will save $1,250,000 (gold) annually. : - ' ! DOMESTIC - An association was formed of Mutual Life policyholders in Minnesota to oust tne.MCUurays irom tne company. : , : ' John F. ' Stevens, chief engineer , of thet Panama, Canal, denied a rumor that he would resign. v . i -Upward of 500 delegates are expect ed jt; Chattanooga, Tenn., for the Soniutrn immigration and quarantine conference,; No vember 9 and 10. fter " a week's trial the charge gainst ; Charles M. Chamberlain of wrecking the Chamberlain Bank, at Tecumseh, Neb., has been dismissed. " The President of the wrecked Enter prise National Bank, at Pittsburg, Pa.; says the, shortage will .reach $i,auu,uuo. David S. Scott, who forged his wife's name I to obtain funds, requested a Pittsburg (Pa.) judge to send him to priron. ,?'Scw ifidictments have been found at Cleveland, Ohio, against O. L. Haysj anTTMward Flickinger w.7. -'- tfeii ,the National parks in California to the LiYellowstone Park and promise to thrive there. ' : Thrw hundred Svrlans rioted at i Liberty and Church streets, New York City.' Daggers and pistols were drawn I f Herman Schultz knelt at the coflltt of his sucide son at 'their home in- New York City, and sent a bullet through his own brain. Five miners were- killed by the cave- in of a slope in a . Utah copper mine. Receivers took charge of the Tubular Dispatch ( and'New York Mail and Transportation ' Companies and the pneumatic mail' tube service in Man hattan (New York. City), was stopped. ; In ten factories in the mountain dis trict 1500 men of the Amalgamated Window Glass -Workers of America will go to work at once. Beef Triist men indicted in Chicago, 111., filed a special plea contending that testimony given by them in the Govern ment beef inquiry had been used in obtaining their indictment, and : there fore they could not be prosecuted on that finding. - 4 . ' The Royal Mail Company began Its service between the Isthmus and New York City, v 1 James A. Shuttle worth, of Louis ville, Ky., announced the gift of four teen acres as a site for a Presbyterian College for Women. The fiercest storm In years 4 swept , over Lake ; Erie, strewing ' the shore from Buffalo to Detroit with wrecks.' In a revolver duel Mrs. J. S. Stoops and J. A; Armitage, both of Marshfield, Ore., kill ed each other. 1: ,1 1 ; i George Pickens confessed, at Cripple, Creek, Col., that hewas guilty of mur dering P. E Walsh,- at ;Lou;sville, twelve years ago., t t,u -:' FOREIGN. -a , The Russian forces in Manchuria are being rapidly i demobilized and " sent home by trains from Harbin. , ? A- statue ' of Pope Pius X. ; was un veiled: in 'Riese, the. Venetian village where he. was born.. . Count Zeppelin is continuins his ex periments ' with airships on the Lake of Constance with great perseverance. William J. Bryan and J Captain Glover, ' of the battleship Wisconsin, were presented to the . Mikado, at TOkio, Japan. t The Kiel correspondent of tbe Lou don Daily Mail says that a German ' cruiser squadron has been ordered to the 'Far East where It will visit the principal Japanese ports The German Minister at Copenhagen, W. von Schoen, , has been appointed - German Ambassador to Russia in place pf Count von Albensleben, who retires on a pension Sir Pardon Clarke, the new director of the' Metropolitan Museum of Art, in New York' Citj. bade King Edward VII.; atLondou, farewell beforei sailing According to a special Tangier1 dis - Batch. difficulties arose over" tne-re- lease o ofacers oi uxe , isritisn. marine i- the position.: f lneappoinunent, naw setvice captured by Moorish tribes-. I 6ver, 'was only decided ' upon by the men. - - 1. 1 ftnvernor Fadav. J WILL ESTAB sJiy Important Finds By. Secretary of . v. . State. Raleigb, Special. Several valuable finds have just been made , by Secre tary o btate J. Bryan Grimes and these will no doubt throw much light upon matters connected with the T?av, pecially the Mecklehbnrsr Declaration the - Cumberland Resolves and ' thj Tiyon Committee! Report. i I v lhe pamphlet relatmer to . the Meek ' lenburg Declaration is oneprinted in 1831 and which was thought to have been lost irom the State Library. Jt was among the papers filed away, from the Secretary of &taf e 's oflice, and may have been used by Col. Saunders. In it is the testimony of "Captain Jack" as;to his ride in June, 1775, .with the .declaration, as well as other edence of the 20th of May, 1775. Declaration., On the router cover the reading is "The Declaration of Inde pendence by the Citizens of Mecklen burg County on the Twentieth of May, 1775, with Accompanying Documents and the Proceedings of the Cumber land Association, Published by ;'; the Governor under the authority ad di rectioii' of the General Assembly of North Carolina. Raleigh, Lawrence & Lemax, Printers to the State, 1831. ' 'Another valuable find was the ori ginal copy of the "Journal of the Pro ceedings of the Provincial Congress of North Carolina, Held at Hillsboro, Twentieth of August, 1775. Published by authority. New Bern, Printed by James Davis, Printer to the Honor able the House of the Assembly, 1775." The president of -the Assem bly was Samuel Johnston, the Secre tary, Andrew Knox. ,, , A unique document as to its clear and specific terms and writing is the "Resolutions of the Committee of Surry county,'' Twentieth of August, 1775. ' .The chairman of the commit tee was Benjamin Cleveland. . Bound in part of a copy of a news paper of 1774 is another .find. It is the Minutes oi tne rroeeecings ior Tryon County,, 1775. The Twenty- ' sixth of July, 1775. It is bound in part of a copy of what is evidently it fih Carolina, Intelligencer and being f'from Friday. June 3rd to Fn ftt.fT1? date missing being " June ivin, t t. J All these documents wui De careiui- Iv examined and copies will be made so as to keep the facts for use in the clearinsr up of mooted points in his- history. Two New Corporations. Charters "Were issued by the Secre tary ' of State to; new corporations Friday as follows : , , t. L. Harvey & Son Company, of Kin ston, in Lenoir county, organized' for the purpose of doing a general real estate and mercantile pusmess. ine capital itoek subscribed - as twenty thousand dollars, authorized,, $50,000. The incorporators are Lemuel Harvey riinrlps TVHt Harvev and P. ' P. -Meade. ' ' ' 1 The Salisbury Transfer Company, with a capital stock of $10,000 au thorized, to do a general transfer bus iness and , to ? maintain storage ? and wm'tinp- ronms and to operate be- tween Salisbury ana spencer, in xvovv an county. Incorporators are 5 Chas. W. Mower v. T. B. Marsh and Max Jj. Barker: t 'To Employ White Servants. , : Asheville, Special. In the future the waiters and other help, at -. tne Mountain Park Hotel at Hot Springs will be white instead of colored peo pie; 1 This statement' was made by a l 1 1 f rl tl ui ciavn. a . . iiihftritv of Mr. RnraKuurh. one of the owners and managew of this not ed hotel at Hot Springs, j Mr. Rum-: bougH, it was said, had gone to New York to engage . white help 1 for the coming season. . V , ; Pell on His - Head. ; Goldsboro, Special. George; Saund ers. a white boy about 15 years old, fell from-the top or a loaaea toDae co wagon Friday, afternoon and, wa? very badly hurt. T His head stru'ek a brick bat which made an ugly wound from which the blood flowed treely Tlri M.EJ 0 Robinson . dressed his d he is doiric as : well f as could be expected. . : ' The Governor's Private- Secretary. . Raleigh, Special.-TGovernor . Glenn on Friday appointed ; as his private secretary" to takV the position made vacant by the' death of his brother, General James D. Glenn, Mr.fA.u H. Arrington, a son, of the late Capt- J.; P. .Arlington; and teller in the ofHce of the State Treasurer The appoint ment was not .a surprise as it had been teo for some days thatArring- ton nad Deen nigniy reconunenaea ior iff ft : Items'of Interest to NortHCar- olina People - V: , it Charlotte Cotton Market, The cotton market steadv. Low hiiddlinj?. ;? . . ! I- . 2 strict low middling, ...'-..10 Middling.. . ; . . ....V .... V.lOVi'- Strict : middling .io3g Good .middling . . . .10y2 uenerai Cotton Market. Atlanta steady.. - . . . 1 IlO 5-8 Galveston, steady. . 10 3-4 New Orleans, easy.. .. .,,103-8 bavannah, steady . ..... .-. .10 3-8 Charleston firm . ..-i .... .10-1-8 Wilmington, steady.. .. .. . .10 1-8 Norfolk; quiet. . ....10 3-8 Baltimore, nominal. . . . . .10 3-4 New York, quiet .... . . . . , . .10.65 Boston, quiet. ....10.65 . ..10.90 1 .10 7-16 ;.105-8 Philadelphia, steady .. Houston, easy .... Augusta, steady Memphis, steady. . St. Louis,, steady. . .. 103-4 3 u The Jefferson Turnpike. ; Raleigh, Special. Mr., R; Bl Lacy, state treasurer, has returned from a visit to Wilkesboro, where he went to look'atHhe Wilkesboro and Jeffer son Turnpike. He expressed himself . as , being -eharmed with the' couritry and impresed with the possibilities of the proposed road. The turnpike has now been completed to within nine or ten miles of Jefferson, f rom' the line of .Wilkes and Ashe counties. This means from Wilkesboro a construc tion of twenty-eight miles of the proposed-turn-pike. much of, t which tra verses1 Some of the most clificult moun- tain sections considered from an " en gineering , point, of view and, at the same time some oi tne most Deautiiux country to be found in the State. The completion of the road to Jefferson depends upon the action of Ashe coun- 1 I ly wmcu in ven uays wui ueciue whe ther or not it .will furnish the; four . , thousand' dollars additional needed; tq; f Charters Issued. , The Secretary of State Friday chartered the following corporations:4 ' The Moms' - Telephone Company Ito eng age . in the , construction of f j tel e- phone and 'telegTaphUines, etc. The principal oflice will be at Roxboro, in . Pearson, county. The authorized capital is one hundred thousand dol- lars, but business is commenced 'upon the payment of $10,300fiwhichUsfsub scribed by Messrs. T. H. Street, R. J. league, A. u. Jsoyies, j. u. Morns. r -The Washingtbn Investment' Com-" pany, to construct electric . street - rail- ways in Washington, Beaufgrt Coun ty." 'Authorized capital 'stock $100,000 . Incorporators : R. T. Hodges, "L;-.'R. Mayo, E. S. Simmons, Jno ,B. 'Whee- ,t ler, W. E. Jones. McDowell Land and Trust Company, to do a' general ' real estate building and mining ;busi- ; ness. , Principal., office Marion N.-.C.-j Authorized capital stock $50,000. In corporators: M.! Morgan E. -I.- 'Gas- ' ton, J. W. Streetman, . J S.. Biddix, R. s."ciayV v:";vv:";; ti ; The Imperial Company to1 owC and Jt sell ?farms, land- etc.,' arid to dcr - general merchandise business' Prm-. il. , cipal office, Spray, in, Rockingham County. ? Authorized ' -capital ' stock $125,000, i Incorporators !-ThoiI G: McAllister,' B. K. Terrj, J. Worth Me- Alhster. ...ii r -f "T" The New Garfield Wood-working Company was granted ;;eharter with an authorized capital stock of twenty thousand dollars, to be located at ' Salisbury1 arid ;Newr 'Garfieia and ito -work in and manufacture aIL kinds of woods, metal, etc.: The, incorpora tora are Leopold Graf Weslie C. Ket- ehie and Hayden Clement. t ' - ' t 4; 1 Murdered by. One Unknown. , K A r . A X Wilson. Special. At the coroncr heariri? oi the murder case of Amos Battsl the jury brought iri; a verdict -that the deceased was foully murdered " by some unkno.wri party 1 There being ho Evidence against .George Jones andr Sylvester Jones, who , have been, under; arrest charged 'With the . crime, they ?. were released. , , . v Ir'v . Shippers Meet; " Winston, SpeciaL At a meeting ot t the i business men herelaf numberof l large . shi ripers made . addresses,; which a? they criticised, in 'plam English, he. nnsatisfctary freight -services now. ' t heirig4 giyen CWinstOn-Salem by the Southern Raway.:TheK.hamea?Lo? . v those v. - o have grievencos and will furnish the State icbrp&ratioir fonliris- . sion I with' facts t and, figures 'when XU .v meets here Weire announced. , Those presenr were4 tinanimously 'or theopv ' inioii that time for action had arrived and that; the business . men, in orders to protect ' thev interests' roust de- j ' mand better freltht facilities I i;3 V 'V - t S 1
Polk County News and The Tryon Bee (Tryon, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 2, 1905, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75