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WAGNka CMUM News. sz VOL. I. McCRORY, ARKANSAS, THURSDAY, JANUYRY 2, 1902. NO. 39. NEWS OF THE WORLD, Senator Sewell of New Jersey is dead. Gov. John R. Rogers, of the state of Washington, died December 2(1 of pneumonia. Secretaries Gage and Long, it is reported, have notified the president of their desire to retire from the cab inet. In a street fight at Muldrow, I. T., between Officer Mayberry and Chas. Scheiler, both men were mortally wounded. Gen. De Wet surprised a camp of British at Zefontein, Orange River colony, Christmas eve, and after a bloody attack captured three com panies of yoemanry and three guns. Judge Carter, of the Indiana su perior court, lias decided the case of the state against the Commercial Insurance company, sustaining the company’s demurrer and holding that the act under which the stale auditor seeks to examine the books of special charter insurance compa nies is unconstitutional. Three killed and a $70,000 fire is the record at Shreveport for Christ mas day. The three killings report ed were those of Jack Ryan, color ed, who was shot by an unknown man ; Hesah Ewell was shot and killed by Charles Bell, and the body of an unknown negro was found in an alley in the rear of a saloon. The Pacific Hardware and Steel company, capital $10,000,000, has been incorporated under the laws >f Xew Jersey. The stock is divided into $7,000,000 common and $;?, 000,000 preferred, hearing (> per cent cumulative dividend. The com pany is authorized to manufacture and deal in every kind of iron, steel and hardware. Edgar Stanton Maclay, whose connection with the Schley case led President Roosevelt to request his resignation as special laborer in the navy and who was dismissed, has made formal demand for trial by usual naval procedure. Discussing the case, Maclay said: “The presi dent cannot have me dismissed un der the law as I see it. I do not see how he can force me out. I am protected by the civil service laws enacted by congress, whose enact ments the president is bound to ex ecute.” 7 u A statement exhibiting tne extent of the cotton manufacturing indus try of the United States for the year of 1900, as compared with 1890, by the census bureau, places the total value of cotton manufacturing prod ucts at $336,974,882, a gain of over 25 per cent since 1890. The num ber of establishments in 1900 was 1,051, a gain of 16 per cent; the capital employed $467,240,157, a gain of 32 per cent ; salaried offi cials, 4,967, a gain of 84 per cent; amount paid in salaries, $7,535,129, a gain of 117 per cent; average number of wage-earners, 302,861, a gain of 38 per cent; total wages paid, $90,384,532, a gain of 36 per cent. Cost of materials used, $176, 551,527, a gain of 14 per cent. The jury at Jeffersonville, Ind., in the case of N. C. Rathbun, charg ed with murdering Chas. Goodman, returned a verdict of guilty of man slaughter and fixed his punishment at from two to twenty years. Charles Goodman, Rathbun's alleged victim, was found dead last month in a ho tel at Jeffersonville, after he had spent some time with Rathbun. His body was shipped to Little Rock, where Rathbun's wife lives, as that of Rathbun, on whose life an insur ance policy for $4,000 had been is sued. Following the discovery that the body was not Rathbun's came Rathbun’s arrest at Louisville, where lie had enlisted under another name in the United States army. The corpse was later identified as that of Charles Goodman, a wanderer, who went to Louisville from hvansvill’, Ind., and met Rathbun. The report comes from Pekin that the dowager empress intends to re linquish control of the Chinese gov ernment* making it possible for an amicable, settlement with Russia re garding JJanchuria. The bicycle trust is to be divided, one branch to manufacture automo biles and the other bicycles. Gen. Alger, who has been serious ly ill the past four weeks, is said tc be out of immediate danger. Four white men were fatally wounded in a riot with negroes in New York City Christmas day. Secretary Gage has resigned the treasury portfolio and President Roosevelt has tendered the position to Gov. Leslie M. Shaw, of Iowa. The steamer Sun burned at the wharf in Memphis Christmas morn ing and four lives were lost. The dead are D. N. Rainor and wife, from Old River, Ark.; Mrs. G. M. Timbs and child, Richardson, Tenn. The tire was discovered at 4:10 a. m., and spread with such rapidity that the steamer was a mass of flames when the department re sponded to the alarm. Secretary Long has disposed of the Schley case for good so far as the navy department is concerned. He approves of the findings of the whole court, and of the majority re port where, it differs with the mi nority report made by Admiral Dew ey. The secretary has also declined the application of Admiral Samp son’s counsel to enter upon an in quiry into the question of command, and notified Admiral Schley’s coun sel of that fact as a reason for de clining to hear them on that point. A dispatch says: The Ital ian government has been renewing its efforts of late with the authori ties in Washington to have our fed eral statutes so extended as to pro tect foreigners in cases arising with in the jurisdiction of states, thus giving a federal remedy for lynch ings and like affairs directed against Italians, such as have occurred in Louisiana, Colorado and Mississippi. The Italian ambassador at Washing ton is endeavoring to secure this protection for subjects of his gov ernment through treaty amendment. The preliminary report of the in terstate commerce commission on the income account of the railways in the United States for the year ended July 30, 1001, shows returns of railway companies operating 192, 193 miles of line. The passenger earnings of these railways were $426,909,210 and the freight earn ings $1,114,740,770. The total gross earnings were $1,578,164,205, or $8,211 per mile of line, against $1,487,044,814 in 1900. Operating expenses amounted to $1,023,156, 281, or $5,323 per mile of line, making net earnings $555,007,924, or $35,577,218 in excess of the fiscal year 1900. The amount of divi dends declared during the year was $121,108,637, or $13,000,000,000 more than for the same roads in 1900. The surplus from operations was $77,744,735. The complete re port for the preceding year showed a surplus of $87,657,933. DV uriUT ui me piir-iurm, otric tary Boot sent to' Lieut.-Gen. Miles a caustic rebuke for expressing a pro Schley opinion as to the result of the court of inquiry. In his reply to the secretary for an explanation of his conduct, Gen. Miles, in part said: “I have the honor to state that mv observations as substantially re ported had no reference to the ac tion, pending or otherw ise, of a co ordinate branch of the service; they were merely my personal views, based upon matters set forth in va rious publications which had been given to the world and concerning which 1 conceive there was no im propriety in expressing an opinion the same as any other citizen upon a matter of such public interest.” The president took the stand that an officer has not the same right as any other oil i/on to express publicly an opinion regarding official questions pending in the course of military discipline. Following the publica tion of the Miles reprimand. Secre tary of the Navy Long called for the resignation of McClay, the man who wrote the history of the battle at Santiago, and who referral to Schley in such incomplimentary terms. Christmas services at a country church near Piketon, 0., broke up with a general row in which six men were fatally wounded. The threatened trouble between Chili and the Argentine republic is to be settled by submitting the boundary disputes to the king of Spain. Industrial stagnation throughout Germany is said to be causing an unusual number of young mechan ics to seek service in the German army. Mayor Harrison, of Chicago, pro poses to have the question of mu nicipal ownership of street railways submitted to the voters at the ap proaching city election. In a general fight between white men and negroes at Childersburg, Ala., two white men were killed and a white boy and one negro wounded. The trouble started between negroes and when a white man tried to stop the fighting he was shot and fatally wounded. Several other whites then interfered and a general fight followed. itauroaa Dunamg in tne unnec State during 1901 was greater thar it has heer> for eleven years previous the total approximating 5,057 miles of line, as against 4,437 last year The construction for the year, addec to the total mileage reported pro vious to that, brings mileage of tin country to approximately 190,37( miles. It is noted that the south west and the middle west take th palm for the year, that Texas lead with 583 miles of new line, distrib uted among twenty-three roads, an< that the Rock Island leads all other with the longest single line of 26. miles, to which might well be addei 28 miles of the El Paso and North ern from Santa Rosa to Carrizozo, N M., which will be completed by Feb ruary 1. The McKinley National Memorif Association, with headquarters i Cleveland, 0., has had its attentio called to so many enterprises of commercial nature tending to mak capital out of sentiment of publi affection for William McKinley, tha the following statement has beep, is sued by Judge Win. R. Day, ex-sec retary of state and president of th association : “The public is especial lv cautioned against any enterpris attempting to make capital out o the sentiments, the affection, wliic inspired the desire to rear at th grave of the late president a memo rial which shall fittingly, honor hi memory. It is the desire of th trustees that all contributions shal bo free-will offerings of the people and they respectfully request th public to discourage all proposition which may seem to have as thei object the obtaining of money b the giving of all or part of their pre coeds to the memorial fund.” Profitable Weddings. ' What is known as the “pay wed ding” is popular in Germany. Th bride receives the guests with a basil set before her, and into this each vis itor entering the reception-roor drops either some jewelry, a silve spoon, or a piece of money. In som parts of the country the expenses o the marriage feast are met by eacl guest paying for what he or she ma eat and drink. Some visitors pa high prices, and the happy eoupl make a handsome profit out of thei wedding, as many as 300 guests oftei being present at such a festival. Work for Explorers. Explorers have approached withii 238 miles of the north pole, but th nearest approach to the south pot has been 772 miles. Scientists Puzzled. It has been a source of much sur prise to Prof. Nordenskjold that dur ing his expedition within the arctii circle, in regions where animal life i; abundant, he has found very few re mains of animals which died a natu ral death. No one has any idea o: what becomes of the bodies of sucl animals; and it is indeed very strang< that on Spitzbergen it is easier to fine bones of a gigantic lizard of remoti geological time than those of a “self dead” seal, walrus or bird. The sam is also true of some places not so fa north. NEWS OF ARKANSAS. Street Fight at Parkdale. Three men were wounded in a shooting affray at Parkdale. Jt seems that Frank Barnes was a little boisterous on the streets and Depu ty Sheriff Atkins was asked to ar rest him. G. P. George volunteer ed to assist Atkins in the arrest. Atkins procured a shotgun from one of the stores, proceeded down the street to await the coming of Barnes. As Barnes was passing up the street George caught his horse by the bri dle and pulled a revolver, when both began firing. George emptied his revolver, missing every shot. Barnes only having three loads, fired at George twice, one bullet taking ef fect in bis leg. Then seeing that Atkins was about to sxioot with a shotgun he fired at him and Atkins fell to the ground, his gun being dis charged in the air without damage. After emptying the gun at George and Atkins, he threw his empty gun at George. George also threw his empty gun at Barnes. Robert Norwood, a relative of George, then . carried another shotgun to Atkins , and he fired at Barnes, the load tak i ing effect in his shoulder. Barnes . having no more ammunition, had . wheeled his horse to get out of the • way and was shot in the back. Verdict Against Railroad. The jury in the damage suit oi : the Wolff-Goldman Mercantile Com J panv against the St. Louis, Iron ■ Mountain and Southern Railroad l Company, growing out of the com 3 press fire at Newport April 4, 1900 ' when 2,108 bales of cotton were de ^ stroVbd, gave a verdict in favor ol ‘ the plaintiffs for $124,000. Tin • real plaintiffs in the suit are no! ' only Wolff-Goldman Mercantile Company, but seven or eight insur 1 once companies, who carried the 3 risks upon the cotton destroyed. Tin 3 petition of the plaintiffs alleges tha i sparks from engines on the Iroi e Mountain set fire to the Best feee e and livery barn, in which in tun t set afire the compress property - The Lessor Cotton Company prose * cuted a similar claim in the federa B 8 f 1 B court against the Iron Mountain fo losses sustained in this fire, the casi having been tried at Little Rock las spring, but was decided against tin plaintiff. Three Dead. s Martin Davis and Jeff Davis, col e ored, who were cousins, living nea; 1 Wilmot, quarreled over the owner i, ship of some land, when both pullec 8 guns and opened fire. When tin s smoke cleared away they were botl r dead. It seems that one Jin f Thompson was a friend to one o: • the fiarties in the shooting, and it n supposed that he took a hand ii the shooting. Thompson went ti Wilmot for a coffin, when Artlnu . Davis, father of one of the deac i men, met him in a store and sho l him dead. Money Recovered. Twenetv-three hundred dollars ii [ bills of the $7,000 taken from th< j Springdale bank were found in tin j mountains near the place where tin ,f bandit's coat and pistol were found Only $650 of the amount is nov 3 missing. $6,350 having been recov r ered. A man named X. B. Carlisle j was arrested on suspicion of bein< the robber. Petition Refused. A petition of Hot Springs dairy men to increase the rate on milk ant milk products from Carlisle to Ho; Springs was refused by the state railroad commission. It was. over ruled on the ground that it woulc tend to suppress fair and reasonable competition, to the detriment of con sumers. Shot Through the Heart. Frank Chileutt shot and killed Frank Mallory at Hot Springs Christmas day. Chileutt is the pro prietor of a saloon and Mallory oon i ducted a restaurant next door. Mai > lory was drinking and sent Chileutt - word he was going to kill him. As ; Mallory entered the saloon Chilcuti r shot him through the heart. To Consider Change in Commerce Law. The Arkansas State Board of Trade a few days since received a letter from E. 1\ Bacon, chairman of the executive committee of the interstate commerce law convention, inclosing a copy of the proposed bill to amend the present interstate com merce law, and requested the ap pointment of a committee to consid er and report on same. In accord with the letter President J. A. Wood son of the state board appoint ed the following committee to consider the subject: W. W. Dick inson, chairman; Janies A. Fones and Chas. F. Pcnzcl, of Little Bock; Hon. George Sengel. of Fort Smith, and Hon. Louis Altheimer, of Pine Bluff. Copies of the bill will be furnished each of the gentlemen and they are expected to report by letter to Geo. B. Brown, Little Bock, after which President Woodson will make a report as the majority de cide. Coal Output Increasiag. In reviving the coal mining in dustry of the south, F. E. Seward, an authority, says of this state: “Arkansas is coming up as a coal producer. For the year 1890 it was credited with but 279,584 net tons and for 1900 it has 1,447.945 tons to its credit. One may safely put this state down for 1,750,000 tons for the year 1901, as the devel opment lately has been along the lines of improvement around Fort Smith. There is a great awakening in this respect.” -* Slain By Brother-in-Law. On Christmas eve Jack Pcpltin, who conducts a store about six miles from Forrest City, and his brother-in-law, John Manus, had a difficulty. Manus shot into Pipkin’s store, slightly wounding Pipkin and his two sons. Manus was arrested, but when released Christmas morn ing returned to Pipkin's store and renewed the difficulty, when he was shot and killed. Pipkin was exon i erated. Arkansan Killed in Memphis. Robert Blythe, a farmer, whose home is at Earle, this state, was shot I and probably fatally wounded by an officer at Memphis. Blythe is said to have been drinking and trying tc raise a row with a saloon man, and when the officer tried to arrest hi in lie resisted. A brother of the wound ed man was shot by a deputy sheritl in Memphis last August. Railroaders Fight. Tn a difficulty at a tie camp on the Choctaw road on L’Anguille rivei - Gabe Potts was probably fatally wounded by M. P. Bern lev. Potts 1 is said to have insulted Remley’s [ wife, and when called to account by the husband assaulted him, when ' Rem ley made a gash in his neck with 1 his pocketknife, nearly severing the 1 jugular vein. Woman Wounded. Jack Elmore and Roland Thorn ton engaged in a difficulty at Clar endon, when the former shot at the latter with a shotgun loaded with 1 Xo. 1 shot. The load missed the mark but lodged in the face and neck of Mrs. Saxton, inflicting serious wounds. BRIEF MENTION. Dynamite was exploded by an unknown party near the court house at El Dorado, resulting in about $500 damages. Levy Sanders, a convict sent up from this state for violation of the postal laws, escaped from the Leav enworth prison. Gov. Davis made glad the hearts of twenty-eight state convicts by granting them their freedom as a Christmas present. Cordelia Walker, a colored wo man, was assassinated as she sat in her room two miles from Fulton. A negro named Trulock with whom the woman had been living was ar rested. Chas. F. Moore, the Hot Springs hotel man who shot and killed James and Will Garner because they re fused to take a drink with him, was taken from the city to prevent a lynching. DICK MADE THE TRIP, Tom Helped Him Out Though He Didn't Mean To. Here is a story of two well-known young Baltimoreans, whom we will •■jail Mr. Tom Blank and Mr. Dick So and-So. Each prides himself on be ing absolutely up to date and up to snuff in all particulars. Tom called around to see Dick one morning a. short time ago and had scarcely passed through the door before Dick exclaimed: * "By George! The very man. Say, Tom, I want to go to Boston this aft ernoon and I need $75. I wish you'd let me have it. I really wouldn't ask yoti. hut see my position.” “Yes,” replied Tom, “a sort of touch-and-go or no-touch-no-go posi tion. You are better off at home, Dick. It’s very cold in Boston.” “Somewhat frosty here, too. it seems,” said Dick. “But it’s all a joke, old man. Come in and sit down.” "Haven't time,” said Tom, “I just stepped around to see if you wouldn't let me have that $100youalready owe me—if it's perfectly convenient.” Dick seemed to make a hurried mental calculation, and then told his friend that he would give him a check for that amount, but didn't think ha had quite that much *tn bank. "But you can go down and see,” he added. So Tom took the check, invited Dick to go to the theater with him that evening and hurried down to the bank. The paying teller took the check, strolled back, looked at Dick's account and returned to the window, shaking his head. "How much does it take to make it good?" asked Tom. "Yot allowed, to .tell,” replied the teller. Tom went to the receiving teller lollars to Dick's ollars and deposited ten dc credit, but that 4jdj good. Another* t| others were put u{ suit, until Tom be< the bank people tl Tom deposited his* with the remark that It was a tough game to be up against, and he again presented the check, only to be met with another shake of the teller's head and the information: “Very sorry, Mr. Blank, but that account was somewhat overdrawn.” Tom gave it up and dashJcl out of the bank. He had no sooner gone’ than Dick sauntered in and asking how much he had to his credit was told $95. “Just cash me this checlv^for $90,” he said, "and if you see Mr. Tom Blank to-day tell hint I’m awfully sorry I cannot be able to see him this evening, as I have decided to iake that little Boston trip we were talk ing about this morning.”—Baltimore a ' * bun. 1 LETTA AND HER CURLS Borrowed Finery, as Usual, Brings Griet to a Young Heart. In a W iseonsin town were two young girls who were fast friends and had but one jealousy between them. The older of the two, says the Mil waukee Sentinel, had hair just the common length, while the younger had long brown tresses that reached near the bottom of her dress. Night and day Letta of the scanty locks pon dered over the situation and tried va rious means to coax and impress upon her hair the propriety of thrift. But all in vain. As time sped on, her parents moved to Milwaukee, and as they were sorting and packing Letts, found in an old bureau nothing less than a bunch of curls that her mother had worn in her girlhood. Compari son proved them to be the exact color. “Now. ’ said the young leader of fashion. “I will be just sweU*tht rirst day at school.” Letta braided her hair carefully and tied the curls at the end with a fre.-li ribbon. When recess came the girls were ranged up in a row for pull-away. and as all went flying across the school yard a spry little maidenCaught the curls as they sped by Uyr, and lofthey staved with her while their owner went straight to the goaj. Alexander's Mole. Alexander the (Ireat had a large mole on the right side of his neck. It was regarded by his con tempos* as a sign of good luck. / -r; *V. .