The Sunday-schools at 13 churches in the vicinity of Concord
have been closed on account of the prevalence of scarlet fever and diphtheria.
--Joe Grady, a well-known carpenter at Morganton, was struck
by a freight train on the Southern Railway near Drexel Sunday night and
received fatal injuries.
--The plant of the Reidsville Fertilizer Company was
completely destroyed by fire Thursday night. Loss was partially covered by
insurance.
--The Southern Railway has just appropriated $60,000 for
improvements on the passenger statin at Asheville. The Southern Railway has
declared a dividend of 2 ½ per cent on preferred stock.
--Jacob R., Nocho, colored, 40 years in the railway mail
service, was found dead in his car at Franklinton a few days ago. He leaves an
estate estimated at $20,000 to $30,000.
--The Henderson Gold
Leaf says a mule owned by a Vance County man died last week at the age of
45. The owner of the mule had it in his possession 36 years.
--A young man claiming to be W. Frank Whitaker, son of a
prominent merchant of Charlotte, has been arrested in Atlanta charged with
stealing $4,000 in money and jewelry from a wealthy woman in Norfolk, Virginia.
--H.M. Baucom, a well-known white man who lived at Lowell
and ran a blacksmith shop at Gastonia, was instantly killed Saturday night at
Ranlo, about two miles from Gastonia, by an interurban car. It is said that
Baucom was drinking and was waiting at Ranlo, a local station, for the car.
--The Statesville Landmark reports that J.R. Askew of
Halifax County dreamed his saw-mill had burned. When he awoke he was so
impressed with the dream that he got out of bed and looked in the direction of
the mill, but saw nothing. Next morning when he drove to the mill he found it
in ashes. The loss on mill and lumber is estimated at $2,500.
--William Taylor, an aged negro shoe-maker, while sitting on
the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad track in the outskirts of Fayetteville, was
run over and instantly killed by a train of the Atlantic Coast Line Friday
afternoon. The old man was partly demented, the engineer blew the whistle when
he saw the man, but the aged shoe-maker did not seem to hear and took no notice
of the warning.
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