Newspapers / The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, … / May 21, 1911, edition 1 / Page 4
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TBB COEIARLOTTIS NSWa M AY 2t 1911 0 10 .1 k Ir o )T h in li jr If K a* :e lo !0 le ra b( sc F- 01 P Id w tl 01 U 2- Ip' : f i i' 'fi The Charlotte News Pabliahed dally and Sunday by TK£ NEWS pmLISHIKTG CO. W. C D«w«, rrMMcat sad Gca ttgr, T*l«9hmeai nty Rditvr BuahMM Jnb Ofllet J C Editor A. W. CALDWBbl. City Editor A. XW. BURCH Advertising Mgr. .1UB*CRXPTION RATES The Charlotte Ncwa. Dally and Sunday. On* ymr 1* 0® FU jaicntba 3.00 Ihroa nontbf - One month Ore WMk gunday Only, One year 12.00 Fix KOSthl O'tiree month* The Ttineii-Dcmi»etat. Feul'Weekly. One year .... 81x montha .. Three montha 11.00 .60 .2S AWBoaBMaieaf. The attention of the puWlc is re- apeotfally inrlted to the following: iB futoxa. Obituary Notices. In Me- men«m Sketches. Cards of Thanks. communtCBtlonr eepoualna: the cause 'of a private erterprlse or a political eandldata and Uke matter, will be ehargad tor at the rate of five cents ^ line Thera will ba no deviation from thia niU. > ■ — , - — — SUNDAY MORNING, MAY 21, 1911. THE OLD-TIME DARKEY. Tht Baltimore Sun comments at H«si|rth upon a dinner on Memorial Day ^tU Oaatonla to the ol’ time, “befo’ de 'wah** darkles by their former owner». krbote who love to picture the breech fbatween the races, who dwell long topon the subject of race strife, etc.. iffrottld do well to ponder deep the itntfti of the Sun's comment. Every Ittoa Southerner has a kindly feeling mot th« ol' time darkey. And the better than any section on earth tfcaowa how to get along with the negro ■of todAj. Some time ago a movement Nrma itartad to raise a “Black Mammy” [ftrod, the Idea being to erect a monu- VMOt to the old colored mammy, whose kalthfnlnesa and devotion has merited igratltuda. There ar© thousands of fth«M old-time darkles in the South to- •day, and they occupy a warm placc )!• th« heaxts of their white friends. lljOTal, true as steel, deferential, hon est ttcd faithful they have earned the •reapect and la\e of the other race. "The Sun’s comment la a* true as can and it’s editor evidently under- ,stands thoroughly the situation as af- jfectlEg the races in the South. We make room here for his comment on {the Gastonia dinner; "On Confederate Memorial Day at lOaatonia, N. C., the veterans provid ed a dinner for a hundred pegroes who had been slaves 'before the war,’ and the accounts report that it was such A dinner as few of them have eaten alnc« the old slave days. Their white friends enjoyed the delight of the col ored people as much as the guests did the bountiful spread. It was union of old retainers, their former masters and mlatresses and the descendants of the former slave-holders. Those who have never lived in the South can hardly tinderstand the affection of the South ern whites for the colored people with whom they were reared, or the at tachment of the negroes to the fami lies they have served and, in many Instances, whose names they bear. With the drifting of the younger neg roes to the towns and cities and the dying out of the older generation this feeling is changing; but such in- atancea as the Gastonia dinner show that it still survives In many parts of the South. ^ The white man who had a negro ‘mammy,’ who looked after his tod dling footsteps in infancy and who ever in after life considered him as her ‘ehile,* looks with peculiar affection upon the old ‘uucles’ and ‘auntie&’ who are still in the land of the living. He knows how faithful, capable and devot ed they were, and he mourns the pass- “BLACKMAILING.” President Taft stirred somewhat of a sensation by severely criticising a certain exclusive club in Washington which had “blackballed” several of his friends. Without mincing words he paid his' respects to “small-headed men” who exclude from close associa tion men superior to them in brains, character and position. We do not know the “inside” of this affair at all, and care very little about it. It strikes us, however, that true as the president’s statements no doubt he acted unwisely in openly opening fire upon a club of which he is a mem ber himself. The mere fact that he is president does not necessarily mean that all of his friends would be con genial with the members of the club in question, and the object of the “blackball” is merely to keep out birds of unlike feathers. If some “small minded” fellow sought to ease a grudge by blackmailing a superior, certainly that superior should be able to take a good laugh at such a display of assi- nlnity. Most assuredly a high-minded gentle man would And scant pleasure in an organization composed of “&rnall- headed” individuals, and the president should thank the wielders of the black ball for sparing his friends from nec essity of unpleasant association. Be sides the president’s friends in this instance are sufficiently prominent to take the matter as a huge joke. Just as there are many men of many minds, there are many different kinds of clubs. If all were composed of the same stripe of gentlemen there would be need of but one. The clubman, whether he belong to a highfalutin’ or ganization or to a body which meets over the comer grocery store, believes in the association of conjenial souls. There are clubs for the noisy fellows, clubs for the boozy fellows, for the artists, the literary cranks, patriotic clubs, clubs for loafers, as well as gentlemen of genius. The member con siders his club rather like his home, and ho readily objcts to the introduc tion of a member with w'hom he does not think he could mingle pleasantly. The black ball is not an instrument of torture. It does not mean that the man to whom It Is applied is in the least inferior, morally, mentally, or in tellectually. It merely means that some member of ~si club does not feel that the fellow proposed would make the right kind of affinity. The women in a certain neighborhood form their own club. They would resent the name of some lady ior whom they had no spec ial amount of admiration. And the same is true of the men’s clubs. Oftentimes there is no more excuse for a blackball than the fellow had who said: Under Capitol DoTm\ (By H. E. C. BRYANT.) “I do not like thee, Dr. Fell; The reason why I cannot tell, But this thing I do know well— I do not like tjige. Dr. Fell—but, what’s the difference.” The president, when he Joined the club in question, must have have un derstood that he was to bide by the action of that club with reference to taking In members. Since he has op enly attacked it’s conduct, without at tempting to remedy matters quietly and In club circles, the thing for him to do is to resign and join a club where “high-minded” men are to be found. An aggregation of the “small-headed” \”ariety is no place either for the presi dent or his friends. Blackballing: President Taft’s censure of clubs for blackballing members of import ance in the community will be general ly applauded by the public and specific ally ignored by the clubs, notwlthstand- ing the resignation of three army offi cers who were officers of the Metropolis tan. The average club Is a social aggre gation of men of sympathetic tastes, foibles, manners and vices. Sympathy being the keynote of the club, it fol lows that the one paramount requisite for membership is inocuousness. Since Ing of the old days. For the races" in Bornu resnpcfB oAom v- cleverness affronts ten, since accom plishment antagonizes one hundred men where idleness offends none, and since good manners promote harmony where bad manners strain It, It follows that the standards of membership in a social club tend more toward the fop than the rough diamond, more to ward the ne’er-do-well than the man som® respects seem to be growing farther apart all the time, and the clash of interests and the failure of the younger generation to appreciate the ralations of their elders have led to race feeling and at times to serious .disturbances. The real Southerner Is oot the enemy of the negro, but In nsallty hla best and truest friend. He never will permit social equality, and the best element of the negroes favor separate development. Buti he Is alwu's ready to extend a helping hand to^e colored people when they are In need, and he is pleased when they signs of developing Into useful property-owning citlaens. The South erner knows instinctively how to deal ^wttb the colored man, to hold his affec- tlQli and respect; and while there aro Tufflys In the south as there are ev erywhere Alse, among the Southerners jthere Is a kindly feeling for the negro land a hope that he will develop into a Ihard-worklng, capable and successful kltlien." ‘ The'^Orsensboro News thinks that the platform of Chief Justice Clark Is In the nature of a dissenting opin ion. Is It true, as reported, that the town Is OTerrun with gamblers? And, if so, why is nothing done about it? No one ever goes to bed with empty stomach In Charlotte. an Ex-Ooremor Aycock makes It a four homed dilemma. One day with life and heart Is more than time enough to find a world, —^Lowell. ii of mark. The officers of such a club are doing no more than their duty when they blackball any man whose unconventional manners, , conspicuous career or obtrusive intelligence might jar the sensibilities of their fellow- members.Thls le not In reaHty the snob bishness of superiority but rather the self-preservatlon of contented Inferior ity.—Ney York World. Talks Of Things Along Rio Grande Mr. William Tredenic, a former Mecklenburg boy, is spending a few days in Charlotte with friends, hav ing arrived here from the'Mexican frontier on Friday. He talks interest ingly of the situation along the Rio Qrande and of the probability of peace as viewed by those near the sea^ of disturbance. He -has seen service in the United States army in the Philliplnes and in China dur^ ing the Boxer trouble. He sa^ the people along the Rio Grande are hopeful of peace at an early date, but thinks that it will come as result of the retirement of President Diaz, who, they say, al ready sees the necessity of resigning. —Messrs. I'Yed Summers and Ben Fry, of Statesville, have retumed home after a visit of several days at the home Of Mrs. W. H. ioung.' News Bureau, Congress Rail. Washlpgton, D. C., May 20.—Repre sentative Hardwick, of Georgia, has in troduced and had passed a resolution to investigate the Sugar Trust. Nine members of the house will serve on a committee of investigation. It is the purpose of Mr. Hardwicke, chairman of the committee, to take a look into the records of the giaat corporation or ganized by the Havemeyer group. Many people are interested in this proposition. Every man, woman and child in this country is taxed about $1.50 a year for sugar. The present tariff brings in about 152,000,000 in rev enues. "It shall be the duty of the commit tee to inquire whether the organizanon and oi>eratIons of the American Sugar Refining Company and other persons or corporations having relations with it, and all other persons or corpora tions engaged in manufacturing or refining sugar and their relations with each other, have caused or had a tendency to cause any of the follow ing results,” says the resolution. “First. The restriction qf^ destruc tion of competition among manufac turers or refiners of sugars. “Second. An increase in price of refined sugar to the consumer or de crease in the price of sugar cane vot sugar beets to the producer thereof.” Representative Pou, a member ofrthe sub committee of the house committee on rules, which reported out the Hard wick resolution, with a recommenda tion that it pass, stated the case clear ly from the standpoint of the Investiga tors. “Twenty-one yearst ago this corpo ration—the Sugar Trust—came into existence,” said he, “and since it has grown and spread In its operations, absorbing competitors. There is a com mon belief among the people of the United States that It is every day violating the law. Now, the purpose of this inquiry is to ascertain wheth er or not this is true. There is no pur pose to play politics. The people are entitled to know why It is that this trust, if It be tme that It is violating the law, is still doing business in the dame old way at the same old stand. “We will be able to prove that the Sugar Tmst has absorbed more than 54 companies since it was organized. It has been taking over its competi tors whenever they got In Its way. One case in particular, the Pennsylvan ia Sugar Company, of Philadelphia, will be looked into. This concern had been established/ at an outlay of of several millions to refine sugar but met with financial troubles, and when in distress, was trapped by the Ameri can Sugar Refiining Company. The E. E. Knight case is another one. "The trust controls more than 50 per cent of the refined sugar business of the country. It probably dominates more than 80'per cent of it. “There Is no doubt in my mind that it has a gentleman’s agrement with Arubuckles Brothers and the Spreck- les interests. Thisarrangement Is made so that there will be no competition among them. “The tariff, especially the Dutch Standard color test, makes such a cpmblnatlon, which seems to be un lawful. possible. Sugar is about twice as high to the consumer as it should be. “The trust has not only put the price up to the consumer, but it has fixed the price of raw cane and beet sugar. “The inquiry provided by the Hard wick'resolution was prompted by the fact that the Sugar Trust has existed and openly ^and notoriously violated the law ever since the Sherman act went Into effect. There has been no conviction under that statute. “We propose to ascertain why it is this great corporation has not been convicted in the courts under the anti trust law.” Mr. Hardwicke says that the commit- J;ee will be directed to look lijto the "affairs of the American Sugar Refin ing Company from its origin in 1891. That he trust exists, he argues, is evidence that the laws have not been enforced. The Sugar Trust, it is believed, has violated the law in many ways. It has made illegal contracts, combin-ations and combined in restraint of trade. It has left nothing undone to further its own interests to the detriment of competitors and the cost of the peo pie. The record of the American Sugar Refining Company will be followed from its beginning to the present day. It will be proven that it has been a factor in 'tariff making at Washing ton; that it controls the sugar inter ests of the United States, including the cane of Louisiana, and the beets of the West, and has large holdings in the Hawaiian Islands, Porto Rico and Cuba. Figures will be given to show that it dominates the beet sugar refln^ies of Colorado^ Idaho. Utah, Montana and other states. Its $90,000,000 of capital extends to eviery sugar growing re- gion. ' ^ An effort was made during the de bate of the Payne-Aldrlch tariff bill in the senate that the Sugar^Trust had nothing to do with the beet sugar in dustry. The puWIshed figures of the company refute this. The supporters of the Hardwicke resolution alleges that the American Sugar Refining Company had its way in framing the sugar schedule tw»x years ago. Senator Aldrteh, it is said, made an enemy of Senator fiolliver, of Iowa, by giving the place %e desired on the senate finance comjnlttee to Senator Smoot, of Utah. In tlxe Payne- Aldrich tariff fight Mr. Smoot led the forces that fixed the sugar duties. He claimed to speak Tor the great beet sugar interests. Senator Smoot was supported most loyally by senators from the cane sugar an^ other sugar beet regions. All interested made a manful stand for the Dutch Standard of color, which has given the trust its advantage for years. For 26 years American tarllt schedules have car ried provisions for “a duty of so and so on sugar not above No. 16 Dutch whether democratic or republican, have stood for a duty on sugar. The Sugar Trust has not hesitated to use money in campaigns for democrats or republicans as the occasion demanded. Senator Aldrich never failed/to have enough democrats when he needed them to put through the Dutch Stand- 'ard schedule. The records of tariff con gresses show this. Sugar has carried a duty ever sln^e July 4th, 1789, when the tariff on raw' sugar was 1 cent a pound; partially re fined, 1 1-2, and fully refined, 3 c^nts. The McKinley bill was the only one that put raw sugar on the free list, and the Walker tariff the only one that did not provide a differential duty. Northwestern congressmen, among them Mr. Warburton, of Washington, are going to Inake a fight for free su gar. ^ In a speech the other day on his resolution to change the mles of the house so as to have the Congressional Record carry just what takes place on the floor of the house, Mr. Clark, of Florida, said: “Mr. Chairman, upon investigation of this subject I find that it has at different times created discussion in both houses of congress. As far back as 1852, on May 20, Mr. Clingman, of North Carolina. I believe. In correct ing the Globe, after stating that the report of proceedings in the Globe for a certain day showed that while he held the fioor he gave way to a certain member who made a speecli.^cupying several columns, and that he then pro ceeded with his own speech, making no reference to the interjected speech, said: “Now the fact Is just this, that a gentleman from New York said he wished that I would give him the floor for a single moment, and that his ob ject was to notify the house that he intended to publish a speech. I told him, of course, that I had no objection —it is a pure matter of taste. I then informed the house that I had given him the floor for that purpose. I made that statement, and he made the state ment to the committee, that he in tended to publish a speech. I took it for granted that all of that would go into the Globe. If that had been done, everybody would then have seen that the speech which followed had not ac tually been delivered in the house, and I and other gentlemen should have been relieved of all responsibility of answering it. Several gentlemen have come to me, and said they considered suclj a thing a fraud on the house. I will not use such a strong expression myself. I have no objection to the pub lication of speeches in the Congression al Globe that have not been delivered here; but the fact that they were not delivered ought to be known and understood'.” “On December 23. 185^, Mr. Stanley, of North Carolina, by unanimous con sent offered a resolution as follows: ‘Resolved, That the reporters of the house of representatives be directed hereafter not to report in the Daily Globe as part of - the proceedings of the hO^use, speeches not made In the house.” “Amended by adding—‘Provided, That nothing in this resolution shall prevent any member from correcting or revising the reporter’s notes.’ ” The resolution as amended was pass ed by the house. E SEASON OPENS AT LENOIR, N. C. Lenoir, May 20.—^The closing ex ercises of the Lenoir graded schools began Thursday afternoon with ex ercises by the primary j;rades and was attended by a large number of our people. Friday night the literary address was delivered by Dr. Edwin IVDms, of the State University, his subject being, “The Need of Higher Education.” He spoke for a little over an hour and handled his subject to the delight of his hearers. He told the audience that fifteen years ago he made his first speech In the interest of education at Hartland, this county, and he had been on the warpath ever since, for the cause he*represented. In speaking of the work of the women along education lines complimented the good women of the town fuv the work they have been doing since they organized their bettemient associa tion. Tomorrow morning (Sunda:'/ the Rev. D. P. McGeach}% of Lewlsburg, W. Va., will deliver the annual ser mon in the auditorium, at 11 o’clock. The graduating exercises will be held Monday night. The school will send out nine gi'aduates this year. Commencement at Davenport. The commencement exercises at Davenport College will begin Mon day afternoon and continue through Wednesday night. The annual sei’mon will be preached this year by Rev. E. K. McLarty. of Greensboro, and the literary» address will be deliver ed by Rev. J. H. Barahardt, of High Point. The grand final 'concert will be the best closing concert ever given at Davenport CollegCj^Thls year the college is sending out ^ne of the largest classes in Its history, com prised of fifteen young ladies of the different departments. The elocutionary contest for the Nelson Elocution medal will be held on Tuesday night and there are five contestants this year. Davenport has done a fine year’s work during tlrl^ year that is about to close, which speaks well for the excellent faculty and the efficient president in charge. story Tales From New Prof. Parker Weds. New York, May 20.V-Professor Her- chell Clifford Parker, adjunct professor of Columbia University, who led an expedition up Mount McKinley for the purpose of disproving Dr. Cook’s claims to having ascended that peak, was married this J afternoon to Miss Evelyn Naegele, daughter of Charles Frederick Naegele, the portrait paint er. Professor Parker and his bride will take a honeymood trip to Alaska 4jy way of Arizona, California and the state of Washington. Walked for Coronation Cup. London, May 20.—S. C. Schofield, of the Blackheath Harriers, broke the world’s record in the 25 mile walE^for the coronation cup, held at the Her^ne- hill track this afternoon. His time was three hours, 37 minutes and six and four fifths seconds. B (BY B. M. J.) New York, May 20.—One of the most talked of wom^n In New York today, or perhaps In the whole coun try is Mrs. O. H. P. Belmont, former ly Mrs'. W. K. Vanderbilt, mother of the- Duchess of Marlborough, and about the most prominent suffragette in the United States. Up to a few weeks ago Mrs. Belmont shared hon ors with Mrs. Clarence Mackay, then president of the Equal Franchise So ciety, and one of the most popular young matrons of the ultra-exclusive circle of the Four Hundred, but since Mrs. Mackaps retirement from the presidency, Mrs. *Belmont, who is head of ^;he rival suffragette club, stands out more prominently than ever. She has her enemies, and scores of them, and she is severely criticized in many quarters, and particularly among the men. whose feelings she is not inclin ed to spare. When she first took up the cause of suffrage she was laugh ed at from all quarters, ’ and mud slingers were very busy with her name for a time. and. in fact, are yet. People said that she had turned to It because she had exhausted every other resource in the world, that, satiated with every thing money could buy her, with every luxury that ingenuity could devise, she had at last struck out into tte new field as the means to a .new sensation. But. ber her object what it may. (and it would seem that if It were merely a fad with her enthusiasm would have died many months ago,) there are .few, if any, among Mrs. Belmont’s critics, who__^ave accom plished, or even tried to accomplish a huijdredth part of the good she has done, and Is doing. Naturally she has made more enemies among the men than. the women, and, while she does not pose as a man- hater, she is apt to be pretty severe in her judgments of the sterner sex, and is most frank In her opinions of them. In an interview a few months ago she was asked to explain why, in her opinion, women go on loving men to the bitter end, under any and all circumstances, and'Jong after their love has been trampled in the dust. “Why,” she is said to have exclaim ed, “Do you really believe that wom en go on loving men? I believe that if women would tell the brutal truth they’ would say that after the first glamoui* has passed, after they have sounded, and discovered just hOw distance. The seem to thoroughiv ’ to stantial supper the cause of suffraep d " ''o tirxie music halls and moving where they sho?^ They sa. hedi to tial supper'and"a bS' beats the sweat “You can’t wear skirts,” thev sav and . , sweat shnn'“'“"‘^ ed gingham blouses n can’t dig in the Mrs. Belniont ic ^ cost 0, a A . St owned by her in \ which, when completed street contain, among itg appointments,- a Dutch a large, open-air smokir “4 t^he use of'its members be a shop, a restaurant' ' sembly hall, and the will will be given ove7tf She leads a stTenuou,^1?°®«’ this woman who combinp^ ties of a society leac?S S J a woman of affairs. Shf^ dnl ® shrink from standing on a ner to distribute ‘‘VoL en” tracts, although she by so domg she attrac ^^ (ew minutes a Woe enough lock traffic; harsh criticisms ' her not at all. She was recent-?? ed a school trustee of one nf I largest school di^irict=! L r Island. Long New plans for sky-scrapers New \ork have caused to sink inm comparative InsigmScaiice ,ie ivhile famous and much landed Stoj. Yazoo City, Miss., May 20.—In an al-' tercation on the street here today, state senator Theodore Bildo candidate for lieutenant governor, and the cen tral figure in the alleged bribery scan dal of the senatorial caucus In con nection with the election of a United States senator, from Mississippi last yeai', was knocked down with a cane in the hands of state senator, W. D. Gibbs. Senator Bilbo. was stunned by the blow and lay on the street for several mohients. Senator Gibbs offered to renew the affray in any manner that Bilbo should name, but the latter declined on ac count of the age of his antagonist. Jamss Bennett Gets 10 Years. Yazoo City. Miss., May 20.—James G. Bennett, a w'ell known newspaper man, convicted last night on the charge of bigamy, was arraigned be fore Judge Henry here today and given the maximum sentence, ten years In er building. It man.v. The Metropolitan Its forty-eight stories was the fl to on strip it in point of height Z now there is being erected in PaJk Place and Broadway, opposite the post-office and a few blocks Xoi? K ^ storv bu ding-The Woolworth-whicii bear, as did the Sinpr and the Metroplitan before it, the proud distinction of being the highest office building in the world. There is only one struc ture in the world that is higher- The Eiffel Tower in Paris, The Woolworth building, oiirned bt the man w^ho made his fortune from his five and ten-cent stores, is Just now sinking its huge shafts and . X 1.1 J • * caissons on one side of the block it selfish, how unstable and insincere jg occupy, while on the Barclav the average man is, they come much afreet sld-j -he dozen or more oltei neper to desplsmg them than to *Veh had to be demolish- loving them. But women are essen tially philosophers—life makes them such—and the majority of them pre fer to make the best of things, to show a brave front always, end to endure what they must with as lit tle outcry as possible; They hug their hitter disappointments and real con victions to themselves, and placidly lie ta their friends about the_many virtues and good qualities of their husbands.” And, having divorced one husband and buried another'it would seem that Mrs. Belmont has at least some ground for believing .that she knows whereof she speaks. Among the latest of Mrs. Belmont's schemes for the betterment of her sister-women is a farm on her Brook- holt estate at Hempstead, L. L., where practically all the farm work Is done by young women, and which is proving a great success. Mrs. Bel mont believes that this work, with its open-air life, its tissue-building ex ercises, and its freedom from Te- straint. Is far better for growing girls, and young women than the slavery of the foul^odored sweat shops and factories, from which she has gathered her recruits. The girls are cawght gardening, ploughing, hay ing, milking, chicken-raising, and, in fact, every branch of the gentle art of farming, and, while there are men to assist no\R Mrs. Belmotft states that, after the girls learn their parts, and get accustomed to the ed to make room for it are being torn down by one of the big “wreck ing” companies. It is a wonderful sight to watch the small army nf men working like beavers, and assist ed by the wonderful machinery. It somehow reminds me of the marionet shows of one’s youth, where each little man was working so hard at hi? own particular little job, without ref erence to what his neighbor was doing. And just across City Hall Park Is a still more interesting structure in process of erection, the new rai'nioi- pal building. While this will be only forty stories high—twenty-five main stories and a tower of fifteen ?'■■ ditional stories, it has a frontage ■'? 381 feet in Centre street, 168 fe_e» rear in Park Row, and will be 15i* 1-2 feet deep. Under the Centre of the building, 3.5 feet below the curb, will be the great Terminal for the Bridge Loop Subway, and f her fu ture underground. railroads. The structure is of steel skelton construc tion, and is now nearing the twenty- third floor. Every day hundreds of people stand round in the Park an watch the huge steel beams and gini- ers swung hundreds of feet into tne air by electrical hoists until the} res in their appointed places. There iR specially built Avagon, drawn by tnir- ty-six horses lo carry these girdeni from the dock to the building si t and so heavy are the loads that - the penitentiary, Bennett will be taken | work, the place will be an Adamless j feaW behind them a trail of smash' to the state farm in Rankin county. jEden, with never a man in. hailing Ud side walks and man-holes. tt-i y WIUD SCENE DURING CAMORRiST TRIAL *'*.• “lnfor>n«r” Abb.tem.gglo, te«tlf1ed. ThI. ^ betray*^ J-9. « W. right «d th. ..rm«l p.ll«’.t-hl. b.cK, wh. S the on the judicial dais, heads. E ♦ jui ♦ ly ♦ th ^ th ♦ Co A ne> Goo gra« ue Thh to fill able I the d I/mdon, ant event, , three months to the conon. place tomorrj isters of the I lia, the Domij of South Afr Zealand and and his cabi^ heralded is to consid^ ■P’orld-wide national de, l^y postage fii'st official ®reign and is expectc '^'j'vard her ] ially change ^'Jnns advoc i^iinions an^ , Chief amc tions raisec ^"*^sland’a cn to the confJ J-fiperial corl I'esolutiorJ South AfricJ ^ition on tn ^’Jtion reads “That the of repl; l^eference overseas c ^ system u services flefense. f'liis resc a time w agreenid the leg! dominiJ ^‘^nada, rail Eng 1-oIiticaI u'^^’ons anci introdul impol the V ■ strong' . upon tfl Bin Btafi that " f niinistrj ? the d 3 “t^at Lnr,^ °Ppor Ms ^Ostone a ^ Of Sout
The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)
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May 21, 1911, edition 1
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