Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / Aug. 28, 1910, edition 1 / Page 1
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if..-. '"-(-' '"' : v"i THE WEATHER. mmm The MORNING STAR: Partly cloudy In west, showers In east portion Sunday, warmer in cen tral portion; Monday partly cloudy; moderate northeasterly .winds. Kw paid for ud re4 r miw MpIiM than erer before la Ita 43 years' history. Advertisers shoald aoto this fact la plaa alBk their Fall adTertlslas campalsa. - FOUNDE tVA VOL. LXXXVI-NO. 138. WILMINGTOlSr, N. C, SUNDAY; MORNING, AUGUST 28 191 WHOLE NTJMJ5EH 13,385. J Will Marry RULING OF COURT or Montana s iovver IS NOW ARRAt, & COLONEL CHARMED BY ROUGH RIDERS IIIGMGUA AGAIN. A PEACEFUL LA! Actress One Kiritjsl GEO H ELP1 HG B RO WN E - i . STIRS STRIKERS ..MM T W I Western Cowboys Gave Roosevelt Grand Ovation at Cheyenne, r SPIRIT OF WEST STILL: ALIVE Teddy Urged Them to be Progressive During a Stirring Speech Deeds of Skill and Daring for. Their Visitor. Cheyenne, Wyo., Aug. 27.--Tm here to see'what you fellows can do on the hurricane deck of a broncho," Theodore Roosevelt said today as a group of cowboys, the hardest riders in the West, gathered, about him mounted on their horses. Col. Roose velt saw all that the Wild West bf today had to show him in the way of deeds and skill and daring and said that the spirit of the West was still alive. . , : ; As he watched the cowboys at their work, heard the Indians yeli and saw the familiar sights of more than 20 years ago, when he was a plainsman, the spirit of it all came over him again, and he climbed down, from the flag-draped reviewing stand and mounted a big white horse. He gal loped around the half mile track at Frontier Park and past the crowded grandstand, while cowboys yelled, In dians gave their war whoop and the rest of the crowd joined in a tremen dous shout. Ho dismounted after one lap, smiling his delight, and went back to his place to see the rest of the fun. There was no formality about Poosevelt today at Cheyenne. Every cowboy who had drawn a-year's pay and could get here came. There Were thousands of them, with a good many cow girls. They came on horseback from miles around, some of them from points hundreds of miles away. The streets were thronged with men and , . wQpiea on horseback,, in their, pictur esque attire of many colors. There were a good many thousand of other persons, too. eastern tourists and 'th tradesmen and plain farmers of the region; but they got little attention It was the day of the old Wild West. By the time Mr. Roosevelt arriv ed here, shortly after 9 o'clock this morning, the celebration was well underway. They met him at the sta tion with' a band and an escort of cavalrymen, and then followed ,a pa rade. The exhibition at the park" was next on the programme and then there came a dinner which Gov. Brooks gave lo the former President. A smoker at the Industrial Club and a theatre party, both of -which Col. Roosevelt attended wound up the day. The celebration at the park,-which is set in the midst of the Brown Plains of Wyoming, a mile and a half north of the city was the star attrac tion and Sand Creek came next.. Sand Creek is said to be the wickedest horse in the world, and after a long combat he bested Al. Whitney, one of the most skilled horsemen that the West has. Col.Jloosevelt watchefl the struggle and after it was over, he shook the hand of -Whitney and complimented him. The sun was baking the plains with its fierce heat when Col. Roosevelt appeared. He rode in an automobile from Cheyenne, although some of the cowboys were expecting that he would appear in chaps and sombrero on a horse. The Indians were the first to any him as he rounded the turn of the half mile track and set up a wijd Jell. The crowd that filled the grand stand and the bleachers and over flowed into the field joined in and Rave the colonel the noisest welcome ' he has had since ho left New York for his Western trip. ("apt. Hardy, who, according to the megaphone man who made the an nouncement is the champion marks man of the world, was just drawing a Picture of Col. Roosevelt by fir ing bullets at a white target when the Colonel appeared. The colonel took his place in a reviewing stand J'ist across the track from the grand stand, oni watched ..the champion's fancy shots. i , Four cow girls had a half mile race on horseback next Joella Irwin, who is 1.: years old, appeared in short white trousers on the back of Brown- and she caught the colonel's fancy, before the race began he beckoned jo her and shook her hand. She had two hard falls from her. mount yea rent ay and was severely shaken but refused to withdraw. She won the race today, and Col. Roosevelt called ner back to him to congratulate her. thereafter a dozen cowboys picked 'ip the reviewing Btand, after Colonel Roosove t had descended from it and I ' ru:d t, acrss the track so that tiie crowd might hear the colonel's speech nir:h came next. h.Hov- "rooks introduced him and for "r n hour he talked to the crowd. J e of tn old West, 'now. fast Pass ng away, and the men It develon- wos V?1(!he people of the ne "est that they must preserve thoe '-me characteristics if the nation is RreSivT' "e " them t0 be Pr 'Tt will be a bad day, for America 'he end of America if the average C ontinued on Page Six.) General Estrada Preceding ' to Managua to Become , ; The New jhiler. " ClST HOSTILITIES ENDED Policy of the New Administration Ex ; pressed in Note Sent Represen tative at Washington Me na Acting President. Managua, Aug. 27. Jose Dolores Estrada, to whom President Madriz turned over the administration of the Nicaraguan government before fleeing the country, today . retired -from the Presidency in favor of General Luis Mena, -who was designated by him .as acting president of the Republic. This change of administration was in ac cordance with instructions from Ka. trada's brother, General Juan J. Es trada ,the head of the provisional gov ernment, and leader of the successful revolution against Madriz. General Mena immediately took possession of the presidential mansion. The prefect of Managua has issued a decree to the inhabitants of the cap ital Instructing them to decorate their domiciles in honor of General Juan Es trada, who is coming to the .capital. . General Juan Estrada arrived at Granada at 3:30 o'clock yesterday af ternoon. One of the first acts of the acting president was to appoint a com mittee to go to Granada and escort the triumphant leader of the revblu tio to the capital. The final clause of an agreement signed last night, provides that the. free election for the presidency which, according to the proposals of the com mission of conciliation should occur within six months, shall be held within a year from the present time. Estrada Rule Begins Soon. Blue.fleWs, Aug. 27. General Juan J. Estrada, provisional president of Nicaragua, is as the first act . of his administration sending to Dr. Salva dor Castrillo. his Dersonal reDresenta- kive in the United States and minister WoDhlnirlnn ftwm Vi g nrnirisinnfll government a note setting forth the policy of the new administration. In the note he will pronounce for the re-estaDHshment or tne nnances or the country." the elimination of Zelay aism, the abolition of private privileg es, and concessions and complete com pliance with the terms of the Washing ton convention, aiming to put a stop to the perpetual revolutions in the Central American States and en croachments by one State upon anoth er. In the note, it Is understood, he pledges himself to free elections to the presidency of Nicaragua, to be held within six months. General Estrada, with other leaders of the revolution, desired the aopolnt ment as minister' to Nicaragua Thom as P. Moffatt, the American consul at Bluefields, and in a telegram 'sent to Dr. Castrillo today he says: "T)nn't. fnreet when askine for rec ognition of the revolutionary govern ment to suggest strongly to tne Amer ican Department of State the appoint ment of Mr. Moffatt, as minister to Nicaragua, to perpetuate the confi dence existing between the two coun tries. We feel that this appointment will be the best pledge and guarantee of future good relations of the two countries." General Mena, with the chief of the Madriz faction, who remain in Nicara gua, have signed terms of surrender at Managua and the government gun boat Novention, at Lake Nicaragua, which has hitherto held out against the provisional government, surren dered to the forces of General Chamor to. the acting president at Granada, today. The retirement of the Madriz steamer Venus has terminated hostil ities on the Atlantic coast. Washington, Aug. 27. Surprise was expressed by Senor Castrillo. repre sentative In Washington of the Estra da government, when informed tonight by the Associated Press that General Estrada had sent him a telegram urg ing him to recommend to the State Department the appointment of T. P MofTatt as minister to Nicaragua Senor - Castrillo spid he had received no such telegram and while indicat ing his own approval of Mr. Moffatt he doubted the propriety of his mak ing any suggestion , to the American government as to whom it should send to Managua as its representative. - As .American, consul at i Bluefields Mr. -Moffatt - has ingratiated himself with the Estrada followers by his Jair ness and his appointment to the high, er post doubtless would be pleasfBg to the new government.:, Senor Cas trillo made it Ldear,' however; that he would prefer teat; the--. State Depart men t should, make the designation on Its own initiative. . ; . HOTEL QUARANTINED, i. ' Diphtheria and Scarlet Fever In Green vile, 8. C, Hostelry. Greenville,. S. C, Aug. 27. -Caesar's Head Hotel is under quarantine on account of an outbreak of diphtheria and scarlet fever. The diphtheria pa tients are a little daughter of Prof. E. E. Geer, and a child of Rev. Mr. Her bert; the scarlet fever victim is a son of Mr. Shanklin, of Easley. - Physicians from Greenville have "been to the hotel and " administered antitoxin to all children in the neigh borhood. . It is said the . cases are light and : the children have . passed the crisis. The quarantine may be lifted next; week, v , ; inn ' ' ... , Miiii..iiiiiiiLiiriuiMiir-1 , ?9 '"'" "' n imihiii jiig P - X' y " s Hi'- (fioeti wood a tMterf wooa New;YoYk. Aug.' 27. Another act III when Miss Bernice.G. Henderson .becomes the wife of P. AupriistuS Heinze . early in .September. -Miss Henderson played the role of the.YicOPire In.A-- FooLThere -Wasi- and: has "been ofi tha was eight" years' of age Miss Henderson man she is to marry, has had a most in teresting career since he went to Mon. tana as r raining engineer almost penniless a number of years ago. Since mat time ne has garnered millions from the ore veins of Butte and other camps in Montana and has also had his share of tilts with Uncle Sam in prosecutions, for alleged violations of recently acquitted Dy a Federal grand DR. CRIPPEN BACK IN LONDON Inspector . Dew Delivered Americarv Dentist and Miss . Leneve to Brit ,lsh Authorities Formally Charged With Murder. London, Aug. 27. Dr. Hawley H. Crippen, the American dentist, and his typist, Miss Ethel Clare Leneye, returned to London today from Can ada where they were apprehended by the police on suspicion of being connected with the disappearance of Dr. Crippen's actress wife, Belle El more and with having knowledge of the , mutilated body, believed by the polio lb be-that of Mrs. Crippen, which was found in their Hill Drop Crescent residence. It is- just seven weeks since Dr. Crippen and 'his companion disguised in boy's clothes, secretly left Lon don. The Crippen party, composed of the two prisoners Chief Inspector Dew andj Sergeant Mitchell of Scotland Yard, -'and the two -wardresses, who had in charge Miss Leneve arrived at Euston station at 7 o'clock tonight from . where they had disembarked a few hours earlier from the steamer Megantic. . Three taxicabs were wait ing atvthe station and the party im mediately was driven to the Bow street police court where the accss ed man; and woman were formally charged with, the crime and then plac ed in cells. . DIED ON WEDDING DAY. Sad Death of Young Man in Raleigh f : " '- -The Funeral, t Raleigb.; Aug. 27. Out at Mt. Pis cah church . this afternoon there was the funeral of 9. O. Yates, who died yesterdVy morning at' Rex Hospital, from typhoid fever, death coming to him on the very day that he was to have been united in marriage to Miss Pauline Olive, pi Apex. Mr. Yates was 25; years old, a son of J; D. Tiates, of Morrisville. He had been for some time a . pharmacist in the Main Street Pharmacy,' Durham, and about three months ago accept a position with the Hicks' : up-town drug store here. THE SIBLEY CASE. Audit of Election Expenses Postponed ' to September 13th. Franklin, Pa., Aug. 27. The audit of the . J42.500.. election, expense . account bf Jos. C. Sibley, Republican nominee of the . 28th Congressional district, 'which, was scheduled to begin Monday morning, hef ore Judge Geo. S. Criswell; has been postponed until Tuesday, September 13th. Judge .Criswell grant- red this at the request, of attorneys af ter hearing arguments from both sides ! tonight, w -, if? AUGUSTUS resjc will wed into the millionaire class, stage for several yeo nMtfl -"He was afflicted with blindness. The (the national1 banking laws. He was jury. SHERMAN ) PRAISES: MR. TAR Keynote of Vice President's Opening Speech in lllinois--Thousands Assembled to Hear Him Starts on Long Trip. Clinton, 111., Aug. 27. Vice Presi dent James S. Sherman stopped in this city today just long enough to tell the Weldon Springs Chautauqua that he would not talk politics and he did not unless . an eulogy ot President Taft may be called politics. This is the first halt made by the Vice President in a trip which Is to carry him through Missouri and Okla homa ending next Saturday night in Oklahoma City. He is accompanied by his brother-in-law, Capt. Sherrill Babcock, of New York. There were 3,000 to 4,000 persons assembled at Weldon Spring's just outside Clinton, when Mr. Sherman, accompanied by Congressman William B. McKinley and former Congressman Vespasian Warner arrived. "William H. Taft is a patriot," Mr. Sherman said. - "Behind that charm ing personal presence, behind that sunny smile; behind that disposition which would avoid controversy, there is courage, stability and the firmness to meet any contingency. An illustra tion of this is when, last June the Presidents of several great corpora tions went to the White House and they went well, figuratively, with chips on their shoulders. There was the chance for a heated controversy. ."The President might have met them in the same spirit, the chip-on-the-shoulder spiritand there would have been an unpleasant result. A' man of less courage might have .stfven way. "But President Taft did not do so. There was a -calm, serious talk, and when it was over the agreement was that the government should go ahead m its course, and that the courts should not be called on to settle the contention." That was the way Mr. Sherman re ferred to the somewhat famous meet ing of President Taft and the railroad presidents to consider the freight rate question. The greater part of the Vice Presi dent s speech was devoted to the won derful resources, of the United States. He gave figures showing the enormous growth of the railroads, of the manu factures and of farming Industry. He asserted' that in no country was the citizen and his family so well off as here. And all this, he said, has been made possible by the protective ftariff system. "I believe in that prin ciple," the Vice President added. Decatur, Ill -Aug. 27. Vice Presi dent Shermanr speaking here tonight in Congressman Win. B. McKinley'g (Continued onEage Eight.) , Special Committee in Session at Raleigh Yesterday' Afternoon.' W!LL VOTE SEPTEMBER 15TH. No Convention Will be Held and Re turns Will-be Certified Details as to Robeson and New Hanover. " (Special Star Telegram.) Raleigh, N. C, Aug. 27. The Sth District muddle as to whether" H. L. Godwin shall have the Democratic nomination for Congress to. succeed himself or whether O. L. Clark or some other Democrat of the district shall l be the nominee,- Godwin and Clark having both .claimed the nomin-. ation in the former district conven tion, i&4o; be settled September5th, with a general uniform primary throughout the district, the candidate that receives the most votes -to be de clared the nominee provided he re ceives majority of the vote cast. -.-Furthermore, all who expect to en-Jrer-the rr.co fo- the nomination are to file; notice ' to this , effect-on or before September'. 1st. . This was the decision reached this evening' by thie special committee of the State Democratic executive com mittee, named to hold a primary, com posed bf Hon! J. R. Young; Col. J. Bryp Grimes and - H. A. Foushee. ...During the afternoon the committee heard suggestion from O. L. Clark, A. J. McKinnon, H. L. Godwin, J. C. Clifford and E. F. Youne:. All were found to be pretty close together in the matter of what was necessary In the way of rrbinery fnr the pri mary and also entirely willing to cut out any post primary convention. The knottiest pspblm Is now to deal with the legalized primary laws of New Hanover and Robeson coun ties. i This Is- to bu - worked , out later and ; the, impressioq 5eeois to , be ,,tha thThfiiTQW held !n these counties just as they are in the others for the reason that this is simply an extraordinary feature of party machinery that is not obliged to conform to thene special county laws. Detailed machinery 'for the primary is being worked out and will be an nounced later. .One of the pollholders at each precinct is to be sent on Sep tember 17th to the county seat -with the precinct returns. These returns for the county are to be certified to the Special State Committee here In. Raleigh and thfot committee, J. R. Young, chairman, will canvass, these returns and formally declare the nom inee on September 20th. A. J. McKinnon, of Maxton, says he will not re-enter the race for the rea son he had acquiesced in the nomina tion of Clark in the former sensation al convention. So he will make a fight this time for Clark. It Is said here that McClammy. of New Hanover, will not run in this primary and that it is very doubtful if Cook, of Cumberland, will run. So it looks like a clear field for a sharp fight between Godwin and .Clark. Both express themselves thoroughly satis fied with the arrangements made for the primary. COLDEST DAY OF SUMMER. Thermometer Dropped to 57 In New York Yesterday. New York, Aug. 27 "The coldest day of the Summer." said the weather man today. Last night the thermome ter fell 26 degrees and touched 57 to day. Only five times in 40 years has there been a colder August day in New York. The record is 51. Children's Souvenir Dance, at Lumina tomorrow night. During week orchestra will play every after noon at Lumina, OUTL1NE8. Former President Roosevelt was given an enthusiastic ovation at Cheyenne, Wyoming, yesterday, by thousands of cowboys that assembled to greet' him. He made one of the principal speeches of his Western tour :Vice President Sherman laud ed President Taft in his speech yes terday in Illinois Dr. H. H. Crip pen, the American dentist, and Miss Leneve, charged with the murder of the doctor's wife . are now confined in a. London jail awaiting trial Peace reigns in Nicaragua and all hos tilities on the coast have been ended. General Estrada has started toward the capital, where he will assume the presidency The first wireless mes sage from a aeroplane was received at Sheepshead Bay, N. Y., yesterday The decision of Judge Goff declar- Hing the "closed shop" strike , to be a conspiracy, threatened, violence in New York yesterday New . York -markets: Money on call nominal, time loans steady, firm and dull, no loans; spot cotton closed quiet' 50 points higher, middling uplands 16.90, middling gulf 17.15; flour' steady: wheat spot firm. No. 2 red 1.06 3-4 elevator and 1.08 f. o. b.afloat, new No. 1 northern 1.23 1-2 f. o. b. to ar rive;, corn spot steady. No. 2, 70 14 elevator, domestic basis to arrive c. 1. f.;'oats spot steady, new standard white 39: rosin and turpentine quiet Sensational Charges Yester aay in Lonmer bribery Scandal Investigation. RAILROADS AND PASSES GIVEN Intimation That Over Thirteen Thou- sand Requests Were Honored for Members of Illinois Legisla-. ture Subpoenas Issued. Chicago, Aug. 27. Charges that the Pullman 'Company is j aiding the de fense of Lee O'Neill Browne, minori ty leader of the Illinois fegislature, in his trial on the charge of buying votes, to elect William Lorimer to the United States Senate, were made in court today by State's Attorney John W. .Wayman. J This charge was followed almost immediately by subpoenas by the pros ecutor of -tne appearance on Tuesday before a special Jury of numerous of ficials, and clerks of the Pullman Company, incuuding John C. Patter son, division superintendent. This move of the State's attorney is believed to concern his petition for a special grand jury. A subpoena was issued directing officials of the Pull man Company to bring before the grand jury books and records show ing the names of applicants for posi tions in the months of April and Au gust, 1909.' . . Following a request by the prosecut ing attorney, the court directed that F. G. Hull, head clerk for the chief clerk of the . Illinois Central, produce in court Monday all the passes issued to members of the Illinois Legislature. Mr. Hull denied an intimation by Mr. Wayman that 13,105 passes were is sued at the request of Illinois Legis lators. new Norway; boat line. 8teafntWps Will Run to United States - Capita I , of $2,800,000. , Christiana, ; Norway, Aug. 27. The Norwegian-American Steamship Line, was established here tonight with a capital of 10,000,000 kronor ($2,800, 000.) " ' The directors of the new line were authorized to purchase for four and three quarter minutes kronor ($1,330, 000) the steamship Kaiser Frederich, of Hamburg, which will be renamed the Leif Erikson. . Engebreth H. Hobe, the Norwegian consul at St. Paul, Minn., was elect ed one of the directors and six other persons from America are on the board of advisers. The scheme for a direct steamship line between Norway and the Unit ed States has been under advisement, for a long time. It was originally the intention to have Sweden and Den mark share in the financing and man agement of the line, but that plan was abandoned. The creation of the new combination may be taken as an indi cation of an unusual increase of emi gration from ScandanaVia to the Unit ed States. The proposed line will make possible travel between New York and Norway in less than nine days instead of eleven at present. Columbus, Ohio, Aug. 27. Harry M. Daugherty, of Columbus, today issued a statement declaring his candidacy for the United States Senatorship from Ohio In which he held that Re publican members of the next Legis lature would not be bound by the ver dict of the State primary of last Spring, in which Senator Dick was the only candidate for the Senatorship. MAY ORDER OUT TROOPS. Guthrie, Okla., Aug. 27. Rumor was persistent today that Governor Has kell was on the point of ordering the militia to Guthrie to remove the .books of the State Bank Commissioner! The books are held In a local warehouse under, an ' injunction 1 issued Tuesday night when the State officials were , in the act of removing them to Oklaho ma City. v . ' If; A )iJ -f- if- ,V Demonstration by Protesting Cloak-Makers Follows the Decision. GALLS STRIKE CONSPIRACY Under the "Closed Shop" Demands. Sixty Thousand Paraded the Streets In New York and Threatened Violence. New York, August 27. Parades of protests broke out all over the east side today on receipt of the news that Justice Goff had ruled in the State Su preme Court today that a strike which demands the "closed shop" is a con spiracy in restrain of trade. Bands of the 60,000 cloak makers now on strike marched through the streets, one of them to city hall, carrying ban ners and American flags and shouting "closed shop" at every step. There was no violence, but apparently the de cision stirred the strikers. Justice Goff's decision granted an injunction to the members of the Man ufacturers' Protective Association in restraint of acts of violence, threats, picketing and patrolling by strikers: "The promary purpose of this strike" reads his finding, "is not to better the condition of the workmen, but is to de prive other men of the opportunity of their right to work." A final vote on the tentative agree ment reached yesterday between the strikers and the manufacturers, de tails of which have already been pub lished, was expected to be reached late tonight and not to be made public until tomorrow. General opinion inclines to the belief that the terms will be ac cepted, although there is much conv plaint that they are not more favora ble to the strikers. AFFAIRS IN RALEIGH. Convict Escapes-UcHathanv.rat tht Fair. Circus. (Special Star Correspond ence. ) Raleigh, N. C. Aug. 27. The State penitentiary authorities . announce the escape of Thomas Duncan, a young jeweler, who was serving a two years' sentence from Cabarrus county for lar ceny. He was 23 years old, and was committed to the penitentiary last January. He had been given "trusty" privileges recently and took advantage of his opportunity to steal a suit of citizen's clothes from a guard and slip away from the camp which Is on the Virginia ,& Carolina Southern Railway near Tar Heel, Bladen county. Chatham county has Just reserved! 100 feet of space in the new concrete agricultural and horticultural building for a big exhibit at the North Carolina State Fair, October 17 to 22. The work on this building, the first of- a series of fire-proof buildings, intended to take the place of the present frame buildings that constitute the State fair equipment, is being pushed now with redoubled force so that it . will cer tainly be completed in ample time. It is learned that the State fair management is still at work seeking to stop the Ringling Brothers circua from setting up in Raleigh on Thurs day of fair week. The county com missioners some weeks ago granted the license to the circus, but It is in sisted that the county and city autho rities have the right to rescind with out incurring liability for damages, 'since the agent in slipping in here and getting the license so far in advance as to indicate a consciousness of tak ing an unfair advantage of the com munity. WIRELESS FROM AERO. New Achievement In Aviation in New York Yesterday. New York, August 27. Buzz, Buzz, Buzz, Zizz" Bpoke the small voice of the coherer into the ea of the wlre leBs operator stationed this afternoon on the roof of the grand stand at Sheepshead Bay race track. A mile away and 500 feet up Aviator McCurdy was a speck against the sky. The operator began to piece into sense the sputting of the wireless. This is what he read: "Hortofl: ' "Another chapter in aerial achieve- . ment is recorded in the sending of a wireless message from an aeroplane. (Signed) . McCURDY."' Thus became a reality this after noon the first wireless message sent from an aviator in a flight to a receiv ing station on earth. J. D. A. McCurdy, a pupil of Glenn H. Curtis, was both aviator and sender and Harry M. Horton, formerly a ser geant in the Spani6h-American war and acting under supervision of Major Samuel Eber of the United States Sig nal Corps, was the receiving operator. Stockholm, Aug. 27. Herman Do Lagercrantz, the representative of Sweden at Washington since 1907, has resigned, according to an announce ment made here today to look after his personal business in Sweden where he has large interests. The re- . tiring minister's diplomatic services are . highly regarded here and there . is no foundation for the report that his resignation was caused by attacks made on him by the Swedish Amerl-." can press. . , : , . a- ; :-- ,.,- tin "i E - 1H ft " i j ft i : I 4 J V -1 P.; ! . 1 , . -v i . .
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
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Aug. 28, 1910, edition 1
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