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m AlLYlrl WASHINGTON, NORTH CAROLINA. 3?hURSDAY A.FTERNOON. OEGEVtSEK. 1. 1910. SO. 192 ' ' i' ii inii; li t"-1 r'lii/-' ? f .'?' ?r' SUBSCRIPTION OF ANY PAMR PUBLISHED IN EASTERN NORTH CAROLINA -Ill W W I I I ft UUVI I IS IflW MOVING SOUTH The folIoWlu* nine state* as o!n<-lal? reported ty the United Stat en Department ot Agriculture ehow an Increase of 168,214,000 bushe'.a of corn, which li (i per cent of the total Increase for the rear, for tbo en tire United Statos: J\'. . "f.V; ,y.'~ Ararige rlold per Total Crop ' * - v>V* - acre In buahels InUuahelc States. 191ft 111! 10-jrr. 1001 It la Virginia .. SJ.l 16.6 11.7 47.IIS.II0 0 4.6 21,000 North Carolina l?.l 18.0 14.8 48.IX.000 67.*64,000 South Carollaa . ?> li.7 18.5 11.t 17.041,000 44.7SS.000 11.1 M.I 111 11,140,000 I4.801.fl00 11.5 11.0 11.5 41,141,000 13,411.000 -.14.1 10.1 11.1 40.744.000 lt.tS0.009 U.O 11.1 17.6 11.1*1,000 68,915.000 . . U.O 14.0 11.7 50,400,000 I0.1H.000 15.0 10.1 11.0 Ui.15O.OO0 111,003.000 501,454,000 IM.74tt.OI0 101,464.000 ' v f ? ? ?: Total [acreabe in oM rear 151,45*^00 ?!> ?' ? -'tf t ' . ; * Farmer*' Cooperative Demonstration Work haa been coaliuted In Aach ?V'*.v -v t*. THE STORY OF DR. COOK New Tort. Nov. IV?"Dr Fied-| ertck A Cook, after ? year In hiding, hu written hla own story. It Is to be printed In a aeries of article# in Hampton's Magaslne?the periodical that paid I&0.000 (or Commander Peary"a story of his trip to the north Dr. Cook In his atory confesses that he does not know whether '' reached the pole or not. The editor" or Hampton's ltagatine declare that this statement la the moat intensely human document they hare ever read. < rVl"WL? In It Dr. Cook deals with the pay- I chology of his adventure and de-j dares: "Did I get to the north pole? | Perhapa 1 mads a mistake In think ing that I did. Perhapa I did aot make a mlataks. Alter mature thought I confess thst I do not know absolutely whether ( reached the pole or not. * "This may come as an amazing statement, but 1 am willing to star He the world. If by so doing I can get an opportunity to present my esse. "By my case I mean not my case aa a geographical discoverer, but my case as a ma?. Much as ths at tainment of tlis north pole once meant to me, the sympathy and con fidence of my fellowmen mean much more. "If after reading my story y say Cook Ja alncere and honest, if] half erased by Isolation and hunger, he believed that he reached the pole; j he is not a fakir, then I will be aat-j Itfled." PHARY LAUGHED. Washington, Nov. SO.?Captain Robert B. Peary laughed today when Informed that a Mew York magazine had given out a statement purport ing to be a confession that Dr. Cook does not know whether or not he reached the north pole. He refused to eMumt, however. "I have absolutely nothing to say.l and will not discuss the matter one! war or the otMr," he declared. ATTRACTTVH Attractive shows are promised for r^ahtagton theatre goers during ? months of December aad Janu ary. ' - r The opera houee is now bstgg fit ted up In attractive style and all those sttending this theatre this sea* s6n will be surprised to see the mark sd changes In this play hontf. la that Newark holocaust th*?*| escapee aeem to have beea the ai est places of destruction. Sterling and Empi Ai Show Case Di ? the mm is Frankfort.'Ky.. Nor. SO.?Tbe de parture for Loulavllie of the lust or the 24 go?ernora who openvd tHelr national conference here ha# Jefi the Impression here that either Govern or Judaou Harmon of, Ohio, or Wood row Wilson of New Jersey, will be the democratic nominee for prest iStfc it 1 J. The gathering of commonwealth executives, the most represent stive body of popular political Sentiment perhaps over sssembled in America, discussed politics, notwithstanding Governor Wilson's declaration thnt this subject was tabooed. The governors held a number of secret conferences after which many of them talked guardedly of nation al political probabilities. Governor 8hafroth of Colorado, a loading democrat admitted that the governors had discussed the avail ability of 1912 presidential timber. "We discussed Governors Harmon Wilson and Dlx. and Mayor Gay nor; of New York, too," declared Govern or Shafroth. s 'There are no more able men In the country than those I have Just mentioned, but it Is too early now to begin casting about for nominees. The proper man will be selected at tbe right time. "Governor Harmon who received an ovation every time he appeared in public, aald he was averse to fore casting the national political events of the next two years. "You cant give the people ^oo much power for me." said he "in the last analysis you can always de pend upon the people to do the right thing and to vote the right way." Many or the expressions from the governors concentrated upon the sub Jects of greater power for tbe peo ple and more stringent control of corporations. T? It waa Indicated that these will be two Important planks ia the next democratic platform. Governor WUeon of Kentucky; Noe] of Mississippi. Mean of Virginia and others nailed in these senti ARRKHTRIJ at BALBIGU k:: FOR VIOLATING THVHV LAW Raleigh, Nov. 80.?Warrants of arrest wore served today on local representatives of ths standard OH Ooapany, allsglng violation of the North Carolina aatl-trsst law. The presscntion was.Instituted by City Attorney Walter Clark. Jr.. a son of Jostles Clark of the State Supreme Osmrt, ; _ ?-?&?' ??* bfciil < : p..I No doubt these convicts In Rich mond all felt like tying when they saw ths aviators In ths sir.-' ] ire t Silver Novelties blliL UN IHIAL FOR MURDER Cambridge, Moas., Not. 30.--Hi t tie IA B'-me, a pretty Freuch-c*na dUo. looking younger than her 17 years, wu placcd on trial In But Cambridge today for the murder of CTkrence F. Qlover, president of the laundry company fa Waltham. Tbe gin had been employed aa a domestic In Glover'a home. Oa the night of Nov. JO. 1909, Glover waa found dylhg of a bullet wound oa the vteps of Dr. N. W. Cousin's hoa pltal in Waltham. Me died while the doctor wu probing for the bu? let, after say lag that he and Mies Le Blaac had been conversing pleas antly In the laundry, when the girl suddenly eetsed his revolver from his dash and shot him. nring two mora shots as he fled. Then he ttaid he seised the revolver nod crawled a quarter of a mile to the hospital, throwing a revolver over a fence. The revolver waa found bat only one chamber waa empty. More thaa one bullet waa fouad la Glover's body. Hat tie Le Blaac disappeared. Three nights after Qlover's death she was found under his bed at his home She Mid that she had met Olover at the laundry by appointment and he attacked her and aha Bed,'hiding 54 hours, cold and almost atarved un der the b*L She said thnfTllover had a revol ver but she had not touched it and suppotad that he shot himself. Her reason for hiding was her shsmo at hav',94 made an appointment to meet Gt^er at. the laun4ry ^ Mrs. Olover denied knowledge of tk* (MM. of -*e Wrf-la WVmw the three days she was hiding there. At the time of Glover's death Hat ir coo Id not speak Knglish. During he year she has been awaiting trial she has learned to speak It luently. but the court today asalgn ?d an interpreter to ner. ^8he ia the youngest girl ever tried or homicide In this state. Hattic, who wears eyeglasses, to lay wore a simple blue dress with a hi* of the same color at her throat, ier blond hair glistening In the sun ight, was brushed back and held by T wenty-four days to Xmas Dec. 1 TheBoy is think ing of that new Sled. Get it now! MR. UABB1BL MADS AGKNT AT ZEBVLON ? ii Mr. 8amn?l Gabriel who has been the efficient operator at the Norfolk Southern office In this city (or the past year ha? been appointed agent or the same road at Zebnlon, N. C. Ur Gabriel hat been succeeded here j by Mr. J. W. Ski) Ilea. formerly agent I of the Norfolk Southern at Mackey'a Mr. Gabriel Is one of the meat, ef ficient employee of this ayatem and! he has the beat wishes of all our peo p,# U wo^ld be too bad for tbe Wood row -Wilson Club If Harmon should be nominated. 4 Per Cent Compound Interest On Savings Accounts j Savings & Trust Co. WjjMaitMu CWneral Wlek. ?r three weeks to tlon of Dm alirtiluaf a point where he complaint against There ars a rut ponent parts In it. talned that e*erythli cept the halts and quacks and oae I Pennsylvania that lamps Is controlled ment made in l|?l eral Electric and I Electric Company, purpose of the safeguard their If the 'ease to be this combination In bottom it Is beloved patent lawyers that a orj^ons proportions will connection with the Without the assistance patent laws snd the regulations and juris prudence which hare ?i'own up around tb?m. the members of the combination hsve been able to' keep alive exclusive rights originally granted under basic patents since expired. The basic EdiM>n patent on the In candescent lamp expired long ago, but. with the exception of the tung aten lamp msde In- the UtUc factory in Pennsylvania tkerfi Is not a lamp to bo had except upon payment of tribute to ono or more members of the combination. For several weak*.#**Jf'OUrQ ment has been endeavoring to'ascer tain whether the control of tbe West taphouse Company has not paased out of the hands of Georgo Westing house as a result of the squeeze which the Morgan and Rockefeller interests gave that company In l?07, when* Morgan took over the Tonnes see Coal and Iron Company No one bus been able to figure out Just what the Rockefeller Interests took, but there is a suspicion that after the P |receivership of the Westinghouse ? Company the General Electric, pop lularly known as a Standard OH ent *r [prise, tightened Its grip on the *!*?c Itrlral business of the country. The ?only visible change In the Wos'.lng Ihouse Company is the retirement of lthe man who gave it Its name and ?turned over to it the direct system |or generating electrical current. The other big corporation In the ?electrical business not Included In lthe agreement of 1*96 is the Ameri- j ?can Telephone and Telegraph Com- J It any. known as the Telephone trust j ?One of Its subsidiaries is the Western j |Union Telegraph Company. About fifteen months ago the Mac Ikay-Bennett Interests appeared to ] ?have acquired a controlling Interest lin the Telephone Trust, and thereby ?the Postal Telegraph Company, the ? chief asset of the Mackay-Bennett | interests, appeared before the pub Jllc as the owner of Us big competitor jjthe Western Union. A few months srter the publica tion of the report that the Postal ? had acquired the Western Union the |Postal announced that it had dlwpos of Its holdings in the American [(Telephone and Telegraph Company I had thereby divested itsslf of |the odium sttachlng to a trust. But it Is going to be charged In ?the hill of complaint that there Is a connection between the Telephone ?Trust sad tl? General Blectric and Westinchonse comblnstion Until |be resigned his directorates Senator Murray Crane was a director, not o*lf in the Telephone Trust, but [{also In the General Electric and in tbe Western Electric, which Is awned ?by-'t^e Telephone Trust, a*f the chief business of whloh Is to manu facture equipment for telephone and | telegraph companies. ' This electrical dooibinatlon la cap italised at nearly three-quartan of a bill!on. . -ur If stands seat to the steel trust | for swollen capitalization. on which | dividends are paid by.the users of PINK SKOWEN TO MISS MOORE One or tlie moat delightful enter* talnmcnts cf tfie homo waa M pink ahower given yesterday afternoon *>y Mlaa Adeline Mayo In honor of "See Julia Hoyt Moon. Six tablea of bridge were played from three to fire. Mlaa Sallla Myers winning the hlchaat wore prtxs, a handsome cen terplece of hand embroidered linen. Mlaa Moore wan presented with the sueet of honor prlte, which waa a lovely hand-bag of pink silk. After the game a tray loaded with mysterious package* waa brought in and Mlaa Moor* opened them amid much merriment. The gifts were varied and beautiful and were all of ?xquialte ahall-color which la (he bride's favorite Unt. Refreshments were served, COD of nut tee cream, salted nuts, mint* and cake. Th? cake waa brought In whole. Iced with white and decorated with pink rose. The bride-to-be cut thla heraelf and paae ?d It around to the guwta. The following were preaent: Mrs tinmen J. B. Moore, A. c. Hath ?war. E. W Ayers, H. W. Carter. ?*?rge T. Ijeach. W. K Clark. A M Duma,. J. H. Hodgoa. J. Rodman. George Hackney. John Gorham, s. 8. Sprukea of Scranton, Ja.. Daniel O. Kowjfc. Of Beaufort; J. I* Jackson ot Georgetown. Ky.: Misses Julia Hoyt Moore. Lillian Bonner. J?||? Hoyt, Pearl Campbell. Olivia Hodg oa, Mattie l^aughlnKbouse. Sallle Myers. Mary Hoyt. Jennie Cos. An nie Cox, Caddie Powle. Mary Carter. Elizabeth Warren. Helen Kugler] Beaa Conoly, Mary Wright.. U?leu I Knar, Julia Mayo, Mntirit' Windley ) Elizabeth Mayo, Adeline Mayo. Res. Taylor, of Beaufort. Prances Doi k-1 ery of Rockingham. All Kmllm. When t think that already this I year I ha\e turned out forty thous-j and photographs of people from the ! cradle to old age it is a consolation Tor me to think my years work so! far Is represented in thousand- ot ? homes and will be there many years ! to come. BAREITS 8TTDIO. ?tn. A\n Mils. GOKHAM HOME FROM BRflMl, TOI H ! Mr. and Mrs. John Gorhara have ?eturned from their brldaj tojr. They ?r? stopping at the home of the bride's pprents. Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Dumay on West Main street. PRIflOXKD BY HIS FAMILY IX AX OU> ICKHOrsK Pli Mlddlotown. X. Y.. Nov. 30. J lohn Burrel. thirty-seven years old. I lon-ln-Iaw of Bryan G. Hughe* of S'ew York City, was received at the ^ itate hospital this morning in a pit able condition. He lived on his pa rents' farm nenr Goshen. He hs? >een subject to spellii of Insanity ?nd a neighbor complained to Healti; 0Ulcer McGeoch of Goshen th.it Bur ?el wos being 111 treated. McGeoch went with Dr. D. T. Con llct to the farm today. They fotiff* Burrel in an old icehouse. The build ing is about seven feet square and s sunk below the level of the ground ibout seven feet. Two windows are close to the (round. Burrel was slttiog In s cor ner. eating dry bread that had been owered to him In a basket. illPKRIOR COt'lIT TO OOXVBKE NKXT WKKK Many cases are on the docket for trial at the forthcoming term of Beaufort county superior court. The neat session will be for a ?rm of three weeks. trolley oars, telegraph*, telephones, acantfeeeent and are lamps, electric >u tiers and, la fact* everything elec trical except the insoles recommend sd for rheumatism and the belts that are supposed to restore virili ty. m HOYT, dSffigrafa |Ladies Fiannette Gowns ! Plain and Fancy Patterns GOLD WEATHER IS Wftchln&iohV Nov. SO.?Got out out your big overcoats and fur*. The weather Is to be Intensely cold (or eleven days In that section east of the Rockies for Qulf of Mexico to the Great Lakes and New Ens land according to a special fore cast today of the United States weather bureau. In the greater portion of that section snow Is already falling snd the lndloations are that In the Ohio Valley and In the lake region one of the heaviest snows In years will be experienced. To prepare the southern trull growers for the change in weather the department today Is sending oui special warnings. It is expected that before night tfye temperature in the northern sec tion of Florida, Alabama will be be low freezing point. In the Ohio Valley the tempera ture at 8 o'clock this morning was from 5 to 1^ degrees, while In the Dakota* it was below sero. It is fore caster that the heaviest part of the snow fall will be In the lake region, extending as far east as the Ohio river and extending as far nouth as the central part of Illinois. The fall along the Atlantic coast Will be light. Ii? Moving The Kmford Hardware Company ire moving to their new place of justness on Main street next to the Ually News Office. The building has bf?en flttod up n most attractive style and twil! t*? noet creditable when completed. Marriage Next Wednesday I Miss Julia Hoyt Moore and Mr. | Volfe will he married at the Epia- I opal churcli next Wednesday even-1 ug, I>ecember 7. This social event promises to he i >ne of the moat interesting of the! all season. OPTION I have option upon houae and lot! n East Second street, No. house! 34, 8 or 9 rooms, water, gas. elee rlc light a. House would coat two bousand dollars to rebuild today; ractlcally new, Urge and deep lot, >t alone ia worth seventeen nundred ollars. If sold In the next ten dajB oes for $2,750, you pay for the new avemeni of sidewalks, now being ullt. If location of house Is worth nything you can take this In con Ideration. For any Information call j t Baker *.Studio. XTKKKKTINCJ MEETING xkxt Krxn.w mohm \ c i The program tor the Woman's 'oreign Missionary Society at the 'lrst Methodist church next Sunday aornlng promises to he uniqne and ntertalning Both the music and papers to be ubmitted wllj no doubt prove of liferent to all thoae present. There riU be nc service In this church unday evening. The collection of garbage seems j I so to be a Joke or a crime. WARNING ABOUT BILLS UIBING ? A H Washington, Not. 30.?To break up alleged criminal practice? of rallroada Juggling datoa on bills ot lading the interstate commerce com mlsaion today issued a warning to all the railroads in the United States An investigation conducted by the commission developed the fact tbat certain coal carriers at Chicago, ua aha, Nebraska, Kansas City. Mo., 8t. Louis, Mo., snd other points were Issuing bills of lading contrary to a rule of commission. This vlolstlon can be punished by criminal proeecution. An order Is made that property to be transported shall be In the po. session of the carrier at the time bills of lading are Issued and dated when shipping instructions are giv en. During the past the railroads hare juggled the dates of **eee bills of lsdlng which resulted in great loss to the shippers. Cotton Market. Breed cotton fi.60 Lint cotton 14.SO. Cotton seed per ton. Convalescent. The many friends of Mr. Charlea Fleming, who haa been confined at the Fowle Memorial Hospital for the past several weeks will be glad to learn that he Is convalescent. He has been critically 111 with lyphola ? At tliffc bis' life was despaired of. The Dally News Is glad to report that his condition Is such, that un less something unforeseen happens, ho will soon recover To Take Office. The new officers recently elected for the respective county offices will be Inducted Into their office on the first Monday In December. The pres ent board of county commissioners will meet on the first Monday In De cember for the last time. After their ? business has been consummated the new board will be sworn in and they will take charge As to who will be the new chairman of the board is not yet known. The present board is composed of seven members while the Incoming board will be composed of only five members, as & result of a law by the last General Assembly of North Carolina. Leave for Conference. Quite ? number left on the Nor folk Southern train this morning for Elizabeth City to attend the an nual conference of the Methodist church. QI ARTKRLY MEETING PI1IM1T1VK BAPTISTS On next Sunday, one week, there will be held quarterly meeting In the Primitive Baptist church, this city. This occasion will be looked forward to with much pleasure by all the members of the denomination. Special Values In Clothing. ? ? wupm We are showing in Mens and Boys Glothing the largest line of patterns we have ever shown. Values unex celled. Call and get your Xmas Suit. Bowers-Lewis Co. Sto-*. Wntrh Tiw ? mw't t A. THK GSM THEATRE ^ You'll set the full value of roar monty bora?moat enjoyment! ? ? ? ? An up to date ahoar run to anlt yon. s . ~r,.. *" -V . fi ' . ' ?*'. ? ,* lUtOnrt ARCHKBT
Washington Daily News (Washington, N.C.)
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Dec. 1, 1910, edition 1
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