Newspapers / The Caucasian (Clinton, N.C.) / April 9, 1903, edition 1 / Page 1
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n ;ua.i. a c p.-l - J - ,r HAI2AOUAO 3HT Jl'T .'C""v'M ;s T .... ' 4 ! . I -: i 'ri ! 4 j . 1 i " ' j. V iT ? . . i ' J . -!,. i r NO. 14. VOL. XXI. RALEIGH, NORTH CAROLINA, THURSDAY, APRIL 1, 1903. t - a u I ,,,,.,.nM.,j L,VE TES Qp NRWS I HON H Wl MA K5 3 Newsy Item Gleaned Murphy to flanteo Iron Jj 4 Smurpny io j lantco. A PRESIDENT'S SPEECH i MARKETS. I 'of ton 'orn Wh -At I'm "ii Lard 1 t r- Si: t 1 ;inuki' d . I 'i a n n t i 1 1 ! . Y: CHICAGO GRAIN The gi ;i"n JHi'l pi : r- i i n .i rami in r eii:-lflg .i''H Wen May . h' -it In in;: lfiwr mid .i r s down l-1?i'"H; V I F i 1 1 J . I . f I ( 'in l 12 to : Inn i i J . 12 yi 12 12 12 1 tit 13 . . . ::: Hi 1 1-2 -lit 4 AND PRODUCE. 'vision market ex wa!' session and lower all around; off l-l; corn II pro VI 12 Slate News. K. V. Viii'in and V. I". Adams, two Will (in.'! ,! 'll;.g riH II 'f prepOSCrfS- irii' ;it ' ir iih , wi f nm.stel at Mi.? LtUnd II H i i Charlotte Tu-s day morning on ;i warrant sworn out ly I'M'-totii. I it - ; r r i- ;. N. Davis. Mr. 'V. S. Gr- mii th' wariar.t. The.-c 111- rt ipe su :; I ted of belli:; glill'v ) Iirciikilii; lutii lhr pOKtolli'O 41 Ml Oiivv, i;i 'A'iiyiK' ro'intv. Mim iUii '"" i 1m- :o-lolTl.-' f-af anil takiLg I ii r i i i m f .'J i 1m riionry and aloi,l J .O oi .fT'i i i : i .mips. Moth Virgin and AdilPI;; pi ill f. -If, vigorously, Mii'.f ;k ni:st:i!; had l,rcn inaiU' and lha' l y iiid n H think it right or Jw I'iir; n ji': li ' I i nfi'iir tli'-m to l'? Mius hntiiil;'l d; th:it th'-y vvrv h'i'.u.-., Iiard v I't Kiii;,' iim ti. ari l though cirruin-ilnn-is sf in. d to In- against thi'in, Iht y v ' iiinf ( ' iii !" any wron.n-uo-in,' iYn'iiii--i 'in Maxwell hound lidh vr in a l.ond of $.".iH) a li. Kaii mir to r.iv 1 1 i -. tiiv vc!0 takfh t-.) lail. A J onus wild.- man named It. H. l';-r.iy, w.t s.ivs Ills homr is in Uoidi I Mil w;m l.i'foi'f tin- i ronlvr in Clur lotti V'dtMi.la.v inorniiii; riiaiK'd with l.fip dncik in th' Sou the n wail inn room on Vst Trade tr vt in hat Hty. IV-.-ry did not ch-ny li:;1 fhari;i'. lfo aiiniiii' d hcin drunk and said that h had onio (lovi from 1Iui't.rHvlllf Tin sday afternoon with in his jio. i i and when h t arn'. to himself in-xt Morning ho only had ?2.,'hi. Tlurc 'vcr' two young men with Vm-'iy wh n ho went to Charlotte nnd h thinks one yf tliese took his money. It is report-,! that the Southern railroad lire- just r:i eived fifty-Heven n,-v lo-Tniotivt s and they are heins li;rli'i'd ui ai the company's shops at Spencer. TIe statement is that two yean; au: the Southern gave an cider for niii"ty-.-ern new locomotives; out ha ii' t hvn ahle to get tliem before now for I lie len.son that the locomotive huildeis were so far behind with te'nir work. Tii" Southern system has been badly in need of additional motive power, and i' is hoped that thy c-n-pincs just received will very material ly relieve the fdiuation. Mr. Albright Harden, of Greensboro, is to bring suit t,gaint. S. A. Schloss sitid the city of (5r er-.bero for injuries sustained by his little uaughter in fall ing through the levator at the ('.rami on tii" occasion t the entertainment given by pupils of the graded schools s veral weeks ago. The summons was served Men day. but the complain has not yet been filed. It must lie in by the mxt term of court. Will Harris, the negro desperado, v.ho has on n.ore than one occasion terrorized tiie Su.ar Creek section of Mrekleninirg county by using the mid night torch, was arrested Wednesday In Norfolk and i.s now In jail in that city. Will I In vis is wanted in Meck lenburg for so many crimes that it would be cxtecdinglv difficult to en umerate all of them. He will bo brought tv.ck to Charlott". While he was preaching at a fevival In progress at a colored Haptist church in east Wilmington Tuesday night, Hrv. M. W. DeVane. colored; of Wil mington, lost his horse and buggy, which wms tied to the church yard. Sneak thieves slipped up in the grove and drove the animal away. Th? prop erty had not b;en recovered next rrorning. John Copper, colored, was arrested in Wilmington beiore day Wednesday morning on a wairant from Florence, S. C, charging hi:n with burglary. An officer was expected Wednesday night o identify the nrgro and take him back to Florence if ho consented to go without rt'iuisition papers. It was reported In Wall street, oit denied, that .1. P. Morgan has gone to the aid of James R. Keene in tire tri:?gle for control of the Southern Pacific. Littleton Female College. Littleton, is preparing for a great commence ment the last week in May. Bishop A. Coke Smith will preach the annual ser mon. Dr. C. F. Held, of Nashville, Tenn., will deliver the missionary ad dress and Gov. Aycock will deliver the literary addre&a. Many Matters of General Interest la Short Paragraphs. Down In Dixie. Apprehension Is felt for the fruit crop of North Georgia. Will Ian lv, th; notorious i-jrn burner and all around outlaw, of Char lotte, N. C, was captured In Norfolk, Va. A nephew of ri i.ator Iatimer, of South Carolina, thot and frioubiy wounded his t'.a'hcr on April let. Further argument was hard in tho Southern Pacific Union Pacific cas-, at Nashville, Tenn. Richmond (Va.i banks were the first to offer bonds for refund under Secre tary Shaw'K circular. Di Fi le, acting Surg? .m General of the Navy, received a dispatch from the commander of the receiving ship rranklin at Norfolk, that the enis of diphtheria among t lie crew was well in hand and there had been no iijw cases wilhin the last 4S hours. It i.s proposed to form roMon-mill company ut Sti p.if n ville. le.-.as, and Fpshur Viti ent is interest, d. Ho is now endeavoring to int-rest capital, and is also desirous of corresponding with manufacturers of cot-ton-inill ma chinery. The surviving soldiers who Ferved under Gens. Taylor and Scott in Mexi co in lsty and 1817. are invited f. be pn.sent at the thirty-seventh national : encampment of th (Jrand Army of the Hepublk- In San Francloco next Au gust. The? pensionTolls show that :, 000 dwell on th'3 Pa'if.c. coast. 'Aie managers hope to attract rt' lea.vt 100 of them to the reunion, believing that it will be he Jat they will vver attend. comr'-.aatKins h':rh l-riT a ponioa ct thr lnjpjrtanr from ;L cxlsta-: of some monopolistic tndncy. Th right fchould 1q exerclaei with caution aad self-retitralct: but It should ru Meets With Creat Ovations at AU that it may t? invoked it th ariiKS." Stopping Places. A BID SPEECH IN MILWAUKEE, He Addresses the Wisconsin Legisla ture and Afterwards Speaks to a Much Larger Audience. At The National Capital. Associate Justice Alexander IJ. llag ner. of the District of Columbia Court, will retire May 31. Tin District Commissioners decided (o enforce an anti-expectoration regu lation. William Johnson, a negro ex-polise-man, was htdd for the grand jury, charged with shooting at two policemen. The value of building operations in March was $002,573. At The North. Secretary Hoot made a speech on tariff . rcviwion, before tho Homo Mar ket Club, of Boston. Horses attached to a, carriage con taining Mrs. William McKinley ran away in Canton, Ohio, but no one was injured. Gould interests have purchased an old Pennsylvania charier giving sweeping privileges, which may be used, it is reported, to get the Wabash into New York. The Hood situation bus changed lit tle, Greenville. Miss., and Yazoo City being partially under water. One death is reported. Tho heavy registration for the muni cipal election in Cincinnati is said to be favorable to the election of M. E. Ingalls, Democrat, for Mayor. k T 7 1 " . 4,1, . . 1 . . . . j JL.OIHIOH (iisiJiiicu hiijb; i.,eici Pillsbury has decided the sixth game In the inter-university game chess match in favor of England. This gives the match to the English players." James H. Keene v.as reported to have called on Union Pacific striking 6hopmen to aid him in showing that that read controls the Southern Pa cific. A verdict of not guilty was ren dered in the case of Elmer Collins, accused of wife murder at George town. Del. A London dispatch .says that it is officially announced that King Ed ward and Queen Alexandria will visit Ireland in July, or August, of this year. A meeting of Jewish rabbis was held In New York to devise ways to raise the $500,000 wanted for tho Isaac M. Wise memorial fund. Importations of leaf tobacco at New York are being closely watched to prevent loss to the Government on duties. Reports that the control or tiie New York Central will pass to the Pennsylvania-Rockefeller-Morgan interests cause much comment in Wall street. A landscape and cattle by Troyon was sold for $20,000 to V. II. Dun woody, of Minneapolis, on the clos ing day of the Antelo art sale in Philadelphia. News In Brief. One thousand men are reported to have been killed or wounded in a bat tle between Bulgarian bands and Turkish troops in the Okrida district of Macedonia. Premier Combes stated in the French Chamber of Deputies that tte religious orders were taking a threat ening and violent attitude. Caron von Sternberg is being criti cised in Derlin for seeing President Roosevelt off when the President left Washington on his tour. The overdue ships Burgundia and Notre Damo du Salut arrived safely at St. Pierre, Miquclon. The Italian navy will make a Dig demonstration in honor of the ap proaching visits of President Loubet and King Edward to Italy. ( Minlsler Bowea has reacted the proposition of the nllier. powers that Venezuela pay the cost cr the blockade From Across The Sea. Macedonian insurgents continue hos tile acts against Turkish troops. Scotchmen in London gave a demon stration ofwespeet to the body of Gen. Sir Hector MaeDonald. The French Senate voted against the principle of a Government monopoly of oil refining. Captain Coffin and 12 men. who will take part in the Ziegler arctic expedi tion, arrived at Tromsoe. Norway. Another Canadian transcontinental line, from Quebec to Port Simpson, B. C, will be constructed. Democrats in Washington say the success of the paiiy in Iowa or Ohio next fall may produce a Presidential candidate for 1904. Minister Brown expects President Castro o decide this week whether he will svndicate the Venezuelan debt or send the disputes to The Hague. It id raid Robert B. Armstrong may be appointed Assistant Secretary of the Treasury to succeed Milton E. Ailes, who i3 about to resign. Miscellaneous flatters. Gen. Alejandro Wosy Gil is leading the Dominican rebels. - J. P. Morgan is expected to sail for Europe early next month on his an nual vacation. - A papal consistory will be held at "the end of April or the beginning of May for the appointment of bishops. Milwaukee, Special. President Roosevelt waa the guefit Of the Mil waukee Merchants' and Manufactur ers' Association at a banquet at the Plankington House Friday night, the occasion being the climax of the day. The President sat in the centre of a long table with other guests of honor. At his immediate right, sat united States Senator Quarles, while E. A. Wadhams, president of the Milwaukee Merchants' and Manufacturers Ass ciation and toastmaster of the oc casion was seated at his left. After the banquet had been served, Toastmaster Wadhams introduced President Roose velt who responded to the toast "The President of the United States." The President took occasion to give his views on the subject of trusts. Mr. Roosevelt's speech in part fol lows : Mr. Toastmaster, Gentlemen: I wish to speak to you on the ques tion of tho control and regulation of those great corporations which arc popularly, although rather vaguely, known as trusts; dealing mostly with what has actually been accomplished in the way of legislation and in the way of enforcement f legislation dur ing the past eighteen months, the period covering tho two sessions of the Fifty-seventh Congress. At the outset 1 shall ask you to remember that I do not approach the eubjtxt either from the standpoint of those who speak of themselves as anti trust or anti-corporation people, nor yet from the standpoint of those who are fond of denying the existence of evils in the trusts, or who apparently pro ceed upon the assumption that if a corporation is large enough it can do wrong. DESTRUCTION OF BIG CORPORA TIONS NOT DESIRED. I think I speak for the great ma- jority of tho American people when I say that we are not in the least igainst wealth as such, whether in dividual or corporate; that we merely desire to see any abuse of corporate or combined wealth corrected and remedied; that wo do not desire the abolition or destruction of big corpora tions, but, o nthe contrary, recognize them as being in many cases efficient economic instruments, the results of au inevitable procea of economic evo lution, and only desire to see them regulated and controlled so far as may be necessary to subserve the public good. We should be false to tho his toric principles of our government if wo discriminated, either by legisla tion or administration, either for or against a man of either his wealth or his poverty. There is no proper place in our society either for the rich man who uses the power conferred by his riches to enable him to oppress and wrong his neighbors, nor yet for , the dennagogic agitator who, instead of at tacking abuses as all abuses should be attacked wherever found, attracks property, attacks prosperity, attacks men of wealth, as such, whether they be good or bad, attacks corporations whe-ther they do well or ill, and seeks, in a spirit of ignorant rancor, to over throw the very foundations upon wincii rest our national well-beinz. In consequence of the extraordinarv ndustrial changes of the last half- entury and notably of the last two or hivo rtecandes, changes due mainlv to the rapidity and complexity of our nuusmal growth, we are confronted with problems which in their present shape wcjfc unknown to our fore- athcrs. Our great prosperity with its ireompanying concentration of popu- uion ana or weaitn, its extreme snecl- iluation of faculties, and its develop- nent. ot giant industrial leaders, has brought much good and some evil, and it is as foolsh to ignore the good as wilfully to blind ourselves to the evil. REMEDIES FOR A PORTION OF THE EVIL. The evil has been partly in inevi table accompaniment of the soeial Changes, and where this is the case it 'an be cured neither by law or by the Jdministration of the law, the only emedy lying in the slow change of -r.aracter and of economic environ- Titiit. But for a portion of the evil, at cos?, we think that remedies can be V'Un l. We 'know well th danjrpr nf ah-r- icmedies, and we are against all .-loleat, radical and unwise change, bit we believe that by proceeding I-wI yet resolutely, with good sense .nd moderation, and also with a firm letermination not to be swerved from our course either by foolish clamor or by any base or sinister influence, we can accomplish much for the better ment of conditions. FORMER SPEECHES RECALLED. Nearly two years ago, speaking at the State Fair in Minnesota. I said: "It is probably true' that the large ma jority of the fqrtmies that now exist in this country haVe been amassed, not by injuring our pecple. but as an inci dent to the conferring of great benefits upon the community, and this, no mat ter what may have been the conscious purpose of those amassing them. There is but ths scantiest justification for most of the outcry against the men of wealth as such; and it ought to be unnecessary to state that any appeal which directly or indirectly leads to suspicion ana natrea among ourselves, which tends to limit opportunity, and therefore to shut the door of success igainst poor men of talent, and, final ly, which entail3 the possibility of law lessness and violence, fs an attack upon the fundamental properties of American citizenship. Our interests are at bottom common; in the long run we go up or go down together. Yet more and more it is evident that the State, and if necessary the nation, has got to possess the right of supervision and control as regards the great corpora- tions wnicn are its creatures; particu lariy as regards the great business La fall In speaking at CincinaaU 1 said: ''Th neeetisry suprnaloa and control In which I firmly belieTe as the only method of eliminating the real erllj of the trusts, must come through wisely and cautiously framed legislation, which shall aim in the rt place to give definite control to w?mt aovereijrn over -the great corporations and which shall b followed, when once this power has been conferred, by a system giving io the government the full knowledge which i the essential tor satisfactory action. Then when this knowledge one of the essential fea tures of whle-h Is proper publicity has been gained, what turther st?ps of any kind are necessary can b taken with the confidence born of the possession of power to deal with the subjext, and ot a thorough. V:wled; of what should and can be done la tne matter. We need additional power, and we need knowledge . . . Such legis lation whether editainable now or obtainable only after a constitutional amendment should provide for a rea sonable supervision, the mort promi nent feature of which at first should be publicity; that is, the making pub lic, both to the government authori ties and to the people at large, the es sential facts in which the public is con cerned. This would give us exact knowledge of many points which are now not only in doubt but the subject of fierce controversy. Moreover, the mere fact of tho publie ation would cure some very grave evils, for the light of day is a deterrent to wronk doing. SUIT AGAINST THE FEDERAL SALT COMPANY. In November, l'i02, the Attorney General direct d that a bill for an in junction be bled in the United States Circuit Court at San Francisco against the Federal Salt Company a corpora tion which had been organized under thy laws of an Eastern Stat", but had Its main office and principal place of business in California and against a number of other companies and per sons constituting what was known as the salt trust. These injunctions wrre to restrain the execution of certain contracts between th-o Federal Salt company and the other defendants, in- NO MORE INJUNCTION Judge Adams Wiredraws bis facet Rcstniaiflf Order WABASH MEN MAY 0W STRIKE The Court I Ind the Statement That the Hen Arc Satisfied l Not to De Credited. St. Louii. Snerlul. The Injunction issued March Z. by Juds Elmer U Adams, of the Uaitci States dlstilct eourt. at the Instinct cf the Wabash Railroad officials to restrain th lirotn- ihooJ of Railway Trainmen and Pirtinin fr.im orderine a Btrlke on that system, was dissolved Wednesday In a decision handed down by Judge Adair.3, a week after the bearing of arguments for ptiA agaiubt the remov al of the legal obstacle. While no oae will express aa opln Ion a3 to the next probable xove on either sid, remark dropped Indicate that every effort will be made to ef feet a settlement and avert a strike. Bat if u settlement hhall not be T fectod, the understanding seems ta be general that a strike sure to result At Wabash headquarters U was stated that amicable adjustment of tue con troversy is hoped for. The tam? senti ment was expressed at tLe ho'els. where are quaitercl the few represen tatives of the ofliclald of the trainment and firemen now in the city. Counsel for both sides spent the afternoon in filled." conference, but no agreement was leached. Judgo Adams announced that court would be in session and retain jurisdic tion of the case, if desired, so that in the event of any molestation of or in terference with, inter-State commerce or the mail service, all its lawful pow erf may be invoked to restrain tne tame, with the confident assuraucc that they will be fearlessly and effect ively exercised. The temporary injunction was graut ed by Judgo Adams on allegations made by officials of the wabah sys tem that the defendants were conspir ing to interfere -vith inter-State traf fic and in the rant-mission of United southern industrial BANK CLERK SHORT: flat Ulagbams SgKlA& VIay Soatl-rn Cotta Mills gut maaaf actuiinf gtoghatas ct ttt tovrr grata aai finding a ready &&rkrt tot their product. Soulbera masa!C.uT- ers of cvton cloth hs daritt r ctct ytars ben dficlcpln thir plants toward a Utter tla uf gji w I I iM Stales BELD.tWt AtllST IV AltAMl 1 1 1 3.1 - ---- V V ..J .-i-..-- gmerally; In fsct, the tn.Vncy of lit J Mat I ma a 5mf, ( TrU 4 UmfU . , Southern oltoa-manufarturlcg icd-- try it In th direction of finer jxrc an J cloths. It U no succeed that fine ginghams ahouli not tr ntf '.trted. One of tte leading dry goods n. rt- ants of LYdumbus. Ca.. In writing of thia la the Colarubua Knaulrrr-Sun. says: "1 should think It would paj the Southern mills to manufacture high grade of gingham for the home tra'c. It is airnot isaroaMble to buy tne best grade of gingham. Uy thr tx-t gradva I mean standard ginghams l.k Ainonktag. Iancahlr. etc. It U roe that tome of the Southern mills i-itke ginghams, but none cf ths let grades. Our firm has about doppl buying gingham front any but thok mills ub5ie product is rercgnixed aa abno luwly standard. The Southern mills try to make a. cheap quality, tut 1 should think It uould pay th-m to manufacture a real rimt-clasa gin&haoi. The price has advanced to six cent. I and it i hard to get orders filled even at that price. I am writing now re garding an order that waa placvd nome time ago which has net yet l-en . .... mli t . Charted Meaty ltaUaU.., (J AliabU. Jip-ftal C, lUatt Mm collects a cirk lor i- Uo Cp'tY Ci'V, ittt i UrYJ !fT' Durham ludustrlea. An address delivered before the Dor ham (N. C.) Chamber cf Commerce by Mr. Thomas P. Fuller, a member of the hoard of aldermen of IXirhatn. ha been published in pamphlet form, and is being circulate! n the inter -t of Ihirham'a development. Mr. Fuller In his address showed that In the iat 10 years Durham imputation ban In creased from '.'-M' or (HiO prsemn to about 20 Out), the valu of r al and personal property fiom lt?."il9 $'J.041.S02. IU Laakitig capital from S'O.OOO to tJS3J!0i). and Its rotton-mlll m l! to x. wnn to the Federal Salt Company, and not to engage or assist in the production of salt west of the Mississippi river during the continuance of such con tracts. As the result of these agree ments the price of salt had been ad vanced about 4"0 uer'cent. A tem porary injunction order was obtained, which the defendants asked the court to modify on the ground that the ami trust law had no application to con tracts for purchases and sales within a State. The Circuit Court overruled this contention and sustained th3 government's position. This practically concluded the case, and it is under stood that in consequence the Federal Salt Company is about to be dissolved and that no further content will be made. A SUCCESSFUL EFFORT. Thvj above is a brief outline of the most important steps, legislative and administrative, taken during the past eighteen months in the direction of solivng, so far as at present it seems practicable by national legislation or administration to solve, what we call the trust problem. They represent a sum of very substantial achievement. They represent a .successful effort to devise any apply real remedfes; an ef fort which so far succeeded because it was made not only with resolute pur pose and determination, but also in a spirit of common sense and justice, as far removed as passible from rancor, hysteria, and unworthy demagogic an peal. In the same spirit the laws will continue to be enforced. Not only is the legislation recently e-nacted effec tive, but in my judgment it was im practiable to attempt more. Nothing of value is to be attempted from ceaseless agitation for radical and ex irenie legislation. ine people mav wisely, and with confidence, await the results which are reasonably to be ex pected from tire impartial enforcement of the laws which have recently been placed upon the statute books. Legis lation of a general and indiscriminate character would be sure to fail, either because it would involve all interests in a common ruin, or because it wouic! not really reach any evil. We have endeavored to provide a discriminat ing adaptation of the remedy to t'ac- real mischief. ALLEGED REMEDIES TOO DRASTIC Many of th.e alleged remedies advo cated are of the unpleasantly drastic type which seeks to destroy the disease by killing the , patient. Others arc so obviously futile that it is somewhat difficult to treat them seriouslv or as being advanced in good faith. High among the latter I place the effort to reach the trust question by means ot the tariff. You can, of course, put aa end to the prosperity of the trusts by putting an end to tne prosperity of the nation; but the price for such action seems high. The alternative is to do exactly what has been dene during the are or me congress wnicn cas just National lUak. La Im ancit by failed i-tatr ivptj flir.' ahal Font, tan a vanact awoiaetf by President S;-f. tt? t. charglnc Sim. with tn'-eijlio a ura eatltuattvl at aearly Dl'"' hlsis i now Lrld at lie ricdrju&l Houl r th dputy taarhl. II" rfu t talk aU.ut the affair. The first util'n ot a ttnruc let Situ' accounts irtr Satutda;. i:;rt accountants lruisidutrly Usau wotk oc the Utnks and it a -a d.f w t that large sums ha 1 bea ab?ratU 1 at various time. etN udieg I k eral years. TLe variant tba sworu tut bjr tl. r-1M f tfc bank. Slma had b--n In tl. r, r.f the oatA for t oat an 1 a .r.M-t-red on f tbcJr i;i"t t;nt. 1 rt.v ploycs. llr mood Io culutUe- '1 of Atlanta mkW'jt n J a a vv,t.c Dao of fashion. I't omlnelit ijttd.- .ftk I h made a thomurn limicate.n f t!. tMtuk'a (ooditiou n I Lav rna jt a sfrocd tattiint that it t al.t-- luti-ly fcai'. A iittia e.f il.e dfU'- tion It euurii ! Smt lent aul L alfo ttwui; tu. rtjit). liKli L turned iitir t' tanV. Tt.e dlrr tr tatc that the au.out rf the ! fab aili'ti Laf alr ad v l it .at f d undivided prvintK NitH-iial llnk Ex aminer U-uu.Muif a) tat t'mt th bank in no .lrjfcc- Sin f. Li ha &4!mttte4 bU i-uil:. w.ll l i r cuN'l by the I'nlted Slav ;... n ment. Hp In unnurrltd at 1 t tt.e un tf Thou. I. Siii.. a jiui'i:iint ?u-t tluuit f lllrk(H. :., i f Atlanta a suburbs. industry from cn lfifvo Kr.itidlr-a and 24GS looms. UU States mails. Jn b;e Adami in his de- an annuai product value 1 at 2.Sul.l73. cision savs the provisional restraining Ttio mannfat ture of varns and sh;et- which the latter agreed neither to im- order was made without notice to the jn;s jIltfl hosiery a nu tobacco bags by noir, ouy, or sen salt, except from and defendants, under tne stress or mi two ot tht..; plants aid "07.w) io tne facts disclored by the bill and was annual output. Other industries la fully authorized by section 718, Re- tilP rty indudv four lobacco factories, vised Statutes of the United Stales, and three cigar and cheroot factories, one was imperatively demanded by the sm,fj factory, pants factory, roller general pnncinbs e.f equity jurispru dence recognized and enforced in many carriage factories, yarn fa tory, two iraiiar cases in Uie United States and ..tanlmr milln. furniture factory, mat England, and many authoritieM war- ,rtM factorv. i.aper-box faetory. book-I omclaU of that fMrtu ranting the Wabsaii Mrike Urr. St. Ixuis. Si.lal. Afur four flouring mill, telephone fartory. three BonlU of ,DUul,t u,,,n the imploven cf tba Wbah toad anl tt war- trt68 factorv. i.aper-box faetory. liook- I omciau or tnat sMrtu. tljfin '. It picvisicual restraining bindery, dye wotks. foundry and ma- j t one Unie a strike m Imminent a: order in question in cases of conspira cies to interfere with inter-State ouv nicTce and otherwise are cited in sup port of this last proposition. Within the time allowed by the re straining ord?r the defendants duly appeared and filed their sworn answer. denying the alleged conspiracy in all its phases and particularly denying any purpose to interfere with Inter-State commerce or the mails of the United Spates; nnd esnect.-il! v df nvinir that the rmnlnwi urro esli.fir.l aith vara pes and I VPlOn 166 BCTCS Oi timUCr lanU conditions of their service and deny- Glady s fork or cneat river. mg the practice of any and all coercion Tne southern Pine Co. of Georgia ehini? EhoD and two brick factories. In the rapt 10 Tears Lurbam's area has Increased from ons square mile to foul square miles. Lumber Note. The Lot & Perkins lumber Co. A Gulfport. MIhs.. has Incvreased Its capital stock from 100.00) to $2O).i00. The Whee UnR Iuml r Co. of 1'enn svlvanla has Durchaaed and will de- OD " prevntd only by an InJuccGm restraining th nipIot frvr:i arj!iog their pobtjf. and t.lh Inji.tutlon mm dI-olveI lart WVdnefday. tLe dlffej incca eie finally adjui-tl anl lL eoiitroverfy atlsfa lotlly f,eitKd. fffl clls of the brothrh' H f pt m tjtirif the emp'o-es deelare the 'ttltuert is fatlsfattory and Is a epiiin U'.r for organized lalior. 1 he Wabat.li ofH rials declare that all difT r nn-a !th I the f roplorra have leea Iiually t-rml or fafse rcprcsentatiems to bring about with principal office la Savannah, will fjatM jn a naJfactory manuer a that their f.iture relations la all froD- abllity will Ik mo?t harruoaiou. f Li following are the main points ct.. brared In the M-ttJement: Taelve cent. Incrt-aae for tr,ndutors. luake men and bargage men In the raen- gc-r serTlrta and 13 pr cent, for con- a strike; avcring that tire only pur- ,Pm0ve Its saw-mill from Ilrunawick pose of the present defendants in eon- Ga to Brooksville, Fia. seniing to a strike was to better the ... . , r condition of their members who were . The Texas & Pacific LmWCo.ba. in the employment of the railroad by incorporaieu bi . with a canital stock of Slu.ow. Tne me extrcjse oi ineir uu'ioui;teu rigui a ncr c a f..n.. -it i i ii li j iiiji aLUin air a mm to p vice of wages .etc.. should be conceded. The W. H. Hancock Lumber Co. of i . . .a M-l 1 m a. a. -W W I . I.a.b V.AM M a m w tWA V I me court, alter limy considering an jiarttpuaie, aw. a '"vy'i"' diutnra and brakemen In the frrleLt ii. . m a: i . At . a - a . .mi .1 i , t. M -i rt i r i i m ) n i n. i - - - - me pioui, uiius mui ine staiemenis ui i era, wnu mn f the complaint to ihe effect that the ineorpejrators are W. II. itancocn. - employes were satished with their it. itarnsuaie tun j. v. Huar. i wuuarj i, i'i., rn vi u.-- ..imiv. i wages and conditions of sen ice are not Quiver L'imber Co. at Darks- river. For the fin-men. lncrea-a ere supported, irrespective of tho qus- dalPj Sunflower county. MLsa., has granted ou the Canadian lines In ar tion whether the men or the commit- bon chartered, with a caplUl stock t0rdanee with the Canada Koutbern eee oi nrctaernoou rcpreseiumg mem of fio.WO. The Incorporatorg are It. dlvlfdon of the illehiiian Cen'nl. On nrst suggested tue increase or wages w perry, W. II. Hancock and W. II. and change of rules, the employes Uarksdale. themselves at and for a long time prior . . . ny ;- to the filing of tho bill cf complaint .TLL' El. iLSf were dissatisfied with their wages and I'ouzuy. r,,.fi:r ti,; conditions of service, and a real differ- caf,tal frili'uh it r ence of opinion existed between the Incorporators ar e J. L E K8J F. railroad and a large majority of Its Manning. J. C. Wmball. Walter G. employes, members of the brother- -,33 AUU hood3, with respect to their wages and The Southern Pine Lumber Co. of that the defendants as officer and com- Diboll, Angelina county, Texas, has mittecs of the brotherhoods were fully begun the building of a new plant un der the supervision of 11 r. A. w. cor authorized both by reason of their of ficial i elation to their members and also by direct written authority to rep resent them in tte effort to secure higher wages and change conditions of service and the proposed strike instead cf being officially ordered by defend ants was a result of the vote of the employes acting without coercion and directly authcrzing the same. The court further finds after a full exam ination of the evidence that the charge of conspiracy to interfere with the In ter-State commerce of the States or the mail service kins. The capacity of the plant will u t be 125,000 feet of lumber per day. the lines la the United State mate rial Jncreaata and improve im-nt In working conditions ie granted lh firemen. East of tb Mississippi rlicr the rates will be brought up to th'.a standard when competing Jims In th game territory shall grant ltulUr In crease. The yardmen received a sub stantial incrrae, varying la dlCrtit localities. There is an entire revision cf rules applying to all rl- cf tralo aervke. This was the main toa cf contention and as granted Io It eu- Textlle Notes. Merrimack Manufacturing Co has la Hands of Receiver. Akron. O., f pecial- Tb-s plant of tte received plans and spedfieaUcns for Quitman. Miller A Co.. n..iaf.rt,. its additional building at HanUvllle. ot agricultural Implement. lae Ala mentioned last month. Ti Saturday, placec In 'be Lamia cf a rt- Mro mm be five stories high, etlver. on arph-tIon c: ..otj. Ctjrr 130xi38 leet. to contain 65.000 gpindlea B. Croue. prcaHent cf ti e .tjropu. and 2000 looms, as was stated. Con- He and H. I. Mclatob. of ClivlmC. . t Ja 4 I a m m aI a.l aan.l - tT.l trur-t fnr ererTJOn nas lU saiiurj iw I avie mvinjtui.-,, , , i (.unci .v. r. r. . i i- j. i. j. nt thai Flvnt Building ijonsxruciion ot i in pm.u v wa, fcV 1 The liaUK kith SNet United States, is not sustained. Palmer. Mass. Marietta (Ga.) Knitting Co.. report ed last week as having contracted for exceeding that amount. whatever is cf evil in them and of making them subsetfe the public use. The law is not to be administered in the interest of the poor iaaa as such, nor yet rn the interest of theories man as such, but in the interest of ths law. abiding man, rich or poor. We are no more against organization of capital than against organizations of labor. We welcome both, demanding only' that each stall do right and shall re member its duty to the republic. Such a course, we consider not merely a benefit to the poor man. We do no man an injustice when we require him to obey the law. On the contrary, if he is a roan whose safety and well-be ing depend in a peculiar degree upon the existence of the spirit of law and order, we are rendering him the great est service when we require him to himself an exemplar of that spirit. The Way of Life. You often find that the boy who was always at the head of his class in school la now keeping a set of books for the fellow who was always at the tailor-Philadelphia Record. Injured in Wreck. d last week as navmg comraei-u To dik;u Heavy Sufrjecis. Montgomery, Special.-Southbound 100-hcrse-power engine ana iJ Philadelphia. Epial. The euth passenger train on the Lojisville & additional auiiuuB ...--. annual meeting of the Academy oi ro Nashville Railway, which left Mont- to Install more anitung - uucai and Hoclal Science !I1 b bell Its present. increa o . . Friday and Satuxdav. inrii 17 nA Tke rxreral tooi: tor ' . . ... i "y " " - cf 00 elotn pairs pr caj. au dlttyc.tln fcc -jhti rcitel S-tkt tcse. Contract has aiso ceea ww-'- for building materials, ana the cxm- VUJ r rw " T - t- w Bsrnss is the arcnitect iu v VMa eharge. closed that is. to endeavor, not to de- gomerv Tuesday night, was wrecked 1QS tQe rear. Its present increase vi stroy corporations, but to regulate near Sparta, 83 miles south cf hert equipment will provide for aa output mem wnn a view ot doing away wita early "VTednesday. Two passengers, an invalid woman and a man, whose names canr.ct be le,rnjd, were injur ed. Ths entire train left tJ:3 tracl: and the Pullman and day coaensa were badly smasaed. It is tFaii that the wreck was caused by misplaced rails. supposed to be the work cf vandals. Crew Rescued. Cape Henry. Va.. SpeciaL The three masted schooner Benjamin Russell. Capt. Cranmer, with lumber from Bogue Inlet. N. C.ior New Haven, Ccnn.. went ashore Sunday, one mile south cf Creed's Hill lite-saving sta tion. Her crew of five men were taken off in breeches buoy. Her deck load will be taken off. Offers $50,000. Boston. Special The Congregational Educational Society received word from Dr. Persons, of Chicago, -that he had made an offer of $50,000 as a gift to Rollins College, Winter Park, Fla., provided the college shall raise $159 000 additional. RoIHns College li aid ed by the Congregational "Education Society, and Latin AnurJca." and rctn ;roJ netit In diploTaatlc eirc.es, toti to tt.! couitry and la Latin America, will gpeaii.cn tie relations cf tte United Henderson, (N. C.) Cotton Mills U Stitee to Sonth and Central Axxrica. decided to -enlarge it plant It is n- pcijcy of the Cnited States la noanced that the addiuoa wiu c ml t Between Eorope and Latin 55x79 feet, with sn en stxis iw- America' Is ono topic to U liciisifcd Number of spoles ana tosma w w will result in consideraUcs of th KmC. Venezuelan quettcn. na3 iO.VUJ tyiiiuico auu - Hardy Greenwood. Box 751. San ntonIo. Texas, wants to correspond with manufacturers of cotton waste. In referring to the report that it will establish a branch silk mill at Clarksburg. W. Va., the Valentine & Bantley Silk Co. of Newton. N. J.. states there Is nothing definite de cided up to this time. There is no truth in the report re ferred to last week connecting E. A. Smyth of Pelzer. S. a. In connection wiih a mill projected lu" ' in connection with a mill projected at tielton, S. C Will Oct Increase. Denver. SpeciaL Subject io the ap proval of General Manager Uardicg. an agreement has been reached be tween Manager Edon. cf the Denrcr & Rio Grande Railroad, and re preven tatives cf the Order of Railway Con ductors and Brotherhood ot Kailroal Trainmen. The new schedule gives the; passenger conductors and trainmen aa approximate increase in wagea of 12 per cent, and freight o.en ua Increase of 15 per cent.
The Caucasian (Clinton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 9, 1903, edition 1
1
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