VOL. XXV. RALEIGH. NORTH CAROLINA. THURSDAY. JULY 4. 1907. NO. r. SOUTH Ci 9 nil 7 Citizens o? Palmetto State Capture the Exposition City WAS GLORIOUS OCCASION Addresses of Day Great Enthusiasm, Eeceived Willi Hant W V. t uonzaies Deploring act mat injiKP jn Boston Tea Parties, or live State Has No Building and Thank-! (nti rely wjtllin the reflected halo of ing Goevmor Swanson for Use of. Mfultri or Sumter, but it is some Virginia Building Celebration cf thin to lmve tbc ony u.a gardens in Day Continued at Exhibit Palace at America; it is more to be endeavoring Conclusion of Ofacial Ceremonies )y prw.t.pt and example to elevate the South Carolina Raised Tea, Pour-) standard of our itizenship." ed by Official Ladies, Served All , Mr (:onzales deplored the fact that Callers by Japanese Girh. JCorfnll:, Va., Special. Friday was; .!-fTi'd as South (Carolina Day at t! .- iM-town Exposition with Gov-; ... . ... ., e .. f, i-r:.or A;i-ei, his staff, the South Car.v . . , ' .M;:.e commissum, me "" ; -i:t of Infantry, South Carolina! .; Guard and several hundred N. THE VIRGIMA South Carolinians present to partici pate in the events on the day's pro gramme. The official exercises occur red in the main auditorium building and ;Wr.a ' C.sbS were attended by hundreds ofjplished here is gratifying to South ing and "resident South Carolin-. Carolinians, if in viewing their ians. The principal address of the ; lav weer made bv Capt. William E. j Gonzales of The Columbia State, Co lumbia, S. C, Gov. Martin F. Ansel, President Harry St. George Tucker ' dustrial victories, if by the stirring of the Jamestown Exposition, and ; of their pride these sons and daught Hon. Walter Hazard, of Georgetown, ; scr are encouraged to greater endeav- i or and achievements, then the exhib- H. ST. GEORGE TUCKER. President of tiie Expoeitioa. The addresses were notable and ere received with great enthusiasm. W. E. Gonzales, president of the South Carolina commission to the Jamestown Exposition, spoke in part as follows: "Our State may be charged with inconsistency in celebrating the Iand of the English at Jamestown three ;r-w.llth ago wmie at tne same time side of the palace. South Carolina giorying at the inbospitalitv of Col. i JUliam Moultrie in his little fort ct tea serwd to a11 C::!lcrs Palmetto logs to the advances of Sir ! bein PurctI ladies of the offic;a. Peter Parker on the 2Sth of Jun, South C.Molina paty .aud served bv 1"6. But it does not come within i Japanese birls. Libel Against the Chelton. Norfolk, fecial. Capt. F. P. Sanford, master of the five-masted eaooner T. Charlton Henry, of Bos - n sunk off Fire Island, N. Y., by the Wish steamer Chelston, Sunday . ' 1 Mr 11UV.1 ill. 1.11 J 1 states Federal Court against 4- - O Ll.t garner asking $100,000 damages. stearacr vili give bond here and Tin. - I'ojeeea on her v; tn rVn-rtl Ami; ncan port. i rny province to harmonize the no j parent contradiction. The South ! Carolina commission must deal more with K T.rw-ciit 4. I III'- 'l "In those timos of poace we cannot ! South Carolina is without a build- '. ing at the Exposition, and thanked Governor Swanson for the use of the 1 Virginia State building, where ho . , said, the South Carol m had violated n time hon ina commission onored tradition bv invitinjj t,e (Jovonior of South Carolina and the Governor of Nnr:!i Carolina to "clink glasses of water." BUILDING. In referring to the South Carolina exhibit at the exposition Mr. Gon zales said: "If that which has been accom- State 's tirstppearflneat.a great-ex- position they are given a larger con ception of that State's resources and made to appreciate more fully her in- it is its justification and those that created it are rewarded. Following the olScial ceremonies the celebration of the day was eoutin i:cd at the South Carolina State ex hibit in the State's exhibit- palace where the Palmetto State has an ex ceptionally fine exhibit of its pro- ! oucts, occupying almost one cntiif Deserted in American Ports. St. Johns, N. F., Special. Ac-J 1 Warship Argyle which sailed from I here to join her consorts the Good Hore. Roxburgh and the Hamnshiie f X 7 J A off Cape Race 163 men deserted from 1 , , j 1 1 il 1 me Bquaaron h uue me vessels weie at Hampton Roads and other Ameri can ports. The four ships are on their way to Portsmouth England. THE S. C. DAY ORATION Eloquent Protrayal of the Position This State Has Occupied Since the Foundation of the Government. Norfolk, Special. Hon. Walter Hazard, of Georgetown was the ora tor for South Carolina day at th Jamestown exposition. Mr. Hazard was Mrlected for thU signal honor bv the South Carolina commission, and right well did he acquit himself. Mr. Hazard k address wax largely a historical review of the development of this country from the landing ot Columbus to the present day. Mr. Hazard said in pait: In the inspiring presence of this assemblage, composed fc: largely representatives of two of the most famous of the original 13 colonies one feels an acute consciousness -i fact that he is standing on hallow ed ground ground mude sacred by the toils and the sufferings, the blood and the tears, the joys and the sor rows of ten generations of American freemen. Only a few miles to the westward, on the bo.)m of the ma jestic rive the muic of whose waters today sounds in our ears, floats the little island where the first perma nent English settlement on this con tinent was established, and to which the civil and political principles de veloped by the Anglo-Saxon through centuries of struggle and of growth were transplanted, there to blossom anew for the healing of the nations. Not far to the north lies the city whose name will be forever linked in the annals of history with the closing chapter of the Revolutionary war, on whose shattered walls the battle flag of Great Britain was furl ed in final defeat. And less than a hundred and fifty miles hence, as the eye gazes toward the mountains bath ed in the tender purples of distance, lies the tranquil Appomattox, where the flowers of hope that blossomed at the cradle of the Southern Con federacy dropped their faded petals over its untimely grave; where the greatest soldier in all the tide of time sheathed at last his stainless sword and the thin gray line which had followed its flashing splendor through the smoke and carnage of battle melted away forever from the vision of men. South Carolina's Work. And so we of the Palmetto Statd, entering within the hospitable gates of the Old Dominion and bringing here our Treasures of art-and science, our products of loom and mine and forest and field, to enhance the at tractions of her great ter-centennial exposition, lay our tribute of praise and affection at her feet, that base trod both the paths of peace and Wle wine-press of woe, and draw from her fair beauty, her proud dignity and her glorious record, a fresh in spiration for the duties and respon sibilities that rest upon us as citi zens of a sister commonwealth. It has been wittily said that the only difference between the Virgin ia gentleman and the South Carolina gentleman is that, when the foimcr salutes you, he bows wholly to you, whereas the latter, returning the courtesy, bows half to you and half to himself. There is perhaps just a grain of truth lurking in this piece of pungent satire. For it cannot be denied that there are few beings on the earth, for whom the average South Carolinian has a more exalt ed regard than a typical son of his native State, one "to the manner born." Yet it is no less true that there exists in the breast of the ed ucated Virginian an exquisitely del icate, but well defined, pride of liu- cage, a subtle appreciation of the an cient splendors of his ancestral hai!: and acres, and a fine sense of the pre eminent virtues of his contempora ries within the pale of the Old Do minion. Yet, since he recognizes with true g enerosity the claims of his South Carolina friends, we may accept his bow as an admission of the greatness of our own little State. For to his ears too has come the fame of our great men, Gadsden, Pinefc ney, Rutledge and Middleton; Sum ter,. Marion, Moultrie and Horry; Heyard, Laurens. Calhoun and Mc Duflie: Chcves, Harper and Ward law; Hampton, Pickens and Pintle;, Petigm and Hayne, Timrou and Le Conte, and a score of other brilliant names, eminent in Avar, diplomacy, statecraft, law, literature and the ology, that illumine the pages of South Carolina's history, have cm belished her fame with an imperish able lustre. Hot for Self Fraise. B;:t we have not come here today irtcr.t upon self-glorification. There is a solemnity of meaning in an oe Tion like this that ill comports vith vain assertions of our own" sa KMiority or with boastful pictures ;' what we have accomploshed. The "rsson suggested by these exercises :s the duty of introspection, and the privilege which it affords is that if inspiration for higher and nobler endeavor in the field of social, po litical and industrial activity. Headlong Fall of 31 Feet. " Newbern, Special. John Clodfel ton, a caipenter, employed on the Elks temple, fell 31 feet striking the floor of the building and breaking the temporary flooring. He suffered a dislocated shoulder, a broken hand, fearful bruises on head "and body, a 'fracture at base of the skull and in ternal injuries, lie is m a vei v pr- carious condition and it is doubtful if . he recovers. THE IRtAL DRAGS ON Slow Progress in Moyer and Haywood Case EVIDENCE FOR TliE DEFENCE Proceedings cf Federation cf Miners Beported to Fiakertons State Endeavors to Ascertain if Fried man Ea.3 More Letters, and At tacks Him on Ground That Docu ments Were Stolen. Do:se, Idaho, Special Morris Friedman, a Russian slfnogrupher who left the employment of the Pink ertou agency at Denver lo write a book in which he published icrtain correspondence of the agency that piused through his hands, was again the principal figure at the trial of William D. Haywood for the murder of former Governor Stueuenberg. More than half of the court's day was occupied in reading to the jury copies of the documents which Fried man took from the Pinkciton re cords. They were chiefly the daily repents of secret agents operating as spies among the unions at Cripple City, Trinidad and Denver and show ed a complete surveillance of the Western Federation of Miuers and the United Mine Workers of Ameri ca during .the labor troubles in Colo rado in l?)0.'-04. Pinkevton men sat in the federation convention at Den ver in 1904, reporting all proceed ings. None of the reports that were Pfro di'.ced by Friedman and read to the jury by Clarence Darrow contained other than general references to the collateral issues of the trial, but they were offered in substantiation of the Piukerton agency conspiracy for the destruction of the Western Federa tion of Miners and the lives of its leaders. No Opposition From State. The prosecution offered no opposi tion to any feature of Friedman's testimony and no objection .to the in troduction of any of the documents the defense obtained through him. When Friedman was handed over for cross-examination the State endeav ored to ascertain whether Friedman had any more reports or loiters hear ing on the general issue. It attacked Friedman on the ground that he had played the Pinkertons false, had vio lated his pledge to them and h:ul stolen the documents which he pro duced; but the witness would not ad mit that he had stolen the papers and would not allow Senator Borah to call him a "Piukerton" He in sisted that it was not stealing to take information that had been obtained by the fraud and deceit of secret service men, and declared that the public sei-viee which he performed in informing the people of the mUiods of the ageney, fully justified any thing that lie had done Friedman said that if he had known that this trial was coming up, he Wyould have taen many more let ters and reports. Senator Borah pressed him to tell just what records there was in the Piukerton office at Denver bearing directly on this case: and, while the witness said he could not tell him of any particular one, he remembered many letters written by Detective McPartland in whhdi ail manner of crimes were laid at the ooor oi tne western l eueration ot Miners. Places Murder cn His Ercther. Columbus, Special. Sanfard Ear ly, the negro arrested at LaG range and brought to Muscogee county jail charged with being the 'murderer of Hal Brewster, said that his brother, Frank Early, is Mr. Brewster's slay er. Ifj says that he was present, but had nothing to do with the kill in :r. Eejjgcrs Will Have to Wcrk. San Antonio, Tex., ,Speeial. A special to The Express from Srdtollo, Mex., says: A plan to rid the side walks and public gardens of the street beggars is under advisement bv the Federal authorities of Mexico. A commission is to be appointed to investigate into the matter. It ic the intention to compel all abl" bodied men who are found begging, to learn some trade by which they can make a living. Already there is a law in Mexico restricting begging to certain da vs. News Notes. Four persons were drowned in flood in Montana. The suit of Morris C. Mengis against Gen. Louis Fitzgerald was settled for $300,000. President Roosevelt gave a lunch eon at Sagamore Hill, and received the thanks of China for his scaling of dams s throagh the retiring Chi- Minister. - , - SMITH IS HOW GOVERNOR Heke Smith as Georfia'i GoT?r3t Scm in By Chief Jcstirs rub Jlc&ftcr Parade Indsdin Hoke Sith Clubs from AH Orer lit State Governor's Iaacfural Ad dress Dealt With Kew Coastitutica al Amradccrt. Atlanta, Ga.. Special. H .Le Sraith was inaugurated Governor of G-r-gia at noon Saturday, hems stun in by Chief Justice Fiidi. ThU is Atlanta's big day and the glorifica tion began early. Great erowd are assembled hru, including the varior.s Hoke Smith clubs from all over the State. A monSer para do this turn ing was tuc of the features. Governor Smith delivemt hi in augural ad.hess at the capitol thb afternoon, r.fter beir.g formally pre sented to both branches of the islature. The sfeeeji was devoted largely to the defence of the con-ti- tutional suffrage amendment. In his inauguration j:ddress tnlay Governor-elect Hoke Smith openly advocated the disfranchisement of the negroes through the application of educational tests. He der!and his determination Jo prevent lynch ing or mob violence in Georgia dur ing his administration. In view of Governor Smith beiir a candidate for Vice-President on th Democrat itr ticket, some of his utter ances are significant. Governor Smith urged the abolition of railroad passes; declared that it should be a crime fo? corporations to contribute to a campaign fund: urfd a consti tutional amendment fixing a net? standard of franchise qualifications; declared members of some particular race should not be denied ! affray on account of race, color, etc.. but because they come short of the edu cational standard set by Georgia: ad vocated local option and protection of "dry" communitios from the "juc trade." He declared the terri tory of the black race must be re cognized and said we must tench th negro manual labor and that the ne gro schools need fewer books and more work. lie recognized the duty of the white man to be absolutely just yes, kind to the negro. FEDERAL FISCAL YEAR ENDS. Surplus Substantially $87,000,000, One of the Largest Net Balances Ever Shown Customs Receipts Millions Ahead of Any Previous Year. Washington, Special. So far as working purposes are concerned, the fiscal year of the government closed Saturday, with a surplus of substan tially $S7,000,000, one of the largest net balances every shown. In the fiscal year f)C2, there was a surplus of $31,237.37."), but that was the larg est since ' While the official figures for the fiscal year will not be announced un til Monday, the figures available are approximately accurate. They show that in the year just closed, the in come from the various sources of revenue was $fiG.".306,133 and expen ditures $.j7S,37G,709, as compared with receipts of $.)S9,754,2SG for the last fiscal year and expenditures of $5GS,7S4,799, the surplus in that year being $25,000,322. This has been a tremendous in crease in receipts in the year just closing, while the expenditures have been only about $10,000,000 in excess of the last year. The largest increase in receipts has been from customs, although internal revenue has shown a big gain. The receipts from the different sources this fiscal year have been as follows : Customs $333,230,120, internal rev enue $E70.309,3SS, miscellaneous $01, TbO.oPJ. There has been no vear in the his tory of the country in which the re ceipts from customs came within many millions of the present year. The receipts last year held the rec ord up to that thne and this year's income from that source is about $33,000,000 in excess of last year. Internal revenue receipts likewise break all records, except during the Sppjrish ar, when special taxes were being collected. Charged With Peonage. Greenville, Is. C, Special At the instance of Special Agent Hoyt, of the department, of justice, warrants were sworn out before United States Commissioner lung, of this plaee against E. A. Kline,' a contractor on the Raleigh & Pamlico branch of the Norfolk & Southern Railroad for peonage, in violation of Section a52o of the revised statutes of the United States. The basis of -the prosecution is the arresting and returning to the State on four different occasions of n number of foreigners working under Kline in the construction gt the rail road. A North Carolina Tragedy. Bakersville, N. C, Special.- J. C Randolph killed Anderson Burleson at Glen Avre Thursday afternoon. Mr. Randolph was ax-lister and Sir. Burleson accused him of listing oTs property too high. Burleson slappj-d Randolph a time or two with open hand and then struck him on :he side of the head with his first. Mr. (Randolph drew a pjeket knife and ( cut Burleson three or four times, kill ling him instantly, JUDGE LOVIN G FREE Acquitted cf the KHUn of Theodore Estes. VERDICT BASED ON INSANITY Every ILvi of the Jury VTett Up in Reipo&e to Tores' Call lex Exprewioa by Thcs Fevering Ac quitiil Verdict XUturstd ta S Miautrs After Jury Retire Hoiistun, Va., Stia!. After h, irt; iu the jury txv:c ia minute l he jury Saturday evvuing iitut,.ci 4 vcuLirt cf "iK-t gi:l!t " in the ca' of former Judce William G. of Kelson coui; ty, nnd manager f the Virsnnia wtate of Thoma K. Ry an, ho v.as placed 011 tri.l here lat SlomJav l-t'cre ir Cirruit Court t Iltiitiax. Js dtt WiUiaiu R. llatk dale pri-idin . for the murder uf T! hmou' i". -,., mo of Sheriff M. iv. Ite. of N" lntn eu.:ut. J;:dgw Ia ing shot and killed yiung Kftrn un Api'.J "i at Oak K.-ige, lullowing a br.i'.'v-Tide Este ha taV n with the j idfc.t s da. ,,:i:ter, Mi ElizaWlh I.oirig. who t !d her father that her i-veort had diuaed and avsaultcJ her. The jun u-timl nt 4:4r o'clock pnd fnr.i time until the vrrdi:t v.a ret'Hiu'l the defendatit remained in the sent he had occupied More th" trial be:ran. and surrounded bv the members of his immediate fnmilv with the exception of bin daughter Eli.aleth, who was not pre-"nt t' day. At a:4 o'clock a lr.d knock was h.eard on the door of the jury room and Judge Harksdale. who had taken his seat on the bench ordered the sheriff to pre-crve nru.'r and cautioned the large crowd that had remained to not irive vent t.. their emotions when the verdict was an nounced. The verdict of " remittal was read by Foreman P. S. MGraw. Jndee Itaiksdale thanked the ju rors for their attendance?on court at great sacrifices. He derTareii that he believed the verdict was in ac cordance with the conscientious view of the iurv. After the jury had been discharg ed. Judge Loving, his wife and other relatives shook hands with and thanked each juror. Tears streamed from the eyes of the defendant and his wife. Judu"? Loving was congratulated by many of lis friends present, though in nc e ndance with the warning of Jude Barksdale, there was no noisy dem onstration. Insanity Ea:ds cf Verdict. Foreman MeCraw, n merchant and ft-nrci. said that when the juror entered the room, one of them did not exactly understand all of the in structions of the court, and the-r were read to him. Mr. Mf-Craw said that when he called for a vote, he requested all who favored the ac quittal of the defendant to hold tip their right hand. On the first bal lot every ha;:d promptly went up. When asked what the basis of the verdict was he .iid "In.-nnitv," and that he and the other members of the jury believed that Judge Ijoviii was out of his mind at the time he killed young Estes. The stress, he said, had brought on by the story told him by his daughter. I10 Assault Committed. The following statement was given out by the counsel for -Judge Lov ing: "Within half an hour after the rendition of the verdict by the jury and the adjournment of court counsel for Judge Loving were called on by two of the jury who stated that they had been appointed a committee rep resenting the entire jury to convev to Judge Loving and his wife while they believed that Miss Loving's statement on the witness: stand of what she had told her father was a true account of what she had commu nicated to him yet not for a moment did the jury entertain the opinion that an actual sennit had been com mitted by the deceased ujwri the young lady, but on the contrary they were all fully sati.-fied beyond all doubt that no oeturd assault had been committed, but that there bad been an attempted assault. Counsel for Judge Loving ujjon bing inter viewed in this connection said: 'The conclusion of the jury to the effect that no assault was committed was absolutely correct." Quick Action Saved the Town. Fairbum, Special Thursday night the ceiling of the Masonic hall, on the third floor cf the Young build ing, in the center of town caught on fire from a hanging lamp. The pr-jmpt action and presence of mind of Hon. John T. Loneino, Messrs, J. L- Loon ey, Warner Viekcrs, and K. F. Smith, saved the building and perhaps the town. Fairbnrn lias no waterworks, and had there been any lack or promptness and precision, the town 'would have been a smoking ruin to day. Sues for Wife's Recovery. Augusta, Special. A. L. Anderson has begun habeas corpus proceedings for the recovery of his wife of a few hours, who was taken from him at the point of a pistol by the irate fath er of the bride, D. E. Morgan. The matrimonial ambitions of the young couple had been forcibly vetoed by the father, but while he wes serving on the jury Anderson and" Mis3 Mor gan went to a minister and were mar ried. . wuniERniPAsiwEB O 2iail Rpcn ca liu W;f Geaii tictM tit Vt lUJLij ilsiOay. J sly 1. fu!it r byi!ta .'. ..'. ? r t r4 turn f r pl Tciiij n Afvir. 1 J rrcr,ttr fur the yfAtc t ; Vwl mat. Tte t LaU l". w4 't M&itS, bet ht '-ti liAif I u tl ;.t:!, i 'at-. (uit i- f I'i't! i e I .c.t len- i Sir -t n :, t, a'sd mi ! ot .1. e::. ! . t J. !v n K t.; . i.fi! J Mr S'..lr. T; U- !'t . 1 ij il.-tuou. - 1 '' t v'fiM fr the S'j! r 'ij:r' : . : it r .' i,!, t iM-e-Mi1 l'i. "h"i Xrr- v..:ti.v vU 1 u count n -. j. i J m dr-fl-clcticy in the 1. the& J. , aud uet c:i ttif.tiN. The tu t 1 .f ti'i .!. -re fair. Sie f '! ?rne aliy :1c 27tt'. 2!', ' :: '.-. o:j tl:e irrth t!e e?-! : - .( ittl o j ti e "M h i;i tl:c tc ! in fnft Hit I the 2'lh tie rain .n .1 m;jm-i.1 ov urong wjnu in riao, !i:i, r.nd Gate eointu-s do;;o; d.r 'i.T.". ti the 2-th t! 1. vt a epe. ially heavy in lit initul a -l e;. district-. Si'shine and C!n:v.lf: hi. - TJ-r sunshine jr the -rk w: . me hit l-!o' nosnnl. The Utl two ;!t two days we r n?Mierally clear, the ie.iaij.iiig were cloudy. Eight Hours for Telegrapher. Raleigh, Special. The or o ra tion cormnisj-iori Monday afteni made an order that railway tetj praphers at the following j-ho! should not be worked ow-r S Ismim a lay: Pelham, Reidsville, Giwirw Ixro, Pomona, ThornasviHe, W. IK block between Iexinton itiid Spen cer, Spencer, north yr.r!, Seii,vr ?nidd!e ar!, Saljsbary. Hir!in;if-, Dim hair.. RaUiph. Felrna, V.irut Salem, Mocicsille, (laxtonia, Char ii.tte st.iti-n. Charlotte frei"-;I.t yard-. Air Line junction at Char lotte, Hot Springs, Marshall, Al" ender, Afheville, Salisbury, Htatc. viile, N-'.vton. Hi'kory. Marion, OM F it. Tern 11, Iliitmorc, H'-ndi-rsui-vilie, Saluda, Canton. Vayfiwvill ll- VM.n Citv, all thc-e lit iig nti t! Southern Rial way; Weldon, HoLy M'-unt, Wilson, Dunn, ("ontenhiejt, Schua. rayeteville, Par!;.'n, Prm br re. l!ob'ooi!, Tailwiro, J. F. tower at S -tilth Ro. liy Mount, So:t!i Tuift, Chadbourne, Coat Line; Maitmi, Xosline. Wtldon, IIcndcrRi-i, Kmnk-li-iton, Wake Fret, Rr'cigh (Jtbr tret). Caiev, Aex, Sanfon!, Aberdeen. Havilet, Moii:m (.Tur lotit. Wiiniin'ton--all the.-e ling on the Seaboard Air Line. May Call Extra Scinon. A' eville. Special. It i believed !"!( that close friend of Governor R. P. Glenn have advised him to rail! an extra set-xio.T of the Gcr;ral A seinbly of North Carolina l- cnrin!er th railroad rate legislation, in vir r.f the howir made by tho railway eorr.naiiie4 in the hearing !eforc Jndge. Pritchal in United States Circuit Court !a.t week in kuiU for injunction ai'ainst theState laws en i'Cted at the recent session Ftst Train Strikes Watbont. IV.vetivi!le. Ark., Sf iah Tim Fii'co'ti fa.t s'tithb:jnd eimon-hal! train' va wrecked five miles fnn ! r re at .c- o'clock, as ttQ re,;'jt of v.r'.oal.. Ten passengers were? in .ju ne 'liouvly. A h.'avy freipf.t hail j.r"d over the tri'I: aftsrr tber r.'.nrr:, breaking a section of the rail, r.f aily two fet in lct!:, -.vhleh a not k tier d by the crew. CScfcls Inspect the Czml Way. Feyctteville, Special. Captain Ctr; Brown, of Wilmington, UniUl Steles engineer for thif di-trirt aiiJ Cn'.Tc.-ir:.2:i Godwin po dvTi Hue river in the morning on th Mrera c.it beat '-General Wright" to it-tpc-f-t the eights of the locks an-1 dr.r.s on the Cape Fear and fur othT pieiirtlir.arv work in the ,cbcoe far a canal between Fayeteville and WC rrington. Tar Hesl Topics. Mr. B. W. Ilateber, Masonic Grac4 Lecturer for North Carolina, died 00 Monday at Lis home in Albemarle. Ed AsLby is a captive anu le slayer of his father and liter of Lis brother-in-law, Daniel Ovweasj, two weks r.go, v.i!l . be irnnrkonesl ii ?4'.Ilibury, wlcrc be wJ'l regain un til A;gait, v.hcu be v.i!l bo twicd

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view