The Caucasian ASV fLM.r.wn kxtkiu'Iiise. local Matters. I . ,.(lfttal Savings Bank will be! ir July. , (-:, tral Methodist Sunday ,f lUlHgh. will picnic at i.riK on Tuesday, June 20. l ,hn Da via, of Raleigh, died V !avig, on. North Salisbury j m Harris, a colored man about 65 tarft of ae. dropped dead while aTk ' ? OI Cabarru Street, this city. j,. Andrew, of (Juiiford County. :a.I served half of a year's sen ,H,. fr larceny. a pardoned Sat--tjav li.v Governor Kitchin. lir .1 L. McCullerp, County Phy-i .c;ai., ias resigned. He stated thaU lie i ii ties that have been attached to .;!)' a ere too much for him. (.'aroline Alston, a colored woman KaU-igh. said to be 195 years old, c.c-l a few days ago. She has a W V f I A 1 daughter, trances rerry, sam 10 ue t-vtr ' years old. Mr. Martha Harris, widow of the lute Ur. Hal Harris of this county, (iit-ri suddenly a few days ago in Iuisburg at the home of her daugh ter, Mrs. V. M. Person. Governor Kitchin offers a reward ( f $400 for the capture of the mur derers of Mrs. Joel Hill, at James-! :own, Guilford County. This makes' a total reward of $1,000 that has; been offered for the capture of the, murderers. Mr. W. C. Norris, of Kaleigh, suf fered a stroke of paralysis Friday morning. He was dressing when the; stroke tame. It affected his right arm and one side of his face. Mr. Norris is a member of the firm of M. ; T. Norris & Brother of this city. ; Mr. Percy Fleming, of Raleigh, had a narrow escape from death j while doing some plumbing work i back of Dughi's Ice Cream parlor, j By mistake he took hold of a live wire and was unconscious when j found. He was soon resuscitated, j His hand was badly burned from the ; wire. ! I A force of twenty-five convietsj from the State Farm in Halifax County have been sent to the South Atlantic Trans-Continental Railway camps near Waterville, in Haywood County. This force will aid in the construction of a railroad from Knoxville through Asheville to Ruth erdfordton. This road will be under State control. Charles Stines, of Madison County, who was convicted February, 1905, of rape and sentenced to death, sen tence having later been commuted to life imprisonment, was conditionally pardoned last week by Governor Kitchin. The principal witness against the defendant was a woman of bad character and afterwards told that she swore falsely. The solicitor rec ommended pardon. Mr. Mills General Manager of Elktn and Alleghany Railroad. Mr. John A. Mills, of Raleigh, pres ident of the Raleigh and Southport Railroad, has ibeen elected general manager of the Elkin and Alleghany Railroad also. Mr. Mills has taken an important part in financing the en terprise. Mr. Hoi man Bernard Xow at Fair port, Iowa. Mr. Holman Bernard left Raleigh Monday, to report to-day at Fairport, Iowa, where he has accepted a posi tion as special assistant in the Gov ernment Fisk Laboratory. Mr. Ber nard has just completed his fourth Jear in medicine, but will spend an other year at his studies before en tering the duties of his chosen pro fession. Mr. Coen Rowland Suffers Strofce of Paralysis. Mr. Coen Rowland, who lives near Willow Springs, Wake County, suf fered a stroke of paralysis Friday. Mr. Rowland was operated on at Rex Hospital last spring for an abscess m the stomach. The wounds never pealed. The paralysis affected Mr. Rowland from the wounds downward er the rest of the body. Mr. Row tend is a bright young man about seventeen years old, and is the son of Mr. Bennett Rowland. Montague Held Under $2,000 Bond for Murder of Robertson. H. W. Montague, the young white jaan charged with the murder of J. p Robertson, near Eagle' Rock, Wake -ounty, on Sunday night, June 3rd, as given a preliminary hearing he ore a justice of the peace in Raleigh inursday afternoon and night and as bound over to the next erm of ftnrt Under a bond in the sun of $2, IZ Which was ven- Montague f lea elf-defense and claimed that e did not shoot until after Robert son fired on him. Montague fornv3r erai ! Granville County and sev wai of his relatives from that county hearti t0 Ettend the PrelImaary iirmhmm fHktef Arrrtrtl Im temih Owrwlls. Graham Oskley f ocder srrm at : CretferSeSd, g. C, oo the cnarge of bigamy. When the Sooth Carolina authorise are iaUffied with fcfis the ? Vak County authorities m ask for his presence again In Wake, Inhere be U wanted to complete a ! five years sentence for house-break-1 ins. Graham Oakley and hi brother, Ira Oakley, alio an escaped convict, wire, disturbing factor in the cora iuunity of Fuquay Springs. Graham Oakley wa arretted in Barton's Creek township. Wake County, four years ago. on the charge of breaking into the bout of Mr. Ora Cash, a white man. Oak. ley rsas subsequently tried, convict 1 and sentenced to five years on the roads, but he escaped within a year. .Several Towns Itiddlng for the School for the Feeble-Minded. At a meeting of the trustees of the School for Feeble Minded in Raleigh, a few days ago a number of cities and towns made offers of money and lands for a site for the school. The selection was defeated for about two weeks and competition was left open until June 21st, up to which time any of the towns or cities may increase their bids and new one3 come for ward. The final bids must be in by June 21st. The trustees will meet June 22nd at Wilson and examine the site offered by that town and thou visit the other proposed sites before a proposition is finally accepted. Raleigh, Lilllngton. Kinston.Wash ington, Lenoir and Wilson have put in bids for the school. The last Leg islature passed an act providing for the establishment for such a school in tne hiaie. Meeting of Commissioners. On Friday the Board of County; Commissioners of Wake passed a! resolution setting July 4th as Central j Highway Day in Wake County. The' resolution provided that during the! week following all citizens along the proposed highway through Wake County be urged to go to work and construct this county's portion of the highway, or if they can not give their time, to donate an equivalent amount of money. The chairman of the Board is to appoint the supervisors of the work. A committee to revise the jury list was also appointed Friday. The com missioners will hold another meeting on June 26th. APEX HAS DISASTROUS FIRE. Most of Business Section Wiped Out By the Conagration Early Monday Morning One Fatal Injury. Apex, Wake County, was visited by a fifty thousand dollar fire early Monday morning when the main bus iness section of the town was wiped out. The fire was also the cause of one fatal injury. Graham Herring, formerly Apex, who was serving as relief operator at New Hill, attempt ed to board a passing through freight, so as to get to Apex and help fire, but when he tried to swing on he lost his hold and fell under the train. One leg was cut off and his skull fractured. He was brought to Raleigh and placed in the hospital,' but there are no hopes for his recov ery. ! The fire was discovered about one' o'clock Monday morning in a-frame building owned by the Apex Land Company and was occupied by J. W. Jenks' meat market. The owners claimed there had been no fire in the place for the previous twelve hours. The fire spread rapidly to build ings occupied by the Merchants and Farmers Bank, H.,C. Oliver & Co., wholesale merchants; Harwood Com- Who Was There That You Knew? IN the shadowy ranks of those who marched to defeat or death or victory fifty years ago in the mighty conflict that convulsed this great nation, is there father or grandfather or uncle of yours ? Would you like to see a photograph of him in that long ago day of his youth a photograph that he never knew was taken? Perhaps we can show you one; and in any case, we can tell you a story, stranger than any detective fiction, of 3,500 priceless photographs that were lost and are found again. . - 3,500 Long Buried Photographs of the Civil War THEY were taken br the greatest photographer in the United States of that day; they were bought by the United States Government for $30,000; they were buried in the War Department for 50 years they are buried Acre stUl. But a duplicate set was kept by the photographer who died poor and broken down; that duplicate set was knocked from pillar to post for nearly 50 years, until it was discovered by a New Enelauul collector. J. Pierpont Morgan tried to secure the collection Ex-President Garfjeld and General Benjamin F. Butler said it was worth j&150.000 yet with the help of the Rkvmw ok Rk views, the entire collection has been gathered into 10 great volumes and is placed within your reach at less than the value of one of the photographs. It is the one accurate, impartial history of the Civil War for the camera cannot lie. It tells the story of the War you never heard before. Taken under protection of the Secret Service, these photographs bring to light thousands of little known phases of the war; they penetrate to strange places and record strange things. REMEMBER: Our privilege of selling these books is limited as to time. Our supply of Free Portfolios is limited in quantity. You must be prompt to secure either. Better mail this coupon today. . j'Asy, the J&s&roea 4rscflef la,, ttcr fit It J. i0rU a4 mi?. aswi th rriecce d S. V. Ha4o. All th btsUdiert r totally ttroyed. nbll tfce rr i&jstrel Mr? era I others, fx in lUtlldiajpk and Sturii. Building of Apex La&d as 4 lss. proressest Compsy, f ITS iBsraxiCe. II. II. Pates baUdlcjr. $1,000; no insurance. Apex Botlllcr. Work $1,000; bo insurance. W. H. Harwsrd's general tore. $l-.ooO; $7,000 Insurance. R. J. Rollins! store, $1,S00; $.0 iceurance. A.V. Raucom's drug-store. $.0tH; $5,400 insurance. Merchants and Farmers Bank. $3,000 insurance; $1,100 insurance- H. C. Olive Company's store, $7, 500; $4,600 insurance. S. V. Hudson's residence. $1,200; $800 Insurance. The stock of. Pate & Company was damaged to the extent of $1,750, while that of the Watkins Seymour Hardware Company was damaged to the extent of $500. Mr. S. T. Ben nett's stock was damaged about $1, 000, the loss being covered by Insur-' ante. The two-ftory brick building of Sellars & Mason was damaged to the extent of $1,000. The library of 'Attorney Percy J. Olive was destroyed, the loss amount ing to $1,500, there being about $750 insurance. His automobile was also burned. The fixtures in the of fice of Drs. R. W. Johnson and J. C. Mann, valued at several hundred, dollars were destroyed, the amount being partially covered by insur ance. The Seaboard Air Line water tank, was also burned. For a time the whole town was threatened, but the fire was gotten under control about 4 o'clock. Three persons were slightly in-! jured by falling buckets and glass,! these being Mr. Harvey McKee, Mr. i Jesse Norris and Rev. J. R. Edwards. I MORE 'MILLS TO CLOSE DOWN. Outlook Not Encouraging to Opera tives and Owners of Cotton Mills. The prospects are that many of the cotton mills in this and other States will close down! during the summer months. A reporter of the Greens boro Xews tells of the view taken by the mill owners in that town: "According to local people who are interested in cotton mills and who are pretty well informed as the situ ation existing in the cotton mill cir cles, the prospects for the remaining months of the summer are not at all flattering, and the opinion has been advanced by some that a number of mills throughout the State, as well as in other States, may be forced to close down for a few weeks in order to cope with the condition. "There is knowrn to be a general curtailment either going on now or prepared for and this process is be lieved by some will be extensive be tween now and the time of getting to the new cotton crop. The curtail ment, as is anticipated in this and other Southern sections, is not a con dition found here alone, but is one that exists in Northern as well as Southern mills." FIRST BALE OF COTTON AT HOUSTON. Sold for Over One Thousand Dollars Eleven Days Earlier Iuui Former Record. Houston, Texas, June 12. Estab lishing a new crop record by eleven days for first appearance of the new cotton crop, a bale of Cameron Coun- 12 of Th FREE Picture For the Cost of Maffia In order to give you some idea of the greatness of this work we will send you 12 superb reproduc tions of the photographs free of charge in a handsome portfolio. These photographs are very ex pensive and valuable, but you send only 10 cents to cover the cost of mailing. They are not only interesting from a historic stand point, but. framed, make a splen did addition to your library walls. At the Mot time we will tell yea bow tb iieTlew oj .Renews ru offer this S1SO.0O0 collection ei 3.690 pbotogrmpha at the price the United Btatee oovera ment paid tor three of the picture!. Review Send the coupon of Reviews at once. 1 J Aster Place. r S NewTork.ltY. Send me. free ef charge. the 12 rearodoctiena o ear newlTdiecovered Brady Civil War Bboterraphs ready for framing and ceatained In a haniltam. nnrtfolio - Also seed me the story ef these picture and tell me bow, for what tne goTernmen . paid for half a deten prints. II can make the whole collection say m. I eacleee 1 cents to cover the coot of mailing. ..Hams j ,.' ,"f ...,,v ' j - , Address ... XT n&U rtf4 . tfc . f cvsis miuhjk3&w f4ay H rr a fr f tmr4 Mail asd tw fc t& bl4dr fart f ta team's my tmm CaAro Cmty s fe4 &y tUl tnla Scsn it r ln4 oilier -am wr mate for the exthaar The cottoa ms mli at $2-ll$l pr posed. t total wr'ctjt W4s OJ pounds aad tt prl $2.SS, Tlsls was the h!:het j-ric rtr psid on the Hotistos etchace for a b$ ot cotton. It vaa cU4 as strict mlddlisg. Tlr 1010 tYop W th4 tc Valsw able, Washington, June 12 The rouoa crop f mo was announced to-day to be the rawt vtluable eter pro duced In the United State. Esti mated in the Census Bureau's annual bulletin, the crop list year was val ued at $9.lO.0GO compired with $812.00,000 for 1909. Terrible Picture of Suffering Clinton. Ky. Mrs- M. a McElroy. in a letter from Clinton, vrltea: "For six year I was a lufferer from female troubles. I could not eat. and could not stand on my feet, without suffering great pain, I had lost hope. After using Cardu! & week, I began to Improve. Now I feel better than in six years." Fifty years of success in actual practice, it positive proof, furnished by those who have tried it, that Cardui can always be relied on for relieving fe male weakness and disease. Try Cardui, to-day, now! FOR SALE! A Valuable Tract of Land. Pursuant to the ordeY of the Su perior Court of Wake County in the case of 1 Carrie L. Brantley against Reta G. Brantley and others, I will offer for sale at the court-house door in Raleigh, on Tuesday, the 11th day of July, 1911, the following piece or parcel of land adjoining the Gray Massey homestead, W. R. Brantley and others, bounded as follows: Beginning at a stake on the Ral eigh and Tarboro road near W. R. Brantley's house, thence nearly south to the fish-pond branch, thence down said branch to the little creek, thence up said creek to the said Massey's line to the road, thence down the road to the beginning. Containing fifty acres more or less. CM. BERNARD. Commissioner. Terms: Cash. June 10, 1911. (4t) Norfolk Southern Railroad ROUTE OP THE "NIGHT EXPRESS." Travel xia Raleigh (Union Station) and Norfolk Southern Railroad to and From All Points in Eastern North Caro lina. SCHEDULE IN EFFECT JUNE 11 X? B. -The following schedule fig ures published as information only, and are not guaranteed. Trains Leave Raleigh 9:15 p. m. Daily "Night Ex press," Pullman Sleeping Car for Norfolk. 6:15 a. m. Daily for Wilson, Washington and Norfolk. Broiler Parlor Car service between Raleigh and Norfolk. 6:15 a. m. Daily, except Sunday, for New Bern via Chocowinity. Par lor Car service. 3:00 p. m. Daily, except Sunday, for Washington. Trains Arrive Raleigh 7:20 a. m. Daily 11:30 a. m. daily except Sunday and 8:15 p. m. daily. Trains Leave Goldsboro 10:15 p. m. Daily "Night Ex press" Pullman Sleeping Car for Norfolk via New Bern. 7:15 a. m. Daily for Beaufort and Norfolk. Parlor Car between Washington and Norfolk. 3:20 p. m. Daily for New Bern, Oriental and Beaufort, Parlor Car Service. For further information and reser vation of Pullman Sleeping Car space, apply to D. V. CONN. General Agent, Raleigh, N. C. W. R. HUDSON. W. W. CROXTON, General Supt, Gen. Pass. Agt-, Norfolk. Virginia. THE MARKETS RALEIGH COTTON MARKET. (Corrected every Thursday by Cbas. S. Johnson A Co.) Good middling, 15 c Strict middling, 154c Middling, 15c RALEIGH PRODUCE MARKET. Butter ......... . Lard ............ Eggs......:...... ....... 2O0- ...... 14e - 20e 221c ....... 40 O I Hams . . . ... ....... He&s Spring chickens!... Sweet potatoes .... . Con Peas ............. ..... 2002s .....11.00 95c .....$2.00 Attention Cotton Faner Wc mil appreciate it, II all our gta csitssacrs Ul call asJ get plamifif tti from m at eocc as c will only bojr ttd frown from settl furn isHetl by us next scaoa. For iKwe wc wilt pay a fancy price io plcai call at once and get iKcsu xi. a. swtiris, BUFF ORHKGTOK. BARRED FLYHOUTtt ROCKS ROSE AND SINGLE CCliB RHODE ISLAND REDS $150 PER IS REASONABLE FERTILITY GUARANTEED JAS. I. JOHNSON, Raleigh, N. C Phone No 1. CRINKLEY' Department Store RALEIGH. : :: NORTH CAROLINA Spring News MILLINERY. Ladies' Eeady-to-Wear Hats, Ladies' Skirts, Ribbon. SHOE DEPARTMENT. New line Low Cut Shoes for Ladies sod Children, Men and Boys. DRY GOODS AND NOTIONS, TINWARE, GLASSWARE Best R. F. D. Mail Boxes, 85c Baby Go-Cart, 11.85 to 115.00. STOVES AND HARDWARE. Lamps, 10c to $4.00. Clocks, 50c to $4.50. CARPET AND MATTING. Rugs, 30c to U8.00. FURNITURE. Feather Pillows 50c, 60c, 70c Iron Beds, Cribs and Cots. TRUNK HEADQUARTERS. It Pays to Pay Cash. CRINKLEY'S. E. B. EVANS & SOUS, NO. 8 KA8T HAVIJL T., KALZIOH. PLU M BERS. Qu and Bteam fitting, and Gen eral Repair Work. rirst-2at work at moderate orlca. Internstod Ccrresrcndence Scfcccls OF SCRANTON. PA. will trala you, duiiag spare time, for a Government position or to fill a re sponsible technical position at a larg er salary than you are now getting. For full Information, fill out thr coupon below and mail It to our Washington office. U. D. Hanley, Supt.. "I. C. a," Wash Ington, D. C, Ofice 619, Penn sylvania Avenue. N- W. Dear Sir: Please send me infor mation as te how I can become a mention eti clon) by spare time study wi tiout leaving my present work uatll am qualified. My name Is Street and No., Town and 8tate. BAKER tY STEWART ABOUl YOUR Carriage, Wagon 2nd Buggy Repairs WE DO EVERY KIND OF Uphclstcri, !!:rs2-St:z zrJ We also do up-to-date PAINTING and RUB BER TIRING. Ou r prices are right, and we guarantee every job wc do. If you have not had your Buggy done for the Spring, see US. Baker & Stewart til StmtM CUmmi 8U. :: RaLEJCB. M. C. (Jctt Back orW.A. Mtatt's StosjeJ RalQigii, n. C. for Hatching FROM KGIH-GRADE FOWLS SMITH'S CAFE Wi FcnfcS tt3 tut tW lzzy tea Everuttilno in Season Uszls Scnrcd ca Stat l!:tf:3 Omt pries art Dm aarrtea ia Ow tw aleatr fitted . ad N. ErtiMig Stmt RALDGIl : : : COJTII CJtfCLCA James L JoHnmsoini Opp. Post Office RALEIGH, . .. N.C. JEEPS every thing usually kept in a first class Drug Store. Fine Assortment Of GARDEN SEEDS Special Attention to All Mail Orders. NOTICE. Notice Is hereby given that on this day. A- Pugbi has sold his icecream business to "The Dughl Ice Cream Company,", of which Mr. Geo. L. H. White wiir be manager. This com pany will conduct said business from this date. All debts due A. Dughi will be payable to him and be will not be liable for any of the debts of the "Dughi Ice Cream Co." The "Dughi Ice Cream Co' will not be liable for any debts of A. DughL This April 4. 1911. A. DUGHI, ' GEO. h. H. WHITE, Mgr. Dughi Ice Cream Co. 4-5-4t L. G. GILL RALEIGH. ' CLOTHES PRESSED, V T CLEANED OR ALTERED $mtm'$ Cafe

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