T i "This Argus o'er the people's rights Doth an eternal vigil keep ; No soothingstrains of Maia's son Shall lull its hundred eyes to sleep." $1.00 a Year. $1.00 a Year GOLDSBORO. N. C, SATURDAY. OCTOBER 16,1909. VOL,. XXIV NO. 91 i it. -J . V r 1 n VAST RAILROAD NEEDS Hat Yet Prepared Fof Meet ing Demands of Busi ness Revival. Hi Editor Edmonds Estimates That Transportation Expenditures of $lj000,000,000 a Tear Will Be Required. Ribhard Edmonds, editor of the Manufacturers Record of Baltimore, while in New York this week, in an interview with a reporter of the New Vork News Bureau, said: "Though general business through out the country has not yet joined fully in the remarkable activity pre vailing in iron and steel, railroads are already becoming congested with traffic and many complaints of scar city of cars are heard in Alabama and West Virginia and other other iron and coal centres. "We are now producing iron at the rate of nearly 30,000,000 tons a year, or over 3,000,000 tons above the rec ord output of 1907. If other indus tries were as active as iron and steei (and they mast inevitably become so), railroads would be as much over whelmed with business as they were when the railroad system of the coun try practically collapsed in the sum mer and fall of 1907. Moreover, the really marvelous activity in iron ana steel is as yet without the benefit oi heavy railroad purchases of materials. When railroad buying attains tne heavy totals which their necessities will force in the near future, the dan ger to the country will be a scramble for Iron and steel products, with the possibility of a runaway market. There is possibly as much danger in a speculative iron market as in a wild stock speculation. If prices go toe nirii nnnsnmntion is checked, but while consumption is absorbing such a vast amount of iron as at present, the Iron trade must of necessity be crowded at high pressure. What will aappen when all business revives it is hard to say, but it is quite certain that tne outlook indicates a very great ex- T.ondnn in pvfirv leading industry to f " I keep in touch with the remarkable ex- I tansion of iron and steel. The rail roads seem to be at last waking up to the situation, but they have been so slow in doing this that traffic is al ready growing far more rapidly than railroad facilities, and the danger ahead of us is a collapse in railroads from inability to handle freight. I very day is simply emphasizing the j fact that railroad expansion has not kept up witn tne growm ui mo try, and that at least $5,000,000,000 to $f,C(,0l' 1 00 would be required to push railroad building and enlarging of railroad operations to a point where facilities for handling freight I nearly completed. It shows that 34, would equal the demands of the next I goo landlords own land covering 113 two or three years. If $1,000,000,000 a year for the next ten years could be expended upon railroad construction the lacilities at that time would not eciiial the certainty of the demand. Any legislative action that delays the investment needed for ailroad con- struction eirnply intensifies the situa- Lion and really makes all present rail- roads a greater monopoly than if rail- road construction could be Droauiy pushed in all directions. "In connection with this marvelous expansion in iron and steel, it is evi dent that the great steel operators are endeavoring to safeguard the fu ture by the purchase or control by lease of the sources of ore supplies The announcement that the eBthlehem iuouv Steel corporation nas secureu one ui the large ore properties of Northern New York follows very quickly after the report that it has arranged for heavy investments in Texas, where, according to reports made by the San ta Fe Railroad to the State Railroad Commission, contracts have been made lor opening up ore properties with a view to furnishing the Bethle hem people 1,000,000 tons of Texas ore a year. "Similar efforts are being made in manv directions as to coking coal properties, as well as ore properties, showing that the far-seeing men of to-1 . The discussion of war between Eng day are recognizing the tremendous I land and Germany at least haa this fiirr.rft throueh the ownership of the raw materials for iron and steel mak- ins. "It Is hardly to be expected that the rate of Iron production which has pre - vailed during the last forty years will continue for the next ten, but if it did so continue it would, as shown in a recent paper by Professor Porter the University of Cincinnati, carry te-iron production in 1920 to 85,000, 000 tons. It is, however, entirely within reason to estimate that iron production will double by 1920, and give us at that time between 50,000,000 and 60,000,000 tons, which would mean a rractical doubling of the entire iron coke and steel Industries 4 of the country. As other industrial activities in the long run keep pace with iron and steel, this would mean that the general traffic of the country in ten years will double, unless so hampered by railroad facilities as to make this impossible. The problem of the day, therefore, is to make a possibility the finding of the $10,000,000,000 needed for railroad expansion during the next ten years." PRACTICAL FLIGHTS ARE NOW SEAR AT HAND Mr. Wilbur Wright Says He Will Have Machines of Commercial Value in Two or Three Tears. College Park, Md., Oct. 14. The day of the use of the aeroplane for busi ness journeys is almost at hand, de clares Mr. Wilbur Wright. In the course of two or three years, he asserts, he will be building ma chines that would be of practical use for making short journeys. He made this statement in the course of an interview with Mr. Gus- tavus A. Duncan, a mining engineer of Nevada, who visited him at his shed here. In the mining and desert regions of the Southwest tnere are many places which cannot be reached on horseback or by railroad, and Mr. Duncan wanted to know if he could get an aeroplane Dy wnicn to ma.a.e such trips. While Mr. Wright could not accom modate him now, he assured Mr. Dun- an that he would in two or three i 1 J. t J T years nave macnmes tnat couiu oe lepended upon to do the work. NEW TORE THE ART CENTRE. So Says Mr. Seymour Thomas on His Return From Paris. New York, Oct. 14. Mr. Seymour rhomas, an artist of this city, return- ad yesterday on the Vaderland, of the Red Star line, with his wife, after aaving spent three years in Paris, where he exhibited many of his pic tures, one a portrait of Dr. wimam Osier, which, he said, was well re ceived. He painted m Paris a por- rait of M. Antonin Dubost, president Df the French Senate. Asked if he thought, like so many other returning artists, that the art centre of the world is moving to this ountry, he said: Yes, I am of that opinion. New ,r l : v A t- 1U1 i& ueuuuuus " - ists do not remain in Paris as long nowadays as in former years. Where men lived in Paris thirty years, they remain now only two or three years in order to get the atmosphere." LONDON WORTH $3,000,000,000. County Council Completes Study of Metropolis I London, Oct. 13. The London coun- I ty council has spent a decade in pre- I paring a ground plan of London show i mg ne owners of the land. This is I Square miles, these being mostly sin gle house owners j sixty square miles are owned by 187 j persons, organizations and corpora- I tions. One-third of the area belongs I 0 crown, the Ecclesiastical Com i missioners, the county council and the cny corporation. It is estimated that I the present value of the land on which London is built is $3,000,000,000 which will be increased to $3,175,000, 000 by 1930. Mrs. Cleveland in Switzerland. Mrs. Grover Cleveland, accompanied by her daughters, Esther and Marian, and sons, Francis and Richard, ar rived at Lausanna, Switzerland, yes- terday. It is understood that the chil dren will be placed in school there and that Mrs. Cleveland will take up her residence nearby for an indefinite period. TODAY'S COTTON MARKET. New York Futures. Open. Close. 13.56 13.63 13.67 October 13.49 December . . 13.60 January .. .. .. 13.61 Local spots, lS virtue it muddles the Japanese American war waters, An airship trust may be possible in 1 the future, but not this year, although the Wright brothers are trying to lay the foundation for one, of I An inquiry has arisen as to the use of benzoate of soda in pemmican, but - the Eskimoes probably have not kept up with the Remsen discussion. The young Shah of. Persia Is trying to run away from his job. He wants to see his exiled father, and he would be glad to stay with him, sharing his lot, ' V TO DEDICATE NEW CHURCH. Magnificent $100,000 Catholic Struc ture at Asheville. Asheville, N. C, Oct. 13 Arrange ments are about complete for the ded ication here Sunday of the new St. Lawrence Catholic Church, an edifice that cost in the. aggregate possibly more than $100,000. The dedicatory service will be in charge of Bishop Haid. There will be many visiting priests and other prominent Catholics here to attend the services and to as sist Rev. Father Marion, the beloved head of the church in Asheville. The greater portion of the dedica tory services will be held outside the church, beginning about 10:45 o'clock. The procession will move to the clos ed doors led bv the cross-bearer, and followed by Bishop Haid and the priests. The doors will be opened and the procession will move down the aisles while the litany is sung. The musical program will be elaborate and in charge of Mrs. O. C. Hamilton, of Asheville. There will be a choir of twenty-five voices selected from the best musical talent of the city. The last portion of the church to be completed will be the panel over the entrance. This panel arrived in sections yesterday by express from Boston and will be placed Thursday and Friday. It will show a figure of Christ with His disciples and will be a beautiful thing. DAUGHTERS OF CONFEDERACY Annual Convention North Carolina Di vision Assembled Testerday. Wilmington, N. C, Oct. 14. The thirteenth annual convention of the North Carolina Division of the United Daughters of the Confederacy assem bled in the commandery room of the Masonic Temple yesterday morning with more than 100 delegates from va rious parts of the State in attendance. The day was one of great activity for the Daughters. A business ses sion in the morning, luncheon at the Elks Temple, followed by another business session and a delightful river trip in the afternoon and a brilUant reception last night, made up the pro gram for the day. MILLIONS OF LIVES LOST. An Awful Toll Collected by Consump tion Many Unnecessary Death From This Disease. if people could only understand that systematic catarrn is an internal ais- , i -i I ease tnat external applications can- not cure, they would not need to be warned so often about this malady, wh:ch, when neglected, paves the way oftentimes for consumption, at the cost of millions of lives every year, Yet catarrh may be cured, if the right treatment is employed. . Catarrh is caused by a general ais- eased state of the system which leads commonly to annoying and perhaps serious local conditions, which may prove a fertile breeding ground for germs of consumption. External rem- edies give but temporary ease. The onlv way to successfully treat catarrh is by employing a medicine which is absorbed and carried by the blood to all parts of the system, so that the mucous membrane or inter- nal lining of the body is toned up and made capable of resisting the infec tion of consumption and other dis eases. We have a remedy prepared from the prescription of a physician who for thirty years studied and made ca tarrh a specialty, and whose record was a patient restored to health in every case where his treatment was followed as prescribed. That remedy is Rexall Mucu-Tone. We are so posi tive that it will completely overcome catarrh in all its various forms, whether acute or chronic, that we promise to return every penny paid us for the medicine In every case where it fails or for any reason does not satisfy the user. We want you to ry Rexall Mucu- Tone on our recommendation and guarantee. We are right here where you live, and you do not contract any obligation or ris wnen you try Kexaii Mucu-Tone on our guarantee, we have Rexall Mucu-Tone in two sizes, 50 cents and $1.00. Very often the taking of one 50-cent bottle is suffi cient, to make a marked impression upon the case. Of course in chronic cases a longer treatment is necessary. The average in such instances is three $1.00 bottles. Remember you can ob tain Rexall Remedies In Goldsboro on ly at our store The Rexall Store. H. Hill & Son, General Bates Dead. New York, Oct. 13. Maj.-Gen. Al f red E. Bates, former paymaster - gen eral of the army, died here this af- ternoon. . General Bates was stricken for 50 cents and they guarantee it to that, when the property owners so de wlth apoplexy Sunday. With him at banish dandruff, stop .falling hair and sire, the city will cause the awnings the lime were his two married daugh- Itching scalp in two weeks or money above referred to to be removed with ters, Mrs. F. R. Swift, of North Cafo- back. out cost to the owner. - Una, and Mrs. M. C. McKee, of New Parisian Sage is an ideal hair tonic, JOHN R. HIGGINS, Mayor. York, not sticky or greasy - D. J. BROADHURST, Clerk, THE CARRAWAY CASE Judge Connor Declines to Require Bill of Particu lars to be Furnished. Federal Court at Wilmington Postpon ed and the Date of the Raleigh Term Is Changed to December 13. Raleigh, N. C, Oct. 5. Judge Con- nor, oi tne reaerai oourt, wuaj maue an order declining to require the pros- ecutlon to furnisn the deienaants witn a bill of particulars In the noted case I against Cashier J. R. B. Carraway, of a ew ern Dana, ana against v.. Stevens, editor of the New Bern Jour- pal, and J. F. Taylor, charged with conspiracy witn tne ,casmer oi tne bank througn overaraits. However, the judge did direct that counsel for the defendants be permit- ted to examine the checks involved in the cases and the books of the bank I relating to them, an officer to be pres ent while the inspection is made. Judge Connor gave notice that he would try this case at New Bern for the court term to convene October 18, the Carraway case, because he has when all the "men folks" were at the traditions of the Puritant democracy tne two approached the roller this af to be in Richmond shortly thereafter front and the blockade was drawing and gold, luxury and pleasure a rep- ternoon the attendant moved close ta to sit with the Circuit Court of Ap- its coils tighter, is pathetic In its il- etition under modern and more com- him but thought that when the front peals. Therefore, he will name a date for a special term for this ca3e only. Another order by Judge Connor makes perpetual an injunction re- straining J. B. winders, or Warsaw, from cutting timber from lands In I Duplin county in which the Norfolk & I Southern Railroad has an Interest. Orders are also made by Judge Con nor continuing both the Wilmington and ""Raleigh Federal Courts. The Wilmington court is continued from November 8 to February 8, 1910". The Raleigh court from November 23 to December 13. These continuances are for the reason that Judge Connor will spend some time in Richmond sitting with the Circuit Court of Appeals. DIAZ AND-TAFT. Will Hold a Secret Meeting at El Paso Next Saturday. El Paso, Tex., Oct. 12. What Pres ident Diaz says to President Taft and vice versa when they shake hands in vCiB " ii irasu ouiui, oe 5ivCU iU TTll T O-J. J Vv . worm umy a iuej uuuusc w ec w. Their meeting will be secret, A telegram received by Secretary Ades, of the arrangement committee. and Chief John Wilkie, of the secret service station, states "That no per- sons will be present at the meeting except the President's secretaries, . wno win iaier give out ivir. iaus ie- marks to President Diaz." It is un I derstood that the secret meeting is the wish of President Diaz. FROST IN CQTTOtf BELT, Considerable Damage Done to the I Staple Another Frost. charlotte, N. C, Oct. 13. A killing frost and the lowest temperatures of the fall seaSon was reported in the cotton belt this morning, according to the weather bureau here. Considera ble damage has been done to cotton, but to what extent is yet a matter of speculation. Young corn was ruined, but the pea crop generally saved. Frost is expected again tonight. Uncle Joe engaged In patting the Tammany tiger is a sight for gods and men. The general impression is that a diplodocus should be sent alike to Cook and to Peary. SOCIETT WOMEN'S HAIR, A Simple Treatment That Will Make It Truly Fascinating J. H. Hill & Son Guarantee It. Nowadays every up-to-date woman has radiant hair What a foolish creature a woman would be If she lost the opportunity to add to her attractions. Yet in America today there are hun- dreds of thousands of women with harsh, faded characterless hair who do not make any attempt to impr0ve - In Paris most women who use Pa- - , , s h lustrous and luxur iant hair. And any woman reader -of The Argus .can have attractive and lus trous hair in a few days' time by us- - ing this great hair rejuvenator, Pari - 1 sian Sage, J. H. Hill & Son sell a large bottle SOUTHERN CHIVALRT. A Movement Afoot' to Memorialize Heroic Women of Confederacy. Boston Transcript. From the standpoint of "chivalry" it is somewhat of a reproach to the men of the North that while the aid the women of that section gave to the cause of the Union is as yet without public memorial, the men of the South are raising funds for a monument commemorating the services and sac rifices of the women of the South to I uie uomeaeracy. i j y-t a l in South Carolina the men nave subscribed $20,000 for the monument, I and the legislature has given state aid. No woman is allowed to contrib- j ute to the South Carolina collection. I in otner states, nowever, tne line nasiizmg ana canvassing the sixteen heretofore not been so strictly drawn, I but In the future the south Carolina I example is likely to have the force of law. -resumaDiy tne monument win De erected in Richmond, which is still sentimentally the "capital of the soutnern uonieaeracy. in Kicnmona, notably in tne museum in tne uon- federate White House," are already many visible evidences of the loyalty of the women of the South to the Con- federacy while it was battling for life, I and of the sympathy their daughters and granddaughters feel for "the lost cause." The exhibition of devices to which I the Confederate women were driven I lustration of the efforts to make ne cessities satisfy tastes formed on lux uries. The Confederate cloth, hand woven land dyed with such "extracts" as could be substituted for chemicals ; the rough dresses bearing Improvised I finery, either of deftly fashioned rem nants or of coarse substitutes on I which refinement had lavished Inge nuity all these things bespeak a state of siege, with the women of the besieged doing their utmost to help I the defenders and setting brave faces toward the encircling foe. IN "BLEEDING KANSAS." Kansas has become fairly prosper ous Wheat dtil it. Rut nroanerltv could not keen the men of Kansas alive, and todav the state is full of widows who own nronertv. This rv qo ti o nrttTira with Hr-h farms I m,lf-h oniitr.i nn th Ride. The nnnr widow has disanneared in Kan-1 ' I SHM. III 1J.CI a LCd.ll aUUCttlQ iiittUJ i "7. I" , . 1 wall nrnvliul tirlth thla -wnrld'a frnnAa " ' v - I The situation in Kansas has started a new sociological inquiry, ana peo ple in that state are endeavoring to ascertain why the number of women who lose their husbands exceed so largely the number of husbands who lose their wives, and the widows are mnstlv rirh! ThA Kansas Citv Star - arrives at the conclusion that as long ao mon ir, mnntrv ro in fnr mak - ing money the way they do, and strain " ' WWW thmsAlvPa tn cHva their families as good a layout as anybody else, there are bound to be widows who own property. The Star does not seem to regret the situation. It is a part of the prosperity of Kansas, a state that has nothing at present the matter with her. A state well supplied with rich widows may be a novelty, but when the fact becomes widely known will there be any widows at all in Kansas? The worst part of it is that the whole controversy will start over again when the south pole is discov ered. Some of the new hats are eighteen Inches high and cost $1,700. Note the reduction from a flat rate of $100 an inch. v' A mail order marriage contracted through a matrimonial agency has been held valid in Kansas City. The law does not recognize or protect fools in matrimonial matters. AWNING ORDINANCE, At a called meeting of the board of aldermen of this city, held on October I 1 a. 1909, the following was adopted, Ivis: That all stationary awnings on the I sidewalks of the following named streets, to-wlt: Centre and John! streets between Chestnut and Ash streets, Chestnut street between John! and James streets, Walnut street be- - Itween William and Carolina streets, Ash street between John and Centra streets, Mulberry street between John and James street, shall be re- moved at once, and all1 overhanging signs that extend more than three (3) ifeet from the property line over said sidewalks, shall be removed also. And PLANS FOR $1,000,000 BUILDING. Officers of Southern Commercial Con gress Accept Plans. Washington, D. C, Oct. 13. At a meeting of the officers of the Southern Commercial Congress today plans for the organization's million dollar building to be erected in this city were accepted. The structure will be built from contributions made by various organ izations throughout the South, and J W: Parker, president of the congress s 1 1 i . win leave tomorrow on a sneaking tour in that section of the country He goes first to Greenville, S. C, then to Atlanta, Ga., and Birmingham Ala. The complete itinerary has not been completed yet. The work nf nrn. states which will be called upon to contribute to the congress will, it is figured, occupy more than a year, The object of the congress is to ad vance tne interests of the South through the maintenance here of a bu reau representing every state THE HANDWRITING IS THERE. When Guglielmo Ferrero, the great Italian historian, was in this country I last year he was made much of and I he was a welcome guest at the White House. When he went home he told the people of his countrv that th an- ti-plutocratic movement in America is I essentially a struggle between the old I plicated forms of the struggle which rent Rome for three centrues.- "In- dustrialism," he went on to say, 'seems to be destroying a part of the old-time America of Franklin and I Washington, and creating an America I less American than that of the past. I When and where this destruction will cease no one can say." I There is some truth in these state-1 ments. Privilege and special interests I do run riot in the national tariff bill. I Trusts and monopolies are crushing out in divers directions competition. I But Signor Ferrero is far too pessi- j mistic. The people are beginnine to I see the danger that threatens the I country and they are beginning to I curb It, to regulate it. I All that Signor Ferrero asserts was true ten years aS- Then Con- Sress and various legislatures were controlled by bosses and corpo- rations, but the evil work has been largely minimized. The public con- science has been quickened, and the prospect is that America will be kent from coimr to the does as Rome dirt - ... I pernor xiugnes started a great rev-1 olution when he exposed the big in surance companies of New York, and today fully one-half of the country is determined to shackle special priv-1 ilege. There are states, it Is true. I like Pennsylvania, and New Jersey, auu Ulau' nu w Virginia Still Iuieu oossea anQ magnates, out 1 th6 reform movement is spreading, I rulea ana ien years more W1U see coun- I . i J 1 tt -w . . . Lr as nearly no oi privilege as ltaiy ul utuer ia- WIien umiea States Senate is fully expurgated, Signor Ferrero may know that the re form has culminated. GROSS-PERKINS. Qulet Wedding Took Place at Noon Today. Mr. Lucien Gross, who holds a po sition with the John Slaughter Com pany in this city and numbers his friends by the score here, and Miss Ora Perkins, one of our city's most highly admired young ladies, were happily wedded today at high noon, Rev. J. H. Frizelle, pastor of St. John M. E. Church, officiating. The happy young people left on thenxed for today, but the postponement two o'clock train over the Southern for Burlineton. to spend the honey - moon among relatives of the groom. The Argus joins their army of friends in best wishes for all that is bright and good. The Los Angeles Taft banquet tick ets, are $25 apiece and this has put a damper on the dinner. Detroit and Pittsburg are in the a. I spotlight, having temporarily crowoea Cook and Peary out of it. I Rubber is aviating also. It has gone from sixty-seven cents a pound to $2.15 a pound. This is soaring some. ' I The automobile may replace the! horse, but the number of pedestrians will always remain about the same. I J When flying machines become num erous the top floor of a skyscraper I will be no more, private than ground floor. Jerome has declined to run again for district attorney of New York. The situation there is full of interest. Si- multaneous with Jerome's announce- ment is the one that Hearst will fight with the Republicans against Tam- man l PROF. GILES A SUICIDE Was Principal of Rosewood Academy Two Years Ago. Threw Himself In Front of a Steam Road Roller Near AgfcATille Testerday, Death Result ing Instantly. Asheville, N. C, Oct. 13. Mr. J. R. Giles, a prominent resident of Wil mington, N. C, and for two weeks an inmate of an Asheville sanitarium for mental diseases, sprang from beside an attendant who was taking him for a walk at 4 : 30 o'clock Jthis afternoon and plunged headlong beneath th wheels of a fifteen-ton steam roller re-surfacing the macadam road four miles from Ashevile and his head was fearfully mashed, death being instant. Mr. Giles was a high school teacher twenty-seven years old, who, it is said nad been morbid and disposed to sui- cide for half a dozen years, having ia tne period of his two weeks' stay la the sanitarium slashed his throat and sought to get his attendant to allow him to walk on the railway track. A& roller passed there was no danger. Mr. Giles, however, ran around the keeper an(l threw his head beneath the rear roller. His astuteness was shown by the fact that the roller was movine slowly and the driver could have stopped the machine if the man had cast himself in front of the engine. out Mr. Giles leaped m front of the rear roller, which the driver could not see, and his head was crushed beneath tne ponderous wheel. Deceased was a grandson of the late Mr. George V. Strong, for many years a prominent member of the Goldsboro bar, and a nephew of Mr. Clayton Giles, of Wilmington. Two years ago he served as princl- Pal of Rosewood Academy in Fork township, this county, where he waa highly esteemed, but declined re-elec tlon or last year's term- His untimely death and the manner of his going are deeply deplorable. i EFFECT ON HAVANA. rt i o -ri i . , . w xisasirous as nrs Havana, Oct. 12. The effects of the cyclone appear tonight to have been considerably less disastrous than at first supposed Communication haa v vana province and a large part of PU nar del Rio Province. In the former uu. uuu OJr xiuoua. I hilt fn Ott nrrt n a avva wwnrli a m a n "" v fine condition. Careful estimates of the damage suffered in the city and by the ship ping and in the harbor indicate that the loss will not exceed $500,000. THE TOBACCO TRUST CASE. United States Supreme Court Fixes Date for Hearing December 13. .Washington, D. C, Oct. 13. The Supreme Court today fixed December 13 for hearing arguments in the case of tne government against the Ameri- can Tobacco Company. The cases were instituted by the government to obtain the dissolution of the alleged trust. Their hearing was originally was made to allow Attorney-General 1 Wickersham to participate in the ar- guments. ATTRACTIVE LOW ROUND TRIP RATES AND SPECIAL TRAIN SERVICE TO RALEIGH AND RETURN ACCOUNT THE STATE FAIR.. A October 18-23, 1909. Account the North Carolina State Fair, the Southern Railway announces the sale of very low round trip tickets. I which will include one admission in the Fair Grounds, to Raleigh, N. C. October 16 to 23, with final return limit October 25, also announce the operation of special trains for this oc- casion as follows: i Wednesday and Thursday, October - 1 20 and 21, special train to leave Goldsboro at 7:30 a. m., arrive Ral- theleigh 9:15 a. m.; returning, to leave Raleigh at 5:15 p. m. All regular trains will Jbe provided I with extra coaches sufficient to take care of all who wish to go. For further information regarding rates, schedules, etc., ask your nearest agent, see posters or address B. ,H. DeButts, Traveling Passenger Agent. Raleigh. N. C. .. fl, V i--s t i , t. - ! ? I i to i ! ' i 1 it if TDTfcnaD ID) ID) TTVTHT