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No soothingstrains of Maia's son Shall lull itshundred eyes to sleep." $1.00, a Year, $1.00 a Year V eOU3SB01UK N. C, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1909. VOL. XXTV KC. 95 '"This Argus o'er the people's rights . Doth an eternal vigil keep ; y - 3 V - i V . ' 5 i "-it I V u i FIRST WOMAN AVIATOR Ors. Van Demaa, wife of In fantry Captain in Air Four Minutes. Diversion of More Than Ordinary In ' terest Furnished at Government Aerodrome at College Park. Woman Is Passenger. Washington. D. C.'. Oct 28.- A di version of more than ordinary Inter est from the dally flights was furnish ed yesterday by Wilbur Wright at the government aerodrome at College Park. Having coached hi sthree army officer pupils to the point where they are now able to operate an aeroplane themselves, Mr. Wright had for a pas senger a female aviation enthusiast in the person of Mrs. Van Deman. wife of Capt. Ralph H. Van .Deman. of the Twenty-first Infantry. The machine circled the aerodrome and was put through some 'intricate maneuvres, the flight lasting four min utes. The landing was made without the slightest mishap. Mrs. Van Deman received a round of applause as she stepped from the ma chine to the earth.. Mrs; Van Deman was the first wom an to - fly in a heavier-than-air ma chine in the United States. Mr. Wright and his brother Orville both have had women as passengers in their aero plane abroad, and Mrs. Nicholas Long worth at Fort Myer recently wished to make the trip in the aeroplane, but the Wright brothers have refused heretofore in the United States. It was only after Mrs. Van Deman had obtained permission from her husband that Mr. Wright consented to take her for a flight. The trip was made dur ing a calm. Mrs. Van Deman expressed herself as delighted with the unique sensation. , Mr. Wright afterward put the aero plane through several short flights to Instruct his pupils in gliding to earth from various heights with power shut off. THE SEABOARD TBAXSFEB Arrangements Perfected Receivers Will , Turn Over $12,000,0. . New York, Oct. 27 At a meeting of the boafd of directors of the Seaboard Air I ine Railway today arrangements were perfected for receiving the prop erty, wMoh is to beturnod over by the receivers at midnight on November S. C. II. Hix, general manager. , was des ignated to receive and receipt for the railroad, real estate and all physical properties of the Seaboard Air Line . system, in behalf of the board of di rectors. All moneys funds and secur ities will.be turned over to the treas urer, Robert I Nutt. and the secre- . tary, D. C. Porteous, who were author ized to receipt for the same. "A special committee of the board was appointed to . fill the existing va- eancles in the organization, including . that in the office of president.: : The amount of cash which will be i turned over to the railway by the re-. . ceivers and by the reorganization com mlttee being j largely the proceeds of , the securities recently, sold, will v amount-to more than-$12,000,000. The company will start business -free of all floating debt and with a w. considerable balance In the treasury carter the payment of all receivers .certificates and other current obliga . ttions. Prefers Death to Prison. Peterson, N. J.. Oct. 28. Forbid ding his counsel taking any further Steps in his behalf, Pietro Silverio, sentenced yesterday to die In the elec tric chair in the week of December 6 for the murder of Mrs. Rose Guarino, his former employer, declared today that lie preferred death to a long stay In prison. "The best I could hope for." he said. "was a life term, and that would be worse than death. Let them execute me and have done with it. The sooner the better." Lawyer Harmon, who defended Sil verio, had arranged to apply for a writ jot error, which would stay the carry' lag out of the death sentence for a time, but In accordance with the re quest of Silverio he will take no fur ther aetlen. Dies of Football Hurts. Wilmington, Del., Oct 28. Clarence Pierce, nineteen, died at the Delaware Hospital this evening from Injuries re cenved in a game pf football oh Sat urday afternoon. During a scrimmage young Pierce was thrown to the ground and several players jumped on him." The youths was carried from the field to his home, and qn Sunday his condition became so serious that he was taken' to the hospital, where he sank until his death this evening. WATKINS' TRIAL AT ASHE YULE. Defendant Had an Inning In the Tes. tlmony Yesterday Asheville, N. C. Oct 27. Today's sessions of the trial of F: C. Watkins for the killing of John Hill Bunting, at Black Mountain August 7, was featured by the production Of evidence highly beneficial to the defendant C. E. Adams, of Atlanta, testified to hearing Bunting and Collins using profane and vulgar language and of his efforts to quiet them; his wife told of hearing the men using profane lan guage and of being greatly, frightened. Proprietor Manly, of the hotel, testi fied that Clem Jones told him the men had Watkins down and he had to shoot Watkins' sister, Mrs. Craw ford, testified that Gowan-told her the men had Watkins down and her hus band said that Jones told him the men had Watkins down. Dave Glenn testified that Jones told him the men had Watkins down and that he thought the men were going to kill us - Leslie Hummel, clerk at the hotel. testified that Jones told him the men attacked Watkins. A number of wit nesses testified to defendant's - good character. The Cross-examinations were rigorous and whatever matters contradictory were developed will be used in argument The cross-exami nation by Judge Jones, of the defense, was resumed when court met yester day morning and witness was asked about statements he made to news papers some hours after the tragedy with a view to showing that they did not correspond to some Of those he made to the court Witness denied the correctness of certain statements. He denied that he had caused a statement he signed to be published with a view to influencing public sen timent and also denied that he had been to various section of the county talking, about the ; case to Influence sentiment and f that he -;,had agents around seeking to infiuence'peopfe. He said he had no money to use for any such purpose, saying that while he had sold a place for some $3,100, he had used 83,000 of this money in a few hours to buy a farm. He had -not furnished a cent to get witnesses here and no one had done this, for him. so far as he knew He admitted that he was Intoxicated once and denied that he had engaged, la... the sale -of. near- beer, although he had kept hlststor e"f open Sundays. On re-direct examina tion he said that he had killed the ne gro of whom he spoke the day before, because the negro had cut through his door with an axe and nearly struck his daughter with it " C. EL Adams, a cotton broker of At lanta, who said he had been at Black Mountain for his health, was called to the stand and when the ladles retired testified ' that he was ;; awakened- by talking and heard two Intoxicated men using profane and lewd talk, which he detailed. Mrs. C. E. Evans testified that she was awakened by cursing, but she was so much shocked she did not, know if there "was vulgarity used. Her hus band went -to quiet the men, and then went a second time and said: "You ought to 'be ashamed of yourselves," and someone made a reply Bhe did not hear." - On behalf of the State Miss H. Z. Eller testified that she was nurse at the. Mission Hospital and half an hour before the operation Bunting said he was going to die. He said, "I am go ing to die." In view of . Dr. Fletcher's testimony, which the court -considered might have held out to Bunting some possible hope of recovery, Judge Ad ams consulted authorities, but then allowed Bunting's statement to stand as a dying declaration, this being that he was shot for nothing. Walker Taylor, T. D. Meares, W. N. Haniss, former mayor of Wilmington, and Rev. R. W. Hogueof Chapel Hill, testified that Bunting's character was good, as did Rnfus Weaver and Harold E. JohnBton, of this county. MEXICO FLOOD WORSE. Water Still Rising in Some Sections. Loss $5,0,0. Mexico City, Oct 27. A special dis patch from Can. Juan Bautista says that the "GriJillYla river at that point is still rising and the poor in that city and throughout the flood regitJh are starving owing to the impossibility of sending out provisions. The total damage will exceed $5,000,000. ' Re ports from Huimaguillo are that , the Mescpilla river is slowly, receding, but the north part of the town is still, in undated. Tenosique, Usumacinta, Estapilla, Cerro and Carmen are all- flooded and the Inhabitants ' have taken to high lands in boats. Crops are a total loss in this region. The maximum height of water in Cerro and Cannes Is thir ty-two inches, while in Pomocina the water stands six and a half feet in the man streets. Trees and driftwood are floating through villages, destroy ing adobe houses and forcing families into the water. Petty thieves have taken, advantage of the situation and many homes have been looted. S. M. GATTIS NAMED. Succeeds Jones Fuller As Solicitor In . the Ninth District. Raleigh, N.,C , Oct 25. Hon. , Sam uel M, Gattls, of Hillsboro, was yester day named by Governor Kitchin as the successor of Hon. Jones Fuller, of Durham, as the solicitor of the Ninth Judicial District the position having been vacated by Solicitor Jones Ful ler, who goes to Boston, Mass, as the attorney for the United Drug Com pany, the Rexall Company. ' Mr. Gattls received strong endorse ments throughout the district and his appointment by Governor Kitchin Is one that will be received with great satisfaction by his many friends. He is an able lawyer, a man who is re garded as one who will fill the posi tion with the -greatest satisfaction. Mr. Gattls is an earnest and zealous member of the Democratic "party, one of the party leaders - In whom the greatest confidence has been reposed. In 1903 he was the Speaker of the House of Representatives and made a most able presiding officer. He Is the Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of Masons of North Carolina, and under Ms administrate nthe order is making great progress. WORLD'S GREATEST SEA FIGHTER Battleship Delaware, Dreadnought's Superior, Soon to Re Commissioned. Newport News, Va., Oct 28. With three brooms at her masthead, signifi cant of a clean sweep of the sea, the new battleship Delaware returned here yesterday from her successful standardization tests of Portland, Me., where under 30,000 horsepower, she developed a speed of 21.98 knots. This is the greatest speed ever made by a first-class battleship. ..She Vlll now be placed in commission and undergo her official naval tests. : " ' The Delaware is the most powerful fighter afloat, outclassing the British Dreadnought In appearance she dif fers fro mthe ordinary type. The for ward deck is uncommonly high - and broad, calculated to keep the heaviest seas from dashing over the bows and making it possible to fire the-guns In the forward turrets when the ship is running at full speed in a storm. In her main battery she carries ten twelve-men breech-loading rifles, mounted tin- pajjs In electrically con trolled elliptical turrets, . situated . on the centre line of the ship. All ten of the guns may be fired on either broad side. ...... , V Two skeleton masts set off her su perstructure in place of the steel tube masts in use in other ships. The new type is made of small steel tubes and steel wire cables. Tests In Hampton Roads proved that it was Impossible to shoot the masts away. She Is equip ped with .two submerged, torpedo tubes. She has a water line armor belt from stem to stern eleven' Inches thick along the engine room, fire room and magazine ' spaces and stepped down at bow and stern. . THE NEGRO STATE FAIR. President Young Says Crying Neew for the Race Is to Be Let Alone, Raleigh, N. C.,-ct 27. President E. Young, of the Negro State Fair, de clared in his address opening the fair in progress this week, that, the crying need is for the negroes of the South to be let alone by misdirected philan thropists of other sections. The race situation, he said, is a problem for the Southern people and not fr the North to settle. : "Every, time outsiders in terfere, trying to change condition here, they make it worse for the he gro. Let us alone and everything will be right between 'the Southern white people and the colored epople." He urged the negroes to engage more generally in farming as 'the best and most Independent work for ne groes. r The attendance and ' exhibits ate very Harge. - Hon. Ashley Home is to deliver an address before the negro farmers at the fair " tomorrow. John C. Darren, register of deeds, 'District of Columbia, is also to spealc tomor row, on education. -' ' v ' Physicians say that lew, women know how to" draw their breath cor rectly They know how to expend it freely, however. ' " ':- " Dr. Cook' has already - cleaned up $100,000 on his lecture tours, and he qalmly awaits the Peary attacks. Ev ery. additional - lecture' a'dds to his calmness. ' '. ' " .' v :' ' '. Secretary of the Interior Ballinger Would be delighted if the ; President would send Gifford1 Pinehot to the top of Mount McKinley In search of that brass tube. ' "' V The Missouri Democrats are boom lng e-Governor Folk for President in 1912. . The Democrat who hopes to win In 19i2 should get ready to down Theodore feooseveit fresh from the jungle. , ' - JAG DAY GOuMITTIES The City Has BeiiSlJistrict- ed AndCanYasirs HI Go to Woiaf Once; There Was a Large Meeting of the La dies Interested in the Good Work . This Morning and Success Seems Assured. The call issued yesterday . for a meeting of the ladles of Goldsboro who had been designated by . the Hospital executive committee to lake up the canvass .for Tag Day resulted in an almost unanimous attendance this morning, and such was the enthusiasm manifested in the good work that the most brilliant success yet experienced in the interest of this commendable publie charity seems assured. The' entire city has" been districted, and the following have been, appointed district chaperones for Tag Day can vassing: . Jv.. - " : Beginning at Centre street west Elm street and Spruce street Mrs. N. O'Berry, and Mrs. John Powell. . Spruce and Walnut 1 streets Misses Gertrude -Weil and Mabel Borden. alnut and Ashe streets Mrs. W. H. Borden and Miss Evelyn Privett. Ashe and Vine streets-Mrs. George Southerland and Mrs. Walter Borden. Vine and. Boundary " streets Belle- vue Misses Vivian Wootten and. Jen nie Ormond. , Virginia and Depot streets Mrs. Z. M. L. Jeffreys and Mrs, J. W. Bizzell. Beginning at Centre treet east. Elm and Spruce, streets Mts. H. L. Grant and Mrs. Thomas Edmnndson. Spruce and Walnut streets Mrs. W. Munroe and Miss Nellie Edgerton. Walnut and Oak streets Mrs. M. N. Epstein and Miss Estelle Edwards. Oak and Vine streets Mrs. J. N. Al len and Mrs. John Eason. Beginning at William street east, Elm and Walnut streets Mrs. Sam HJa son and Miss Kate Isler. Walnut street and Park avenue Mrs. M. E. Bizzell and Mrs. A. A. Jo seph. . ' , .- - . " Park i avenue . and Puiiilary street- Mrs. W. It. Thompson and Mrs. J. S. Varrick. Pouth of Elm ahd west of George streets Mrs. E. B. Borden, Jr. East Elm street south Mrs. II. C. Smith. Vebbtown Mrs. W. D. Creech. THE LATE JUSTICE PECKHAM. The death of Justice Peckham of the United States" Supreme Court In the dist year of President Taft's term in dicates very considerable changes In the great court before the end of the present presidential term in March, 1013. Justice Peckham really died of old age, although he was only seven cy-one years old. Chief Justice Fuller is seventy-six years old; Justice Har lan is also Seventy-six years old, and Jcstic-e Brewer seventy-two years old Justices McKenna and Holmes are each, nearly seventy yearB old. Jus tice Moody is in feeble health, al though he is the youngest man on the bench, end he is fifty-six years old. The dead associate' justice was a Democrat. At present there are but two Democrats in the court, both ap pointed by President Cleveland. These wo are Chief . Justice Fuller and Jus- iit h Vv hite; of Louisiana. No doubt the seat It tit vacant by Justice Peckham will be filled by a Democrat, and Luke 3. Wr'gLt, of Memphis, Is mentioned lor 1 he place. Possibly -a New York emociht "will be selected by Presi dent Tatt. for the middle Eastern states Vie unrepresented in. the great court But whether the new justice cowes.tir.m New York or the South he should be a man whrifairljr represents tlie .c-oporit.lon party on a bench that is frequtmilj' Called upon to decide diffi cult interpretations of the statutes, and of tlie ;oonstituron and of all other law. -. i'erhaps no one Is better fitted io. make a wise selection than Presi-d-ut; Vaft for he "indeed knows what .iua? "ts are needed on-the bench. Dr. Cook's pricefor talking an hour into a phonograph .was $500. That ex plorer has more "money than he knows what to do with. i Tom Taggart i'is- booming Governor Marshal) f dr the Democratic preslden tlal nomination in 1912; 5 Tom is not a high-grade Warwick. ":. . - ' : It' President Taft has . a rival in greatness in this country, it is Babe Adams,- who won for Pittsburg the world's championship. The suffragettes will conduct a warm campaign In Washington as soon as Congress meets and the Pres ident settles down In his winter capi- FIFTIETH -ANNIVERS ARY. Plans Formulating to Celebrate Semi- ' Centennial of Freedom of Negro. Tuskegee, Ala., Oct. 27. At a meet ing held at Tuskegee Institute today, preliminary plans were formulated for a semi-annual exposition to celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of the freeing of the negro slaves m the United States. Ten thousand dollars have Al ready been secured to meet the . ex penses of the preliminary organisa tion. .. Among the men behind the move ment are Booker T. Washington, prin cipal of the Tuskegee Normal and In- iustrlal Institute; Prof. E. L. .Black- shear, principal of . the State Normal School, Prairie View, Tex. ; "Dr J, W. EL Bowen, president of Gammon Theo logical Seminary, Atlanta, Ga.; Dr. C. T. Walker. Augusta. Ga.: Nathan Al exander, receiver of public monies, Montgomery, Ala. ; Ernest Lyon. Unit ed States minister to the Republic of Liberia, and Maj. R. R. Moton, of the Hampton Institute. The exposition, which will be held in 1913, in Borne Southern city not yet decided .upon, proposes to show the progress of the negro not only since slavery, but since his first landing in America. COOK'S ESSXMOES FAITHFUL. It must be a terrible thing to have a reputation for being as Irascible as Commander Peary, for that seems to be the answer to the confusion which now prevails as to what the Cook Es kimos, who accompanied the Brooklyn physician, have to say on the subject of that trip to the pole. It will be recalled that Peary, a short time ago, gave us a very circum stantial account of what the Eskimos told him. He alleged that these na tives of the frozen north bore testi mony that Dr. Cook had not in reality been anywhere near the north pole. Which was very Important. If. true. And now Knud Rasmussen, the half- Eskimo governor of Greenland, sends word back to Denmark, that the two Eskimos who are supposed to have ac companied Dr. Cook to the ultimate north are faithful to him and bear willing testimony, that Dr. Cook was really at the apex of the world. Rasmussen himself, being, as we have said, half an Eskimo, speaks the lingo perfectly, and he .had no diffi culty in talking with the natives. It is true that he did not talk to the two who accompanied Dr. Cook, but he saw numbers who had talked to thenv and the verdict is entirely in favor of Dr. Cook. In explanation of why they did not tell Commander Peary "the truth, they said that they feared the commander's temper. " -. The civilized world has more than half guessed already that Peary has a temper which one would rather not encounter. If possible, and the Eskimos have borne out -the suspicion. The manner in which Peary came charging horn, with blood and brimstone In his eye; vowing to expoBe the gold brick which Cook was handing the world, prejudiced his case so much in the eyes of the general public that he was making friends for Cook right along. Wonder how Peary must feel when he learns that the Eskimos were really duping him, and pretending to dis credit Cook, simply because they were afraid he would 'blow Out a cylinder head if they told him the truth? Such, at any rate, appears to be the fact' The Eskimos, according to the highest authority in Greenland, really went with Cook to the north pole, and they are' willing to bear testimony to this fact at any time, tothe' complete satisfaction of the world. : 7 A HAPPY SITUATION. The railroads report a shortage of cars li the East and South, but a small suiplus in the West and Southwest. The foitulghtly statement of the car association says there seems to be no doubt that the railroads, are .carrying as much freight as they did in October, 1907, when -the railroad movement was at Its maximum. The general busi ness of the country is normal when U.e railroads are carrying as much freight as they did . just before the panic in 1907. . It is a happy situation when we find .iractically all the freight cars of the coun'ry in use, and yet there is to be no general crossing of. the line to a car f & mine. We have just enough ears, in ether words, and just enough busi ness to keep them .moving. ; The sit uation is Ideal, and the railroads can keep It Ideal, perhkps. if they will orr der -additional equipment against the crops of another year., - - TODAY'S COTTOZf UAHSBT. Tfew YoTk Fn tares. Open.. r Cles. October . . . . , v. . ; 14.65 December . . . , , .T . . i4.58 January . . . ; . . . . 14.69 .. Local spots. HH 1 14.38 14.48 14.62 Wad not into unknown water. OPERATKIB ROOM III a'ilXflESS Woman Under Knife Probably Would Have Boon Saoriflood If Help Had Failed. Chleago. Just as the surgeons roaohod the most serious stage te a Caosarean operation upon Mrs. Sttza both Harrison, lfigt BnektaghajD plaeo, m the National JBmrgMy Hos pital. 8ts La Salle aveau. tfce elec tric lights wont out An 'Interne struck a match to light the gas and In an instant the gauso-Uaod room was In flames. Flames covered the eoiUng and the walls, aeroes which the . anttseytlc gauso had boon stretched. Burning strips of the flimsy material fell upon the operating table and nurses and surgeon, igniting thoir; gown and the shoot upon which the patient lay. Mrs. Marguerite Warren Springer, who was in the operating room at the time, sprang to a efealr wttfc her cloCfaea in a blase. Dr. J. M. Avid and Thorn B. Moany. the latter from It Ann's Hospital, beat out the tamo with their hands. Mrs. Harrison, the patient was la such a condition that her roooTory for a time was thought to he extremely doubtful. Her baby, born at the ttaaa. was taken to Forest Park in Dr. Anld's automobile. It probably will ttvo. The failure of the lights waa caused by a short circuit tCE m FEE LOVE TEMP THE SJ Ctt New York City. T earn see little difference between the way im which Amertean dlvoroe is tending and the way of free lore," solemnly assorts the Rev. Dr. George Clarke Houghton, of the Church of the Transfiguration, the Rev. GL C Houghton, famous Tittle Church Around the Corner, the aoton' huroh. 4 Dr. Houghton insists that the pres ent erisls ealls for national restraint "Ones married always married,' Is set forth as the only saf s code, with legal separation as a privilege to the miserable. Dr. Houghton's warning is upon the following statistics : LATEST STATISTICS OF DITCSE ISSUED BY U. S. CEKSHS BUREAU. 45. W divorces granted in the United Stats in tkm . ten years from lift to IMf. tSt.Tl diveress granted In the United States in tkm ten year from llsT to Isle. imnets has th largest number of divorces S2,2ot la ten years. Mow York has 2i,lI divorees In ' ton "years. Two-thirds of the divorees are ' granted to wires. Divorcee increasing now three times as rapidly as the popu lation. Of twelve marriages to-day one . ends in dlrbrco. SOUND PEARL FETCH fOOO. It PlnOer Took a Boat Worth tttO tn Enohange for It South Norwalk, Conn. William Redding.' an oysterman, fsmnt a pearl in an, oyster when at work em Southport natural bed. Bsraeo . . Saunders promptly bartered his oyster host for the peart and started for New York. Redding earns ashore hers. sold the boat for MM an boasti hew ha had outwitted Sa waders km th deal. He was glum, however, whi Sauadsrs returned from Mow York with t, the price paid for th pear! br a Fifth avenue Jeweler. , r The pearl Is believed to bs the fin est ever found, on the Oonneetleut shore. It is larger than the average thimble, and 1 perfect in Its form tion and coloring. Saunders has the value of ths pearl, as he visited Che Ceylon pearl fisheries whsn a sail or before the mast H said that the yoarl was superior to any he had ee ls two weeks in Ceylon. He was drs gtng for oysters about twenty, feet from Redding. 'Say, Horace," hailed Redding,-Tve got a pearl here, and lfs as big as a walnut" . Saunders paddled over, examined the pearl, and said. "Tn giv you my host lor it Redding accepted on ths spot, and re turned hers to sell the boat and tell of hU good lucki - " Nothing you eat will hurt you. when you take Frazler's Indigestion Powder. 60s at Th City Phwrmnsy. ITO'S ASSASSINATI OH It Will Give Stresglb to iap 2R3se Ideals Soys Bead Man's Sob. elegrams Pour Into Toklo From All Parts of the World Body of Dead Statesman Will Be Taken to Japan on Warship. -Toklo,-Oct 27. The body of Prince Ito, the murdered elder statesman of Japan, will be taken aboard the Jap anese warship Iwato at Dairen and will' be brought to Japan accompanied by a full suite representing the entire nation. The body lay today In a hotel at Dairen, the coffin covered by a sim ple white palL .Guards surrounded the hotel and only the prince's per sonal staff were admitted. - Throughout the day telegrams pour ed into Toklo from every country of the world, and the officials of the for- ign office are busily engaged in an wering them. Those closest to the throne say that he Emperor is deeply affected by the assassination of the Prince. He has asked for every detail and apparently is unable to understand why the mur der was committed, in view of the evi dent popularity of Prince Ito. But when informed of all the facts so far as they iiave been learned here the Emperor ordered that there must be no change in the policy toward Korea. The Emperor of Korea has cabled his sympathy to the Emperor of Ja pan as well. as to Princess Ito at Oiso. The assassin probably will be tried at Dairen; . - Nine alleged accomplices have been arrested and It Is believed that the Investigation will show that the plot was hatched at Seoul. The Japanese authorities are determined to unearth the source, because the assas sination of Prince Ito is believed to have been planned by the same per sons who planned the murder of Dur ham White Stevens, the former diplo matic adviser to the Korean govern ment, at San Francisco in 1908. The Panama canal is hot in the libel ' one. says Judge Anderson, and what he says goes. t - , I-took-a-shoo enjoys at present the confidence of both sides In the Impend- 'ng: controversy. ' Ballooning is 'good for the complex ion and the feminine interestin avia- lon Is increasing. The Methusalehs "' of the summer louseffy- crop are now rounding out Jie season in great Vigor. No doubt President Taft and Presi- int Diaz duly discussed the bearings it the third term question. Secretary Knox demands gumshoe llplomacy and his requisition is about jo be honored, in China at least. Mr. Taft Is writing no speeches, but ie is shaking more hands. The latter :ask is not mentally exhaustive. LIST ? UlCLAIHIB LETTERS tsmalalng In the rostefiee, eeldsbere, Wayne Ceanty, K. C. 0ctober2S, 1909. Ben's List. R. G. Aleander. Rev. W. G. Best, W. H. Blanchard. William Collejr, -John B. Croford, L. H. Cox. , Elieck Daniel, John Doake, John Doke. Tomle Edwards, Oscar Edwards, Dan Evlns. Rev. E. C. Glenn, I. D. Gaze. James Jennett John Kelly. H. L. Wellons, Rev. J. J. Woodard, W. H. Williams. . " XUza Atkins, , Gary Battle Miss Mary Bess. Mrs. " Martha Burnaum. MIbs Minnie Collins, Miss Fannie Clark. Miss Sala Davis, Harriet Davi. Miss Suddie Evrutt, Mrs. F. M. Ed- mundson. Miss Anner Easson. Mrs. J. E. HowelL Isabella King. ' Mrs. Annie Moye, Miss Annie MoyO. Miss Imya Nice. Miss Joe8ophine YS right. Ethel f bung. Persons calling for ' above letters will please say advertised. ' Rules and regulations require that one eeat be paid en advertised Istters. r . ; J. F. D0B80N, ' . Postmaster. ' mm stavn wan aita
Goldsboro Weekly Argus (Goldsboro, N.C.)
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Oct. 30, 1909, edition 1
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