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"This Argus o'er the people's rights
No soothingstrains of Maia's son
Shall lull itshundred eyes to sleep."
$1.00 a Year
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to
GOLDSBORO, N. C, SATURDAY. DECEMBER 4. 1909, y . NO. 99
VOL. XXIV
V)
r
Is
I
...
V
X
UllCLE SAKS GETS BUSY
Diplomatic gelations
Hisarauga Are Dis
continued.
ELKS LODGE OF SORROW.
Will
The United States Government
Hold Personally Responsible Men
Who Tortured and Killed ''
Grace and Cannon.
"Washington, D. C, Dec. 1. Felipe
Rodriguez, charge d'affaires of the
Nicaraguan legation, was tonight ten
dered his passports by Secretary of
State Knox, thereby severing diplo
matic relations of the two countries.
Interesting and Impressive Exercises
- Next Sunday Afternoon.
Goldsboro Lodge, No. 1S9, Benevo
lent and Protective Order of Elks, will
hold interesting and most impressive
public services in the Messenger Ope
ra House next Sunday afternoon at
three o'clock the Memorial Sunday of
the order, that is observed with great
fervor throughout Blkdom.
These services - are always very
beautiful and touching, and the local
committee have arranged for the ob
servance of the hallowed occasion by
the Goldsboro lodge a program of un
usual musical and literary attractive
ness.
As already announced, Jtae eulogist
is to be Hon. Tasker Polk, who will be
introduced by Mr. J. Langhorne Bar
ham, of the local bar.
The "Lodge of Sorrow" .will be pre
sided over by Mr. Qeo. C. Royall. ex-
R. 1 STRIKE SERIOUS
Every Line f Industry Ham
pered and Thiusands
Are Idle.
In delivering passports to the Nica-1 alted ruler, assisted by the other offl-
raguan charge d'affaires, Secretary of cers of the lodge in their several ca
State Knox informed him by note that pacities.
the United States would hold person The following Is the program, as ar
ally responsible the men responsible ranged:
for the torture and execution of the Processional Miss Brinson. .
two Americans, Grace and Cannon, Opening Ceremonies Bro. ueo. k.
who recently were killed in Nicara- Royall, Exalted Ruler, and Oflkers.
sua, and that Nicaragua would be hel i "Jesus, Saviour, Pilot Me."
to an observance of the principles of Schnecker Double Quartet,
the Washington conference of South Opening Ode "Great Ruler of the
American republics in the interest of I Universe.
Dr. John M. Faison For Congress!
To the Democratic Voters of Third North Carolina Congressional District:
I take this method of announcing myself a candidate for Congress sub
ject to the will of the next Democratic Convention of this district.
Should I receive the, nomination at your hands, I pledge you an active,
intelligent and successful canvass of the entire district upon the vital issues
of Democracy as contained in your Convention platform and shall, with
pleasure, champion the cause of the people, now burdened with unjust repub
lican high protective tariff taxes and hostile class legislation, which are rob
bing the people ,of their honest earnings, 1 :
As agriculture is the xhief wealth-producing industry of this district,
which largely underlies progress of all other industries and the general
financial welfare of the;-people of most all the States as well, it should be
fostered and encouraged, rather than taxed and hindered "by National legis
lation. If chosen your representative such legislation shall receive my closest
nrnfoccinn that lrftftns in C.lnsfi t.Olieh with the TieoDle
f on oiSM "whifh has also eiven. freely and unselfishly, its best efforts to the lIn the tobacco trust case. Should th
otn or,H tn. thomnrrBtip. nartv. and from DuDlin County, the oldest in the curt allow the tobacco combination
district, which has so long and so continuously given such large Democratic
majorities to this district, without due recognition, while many other Coun
ties have been and are enjoying the honors of office, I shall thank you for
your p"pp--rj ' PTRTRTiiiiv appreciate juur eiiuiua 111 uij ucuii,
Montana Is Most Seriously Affected.
Wholesale Grocers Report Jfoth
Jng Moving in North
west Idlers.
St. Paul, Minn., Dec. 1. Every line
of industry in the Twin Cities, Duluth
and Superior, and all cities of the
Northwest dependent " on the move
ment of supplies is seriously affected
by the strike of the railroad switch
ment which began at six o'clock last
evening.
It is estimated that upwards of' 12,
000 men are idle tonight on account
of the strike order, thousands of
freight handlers and teamsters are
I losing time by reason of the ireignt We, the undersigned Democrats and citizens ol nupnn uounty. Knowing
'blockade in the terminal towns, while the character, ability fitness and loyal party service of our countyman. Dr.
crtsX S"Congres8 to Wrestle
-irfrSherman Law Changes.
"tyashington, D. C, Dec. 2. At al
most any angle from which it may be
viewed, the coming session of Con
gress, less than a week away, will be
one of the most important ever known.
Angling awkwardly for relief, the big
combinations of capital have forced to
the front the question f what to do
with the Sherman anti-trust law. That
long-disregarded statute is beginning
to draw like a halter. Naturally the
big corporations -want relief.
The question what to do with that
statute will be uppermost, no matter
what the Supreme Court may decide
Faison. N.
JOHN M, FAISON,
vember 30th, 1909.
DR. JOHN M. FAISON FOR CONGRESS.
general peace and harmony.
Prairie Sails Today.
Washmeton. D. C. Dec. 1. The
Prairie will sail from Philadelphia to
morrow or next day for Panama, with
from 400 to 700 marines aboard, ac-l
cording to a statement made late to
day at the Navy Department.
p.Ha Tiet. 1. The foreign office
cabled today to the French consuls m
Nicaragua instructing them to furnisn
Information regarding the pubtfsheu
reports that citizens of France had
been ill-treated in Nicaragua. Upon
the nature of the replies will depend
the subsequent action of this government.
In opening and closing odes the au
dience is requested to unite in sing
ing. Prayer Bro. L. N. Grant, Chaplain.
Solo Selected Mrs. Ehrlich Smith,
Introduction of Orator Bro. J.
Langhorne Barham.
Oration Hon. Tasker Polk, War
renton, N. C.
Violin Solo Calvaleria Rustlcana
Miss Lucia Privett.
"There Is a Land Mine Eye Hath
Seen" Crowninshield Double Quar
tet.
a continuanee of theustrike for several
days will throw additional thousands
out of work. The railroad yards are
filled with stalled freight trains and
an attempt to move a few by the aid
of the office men drafted as switchmen
is making no impression.
The railroad managers' committee
announced today that they were bring-
John M. Faison, take great pleasure m presenting his name to tne Demo
cratic voters of this Third Congressional District as a worthy, able and most
excellent Candidate for Congress, subject to the action of the next Congres
sional Convention. ;
Dr. Faison was born in Sampson County, near Faison, in 1862, his family
returning to Duplin four years later. He attended school at The Faison
Academy and worked on the farm in his early years, graduated at Davidson I from the interstate Commerce Com-
Collese. in 1883. and received his Medical Education at the University of Vir- mission and creating a court, the sole
jinia, taking a post graduate course at the New York Polyclinic. Since he has duty of which shall be to decide ques
practiced medicine and surgery with skilled success, has been engaged in tions of transportation law.
to escape, that would not help the
Standard Oil or electrical combina
tions. They present differences of
fact and practice sufficient to sharply
differentiate the nicotine monopoly.
The leaders of organized labor are
just as anxious to be relieved from
the operation of the law as the combi
nations of capital.
"While the control over labor organ
izations and industrial combinations
seems fairly satisfactory to the ulti
mate consumer, the control over the
railroads of the country is not as good
as it might be. President Taft senses
that fact, wherefore, he is endeavor
ing "to interest Congress in his plan
for taking some of the functions away
CAM FIX LICENSE MX
The Law Making Power of
City Alderman is Far
Rerchlug.
ing to St. Paul new switchmen to take trucking and farming, and at the same time, taken an active interest in all
the places of the strikers. To this
President Hawley, of the Switchmen's
Union of North America, said;-
"All right, let them come; we will
not object."
, Business men generally are begin
ning to feel the result of the strike.
The first to be affected were th?
commission
NEW STEAMSHIP SEEVICE.
Une Between Boston and Galveston
Established,
nnctnn Mass.. Dec. 1. A new
freight steamship service, between
Boston and Galveston, was started to
day with the sailing of the Clyde Line
Steamer Algonquin. The steamer car
ried a cargo of potatoes, provisions,
wire and general freight. She will
call at Charleston, S. C, on her way to
Galveston, and at Jacksonville on the
way back. In the new service weekly
sailings will be made.
. tt -oi wholesale grocers and
Closing ceremonies that
nothing is moving. Commission
houses are doing nothing.
Some of the larger- commission
houses today reduced their working
forces. In Minneapolis the flour mills clos
ed tonight and it is estimated that
3,500 men employed in them are idle.
In South St. Paul, where are located
the stockyards, only 300 head of cat
tle were received today, where, usual-
and Officers.
Closing Ode "America."
Benediction Rev. J. Gl'n er Buskis
IS SUPERIOR COURT.
Cases Thus Far Disposed of at . Our
Present Term.
public affairs about him for the advancement and progress of his county,
state and people. In;4892 when populism began he became a leading Demo
crat in this county afid section of the state, and since then no man in the
county and district'has done more arduous and successful work for democ
racy, giving freely of his time, energy, intellect and means to the success of
the party in county, district and state. Dr. Faison has always been "in the
chickest of tbe fight"--"in the trenches with the boys" battling against the
enemy without fear or favor and without even the hope of reward. When
the State was in the hands of the fusionists in '94 to '98, he was selected a
member of the State Executive Committee, of this District in '98, opposed
any fusion on the part of Democrats, and took an active and determined part
He wants the commission to confine
itself sharply to the question of the
reasonableness of rates, leaving the
finding of facts to the investigating
forces of the Departments of Com
merce and Labor and Justice, so that
all prosecutions can be placed in the
hands of the Attorney general and his
assistants, which seems a reasonable
thing to have done.
Then there is the question of reor-
State Supreme Court Deelares Char
lotte Did Not Impose Prohibitive
Tax on Xear-Bew Saloons
When It Levied $1,000.
Raleigh, N. C, Dec. 1. The Supreme
Court sustains the Mecklenburg Supe
rior Court in holding that the $1,000
tax imposed by the City of Charlotte;
in the case of the State vs. Dannen
berg, on near-beer saloons, is valid,,
thus setting at rest the prohibition
forces of the State, whose leaders had
declared if the power of cities and
towns to impose such license tax on
these places was not sustained there
must be another legislative campaign
that would assure to towns the power
to absolutely control such places.
The court's opinion, written by Jus
tice Brown, who holds the Charlott
ordinance is not ultra vires, and not
discriminative, since it applies to all
persons alike who would operate suca
places, that it is not prohibitive, or
rather, that the court can only taxe
under consideration the question of
reasonableness in view of the show
ing of expense for police and other
cost of maintaining order at thes
places. The court declares the pre
sumption of reasonableness is not
overcome by the contentions of the
defendant. The court holds, further
more, that no violation of the four
teenth amendment to the Federal con
stitution, the ordinance being well
within the police power of state and
municipality.
in redeeming the State, district and county, from fusion rule and also in the I ganizing the Navy Department so as to
The following cases on the criminal
docket heard yesterday and up to to
day at noon have been disposed of:
Ed. Stevens, carrying concealed ly 1.800 Is. the daily average,
weapon, nol pressed with leave.
J. R. Bivens, murder, nol porssed.
Leslie Miller, carrying
passage of the Suffrage Amendment in 1900..
Reared an ardent Democrat, Dr. Faison has ever been ready "to defend
the faith that is in him" and has "stood guard" in the county and district,
willingly and gladly crossing swords with republicans whenever and wherever
opportunity presented. . -
Dr. Faison is a christian gentleman of character and ability, well versed
in State and National rlitical issues, a forceful, eloquent speaker an an able,
successful, convincing campaigner and debater. 'Should the nomination come
to him he will measure up fully to every obligation, make an active, vigorous,
brilliant canipaign of the entire District and an able, useful representative of
the Democratic people.
DuDlin County, the oldest county in this district, has had but little recog-
In tbe iron range country the small I aition for its long-time, large Democratic majorities and is justly entitled to
get the full benefit that might be made
to accrue if the $125,000,000 a year ap
propriated for the navy were wisely
laid out. 11 of which goes to make up
the sum of things that will make the
coming session important, aye, very
important. . ........
STARTLING SUICIDE'
BIG CHANCE FOR FRAUD.
towns will soon be facing, a famine
i- nnlARB trains of foodstuffs can De
SUIT AGAINST TOBACCO TRUST.
weapon, judgment suspended on pay
ment of coat.
D. J. Miller, affray, judgment sus
pended on payment of costs.
Leslie Miller, affray, judgment sus-
Sam Shrago, larceny, nol pressed perior within forty-eight hours 10,000
with leave.
brought in there. At Superior 300 men
were laid off in the Great Northern
j Railway machine shops, The mines
will be affected by the stopping of
freight traffic. '
On the ore docks at Duluth and Su-
men will be out of employment and
this nomination, especially when other counties of this district Craven,
Jones, Cartaret, Onslow and Wayne have been for years and now are so
signally honored with state and national offices. Other things being equal
the other counties of this district should justly share, as it is only fair and
democratic, in the honors and emoluments of office.
Dr. Faison's profession has so freely and constantly given its best efforts
.o the State and Democratic party and has been always such a power for Dem
ocratic government, that it richly deserves such recognition from the party.
As a member of the State Democratic Executive Committee for years, as
member of The North Carolina Jamestown Centennial Exposition Commission,
and as Chairman of the Board of County Commissioners of Duplin County,
No Decision Has Been Beached As to
Postponement of Argument.
Washington, D. C, Dec. 1. No de
cision has yet been reached by Attorney-General
Wickersham as to re
questing postponement of the hearing
of the arguments in the suit against
the American Tobacco Company be
fore the Supreme Court of the nited
States.
The case was postponed by the
. court until December 13, and Attor
ney-General "Wickersham held a con
ference today with Frank B. Kellogg,
; special counsel for the government in
. the Standard Oil case and former As
: sistant Attorney-General McReynolds,
special counsel for the government in
.the tobacco case. The effort was to
: arrange a date which would be agree
able to the government and to tbe
,court, but no decision was reach eo
pending further conference.
Walter Williams, assault, judgment the general loss on account of no em- Dr Faison has always "made good", displaying wise judgment, good common weights.
This Is the Point Being Made by the
Government.
New York, Dec. 1. The fruitful op
portunity for fraud in the haste and
bustle of the enormous business done
daily on the Williamsburg docks of
the American Sugar Refining Com
pany was what the government sought
to bring .put today in its prosecution
of the, six former employees of the
company now on trial, charged with
defrauding the government by under
Greensboro Society Belle
Puts Pistol Ball Through
Heart.
. m A. 1 Vv. n-nsl t -r 1 hi llTV T f I . .. . , -w-w
simtiended on payment of cost. pioyment iur iauui ense and excellent discretion. As tne standard nearer oi tne jjemocracy oi
Will Haid assault with deadly ueiiver mercuauuiac "'icnis uistrict ne wiu matte a oruiianL campaign aim an auw icpi calmative,
' ' ' thousands of dollars. and will reflect honor upon his state and district. Duplin Democrats, who
.' p oritii disnosing of mort- st- Paul, and Minneapolis are dis- inow him best, will present his name to the coming Convention and trust
Willis am, trlbuting' points for the entire North- that their County and their candidate will justly receive the nomination
gaged property, judgment suspended " . . ... . nr thtsW lnnir f5vithfi ail(, aotive RftrviceS to their nartv.
m . i wfiSLfirii H La. tea m tm -- k"" i --o - -
oil yajriuoui, ui. wat.
R. L. McLeod, disorderly conduct,
fined $10 and cost,
Ranzell Britt, carrying concealed
weapon, judgment suspended on pay
ment of cost,
which the effect of the stopping of the
carrying of freight will be felt.
The most j serious - effect will be in
Montana, 'particularly -In Butte, Ana
conda and Great Falls, where the eop-
November 30th, 1909.
(Signed)
J. R. Quinn, G. M. Houston, Robert James, D. J. Williams, James G. Kenan,
G. B.: D. Parker, W. F. Murphy, B. R. Graham, M. D., W. D. Brice, T. Q. Hall,
D. S. Williams, A. L. McGowan, N. F. Register, D. B. Williams, W. J. Boney, J.
O. Carr, I. P. Alderman; Jos. Rouse, W. A. Fussell, R. L. Carr, M. D., W. F. Pickett,
David Fragner, a customs inspector,
and once an assistant weigher, testi
fied that a busy time two truckc a
minute passed over a single set of
scales, or eight to the minute on th?
four sets in use there for every hour
of the day. Each truck weighed half
a ton an deach half ton the govern
mentwill contend was weighed thir
teen pounds Bhort, by the secret ma
nipulations of government employees
nvnron Rritt TMtass iudrment Per mines smelters are located. jno. F. Croom. W. R. Tucker, A. D. Johnson, Andrew J. Pickett, W- A. Thompson, wh lt ig chargedi were paid cash by
HOnzmt jail!.!,, 1.1 juubu. . ' -, r,..4.: T3.l r.tt r. t- t-.: ti . m it- 1-1 n -n TX7 T. Tim TT T Tlill HoTlTTT Tlnil I - .
suspended on payment of cost.
Herbert Hooks, larceny, not guilty.
Bill Eason, assault witb deadly
.veapon, judgment suspended on pay
ment of cost.
TAFT AND ROOSETELT.
New York, Dec. 1. It was stated on
authority this afternoon that the
American Tobacco Companv will op
pose any postponement of the hearing
before the Supreme Court set for De
cember 13.
ACKNOWLEDGMENT.
A Roosevelt "return from Elba" may
strike the imagination favorable, but
unless Mr. Taft becomes, very reac
tionary unless he consorts with Aid
I rich and Cannon and snubs the insur
gents -4t is; difficult to see how it can
(crystallize into a nomination in 1912.
The fact should not be lost sight of
that an administration controls tne
DomitiHKan rialBcratna nf thirteen : one- I K-Uapp,
party Southern state very much as
In Montana and Eastern Idaho freight
traffic Is tied up. " .
The entire town of Butte is depend
ent ;on the operation of the mines anr7
smelters. "- When they stop everything
stops. All foodstuffs" are imported.
Many of the big mining .companies run
stores. A miner's credit is good there
only as long as he works. The smel
ters in Anaconda employ about 2.50P
men.- There are also large smelters at
Great Falls, employing 5,000 men, who
are idle. ...
That all hopes of "a settlement of
the strike at present are at an end
was. indicated -by the departure for
tonight of Martin A
of the Interstate Commerce
Commission, and ' United States Labor
Commissioner Charles P. Neill, who
r. B. Peirce. H. S. Boyette, G. G. Best, W. L. Hill, tt. J. mil, tienry uau,
Li. P. Best, S. O. Middleton, S. .S. Bostic, L. H. Sanderson, L. Smith, B. F.
..Villiams, Wm. J. Grady, H. D. Grady, Walter J. Smith, R. D. Kornegay, John
vV. Waters, A. H. Whitfield, D. C. Thigpen, R. N. Cole, Furney Jones, G. W.
Joodson. Wilson Reaves, E. F. Hicks, Frank Hurst, W. R. Blackmore, John
Hardy, J. A. Shine, Thos. Perrett, W. Scott Loftin, B. F. Pearsall, G. W. Ken
nedy, M. D., J. A. Ferrell, M. D., P. L. Kornegay, Scott Stanford, J. J. Bowden,
Jno. H. Carter, J. M. Williams, M. D., G. M. Long, C. S. Hines, O. P. Middleton,
J. A. Powell, L. Middleton, D. W. Hobbs, F. G. WesturooK, J. ti. jfonvieue,
J. L. Lane, M. D., H. S. Thomas, R. J. Williams, D. S. Boney, G. W. Carroll,
Buckner Davis, Lucian Bradshaw, G. W. Boney, and many others.
the sugar company for the evasion of
customs duties. If the game ran prop
erly the government stood to lose dues
on 5,880 pounds of sugar every hour.
At this steady flood of trucking
rolled across the scales the checke
who stood next the weigher was too
busy for Fragner towatch him. John
J. Longhran, a checker, was asked if
all the entries to which he certified
. .. a 1 A
The Goldsboro Athletic Association
desire to thus publicly acknowledge
rt!ar Ano tha vntpa In MaxlriV or anv
I South American administration does endeavored to settle the dispute by ar
the votes cast in its state.
These thirteen Southern states have
h snleridid nublic spirit displayed by in a Republican national convention
their fellow citizens of Goldsboro in 282 votes. The East, from Delaware
the liberal patronage bestowed upon to Maine inclusive,' cast : 252 votes,
the recent Baseball Fair, whereby the Here,' then, are '534 delegates but of a
association has been enabled to great- total of 992. The South and the Eat
ly reduce its indebtedness incurred in can control the convention..
c,iT,cr la-H-summer's baseball en- But a third-termer must indeed be
tertainment. Ahd especially are we stronger than General Grant was
grateful to he ladies wi? so tireless
ly and enthusiastically championed
our cause and made the Fair so at
tractive and so successful.
Very cordially,
THE DIRECTORS.
- Goldsboro Athletic Association.
December 2, 1909.
bitration.
Mr. Knapp said he could do nothing
but offer his services, and at this time
they were not wanted-;
MARSDEN' BELLAMY PASSES.
in
1880. " The unwritten law against - rt
third term has grown with tho yearE
Prominent Wilmington Attorney Suc-
V mmbs to Paralysis.
Wilmington, N. C.
Bellamy, Sd., one
Dec. l.--Marsden
of Wilmington'
of the Republic, and unless Mr. Taft J most distinguished attorneys, died to-
goes Tbodily over, to the reactionaries,
it is much too early to assume that he
will be turned down by his party con
vention In 1912.
Chattanooga in Southern League.
Affirms Hargis Sentence.
Frankfort, Ky., Dec. L The Court
night at eleven ,0 clock, ; following a
stroke of paralysis several months
ago. He had been in a comatose state
for three days or longer and while at
times he rallied noshope was held out
to those who waited so -anxiously at
his bedside. . .
11 II AT 1111 1 I DIIV
HI1fil if ILL I UUI
FOR XMAS?
Hundreds of satisfactory and
appropriate answers to this
question are readily found in our attractive display of
Beautiful Holiday Goods
Now is the time to get the Bestand get it to suit. Our
assortment is so complete that the widest range for selection
is offered. v - , -
We can meet your wants with Bright, New Goods to
please every buyer who is seeking an appropriate Christmas
Gift for old or young. -;
Whatever your needs let us show you that we have Genuine ,
NEW ATTRACTIONS for CHRISTMAS that will please you.
After Being Kindly Remonstrated
With by Relative Young Woman
Went to Her Room, Where
Awful Deed Followed.
Greensboro, N. C, Dec. 2. Without
any previous intimation and with no
earthly motive other than a slight re
monstrance from a member of her
family about extravagant indulgences.
Ethel Norman, the seventeen-year-old
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Nor
man, of Pomona, passed her mother in
the hall at 5:40 o'clock yesterday
evening went directly to her room and
thirty minutes later pressed a revolver
to her bosom and fired, the bullet
passing through the centre of her
heart and death resulting instantly,
the terror-stricken mother rushing in
to the room "just in time to see her
youngest and devoted daughter breata
her last.
Why the young lady, who was just
budding into womanhood, should be
prompted to such a rash act is beyond
the comprehension of her closest rela
tions and most intimate friends. Sur
rounded at all times by ardent admir
ers, overwhelmed with devoted atten-
represented weights he had seen the tion Dy every member of her family
weigher find. and society, in the very glory of youth
"Not all," he admitted. Sometimes and tne cnarms which atttach to a
had to be away." young woman graced with the culture
Three cross-examiners were unable f refinement and the best society, it
to shake the testimony of Andrew J. ig nard to attribute any cause for such
Mallen, the clerk who swore that a tragedy otn6r than that in a moment
James F. Bendernagel, formerly cash- of terrlDie despondency brought about
ier for the sugar company, paid cash by tne sligllt but kindly remonstrance,
at his office to customs employees in the young WOman became for the mo-
uniform.
I . ... .in j XI 114. n
h,ttot,nnea ' Tenn.. Dec. 1. The of Appeals toaay auirmeu ui m
.i cfarrin Little Rock's South-ltence given Beach Hargis for the-mur-
uvai
A Virginia man thinks his chauffer! '
era
Taue franchise to Chattanooga der of his father, former Judge James tried to, murder imT It all depend
.ueagua "ouul .. ... 1 , '.v. A T.Mrl whitlia th Virgin In. man was
- -t tnHv. The'Drtce paw dy b. tiarB, w " i"" r"-w.
W VAWOVU , vwvrf - - -
nvtiaArt was 112.600. ' .
crossimg th strut afatt.
114 ' V
vv -
R. A. CREECH,
west Centre Streets
KE1AJ3ING J1CWKLKR.
-
- Ml 1
rvfRX!se in Ti-ir vrgus i
Al: G. Fields at Messenger upera
lleua Dembr 8.
ment deranged and fired the deatb-
dealing bullet into. her heart without a
full realization of its awful conse
quences to the aged parents and de
voted relatives and friends.
XOTICE.
Having this day qualified befor th
Clerk f the Superior Court of Wayn
County, North Carolina, as administra
tor of the estate of George W. Brog-
den, deceased, notice is hereby given
to all persons Indebted to said estat
t make immediate payment, and to
all persons holding claims against th
said estate to present them to the un
dersigned for payment on or befor
the 13th day of November, 1910, er
this notice will be pleaded in- bar c
their recovery.
. This the 13th day of November, 1801.
H. T. DAVIS,
Administrator of Georg W. Brog
dea, deceased, 6eldsbr. N. .
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