VOL. VIIL NO. 71. GBEENSBORO. N. C MONDAY. 29, 190L Pride Five Cente, NO MORE CBURCB DOOR a- ALDERftlAll PASS All 0RDIIIA1ICE . IT FORBIDS CONORJEixtid JLr6tTST WEST MABKEt 'tHUBCH;' ' ' Boys Must Now Move Elsewhere to Look at the Folks Going ia and out Water Committee Elected -kther Matters of Interest. The Board of Aldermen met Satur day night in an adjourned session. Those absent from this meeting were Boyd and Joyner. A committtee" from the Board of Stewards of West Market Street Meth odist church, composed" of Messrs. J. A: Odell and E. J. Stafford, appeared before the Board and asked that an or dinenace be passed prohibiting the loitering around that church.Alderman . Elam offered the following which was adopted : "Be it ordanied by the Board of Al- I Mermen of the City of Greensboro, I JNTorth Carolina, that it.shall be unlaw- I ful for any person or persons to loiter I around West Market Street church, or I make annoying and insulting remarks to any person or persons coming to or from said cburch. Any person violat ing this ordinance will be fined five dollars." Prof. George A. Grimsley and Mr. Georee S. Sergeant from the committee on the public library, ap peared before the Board and asked that the rooms in the City Hall on the third -a ritr-rt fnn tka una rf tVia HVtrW I . au uC " They stated that the commmittee in the canvass of the city had met with such success as to be able to fill all the rooms onthat floor. Upon motion of Alderman Love the request was granted. Alderman Scott offered the follow ing resolution which was adopted: "Resolved, that the Board of Alder men learns with pleasure of the move ment now oh foot to establish a public library in bur city and believe that it will result in great and lasting good to our community. We commend the public spirit of the library committee in cnarge or saia movement, uu muoc who are so liberally giving of their means for this purpose, and we trust the people of the city will show a lib eral and progressive spirit in so an important matter.' A settling committee to settle with the officials of the city was appointed comoosed of Messrs. Tom Sherwood and B. H. Merrimon. The application of John Barker to sell liquors by retail at his store on West Market street, was, by the request of the applicant, de'fetred to the next meeting of the Board for action. Mr. J. Ed. Albright was granted a plumber license R. S. Small n.ade application to sell liquors by retail ar 230 South Davie street. Under the rules the applica- - tion went over two weeks. A deed to Tate street was filed and accepted Alderman Ellington moved that they proceed to tbe election of a light and water committee, to consist of three men, one to be elected for three years, one for two, and one for one year. Messrs. Sherwood and Ellington were elected tellers. Alderman Ellington nominated W. T. Sergeant for the three year term, B. H. Merrimon for the sec ond, and J. D. Glenn for the one vear term. Alderman Hunter moved that the clerk be instructed w. of the Board for Sergeant for the three year term, which was done, and Ser- geant was declared elected. Ballots for the two year term were then taken and resulted in the following; vote,' Merrimon,1; Hunterj 3 .Merrimon' was declared elected. Ballot for the one year term resulted In Glenn, $; Whar ton 3. Glenn was declared elected. 10AFING This committee is appointed underthe change of charter by the last Legisla ture, x v The building committee was instruc ted to put in a drain for the city -hall lot Board adjourned. JIarrlrtire ttt the White If ease. By 7ire!fi)2Phe Telegram. r Washington April 29. The police this morning gave out information that Barry Finklestein, a murderous maniac who months ago left the Utah State insane asylum was arrested when he attempted to force his way into the White House yesterday. The news of the arrest has been kept from the Washington public and the President. THE PRESIDENT'S TRAIN STARTS LEFT WASHINGTON THIS MORNING for the: long itinerary. For the Next Few Week the Executlre Post ot the Government of the United States Will be on Wheels. By Wire to The Telegram. Washington, April 29. On schedule time, and cniid great cheering the this President's train left this city morning. The train is the one used by the educational party in its late Southern trip The Presidential train which pulled out of the Southern Railway at 10:30 a. m. consists- of a private car for the Pre sident ahaHMrs.;i McKinley, two Pull man compartment' cars, two Pullman sleeping cars, a dining car and a com bination car. Col. Li. S. Brown, gener al agent of the Southern Railway, ac companies the party from here to New Orleans, and from New Orleans to Port land, Ore. Mr. O. E. McCormick, pas- genger traffic manager of the Southern Pacific, will accompany the party. Those who travel -with the President ... are Secretary and Mrs. May, Postmast er-General and Mrs. Smith, Secretary and Mrs. Long, Secretary and . Mrs. Hitchcock, and Secretary and Miss Wilson, Miss Mary Barber ( Mr. Henry T. Scott, Mr. and Mrs. Charles A Moore, Secretary and Mrs. Cortelyou, Dr. and Mrs. Ricky, Assistant Secre tary Baraeaj Mr. ,M. A. Dignam, sever al stenographers representatives of press associations, Illustrated weeklies, Washintgton dailies and a representa tive of the press of San Francisco. Mr. Marcan, manager of the Western Union Telegraph Company at Wash ington, and Mr. Ribble, manager of the Postal Telegraph-Cable Company are also on the train. The train will go by way of Alexan dria, Charlottesville, Lynchburg and Roanoke, Va., Huntsville, Decatur and Tuscumbia, Ala., and Cornith, Miss., arriving at Memphis, Tenn., 4:30 p. m. Tuesday, April 30. A stay of sev eral hours will be made In Memphis, the party leaving there during- the night for New Orlenas, going by way of Vicksburg -and Jackson, reaching New Orleans at 4:30 p. m. the flfst of May, and reamining there until 6 p. m. the following day. On the the evening of May 1st, the President Will - attend a banquet and will probably deliver a short address. On the 2nd the party will go for a drive visiting In its course the Cabildo, the old building which was the seat of the Spanish and French governments, and which witnessed the transfer of sov ereignty from Spain to France, and from France to the United States. Af ter luncheon a boat ride will be taken on the Mississippi. 3yples Rob a Girl. By, Wire to The Telegram, I woahinVtnn. Aoril 29. Cvpsies in i Y Cfcfr iff " Q y m. - camp opposite Georgetown today held ud Blanche Ferguson, a girl on "her way to school .and took her pocket 1 book and other valuables. The" camp wiftbe thoroughly-Investigated -by the VlrtfclaJVuthorities: ;Two girls have aireadr: been arTeteaAottvBUsptciotti knowingr KcQQtnpfisll? abouU, who belong to tWs-campr k74 LIES TDE NEGRO. ' ' t OR.PARKHUBST GIVES HIS VIEWS THE NEGRO AND SAY88O. Bat the Northern Man Makes a Flamboy-! ant parade oTer the Negro Got. Chand ler Should have Done like Got. Ayeoek Did. , . New York, April 28. Thet Rev. Dr. Charless H. Parkhurst preached today at the Madison Square - Presbyterian church, on topics connected with his re recent trip South. He also made, an incidental reply to Gov. Candler, who was reported as having denounced those Northerners who took an inter est in educational matters in the South, as a distinct section, but because they were conscious of the unity which makes the North and South members of each, other. The conference held at Winston-Salem, in North Carolina, he said, was characterized by the utmost frankness on .both sides, and yet from first to last, not an embittering word was. spofceii3fRef erring to Governor Candler's criticisms, Dr. Parkhurst said they would not have been made hadthe Governor of Georgia, as did the Governor of North Carolina, come into direct touch with the personnel of the conference, or for five minutes respired the atmosphere which the con ference exhaled." Referring to the estimation in which the people of the South and those of the North hold the negro. Dr. Park hurst said: "The Southerner does not like the negro any better than the aver age Northerner does, but the xiegro with just about the same amount of Christian jsidettonlyot.ithe! two, the Southern white man has per haps the advantage, that he sloes not. make quite so flamboyant a pretense of loving the negroas his Northern brother does. The JSouthem i white man disliked the njegro, and owns up to it. The whitfrmaiuin the:Nortb dis- likes the negro and' ties about it." The preacehr Baid further ''The in- discriminating act by which the :ine- grpes . had conferred upon thenv the: right . to 'vote was one of those blun ders that it is not easy to escape from after it is once committed, but which it would seem, we ought to have had Northern' statesmanship sufficiently in telligent to prevent "The counsel that both the Northern and the Southern friends of the negro are now,, giving him is to keep quiet upon the whole matter, to keep out of politics; not to talk about the constitu tion; not to insist unon his right, but to attendSfiustriously to tne work of gfUing htriiself well ready which lf is not now-for what God andth ; coun try and the future may i;-.v. in store :o- cim" Lr.' Parkhurst sed bv tr.e folio -Ir general reference to p 'vi-r.T. coii!i t: ts arrtohgSou lien people: "The South does not altogether love us, but no one there hates us nearly as much' ls" it would be perefectly nat ural for them to hate us. They are all glad that slavery is done. They are all glad that they are inthe Union. They all glory lit the flag, even while in ten der berehvinent they lay flowers upon the graves bf the Confederate dead. We . belong to them and they belong to us; &devery deed of kindness wisely rendered, every word of symathetic interest prudently spoken, every new commercial relation and every inter change of hospitalities discreetly ar frrged will be somuch contribution to that perfect readjustment of relations Wtilch shalPmake for the enrichment of our comhion history." y.erg Thompson, colored, was arrest- ed Saturday night for being drunk and . disprderly. He was arrested by urn- cer Merritraaa a urHt enxeruuueu some obleUons to being locked up. ABOUT Big Fire in Alabama. By Wire to The Telegram Birmingham, April 29. Fire today destroyed half a block of buildings at BessemerT" The loss is seventy-five thousand. The last report says the fire is under control. Shi pping:' Consolidation. By OTri: ' London; : AprilV29.J. Pierpbnt '"Mor gan purchase! today the Leyland Line of steamers. This is the first step in the consolidation of trans-Atlantic shipping interests. MRS. HOWARD WRITES LETTER. LAYS HER CASE BEFORE A JUSTICE LOVING PUBLIC. But the Facts In the Case as Stated by the Attorneys Do Not Help In the Attempt to Manufacture Sentiment, The. follwing paper has been sent to this office, with request to publish, and is addressed to the public. The paper was written with a typewriter and signed by "Mrs. J. L. Howard." It reads as follows: "I am the wife of John L. Howard, -who Is now incarcerated in the com mon jail of Guilford county, under a charge of conspiracy to cheat and de fraud. My borne is in Chicago. I have made two trips to Greensboro and1 have enedavored to accomplish every thing I could in his behalf .My expense thing I could inhis behalf. My expen-' ses to and from Chicago and here have been considerable. On my arrival here the first time, 1 found that my husband Mr. Hawley, and Mr. Daley had em ployed Major Charles M. Steadman, JMjV G. S. Bridshaw and Mr. W. P. Ra- gah' 'as uhefr attorneys to appear for them before Mr: J. M. Wolfe, the-mag-istrate'who held the preliminary hear ing. I found that the officers had ta ken from them on their arrest a sum or money approximating the sum of $500 and all of their clothing and ap parel, and that the defendants had given an order to the attorneygiahove nanied fdr 150 as their fees" f ottbe1 appearance oeiore tne magistrate? . t 'Thbe papers are still outstanding? But- I witi to say to the people of Guilford county that 1 have paid out of my own pocket the sum of ?350 in cash to Major Stedman' and Mr. Bradshaw as attor neys, and have their receipts, and have asked them to surrender to me the or ders upon the sheriff for the money in his hands 'taken from my husband and that they refused to surrender me those papers. In consideration of this and other matters they no longer ap pear for my husband or the other de fendants. I am not able to prosecute an action for their recovery. I have done all that I can do in behalf of what I conceive to be just and right. I have spent all my money. I must go home, and I leave my cause and the cause of my husband in the hands of a just and law-abiding people, "MRS. J. L. HOWARD." This was so clearly an exparte state ment and ro calculated ahd no doubt intended to do the gentleman named an injustice that The Telegram did not consider it just to publish it without making the attorneys mentioned aware of its conteatiT and it therefore asked them for arstefeanient, in reply to which Major Stedran said: 'Wherrthese three men were arrest ed they employed Messrs. Bradshaw, Ragan, and myself to appear for them before the magistrate, and gave an order payable to all three of us for $150 for this service. They also gave an order to me as trustee for $236 to be held for any, fees that might there after arise and not coyered in the $50 each was to receive for appearing be- fore tne magistrate. This order was made payableimediyidually but M sjnFftont c&ae ndUfiued'W&ii:i 4 '-A&jiUSi SIX PWS1NERS GET OUT OF JAIL UNLOCKED DOOR THIS MORNING WHILE THE JAILER WAS OUT THEY --A80-WJE!IT; OUT : if Ohlj4qehm HasBeen Recaptured and in Broad Open Day Ught the Gan Make Good Their Escape "Here's Tron- ble up Town. This morning about nine o'clock considerable excitement was created by the announcement that six prisoners confined in the county jail had es caped. The escape was made in the fallow ing manner: The cells in which the prisoners are confined stand in a double row, with the doors facing each other, and be tween them runs a passageway several feet wide, into this passageway each day the prisoners are permitted to come at stated intervals for exercise. Each end of the passageway is com pletely barred by iron work, one end containing a door, which opens into yet another passageway wihch runs around the cages. The only means of exit from this outer passage is through an iron door, but once through it is an easy matter to escape. This outer iron door had been left open this morn ing by the jailer in order to -allow the corridor to P iwept out by a negro. While this door was open and the negro sweeping, the jailer went up stairs with Mrs. Hawley, wife of the assayer., and soon afterwards the guard had occasion to also go upstairs. This was the opportunity looked for by the prisoners, who at that time were al lowed the privilege of . the inner cor ridor ' for exercise, and one of r them reached his hand through the bars of the door J to the box containing .the levers that, open, the doors. This box is locked by a combination similar to the ones used on safes, and the negro, turning the knob, accidentally turned it the right way causing the, box to open and allowing him to pull out the leyer that opened the corridor door, ft was then but the work of a moment to dash through ne open door, run through the innfer portion of the jail used as a sitting room for the guards, and then they were, at liberty. Jailer Rees, on hearing the noise below, ran down stairs,and seeing what was to pay; drew his pistol and drove the balance of the negroes back into their cells. By the time they were locked up the six who were first out had gotten out of sight, and five of had gotten out of sight. The names of those who escaped are Will Thomas, in jail for carrying a ra zor; Bob Johnson jailed for an as sault committed on Summit avenue; Robert Poard,a United States prisoner; sentenced to 18 months in the peniten tiary for pilfering mails at Winston; Alf Mabry, fighting; Tom Young, lar ceny; and Foster Benton, t fighting. Tom Young was recapture! by Deputy Sheriff Jones. In speaking of his cap ture, Young said, T seed Mr. Jones coming, an' I stopped and waited fer him." Alf Mabry, one of the fleet footed dusky runners, has for some time been, complaining, and has had the atten tion -of a physician, but when the doors were open this morning and the sweet breath of liberty was wafted into his nostrils, his sickness became a thing of the past, and none were fleeter of foot than this same sickly coon. One of the negroes was seen near the Farmer's Warehouse without a hat and when asked the cause of his haste replied, "Dere's trouble up town." Chief of Police Scott made a search through the woods in the vicinity of the water works, but could find no trace of the fugitives. The United States prisoner, Foard, would have been, taken. to Nashville tonight. The sheriiX is responsible for-bim. 1 - T ft - - - 1 1 J 'i v i 1 AC' a. t s I 'JLt ! 'V f - ; i V - J - i Jo