'5 r. V- V Isargczt Circulation of any' Paper -V Jhe Jksi- -AdvertUSg '..-.SrVw meaium t V V A i' SfteV . .: ' :-iv- ;--! --'. ?-v.: .,y . - ''f.;. 1 Sill ' v . Volume 3, No. 3. o ; Price TwoCeai HOME: rNorthCqrolind, ffi W HANDS WAS FIRST TO WITH FRESH STATEMENTS CAPITAL CITY NEWS BUDGET OF nv.CF.IVFR HOMICIDE PAY A VISIT .' t s .v- ..':. : . ... ,5.-.-v-, JUSTIFIABLE DELEGATES A, On Petition v of i rasf ; Company WAS UNABLE TO MEET INTEREST Tliejr Hare. Incurred a Debt of $15,- 000,000, Floated by tht Trust Com- , panjr of America. A Reorganization Committee Formed. ' , . : By fireto The Sun.v v , Norfolk, Va.C July 2. On the petl. tlon of the Trust Company of Amerl ca, joined- in by th railroad, the Nor folk and Southern Railway was placed in the hands of receivers today by or der of Judge Edmund Waddill in the Federal court. ; The receivers named are Thomas Fitzgerald, Henry. K. Walcott and Haghl. Kerr. George Rttblee, of Ne Vork bmV Edward R. Baird, of Nor. folk, are named as counsel for the receivers. Mr. Fitzgerald is desig nated as general manager for the re ceivers., -.v A reorganization committee has also been formed, consisting of Geo. C. Clark, of Clark, Dodge & Company; Rathbone Gardner, president of the Trust Company, Providence; Trust Company of America; John I. Water burg, president of the Manhattan Trust Company and S. L. Schoon. maker, for the adjustment of the fin ances of the property. ' . In the petition for .receivers the pe- : titktners set forh that the road re- , cently Dougnt in the SunTqlk and Car. , ontlp'-tallroad the jPamrlco Oriental and" Western Railroad,' the Raleigh and -Pamlico Sound Railroad and the At- lantlo and North Carolina) for 'which a debt of $15,000,000 was incurred and floated by the Trust. Company of v America, of New York city, taking Urst ; mortgage and' refunding bonds. Ex : tensive ImDrovements iwera alao in. . augnrated. The company offldialB ad mit their inability ; to meet .interest, debts, etc. - It Is further shown that. many of : the larger stock holders have contrib : nted ... during the past eight months in the hope of tiding over the situation ;and keeping the property, out of the " hands of receivers. . The Norfolk and Southern Railway owns and operates six hundred miles of trackage, with . principal points at Beaufort, N. C., and, Edenton, N. C, . Raleigh, N.'C,, and Norfolk Va. ; They also own the electric line, v double route of about' 20 'miles each, from Norfolk to Cape Henry and Virginia Beach. v . The officials, receivers and bond- - holders declare the company's embar . ra8sment temporary and predict a .aolld reorganisation. , - - t JFKINLEY GUARD DEAD. - fialttlier Who Wrenched the Weapon , i x . From Murderer, r By .Wire to The Sun. - - . ' :', Chicago, July '2.Albert. Gallaher, lor many, years in the secret service .,! of the United States and one of those detailed as personal guard of the late President. MnKlnlnv at tho tlia nf tv. .'!.')ater'f assassination, 'died here' today. ' .V, It was Gallaher who seized the wrist , , w vuibub mier me miai snot was, i,flred, and wrneched the weapon from .::. the hand of the alayer.; Gallaher was I at first - mistaken , bjr; the Crowd as the assassin, and was Bet upon , and . beaten. To thU Jactaccording to the ' . attending physicians, Galiaher's death vas indirectlv due. An aftta'tlnn nt tha . I-liver developed from injuries received ': at that time. 1 ; yt f -f'-''" w After his experience at Buffalo Gal ""V later was under a physician's care for time) but the extent of his injuries ". t;oa nnt Di.n'naK. 'iUa 1.1.- . , transferred from Chicago to'SL'Paul, .'" i:inB.,, where he became flj and unfit ?, ..'.tor duty last October. . H was atT , u tended -la, Chicago Tecently -. by r two , gpeclallsu, one of whom said -today ... that the 'immediate cause of death was , ' .cancer ot the liver", ind In all proba , tlllty it waa . k result of the rough ' handling received at the hands of the crowd tollowlng the bootfng at Buf- lalo, , So Says Jury in : Case of Hunter Smith FOB KILLING ENGINEER STUTLZ Smltli tWll be Given a Preliminary Hckring Before Police Justice To. morrow Bat Will Likely Not be Held as Public Sentiment Is With Him. By Wire to The Sun. ; Raleigh, N. C, July 2. The" coro ner's Jury this afternoon .rendered a verdict ot justifiable homicide in the case against Turner .Smith, the young white boy ,for killing Engineer B. M. Stultz early yesterday morning. It developed at the inquest that Stultz, alter he had been shot at the first time, went to his engine secured a pistol and 'this w&s found on him yesterday Smith will be given a pre liminary hearing before, police justice tomorrow for the murder, but will not likely be held as public sentiment is all with the . boy. and sister and is against the engineer. Smith is nineteen years old and shot Stultz, who was prowling around Mrs. "Smith's home at two o'clock Wednes day morning, earlier in the night Smith's seventeen year old sister hav. ing seen a man peep in through a broken blind af'lier 'as-'she waa' un dressing.. : 1 ' . " v !; ' The man came again at one o'clock and young Smith shot at him, the.thtrd visit wen about two o'clock and then Smith shot four times.1 A few min utes later StuMa lsW; into"the engin eer's wash room at vthe Seaboard Sta tion four hundred yards away and died in a few minutes.. Refusing to tell how 'or by whom he was 'shot Stultz's home is at Roanoke, Va, and his body has been shipped there, where his wife and nine children live,, The Smith girls who occupied the room in which Stultz peeped work In a ho slery mill here. , MB. B. HARBT JONES DEAD. He Was a Member of Norfolk's Board of Control. . By Wire to The Sun. Norfolk, Va., July 1. R. Harry Jones a member of the board of control of Norfolk, died last midnight from Brlght's disease, of which he had been a sufferer for some time. He returned from Mecklenburg . Springs .where he went "for. his health last Friday. He was 64 years old and a native of Nor- folk.. - ,'.;' -,'..' -J He had served the city in both branches of its council, as superintend ent of the water department, and as a member of several school boards, was a member of several secret orders and a vestryman of St Luke's church. Two children survive him. .The vacancy on 'the board" of contro) caused br his death, will be filled by. the councils until the next city elec tion, two years hence. Mr. . Jones had tour years to serve. : . BAPTIZED IN FIGHTER'S POOL. Mormons. In Bathing Suits Cndergo , Rite at Gymnasium. ' By.Wlre'to The Sun. ' k St Louis, July 2. Rev. Dr. Ross, of the Church of Latter Day Saints, today baptized five converts to Mormonism In bathing suits at the natatprlum of Prof,' Bill .Clark, former . prize fighter, "mown as the "Belfast Chicken.". The pugilist was a spectator of the cere mony. Ross, entering the shallow end ?f .the tank, gently. but firmly led each candidate, who had brought his .own bathing sult'and immersed him in four feet of water. Libels' ihe ' Schooner : Sprague. By Wire to The Sun.' Nortolk, Va.', July -i-Franfc Seeley, master of the Cuban steamer Yumurl, on . behalf ; of. the owners and crew today filed a libel suit li the federal court against the schooner Charles H, Sprague, picked up at aea dismasted. The value" of the damaged Vessel, cargo and freight Is placed at $18,500,' but no- specified 'Amount ' of . salvage Is asked. ' " , " - Speaker Cannon Calls on Taft FIRST OF DEFEATED CANDIDATES For Nomination to Congratulate the Candidate of the Republican Party, He Talked An Hour and a Half. By Wire to The Sun. ' .Washington, July 2. Speaker Joe Cannon, called on William H. Taft the nominee of the republican party for president, today. Mr. Cannon is the first of the defeated candidates for the nomination to congratulate the candidate of his party. The conversation last more than an hour and a half, talking over the sit uation, giving their views as to the prospects,. for the republican party in the future and its congressional paw.- er. A rumor got out that Speaker Cannon was here to oppose the se lection of Frank H. Hitchcock, for the National Chairman, but Uncle Joe only puffed and. said: "Republicans are going to win. We have the best army and the best prin ciples. I'll fight as colonel, captain or private." " CALVIN PLAYED ON SUNDAY.' Judge Cites Incident and Decides for ' Sunday Shows. By Wire to. The Sun. . New York, July 2. John Calvin's Indulgence in bowling on Sunday was cited as the basis for a decision by the appellate division of the supreme court in Brooklyn today that the ope ration of moving picture shows oh Sun day was not a violation' of the law. Judge Gay nor, who wrote the decis ion, cited the visit of John Knox to Calvin one Sunday at Geneva, when he discovered the founder of Puritan ism playing bowls on the green back of his home. BLAME BLACK HAND FOR FIRE. Franclscians Ignore Threats and Col lege Building is Destroyed. By Wire to The Sun. (Means, N. Y., July 2. The main building of St Bonaventura College was destroyed by fire today. The Franclscians fathers, who conduct the institution, cannot account, for the ori gin of the fire, bout a month ago Father . Joseph Butler received threat ening letter signed Black Hand. It is said that unless $10,000 was placed lna certain spot the college building would be destroyed. No attention was paid to this. Belief exists today that It may have had something to do with the. fire. ' v The school year being over, the main building was unoccupied. The Kinston base ball players came down to New Bern this morning on the east bound Norfolk and Southern train and left, on- the Atlantic Coast Line train for Wilmington, where they will play 4 games of ball. " The Wyandott, arrived this morning from. Adams Creek with a cargo of produce- for the local market. The craft landed at Taylors dock. The presentation of the silver ser vice to the U. S. cruiser North Caro lina by Jthe state will take place to morrow off Cape Lookout". The pres entation speech on part of the state will be made by Lieutenant-Governor Francis Winston. Mr. 'Charles U. Har ris, of Raleigh, N. 'C., will introduce the speaker. .'He pased through New Bern this1 morning on the east bound Norfolk and Southern train for More- head City to be on hand for the big celebration. ' ' ' ,. .- 'tf.y. ". V.?..?.-' v"'"- - "'5- . Mr. W. B. Blades and family, Mr. J. B. Blades and .family, and. a few invited friends are preparing to leave tonight on the house boat Comfort, for Morehead City.1 They will witness the presentation of the silver service to the U. B. cruiser North Carolina and expect to spend part of the summer on this . comfortable boat, '-cruising about the sound. ; ARf LEAVING For Te Denver NaU i6nalConvention ALL INSTRUCTED FOB BRYAN. The Florida Alulmnui and North Caro lina DeWatfs Will Eat Saturday Dinner tjTUli Bryan at Lincoln, hra&tn By Wire to Sjhe Sun. Columbia,. S. C, July 2. The South Carolina delegation of eighteen men, all instructed for Bryan, leave tomor row via A8heville, St. Louis, Kansas City route for the Denver convention, due there late Sunday. The Florida delegates were today joined at Mont gomery by the Alabama delegates. Flo rida, Alabama and North Carolina del egates eat Saturday dinner with Bryan at Lincoln, iieb. KILLED vBY FALLING ROOF. Two Men Crushed to Death and Others Injured at Minneapolis. By Wire to the Sun. . Mineapolis, Minn., July 2. Two men were killed and three injured this afternoon ,fn the collapse of a livery stable at . 40 j Seventh street south, which was bjfeing torn down to make room for a theatre. - C. W. Hardy ot this city and Geo. Johnson, of jwilmar, Minn., are the men who w4re killed. The-three in jured were;'Wled Under the debris and are" at -AfiSty. hospital. The accident occurred shortly be fore 3 o'clock when fourteen men were working on the building. So far as can be learned, bricks that were being removed were thrown on the front part of the roof, making the weight greater than the walls could bear. The front part of the roof caved in, hurling Hardy and Johnson to the pavement outside the walls. Hardy was killed instantly and Johnson died on the way to the hospital. AMBASSADOR RIDDLE BETTER. Recovering from Illness In Which Pneumonia Mag Feared. By Wir to The Sun. . St. , Petersburg July "2. John W. Riddle the American ambasador who has been threatened with pneumonia, is continuing to gain strength, although slowly. . ' Today he received Irwin B. Laughlin, second secretary of the embassy, who will leave tomorow on a two months' vacation. BULLETS END LAW SUIT. Prosecutor Kills Defendant in Quarrel Just Before TriaL By Wire to The Sun. Branford, Fla., July 2. N. H. Green shot and killed L. W. Tldwell this morning while they were on their way to Live Oak to attend court. Green was the prosecutor and' Tidwell the de fendant in a case which was up for trial. They Quarreled, and Green shot Tidwell twice. The coroner's Jury acquitted Green the evidence showing that he acted In self defense. Mrs. Blimps' Condition Critical. By Wire to The Sun. ; Norfolk, Va., July 2. Mrs. C. E Cecil Billups, daughter of Mr. Carroll H. Smith, of Baltimore, who was acci dentally shot with a revolver at her summer home Edgewater, last week continues in a critical condition at the Norfolk Protestant Hospital, although Iter physicians are still hoping for her recovery. It has been found that the bullet which - tore -through her left breast penetrated the lwer , portion of the lung.- - , . t - ' Joel Chandler Harris IIL By' Wire -to The Sun. - Atlanta, July 2. Joel Chandler Harris,- known' the world ; over Upcle Remus, is seriously ill. His physicians at the bedside today hold out but little hope of his recovery. Cannot Get it on first Ballot NOT .GET OVER SIX HUNDRED. Many States Instructed for Him Will Break Away and Vote for Johnson, Who According to Claims of Lynch Will have 300 Votes on 1st Ballot. By Wire to The Sun. Denver, Col., July 2. Fred B. Lynch for Governor Johnson, and Josiah W. Marvell for Judge Gray, are out with tresh statements today claiming that whereas Bryan csuinot possibly get over six hundred onlthe first ballot or sixty-eight less than number needed to nominate the Nesbraska man will not, for all confident predictions of friends, be named by next weeks con vention. They claim, as even many ardent Bryan men secretly realize, that if Bryan docs not land on the first La.ioi he will not land at all and on subsequent balots many states instruc ted for him will break away from in structions and vote for Johnson, who according to claims of Lynch, will show 250 to 300 votes on the first ballot. The statement yesterday by Judge Gray that he would not permit the use of his name for president or vice president is not taken seriously here today and the most interesting of late reports is that New York so far is unable to get together on vice president, will strongly favor Gray for second place with Johnson. State Chairman Connors. One of the most active men here is spreading the state ment everywhere that Bryan cannot possibly carry New York though John son and Gray could carry that state, New Jersey, Maryland, Delaware, and possibly Connecticut "Johnson" said Lynch "would carry all the Atlantic Seaboard outside New .England and Pennsylvania. FALLS HEIR TO $8,000,000 Arthur L. Carson Richmond Clerk, to Get Big Fortune. By Wire to The Sun. Richmond, Va., July 2. Arthur L, Carson clerk In a clothing store in Richmond received word from New York yesterday that he wuld fall heir to $8,000,000 left by his uncle, Chas. L. Carson a salon proprietor, who died four months ago. Young Carson had made application to enter the Richmond Fire Depart, ment apd was notified to appear before the Board of Commissioners tomorrow night. In view of the startling news of an enormous fortune said to be awaiting him, he will not Join the fire department, but will leave for New York next week to confer with his lawyers. He appears to have no doubt of get ting the money.. Charters Granted. By Cable to The Sun. Raleigh, N. C, July 2. Charters Is sued today to Carolina Renovating Co., of Wilmington to clean buildings and furniture, capital twenty-five thousand with twelve thousand five hundred sub scribed by B. H. Stephen, L. F. Home, and J. G. Young and to Wilson Live Stock Company, of Wilson, with hun dred thousand authorized and twenty- six thousand subscribed by John Y. Moore, John L. Wiggins, J. O. Farmer, T. M. Washington, T. W. Williams and E, L Hanklns. MARKET REPORT. Cotton By Wire to The Sun. ' New York, July 2. Coton easy, de cline 7 to 13, active selling near the months at Liverpool. Rains In Texas, showers In eastern belt July opened 9.72 and 3. ' V- Stocks--, New York,. July 2. Smelting Refin Ing; Southern Pacific, Steel Common unchanged, copper down 1-8, Locomo- tlve 1-2 lower, Erie Common down 1-8,1 Union Pacific and Reading 3-8 higher, Brooklyn and Bteel Preferred UP 1-4, Northern Pacific 1-8. News of Interest From Raleigh JURY IS NOW INVESTIGATING. The Death of Engineer Stultz Here Under Sensational Circumstances Body of Stultz Has Been Shipped to Roanoke, Va. Special to The Sun. Raleigh, N. C, July 2. Coroner Se parks and his jury are investigating the death of Engineer Stultz here funder such sensational circumstances yesterday morning. There was a short session of the jury last evening during which the mother and three sisters of Turner Smith told of the coming of some man to the bed room window of Alice Smith to "peep" and of Turner Smith having "waited" for his return and fired at a fleeing man four times. Engineer Stultz having appeared a few minutes later at the Seaboard round house fatally wounded. There are a number of other witnesses to be examined tomorrow, the jury having taken a recess to 11 o'clock this morn ing. The body of Stultz was shipped this morning to Roanoke, Va., where his wife and children reside for interment Turner Smith remains in the city Jail pending the result of the coroner's Investigation. The electric contracting and supply offices of Ruth, Doyle and Ball on Har- get street here was' closed by the sheriff here this afternoon and it is announced that the stock will be closed out at auction later ' for the benefit' of creditors , Revenue officers report two seizures yesterday and last night. One was in Johnston county near Four Oaks where a forty gallon still was destroyed. The other was In the lower section of Wake county near Eno. Fifty gallons of whiskey was seized in addition to de stroying the still and equipment A petition in involuntary bankrupt cy is filed with the United States dis- ' trict court here against the Jonesboro Sash and Blind Company, of Jones boro, A. C. Holloway and W. H. Hoyle being counsel for petitioning creditrs. Abut $10,000 is involved. At the rural free delivery mail car riers in North Carolina are paid each month through the postmaster at Ral eigh, Willis G. Briggs, the aggregate being more than $85,000. There is constant effort on the part of the office here to see to it that checks in payment of salaries are not held over long by any of the carriers.' Recently a num ber of inquiries were sent out to car riers who had not cashed their checks. or at least whose checks had not come to the paying bank, asking them what disposition had been made of the checks. One carrier' sent a remark able answer in which he gave the exact amounts he had paid for groceries for a suit of clothes, a shirt and a va riety of odds and ends, leaving 65 cents In hand. It was clear to the nay- master that this carrier did not have his check still In hand. In one case recently a carrier was found to have "put away" six monthly checks of $75 each. He said he preferred to hold the checks to getting the money. Only the insistence of the department that the checks must be cashed made the car rier change his practice and cash the checks as he received them. The silver service, to be presented to the Cruiser North Carolina off the Beaufort Inlet Friday morning through the legislative . committee from the state of North Carolina, was shlped from Ralelgli this morning by H. Mah ler's .Sons, the contracting Jewelers, and the presentation is to be between'' 11 and 12 o'clock after the arrival of the morning train at Beaufort. There will be three revenue cutters at More head to carry the official party and clt lzens generally out to the battleship which will be at anchor fourteen miles out at sea. The address for the pres entation will be by IJettiSll Gover nor Francis D. Winston anT accep- tanee will be by Commander Victor Blue of the cruiser. - There will be a ball at Atlantic Hotel Morehead. ThursdaV evening In honor of the officers bf tV crulser and the I (Continued on e Eieht.) :t.y. r I , - t , A" 1 '.--SliV4't -r mm ;.'V--J t i'iSfS''' 'ii. j f'.' 'ii'WrsiA " . : a. '-'1 . " ' V". ' . ''''5v:.;-r?.-.S;..t.'M'" ;K-'"!ivrtw';iv'.... ,-;