HE MUHNi.no fOSXs FRIDAY, MAKCH 21. 190a Female Store Robber Arrested at Kinston Three Arrests .This Week in Go!dsboro for Selling" Whiskey on Sunday. Another New Lo comotive r:dddoro. X. ('.. Maivh 20. Spe Yiai. ---Chief of Police Freeman return i ;his nioniiiis from Kinston with I-ena Simmon, a colored girl, who broke into . h. store r M. E. Castex A: Co. on Sunday morning about ;i month ago. '! chief had notified- tiie officers in t hi surrounding towns of the lisap j r.imiK-e of the negro girl from this ( v and last nighr :i telegram was re , "f from the chief of police of Kin- mi stating that the . girl had been ar- Tiie crime with which she is charge! i which there in xi ui ; Iv evidence 10 ; rove, is one of ih i-oldesi robberies Li! h;ts taken pl.se. in this city for -,,- time. She iiie store of above firm in bi:i! day light on -.,!.".y morning about 11 o'clock while ;. wviv going: a! nig the street - i !.i h. She was noticed by Chief of p iiiif Freeman when she emerged from : s-ide alley. ITe knew the girl and :.-'i-el hr what she was doing with so v: my bundles. She had some hat i . and two or three bundles in her . .int. She told hc chief that she was t rying 'hom up to the residence of Mi. I..H. Catex. ' This did not satisfy j.' chief and, he found a clerk who rxv.kd in the store and asked about the ). - tilt s. The clerk said the girl was Tdiing a falsehood. The chief then Judge Adams' Hope Lies with President Roosevelt Still Further Hntol Pnnnritv .Skill IUILIIWIIIUIVI UULUVUT TOT breenSbOTO LXOfln- r -I -f Orponsb:-.ro. X. C, March 'JO. Spe-r-;.ii. Mr. W. F. Clegg. the gentleman and popular proprietor of Hotel I'tegr. is greatly improving his place. 11'' has beautified the dining room and 1'ibby by putting in several sections of large plate glass and is now preparing t i add about "0 rooms to the hotel, li lias leased the adjoining building fii d will go to work at once to re n.cdrl it. One story will be added, a new front put iu and other improve ments made. Judge Spencer B. Adams returned tins morning from a visit to Washing ton. It is said by his friends that Judge Adams will probably be appointed to the Alaskan judgeship in the near fu me. He has many strong endorse ments from influential menvin his par ry and is known to be regarded with favor by the powers that be. The greatest obstacle in his way is the can didacy of a friend of Senator Penrose . i Pennsylvania. Inasmuch ap Senator Penrose and Attorney General Knox nie very warm personal friends, the urn may fall to the lot of the man I'vim ;he Keystone State, unless Pres ident Boosevelt should take the bit in his mouth and give the place to the i"r;h Carolina man. The I- Ilichnrdson Drug Company 's n.oving into the large five-story bnck building on the corner of i-pot and South Davie streets. 'icre will be i f mi ng ton Busi ness Men Enter Their Protest Against Increase in Insurance Rates Story of Saving Crew of Wrecked Vessel Wilmington. X. C. Mai;ch 20. Special. rl ,ie business men of Wilmington are '"t going to submit to the 2o cents urease in the insurance rate without ifriug a protest, ;.id that protest was "i:i'le iii the. form or a resolution unani- "'isly adopted at the Chamber of Coto-iniT'-e meeting yesterday afternoon, and ;: speaks in no uncertain terms." Mr. y! s. Millard, secretary of the-Carolina Insurance Company, submitted the fol i.nvin -i 1-eiila.r to the chamber: "He believe the Carolina is in a po "ii. if it should receive the endorse ment and support of the commercial " dies of the city in its effort's, to sc 'iv some 'very material modification rhe recent advance in rates. At ':' rate, the company is willing to :n.n.ke the etfort, and (at its. own ex I' ; nci 0 send its representative to Xew '"ik or Atlanta, to lay before the of li ' is of the companies the reasons why Mnington should not be as heavily t;i..-il a some other communities. "'c believe, if we can be successful 5" -'ii-h an effort, it will be of much 1 " e benefit t the community than it ..iild be for the Carolina, by itself, to '"''e to be governed by the increase fi,i"I'tcd by the companies, as the amount J'1' insurance which a single company f:ia enrry is comparatively limited. "I i the Chamber of Commerce, the I i.Miuee Exchange and the .Merchants' -ss.i:-j;1 1 jon think favorably of this prop ""i i 'ii. we are ready to act at once in nutter. "n motion of Mr. George It. French f"llowing was adopted: Wh Teas. The State of Xorth Caro l1;1 has. throngh the Legislature, pro J1' '! an insurance law which protects insurance companies from incen ''.'''smi and one that is acceptable to underwriters, and the city, of Wil ;" !l-t(i has adopted a paid fire de-i'i-tiiM'iit and purchased additional ma 'ii.'us at considerable cost in order to '.'e'im itself effectively, and it was prom Nr' 1 'hat these improvements would iu lure lower rates of insurance; and went to find the girl. He found, most oi the stolen goods, bnt the girl uc ceeding iu making her escape. When arrested yesterday sue had one of the pair of shoes with her which slie had stolen which she had never worn. The chief brought the shoes home with him this morning. The arrest of Dennis Robinson, col ored, this morning for selling whiskey o;i Sunday without license, make the third arret of this kind that has taken place this week and goes to show that there were more blind tigers in G lds bol'O ;han the public knew- of. One of the other offenders was a woman who had been buying corn whiskey in jugs and. selling it to whoever .would care to buy. In addition to being a violation of the city laws it is a vio lation of the Federal laws and when the city is through with these "blind tijrer" people the government may take a hand in the matter. There is Jit tip doubt but that such people are Te sironsible for a large part of the Sun Cay drinking. The machine shops of- Dewey Bros. Lave turned out another locomotive, which will he loaded tomorrow and shipped to White Oak. a station be tween Xew Kern and Jacksonville. This one. like the others which they have made from time to time, is built for a tram way for hauling logs. Their .simpleness of construction, together with a corresponding cheapness, make this class of locomotives popublar with saw mill men. Mr. W. T. Harrison, the superintendent of the plant, said he had four orders ahead for just '"oh. a locomotive as they will load tomorrow. It takes about thirty days to build one. They start from the rails ami build evr.rhing from driving wheels to smoke-stack. concern to grow and expand, wnich n. hnhif rf ( JreensHorn enterprises, as .nil the world knows. from near Winston-Salem, passed through here 'this morning on his ne turn from Asheboro, where he sustained paipful injuries from the kick of a horse yesterday. - Judge and Mrs. James E. Boyd and their guests, the Misses Boyd of Wash ington, spent the day in Statesville with :h family of Col. II. C. Cowlc. Kx-Sherifl'. Donahoe of Caswell spent the day hre. Judge W. P. Bynnm, Jr., returned last night from Aheville. where he has been 'prosecuting the Breese ease in the district court. Mr. E. W. Lyon, one of the proprie tors of the Argo gold mine in Nash county tells me that the work of devel oping tho property on a Jarger scale will b'egin in the near future. The prospecting that has been done has led the owners to believe that the mine can be worked very profitably. Superintendent Broadhurst' of the city public schools, will conduct a competi tive examination of applicants for ap pointment to the United States Xaval Academy on the 20th inst. 3Ir. E. M. Andrews, one of the best business men in North Carolina, is pre paring to move from Ca riot to to Greens boro. He will engage in the furniture ann music business on a big scale. The village of Jamestown; in the western part of h- county, is cpm ing to the front. A broom factory has been added no the list of enterprises in the thriving community. "Whereas, By the published statement of the Insurance Commissioner, through the circular of the Greensboro Fire In surance Companies, it is shown that for the past three years the fire insurance companies doing business in this State have made a net profit of 2o per cent, allowing per cent for general ex jienses and 40 per cent for their losses, according to the record, and in the face of these facts the 'Southeastern Tariff Association has advised our local tire insurance agents of an increase of 2" per cent on all stocks of merchandise and manufacturing plants; we therefore express it as our opinion that this in discriminate increase is burdensome and unjust, and should not be endured with out a protest; and "Whereas. The Greensboro fira insur ance companies refuse to make the addi tional assessments, stating that their business is profitable at the present rates, that we commend them for their action and recommend their patronage to the extent of the iines f insurance their capital will permit thu safely to write. "The Carolua Insurance Company of this city also claims to have made a 'handsome profit' on its business in this city, and expresses a willingness to 'lentl its aid and efforts to secure some relief from the burden of the increased insurance'; therefore be it "Ttesolved, That we strongly endorse this movement on the part of the Caro lina Insurance Company to effect ra tional modification of these recent ad vanced rates,' as they apply to this city, and urgently request the officers of the Carolina Insurance Company that they move in this matter and that we will appreciate the effort of this, our home company, to relieve us of this unwar ranted taxation and suggest that t.hev ask and obtain the co-operation with them of the local Board of Under writers. -believing, that "in unity there is strength." A member of the .crew of the United States steamship Algonquin, which sen dered such valuable assistance in saving the crew of the wrecked Spanish steam ship Ea, which foundered last Saturday on Cape Lookout Shoals, writes inter estinglv as follows about the rescue: "The Spanish steamer Ea went ashore at Cape Lookout Sboal Saturday niorn in" at 0:H0 o'clock, loth inst. She hailed from Bilboa. pam. and was I bound from Florida to Xew York, laden with rosin. The misfortune of the steamer was learned by. the revenue cut ter Algonquin Saturday night at 9 o'clock at Southport. and she immediately-steamed under four boilers at full speed to the stranded vessel, which was a distance of 100-miles- The able cutter, notwithstanding the weather, ar rived at the scene of the monster ship Sunday morning at 7:30 o'clock, accom panied by the steam tug Alexander Jones, and there what met our gaze was ever to be remembered. A sinking ship-and no possible, way to render any assistance whatever! Owing to shallow water and heavj- seas no ship or boat could reach them alive. XighUcauie on, and the steamers were compelled by the weather to return to their moorings.- "Monday morning at daylight the steamer's condition Was decidedly worse, breakers rising .clear across her An other day i passed. All efforts to reach the ship were absolutely fruitless. By the aid of glasses we could discern the crew huddled together on the bridge of the doomed vessel, which. .was then their . only refuge other than the rig ging. Some were hanging to the rig ging. Monday night the ! frantic crew, consisting of twejity-six alt told, resorted to their last possible chance of saving thflir lives by lowering away their boat, which would carry only thirteen, one h&lf of the crew, leaving the' rest to Providence. The breakers were then to "the mastheads. Then it grew calm for about ten minutes and the skilled life-savers who' were near by dashed through the seas and succeeded in saving the other portion of the crew, who other wise would have gone down into the deep. But in a few minutes the whole crew were safe aboard the wrecking tug Merritt. of Xorfolk. which was the nearest vessel at the time. The ship broke iu two and went down soon-after-wards. "The Merritt then transferred the un fortunate crew to the Algonqnin, where they were soon snugly clad in dry clothes and all other things needed were pro vided. The Algonquin then proceeded-to th6 nearest point, Morehead City, where the crew will be duly eared for by our bovs. At last accounts the huge steamer j was breaking to pieces on the shoals. "Another wreck was towed into Look out Sunday morning, that of the yacht Endymeon. dismasted and totally dis abled. She was picked up by the wreck ing tug Merrjtt." GAUSESWHiCH" RETARDED GROWTH The South at Last Coming Into Its Own Baltimore, March 20. Special. For a long time the South was content to be a producer of the raw material to be; manufactured at great gain in other parts of the country. Referring to that fact and to the causes which retarded the industrial growth of the .South, the Manufacturers' Iteeord this week says: "That it is coming into its own is de monstrated by the fact that while the value of manufactured products in the whole country increased 142 per cent between 18S0 and 1000, the value of manufactured products in the South in crease! in the same period 220 per cent. In the meantime, the value of manufac tured products in the South increased from eight per cent to eleven per, cent of the value of manufactured products in the country. That fact, taken in connection with the obvious expansion of manufacturing in the South during the ilst ten years, shows that much of the increase in its manufacturing has been but an increase in the first handling of material for lucrative man ufacturing elsewhere, for, with a pop ulation of 23.000.000 the Sonth's man ufactured products in '1900 were value at $1.4(56,000,000. while the rest of the country, with a population of o3.000.000, produced to the value of $11,374,000, 000. Still the South has the proper gait, and the rise in recent years of new indrptrinl centers in nearly every Southern State from West Virginia to Texas, and the enlargement of under takings in older communities, with the manifest tendency toward diversifica tion in manufacturing, indicate the de fermiuation of the South to use to tae utmost all of its magnificent resources for its" own enrichment and for the wel fare of the whole country." Many of the influences contributing to the position which the United States now occupies in industry and commerce are traceable directly to the develop ment of Southern timber, agricultural and mineral resources, rind more than one Southern product lias been foremost in what is known on the other side of the ocean as the "American Invasion." Still. American energy, enterprise and abundance of natural strength are not alone to be considered in explanation of the progress recently made. Faults of the older countries are concerned in it. Referring to one of these. Mr. F. E. Saward. the well known American authority on coal, writes in the Manu facturers' Record: "As showing the backwardness of coal-handling in Lon don, compare it with ours. Iu America the coal cart Is loaded in less than live minutes from an elevated coal bin. In London an ordinary wagon is made to carry about a dozen large bags of coal, which are filled one by one at an ex pense of much time and labor, and then lifted into the vehicle like so many milk cans. In America when the coal cart reaches the house "where its load is to be dumped, the cart is backed up against the side of the pavement? the chute is drawn out like the barrel of a telescope and the end inserted in the coal hole. In a few minutes the entire load runs down into a heap on the floor i of the coal cellar. In London, on the other hand, each bag of coal has to be taken separately from the wagon and emptied as near as may be in the coal hole, and when the task is at latst finish ed the coal which has fallen over on the pavement has to be laboriously shoveled into the coal cellar. And so it goes. In all methods the old country, is be hind its younger and enterprising off shoot. "The trade press seeing and knowing what is done in this, country tried to awaken public interest there, and such k statement as this is not unusual: The whole question of the relative cost of production in this country and in the United States is one beset with awuv difficulties. The conditions snT:uid:nir industry in the new and old worlds vary widely. Our coal pits are bec-jumis deeper every year. In Lancashire coal is being mined not far from what a re considered to be the present limits. The worsing faces are receding further DO YOU GET UP WITH A LAME BACK? Kidney Trouble Makes You Miserable. Almost everybody who reads the news pwpers is sure to know f the wonderful cure maae by Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, the ereat kidnev. liver and bladder remedy. i? cal triumch of the nine- ill teentn century; dis- it l,i covers aiicr years oi i lilt ! Jt L L t n f m. urn sternum rescaxen oy f1 fIPr- Kilmer, the eml H3t - " nent kidney and blad der specialist, and is wonderfully successful in promptly curing lame back, kidney, bladder, uric acid trou bles and Bright's Disease, which is the worst form of kidney trouble. ... Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root is net rec ommended for everything but If you have kid ney, liver or bladder trouble it will be found just the remedy you need. It has been tested in so many ways, in hospital work, in private practice, among the helpless too poor to pur chase relief and has proved so successful in every case that a special arrangement has been made by which all readers of this paper who have not already tried it, nay have a sample bottle sent free by mail, also a book telling more about Swamp-Root and how to find out if you have kidney or bladder trouble. When writing mention reading this generous offer in this paper and send your address to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Bing hamton, " N. Y. The regular inty cent and Home of Swamp-Hoot. dollar sizes are sold by all good druggists. and further from the shafts. Seams of two feet are being worked today in the Northumberland coal field that were despised thirty years ago, whilst in many of the thickerseams all the coal to be got is .that leftin the form of pil lars a monument to the improvidence of a past generation of coal miners.' These are some of the disabilities under which the United States has not beon compelled1 thus far to labor. The 'act that coal Is here generally mined at the outcrop or reached by some short adit or drift, and the thick seams are easily won and inferior seams left, is largely accountable for the high individual out put of the American miner and the low pitmouth price of coal." Agents for CHASE (EL SANBORN'S Messrs." W. C. Srronach's Sons, Raleigh, X. C. Gentlemen: We are pleased to have received through Mr. Randolph your order for High Grade Teas. Regarding the execution of your order we beg to advise that we have used special care in selecting your different grades, and have given you Teas of such quality as will surely impress connoisseurs most favorably. Of course, as you know, we make no attempt to cater for business in low grades. Thanking you for your esteemed order, we remaiu, Most truly, OIIASE & SAXBORX. We have just received from Messrs. Chaee & Sanborn a full line of the highest grade Teas and feel no hesi tancy in offering it to those who know. W. G. STROXACH S SON'S, Wholesale and Retail Grocers, RALEIGH, X. C. I If BY THOS. DIXOX, JR. $1.50 postpaid. BY MARY JOHXSTOX. $1.50 postpaid. TvDewri , SG0.00 delivered with case. This leads them all. Is equal to any of the high priced machines. Send for descriptive catalogue, All orders filled by retnrn mail. lei in 1 1, Raleigh, N. C. W. . N COFFEE 01 SPOTS mm iiii x Ready-to-wear Bepartifieiiit. A broad showing of very elegant Tail Ored vSilitS for women and -misses. Here is the keynote of the collection. There is all the smartness of. the new styles. There is the very best workmanship to be expect ed from the best tailors early in the season before they are rushed and that which most of all appeals to Raleigh women. There is refinement and style that makes a woman not conspicuous yet perfectly well dressed. Ladies' Tailormade Suits. Misses' Tailormade Suits. Misses Tailormade Spring Coats ' Children's Tailormade Reefers. Ladies' Tailormade Silk Skirts. Ladies' Tailormade Wool Skirts. Ladies' Waists, Silk Petticoats, Cotton Petticoats, Infant's P. K. Reefers. B oylan, Pearce & Co. WHEX PERFORMING THE ABOVE I ! 'TIES YOU WILL FIND YOU NEED ARTICLES OF HOFSEFUR NTSHIXGS. CALL OX US TO SUPPLY YOU. WE CAN DO IT WITH THE VEftY BEST QUALITY, AND AT PRICES THAT WILL SURPRISE YOU. EVERYTHING XEW AND -UP TO DATE. EVERY FREIGHT BRINGS NEW GOODS FOR G. S. Tucker & Co. Storeit .Raleigh. Wilson, Tarboro and Rochy Mount, N. C. . THE MATHUSHEK PIANO for more than thirty years has stood every test and is unexcelled by any piaiifc on the market for beauty of finish, quality of tone and durability. Will stanc' in tune longer than any piano.. Ludden & Bates Pianos, ; Mason & Hamlin Organs ON EASY TERMS. WRITE US FOR CATALOGUE. Ludden EL Bates iSoiitHern Music House RALEIGH, N. C. B. F. MANIER, Manager. r-r 11 r esye J. H KING, Pres't ! Trains Young Men, Bovs and Young Ladies for a suecessful start in BUSI ! v.,N 1 IKE teaches vou how to get a LIVING, MAKE MOXEY and to be come au ENTERPRISING, USEFUL CITIZEN. Railroad fare paid. Satis faction guaranteed. Winter term begins Monday, January 6, 1902. Write to day for full information. Address, Fine Shoes FOR LADIES, GEXTS AND CHILDREN. FROM ' 75c to $1.00 Under the regular price to close the ends of our fine lines. THESE ARE BAR GAIN'S; in fact. ALL NEW GOODS. S. C. POOL'S SHO : STORE, RALHIOH, n. c. F. J. HOLDER, Vice Pres't KING'S BUSINESS COLLEGE, 330 Fayetteville St.; Raleigh, N. C-