Newspapers / The Morning Post (Raleigh, … / Nov. 14, 1903, edition 1 / Page 2
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. - . ) 1.. : Mmpvtvg TlST, RATnT?nAY. nVEMBE'K i4 1Q03 CmzwNmroMUs "Hie fa : t Si W of WQ - . . 7 . ; . - Andrew ' Hr Green Shot:aJid Instantly Killed at His Own Door An Imaginary Grievance the Cause of the Tragedy Vaw vnri-. Nov. 13. Andrew H. - . Vl 0f a ! Green, in whose brain the .idea o : a , Greater New York than that within ; the confines of- Manhattan Island first originated, and who with the late . . . Prv moveforthe betterment of .the! city was foully . muruerea . door this afternoon by Cornelius Will iams, a middle-aged negro whose un balanced mind had,, conjured up a grievance against -the aged philan- thfopist. . ; ' " f Mr. Green was 83 years, old and was known as "the father of Greater- New York." - - ',' : ?- f Three' shots were'. Tired into Mr. Green's bbdy, and any one of them was serious enough to have killed him. Two others, aimed at him by the mur derer, went wide, but before they were fired at all the assassination had been accomplished and Mr. Green lay dead on the Aground, his assailant standing 'over him,, revolver in hand, pouring out the vilest curses1 at :the body. The murder of Mr. Green was with out a shadow of excuse. Neyer in his life had the victim seen jthe murderer before, and the grievances which ' the negro poured into his victim's ear be fore he killed him concerned matters of which there is not the least evidence to snow that Mr. Green knew anything at all. The negro had walked by his pide to' the door of the house, raving of his imagined wrongs, and Mr. Green, 'slightly out of patience with such per sistency, placed his hand on the man's Vhqulder and asked him in a kindly tone to please go away. For answer Williams whipped out a heavy calibre revolver and fired the shots which laid Mr. Green dead at his. feet. Williams 'made no attempt to escape. He stood 'still while the police took him in cus tody and gloried in what he had done rather than regretted It. When he told his story and it de veloped that for eight-years his dis eased mind had been nurturing the priwanrp which brouEfht about the tragedy, it was clear in the opinion) of the authorities that he was mental- j ly unbalanced, if not in all things at least on the one subject of the negro woman on whose account he took a life. , - The woman is Bessie Davis. About her the police had been unable to ob tain the slightest information up to a late hour tonight. In 1S95 Williams I hoarded with the woman and had! some trouble with her. As a result, he says, she slandered him so that his friends shunned him. His fiance jilted him. His landlord dispossessed him, and the church of which he was a Trominent member, cast him out. His every' effort at retaliation was thwart ed because of the protection which Andrew H. Green afforded the woman. For eight years, the fellow says, he has sought the woman "to cut her lying tongue from her mouth," -but again he was thwarted by the friend ship of Andrew. H. Green. Finally, he told it boldly, he determined to .kill Mr. Green, and for a week he sought the opportunity which he got today. Not another excuse, for this crime does the negro offer. The life of An drew H Green was sacrificed because of a woman of whose existence there is nothing to show that Mr. Greenhad ever heard of. Cornelius Williams, the murderer, is 43 years, old. He is about 5 feet 9 inches tall, rather light in color, sub stantially built, and wearing good clothes. . Ha has short side whiskers which come half way down his cheeks, and his general appearance is that of a dignified and respectable" colored man of some prosperity. He is the last man who would be picked out as one capable of such a crime as he com mitted today. Williams had been fre quenting the vicinity of Mr. Green's home for a week and several men had observed his suspicious movements. Last Tuesday was the last time he was eeen until today. It was 1 o'clock when he was first observed standing in front of the house, and he did not go .more than a dozen paces from it at any time. Finally he walked into the ' vcHhnlo of AT i nr-o'c Lrto and concealed himself. He had been watching for the appearance of Creep. . .. , . Mr. The conversation between Mr Green iue tuiieiscl.uua,uei.ueen mt. vreen and the murderer and the shooting "were' all In the-presence of Mrs. Anna Bray of S30 Thirty-fifth street, a wo man who does wrork for the Green3 'and had entered the front yard a little ahead of Mr; Green. When she heard the pistol shot, she set up a terrific screaming, wThich brought all of the servants out of the house and from the near by houses also. Miss Lucy Green, who was in the house also, ran cut, and sitting on the flagstones be side Mr. Green, took his head in her lap and vainly tried to restore him to . consciousness. But Mr. Green was long past assistance of any kind. His death must have been almost instan .taneous. . ; ' Meanwhile the murderer stood nvr - ;his victim, reviling his body, pointing the now empty revolver at him, every .once in a while snapping the trigger i .viciously, jno one among the serA'ants"1 paid the slightest attention to him and ne maae no errort to escape. .1 State Pays Interest ; The Btate treasurer on yesterday paid out 561,400 interest on the state's the ; hands of a , management which, outstanding 6 per cent, construction although independent', will be yet thor bonds due October 1st. Tne bondhold- ouhgly friendly to the Southern Rail- .', ers received their interest from New York banks on the day the interest was due and then forwarded their claims to the state treasurer in a lump. This practice on the part or xne New York banks is but another illus- Uration of the great confidence bank- j ing institutions have in the credit Ox the Old North State. v r!jaslrw W'recki Carele-snees is responsible for many j a railway wreck and the same causes j . , . -i ; are ma King- Dumanwreitis ui s"'1" Lung- trout)les.. But pInce the advent of Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption, Coughs and coMs, even the worst cases -can be longer necessary. Mrs. Lois Cragg of ; u., is , one ui iiiiniy ""."c r ' " V;:: ,1 , New uiscovery. xnis great remedy is ; guaranteed for all Throat and Lung diseases' by all Druggists. Price 50c. and $1.00. Trial bottles 10 cents. NEGRO FUNERAL FROM CATHEDRAL ; - . . . . ... . -. . - J - L ; ' - ' " '.. ... .. .. New Orleans, Nov. 13. J. 'Norris Bell, colored, was buried today from Christ ; church cathedral. No negro in New ; vri icaua evei. aau a, muic nuiuiis "" eral, for the services were conducted by Bishop Sissums Dean Wells of the Cathedral, and Rev. A. Gordon Bake - well. Bell was Warden of St. Luke's Episcopal church, colored, and sexton of ' the cathedral since its foundation. All the colored Episcopalians of New Orleans attended. He was a native of Natchez, Miss. Eulogies were pro nounced on him by the bishop and other Episcopal clergymen. ALL FOR LOVE Herbert Pond Proved His Af fection by Shooting His Sweetheart Middletown, N. Y., Nov. 13. A shoot ing affray occurred in this city to night a result of which Miss Jessie L. Smith, daughter of Charles Smith, a veterinary surgeon of this city, . is ! lying in a hospital with a 32-calibre bullet In her right breast, while her jilted lover is lodged invthe city jail. Miss Smith and 'her mother had been making purchases and were on their way home when met by -Herbert Pond. Before the startled mother's eye he took deliberate aim at Migs Smith and fired, the first bullet taking effect. She was taken to an adjoining house and j physicians were summoned. Pond made no resistance to arrest and ex- 1 claimed: "I gave her her medicine and I am willing to take mine. I went up there once before to do the job, but my courage failed. I am willing to take all I get, for I loved the girl." PREPARING TO FIOHT 3 Colombia Is Sending an Army Against Panama Guayaquil, Ecquador, Nov. 13. Yes terday afternoon General Plaza, presi dent of Ecquador, sent a dispatch to President Marroquin of Colombia, ex pressing sympathy with him in the events that have recently transpired on the Isthmus of Panama, To the dispatch President Marroquin has replied, thanking President Plaza for his expressions of sympathy, in forming him that a Colombian army under Generals Reyes, Osplna, Olgu- holguin and Caballeros is marchin.ir on Panama for the purpose of putting down the insurrection. WANTED TO KILL A Negro Boy's Explanation of a Deliberate Murder T Jl i .u T- a m. n T jinuianapous, ma., xsov. ivj. iviiKe in - graham, an eleven-year-old colored boy living near Lawrenceburg, when or dered today to leave the home of John Childers, deliberately raised a shot gun to his "shoulder and sent a load of buckshot through the head of Mila r?hildprs. fivP vpsrs nH. TVip hnv t-p. loaded , the gun and escaped to the t r N w Yo r& j woods, "and when seen by farmers de.Krey Hunter of Cumberland county. clared that he would kill any one who tred to takp him. Later, however, he : ; ,' , was persuaueu to surrenaer, ana wnen 1 . . : - n . . J " ,ct t,o nnQi .v,;, u,.iofficial returns over D. C. Edwards oton the wagon, and taking the reins, said he wanted to kill some one, and it . . , in 1 trii r. as wr 1 n rvi 1 1 a rs nnvhviv else. FRIENDLY INTERESTS The Seaboard and Rival Com peting Systems in the . ' South : New York. Nov. 13. The Sun's re- fv16 of -the Waif street market says ithe Southern ; Railway, stocks "J.v?ere! much stronger than the v have been tp- i cently, and, on the outside. market the stocks of the Seaboard Air Line., which have "beon active for "a long time, ad- vanced rapidly in prices. In the two circumstances last named lay by far the most importantv development of the day, although Wall street. was wholly! unaware oil. It.. Negotiations are pend ing, in fact,, whereby the control of the Seaboard Air Line will pass into way ' and the Atlantic Coast Line in- terestsY:- " : : " r " 7- ir xnese negotiations nave hul jxt definitely concluded, but there is good rpa.on to hOre that they will result itotkts have agreed v to furnish, the Seaboard -. Air Line. Company money sumcient to rorrmlAtA: th .T?irm nsham- extension of - - . r3 the, road. In- return tnese Capitalists ask, as is entirely-proper, the contro iof the company's affairs. It is- need- lesg to ODSerVe that not only 'will "a community of railway interests be thus establishediin the southern part of our country, which previously did not ex- ist but a situation which at any time may become one of unpleasantness for the general market to be wholly cleared. " -S ; Iirolor ntdT Proposal New York, Nov. 13. The' strength., of the Seaboard Air Line securities in the curb market today, when the preferred . . nit and the common 1 ; let to a report, which was verified, that imDOrtant matters were under con- - ... . . sideration by the board of directors at a meeting they were holding at la Wall street. The directors, at a meet ing beuh " before non and which did not leave the board room until about 6 o'clock, had under consideration an offer from, important financial inter- ests which are in a position to furnish to the Seaboard Air Line, the "required funds for building us extension irom Atlanta to Birmingham as well as funds needed for other purposes. These interests, it was stated, are friendly fn the Southern railway, and the COnClUSlOn OI me neSUUailUUS la r-v- uv. pected to operate toward establishihj more harmonious relations in the south prn railroad territory .Tnhn Skiton Williams, nresident of the Seaboard Air Line Company, wasj20,COO bales Of cotton asked regarding the reported offer and what action had been taken thereon. He replied that at the meeting of the board today matters relating to the general business of the company were taken up and discussed, but no action was taken with regard to any financial offer.' President Williams declined to say exactly what matters relating to the general business of the company were taken up, but he insisted that there had been "no change in the prop erty as a result of the meeting," and he added that the affairs of the com pany were in a thoroughly satisfactory state. It was learned from another director that while no action was taken regard- over and will come up for decision at over turn wm uWtie uwx " the next meeting of the board, which vrill be held soon. 11 be held soon r tt" vn,,,, " TT v "Pierre Oak- IS. r. xoaitum, 1. v. ir-ierce, ajs. leigh Thome and E. S. Guiuness, of entered the 'board of directors rot the Seaboard Air Line after the control nf ithp nronprtv had been secured bv these men In the summer as a result of the sale of the holdings of a pool which had been formed to support Sea-, board stock in the market. The mar- ket had been going down steadily for some time and the pool iad accumu lated a large amount of stock. It was this stock which, througn the banking house ofLandenburg, Thalmann & Ci. was turned over to the new interests. It was said at the time that there was some probability of the Rock - Island coming into possession of the Sea board, as it was understood that Rock Island Interests held an option on the t 1o OMfn ww - CCV Uil CJ, O LUVXV. XL IO UllUIJlUUU, 1 ' ' t . . . ... ever, mat tne aominatmg inieresis in j, 1 1 j . -! Seaboard would be willing to dispos of their holdings if In that way har mony in the traffic situation of the south could be--preserved. To fare a Oo'il In On Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All druggists refund the money if it fails to cure. E. W. Grove's' signa ture Is on each box. 25c. t Land Suits Promised Batson Prairie, Tex., Nov. 13. The phenomenal increase in the value of ; lands in this section, caused by the re- cent wonderful oil strike here, has luseV many conflicting claimants to! the land to appear, and many suits for1 the recovery of valuable property are now in course of preparation. Prior to . w ... . . the discovery of oil the land was sidered practically valueless and many persons who held deeds to land did not go to the trouble to record them. These ancient deeds are now being revived and placed on record in the county clerk's office, and there is very much ; " - " J v,0 j ""e to the property etraightened out a.utiviijr in Lining iu get Liieir ii-iicgeu i by the different claimants. Both Sides Claiming Frankford, Ky., Nov. 13. On the face I -v-f 4-V, .J 1, J. i. w iuhi9,.wiuj me giwiei pii f Oley county, unreported W. God- former con pressman -from . the third air Z . TJl a.a, has a majority of fifteen votes on un- r y' in he f1 f ftl" in the 11th congressional district to fill -" tne vacancy caused by the death of j Vincent Boreing.. Hunter claims the;; election by 1,000 and Edwards by 300. There will be a contest. Cockran Declines New York, Nov. 13. Bourke Cockran, it was said authoritatively 'tonight, has declined the offer from Charles F. Murphy ot the congressional nomina- tion- in the 12th district to succeed George B. McClellan.. Some of the Tammany Naders favor the nomination 1 J M A -9 t A ! 01 JvllcPael Y i-aKe,.cwef clerk, of -the UUttru 01. umermen. - ' ; Rpqnllltinns nf RpQnprt ncoUIUUUiio UI neSUcCL Goldsboro Argus: The following res- olution has been adooted by the Golds- boro camp of Confederate veterans and sent to the family of the late Mrs. General Branch incident upon her daath,: . v : "? behalf of Thomas Ruffin. Camp tops tho cough axid Iroals Xuiv : we . offer our sympathies ' In your be- -ireavexnent at the loss df your mother, fiwArn o K. lirancn. of General Branch. Genera Branch s memory is rev eranmi uy an erate soldiers. He was Killed on ljth -or September ' ' dr we fel and aopre.2late your loss as do fifft in which j uu .MC . ... . General Branch was miiea me wmer . . wnP(1 in that bat- tie, and under his command. , - v "Very respectfully. "W. H. SMITH. Commander Thomas Ruffin Camp." COTTON TRADE U m OF WILMINGTON Receipts Over 200,000 Bales and Eightesn Cargoss Ship ped to Foreign Ports . wiln-.lneton. N; C. Nov. H.-Special. The reeejpts of cotton at this port since September 1st, the beginning or the crop year, have been a little over 200,000 bales to date." This breaks last a vpnr's record for a corres ponmng length of time, when 197,40 Dales were wnen u received The total exports from tnep ,wc ,mdr com- port amount to over 1S0.C0O bales. Since September 1st eighteen cotton steam- ers nave cieareu irum ull5lt , cargoes for foreign points. steamer Anglo The splendid, new si Saxon arrived this afternoon ror a car go of cotton from Alex. Sprunt & son liih ia.ree. CAUuriciB. 111c vcooci j.o o-- i o- -x ' If l w . L11C XJLLt-'-l. tflM ' fni- lmrr the nno-aot OM1T1 Tnnr PVPF entered this harbor. She registers 4,- 263 tons gross. Tlie vessel is a modern fr-ata-Vita- a n r win mrrv nnwflrds of OUT FOR GROVER . : A Former Populist Senator Says H e Is the On ly Man v to Win 1 Topeka, Kas., Nov. 13. Judge John Martin, a fusion Democrat, once a Populist - United States senator from Kansas, comes out today in favor of the nomination ' of Grover Cleveland for president. He says: ',-: ', i "While Cleveland -is not exactly the article of Democracy that I would pick I for, president, he is better than-Roose velt and would cause this' countrv less vveit and ould cause this country less irouoie. more man max, re couiu elect Cleveland, and he is the only man , ... I we couia eiect. uc course ne 13 not with the western Democrats orr' the j money question, but really that " is a : fettled Issue for the present, and all the 1 Bryan and free silver parties on earth couia not onng it to tne iront again." ' mm . . BOLD ROBBER MAN A Negro Holds up a. Cashier and Shoots Two Policemen Washington, Nov. 13. Philip Stew art, cashier of a restaurant near the United States treasury in the heart of; ; tbe city, was held up tonight at the : Pnt of a revolver by James Smith, a sne.gro formerly emDloved in the res- , - - " taiirant xxrV,rx rwlr oil ( "iifc . m? m oi&iil. ! nrifT fltrl Smith cTirwt t before he was captured. Policeman paid a high compliment to Dr. Win Osborne's leg was broken by one of : ston and CaI)t- Phelps. Smi'Ys shots and another knocked off ! "Foot Ball" by Mr. O. U Bagley. his badge and grazed the skin over the ThIs Sme, he sid, was the pre heart: Edwards, although dazed, grap- eminent American college sport, be pled with the negro and beat him into cause thers? was no such thing as pro insensibility. A mob of several hun- fessional foot ball players. He praised, dred gathered and there were cries of : the work of Coach I Arthur Devlin and iyrwh him." RIN A FEW CABS Chicago Street Car Company Fynprt tn RfPflk thp trikp ; Chicago, Nov. 13. The tie up caused jhy the strike of the Chicago City Rail- : - - ----- - .con-rpvay Company's men was broken today when electric cars on the Wentworth avenue line made three successful trips from the Seventy-seventh street barns to Washington street' and back. Several attempts to form blockades were made by union , teamsters, but'AT K ..:v even Drignter ror c u; otuuua oviuciH utuuucu at - - 2 o clock on the return trip of ten cars sent out on the second trip. When the first of the cars reached Van Buren street a large crowd was encountered and strenuous work was required to make a passage. An express wagon ; . ' i 1. 1 j.. js j. - . , vvius btrucii uy ine lirsi ca.r ana jam ;med against several other vehicles. This had scarcely been straightened out when a heavy wagon drove in front w liIB tzmu uar. xe teamster rerused : to move and Lieutenant MHIpt inmnoi drove the Worses to one side. Then thP. iwwd hnnt rh hnrM . . 1 "v. All this time hundreds of hoodlums were yelling "scab" and "strike break- ers." Manager McCulloch declared he was satisfied and would be prepared to resume service on the lines just as soon as ample protection was guaran teed. No attempt was made r to run cars on the other lines of the company lthe "vVentworth line. - , i Mail trains on the cable lines made thelr scheduled trips during the day tunmolested nd monr, hv 11T,1rtT, pickets reported that no effort had been, made by the company to take out- electrtc car mail runs. j The strike situation was complicated late this evening when firemen in the sIx power houses, located in different parts of the south "side went on strike The reasoh assigned for this Is that Manager McCufloch refused to listen io their pians for mediation. ; ' - ' "Do yau think you are giving our city & grood government?" asked the earn- 1 es.t man. ''Well, ' answered Mr." De Graft,' after some delibera-tlon, "It's as good as rnoney can buy." Washington Star. W JVfl dTlfSS 1 S M1 Holds Its Enthusiastic Toasts Followed the Feast at the Yarborough Last Night-Speeches by Pres. Winston and Capt. Phelps. Class Roll Wah! Who! Wah! Wah! Who! Wah! J. U. N. I. Ju-Ni-Ah! Who Ray! Who Ray! Who Roar ! Jnior ! The second annual banquet of the ii rvf 'OS of the isorth uarouiiJ w le-e of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts last-night in the dining' hall x'n? iriven of the yarbbrough House from 9 to 12 o'clock and throughout the joyous fes- tu-itiPs of the evening unbounded tn- . thusiasm for the present junior ciasa prevailed. mand of Capt. F. E. Phelps, the com- mandant, came from the college io fnr this annual fes- - ' tivity. maturated by thelaas o 05 - After the banquet 01 eiou- . -v , I toasts were responded to most happily v,r f-if tvip. inniors ana oy - t,1t- -rocI pri Winston - 11171 IILllIlL X iiClWJ. - - - and Coacn Annur uevmi. 4.1 1 were all received wun most H""" i tir nnd nrolonsred applause. The great- est outburst of the evening was wnen President Wiriston, replying to Capt. rhelps' statement that this must be his last year at the college, declared "We do not intend that Capt. Phelps'! B. Hoyle, vice-president; C. A. se., stay" shall terminate with this year, "Coach" Devlin was another hero of the hour and the juniors lost ho op portunity in showing their, devotion to the foot ball trained. The class yell was given when the young men entered and was repeated at the conclusion of the joyous event. Then before marching from the hall the juniors sang their class song and made the welkin ring. Mr. O. L. Bagley, the master of cere monies, introduced Capt. F. E. Phelps, who made an enthusiastic address. Capt. Phelps congratulated the class of 1905 upon inaugurating the custom of J . Mr nnnr txixnuu, v.a, was approved by the president of the ,.v. -,r,,,Mn.DH wuuesc cwu -iatuu.' i. 0 college spirit and welded the young men together. He referred to such events in his own college life, saying that they made lasting impressions. He paid the class of '05 many high com pliments and said that the steady im provement In attendance, drill, study and manners was most marked. Not a man In the Junior class could be found who was not worthy to be a sergeant, -j ' THE TOASTS. Mr. W. M. Chambers was toastmas ter, and the toasts were responded to as follows: "Our College"- by Mr. A. T. Kenyon, who after speaking of the college's past, declared that the students of to ,QV .,,,. n. .. ' " 1 "c - :aJ,u "c u.cu lOJUUUl. UCIUUUU IU LUC . - .. rT reviewed the career, of the team of 1903, saying that they ,had been out weighed and outclassed, but never out played. Foot ball develops the nhvsl cal, mental and ' moral man and this college has material for the best team in the south. "Base Ball" by Mr. W. H. Mclntire, who cited that the class of 'C5 furnish- ed the stars in thP tMm ao tt made man v hfin-ntr Vlte v a. uji. I ; individual players. , - "'I'l' WW JCiCliUlg IV.LiltJ.i. 1 ijjuj viuuai oiayers, . "Track Tnm" Wv it t t c.., who recited : the "ork ,n ft Z ; contest 1;,,t , n ine, atmetic . . " & ieLUJUs msmy gratifying and sur- may records of other colleges j "daco nf n" v , T r T J J M' Howard, who asserted that the present junior class had been the pioneers of all the Progressive movements in the college, 11 e Urged that ail should prove them- selves worthy of the" class, and th college. . x oxijiiiix r WINSTON TALKS President G. T. Winston t on and said that in Iftnvir,..- "s oanquet to one of 1902 the colle-e .hafl - - uue"e ' 4 icisuu ior congratulation an standard f .J7 :.Qn' stood among the best and in standi : . . - a,liU. in sianaard of manhood the best. The A- and Jkf . Colleff -h a C.e."- sathertg3. suui as tne - farmers itt summer, the Confederate veterans In I .-?-Al:- ' ..-.-.in 11 :rir ii'i mi - t -' -' ii M, I A .... . v r. Weath ers & Utlev. Art DepaxtmentU- Wes't Hett' Of B 05 October, and but yesterday . . i. 1 il. J!:. the . want to meet there--next year, v . the' standards, traditions ana Vr5n of the , college were worth v it .1J ?f UJi ;r.esa lifting forces. " The college spirit and it? row-or v, also grown greatly and this ' M iiiil Kiiim irr iiir i.ri cr fir 1.1 4 largely to the class of i?03. r- M' ti'ons and races that have ta' V"1' that is denoted by college -f. ur; the leaders. Such a spirit Ls! 'a X'' institution what patriotism k ? ,rei tinn. . 4 President Winston spoke v;- .c and M. College had pa? j .v-,, A. tr.j 3 minute ciass 10 tne -:30, ckil Or', a rew years ago it was - . iucj ucai i. ner's, but now big teams to meet the A. and M. boy. " ijoacn Annur uevnn wj? cx--( and declared some "coach- u" C3 the A. and M. College had ti.pV est foot ball team in theouihTV boys had. played In hard lurk, ij t-J played extremely well. He cousli.J the junior class the basis - v,- teams, ana aeciarea that his service as coach for' the past two been a great pleasure to him. Capt. Phelps, in conclusion, congrv, behavior of the foot and base iefctlIUS wi1 uiys. n? : receivea . leiiers irom tiirca- tw.; -, dent's highly complimentary to ?t young men .while at the coile?? which; they were the heads. ' 1 CLASS OF '03. Officers: O. L.: Bagley, president; 1 G. Lykes, secretary and treasurf- p jtiisionan, v. ii, oiinin, poet. Class Roll: R. J. Avery, O. L. ga?t ley, B. H. Broom, J. W. Bullock, Hj Cartwright, W. M. Cnambprs, ., p Chreltzburg, L. V. Edwards. W. Finch, Sterling Graydon, E. B. n ,7-C F. W. Hadley, O. H. 'Henderson, Hoffman, R. R. Holt, J. M. Ho.ra;: Knox, II. C. Lehman, II. M. Liiir, j S. Lockhart, L. G. Lykes, O. G. Lyr W, H. Mclntire, C. W. Martin, j. 'I Morgan, L. A. Murr, G. P.' Myatt, 1 A. Park, L. M. Parker, P. M. Poir.dW ter, J. A. : Pierce, E. G. Torter, j;r, j, T. Reinhardt, Jr.t C. A. Seifert, w. I, Smith, Jr., J. H. Squires, J. D. Spirb, D. M. Stanton, R. W. :Scott, C. T. Van able, S. M. VIele, W.Jj. Walker, s d Wall, W W. Watt, Wilkir.' R. B. Wilson, J. E. Williams. ' THE MENU. : The 'menu for the banquet fas ai follows: Blue Points Mixed Pickles : Celery 0:ir Broiled Spanish Mackerel Maitre D'Hotel Julienne Potato ' Fillet of Beef A Ta Cordola-'sv - ; Parlsienne Potatoes Creamed Aparais Fruit Punch Fried Spring Chicken A La Maryla Baked Sweet Potatoes Green Per Lobster Salad Mayonmie Dre?5ir:g Fancy -Assorted Cakes Pistachio Ice Cream Comports of Fr.:' American Cheese Banquet Waf Coffee . Cigars The committee on dinner cor.fist? of: H. M. Lilly, O. L. Bi?:ey( S.-Orav- flnn W. T. Smith on1 r So'V, " -M-M Mill Vli Chairman. ST0LE$40 IN GOLDSBORO AND ARRE.STED HERE Sam Pinn. a Goldsboro ncrro, - ! at 11.45 last night' to- officers The son and Warren an'd placed in tlie tlon house to await the arrival otv 'off.?er , from Goldsboro to .lay. I:.' ! chief of police at Goldsboro 'pro: 3 description of the negro, juft the train arrived, and state 1 thnt r 1 o stole $40. from a ne?ro there m n.nvn .' .$39.15 found in his pockets. j j Ferftimes ,J& and Others We have just received a. rb rer- supply of Hudnut's Sui fumes; also the 1-ridir? v ties of other makes Vf.r.J. vC them to you at sarr.o can purchase from the facturers. : I f ; Hicks Drug Store I- . nfnv rtAi n rrpLt. many P-0 - buying unreliable Wall Far-r ' simply pleases the eye, but it be resorted to by us, becau?' nothing unreliable to sell i to resort to subterfuge or pre::: deceive you. Look over our Raleigh, H C' Pecorating DPaIt! 1 West Hargrett street, . " A
The Morning Post (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 14, 1903, edition 1
2
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