Newspapers / The Morning Post (Raleigh, … / Nov. 10, 1905, edition 1 / Page 1
Part of The Morning Post (Raleigh, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
THE WrATHER TODAY. For North Cireilnt : Fair . For Rifllgh Fair 'TTTr-rr- T frr - .' M M -ST--TN- -rv - n lY ' I TESIPESATlinE: ' " " " " ' ' RALEIG-H. N. C.. PRlf)AV KOVM-RTfiT? rn i one ,. - U H MAFFf -. " - - 140 I ' i il I I1M8 - La .11 sci ons n . i "vnveea UIlUlI sailors. I uoin soldiers and RUSSIAN CITY Pil::!i8d Battle With Govern inent Troops illllNSTAOT IN FLAMES bhabltants,-Fleeing the Town f v firpc tr ussertea that the Last Accounts-Wire Communicant tion Severed DuririV P.. !SP .severe mea. it is aisoj . r Trnuh ft-Gftwrnm.f C:u.. nr.. . . i.wvuk wauuis tinied and Attacked the Town I.o.; Son, Nov. 9.A dispatch to a - Tcreney from St. Petersburg says ;he sailors of the Russian squad- r Cronstadt mutinied last nieht.1 ov ;awered their officers and landed .5 .utacked the shops and stores. Th- troops were called out and flght- g - sued, during which machine guns ' i?ea ana many persons were i or wounded. : Ir addition, a number of bouses were Ire. The fighting lasted all night ''instadt, Russia, Nov9. The troops rere have mutinied and are pillaging :.e rity. Firing is going on in the :;?:?. The inhabitants are panic s:rl:k?n and are fleeing from the town. Petersburg, Nov. 9. It is reported v z. massacre occurred at Cronstadt 'it t isht and that the infantrj't using r.a r.ir.e guns, fired upon the people. . T'r- city is reported to be in flames. ne communication wun at. i e- :rp is Interrupted, but the tele- r ; ;i lines are working, i: British? embassy here has re--i General Trepoff to protect the subjects at Cronstadt. Ir.:-r.se excitement prevails, owing to : alarming news. According to ; the S' r a mutiny of the sailors occurred rirsr the night and -was followed by ;:fi !'.ar battle with the troops, during machine guns were used.. ' , i: i reported that the "glare of the ( an be seen from the windows of Ptnperor's palace at Peterhof." Thr inhabitants of Cronstadt are in a i r The boats to St. Petersburg ' 'topped running and telephone i .?trraph communication have been It c impossible now to verify the re "; r secure details of the happen- to. - Bnzllltn Troops Reyolt 'ion. Nov. 9.The firm of N. M. mid & Son received the follow r m Rio Janeiro, Brazil, today: r O'r.irion pf the fortress of Santa has revolted, so far without, po i motive. The. government is act- ::ergeticaUy.' Public feeling is '-r dispatch to the firm stated !. fortress had surrendered. Lord : nild said that a report that hun ! jf persons had been killed in ' ' qhting atRiO Janeiro was whol :r.rt and that no disturbances urred there, later--The Troubli Explained I' tf-rsburg, Nov. 9. Cronstdat is ier lense pall of smoke. The auu ire is seen through the snow, vornment and military depots air.fcs. It is lmpossiDie w cn -.'. io-. t ' : p tieg'raph poles have been up- I.::?? to a distance-of six kilometers ti-.e town and telephone com- 4 i on has stopped. Many or xns evoked last night and over the officers. Many persons aret ;orr,i to have been killed. W ;tinou$ Salfors Were Jailbirds the govern nlship of Stl Petersburg last i V-"0 1 . t -e i hi ijt nfflrial act as cniei. iiis last omcidi atk . rtr CO COUCCl. J.UU ja.i.s icv-?M.urg jails and send them un ; 6rrn to the naval authorities at' ,r'!at. They were loaded on a r., which started for the fortress. t lh v,-ay the sailors overpowered Ccrew and took control of the boat i;ch halved at Cronstdat flying a Th Red Rao Welcomed - is .-..v.... . . i .AAn v ;'-y.fm or revolution was ow I , -ioi-e and a mass of soldiers aiid (;s a5mbled to -welcome the. muti- j .re .. . hours later the town v'- "V . re entirely ln their pobbcs- ; i 'i. in., . J j, "u me sailors in th piace auu in Uar ship there are reported t 1., Waod the mutiny. The officers, . ' tiif J of troops stationed there such an emergency -made a Mi;rat distance. They fought: the j.t'-rs ir, the streets, and many were K ir:;J pounded.-..:; : f : " j'rit t r? Phihdered the government '1- rT"tV' They -secured several ( trirUns- whlch they used against !nvr'r The inhabitants of the iod.. roPs on Wty to RetiriOrdr QZ brm,ght ',rom onstdat say s J4 Proceeding ther.. Ox re-1 sent r' ut troPs have w sent from order. St. pet ersburg to restore - Pimnts Landowner. ' bt Petersburg, Nov o outbreaks have takt? 9-ASravian toff, Chernigoi an TSCe ? Sara are Pilagim, the estates of L and the police a4 po er?eU fd Mn the murder. Peerless to prevent Washington, Nov 9 ' Partment today receiv state- de Spencer pm, received dispatch from United spates Ttf f th tterized the situati Cnarac' Officials Try to Minimize Insurrection St. PetfrsH. ficial rPr,rr iuv a- 10 P- m. Of- i nciai reports now indlnnr ly exaeWratpr tV i- . " , oecn groat- J XB T8 are quiet an are being I.V" - iroops. It is impossible to sav hnm , the official statement is true. Messages rrom private sources tell quite a dif ferent story, although they are some what vague regarding the times of the happenings. ufe i lives wno arrived here tnntsrHtl say the strikers set fire to th er'a.tr Part of the town and when the fugi- .s iert tne mutineers were masters oi tne situation. Troops were only em ployed to guard the arsenal. Situation erious Nevertheles While only a few details can be veri fied at the moment, it is certain the .(Continued from Pag a Two.) ALMOST PAStIeLIEF Horrible Fate of American Women in China Story of Rev. Dr. Machie, the Mis sionary Who Escaped thelaassa-iand cre at Linchof Exposure and;said this was also the request of his Murder of His Wife and Daughter Hong Kong, Nov. 9 Dr. Machie, the American missionary who escaped the " ii massacre ai wncnow, coniirmB me pie- vious accounts of -the outbreak, and adds horrifying details of the atroci- ties committed on the American wo- men. wnen ine aisturoances com- --.. . . menced the mob seized Miss Chestnut and Mrs. Machie and exposed them to public view in the Chinese temple, Amy Machie, the doctor's ten-year old child, was carried off and flung alive into xne nvei . noun a alou strinned Miss Chestnut naked and flung her Into the river. While the two were struggling in : the water three Chinamen speared them with tridents. Miss Chestnut's body and Amy Machle's head were . . . ii.. nierced. Mrs. Machie appealed to uie mob but they stoned her brains out and threw her .body into the river. The mob t;hen captured, Mr. ana Peale, stripped tnem .naKea, expuseu them for fifteen minutes, clubbed Mr. Peale to death in his wife's presence, and subsequently killed . Mrs. Peale in the same brutal fashion. i j COTtO UP 20 POINTS ' . . xa-rr-r f n ' Great Interest in UOV mt Kepon to Be Issued Today New Tork, Nov. 9. The cotton mar- ket -was quieter ana easii uuns .have, resortea to tortures to qpmnei during the great War and of the fol afternoon on further heavy profit- sucft as are not members of the asso- lowing period of reconstruction, which taking, with-'large - seinng uy 101 traders, who were heavy buyers on tne oreaK yeiejuaj oariv'this morning.-. -" again ; '-'"- OA Spot cotton here was marKea up ints to the basis of 11-80 per pound fnv middling. The entire interest or i th trade has now centered in the .: . .u vj.nimrnmpnt. rror re- character, oi &u - - uiaia . ia9nP.A at noon nr-- whirh IS to tomorrow and the courae of the mat ket dwindled. ... The market closed steady. A Child Commits Suicide V , . . TTtica. N. Y., NOV- 9 Christina ves- i-n TJftlA Trails. ter, 13 years oia. uvniB . . nrlimitted suicide by jumping into the Kt.q anai this' afternoon. It is saia miarrel with her mother. e gm - - . the During the quarrel sue n house to 'the. canal, a sno" ;r"h away, frnm the; ... 4.t.MW hArfidii uiw J u,. her from the Her mowioi - Tho . Mnir-l ill II. rtu w body has been recovered. , . ... n Minister Griscom had Tokio, Nov. 9. Ministers fareweUud tn-,tt ested ie emperor, w wnnsevelt convey to rrwwwu - Jilll. w lu v At th-dare Jap- the imperial 'f-r;,- ; ived . nperial tr . , i T?nssiaii had rece anese miereaw A. , the United States during the war. j j t - und.rstooa at an - important It is unueiow 0o.nAH tomor- IB u..v.y aijrned tomor- copyright trw y successful row which will ""ns for the pro- termination. neot,u" tnr rnnerty f avf beS? proceeding since 18S9. f that have oeen pi American- - STOPPED THE LYNCHING BEE - ' - Sheriff Sashed to Scene in an Automobile MB HAD NEGRO RAPIST The Noose Was Already Around His Neck and He Was Being Dragged to a Telephone , PoleWoman's Husband Will Spring the Trap at the Legal Execution Atlanta rto -v,, oT?oir, t.i- . -. . . Z mi . an nUr luauu IliLU a muu of five hundred citizens who wore about to lynch Jim Walker, a negro, for criminal assault upon Mrs. Moore, a prominent Atlanta woman, and sue eeded in persuading the would-be xyncners to let the law take its course, The rope was already about the ne- gros neck and he was being dragged . Nine governors are here. North to a telephone pole when the sheriff Carollna has a dozen delegates and an arrived. Sheriff ' Nelms would prbably other honor vas paid the state ' ta the have failed, in his effort to rescue the selection of Thomas K. Bruner as sec negro if he had- not been aided by ; retary. Moore, the husband of the outraged prfl5pnf 'm:.thA' Bn w r- woman.( In return for Moore's assistance Sheriff Nelms promised that the hus band should spring the trap when the negro is legally hanged. xvxi. iuuure Soiu me moo ne nau given his word to the sheriff that no harm n n r ii j 11.. i - . . snouia come to tne negro if ne was taken before his wife for identification on thIs ground he pleaded that the jlaw be allowed, to take its course. He Assault Occurred In Heart of City The outrage ; was committed three weeks -airo while Mrs. Moore was In',-1 uyx her flower garden of her -home on ; linaN know a good thing when they Peachtree street ,the most fashionable tnoroUgriiare in Atlanta. The i. -i , i j t..i. . ,'Hinshaw were placed on committees. imu uwu c nau. uui,w um, Vr"- Moore screamed "He is the wretch" and fainted. In five minutes a great a il 3 J X 1 W . crowu gamereu uuu look, tne iiegiu ... from two officers. Mrs. Moore's two sons were in the crowd, making des- perate efforts to shoot the negro. ; A rope was placed around the ne- groe's neck and he was being dragged " Phoned Sheriff Nelms and he sprang into an automobile and ran full speed for the scene. The mob parted as the automobile dashed madly through it. When the sheriff reached the negro, he seized the rope and pleaded that tbo low Y,a. allowed to take its rnnrsfl. " "TA; vr" Moore then added his appeals to those of the sheriff and the negro was saved. . - . 1I& ICO 5i.t.Jl. I. J IJf Atllti UtlU AJ.CVtV die before his trial is reached. ' TOBACCO PLANTERS' FIGHT Tennessee Dark Tobacco Asso. Per secuting Patrons of American Co. Jvxempiiia, jlcihi., muv. a. umci ig the flghf between the dark tobacco ir. 1 1 m. m Ta A Ca VUam planters protective association of mid- die Tennessee and the representatives of tHe trust that the former seem to ciation to foreswear aealings with -the tobacco trust TCicrVit rirlprss ar said to he rtatrrlline that part of Kentucky and Tennessee - X f-j - an forcing all tobacco growers wno are outside their company to pledge .. .. . themselves to the association. In caso of hesitation the yare brought to terms v.,. onnVi tronHft Kiin5irn as hanrin? Hv j n.. tv,a tVnimKcs or hv snnliratimi of a or by application or a modern rack and in one case It is said that the victim was suspended by his great toe until he SToro to co-operate with; his torturers against the trust. The majority of the growers are al ready in the association and have do- 1 V- CI. J 7 " . cared that no one in the district shall . , .. . . . DUV or sen to tneir enemies, some or outsiders have stood off their j visl- tors with firearms, but the .'greater part .Q v,oftn comnelled through fear of . r. .. i.-.-u cruel torture, to suumn ana joim tne trust fighters. . , j - - ( Last Negro Company Disbanded, Montgomery, Ala., Nov. 9. -Governor Jenks last night ordered mustered out of service the Capital City Guards, the e(rrrt military organization re- nrng in the state There has h rr,oh fe.line asrainsl the company B0nf late. . Autonomy for Poland? London, iov. a.--it is semi-omciauy stated in St. Petersburg says a dls- : patch to the Exchange that the czar will soon grant an autonomy to Po- r land. 1 At tha-Sonthern immigra tion Conference A LARGE ATTENDANCE Fourteen . State3 Rer resented by " Thr TTrmiWrt : TiU, CnA laree kUJHLed Delegates-God Fearing Men and Nt Anrchiati rearing iien ana ..t-Anrcmats and Infidels Are Wanted The Business Transacted Chattanooga, Tenn., Nov. 9 Special. Governor G!tnn w.n ho, at tod,- session of the quarantine and immigra- tion conference. He made .'tne px'ncipal set speech of the day. His part in the . . nent. At the request of Governor Cox -. of Tennessee he sent the letters to the :v.r'im,a'rSnntWm ,r, various southern ' xif presence. --"oi j gressman Robert N. Page, who was . made a vice-president and committee- man, but who did not speak. Governor Glenn is much with Gover nor "Montague of Virginia, whose mark- : ed urbanity and cordiality towards North" Carolinians at the ceremonies .at Appomattox and Bethel last spring won him a high place in the esteem of jour people Governor Glenn gave Governor Var- daman of "Mississippi a particularly hearty greeting. He admires Varda- man greatly and the latter liked Gov- !f,"lor Gnn on ?lght and said tb him: see it. - , xrn w W are on the important one of immigration. F. A. Olds and J. C. ; Steele are on that very vital one of "1 -H LtWLHl. j. ill. tun I lllivii TV CLO 111 lull quarantine. The convention was in full - . f ft vpo when f .rvi'Drnnr lilann cnnlra tnn J- .7 , 1" afternoon on "The south: its past. present and future. He was introduced by Governor Cox, the permanent chair man, as "The governor of our mother, the Old North State." There was a rattline arjnlau:e and the governor had fgfPP the audience from the start. His description of the vastness, vigor and prosperity of the nation was full of patriotism, as he declared it to be the most independent nation of the earth, dominated by none but domi nating and dictating to all. Its presi dent Is now the best known and most respected ruler In all the world. ' He thanked God he was an Ameri- can citizen and said he loved the coun try with all his soul and would give his life gladly and proudly for its hon or and its defense. An outbreak of applause greeted these sentiments and his tribute to ."Dixieland" elicited a fresh one. His. Picture of the high place the south held prior to the civil war of the t . m it . m i a i rienness ana iunness oi plantation, lire, in what he termed- "the old plantation days of peace of sunshine and of hope," were full of pathos and powerfully drawn were those of the stress of life he declared was worse than war damnable, horrible and cowardly, with inn. hrw mn tn fip-hf 1-mt nnlv hum. mers from the union army and desert- - - ' -A'CS fc W VAAiT U Villi . ers fro mthe Confederacy engaged in the manipulation of the negroes and in maklng issues of bonds. Ke said he told of these things to make clearer the high success the un faltering people of the south had achieved, who- had today f.ftn bil lions of taxable property. He called for concert of action as to immigration, and unity as to the quar antine. j'Iio urgent need of proper la bor was dwelt on. and lnvetd capital, saying it must be assured equal-pro- jfi-m... . , .. . . . teciion ana iow taxation, oat tnat trusts' must be strangled and insurance companies must stop their jciKft, He expressed ?rrLtificatinn at tho -s .7 . ranania v.anai worK, saying it woma maue tne south a gateway. Also upon tne arreat Dtnenrs ot inn lniann wstftr. ...... "VA.. vv cxy uiiuugu lilt: iu:ui V-illOliliU sounds. f As to Immigration he said that God- graying and Sabbath-keeping people pr were wanted, and not the man with the ftiletto or the atheist. ; aiTnst the ." He closed his speech with a plea I'&v.- iiuiLH Carolina s help to the other slates to suppress evils. . A tremendous expression of appre- ciation followed. There was applause for a. minute, and other governors stepped forward to shake his hand. The convention fairly rose to cheer him; a dozen states joiniMt ia the dem- OLE K1T7A1BGA f onstration. It broke out again when ; he stepped forward to set a glass of j water. The North Carolina delegate i fairly glow with pleasure. ' The speech of Governor Blanchard of Louisiana wa& a model. He declared that .the .United States has . complete right and power to entirely regulate maritime and interstate quarantine, .; and that any other system was a fil ! ure. He was given a rousing applause and will no doubt carry hia point. Tomorrow at noon -all tjie delegates will go on cars for . 2-mil tour of Chtckamaugs battlefield and will wit ness Lfce rft view of the regular- tro-9 thre, returning to Chattanooga In car riaares. Juaj Arery, Colonel Ray, HaJ. O. N. P Havana other veterans are here ani will juo oa thi tour. V The de!t?-,s at th conference b !Ces ifcc- refon-ed to already aret J. C. uc. -M. C. Toms, M. S. Brown, a W. F. Barpwr, A. C. Avery. J. Ray, H. E. Cruasn. Th Monfnq rs:on CKattanoSa, Tenu., Nov. 9.-At the t . irttla! session of the Southern Imml- j ration Confine here today there! Are nearIy 300 testes in attendance j &nZrtT states arf wproaentea. j . .:n6ngr thoe present are the gover-i TS of No Ce-:nlIna taierr).' Cov, Tnr-ss, Rlanehcrd of Louisiana, varaaman of Mississippi, Montague of jVirsinia; ErowRrd oJt Florida: Terrell! wria and Dawn of vrst Va., i S"oS,1JSS pressmen fmm southern states: Sur- ;eon -General Wyman of tho marina "C3J"a,i ssrice, and other prominent medical authorities were In attndano. i . Governor Cox explained the b?ct of the thprier tr ho tft inermg to ne.to preant tbo coming to the south of the pauper and , , . ' . 1 -T 'ounnueu on rasre two CContinued on Page Two.) BRIDE KILLS HUSBANI They Had Been Married Only a Few Hours ' s Woman Was the Daughter Of a North Carolina Fish Merchant. , , . .. ' Iragedy Revealed by Drummer, . . x vi nr j , A w .. uviviuuw wuauuiru Suffolk. Va, Nov. S.-After being a bride for less than a day, Mrs. Helen Johnston killed her husband. Randolph C. Johnston, and ' committed suicide iast night. Word of the double tragedy was; brought here today by a traveling t . ... . . . salesman wno tnis morning visitea a a store near the scene. The young bride, whose aere was sev enteen years, was found on the floor in front of the dresser: She had fired & cPssln by the press. 22-calibre pistol In her mouth, the bul- f -TPoff claims to have been greatly let passing through her head, making misunderstood, and that history must its exit below the left ear. eventually acquit him of being in any Before destroying herself Mrs. John- way the instigator of the shedding off ston shot her husband three times. One blood an all the other horrors which bullet entered the breast and another Russia experienced during the last fort just grazed the temple. The couple nlffht were married last evening. When the festivities were finished they drove to the bridegroom's home and retired shortly : after midnight." Both were found dead in their night dresses The girl left no word of explanation. She was the only daughter of Charles R. Hope, , a farmer and fish merchant of North' Carolina. VANDIVER ENJOINED New York Life Will Still Insure Missourians lor a While St. Louis, Nov. 9. United States Cir cuit Judge Adams granted a restrain- ing order late this afternoon directed against Superintendent of Insurance W. D. Yandiver preventing him from enforcing, Jiis order, issuc-d last" night, suspending the license of the New Tork Life Insurance Company In Missouri. The decision Is that the Insurance " .. . a .npany can continue to ao Dusme3S m Missouri till November 20, at which tima the question, of making the in junction permanent' will be argued in the federal court at Jefferson City. Twenty-nine thousand policy-holders will be'affectcd if the suspension of the license of tho New York Life Insurance Company by Mr. Vandirer is sustained by the court. ! .-- ' Death of T. BDonnell Greensboro. N. C, Nov. 9. Special. Desth laj t night claimed Thomas B. m nnnrfv. . Dornell, one of the courty's most es- r V 1- CKIlKta rt 1 -.4 H w-m M t . ' - : . .u ui over eignty... eighty. years at ms. nome eigni . mnes north- ( e.vr . oi urcsnrooro. i . 4 t-J Ja.o iUI. itmilBI 1 was' an ofScer in Buffalo- Presbyterian jchurch, where the fui.eral will be held tomorrow at ,11 o'clock, conducted by the pastor, Rev. ,J. W. Goodman, .t Hsrsh-s Daughter Wed, PottprdriTI - TV T TJrtir O T1 Mo. tnda Lucille Marsh, daughter of Dr. Ellis J. Marsh of the Mutual Insur- ance Company, was m.arried at St. Paul's church at 4 o'clock today to EH sha Kelly Snodgrass of Ma rtinsburg, W. Va. The ceremony was performed by Rev. D. Stuart Hamilton. The brld was given away fey her fathe j NO AFTE Why f ; the Czar Keeps General Trepoff Near Iiim IMMEDIATE SUFFRAGE Premier Witte and the Czar Said to Have Agreed to - It Removal of Trepoff From Governor General ship Most Important Fim Step Toward Free Speech St. Petersburg, Nov. 9, 3:50 p. m. Both Count. Witte and ' the emperor have made another surrender. Ger-al Trepoff ha3 been removed from tho powerful position which he occupied, that. of governor general of St. Poters- U,1T. . . . . . burg and. assistant minister ofito in- -r. -j , , , -terior.and Russia's premier has arced ... j o iromeaiAto univcisal suECcrac. ! Count Witte has been fully i aware of the Intense hatred Genoral Trepofi's relention in office was causing, but he never questioned the sincerity of th governor ffeneral's co-dparation in the introduction of the new" regim Nevertheless, he recognized the neces sity of Trepoff 's removal and the gov ernor general himself agreed that only his retirement would appease the popu lar -wrath. The final obstacle was that the em- jperor had come to believe that Trepoff ! alone was able to safeguard the life of himself iand family. But his majesty at last yielded on the condition that Trepoff should become commandant of the palace, succeeding the late Lieu- tenant General Hesse, where his solo duty will be to take measures to pro- Lecx. tne ate or tne emperor. The position of governor general of StrrPetersbufg ends wiflfiTreDoff's re tirement, but the place W commander of the Imperial government has been assumed byt the Grand Duke Nicholas. The emperor in agreeing to Trepoff 's ffent conferred , on him the ordet iu utaittUiJUp. First Victory for a Gres Press The Rus3 and -tther radical papers which have been campaigning against rrepon. hail his removal with delight as beInff the first victory for free dis- NEW BISHOP COADJUTOR Dr. S. L. Lloyd Elected The Othet Candidates Voted For Lynchburg, Va.; Nov. 9.-Rey, Dr. S. It. Lloyd of New York, at present mis sionary secretary for the Protestant Episcopal Church iri America, today, was elected by the diocesan council in sPciaI session at Lynchburg bishop wdujuior oi mo cuocese or southern TTI I . - The election occurred on the fourth, ballot. Others in nomination for the bishopric were: Revs. C. Braxtoix Bryan, D. D., of Peteisburg; Beverly Dandridge, D. D., of Norfolk; Boiry man Green, D. D.. of the Theological Seminary at Alexandria, Va.; James : Wat3on Morris . of Loe3burg; . V. H. Miltcn of Roanokfa; John . J. Lloyd; D. D., of Lynchburg; John K. Mason of Louis'Ill3, Ky., and W"m. Meade Dame of Memorial church, Baltimore. The bishop-elect and Rev. Dr. John L. Lloj'd of Lynchburg are brothers. Bichop elect Lloyd was a year or mora ago elected bishop of Mir,nFippi but declined. ( Later he was elected bishop of Kentucky and also declined this elec tion, preferring at both times to re ' main in the concessionary work which he entered upon leaving the rectorata 'of St. Luke's Episcopal church, Nor folk, ssveral years ago. f tha o AV . ary of the .. bishop coadjutor , at $3,000 per year, witn an traveling erpenses and. Jn addltinn to thla - , ln addition to this. nrtnnt nf Qf. n. ' J" v& wuiw WUttUKCo Washington. NOV. 9 A rnnn personal early changes in the danart ment of state is "the transfer of Af f Herbert H. D. Pierce, third assistant ; secretary, to a diplomatic post in Eu- Tf J??" to Ill POniPCHAn nrlV, it is roported that Mr. Lloyd C Grls- com, now United, States w'ttr to Japan, is scheduled to succeed Mr Pierce as third assistant eoctctary of state. No official Information was ob- tainable in regard to this renorteA changes or others t v. ? Brespwt In th diplomatic servloV t HIS OWN HIDE
The Morning Post (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 10, 1905, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75