Newspapers / The Raleigh Times (Raleigh, … / April 1, 1907, edition 1 / Page 2
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Ik L w L.'rr.iUczn Fcrccs Pel m E;;:a E:y's Threat The Lad Falls Pying on the Street and Declare He ls .tjie Victim of " Poloner Police Working on . - Case, , J- ; ' (By Le&sed Wire to The Times.) Norfolk, Va.', April 1. That Joseph - Thomas, the nine-year-old lad who v . died Beveral nights -ago at St: Vincent (. Hospital from the -effects of swallow I t Ids carbolic acid, came to his death a: . a result Df having the acid forced t ' down his ihroat by an unknown per- i '.'oq.'tras the verdict of the s coroner's t Jury.- -. -v. ', ' , i:-,,M,:. rS ,r . ,Tbe svtdenoe at the hearing: showed ' that the lad- who had been an errand boy In- Jarvis's drug store, on Chapel street, -was sufficiently aware of the deadly effects of the acid not to hav : wallowed It thoughtlessly. - When h i Tell la the Street the boy was returning from a neighboring drug store with i the bottle of acid. O, J. Cosgrove testified at the hear ing that - the boy told htm, when brought dying to Jarvls' drug store, - that a woman had poured the acid forcibly down his throat. As the Jarvls' drug store is in the : county' and the other drug store visit cd by the boy Is in the limits of the - city. It is not known whether the bov was accosted by the unknown womar in the city or in the county. Both tin city and county police, however: ar working ' on the case. 4 Lo, tiie Icy Grin of Old Winter (Continued from First Page.) trees in the fruit belts of Washing ton county are in bloom, fully thret weeks ahead ot the natural season Fruit growers everywhere are appre hensive that the freeze that usuail; comes in April will destroy the fruit The intensely cold weather in Feb ruary froze about 50 per cent of th peach buds, and should April tun out to be a cold month with periodi of freezing, toany predict that th ; fruit crop will be totally ruined. Winter Robes Easter. (By Leased Wire to The Times.) Bristol. Va.. April 1. At dawn of Ejaater day, snow was falling in south west Virginia. There was a snowstorm 1 in Wise county, and early in the fore noon the ground was coverad with snom : to the depth of an inch and a half a : Big Etone Gap. Trains arriving fron, the east over the Norflk & Western hat snow-covered tops. A ad Gladness Flies. (By Leased Wire to The Times.) . Taswell, Vs., April l.-8now begat falling yesterday evening and has con tinued almost Incessantly since, ant' were It not fof-the fact that it meltf almost as fast as it falls, there would be a depth off several Inches. Grea: fears are entertained that all early vegetation and fruit will be killed. Blue Day in Petersburg. (By Leased Wire to The Times.) Petersburg,' Va., April 1. The unpre cedented high temperature for the month of March, the thermometei refilstcring some days as high as 82 de grees In the shade was followed last night and today by a fall in the tem perature of thirty degrees. Rain fell yesterday until late In the afternoon, when a heavy snow storm set in, which continued without intermission for sev eial hours. A-Tha warm weather had caused many of the fruit trees to put out In full bloom, and It is feared that much damage will be done to the fruit by the- sudden change In the weather. what Physicians have , long ?--.;. waited for VICK'S v 7 CROUP & PNEUMONIA ; . SALVE 25c 1. RUBEFICIENT COVERING 2. CONTINUOUS INHALAHT A grand luccer-t in reach of all, 2 oz jar 25c, mail 30c. " ' L RICHARDSON, M'f'g Chemist, . Grei-nsboro, Ji. 0. THE COJAT fll TIIE DIAMOND WakForest Against Bomb College Team VALUABLE HORSE SHOT THIS MORNING The valuable black horse which At. J. K. Marshall has driven ' for tome time past fell this morning and iroke her left hind leg, and it was lecesary to kill her. He left the- torse hitched near the cotton oil mill tnd In some way she became entan- ;led In the harness and fell. At first -t was thought that the animal had nly knocked her leg out of place, ut upon examination it was found Mat her leg was broken, and there vas nothing to do but kill her; so ihe was shot. 'JIM CROW" STREET CAR BILL IN FORCE The "jlm crow" street car bill be- omes effective today, and, according o the provisions of the bill, the white tassengers will have to take the first scant seat towards the front of the ar, and colored passengers the first acant seat in the rear, and the law ipplies in the same way in regard to ;he aisle of tho car. It is also made 1 misdemeanor to ride on the run ling-board of cars or on the front latform. This law applies to the sntlre state of North Carolina. BRUTAL MURDER COMES TO LIGHT (By Leased Wire to The Times.) Utica, N. Y., April 1. A brutal lurder has come to light at Brook eld, in Madison county, in the dis overy of the body of a woman known s Lllza Anna, housekeeper for a 'ealthy farmer, near that town. The Toman had been missing since Janu ry 7th last After the body was discovered by iccident in a pasture near the farm ear where she lived, the coroner was lotified. He found a large scar on he top of her head, portions of her kull missing, and various marks of Iolence upon the body. "Coroner Beebe summoned a mim) er of physicians, -who alsd looked ver the body. It is their belief-that he woman was murdered. The po ice have begun working on the case. Storni on the Coast. (Special to The Evening Times.) Norfolk, Va., April 1. A fierce storm is sweeping the Atlantic coast today, with wind blowing forty miles an hour, endangering all the shipping at sea. The thermometer has drop pod, 36 degrees. Blooms on all fruit trees are killed. .; , The late Francis P. Furnald, of New York, whose will has Just been filed, leaves $300,000 to the trustees of Co lumbia College to erect, In memory of Mr. Furnatd's son, a dormitory to be palled Furnald Hall. A GREAT COAL DEAL IS ABOUT CONSUMMATED. (By Leased Wire to The Times.) Davis, W. Va., April 1. It is report- id that a coal deal, Involving J2.500.000 has about been consummated at Davis, W. Va., near where the coal lands lie. The property has been acquired, it Is stated, by the Beacon Coal & Coke Company which has been working a mall mine four miles east of Davis. Fairfax 8. Landstreet, late vice pres- dent of the Western Maryland Rail road, while on a recent visit to Davis, his old home, gave out the statement that the property was in the hands of strong Philadelphia capitalists. HARK NOW TO ROOTERS Despite the Bine Character of the Day the Diamond is Warm and Rosy This Afternoon With the Dc- , tern lined Htrlving of the Two Teams for the Supremacy. In spite of the wet, chilly weather of yesterday, this afternoon is. -clear enough to play ball. Wake Forest CjI- lege is represented by a large body of students, who came in with the team this morning. A careful Inspection of the grounds was made, and they were found to be In good condition, so every thing was In readiness when one of the biggest games of the season began this afternoon. Wake Forest has a vast number of supporters in Raleigh, who are out to cheer the Bnptlst team to victory. The A. & M. contingent, headed by its band, are making things lively for the home team's benefit. Nearly every school girl In the city is at the fair grounds, waving either the red and white or the orange and black. Temple is in the box again to day for A. & M., so there'll most.llke- ly be something doing for the farmers. The game was called at 3:30, so that those going north on the shoofly may leave on time. Many of tho out of town visitors will remain over night for the band concert in the Academy at 8:15 p. m. , . Hill I vr if li 1 - It I Trad ft ma ftccirrcnea S jut's 71 Uiai: lUisUUh ml Not' -the mere temporary relief that the old "remedies" gave, mot. the little help that the doctor's prescriptions give ; but .ABSOLUTE AND COMPLETE CUREL That Is what Rheumacide does. Rheumatism is caused by an excess of uric acid in the blood. ' It is an internal disease and requires a strong and vigorous internal' remedy that will cleanse the blood of all its germs and yet act through such nat ural methods that It builds up the entire system. SWEEPS ALL POISONS 8 BLOOD. tt The Great Blood Pnrifier. A Sure Cure for RHEUftlATISRI Also a Specific for e!l other Diseases rising from Impurities of the Blood. , DIRECTIONS. Adults, one to two teojpoonfuli In ntilt , Water, after moo Is and at bodllmt BOBBITT CHEMICAL CO., SOLE raomcTORS, BALTIMORE, MO., U. S. A. 4 SHAKE THE BOTTLC. CURES TO STAY CURED. ; t Different from any other remedy. The result of the latest scientific discoveries. ' XJURED AFTER IS YEARS. ' um -. . Baltrmore, Dec. 10th. " For 10 years I hava suffered terribly with Rhsumatism. I was treated by leading phy sicians but fjot no relief, Lona since I, despaired of ever being well again, lixxt hearmff of liHEUMACIDE, I decided to givo it a trial. , I have taken two bottles, 'and, thanks to this wonderful medicine, I now feol that I have gotten a ''new loase on hfe." Everv vestiga - of thediseccehas boon driven front zny system. . MRS. LAURA D. GARDNER, ' ' , .. U01 James t., Baltimore. , . Sample boftta and Oooklet PRE? ti you send f.Va ccnU tar poeuga, At the same time it cures Rheumatism it sweeps out 1 of the? Wood the germs of ;all "other blood diseases, , and cures Indigestion, Cqn stipation, Catarrh, Kidney ,and Liver Troubles, La Grippe and Contagious Blood Poisons. YOUR DRUGGIST SELLS ... IT. BOBBITT CHEMICAL nn.r Prop's, Baltimore, d. QALUSHA L CROW GONE A Man Whose Name Was a Household Word Relic of Better Days of the Bygone, He Entered Congress Afti-r Tlilrty Years of Rirement to Find Ma chine Methods Vominant. FOLLY NEARLY FATAL BIG GREEK GOAL CO. Miss Mary Bowen Shot by Her Brother THE TAFT PARTY REACHES COLON (By Leased Wire to The Times.) Colon, March SO The United States dispatch boat Mayflower, with 5ecretary Taft on board, arrived here 'his morning from Charleston, after in uneventful voyage. The party is ill well. The party was welcomed y Chief Engineer Stevens and Dr. Jorgas, the chief sanitary officer of he zone. . -t l. During his stay on the isthmus '.ecretary aft will make 'his head marters at the Hotel Tivoli at Ancon. TERRIBLE EFFECTS OF DEADLY "GRIP." PHYSICIAN ADVISES PROMPT ACTION A- o lias rendered twq men insane, John Hart waai placed 1b a sanitarium, alao Jonas Carter who became very violent. ' CoL M. B. Bollard died yesterday. : This -brings the fatalittee up to fifty-seven '.to month.- A prominent physician naa ouDiisnea a siaumeni wai muu- nx& or grip is one of the easiest trou ' ble to cure if taken in time but if al ; lowed to Unger wilt frequently take a ; disastrous turn on short notice. The treatment I verr simple; r stimulate the blood circulation; heal the mucous membranes and keep the bowels nor . mal. For. this he advises the use of , what is know as the Greek formula. ! This is as follows: : "Two ounces of glycerine; half ounce Concentrated oil of pine; elgh ounces of good whiskey or Jamaica rum; mix In a ten ounce ' bottle and shaka thoroughly and use in '. tablespoon doses every four '. hours.' These Ingredients can b obtained from i any good prescription druggist. The oply care necessary Is to be sure. to get the genuine 'Concentrated' oil of - pine. It always comes put up for dis pensing in half ounce vials, each en closed in screw top case which keeps out the light and retains al the original oione. Pon't make the mistake of get- (medicines tat on the market In some localities and called 'tHt of Pine, The "Concentrated", ell of pin Is, also used bymixlng it with hot lard and rubbing on the chest and throat. , ft win prove very effective. , ,.'.:X ..'.-s ' V- Just what causes the "grip". has never been fully determined- but scientists seem to generally agree on the germ theory. However it Is very svedent. that any thing that stimulates and strength ens; the mucous membranes succeeds Immediately in combating the disease. The active principle of pine has been since the days ot the ancients acknow ledged as the greatest stimulant and healer for . the. mucous; membrane and th modern product "Concentrated". -oil of pine: when used according, to the above formula Works wonders on these membranes of the nose, throat and lungs. The worst feature of "grip" is that If not quickly checked it will lead Into pneumonia and hasty consumption, as well as many other conplications, frequently wrecking the nervous sys tem. " 4 ' (By Leased Wire to The Times.) Scranton, Pa., April 1. Galusha A. Grow, father of the Homestead law, and during the Civil War speaker of the house of representatives, died at 11 clock yesterday mprning at his home in Glen wood, near this city, where he had lived for seventy-threo years. His age was eighty-three years and eleven months. Mr. Grow had been ill for nearly a month. Less than five weeks ago he was seen walking the streets of this ity, apparently erect and active. Death was due to general debility. It was a very peaceful end, with none of his blood relatives in attendance. Mr. Grow never married. His relatives con sisted of a number of nephews and feces scattered through the United States, his favorite niece being Mrs. George W. Benedict, Jr., of this city, who spent a great deal of time at his home. He leaves a large estate, much of which he accumulated during the autumn of his life by shrewd invest ments in bituminous coal lands. Galusha A. Grow served twenty years in congress and spread his time over three generations! His service was di vided into two periods, the first of twelve years, came at the birth of the republican party and took him half way through the Civil War. The second, of eight years, which ended four years ago, began a full generation after the close of the war, and brought him back to Washington at a time when the re united country was making its most tremendous strides in material prosper ity. In his first service he wielded a powerful influence. Beginning as a Free Soil democrat, he left that party after three terms to join the new-born republican party in its fight for the overthrow of slavery, and closed that period of his life in congress as speaker of the house. In which capacity he served during the thirty-seventh con gress, from 1861 to 1863. Coming back to the house, after thirty years of retirement, Mr. Grow found that his world had moved far beyond him. He was a relic of an age long gone. , Even the methods of doing bus iness In the house had changed, and In stead of the. deliberative argumenta tive debates of , the days when he had made his 'name famous in the land, there f was set up a machine, guided by the' "organisation' and run by the committee on rules... --' .- .: . ." ' Njf.", ..M ., r ' FOUR PEOPLE ARE ; . HILLED BY A TRAIN Kansas City, Mo.v April IMFou persons In -a buggy were killed yes terday afternoon at ,the. Fifteenth street crossing of the Chicago & Altod Railroad by a passenger train. The horses escaped injury. Tho dead: k George Henry and wifg. D. P. Monner and wlfe , The men were salesmen I6r local mercantile houses. , 'I : Both the Boy and His Mother Sup posed That the Gun Wus I nload ed Miss Brown -is Now in the Ifoupitaf. ' (Special to The Evening Times.) Durham, N. CV April 1. Miss Mary Bowen, eighteen year" bid daughter of Thomas Bowen, 'jgWKt Durham, was shot and badly wounded this morning ,oy a smai Drotnr,- wno aicw no.t tnow iiiai. a BIH.H BU ivl-r.oaueu qnu simiiv ed it at his iiste .. 8h is now in the hospital, and thelj, physicians say that she will recover. J f . The accident occurred about 8 o'clock. The toother and her daugh ter were standing before the fire when a young brother, thirteen years of age. picked up a ghotgun and presented ii at his sister. She told him to take the gun down, but the mother remarked, "Don't bo afraid,; it, ii not loaded." With that remark from the mother the boy again raised the gun, snapped and fired. The gun had been loaded by the father to shoot cats. The young woman walked to another room and fell across a bed.' The load took effect In the left shoulder and one shot entered the breast. Malaria Makes Pale Sickly Children. The Old Standard- Grove's Taste less Chill Tonic drives out malaria and builds up tbe system. Sold by all dealers for 27 years. Price 50 VBMMMttakM Oi Celebrated BIG CREEK COAL direct from our mines will protect you during this damp cold weather CAPITAL CITY FUEL CO. ( WESTEKST i TRANSPORTATION i; ' 4tJk -muni w ir m wwiTTiTm ' )A;hrter was granted today to the Western Transportation Company, at Medlln, Swain county; authorized capi tal stock Is $200,000, but company can begin business with $15,000. Incorpora tors . are, ; Wm W. Hastings, N. 8. Sanders, J. H. Franks and others. The object ts to maintain and operate flumes tor transporting lumber. : WHEN YOU ARE SIC YOUR SALARY GOES ON JUST THE SAMEi" There are so many- men who "mope about," hardly,; able to iput one foot before the other -can't aiord td be sick family to' ; support and no meana. : ' t; 'v';: ''--:;' 5 HUNTER & DREWRY Have "prepared th- way." : They offer an accident and health policy that provides for you and your family when dlsabled'i tv '-f'':- ' i THIS FOIJCT ! -Covers disability Caused by Disloca tions, Broken . Bones, Fractures, Bruises, Cutaj v Gunshot wounds. Crushing or 'mangling, Burns or scalds, Bites of serpents, dogs or other animals, Sprained ankle, Btroke ot lightning, Injuties inflicted by rob bers or highwaymen. Injuries received at home,: In te afllee. Store, Shop, Factory, Mill or ; YardV On the street, Traveling ' on Sassenger trains . or street ears, Waliag, Riding, Driving, Bicycling, Boating, Fishing Skating, Hunting, Horseback:" riding, Drown ing, Going to And from work: and in 11 the ordinary vocations of life. f HUNTER & D.1EWRY, 220 FATETTEVIL1,B ST, - : f . RALEIGH. N. a -EASTER GREETINGS. We wish to offer our friends and customers a Joyful Easter Greeting, and to assure them of our best ser vices in Laundry -ork, done in such a way as to .'promote their welfare and happiness. , . :- EUREKA LAUNDRY,; i i " All Phouca, : ' 0 ' 9 WANTED AT ONCE! WOMEN AND GIRLS TO Operate Sewing Machines. Clean, easy and paying employment. Beginners 'paid GOOD WAGES. All Machines run by power. . . Board seciired at moderate rates. For full particulars, apply promptly to doii mnk (o, Durham, N. C. : A GREAT FICTiON -SALE. ; H. P. S. KELLER. ARCHITECT, RALmGLT, JJ". C. ' vw. J Hundreds of new books in - hundsome xloth binding,. - v at 50 CENTS EACH, H ' , CENTS POSTrAUKT 8en'd ,', for full list. - . - V'l' " Alfred Willilis Co1 - ;.v.-:-big;. . Bargains in CannsJ Geo Js 2 Tb Strlngless Snaps, 754c. , - 1 lb Tomatoes,: 7 V4 C. ' - ' . 2 Tb Corn, TV4c. . ' ' - : 2 lb Corn, Okra ft Tomatoes, 7l4c. 2 lb Okra, 7 o. --J lb Peas, 10c. 1 lb Apples,' 10c. 2 lb Peeled Peaches, 12'4e. : These prices should interest you. J. B. GRKEX CO. "A saw Is a good thing, hut not to shave with." Also 1 Ready-to-Wear Clothing ts - a good thing, but not on the man, ' If your clothes don't fit you perfectly, ' they will not hold shape, and if they dou't ' Wold shape they won't wear. . That's ' the wholo argument in a nut-shell. " Garments will only lit when they are cut, fashioned and tailored over your form. You can't buy from-factory-to-wearer clothing and Set a lit. ; That's common sense : . - s .Whv then spend money for clothing not made for you, when'': r the same amount wo will make a studyf your build and then ;' make, you & suit your Buit? , ' f ' . .i v ' 5 1 U 'i, Dolays are dangerous. , Lot mo take your measure at oneo. Undoubtedly the finest lot of Suitings you ever saw from' .which ' to make your selection.- . t - V H i n It 6 ; n , North . Cv-ftlir.fv rnrmntt 'X4t..'.'- I TI ... ,. . 1 ""7 . rfm s . Rooms 200, 811 and 113, Carolina Trust Building. - f .::;"''""., !.' 'X J, - IIART-WAITD HARDWARE CO., Agents for Keen Cutter Tools. . I
The Raleigh Times (Raleigh, N.C.)
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April 1, 1907, edition 1
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