Newspapers / The Raleigh Times (Raleigh, … / April 17, 1907, edition 1 / Page 1
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.' i. ...... TIMES, r v EALEIC IT, C, 3NESDAY, APRIL 17, 1907. rr.: I1ETHEK7 rr 12 ccrryncirs lcos : ' is; BEOIfj FIGHT ON PILOTAGE BILL boo;,i of ml; :a 3XIE ARM ii m:d cs:: 4r.. . . ". 4 . as w -al 4 - fc v FORESHADOVED UN 9 avl res ,vfn::.ifiLiLFGDcou:iTY '- J-V' . -V ?' n.dl) North fUdeof $eattalT :nnd ( ' ' ' '- trfed Board from .toekale En- dcavored to.Boord-a Passing Freight, and Falling, in This, Start ed Across all Open Field Scruggs 1 Was Phot in he , Back and . Pled InstantlyOne Convict Jnroped in a Yard to Get Out of Way of Bul lets, Bat Bravest of Three Gave Several Guards a txg jChase--All . i J t White Men.1, - '." 1 Three ' young cbnTlets C. h -Scruggs; Jack Williams and Dodd " , Wilson, all white made an attempt 4 to escape from toe state prison touay Shortly before noon. They pried a - hoard from the stockade ; and suc ceeded In getting into the open before the guard saw them. At the first . 1 shot Scruggs fell shot , through the a body, and', died Instantly. V-Neither '.Williams nor Williams, was hit, and both Were captured, one only a few yards , beyond the railroad, which , passes by the1 penitentiary feuee, after ( ' All three' bfth prisoners were 1 from Guilford, county and were con- vlrtnA anil sentenced to terms in the ' penitentiary at the" February Aerrt of ' Guilford court, having been Drought . - to the state prison, on tbo vSkerunry..!. TTWI morning at work at - the brtclf yard I; whichls inKentiary, "' on the north side bt the penitentiary "andplclted a time .whena!1 freight '1 1 train was passing to' make Ihelr t- - "' tenlpt for freedom. ? Just inside of ' the stockade is a very large pile of . wood, and . the convicts ran behind this with an old axe. and before the gnord saw what they were doing, a board had been pried from the stock ade and the men 'were crawling ' through. . An effort was made to get on 'the freight, -but the - trainmen ', pushed them oK. . The, convicts had 7 no other recourse than to take across , the open field tp-the north ' of .the ' penitentiary. As they ascended the ' hill Guard I C. Eatman began firing ' upon Jhem with a ; Winchester , rifle At the first shot Scruggs Jell, and a second later' Wilson dropped, but he ; Immediately sprang to his feet and ' started in the direction of the Hllla boro roqd.' Williams did not have the nervo to run across the field and - Jumped into a near-by yard, where he ' was a( once surrounded and caught. Wilson was eventually caught' in the rear Of the A. ft M. College, where ' he bad hid in a ditch. He gave sev t eral guards quite a chase as he left, going towards the north, and after .. crossing the Cameron' field, doubled . V back iff an effort to elude hUr pursu ers, but, unfortunately zor aim, one "of the guards sa Whim cross the road -P"1 ' R6' was not positive tfiift'the man was ?- J tlie prisoner, but toofe"lt to be' him.: twhd In ttls he was correct.- ., ':t'nr Dr. Rogers was paasing the penl ' ' '' tenttory when the ttjea made their "-' attempt to edcabe, and immediately ..-.')- teri'Scruggs was shot he .wedtii to ; him buf he -wnit obdirt dead.- The ' vbullet struck him iti rthe . back and dame- out It the lower part V the i""thaL fte fell on Ills baekV"!, ", 1 J pfaorjr Of the fHsomertr.'' I , All of the men. weriirom Guilford l countyanff ScrugsU-'only had two '' years, having".' been" """fbnvlcted ? of ?nj- forgery". He was 19afs old." WU ': Hams ahd Wilson were found 'guilty ' of breaking into s 'store and.' sen- ' . tenced 'to seven yean each.. Both n;on are 23 years of age. They had: been in prison only a short tlm.e ; . ' lr-s than sixty J ays but during UHb tlino they had conducted themselves1 i in the proper manner and gave no " sipna of glylng trouble. , , (' - i'-' The men evidently picked the time when a train was passing, so as to get the board oft the fence without attracting attention, and also desiring f , to board the train. t When a reporter of The Evening Times visited tho penitentiary a few minutes after the men escaped, the old axe Was lying by the fence where thB convict droned it, ond the plank (Continued to Page Two.) 01 mm DEMANDED k .1 y-, f CBjr Leased Wire to T4 Times.) v . i Dover, . Vkehl j April J. 3JHne mil lion, dollars 1$ the ransom asked for little orscej Marvin- by Salvatore Ant one, of IJoboken, from whom Dr. MaWin .received s -letter1 this morn lng. ? Anjone ,says he ,has the child 'in his cuto4y. and if an. advertisement Is 'Inserted in a New York paper tell ing '-where Dr. Marvin "will meet him he will deliver the baby. .On the bajCkflf Antone's letter a large black hand) was drown. ,'Xr. Marvin received about thirty letters this morning from all parts of the country. Most of them offered condolence, the "writers - expressing the belief that the Child is dead. One writer suggested that Dr. Marvin ad vertise "in the papers of ten. largest cities in the country. Cleveland was underscored several times. Dr. Mar-, vtn said he would advertise in all the Cleveland papers,(- ; . v. Dr. Marvin was informed " this morning that the Finkerton detect ives who have been working on the Case , since the- child was reported missing, had withdrawn. v - The distracted father '- was hur riedly summoned 1 from the Capitol Hotel fills morning by the : report that his .baby bad been found dead In the woods near his farm.' The rumor proved to be untrue. ' U ' 1 !",''- 1 ' 1 (By leased Wire to The' Times.) ' Asbury Park, N. T.,' April 17. This city Jiaa been brought face to (ace with a serious race problem. . Nlnety-nvo per cent? of the white volunteer firemen have deciarea mat unless tne one coiureu company In the department is,' dis qualified they will not serve in the de partment. ' The city counsel has been presented with a petition asking that the Are de partment be re-organized and the col ored company be eliminated, -i The feel ing between the white and blacks is increasing hourly since, the petition' was read last night. The whites have re fused to sit in meeting with the negro firemen. -.The Are department consists of eight white companies and the col ored company. NO REPLY TO BE HADE BY EVELYN Uutd Wire to The Times,) J New York April 17. Mrs. Evelyn Nesblt ThaW-tpday refused to 'make any comment n the' statement1 made by -her motber- in pttttburg Justify ing the mother's course in every par ticular .since the tragedy Jaat sum mer and before,, insofar ,as it related tQ what was ,brough.t outpa the wit ness atand ..during th trial -and in the isummlng up address of Lawyer j In her .statement Mrs. Charles Hoiman declared that the only, com- mnnlcatlon of any.ort whatever she hag.Jad from her. daughter since, the plght,, Thaw shot and . .killed Whl.tej was a telegram from the girl imme diately after the tragedy giving this warning: 4 ' 'f,' 1 v i. "It Is most Important (or ou to say .absolutely -nothing." . v. KING EDWARD IS A DEFENDANT IN SUIT. "(By Leased Wire to The Times.)' . Boston,. Mass.,: April "17. King Edward is defendant in a suit brought by Mrs. Annie B. Mason of this city to recover damages tor. Injuries re ceived while traveling on the Inter Colonial Railway in Canada. , The complainant contends that the rail road is ; not a .corporation, but the property of the crown. Judge Fes sendeu reserved decision. . VMS IT? A CALt FROM TOE DEAD IS (By Leased Wire to The Times.), 'MIshawaka, Ind., April .1. Either S' aplrii agent or mental tele pathv told: John V. Hjfley, of py pity; Mich., thaUhis old friend, Pater Y, ,B weeny, lay in a morgue In this city, unrecognized, in popr attire, and neglected. - Sweeny's body was found three inlles northeast of this city In a rye fields ; It was brought' here and arrangements were made to place it in the potters field; when there came a letter from Hurley., It was ad dressed ' ' to.; County Superintendent Dice,' 'Hurley, said the letter was prompted by a dream he had had the night before, V Vision, in which Bweony was tho leading character, t - The Michigan . man said he had not seen or heard of Sweeny lu a score of years, but the nocturnal vision caused, him to wrlto he knew aot why " he should address Mishawaka, mut bo did. Swoeney was . buried from the Catholic church... "Sweeny held master chairs In Catholic ' educational 'Institutions in Paris, then -New York, Detroit, the Jesuit' College: at '..Chicago . and last with . the University of Notre Dame! flfive tmtles irom Mishawaka. DEAUTIFUL GIRL UiLllUUFIliliM 1 .9 - fBy Leased Wire .to The Times.) ; New iTork. - April 17. In , view. of scores of persons, Miss Christina Probo delsky, a beautiful young woman,:' was run over, and killed today by an electric train near the Batb Beach station., v Mtst ef the men and women who ,aaw the young woman killed were either on their way to the Bath Beach station, or were waiting on ;- the platform to board the train.; As the front o'f thr1 train hurled the ' body of Its victim twenty feet ahead of It. and then ever tookand cruslied Its life out unger the wheels, women, screamed ' and f.alnted while many strong men .turned away In horror. , ' ' : ' 1 ' Miss Iroboldesky tried to cross 'the tracks in front of the train. She was on an errand to a nearby store for her employer, :. Detective ergeant -Bernard Dolan, of Brooklyn headquarters:'"' ; . mv.:',.: -J 'm (By Leaded Wire to The Times.) - V New york, April 17, Eighty per sons were driven in panic .from a five story brick tenement at No. 1U Her ter street py sre:.arry.today.. -.rite blaze was discovered by JLouis Angelo, who was awakened by the smoke,' and he alarmed the, tenants -by shouqng Fire, . - . Women- and children In their .night clothes crowded in the Hallways and lougnt in tne enorts. to escape aown the -stairs,; y . Several, women fainted and were carried out by toe men. :' f - Angolo'ran to the corner of Mott street and turned in an alarm. i wbenf'sfhe firemen- aod police or iittfithe frghtened'nenants, in all stages of night .dress, were shivering in the atrfet, .', The fain tin A women were carried Into Dr. Kramp's drug store in the basement of the building and revived. The flames were quickly extinguished and the .'tenants were given shelter. THE COCH-A-DOODLE- - ' DOO OF LQUIEES (By Leased Wire to The Times.) ' San Francisco, Cal.. April . 17, Bill Squires, champion heavyweight of: Auatrlalia, arrived In port early , this morning on the steamship Ventura, to challenge' any of the American pugilists for. the world's -title. ' Squires-Is ac companied only by bis manager; Barney Keynoius. , . DRIVENOUT IN JilGIlT BASES t Makes a Sig- t Move ,if& mm Tli" Preslden JAskh the Man from - Louisiana t f Accrit the Ulllce of fl onnnissior f .f lntcr.iiU Itrve. ' nue rWigl'i,' May Become a Towej f of SlrViiSUi for Kooxcv. lt ; (By Leased Vlre to Tho Times.) . Washington, k.prll 17. The president has decided 'Ho to appuun First As sistant Postma itw-Genci a 1 Frank H. Hitchcock as C mmlssloner of internal revenue to aucc ed John W. Yerkes and has " jtsked5.' p ail . Wight, of Now Qrleans," to- o oept that (ifflce. Mr. Wright' was hi 1 '.yesterday and took luncheon, at, tfjtf white uu: He is national commlitceman from Louisiana and one of the tig hunlmss men of that state. ..'lie : was former! v fiom Itock land, Meii-e'"' rt.::'. In this move' there is another Indi cation of tho determined fight the pres ident Is making io retain control of the organization In soethern states and to assure the support of southern delegates In the next nstlo&ai .convention for Se cretary. Taft or sorne other candidate whom trie .president can approve. Al though It has bee little advertised, this struggle for I be JiAPer hand In the south Is qlitto'ltksv 'Herat! as the struggle just beginning In OIo. Some time ago first Assistant Hitchcock, on authority proceeding; from :tbe-white house, be gan Writing letteri to postmasters Jn the southern states to ascertain sentiment. These toUioistes constitute the back bone 6f the repijbUcaO organltatfon In practically every southern state and It Is bcUevtd.thtiC they;' Will tall in line with JLhe 1 - 'm?x Dfllltlcal nlans. - ... . - . ..' Siouer of Internal revenue; will beta tower of strength to the president In a' .like- way.; He is a good politician and can help materially outside- his own state, which he can probaly be counted upon to control. There nrC manyinter naf oevenue deputies and gaugenrs for the 'south, who ate always a factor in controversies between , republican ' fac tions. 1 ' . 'v'?'"?' y In : connection with the Veeen' ap' polntment by the president ' of R. W. Tyler, an Ohio colored man, to a posi tion In the treasury department,: It de velops, according to Tyler's v friends, that the Tylers were first lifted into public life as far back aj 138 'by. Sen ator nrnki- thf. i:ovirnoi- at. thlo. Who appointed James Tyler; the father of R." W. Tyler. copitQl. policeman at the state house in Columbus. ' This bit of history is regarded i'lth Interest, as the Tyler appointment has been re gained In some quarters as a slap at Foraker. James Tyler Was a veteran of the civil war. (By Leased Wire to prhe Times.) TKftlparai80, Chile, April --ii 7, Mea ger, adylces received today indicate southern-Chile is in tho throes of a volcanic horror almost as terrifying as the earthquake .' disaster., if last year, ' Gigantic forest fires have1 been staf-ted by the hot lava, and hundreds offpersgns, as well as tboupanda of uc. are nceing Mir ,uieir uvea rrom 0 flames. ; ; r''f 7. Slight earthquake shocks tave ac companied the ernptton and -this has added to the panic,.;! Ashes, boiling Water and large streams of ' molten lava havo been emitted front the nu merous Andrean volcanoes. -Subterranean rumblings, inky hlackneas and electrical displays of terrifying force have accoBipaaled the eruption. Valdivla province has suffered the most, but the country from Tolten south almost to; Port Monti Is sold to be on fire In the Bueno river dis trict the disaster Is uald to be at Its ,So far, the reports todlcate little loss of lite, but it Jte Jfoared when ihe full story. Is told Jit .will be found that many persons Jjaxe perished, . ' y . dRJtESTKD ON OHAR.GK ' ' , , Chicago? April 17. Perry L. HedrikJ cmer saniiar-f jnspecior or inicago was arrested yesterday afternoon ' an a'charge'of bribery. : i' j ! fl;2 Pre VOLCANICTiiiES lea PI Test It co:i!i:iS!o:Vs legality Point Raised That Governor filhoadd ..Not BJave Named CommlHSlooer Bcfor. AprH first and Tliey Were Kamed ; Marcb' istU-No ,Ji)oubt '! Aboirt, Courts hvlns ta Construe Act.,- u r , -SpeclaI to The Evening Times.) Wilmington, N. April 17. The le gtllty of the bill passed by the last glslature requiring that all vessels eoming Into Bouthport shall take a pilot "Is te be questioned by the ship ping Interest of 'Wilmington. The first point raised is that the governor did . not appoint the board of naviga tion and' pilotage In the proper man ner as the act, section 19, reads as fol lows: ."That this act ahall be In force from: and after the first day of Apr)'. one thousand nine hundred and seven. In section 1 it . hr . provided that the (governor- shall name a board of com missioners and pilotage not later than April Unhand that their1 terms shall begin on the ICth of April. It is con tended, that Inasmuch as the bill, as provided In section 19, did not become effective, until the first of AprH, that there whs no authority to name com missioners before thfct date, and as a (natter of fact, they were named on the 13th of March. . Those opposing the bill raise.. the -point that the proper time 1 have named the commission ers would have been between the first and the fifth of Aprll. that being th a time hieant In the bill for naming them. J When . the eommlslsoners met Mon day to organize a representative of the shipping Interests appeared before the body -and objected to any action being taken on the ground that the bbard wa HeaUy ; appointed. - It Is ' not known what steps will be, taken by the iqwnuea)i but' I -Is; isypoeedj -MMVt until somethtnB- further Is done. There' seems to be not the' slightest doubt about the bill being fought out In the courts.' It will be remembered that In one of the last clauses of the bill an error was made, or at least It Is supposed to have been an error, al though It was the same way In the original bill. The word .''not" was omitted, changing the construction of the -clause entirely, and : Instead of providing that vessels take a pilot pro vides Just the opposite. The use of the stencil In signing the bill may also be questioned and the courts given 'an opportunity to pass upon the matter. The shipping Interests of Wilming ton were very much opposed to the passage of the bill and cited the fact that during the two years that Wil mington was an open port enormous progress was made, but the pilots suc ceeded in getting the bill through. It means a heavy tax on the shipping in terests of the city, as the shipper, In reality, has. to pay the pilotage in the end. The' result of; the 'controversy will be' eagerly ''watched 'by all con cerned, both for and' against the bill. TIRED OF LIVING HE GOT OUT OF LIFE (By Leased Wire fte-iThe Times.)-, ' Norfolk, ,ya April With the re mark that he could See no use in longer living,' Russel B, Ward, a merchant and horse and cattle dealer of this city, shot himself dead In Princess Anne county. He had gone to the county to buy .cat tle. A negro attendant was the only witness of tlm tragedy.' i. . r GUILD'S VAIN FIGHT . toMiiiiiEt f'r 4' (By Leased Wire to The Times.) 4ew : York, AprU ITWhile her seven-jwor-old oa; fought with ll tbestrcngtn tp Ml W?9p t$ yt; trom lier ?frenls4 .grasp s a .ty-ead" kne .Jil jth h.ad: tUid 'ggoist nerseit, eirs. jennte Kooertaon. tJoolf throat today In ..bei1 home In East 4t.WeAW.- fler .feuftd, ,45eorge Cpnklln ftad jbn .out f. work for . long time And. poverty and -melai-l Honolulu. '.ADrU.il7.Thb. first Chi ftem nun in JUo story t Sfa pedert ul Linr onci;uv xxe&i-i.s . JesLUi sna Mary has beeh Invested jWltl Ue yell. F.IcveniEnt Acslcst llie fecial ... .Bevc!Disls TURiiilL IN ASSEOT Many Men and Women Immored knyTke First Estimate ef Los ,of life bf Dungeons of St. Peter and f)t. Paul and Report (Jiven Out That a Plat of Wholesale Assassinati!)!, ItaM Biea Fruetrated. (Special Cable to IHe Times. St. Peterabarg, April 17WCan you put your baud en your heart and swear that yo iave not a bomb in youc pocket?" . I This remarkable speech by one of the reactionist deputies, addressed to one Of the social revolutionists, once more let loose turmoil In the duma, which was only ended by the forcible ejection of the offending member. .. This member is V. V. Schoulgine, a reactionist workman deputy. He rose in his seat when M. Kousemine, a social revolutionist deputy,, was making an earnest . appeal to the; duma to investigate the courts-martial of the Riga mutineers and save them from unjust execution. When Schoulgine left ihe chamber many, of the taction of the reactionist right left with him. The government has taken a de cided step against the .social revolu tionists, and it Is generally believed that Its attitude in this matter fore shadows Its final action in regard to the duma. The continued life of the lattor is now looked Upon as Batter of only a few weeks. , ' , . ," ;. Under the pretext .that they are members of the terrorist organization the prefect of fit. Petersburg has had arrested, aod confined in the fortress of St., Peter and St, aul iwentf-Te Social revolutionist, seven of theem ,1 n reiecfc oeciares wvy or ganization pf the social revolutionists. According to the information given out at the prefecture. (th,e arrest iot the twenty-five has frustrated a plot for wholesale assassination that was just coming to a ' head. ' The social revolutionists declare that there is no plot on foot and will not be any un less the government becomes . dis tinctly hostile to the continuance of the duma. Two alleged terrorists have also been arrested at Minsk as a result of the attempted assassination on April 14 th of the governor of the province. NEW PASTOR OF THE ROCKEFELLER CHURCH. (By Leased Wire to The Times.) New York, April 17. The Rev. Charles Frederick Aked, the new pastor of John D. Rockefeller's Fifth Avenue Baptist Church, arrived on the steamship Carmania from. Liver pool today. Mrs. Aked accompanied him. AN UNKNOWN IVHITE MAN ASSAULTED HER ''! .iKlaa: (By Leased Wire to The Times.) Baltimore, April 17. An attempt to assault a young white Woman was made early this morning about one half mile from' Berigle's station, on the Phila delphia ft Washington Railroad.' The victim Was Miss Elizabeth Ann Stevens, who Is employed as a stenographer in Baltimore and who was . on her way to her place of employment when 'she was attacked, ,, : ' Two men were placed undei; arrest by uie uaiumore county ponce, una is white mad add the other a hegro, but the young wohian is posltlVe'that her assailent was a White roan,1 toough all she saw was hia .Jiands as he placed ihem over-.-her .eyes.,. The negOhas been released, and the search for other suspects continues. ' The man arrested gives thb'namef'of John Green, and .'be cannot account for his presence in the vicinity. '"; :' ' ' "... OLIVER IS TO SUCCEED 8WETT Af ?OVEPR. " ' llai Coble Ti.'Tbi i "times. )' ? London, April 17. Sydney Olivet has been - appointed to succeed Sir Alexander fiWettejbahi' asy.err' yer was princiel pfygk M fi&W ftrhfli dfipgrifmentoif e.foJtml npca, "apd .opting governor o the IsUnd in J0MlW,.M4,.m., - e will sail tor fUngston on. May 4. - Five Cities Fell. tiitiS: jig ffrui W' 4: V?; 1 the Earthquake; 'Now ttelleve t He Very Conservative mi The Vor hno of Celluie Displays t'srwOhtd 1 Aotlvity-t-People iafaalr r -y (By Leased Wire to The Tlrnes.Ji Mexico City. April It. Late dls- -1 patches from the area of destruction in the terrlfld Mexican earthquake r show that the devastation, was greater ' than at first supposed. "Five cities ' have been totally destroyed! - Latest - v advices add the towns of Ayrutla and Omeltepee to the wrecked cities of Ch!lpanclngo,'Cal!apa and Tlxtla. ' ' It is reported that Capulco was partly submerged by great wave which dashed over the breakwater. Although no breath of wind sraa' stir- k ring at the time of the first shock when the earth began to tremble the sea was lashed into a fury, and as the hocks continued the harbor took oa the appearance of a typhoon-swept , sea. It is said that no ships suftarad ! to any extent. r 'i , , ' Communication-by tall with Vera V Crux is entirely cut of, owing to the sinking of road-beds' on both the Mexican and Inter-Opeanlc railway. Reports of Deaths Conservative.;' ' Nothing received ovar .hd .attejK , Interrupted wireSr ifl the tourse of . this day and evening tended to crjh tradlct the dispatch that came, yes terday to the National Bank, JasMert; ing, that 600 Uvea had been .'lost, in Cbllpandngo. Oa'-'th contrary-, , it v jooked, more 'and more-with ,eacH , passing hour as if that bulletin, if . Jguesa.'had . been ;n .xtrernely; coari : servaqve esjtimate.y ,.rtMr, ... .The government received,' brfltral . Information of (nlr thirty-seven- new death to Chilpanclngo and thirty- , nine In Chllapa. but U Wa4 admitted ' ; by officials thatth$y feared, far heavier loss of life. 5 '.' .,',',(' ( . As the real, condition 'dawned, Jb ', the people here many of them became , frantic . for .'further Information, Every telegraph office was besieged with inquiries And -with, requests to send dispatches. id relatives . and -' friends In the region most affected by. the earthquake. But the . Federal t Telegraph Company accepted'' every ; message on the express condition that -it was subject to delay and t it was next to impossible to get private tele- ; -grams through., , 1 Wires Working Badly. ';. ' t More .'. than 1 2,000 personal met sages were held up In the main office . with small prospect of being trans mitted today. The wires were 'Work ing so badly it was all the operators -could do to send and receive news paper and government dispatches. Aj a rule, the government gave the right -of way to press reports manifestly ' believing them to e fresher than ad vices from its own employes.: ; ' The shocks began, unday and eon tin ued with more or less, violence until 4 o'clock Tuesday, ""v . ;i;ln Tlxtjaft Is reportedlthat,,weive bodies ha'yje .been ,' . lakjOU frpm the . ruins, and, twice that,, number dt wounded Are being cored ,for a tern porary structures la he open codn- ', try. An .Operator, - at Chilpanclngo says that the four men in the oBJce 1 have been working without) relief for forty-eight hours, exposed to inclem ent weather. sJt is reported that the state government. ha provided,, teats ; for the homeless and haf .takeA Other ' means to. provide for,het comfort of ' 1 too inhabitants, : . . i , ;:f"i , Collma tn Graptton. i ,'' ' The reports from Collma say that the volcano of C.olim' s dleplayig unwonted activity ad h'at-lhe,,peo- 1 pie Jn that section ari fig.toxfojj:''' t V The Catholic blshon' oi jthe atoM fit Guerrero has fcls,' gd4uartor rt " Chllapa; from him no WAOd.fcoi jbeen : received, and 'ear for fala afet' are entertained; " "Messages from as' far ndrth as Baa Luis PotosI and as far souh af th v Cltydf Saw, Jifan austa." Ja- the tate o Tobaop reoorJi, fltojf MAji RQiyJEH)f hOT KT ' 4,, . RKPtMlXEtt TO VICKERY, Washington, April 17. Chief iPost ofllce Inspector Vlokery stated that the robbery of A ' 10.0e0 . packags In - the m&H between Wilmington. N. C, end New York iiaL not yet been epoiUd to him, - . ' , 1 ' y 7
The Raleigh Times (Raleigh, N.C.)
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April 17, 1907, edition 1
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