Newspapers / The Raleigh Times (Raleigh, … / May 15, 1907, edition 1 / Page 1
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W a , .r .u f HALEICII, II. C, DAY, HAY 15, ,1907 rnnn . MRS. EDITH sm:r ri m . . , "1 ' n 1. . Jli ki.J tat lull J I. MM : f LiLLS'ALj'IN GOIIVENTICil IIQT IiJ COLLAR "V'T" .J .L n Ami ' i - llWui UwO LI kit- u u J - Celestes E.vcrcJ ty o; ueii of ; mm 'EE til L..-J V ; Northu Carolina, Manufacturers and Others Complain of the Scarcity . " ' of Labor In the Bonth, and the Convention Will be Asked to Take Some Action for the Relief of . ' ' This Condition -Tlie 'Need of Im . -. migrants to the South Discussed. - j','. I.. ' . ; . , , v'; $y. Leased Wire to The Times.) , Philadelphia. Pa., May 16. More than one ' thousand delegates .and. possibly double1 that numberbt visitors . to the -i convention of the . American- Cotton V Manufacturers' Association arrived in v this city yesterday afternoon- and last :ht'tSe--aelgat. arid visitors are from all sections of the country. v ' Billions of dollars of capital n cot ton mill establishments In the south, New Kngland and the middle west, It la estimated, is- represented at ;the .j convention, '"" President f Arthur 7 H. Lowe of Fltehburg, Mass., ; who , has ' been here since Monday, "noon,: declared last night the convention is Abe largest .' cotton men have ever held, ".- ' More delegates are - arriving today. ' President Lowe and his officials have -mads -preparations for entertaining more than 1.600 members. :, Plans have ' 1 also been -made jtor several, thousands lot visitors from Jthe, south -and New England. ' 1 '1 President Fairbanks when, 'ho 'nr-:-rIves tomorrow noon will be greeted at. Broad street Station with an ova tion. " . On one- of the state's tugs the vice presidents will be taken to eLague Is : land, -where he will be given the official salute. Plans for the convention 'were dls--( cussed last night by members of the ' board of governors Who met at the Bellevue Stratford, the headquarters "of the delegates. , 4 '- - Plans for-requesting the convention .:; '; to take action on the -asserted scarcity of labor in the nouth were made yes terday afternoon by a" score of owners and -managers of cotton mills in that ; section at an Informal .meeting, Im migration, the cotton men said, In dls : cussing the labor situation and sir t . .Ing plans to relieve it,' was needed and 1 woud greatly alleviate the crisis which they believe 1 will speedily i, confront - ' southern cotton mills in , the form of .." shortage f help. , . " So hampered afe eome' of the mills, the manufacturers explained, that they .- are being run on half time. . , -In the Old North State. i "In my state," said Grant ,- Kstlow, manager of a mill in Graham. N. C f "we experience no. trouble with child labor. We try tp do away with chil dren working in the mills as far as possible. We are hampered though by - a scarcity : of labor. Prosperity has ' outgrown, the population and the . man ufacturing establishments are suffering for want of .labor. ; The "south needs Immigration. The wages are high, An operative In the south commands as . , high, if not higher, wages than, those paid in the north." . - ,. , "... With the delegates gathered in the ball room of . te Bellevue Btratrord, where UIc" sessions are .being held, k Mayor Reyburn formally opened the - convention this morning at 10 o'clock ' and welcomed the visitors. The re sponse was made by D. A. Tompkins, " of Charlotte, NC,,i -f ' , " Following this the annual address of President Arthur N. Lowe, of Fltch ..' burg,, Mass., was mads. ' A score or more' of papers were" then delivered by recognised experts in the cotton luiHlness and by government officials. . The speakers were Commissioners of Immigration E. 3. Watson, of Colum bia, 8. C; E. "W. Robertson, Colum bia. S. C.i Theodore H. Price. 'New York; Georgo Otis Draper, Hopedale, Mhrs.; Charles a Barrett, Atwer. Ga.j WIIMnm Whlttamv Washington; R. C. llltt, Atlanta, Ga.f and Tariff Ap praiser EJwln II. ' Hartshorn, New York. ..-i..-': In t nfVrnnon the delegates will visit t .ti.itf. in ,a body. . There Will be 11 itte j urty at night. V Now I . and di u ratosj are anxious ly awaiting the arrival from Provl- donee, R 'I., of Stephen A. Knight, "the grand old man of the- cotton bus iness" and one of the oldest and largest cotton nmnufariurf -s In this country. Mr. Knh ht is hiy-seven years old, .and he Is the 01 t mem ber of the Cotton f n's Assn. i i'i.n. K. IV. France, director cf the 1'liil ndflpMa 3"'x(i!e : hool, i 1 ; n ! cn ' t he qua n u'at s 01 1 .e 1 (ConUiUH'l Vll 1 i ) 1.) ELLEN iRRY ) 1 biiajwiioi of illcn Terry, lcmiiiiK actress of English.. Btagc, and 89 years old.1 it is announced here hak become, a bridle for the third time, James ' Carew,. the "loading man in Mi9 Terry's tour, announced that he Miss Terry were married by a Justice of the Peace in Pittsburg on March 22nd last. ;. Mr. Carew Is 32 years old. ' ' ' 1 r.:oii 7.;;o-'Su:ciDE Cr Ucs II a C::l!3 Murifer The Wife and the Second Man in the Case Are' Dead The Police Are Now Seeking the Woman's Hus band. ( " , RV Leased Wive to 'The Times.) Chicago, May 15. Thomao D. Ro- nan, a government, letter carrier, and Mrs. Ellzkboth Nelbuhr, who lived on Wentworth avenue, are dead as the result of a double crime committed last night. ; Mrs. Nelbuhr Was sepa rated from her husband, but was said to be near a reconciliation with him The more, general belief 1b that the letter carrier; Jealous of the husband, killed Mrs. Nelbuhr y and : then shot himself. Ho had been a. boarder In the woman's house-. Yet there enters into the crlmo a: mysterious, phase that points to Albert J. Nelbuhr,: the husband, as possibly guilty. The po lien "are searching for him, 'The point that .throws mystery over, the case Is that Ronan's body bears , two bullot wounds one over, the heart and tho 5ther in the right temple. , mm held DY DEAD IE'D - (By Leased Wire to The Times.) ? Philadelphia, Pa., May 15. The lives .of moro than sixty passengers, most of them residents of tho utshion ablo suburbs along the. main lino pf tho Pennsylvania, wore imperiled last night, when William Armstrong, en gloeer of a local train, died with his hand on the locomotive throttle. : - As tho train neared Haverford the fireman and the crew noticed with surprise that there was not the usual slacking for the stop at that station, and instead tho train increased its speed every Becond and dashed through Haverford at tho -rate Of a mllo a minute.' Tha fireman climbed into the cab and found Armstrong huddled in his seat, with his hand limp upon tho wide-open throttle. It was tho work of a second to check tho flying msnster, thus averting the danger of a roar-end collision with another train. , , - v V Tho engineer was taken to the Bryn Mawr Hospital. It was said thero ho had been dead for some I ; imo. He was 60 years old end lived I In this city. ...... . 'I, (- i tl I'c-.l Five liked ta Jc.:: Cccssvell ' DHANDISIIED HIS FIST Coli llugties, rostmastr t . Colum bia, Tenn Resents Being Turned Ont for" Politics,, and Reads the Riot' Act' at the White House, Mak ing Rare Tinslc k .. . By Leased jWIre to The Times.) Washington,' May 15.-Colonel Arch M. .Hughes, of Columbia,' Tenn., a-soldier and a politician of the eld sehooli one of the 306 who voted for Grant at Chicago In. 1880, went to Nthe white house yesterday and read: the riot act to Provident . Roosevelt' " as few men have everv dared to read It, He read it also to Assistant' Postmaster Gen eral : Hitchcock and when he - started back to the south last night he 'left two nalrs of tingling ears behind him. Colonel Hugheri la postmaster at Co lumbia, or was until yeororday, whan he was fired to make room for a man sworn to oppose Colonel Brownlow, the only republican " congressman . from Tennessee, whose extermination is an administration desire. It was about his removal that Col onel, Hughes went to the white house with, his fighting clothes, - President Roo.tevert received him in the presence of several other 'callers, , but thafdld not abash Colonel Hughes. ' He stated his case Without, any attempt at con ciliation and wound uo with this, em phasized by a list that , waved fn the direction "of the. president's head:1 You "wouldn't dismiss a messenger from the white house without a hear ing, yet you dismiss me without one on the ex-parte statement of a man who Is interested In -getting my' place.- . ; "There Is one thing more. I want to say to you: - s " ; "i ha two rronafathers at "Kings Mountnln una of whom , was" wouna ed. ' Mr own, grandfather commanded old Jackson's body guard at ' Talla dega and the Horseshoe. I don't ceme from the stock that will submit to- this kind of treatment without a fight."- " . . 'JGood; very good," said . the 'presl dent. . , ' A" 1 " Colonel Hughe then went down to see ..... Assistant Postmaster General Hitchcock,.-who haa been-down south recently,' bringing ' that section , nto line for Roosevelt . '' - - ''I want to say one word to youj Ma Hitchcoek," said Colonel Hughes, ' '"You think - you - know something about politics. I was voting for Grant at Chicago, when you were in Bhort dresses, yet you think you can teach me something about politics m Ten nessee.-.. I'm going back . there to be elected delegate to the national -convention, and as soon as .I'm elected, I'm coming back here to . shake" my Snger in your face and ask you to . take a few kindergarten lessons before1 you go into the south again." ' . None pretends Hughes'. office , ,was not efficiently run, - His removal ,wsa made ostensibly on the ground that he was absent from his office but the fact was that each time Hughes was absent he had the, written permission of the department, - "You remove': me because-1 - have been absent with permission," shouted the old cavalryman to Hitchcock as a parting salute, "Yet you have" been absent, the Lord knows how long, down south on political missions." - Secretary tCortelyou, of the treasury and the postofflce department are busy lining op Tennessee In the Roosevelt rank through the. whole power of the administration is, devoted to driving out of power Representative Brown- low.'".-1 ; 1';" "v" V .., 'V"r. :',:,-. : Chairman Newell- Sanders ; of 1 the ttate committee and joint head with Evans' faction promised Hughes' place to a subordinate named Jackson on condition that Jackson, would ' desert Brownlow, He got the- job. - - STEAfiDOAT fJEfJ ITi LAST DITCH By Leased Wire to The Times.) . New York May . 15. The crisis - in the longshoremen's strike was reached today, and the Indications were that with the arlrval tomorrow from Eu rope of J. Bruce Ismay, president of the. international Mercantile Marine, the International , steamship Lines comprising the trust would capitulate. The steamship companies are mak ing little progress with their efforts to break the strike. They ire nnable to hold the men , imported as strike breakers, although they are compelled to work on the piers under guard. As fast as they can they- are runnlna away, escaping In boats by the water front or braving the mob In West Av'f '.-' 'J ill Scsai"r' - sndc Leaping w, I:.::. iis'Tort - DAHfc r,!fE TESTIFY .-r -tt - . J t-. -,'si-.'4il. Thyeard.Xhe Shots at Brownsville 'and Saw Eight Negroes Race : To st werd V tlio. Fo Vain Effort of Fornker to Ini'ieach the Testimony fit the Wltnes K.' , "By. Leased Wire to The Times.) ?V WnahIngto4" DfC May 15.Georg3 W.' Randall, of ; Brownsville, Texas, 4vho Was called by Senator Warner to testify :befora tho ncnate committoe or military affairs, stated on the stand today that he not only heard the shots fired on the nlsM of. August. 13, but saw right colored men dressed. In the uniform ' of, tho .jUnjted Rtatcs army, running toward Fort. Brown and af terward Vault thq wall around the barracks. ' , . ' 4' Mri: Randall, lives-over the telegraph office, "which s- directly opposite 1 tho fort in wblchrthe colored troopers wqTe stationed. , Ho. was rigidly cross-questioned, by ' Senator Warner for the prosoeuUon and Poraker for the de fense. Senators Lodge, Fraslcr, Fos ter, BiJlkoleyiiiRcott and Overman also interrogated him." I , . - !' Testimony identical with that of Mr. Randall Was, given by his wlfe who wo the last witness called prior to re cess. Senator Foraket" endeavored to lm- peach the Wltnes by referring to Mr. committee the day after the shooting. the Purdys: Investigation and the Pen--rose court-martial trial Mr, Randall has but one eye, haVing lost the sight' of his right optic about forty -.years ago. . Senator Foraker thought this might have ; FVerented the witness 1 from' seeing ditnctly but' Mr Ran dall; declared he 'w.w. Us plainly -as. 4 man. with a pert-itpskiii--"''i.----f'Befor the tnona committed you stated that you heard, some one, shout 'Here we go,', or There, they, go," or something like that," said Senator For aker,' "Didn't you say then that "you beard that .in a low voice?" he asked, ' "Yos. replied the witness. '-, "And you now say It was In a loud voice,""' said Senator r- Foraker, 7 "How do' you ' reconcire those two, state ments?"'. "' 7 i The Witness Shows SplrH. . 'The witness showed soma Jtttle Spirit and said very emphatically:" "When I testified before the citizens committee I told the whole truth, 1 gave 'my testimony and my Impreeslohs, When I made those statements I. had, no idea anyone Would ever question them. The officer, at the fort knew the soldiers did the shooting and' in the, face of that I didn't think for a moment that there Wonld be a question .raised as tp Who did It" i " !-, v Senator Warner brought out the .fact that a first sergeant of one of the com panies of 4he 25th arranged to rent a house from Mr. Randall, saylhg, "I in tend to bring my wife here to live." On the morning of April 11 he Inform ed Mr.' Randall that he did not think the soldier would remain In -Brownsville and for that reason he would not bring his wife to that, city. . v ."What motive do you think the sol diers had for shooting up the town?" Inquired Senator Scott, 1 "Well,' Mr. Cowan had severak chil dren who play around' the fort A ne gro soldier ssked one of Mr, Cowan's little girl if she was a halt breed Mexican and she repllsd, 'No." The. ne gro replied, " You look life one." Tho little girl said, 'You look like en ape.' A few days after that the shooting oc curred,'' said the Witness, '- : - CQADS GRAHTED AN INJUNCTION (By Leased Wire' to Tho Times.) Richmond. Va.. May 16. rThe Nor folk &" Western, Atlantic Coast Line and Cbeaapeakb & Ohio railroads se cured an order today restraining tho corporation commission from enforc ing the two-cent rate. The order, which . la temporary was Issued by Judge J.: C. Pritchard in tho United States circuit lcourt here, and the pro ceeding is similar to that instituted by the, Boutnerni itanway. t . GEAJD LODO ODD .'. '' -." - , i y :, . I I ? (Special ti Tho fenin(j Time.-) ' Ellxaheth, City, C... J. ay JSi The. Grand, Lodge of. Odd Follows of North Carolina is in sosgi.oa here. This JiMb, sixty-fourth nnni:il meet ing of the urana L,otge. Air. 1. M. 3'ophens., of Durham U grand master.' i rliotogrnph of Mrs. Edith Stein, a malv tho Vr 1jynian Abbott, to in A marital mix. She is suing James Dunne, a lawyer, ' for - $50,000 for breach of promise, .and-, which , the Supreme . Court . handed down . a de cision declaring her f-lght JO bring tho suit,, ..:, " ' ; , .- FAicm'5 crJT.'L cip Beat His Sod's flesh Into - "''?-! ; '.V...-;,;:A.''tV.'--fr a Pulp Revivalist Act the Flened Because His Hon riayed Bnsebair oa. Sun dayHe is Sent lo Hard Lahor for His Heed. ' (By Leased Wire to The Times.) - Athens, Ga., May lS.--Because he whipped his 12-year-old son for play ing baseball on Sunday, J. H. Arnold, traveling revivalist, was. yesterday sentenced to six months oi the rock pile' by Major -Dorsey.- . Physicians testified that the boy was lashed until his flesh was pulp and ".that he might not recover. - Arnold said he believed it was a deadly sin to play baseball on Sunday and he had or dered his son not to play, but the latter disobeyed,, and. was even cap tain of the team. 11 . . n WATKLNS BETRAYS ' HIS DIVORCED VYIFE ; (By Leased Wire to The Tlme.),. Indianapolis,.. Ind., .May 15Mrs. Mary Watklns, who came .here sx weeks ago at the request of her hus band. tor renew her relations with him as wlfe visited the court houso yes terday ana discovered that her hus band had secured a: divorce in .1898. Mrs. .Watklns said thatfWio and her hnsband separated in, Pittsburg thir teen years ago, ho coming to this city and sho and her two children remain ing in Pittsburg. After a trivial dis agreement he told her, yesterday that sba was; not his wife, and If she did not belleyo it to look at, he records for 1898. Thejooord shows, that her husband secured a dlvorco by publl- cation of notice. , THK PIGlfr CP ON THE ' BRIDGE TRtTST ' RKXKWKD, By Leased Wire- , to. The. Times.) . ' Lima, O., May 15. The Allen! county grand Jury tma "renewed its tight on the bridge trout m'hett It returned, in dictment " against bridge companies, directors, officer and agents. Tblrty nlne of the Indictments, Involving 150 Individuals, fncludtnsr J N. Nerronr, father-in-law of "William 'H. Taft.sec- Bracketf Bridge Company, J . - ; l' T""'JT(? rr I""Tr"V RecommenuotioM by the Interstate Commerce Commission i- Inflation of Securities and Violation of Aati Trnst Act 'Tentacles of the Barrt man Trust Extending East.". .''' - , 1 .4.' (Bj Leased Wire to. The Times.) Washington, May 15. The Inter state) Commerce Commission's report of its sensational Investigation Of the Harriman railroad combination has been completed. 5 The document, of twenty-flve printed pages, la far the most sensational ever put 'out' by the commission. ' It finds: '"- . , ' That railroad competition has been absolutely ended in. an area equal to one-third of the United States where Harriman is absolute master. ' . That Harrlman'8 contracts with the Rock Island, the Southern Pacific; the Santa Fe, the Illinois Central and the San Pedro road ' are in violation of ther 7 anti-trust act,: and recommends that the attorney general proceed against them. -.7' 1 That the Ourchase of the shares of one railroad by another is a bad prac tice that ought to be stopped by law. That there should bo new and ef fective" laws ' to -prevent Inflation of securities like that in the Alton reorganisation,- which is v described in most effective language. ''.": ,' ,.',' : - ' . ' To Control the East, r ' That the proflts'of the great rail roads of the far west are being used to buy stocks and control systems in tho east, Instead of In building more rouJs for the development of . the wes(t', as they uoght to be. Attorneys- -Frank; . B, Kellogg ' and Charles A. Severance, who wrote, the report for the commission, find -"that the Harriman reorganization- was one of "the most remarkable cases of mar nipulatlons and stock watering ever known," and they demahd that laws be passed Which shall stop such prac tices in futnrej.j -"-' " ' ', The reDort concludes that Harri man now has absolute control of the Illinois Central, and that he is so powerful in the Santa Fe that he has been ftble to stop all competition be tween it And. his roads. , - . " It is declared that the combination of the Union and Southern Pacific systems has been so powerful as not only to Suppress all competition, but to prevent the building of the, San Pedro.. roa,4 from .Salt : JLake to Los Angeles as an independent line. The independent railroad in the great em pire dominated by Harriman la found to be Impossible.. , ,'. . . , . .- The report of the commission, together-with a complete transcript of the .many hundreds of pages of testi mony taken in the hearings, - will be sent to Attorney General Bonaparte in a few days. - It is felt by the commis sion, that (he record is a, very com plete and satisfactory one for. use in any legal proceedings 'that , may be Instituted,, -..'- - 1 THE BELLE'S PAPA THRASHES flASIIER - (By Leased Wire to' The Times.) Omaha, Neb., May 15. Dean Beacher of Trinity Cathedral, the most fash ionable church In Omaha, yesterday chased through the streets of .the city for jseveral blocks and finally captured a young ''masher': who had made an offensive remark., "to a. young, society belle; daughter; of a wealthy, elevator man .' t" . , ' ; ' , - , Then the dean marched him to the home of the young woman and turned him "over to her father, ," who, . after "dressing him,down",i let. him go. ....,; IKE DEATH OF A WELL-v ' -'f V -". KNOWN, CAPITALIST. n '-'"'"' 1 - n ' ' lj - VJ AjATaciOVI , 1 ft V f lit ffc,,iirn,jh -jj 7 AHneviiie. u, aiay- 40.-iowib Maddux, i founder of the tooffee, -ex change in America at-New -York and well kndwa Capitallat, 'died here last nights J ..u'JN'.J'-M ' Mr.-Maddux was-one of the oldest Odd Fenoww dn 'Atneric t; He- was initialed unto "th ' Raskvlllej Ind.i lodge M X8il:,;.He received testf moiiial from the New ydrk.coffee ex change on his elgnty-sUtfe birthday, last, Pecembef. In -eomfflemorattoa' of his services to the ooffse t3"ade, --v- !:J Cii c: r:; - V" i Marshal Collin Fires at the' A. of Secretary . Von . tUUowlti a - ttte Secretary Will Go to P.oot a.. J Lay fhe Matter Before Ulm, .I knaading SatbtfactkMU ' ; " "' - '"' Vl . ; -. - : ' J -" i- , : fBy Leased, Wire to The Time.) -Washington Maj 16.-Marshal qollins of Glen Echo,: In his anxiety to uphold the anti-speed law of the conduit yoads, has come Into eoliia ioa .with W. Von Radowlti, second secretary' of' the German embassy. With , his usual ! impetuosity , V.r. Collin endeavored to . arrest the progress last night ot the automobiU In which the distinguished diplomat was.: ridlngjalohg. the famous turn pike by firing two shoU from hi re volver at the machine. This action and the? desired,!-effect, but at the same time it ha brought bp largs poaslbilitie , of serious ' lnternation al -complications, 1 In- .which the G't-n Echo, authorltlea are likely, to tare badiy,:::vsijt,.5?: S;0i:-vyftv.;i;;H -: . Marshal Collins was upheld by Mdyor Garrett, wh6 fit ftrft threat ened to. impose a fine on kr. Voir Radowlti . bat - "relenting vome i.ut from 'his magisterial severity, f - y condescended td permit U. ) ' nant representative of t. ) depart with a score1 1 Mayor Garrett 1 tent Ion oftali! in; Secretary I jot, 1 f a fow Id . 4 cf U d ti ii ... r 1 . respected,-, and gave-1.. 1 1 executive notice that: the s ' of state would be promptly lufoi i. 1 of What he regarded ts ah insult. '. The International law that saf r guard ha dignity and privileges 01 representatives of foreign ountrle are exceedlfigy strict; and on the fa d of thing it would., appear -. that ; the guardians of the conduit road ha v exceeded their authority to an e tent that :,'promUes , gave - develop nienta, y. -1 1 OLOVEtt MAY OE AWnPTTTT pntt. (By Leaned Wire to The Times.) V August&Y, Gaj, May 15.--Arthur Glover, who, when; he deceived sett tenon of death for the socohd time, created a. sensation i by 'exclaiming I'll be damned, it I wilt be hanged'." haa to a certain extent made good. He wilt not die in the gallows May 26th-as, sentenced. jJudge, Hammond today aet June IB th -for hearing his motion for a new. trial. . If it Is re fused, the ease. wilt be carried to the supreme -court. Glover's life has been demanded by two juries to expiate the killing In cold blood of Maud Dean his para mour, while- the. was at work, . His trial was Sensational In. the extreme, and - was -marked by , t,he severest at ralgnment ever delivered in this seo tlon by a judge la passing sentence. It developed later that be had tried to borrow a pistol with which to shoot the judge, according to a atory told by an official of another county. He also plahned to, smash the solicitor over the., head with a pitcher of ice water. Hla defense at the -last trial was "brainstorm," "paranoia," f'de- mentla Americana," etc.;-" A1- r," new couRtnotrr -ty" :.-"o.- " "P. Vf? ht-i "i (Special td Tlie'ftwBnrhg;,"?! iic.) . Warrenton, N..C.;'iay. 15,--TLa ; new court 'house here. haa been.cfM- pleted and, June term ,.o.,conRt : 1 christen-the new, bujidlag. i Frank, .B.-1 Ml(bar 0f rWashingtonW was- too arcbltflBUTfew building i " nuaually lattraotlvei and iittv,"ry -way a taodom court house.' ' t HCHOOLMA'AM r.fe.TE ABOUT Iltll tJAnX"" , (By Leased Wr tp The Tift: ) -Chardon, n Ofaioj.) May , 15.-,-. : Eeatl. Gray, the North Chanlnii r tmtfmr reeintly?iexcerated 1 y school board n char, s cf b?J hei-'garters; before her ps ; ' waylald-on her way to schoi ! j day and beaten by two voi 1, slapped, shook ac 1 lticked 1 -, v 1 "1 street rather than work under such conditions. w twq tuea sat , on, a fence an 1 1 ,.( 'j- -s- "W- -1 V - , ' "wt -' '' ... 1- X 1-.
The Raleigh Times (Raleigh, N.C.)
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May 15, 1907, edition 1
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