PAG2 FOim THE RAtiEtOn EVENING TIMES: FRID'AY, JUHE 26", 1908." HIE RALEIGH TIMES - fl. PACE. Rocetrer of fan visitor-press pub. co, published la The Ttmea Building, ' 10-12 East Hargett Street. I. V. SIMMS . Gen. ManAger HTLX1ARD BRUCE, Man'g Editor. 8, H. FARABEE City Editor. GEO. C. HALL . Adv. M'gr J. O. BARRETT Olr. Mgr. Eastern Representative, ROBERT MacQUOID, World Building, " K ' Kew fork. Western Representative, HUGBXETT HOLLTDAT, Boyce Building, Chicago. ..Bell 'Phone. Editor . . .......... . 179 Business Office . ... ... .178 Raleigh 'Phone. Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . 179 SUBSCRIPTION RATES. (In Advance.) Ont copy one year. . ... . . . . . On copy three months...... $5.00 1.25 .10 One copy one week . . The Times Id the only afternoon paper between Richmond and Atlanta with fall leased wire news reports, giving the fall HEARST NEWS SERVICE Entered througn Raleigh, N. C, postofflce as mall matter of the sec ond class, In accordance with the Act of Congress, March 3, 1879. FRIDAY, JUNE 26, 1908. King Alfonso seems to be pretty solid with the stork, anyhow. Mr. Fairbanks will now please tell the simple truth about that cocktail in cident. Probably Kaiser William has found Mrs. Hill's bicycle Isn't so very repre hensible, after all. " The New Jersey woman who dreamed she'd die on a given day Is still able to eat three square meals a day. It remains to be seen whether or not a political steam roller can smooth out all the wrinkles on the road to victory. Now the Queen City won't have an other state gathering until the North Carolina dentists congregate there in July. Nobody -has bothered to cable David B. Hill and ask him if he had the cus tomary little ailment while crossing the ocean blue. The man "who wants to know if this day Is hot enough for you may safely be put In the class with the man who rocks the boat. Even if you haven't the money to vacation ize the way you'd like to, you can make some sort of a bluff at It by looking over railroad folders. They're free. . A publisher out west Is going to get all Mr. Bryan's speeches together and print them In a book. This will be glad tidings of great Joy to the paper trust. That thin Rocky Mountain atmos phere, of course, may keep down the cheering, but It isn't the convention whoop necessarily that makes the ma jority at the polls. . The Sioux City Journal gets peevlch and Inquires: "Now what's the' use In holding national conventions anyhow?" Oh, well, the poor railroads and hotel men need the money, you. know. For all night conventions and long-drawn-out struggles over a party nom ination, the ancient, state .'.'of North Carolina can shew most of her sister commonwealths how to, go some. ' Gov. Guild probably knows by this . time that the republicans knew they could carry Puritanical old Massachu setts without putting a Bay State man on the1 'ticket. And so, we presume, does John Hays Hammond. Old Teddy claims to be smiting the trusts, but young Teddy has been of fered a summer Job, and possibly a per manent Job, with Library Humbug Carnegie's steel trust and maybe he'll accept It ' Consistency, thou art a cuckoo! The New ' York socialist organ that says ' Mr. Debs has been "outvoted" bur never "defeated" has a right in genius way of getting around disa greeable truths. By the way, let's all get together and outvote Big Bill and in that Way spare the feelings of the big and wholesome man from Ohio. It occurs to the New Bern Sun that Candidate Taft was off duty at the war department's office from Wednes day to Saturday and didn't have his wages docked for the absence. That's nothing. The portly war secretary has lest a good many days from war office routine since . this nomination-seeking commenced, at the Instigation of Pres ident Teddy, something . more than a year ago, .'. TRADES COUNCIL TICKETS AND MILEAGE BOOKS. In a f';w day 8 nvw there will be an other meeting In Columbia between the representatives of the traveling men and the representatives of the railroads to see what shall be done. If anything. looking toward the abolition of the rail road's Irksome rule whereby the man buying a mileage book is not permitted to tender that transportation to the 1 conductor on the train but must hand I his book through the ticket agent's i . , r ' e n't window to be exchanged for a ticket K absolutely free from all SUD good between two given points.- At j Columbia In the last week of March stances that inrrferft wi'rr. niirn there was a meeting between the pas- 5rances interfere Wltn nuttl- senger department men and the travel-1 lng men at which this tlcket-for-mile 1 tjon and rliopcrinn The name age business was pretty freely cussed , Un anc OlgeSOOn. 1 lie name and discussed, and at that time the' men of the grip agreed to meet, the men of the railroad halfway and give the' new rule a fair trial for three months, with the understanding that If, at the end of this stipulated time, it still con. tlnued to prove a nuisance, the rall roads were to wipe it out. The protestants have lived up to their agreement and have tried out this very unusual requirement with much les growling and fewer scriptural selec tions than anybody, themselves In cluded, ever expected would be the case; but the delays and bothers of the tlcket-for-mlleage rule will never be agreeable to the men whose patronage makes the greater part of trie revenue for the passenger department of every railroad, Only one of them, so far as we know, has seen fit to put In a good wora ror it ana ne maK.es no runner argument than to claim there is now and then an unprincipled passenger who will ship his trunk or other lug gage by tendering a mileage book to be purchased and then not take . the train himself that carries the luggage, thereby beating the road out of that much. ' There does not appear, at this mo ment, any strong reason to believe the roads to be represented at this forth coming Columbia conference will re store the old way of doing things. Like all railroads, they are set and determined In their ways and disposed to pooh pooh at everybody that calls in question the practicality of their theories or their rulings. The traveling men's association can't force the pas senger department to honor the mile age books on the trains, and the rail road commissioners in South Carolina take the ground that they are without authority to compel restoration of the; mileage book as transportation that can be used on a train. The traveling men's organization is a good sticker when It believes Its rights are involved, and that the fight will be kept up goes without saying. Eventually, perhaps the railroads will recognize the profit- auie policy 01 giving way 10 puouc w n- timent as it if so clearly and forcibly I expressed by the principal division of the passenger department's patron, but there seems to be little ground for belief that the tieket-for-mileage rule will go out at the end of this three months' probation. ROCKEFELLER, AUTOBIOGRA PHER. ' John D. Rockefeller is going to write J up ms me. :. Aiier years 01 fociusiuii and studied rebuff for everybody who tried to get a line on the private side of htm. the despised oil king is about to turn on the limelleht with his own hand and give the dear public a liberal allotment of Information concerning the man whom the eloquent Bourke Cockran once described as "at once the richest and most detested of all the population." Of course It wHl be a biased biography, with, no doubt, as much Insufferable conceit in it as has disfigured and distorted every other line of the literary productions of Tom Lawson, the man now seeking still further notoriety throush his offer to finance the campaign of a. democratic presidential aspirant; Mr. Rockefeller, we are tipped off by his publishers, will seek to explain, defend and vln- dlvate the American business man, on a large scale, of the present day and generation. That, of course, gives a pretty fair argury of what may be ex pected from Mr. Rockefeller when he gets to work in good earnest with the literary pen instead of with the check book pen. He is a very self-centered man and- everything that Rockefeller does looks food to Rockefeller because Rockefeller did It; and, while there will undoubtedly be some interesting rem iniscences of the business start and business rise of this great, competition- crushing corporationist, it would be folly to expect the pages devoted to ex ploitation as well as vindication of the Rockefeller methods of climbing up in the busfhes world to make much less than 90 ner cent of the whole produc tion. Still, when It comes to a com parison of downright self-conscious asslnlnity, there Is one man alive to day who Is able to show Mr. Rocke feller, with all his infernal greed and rapacity, the road home. We always will stick to It that Andrew Carnegie, the library humbug, and not John D. Rockefeller, the petroleum and kero sene despot, is the most contemptible speclman of humanity of whom pres ent civilization has any record. i We thought Taft and Foraker would play the hypocrite yet and get together on some kind of a deal out In Ohio. Taft wants to carry his state. Foraker I wants to hang hold at that precious senate seat, the last public Job that . Joseph Brownsville Foraker is ever likely to hold. Before dog davs strike the Ohio corn land and oil wells the Buckeye folks will see BUI and Joe pull-' ing in double harness Just as nice as"018"01"" any modern David and Jonathan. The cruiser North Carolina will on next Friday be presented with a hand- some silver service. The exercises will occur off Beaufort and will be wit-, nessed by hundreds of Tar Heels. Our cruiser, which Is the fastest In the navy, has already received a black Willie goat ac mascot and, manned aa 1 she Is largely by North Carolinians, the cruiser but needs the service to complete her complement. I - .. . The don't worry club has disbanded: on account of the weather. I WHEAT FLAKE CELEI.Y mm is a guarantee" of its PUIltV. 6 ' . 10 cents a package. For sale by all Srocer Rooks Added to Library. The.' following books have recently been added to the Olivia Raney Li brary: Lane's All for the Love of a Lady, Freeman's Wind in the Rosebush, Harrison's Sylvia's Husband, Brady's Doctor of Philosophy, Almlrall's Mas- j ter Feelins, DeMorgan's Somehow Good, Beach's Barrier, Dumas'! i Black Tulip, Jovner's Program of 'x0rth Carolina Day Exercises, Ashe's Biographical History of North Caro lina, 6 vols., DeBerard's Classic! Tales by Famous Authors, 20 vols Jones' Defence of the Revolutionary History of North Carolina, Roger's Shell Book, Crane's Right and Wrong Thinking and Their Result. Geer's Hartford City Directory, DeQuiucey's Reminiscences of the Lake Poets, Hazlit's Characters of Sha kespeare's Plays, Farrar's Lives of the Fathers, 2 vols, Wessley's New Pocket Spanish-English Dictionary, Brown and Martin's Dictionary of the French and English Languages, Benson's Beside Still Waters, Raymond's Ballards and Other Poems, Raymond's Life in Song, Raymond's Aztec God and Other Dramas, Barrett's Electricity at the Columbian Exposition, Bubier's Electricity and its Recent Applica tions, Martin & Wetzler's Electric Motor and Its Applications, Roper's Catechism of High Pressure and Non Condensing Steam Engines. Juvenile: . Fitch's Bound for An napolis, Smith's Polly, a New-Fashioned Girl, Smith's Sweet Girl Grad uate, Eliss" Check No. 2134, Algier's v,.. , . ,u . , . rt , , A"at' ,! ! a, y 5. Book of Old English Fairy Tales. Ballantyne's Martin Rattler, Trim mer's History of the Robins. North Carolina ) In The Superior Court. Wake County ) -July Term, 1908. John C. Drewry ) vs. ) Notlceof Summons George B. Crater ) and Attachment. The defendant, George B. Crater, will take notice that the plaintiff, John C. Drewry, has instituted in the Su perior Court of Wake County, North Carolina, a civil action for the recov ery of the sum of $524.18 and Interest from May 1st., 1908, until paid, said sum being due and owing to said Drewry by said defendant on account of said Drewry having to pay part of a note of said Crater on which said Drewry was surety, said Crater hav ing failed and refused to o pay; also take notice that a warrant of attach ment has been sued out of said court and levied upon certain furniture In the hands of Kugene Maxwell, also upon a certain piano In the hands of liar telle Wise, both of the City of Ral eigh, and all of which property be longed to said George B. Crater. Therefore, let the defendant, George B. Crater, appear and answer or de mur to the plaintiff's complaint dur ing the term of the Superior Court of Wake County which shall be held on the eighth Monday before the first Monday In September, it being the 13tlv day of July, 1908, and at the same time and place answer to the said warrant of attachment. This notice Is given In pursuance o! an order of the Superior Court of said County and State made and entered In said cause on the 25th day of May, 1908. W. M. RUSS, ., C. 8. C. Wake County. WOMACK, HAYES & PACE. Attorneys for Plaintiff. 6. a. w. 4wks. Tues. North Carolina j In The Superior Court. Wake County ) July Term, 1908.; W. H. Pace. Receiver of the Visitor Press Publishing Company V vs. , George B. Crater. Notice of Summons and Attachment, The defendant, George B. Crater, will take notice that the plaintiff, W. H. Pace, Receiver of the Visitor Press Publishing Company, has Instituted in the Superior Court of Wake County, North Carolina, a civil action for the recovery of $1,287.66 with Interest from December 8th, 1808 until paid, for money overdrawn while said Crater waB manager of The Raleigh Evening Tlmes which said W. H. Pace "a now Receiver, and on contract; also take notice that a warrant of attach- menl na Deen sued tout of said court ana ,ev"ei upon certain furniture in tn hand of Eugene Maxwell, Raleigh, N c- 1110 Property belonging to the Therefore, let the defendant. George B. Crater, appear and answer or .V. mur to the plaintiff's complaint during tn9 term of the Wake Superior Court of Wake County, which shall be he'd on the eighth Monday before the flrt Monday In September, It being the 13th dav of Ju,v. 1908, and at the same time and Pce answer the said warrant of ttachment. i' Th' notice Is given In pursuance of an O"18'" of the Superior Court of said voumy ana mate, made and entond ,n 8aJd the 25th day of May, U08. . - W. M. RUSS. C. S. C. Wak County, o, a. w. 4wks, Tues. ; Secretery Root Is going again to the Bill Muldoon training farm to got In shape for another ytur's statesnuuiship, and he may be accompanied thither by Candidate Taft. Hope the fighting Bill won't train off too much of the super fluous beef from the great framework of the political Bill. The most inter esting thing about Candidate Taft is his avoirdupois. - PEACE INSTITUTE, RALEIGH, N. C. THE IDEAL HOME SCHOOL FOR GIRLS AND YOUNG ;'; WOMEN. Advanced Collegiate Courses; Excellent Conservatory of Mu sic; Complete Schools of Art, Expression, Business, Peda gogy, Physical Culture, etc. Fine Preparatory Department under Special Instructors. It will pay you to look Into its advantages before deciding where to send your daughter. Catalogue on-application. HENRY JEROME STOCKARI). NOTICE OF SALE. Under and by virtue uf the author ity in me vested as Receiver of The Visitor-Press Publishing Company, by an order of Wake Superior Court made at the February Term, 1908, In a case entitled H. J. Brown Com pany, for Itself and on behalf of.lt self and all other creditors of Tne Visitor-Press Publishing Company, vs. The Visitor-Press Publishing Company, I will now receive bids and open same on July 16, 1908, at 12 o'clock, at my offices, 309-10-11, In the Tucker Building, Raleigh, N. C, for all the effects and personal prop' erty, uncompleted advertising con tracts, uncompleted subscription lists, name and good will of the said Visitor-Press : Publishing Company and of the Raleigh Evening Times, a newspaper published and circulated by the said Visitor-Press Publishing Company, book accounts excepted. I will, as Receiver, reserve my right to the pro rata amount due on the advertising contracts and subscrip tion lists, and any and all other sources up until the close of business on July 15, 1908. Terms, cash. All bids must be sealed. The Bale will be made as of .the close of busi ness on July 15, 1908, it being un derstood that all biA3 are subject to the approval! or objection of the Court. The following is a partial list of the effects to be sold: Three Mergenthaler linotype machines, one of them having on it a mortgage for $1,096.80, composing room fixtures, mailing department fixtures, and office fixtures for business and edi torial rooms, uncompleted subscrip tion list, uncompleted advertising contracts, materials on hand, etc. Complete inventory will be furnished upon application at the office of The Raleigh Evening Times. Bidders are Invited to be present at the opening of the bids. This the 15th day of June, 1908. W. H. PACE, Receiver, The Visitor-Press Publishing Co. Raleigh, N. C. Jjne 15 3d days. CRINKLEY'S Curtain Stretchers, $1.15. Mosquito Netting, 7c. yd. New lot Freezers, big Blzes. : One 90 Refrigerator left. Hammocks, $1.00, $1.40, $1.90. Water Coolers, Tubs, etc. Lawn Swings, painted, $4.23. Our Special $1.00 Settee. New lot Iron Cots and Divans. Oak Folding Bed, with Mirror, $12.50 Oak Porch Rocker, $1.25. SLIPPERS. For Men, Women and Children. TRUNKS. $8.75, $7.50, $6.50, $5.00, $4.00, $3.85, $3.00, $2.30, $2.00. . Bags, $6.50, $6.00, $5.00, $4.50 down Palmetto Cottage Carpet, 25c. yard. Men's Genuine Panama Hats, to close, $2.60. CRINKLEY'S. GoodSuggestions For Good Picnic and Excursion Dinners: Boneless Chicken, Boneless Turkey, Cur ried Fowl, Potted ' Meats of all descrip tions, and any other good things , J R. FERRALL & GO. Grocers. n faretterUto Mr AIW011CEMENTS. ' ANNOUNCEMENT. I hereby announce myself as a candidate, tor the position of treas urer of Wake county, subject to the action of the Democratic primaries, date of which is to be named 1 by the Democratic Executive Commit tee. CHAS. E. CRAWFORD. Is all tliat is taken to couvince any. body that DENATURED ALCOHOl UMM1 111 , BENGALIA STOVES is the most economical to use, Not smoke. Take an alcohol stove on your SUMMER TRIP. Thos.H.Briggs&Sons., RALEIGH. N. C. HAVE IN TOUR IIOMK North Star Refrigerator Water Coolers, Ice Cream Freezers, Screen Windows, OH Stoves. If you buy a NORTH STAR you reduce your ICE BILLS. HART-WARD HARDWARE COMPANY. NOTICE OF SALE OF VALUABLE PROPERTY. By virtue of an order of the Superior Court made In Special Proceedings en titled Paul D. Separk and others F-salnst Wiley P. Betts and others in the Superior Court of Wake county, being Special Proceedings number 144 the undersigned as commlsslon- eHT will sell to the highest bidder, for cash, at the Court House door of Wake county, Raleigh, North Carolina, on Monday, June 29th, 190S, at 13 o'clock m., that certain lot or parcel of land on North Harrington street between Jones and Lane streets, In the city of Raleigh, known as the home place of the late J. M. Betts. Beginning on the west side of Harrington street at the northeast corner of lot of Mrs. J. H. Gill and runs thence west with the line of Mrs. Gill. 210 feet to West street; thence north with the east line of West street 62 feet; thence east-In a line parallel with the first line 210 feet to said Harrington street; thence south with west side of Harrington street 62 feet to the beginning. On the above described land there Is a two-story residence of six rooms and also a kitchen with two rooms. ALTON S. HOBGOOD, W. N. JONES. SALE OF VALUABLE LAND. By virtue of the powers contained In a Judgment of the Superior Court of Wake county, North Carolina, made and entered dn June 1st, 1908, in a Spe. clal Proceeding therein pending en titled B. W. Williams, et al against Brace Klvle Williams, et al, and being No. ...... Special Proceeding docket of said court, I will on Monday, July 6th, 1908, at 12 o'clock, M., at the Court House Door in the City of Raleigh, N. C offer for sale to the highest bidder for cash the following described real estate, to-wlt: All of that certain lot or parcel of landslluated in the township of Ral eigh, county of Wake and State of North Carolina, bounded generally and described as follows: The south half of the .unsold part of City lot No. 29, fronting North on lot of David P. Lane, 188 feet; on the South by Maurice Watts, 1G8 feet; on the East by W. B. Hunter, 63 feet, and on the West by the East line of South Person Street, 63 feet. Same being that tract of land conveyed to C. N. Williams by Alice A. Shaffer by deed registered In the of fice of the Register of Deeds for Wake County, In Book 190 at Page 512. W. B. JONES, Commissioner, This June L 1908. ' , Daily. . i SOUTHERN ANNOUNCES LOW RATE ACCOUNT 4TH JULY. The Southern announces greatly reduced fares between all stations account 4th of July Celebration. Tickets on sale July 2nd, 3rd and 4th. Final limit July Ith. We are benefitting the men as wen as the wAmon 5n TV V1I1I1 111 OUR GREAT JUNE CLEARANCE Getting the men to come to our store is one of the objects of this "ad, " but not the only one. We want to benefit them and we want to keep them coming. This is a season of low prices at our. store, and we are selling better goods at lower prices than ever before, and we want men to get the benefit of our great offerings, they are the kind that bring great savings to every one who takes advan tage of them. ' Come and see, you can't help 49c. Great N e g I i ge e S h i r t S a I e MEN'S NEGLIGEE SHIRTS With Cuffs At tached. Well made out of good grade white ground Printed Madras; fast colors. These Shirts fit well in the neck, set right in the sleeves, broad enough across the back and shoulders and full length roomy all over. A splendid Shirt for Summer wear, at only 49 cents. A great big bargain. 75c. MEN'S BUFF PERCALE SOFT BOSOM $2.50 and $3.00 Shirts the big haberdashers-in the cities' are selling. A grand value. 1 "LION" BRAND NEGLIGEE SHIRTS At $1.00 ' and $1.50. NIGHT SHIRTS 50 cents and 75 cents. SUMMER UNDERWEAR India gauze, white short and long sleeves, 50c. The best value in town. - Balbriggan Undershirts and Drawers 50 cents a garment. . French Lisle Thread Undershirts; short and long sleeves; $1.00. f " Scriven's elastic seam drawers, 75c. a pair. Garland, weU made drawers, 50c. a pair. Nainsook Suits, Undershirts and short length Draw ers; 50c. a garment. HOSIERY Imported Half-Hose. Blacks, tans, greys, blues, and fancies; 25c. and 50c. a pair. Pure white half -hose, 25c. a pair. SMALL WARES Suspenders, Garters and all small fixings. "LionV Brand Collars Perfect fitting, 15c, two for 25c, or $1.50 a dozen. Linen Handkerchiefs Our own importation. See the new Boston Garter for wear with knee length undergarments, 25c. OUR FURNISHINGS are now kept right at our front entrance, north side,, just a step from the door, ready to furnish the busy man on his way up or down town. "Drop in." Our furnishings give you full value for the money we know this. llMi-Feirrall !C v J23-125 Fayetteville Street. Notwithstanding the reduced prices in these ereat V M . M a u uuo victuauvo oaica wo win 'TLnld Tndfnff Otemnil' mlt h nun iahimi w sam bma mm mm vu .tmuug UKUUjig nilt U bMU UIUWU4B (bill will prepay carriage on all cash orders of $5.00 or more to any point in North Caroli na. - ' ' jj ' mm a . A a f s , am . wabwiaJm w give UVJUlll 06 'leiiwii Anon onili ia il