rAas TWO THE EVENING TIMES : MONDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1908. r Ml A1B(DA FOR SpecM Tipanes ill lay Leaves Charlotte . . . . . . 8:30 p. m. Arrives Richmond . . 7.00 a. m. Leaves Hamlet . .. ;'. . .10:55 a. in. Arrives Richmond . -. . . 7:00 a. m. Leaves Raleigh . s . . . . 7:00 a. m. Arrives Richmond . . .12:00 noon. Leaves Raleigh . 7:0U a. m. Arrives Portsmouth. . .12:30 p. m. Leaves Durham 6:45 a. m. Arrives Richmond ... .12:00 noon. Leaves Durham . . -.. 6:45 a. m. Arrives Portsmouth. .12:30 p. jn. Handsome Equipped Trains, Pullman Sleeping Cars and Vestibule Coaches operated on fast schedule. ' The Two Greatest Football Games of the year will be played between the Uni versities of North Carolina and Virginia iat Richmond and A. & M. College and V. P. I. at Norfolk, and the largest crowd of North Carolinians vill be in the Vir ginia cities Thanksgiving that ever attended these annual games. AH should go and cheer our Tar Heel teams to victory. Make you Pullman reservations at once, so you can secure lower berths. Round trip from Hamlet . . . $4.50. Round trip from Raleigh . . . . . 3.00. Round trip from Durham . . . . 3.00. Round trip from Oxford . . . . . 3.00. Round trip from Henderson . . . 3.00. Returning, leave Richmond on No. 81, 10:55 p.m.; Charlotte Special, 12:00 midnight, Nov, 26, or No. 35 at 9:00 a. m., Nov. 27. From Portsmouth on No. 33, at 9:00 p. m., and Special Train at 12:30 midnight, Nov. 26,or No. 41, at 9:25 a. m. Nov. 27,1908. C. B. RYAN, G. P. A., Portsmouth, Va. C. H. GATTIS, ; T. P. A., Raleigh, N. C. Atlantic Reflnlng Comnany?" . "They were the-largest, if not the entire owners. It was the largest re finery In Philadelphia." "You got the Block?" "We got all there was to get." "And took Wordeu, Frew & Co. as Staudar Oil stockholders?" , "Yes." . "Did you .'exchange stock j.wltn thens?" , "I cannot say." . "Did yon buy the property of the company or Its stock? You must know whether thy dj 'tl called for property cr stock." "The details were left to the law yers." "The company v:as operated as an Independent.: coni'miiy' all these years?" "Y6s. There may -nava been chan ces on account, of .death -such chan ges there were." "For this property of Charles Pratt & Co. Ob, the .Standard Oil Com pany' was located at- Pittsburg?". ... "Yes; I think ii va i a corporation controlled by Major Few and Chartes Lockhart. Mr. Worden may also have been connected limy have had an in-- terest in it." .-. "Yon bought the stock of the Standard Oil Company of Pittsburg?" "We did the same thing as we did in regard to the other transactions." "You mean you-' 'bought the stock or the properly?" "I cannot state as to the legal bearing. We bought, all." "The three concerns did you take them on .their valuation?" "Yes; the; properties were esti mated fairly and we came to a direct understanding." ; ; "The same in regard to the Pitts burg Company?" "I have said before that. the whole transaction was one. These gentle men owned all of the last-named in terests'Major Few and Charles Lockhart were the chief administra tors.". ' .-" "You testiliej also as to the bus iness of Warner & Moreland, and of Bennett, Warner it Co?" "I think I did." "Do you remember Easterly & Davis?" "I remember some such concern In Titusville." "I understood you to say that, you organized the Acme Oil Company out of the Warner-Moielans and Bennett- Warner Company?" "Yes." "Then your concern did not buy the Bennett-Warner Company and the other compa-iy'.'" "' "I think that came afterward. They were first purchased by j the Acme Company." '' i "Do you remember looking up what Archbold testified to before the Hep- burn commit tee on October 15, "I ilo not recall." "The Atlantic Refilling Company continued to hold, the property, and Worden. Frew & Co. continued to maaage it. although the profits went to the Standard Oil Company?" "That is so." WOMEN FIGHT DEADLY DUEL (By lieased Wire to The Times) Galnsvlllc, 'Mo., Nov.: 23 A duel to the death with knives waj fought Saturday by Mrs. James Crabtree and Mrs. Frank Graham, sisters-in-J law," In a lonely spit In the Ozark woods, southwest of Gainesville. Mrs. Graham's throat was cut, dy ing instantly, and Mrs. Crabtree Js lr. custody. The place and hour wert fixed, and the sisters-in-law met alone, according to appointment on u lonely mountain-side and fought out their .duel. . They had quarreled some days ago. following a trivial dispute over fam ily affairs and one challenged thf other to meet her at the spot where the killing occurred. ; "; , ' The two women were well-known It the community and the duel prob ably will result in -further fauc" troubles. Mrs. Crabtree was cut about the face and shoulder, but her conditio! is not considered serious.-. Soon af ter her retura home she was arrested She will be held on a charge of murder."-. - . , ;" - Seven Years of Proof. "I have had seven years of proof that Dr. King's New Discovery is th best medicine to take for coughs and colds and for every diseased conditio!- of throat, chest or lungs," says fiV. V. Henry, of Panama, Mo. The world h had thirty-eight years of proof that Dr: King's New Discovery is the best remedy tor coughs and colds, , lo grippe, asthma, hay fever, bronchitis, hemorrhage of the lungs and the earlj stages of consumption. Its timely us always prevents the development o: pneumonia. Sold under guarantee at all drug stores. 50c. and $1.00. Tria bottle free. ; ' Watched Fifteen Tear. '- "For fifteen years X have watched the working of Bucklen's Arnica Salve; and it has neve failed to cure any Bast Milton, Maine. 25c. at all drug sore, boll, ulcer ar burn to which it was applied. It has saved us many a doctor bill," ys A. F. Hardy, of East Wilton, Maine. 25c. at all drug J Kellogg Traps Rockefeller (Continued from Filst Page.) . three years Inter. W. G. Warden also beCame a stockholder about three years later. Mr. Lockhart became a stockholder of the Standard Oil about the same time. "Did not C. W. Watson, who was a stockholder in the Southern Improve ment Company become a stockholder of the Standard Oil about 1875?" "I cannot recall." "You changed your charter !n 1875 and increased the capital stock from $2,500,000 to J3,5U0,0OO?" "We did." "Did O. V. Waring become a stockholder?" "I do not think so." ; - "How many railroad men did they give as stockholders?" - "I cannot say. Wouldn't the pa per show?" ; i "Was not W. H. Vanderbilt a stockholder subsequent to 1875? ' "I cannot state whether he was or not." - "Was Mr. Stone, president of the Lakeshore Railroad, a director?" "I do jot know." Mr. Kellogg brought out the fact that up to 1872 three directors of the Lakeshore Railroad, the president of the New York Central, the president of the Erie Railroad and shortly after 1872, all of, the stockholders of the Southern Improvement Company ex cept three were either officials or lo cal stockholders in the Standard Oil ' ' ' " , RIDS THE SYSTEM OF CATARRH Inner linings or mucous membranes of the body. The diseasing of these delicate surfaces and tissues produces all the well known symptoms of the trouble, such as ringing noises in the head and ears, tight, 6tuffy feeling in the nose, pains above the eyes, Irritation of the throat, sometimes slight fever, and a general feeling of weakness and ill health. Even the lungs become affected by the continual passage of impure blood through them, and there Is danger of consumption if the disease is allowed to remain in the system.- S. S. 8. cures Catarrh because it purines the blood. It goes into the circulation and removes every particle of the catarrhal matter, making . this vital fluid pure, rich and healthy. Then the inflamed membranes begin to heal, every eymptom disappears, the constitution is built up and health restored. ' 8. S. S. rids the system of catarrh by attacking the trouble at its head and entirely removing the cause from the blood, thus making a perma- ' nent and lasting cure. S. S. S. is made entirely from health-giving roots, herbs and barks, and for this reason is an especially safe and desirable medicine, took on Catarrh and any medical advice tree to all who write. , V '...TH3 ZV7IXT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA,. GA. Company. "You stated, I believe, that there were about a dozen concerns which you brought up in the early days," said Mr Kellogg. Mr. Kellogg read a list of .a score or more firms, some large and some small. In each .case he asked Mr. Rockefeller If ht remembered the acquirement of them by the Standard Oil Company, . The oil king ocknowl edgei fno'st of them, but, several, he declared, he could not recall. He said: ' "If you could give me th enames of the men at the head of the firms I could tell you better. I could refresh my memory in that way.". "Then It Is u fact that you did buy out 20 or perhaps 2 Bseparate con cerns In Cleveland in 1875 or '76?" "I could not state the number." "Of alii. these concerns you bought, how many did you keep, in opera tlon?'i Mr. Rockefeller said that he could cot reaidSbor thsit. any of the. plants I outside of the Paine refinery at Clove- wand had remained in operation after their acquisition by the Standard. Mr. Rockefeller said lie coum not remember the details of the transac tion whereby the Devereuu Manufac turing Company, of Cleveland, tile Imperial Meaning Company of Oil City, Pa or Chess, Carloy & Com pany of Louisville, Ky., were acquired by the Standard Oil Company, but thought these concerns had bean pur chased by acquiring their stocks and retaining -the heads of these corpora tions lh. the employ of the Standard Oil Company. Mr. Rockefeller said he was not familiar with the legal business of the company. . "Worden,; Frew ft . Co. owned the TWO MEN SHOT. Insane Man Kills Two Men Says He Wanted Five. (By Leased Wle to The Times) Carlyle, Ills., Nov. ' 23 Allie Al ton, aged L'5, shot John L. Edwards, aged 50, and George Walker, aged 35, at their homes near Boulder yes terday. Both are In a critical con dition. Alton, when- placed In Jail, said: "I wanted to kill five men but only got two." He had been In an Insane asylum once, but was nevor considered dangerous. Several months ago Walker worsted him In a law suit Edwards was holding his property as trustee to keep him from squandering It; He Imagined his guardian was not giving him square deal. - .;'--'. DOUBLE SUICIDE. ; Father and Daughter, Both Out of Work, Die Together. (By Leased Wire to The Times) New YortakNov. 23 Charles Walter, 5 years old, and his daughter, Emma, 40 years old, cofnniitted suicide yerter- day in their apartment at 1021 Simp son street, the Bronx. Walter had been a tailor, but had been without work for sometime and had depended for support on his daugh ter," who was formerly a saleswoman In a down town drygoods store, bu' who also had been out of work foi the bast two months. The, 'odor of gas coming from the Walter 'apartment revealed the double tragedy. To Drive Out Mulniia And Build Up the System. Take the Old Standard GROVE'S TASTELESS CHILL, TONIC. You know what you are taking. The formula Is plainly printed on every bottle, showing It Is simply Quinine and Iron In a tasteless form, and the most effectual form. For grown peo ple and children 50c, OFFICERS SHOT . BY NEGROES. Were Disturbing Public Worship When Officers Attempted to Ar- , - mit Them. (By Leased Wire to The Times) Owl City, Tenn.. Nov. 23 While at tempting to arrest three negroes who were disturbing public worship yes terday, Deputy Sheriff Hall and Rich ard" Burns, whom ho had deputised to assist him, were shot. Hall will die. The negroes escaped and a posse of 150 men, under the leadership iif Sheriff Halus. started in , pursuit. Last , ac counts stated that the negroes were surrounded in a thicket flva miles east of here. Mother of John W. Gates Dying. Galveston, Tex., Nov. 23 Mrs. Asvl A, Gates, of St. Charles, Ills.,' mother of John W. Gates, is dying at thehome of her sou ut Port Arthur, Texas, Mrs. Qtttes '.a e'ghty-four years old and has been jn feeble ' health for, some time. She came to Texas, hoping the change would benefit her. NOW IS THE WINTER '.of our dis content when Croup, Colds, Pneu monia, etc., are imminent, but glor ious fact, Vlck's Croup and Pneu monia Salve nips', these dangerous foes in the bud every time. Monay back if it ff.ils. " ' if Lti" F..t.-ti m n 1 1 rrrrrt . .tt.'i.. ..).. lLCOHOl. PER CEN'P. Afege(aUe rTeparationlarAs sfmiluting tltc RwtfaxKlItpetibi ling die Sto-iclis andBmuii Promotes DigcsttcnLltf pitU hiss and. Mestjcontaias naner OptunuMorphinfi norMioeraLl NOT NARCOTIC, !mftiSdm JbtSom i Arise Srri ApptfectRendy toCBisflfa-t1onSouTStoiiLxh,Dlarrli(iea: Worms jConvjlsioiis.reverisa nessandlOSSOFSEEEP. fStcSinale Signamre o( NEW YORK. l3 rr r To?lnfai;ta and Children. ' The Kind You Have : Always Bought Bears tbe atiire of a Ai4' Sgnatnre ZiM m m in Mir In Use For Over Thirty Years (F Exact Copy of Wwppsr. i V it osKTAur oMnr, ir io onr latcmcsii o! CondUion o! The ' WT i ni rf w i 01 a To-!- Raleigh, N. C. Resources. ',. S. Bonds . . . . . . .oans and Investments. Tap! . . )ue from banks . . . . Liabilities. J225,000.00Capltal . . ! "38,635.64Surplus .. . 101,294. 75Clrculation 242,639.26Deposits . . Total . . . . September 22, 1908.' ;.$1,307,R69.65 Total . $100,000.00 . 167,:H0.97 . 100,000.00 . 940,258.68 , , .1,307,509.65 The Raleigh Savings Bank. JOHN T. PULLEN, President. CHARLES ROOT, Cashier. CAPITAL AND SURPLUS, $75,000.00. Four per cent. Interest paid on deposits. Call In the bank, or write for further information. Bank open on Saturday evening from 5 to 9 o'clock to accommodate tbe public. e? GoIe to Eerop We sell Traveler's Checks in denominations $10.00 up. Available anywhere in the world without identifica tion and no risk of loss. THE COMMERCIAL NATIONAL BANK, CAPITAL AND SURPLUS, 9200,000.00 B. S. JERMAN, Pres.; A. A. THOMPSON, Vice-Pres.; H. W. JACK SON, Cashier; E. B. CROW, Assist. Cashier; J. 1. Thomas. Chain Board of Directors, . ' ' ' :' --- -- i THE RALEIGH BANKING & TRUST COMPANY. 0 ' WITH . . 9 An unsurpassed history iM'hind It slnco i 80S . O Safety to its Depositors. ,' , O Accommodation to its Caslomws, O " k Willing service to its Friends. O CHAS. E. JOHNSON . ' - V.- H. BRIGQS, 9 O President. Casliien. AX ITCHING PALM. No Cuiv for It. Other Forms of Itch' ing Preferable. There Is no cure for an itching palm the money kind. Even pos lam, the new skin disease, cannot help it. But when It comes to ecze ma, the most annoying of Itching skin troubles, peslam will stop thj Itching at once and cure the worst cases In a few days. So with hives, rash, Dcabies," split toes,, piles, and scaly scalp, all of which are different forms of eczema, 'accompanied by se vere Itching and.causod by imperfect digestion and careless diet - Poalam ' comes in two-dollar Jars, but flfty cents 'worth will answer in curing any of the diseases mentioned. It can be had of any druggist. ; The Klng-Crowcll Drag Co.. make a spe cialty of !t. V ' That results are immediate will be amply demonstrated overnight by the use of the experimental' sample which the Emergency Laboratories, 82 West . Twenty-fifth ' street, New TOrk City, will sahd free by mail, in plain wrapper, to any ' one bo will wrtto'for'tt. .i' -"'::''.. ' ISBE I '1 - Wg'Z-Jtit,-i eh 1 Jswm&mk. M 1 PMP' isaranteed UJIiiskeys ! All our goods ara guarantasd under tha Ptira Food Law. - If not satisfactory, monay refunded on return of goods. - ; Goods shipped In plain paokagessams day order received. WE PREPAY ALL EXPRESS CHARGES. Renittutn aijr U nit bj ilttor Postal ar Erprsis Montr Order, ir li(lrtirt Littir. Prlo Qda net llst4 will b furnished upen nni,- , EurekVRye .. ....12 DmRhnr Kr..... 2 21 OrayOaaM Ry........ , , , W Itupaetloa By.., , 3 51 OM Henry Ky , J JS Ore n wood Ry. 4 W MrCuty Whiter, Bottled In Bond. B ttm. old... .... Jelltmw Club Ry.., 4 M Hlfftupira Ryo , , SM n.ccorn Whiskey , Vlrrinl Corn Whickcy Very Old N. C. Corn Whiskey..., UMUurro torn wnwkey ........ . BwwitXn , t 23 Holland Gin i 3 M Apple Brandy J,'....., , ( SO V.ryO'd Apole Brandy.. 3 S Peach Brandy..... 3 SO IN JUGS. IN BOTTLES. hrSillM. tlillwt. iMIth. Fall tt. ..IN . i M ........ 3 1175 . 7 M .IIS 1(M II 41 'ii'4 14 M in ' ITS 15 SO "' i 7 20 HH 10 M 70 4M 4 00 .4 JO 5 00 S 00 iM 320 320 'I 3M 3 7 4 04 -4 00 420 4 5 25 i 7 71 8 75 75 75 II 40 4 20 t IS 775 5 00 6 40 125 ill Our Specials. amulet conn Fin Old Copper Distilled 4 Full Ota. BFullQta. $2.65 . $5.00 COCKADE RYE - Smooth and MeKow. 4FullQta. OFuHOta. S3.15 5Q.00 . GousiNS Supply Co; Bi&d, r IN-. r"'lTsl all

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