Newspapers / The Raleigh Times (Raleigh, … / Nov. 3, 1909, edition 1 / Page 7
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t . ""7rT ' ' :'T- T ; 7- the evening times, aleigii, n.'c, Wednesday, November s, ioo&. " " - " "page seven GENEROUS OFFER DUR1IAH VILL GASEOEMME r 1ASA.PAST1JG0. ft i in. ' J 1 - ENTERCARO- UNA LEAGUE Matter Decided in Enthusiastic Held list Night By Ball Cranks : WELCOMES FARMERS STEINHEILIS BEING HEARD Tetter From C. H. fjnttis of Raleigh . Decides Matter and Durham Will I Pull for Bull Teurn Manager Llndsey of the Traction' Company Has Already Hooltmf Heverni fni. lege Gamen for Xext Spring IMtr- f ham Will Give Kilmers' Congress Royal Welcome Embassador .las. Bryce Will Speak Twice Tobacco Sales Please Farmers In the Re corder's i Court Snider Is Given Four .Month Personal. ' We know of no other medicine which has been so suc cessful in relieving the suffering ofnvomen, or secured so many genuine testimonials, as has Lydia E. Pinkham's . Vegetable Compound. , : In almost evey community you will' find women who have been restored to health by Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg etable Corripound. Almost every i woman you meet has .either heen benefited by it, or knows some one who has. In the Pinkham Laboratory at Lynn, Mass., are files con taining c-ver one million one hundred thousand letters from women seeking health, in which many openly state over their own signatures that thev have regained their health by taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has saved many women from surgical operations. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is made ex clusively from roots and herbs, and is perfectly harmless. The reason why it is so successful is because it contains ingredients which act directly upon the female organism, restoring it to healthy and normal activity! Thousands of unsolicited and genuine testimonials such rts the following prove the efficiency of this simple remedy. Minneapolis, Mian.:" I was a great sufferer from female troubles which caused a weakness and broken down condition of the system. I read so much of what Lydia E, Pinkham's Vegetable Compound had done for other suffering women, I felt would help ine, and I must say it did help me wonder fully. Withm three months I was a perfectly well woman. "I want this letter made public to show the benefits to be derived from Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound." Mrs. JohnG.Moldan, 2115 Second St. North, Minneapolis, Minn. Women who are sufferintr from thnsp rlkfnxino- ills wiii do. peculiar to their sex Should not lose sight of these facts The manngcr of the Traction Com-! or doubt the ability of Lydia E. Pinkharrf's Vegetable pny, Mr. n. u lndsey, announced I Compound to restore their health. that he lias some college games book-! ' - ' od for the next spring, Guilford and i I The Most Mysterious of French Murder Cases Began This Morning INTEREST IN CASE ioi:lii -Wynne Guarantees Parisian Sage (o Cure Handrail, Stop Fall ing flair or Killing Scalp or .Money li-ek. (Special to The Times) Durham. N. C, Nov.-. 4 Durham enters the Carolina League if she can make the combination, and Raleigh goes, too. This "was decided last , tight at the final and crucial meetlnj of the cranks. It had been decided that, "unless there could bo at least 12.500 with which to begin this city would not press., for membership .in the league of the east or tho west, it was hefted and the cranks were glad. A letter from Major Gattls, of Hal- J eigh, had important effect upon the talk. The Major let it be known I that there might be objections to the I complexion of the Carolina League if j far away South Carolina towns were ; kept in; it making Raleigh and- Dur ham too distant to fuse well. It was , the sense of the meeting that Durham ! and Ralelga enter the same league, Hut Parisian Sage is more than a euro for dandruff it will make hair grow on any heart where the hair bulb is iot altogether dead. And we want every reader of the Times to know that Parisian Sage is the most delightful hair dressing' in the world. K is hi pleasant to use. and its effeet is so invigorating and r IV. sliiiiK. Iliat il pleases evei yliody. The women of Paris are, as a rule, beautiful anil keep heauiiful, and a eareful American observer who has traveled much claims that their beauty is due to their knowledge of how to kcrp their hair luxuriant, which they do by using a superior hair tonic. Aiany American women arc as wiso as their French sisters, and that is why Parisian Sage, the Quick acting and greatest of all hair restorers undton ies, Is now having such a tremendous sale In America. Admission Cheers and Jeers M in- Parisian huge is. sold by leading gled is the Greeting She Ots While fl,lst:s. evp'" an Raleigh. Passing Through Crowd. by Bobrntt-Wynne Drug Co. at 60 " . , cunts a large bottle. Mail orders filled; Woman is Accused of .Murdering' Her Husband and Stepmother It Was in Her Room Also That President T'aure Died or Was Killed and it is Kxperteu That the Mystery Sur rounding His Death Will he Clear ed l'p Great Crowd' Try to Get Into Court Itoom Itnt Are Denied ( P.y Cable to The Times) Paris, Nov. Mmo. Marguerite Kleinheil, France's "tragic widow," was placed on trial today for the mur der of her husband and her step mother, Mine. 3apy. Before tiie trail is ended, it is declared the mystery surrounding the death of President Tnure, who is said to have actually j died or lo have heen fatally stricken I iu Mine. Hteitilie Ts home, will lie i cleared fur once and all. j Ah night a vu: 'I crowd of men aid I women wailed at the gates of Hi no de justice, in spile ol annonm-i all V. charges prepaid by the American jits, (Jiroiix Mfc. Co., Buffalo, N. Girl with the ev( ry package. Auburn hair is FALL NOVELTIES. Ladies Tailored Suits, Prices, $12.50 to $40.00 Wool Dress Goods, Prices 50c. to $150 Newest Ideas in Dress Trimmings. in the court of assises he had at his side every documents, every scrap of paper, relating to the charges against his client. Kadi of these, and there are more than I!, 1100, was carefully annotated hv Mine. Hteinhell. w ;n' s:t lit months of her imp! isoanieni on her ia.-k. The plea of trie defence i:; ,al-tlial Mine. Sicinheil, cultured, aicnin I plished, a v.ii Ml'. .1 a iieaitly, and all Silk Petticoats, Attractive Showing, Price $5.00. THOS. A. PARTI N .CO., LADIES' FURNISHINGS AND NOVELTIES. 131 TAVETTEVILLK STKKET . . . RALEIGH, N. O. Xext to New Masonic Temple. , Vake Forest notably among them. ( quor. Upon this technical ivolation, He hopes to laud some still bigger there was based tho charge. gmue-aad- taere will Ui-a pull here - .Snider was represented by Mr. Vic tor the Washington Nationals ' prac- tor i, Bryant and the case was made ticc. With Trinity College to mix It as strong for him as possible, but the Y'lta the regulars, groat pructicer witness was too mtica for him. In could take place. 'his appeal, Judge Sjytes required ti The merchants and board of trade bond of $250 and he' gave It. composed of tobacco men, are plan-, Gus Coznrt. was sentenced ten ning the greatest sort of entertain- months on the same charge. He wns ment for the Farmers' Congress caught by Officer Perry, who watdi which conu s here from Raleigh, j ed a transaction between Cossarl and When the special train reaches Bast another. The goods and the money Durham, the big whistles will turn were found and the recorder stuck it loose and a scream and bellow of to Gus. The case against Cozart whistles will continue five minutes, wasn't considered particularly strong, . lotting the city know of the coming, but he could give no account of his The great Bull factory will bellow ,'deal and he went up, also appealing. and the Indian whoop of the Duke ! Peresonnls. whistle will' diversify the unearthly Mr .Fred Flowers has returned to noise. The merchants will decorate Mullins S. C, after a vfcit of a lew and prepare greatly for their visitors. ' days in Durham. Ambassador Bryce will speak ! twice, his chief address being deliver ed at Trinity College. The address of welcome will be made by Mr. Jas. H. Southgale at the Academy or Music. . . - Mr. Walter Cochran, of the Rouge mont section, yesterday sold 1,000 IiminHo nf Inhnivn Hint hKmiohl 1.1t-.i a tew cents more man ?zu. u was one of the best leads of the year, though another Cothran, of Chatham, sometime ago sold a lead that aver aged $34. G5. These sales were mad-3 at the Banner house, which yesterday again maintained an average on its, floor of more than 10 cents a pound. The best of the Cothran loud yester day brought '$65 a hundred, which is the-highest price paid this year. It Judge Henry R. Bryan, of New Bern, was hero yesterday on his way to Hiilsboro, where he visits his sis ter. Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Ireland left yes terday for Uoldsboro, where they at tend the funeral of Mrs. Ireland's fa ther, Mr. L. D .Giddens. Mr. H. A. Fousl.ee spent yesterday in Raleigh and returned in the after noon on No. 1 39. Mrs. J. F. Garrard, who has been in the Richmond hospital, lias return ed, to the city. Miss Alma Monleeai, of New Or leans, is the guest of Mrs. James S. Manning on Manguin street. Mr. J. CHenly, . of Statosville, spent yesterday, in the city on busi- had been visiting his knitting'mlli'. Mrs. J .A. W'oodull left last night -for Atlanta, -where she will be danu of honor at the marriage of Miss Daisy Latta ment of the magistrate Ihnl none of the curious would he admitted to the trial chamber. in her cell at the prison of St. Lazare, the prisoner, on whom center the eyes of all France today, rose at ;7:15 o'clock. As a result of the months of imprisonment, .and despite j favors whidi she litis been shown at tlie jail, she looked pule am! fatii.' i tied. She was si ll, however, lie beauty who eiiarnr.vl many of the i most illustrious men of France, the womanf whose witchery lias invoiced famous and historic names in a mys itery as complicated as any that ever baffled the. police. else that goes lo make the leader ,)l a Paris fashionable salon, could have had no motive in ihe perpetration of the hoi'i'ible crimes of which siie is accused. Ho limited was the space that the newspaper men arc compelled to rcai ii the case in relays, there not be ing room enough for all at one tiiue, in the space set aside for them. The government itself will he riven by the developments of Ihe trial, ac (ordiiir; in Mine, liteinhe I s oppon ents A s.'ore of famous nanu s are said to lie in danger of being amirched. Since M. Steiiihcil and Mine. Japy She was taken to the palace de jus-! were ound dead, bound in their lied tice in a speedy red motor rar An inspector of detectives, in civilian clothes, was tit. her side. As the au- Solicitor Samuel M. Gattls spent lomobile slackened so she could get. yesterday in tho city and returned taroiiRa tne crowd, ine nvngiea in the afternoon for Hiilsboro. -cheers and jeers rose in a mighty up- Prefessor E. C. Brooks left yester-' a" from the multitude. She tried day for Charlottesville, Va., where to hide herself. ho will attend a meeting of Ihe asso-! At the palace she remained till the elation of Southern Colleges. ; opening before tho president magls- Mrs. .1. M. WhiUed has returned trtfi M- DeValles. from Atlanta, where she has been i At 11 o'clock a light luncheon was several weeks on a business trip. served to the prisoner. Half an hour : Ex-Mayor Paul Graham spent, yes- later she left the small cell, and j terday in Hiilsboro, his old home, on'throush a secret corridor, was lei to! a business trip. He returned in the the court chamber to face her ter-f afternoon . irible ordeal the ordeal of a woman suspected of a double murder whose horror shocked the world, the ordeal of a woman whose supporters and Committee In Charge' Will Spend enemies have divided the land into $1,000 to Entertain Newspaper . factions as sharply drawn as those TAR HEEL PRKSS. Men at Wilmington Taff Day. which wore created by the Dreyfus. While she was waiting in the room Wilmington, N. C Nov. :: The adjoining the court ot a.ssizes sue city of Wilmington has in store a.w"H calm. most cordial welcome for her visitors! Now and then, in a jest, she show on Taft Day, next Tuesday, but a spe- ed the bravado which has led those cial cordiality awaits those newspa- who believe m her guilt to dub her per men who have so generously and the most audacious woman criminal unselfishly aided the Taft Publicity of the age. Committee in civJne effect to the mil-1 she had been there but a short poses for which it was appointed. time when M. DeValles said, in a low An was an exceptional lead of tobacco, ness.and returned in the atteruoon. The sales yesterday pleased the , . Mr. w. A. Erwin left yesterday af- larmers. a negro, wuo naa no way ternoon for Cooleemee, where he of Wiling .what, he was to get for his .makes his regular visit io that mill In order to manifest in some meas- voice, "bring in the prisoner. ere its high appreciation of the inter- usher obeyed. est and kindness which the editors As Mme. hteinlicu entered t:ie have shown in this matter, the Pub- court, for a moment her face went lit ity Committee has sent out engrav- deadly pale. Contrasting with her od cards and invitations to "a smoker dead black dress, or simple cut, her to b'e given complimentary to the Tar complexion, marked by the "prison Heel Press" at the rooms of i lie pallor," looked ghastly. If it was the Chamber of Commerce. oom?, on May M. 190;s, tae affair has been creating a sensation akin to the Dreyfus case. Mine. Sleiniioil's ene mies charge that the same forces that secured the clearing of Dreyfus' name are behind her. The retaliatory ae-cu.-.ation is that Mme. Steinheil is be ing made a victim of the political game. Kven in her prison, the accused woman exhibited the strange power, almost hypnotic, that has always been her chief characteristic. In vio lat'on of Paris custom, she is always addressed as "Madame" by her fellow prisoners and custodians. JOHX Bl'RXS' BOOKS. "Honest John" An Ardent Collector of Rare Books. London, Nov. S John Burns as bibliophile is a new aspect of the niaiiy-sidede character of this Cock ney idol. Once a hard-working engi neer, (lien a labor agitator who suf fered marlydom in jail, now a cabinet minister with $10,000 a year, "Holi est John" is now revealed as an ardent collector of rare books. Talking with a German journalist, Mr. Burns became enthusiastic over the Shakespeare folios preserved at Stratford-on-Avon, and informed the newspaper man that he possessed a second folio for which he had paid $5,000; and if his official salary had been raised, as once seemed prob able, he would have acquired a first folio. A SUIT OB OVERCOAT 0 s made by us embodies that distinctive air of refinement in design and quality that proclaims the correct dresser OUR WOOLENS ' AND FASHIONS are novel, attractive, ex clusive the handsomest ever shown. Let us give you a taste of genuine satisfaction. Our prices are well within your reach. Xorth Carolina's 'Foremost Tailor. Carolina Trust Building RALEIGH, N. C. Mr. Burn's collection of books at momentary loss of Composure was the ! his humble home in Battersea filled Mj"4 Claiborne M. VCnrr ' returned yesterday ;.from Gotdsboro, where he HAT'S in the box? If I the name NUNNALLY'S is on tAles, stood nervous watching, the bjiers and auctioneers yesterday'un tll a pile of his tobacco went down for 30 cents. He was glorified and yelled out so everybody could -hoar hint: "Hooray. Go home and tell j ' everybody t" ' ' II is tae best of thecrop that is. being sold now and the average be- eralsemn knOW.. Dr. J.,M. O'Kelly leases today for j at OllCe that the CaildieS vHot Springs, Arkansas, where he will ' wirl-iin am -Vi fie- K spend two months in the re.ort. Dr. Wltl1jn f.C the tinest tne , O'Kelly goes to regain his health, WOnd allOrdS. Flire Hia whlch has been far from ita best il.a tPrtoe nrfnl malrinrr' . nast few lAonths: Heavy work has. TaiS, Careilll maKlllg . intensified it and rest is ns much his j need as treatment, fj;- raeumatism. lie has a largo clientele,' which will in ss his agreeable ministrations. Ja the recorder's court yesterday Judge- Sykes sentenced young Sam Snider to a term of four months on the roads and he appealed. ' Snider fell Into trouble as the re sult, of a. fight he had Sunday with F. A. Purnell. In tho defendant's tcst1!- '. mquy, ho seemed to .have allowed to fall accidentally, tho story of a whis- kev transaction and- Snider was ar retted on the spot charged with re tailing. The charge wns tnat Pnr nell gave Snider $1 to bring him from the country into town, that 50 cents went for the faro and 50 for the 11- and twenty-five years of experience make them so; They are sent direct to this town by fast ex-' press; and you get them dainty ,and fresh. A fresh supply always kept by HKNRV T. HICKS. TTOKKR IH'IUHXG l'HARMACV. "None Like NunnaUy's.": The committee will spend a.thous- trick or an actress, it was effective; .every wall, and when he removed to and dollars In the entertainment of ' natural, the prisoner regained pos- jn larger house on becoming a cabinet Its newspaper friends and it is hoped session of herself quickly, She dropp- j minister, he ins'sted on personally that all whom invitations have been cd almost listlessly into a chaiv, and sent will send In their acceptance at. from under the brim of her round once. This entertainment will take black hat scrutinized the veniremen nlnce after President Taft takes his piercingly ns taey were called for departure liom the city, so that it will not. in the. .least interfere with their oppoitunily of seeing the presi dent and taking in all Hie attractive features of Wilmington's Taft Day Celebration. carrying them all into his new homo. STRICT (.DIE LAWS. Hunters States Laws. New York, throughout the Throughout hud Canada Nov. Tailed the Inited Kind Strict 3 lfunl'.'vs States and ATTACKKH l!V .WILD ROAR. Prisoner mid Rscoifr Attacked 10s eorl, Fled Prisoner Pardoned. Vienna, Nov. 3 A Servian prison er, under sentence of death, but now reprieved, owes his life to a wild boar, which had indeed the contrary intention.- It happened thus: ' Tae prisoner'- was being escorted ' by guards to Belgrade jail from a vil lage outside, the' city. While passing through Rakovits forest, a w Id boar r.ppcarcd and charged the party fe rociously. . The export promptly neu tered, leaving their prisoner man acled and helpless, He received some severe wounds from the brute s tftsks, being unable to defend himself or run awav. - . When the heme minister heard ot tho man's advciflure, he granted a re prieve, and the man is -in a hospital ' recovering from his hurts. - INDIGESTION? examination for jury service. Everj' phase of t lie case has al ready been gone over In great detail hv the accused woman. When her I attorney, Maitie Anliiouy Anbin, he-1 B'.,u u" eAiiiiiiiiui nut ... ... """' jcanada will find themselves bo.iud by .jiuore legal ropes on their foi Ihcorn 4ng expeditions than has ever been j tlits rase since legislation looking to ! the protection of Ash and game was ! first enacted. The law-makers of 3S states in the liuion have amended their laws, while radical game bills were passed by the governing bodies of several Canadian provinces. A total of 220 laws, relative to this sub ject, have been enacted," but nearly one-half of these are local measures. Among the important', seasonal j changes were several giving extended I protection to big game and some i more important succies of game birds 1 I 'and a few re-opening seasons for i deer. DYSPEPSIA? i ... ... Foley's Honey and Tur 'cures coughs i quickly, strengthens the lungs and ex pub; colds. Out tho genuine' jn a yel low package King-Crowvll Drug Co. comer Fayetteville and liar 1 ,1 streets. m ?'A-3PV jp ' V :..,W0L;-.. ... It' you want to make your children happy Kct iiicm a ;iir of our Foot Form Hhocs like 1 liis omp. Ve have thorn in Patent, Tan, ..lit d, ami Vit'i Kid at popular prices. PEEBLES & EDWARDS, 12 E. Martin St. . . ... ...... BaieiglifN. C.
The Raleigh Times (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 3, 1909, edition 1
7
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