Newspapers / The Raleigh Times (Raleigh, … / Nov. 5, 1909, edition 1 / Page 1
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i f ' it " " ' - 3 . " - - . I 1, it. a- UUUL1LL I UhiUULUMUSJ IU I MK CN Y HUI Fir,H ClVr AMY.nTUrD M riAICD A DITD , ' WTTT " - w m m wm W V I - I I Nil I I V V I hil 41 v enim ' - I ' ' L sij Washington . tfoja, 6-Fore-CMt for. North Carolina for to night and Saturday: - Fair to night; warmer la, the west. 3r ' y N R K E2TABLISIEED 187i rAleiqh, n. o., feiday, November 5, 1909. r f i 111. . ..m . ..'S: p I Ua '' 1 Hfesw -.rL w W .5' r IWATTAffi (JREETBORO ONCIHIODS OPPS GATES mm im mm ' ii ftc JcDesoices lhe Education Day Proving Grcat- n , Mcticds, Eciploycd By est AtfraAr and Biggest the Atad Weiaa ! i Event EvefWite&d : A FAKER CITY IS THRONGED SEC WILSON HERE Confegslon of Actor Who Says He I Over One Hundred Thousand People 1 .?onunieq tne . vrjme oi Which j, kmc SteinheU ,1s, Accused Was . :Jnt Trick to )aflence the Jury in . i the Woman' Favor But Ef fect ; of the i Announcement Has Been . to Influence the People Against the Woman - Session Opened With' BennnctaUon of the i Defense and Some Sharp Clashes Occurred Between Judge and At torney. .: ' .- " " See Parade of Fifteen Thousand School Children Parade Beaches Stretch , of Two Mllea Special Train Arrived From Bale'.gh at I O'clock With BOO Delegates From Farmers' Congrcws Amhasdor Bryce Speaks In Andltorluntv of Normal OolleKe Tonight Will be Given to Educational Addresses. FARMERS OFF F0RT0UR0F WEO10N Visit Tobacco at Durham and Cottoa Mills at Greedjcro PAHESON CU& BY claMjIpoe Ambassador James Bryce Judge Waker Elected President State Literary and His torical dissociation history. It :8 necessary in the re-1 enng of history that literary met'i- i ods be used, thereby serving a two-1 lolrl purpose. The literature of an age is part of its history and the i most important in some respects. To understand a people you must not only know the important events, hut tho feelings and thoughts of those who were living at that time. The srea!;fr then name'', a (cw ol ';o rost important characters in t' e oranPiies! or American ire-. alo the.r English eon temporaries. (Continued on Prrp Two.) PRJCE 5 CENTS CONGRESS AT DURHAM rarmeis Are Taken Through i !:au,t: t a;,m its ami nmw Cotton Mills SPEECH BY BRYO: (Special to The Times) Greensboro, N. C. Nov. 5 Gull- Delegates to Farmers' Congress Off This Morning o Visit Durham audi c Greensboro-rWilt Return Tonight at 10 O'clock .Three Sessions to he Held Tomorrow Hon. James ' Wilson, Secretary of Agriculture, to .Speak Tomorrow Morning Other , Important Addresses Yesterday .-Afternoon's Session Tomorrow's v Program, Amliassador HrycilRpoifii to n ( m " -. Audience at the Blind Instil . .! Last Night Clarence H. I' Book "A . Southerner; T.n E:jro) ' Wins the Patterson Cup H- n, Piatt D. Walker, Justice of preme Court, Elected President ' the Association for Ensuing Year. Hon. J. Bryan Grimes Makes a Yal uable Address Other Officers Elected and Resolutions Adopted. The National . Farmers' Congress left here this morning on a special The meeting of the' State Literary and Historical Association yesterday evening In the auditorium of the spiring event ever witnessed inj Durham and the big cotton mills of Blind Institution marked a great event in the h story or the associa tion, and the state as a whole. The capacious hall was ; taxed 1 to its ca pacity to accommodate the' tremen dous crowd of prominent citizens of this and other states Who were anx ious to hear the address; of Ambas sador Bryce. . v About Half-past eight o'clock the meeting was called to order by Clar ence H. Poe, secretary: and treasurer of the association, who introduced Col. J. Bryan Grimes 'as the first (By Cable to The Times) Paris, Nov. 5 A new attack on the methods of the defense marked the opening of the third session of the mai oi mine. Marguerite otetnheil I with visitors, and the opening spec ioaay. me presiding judge in theltacle of fifteen thousand -public wui-t uBHizes, jh, ue vanes, de- Uchool and two thousand college and nounceq ,tne methods nsed by the ac- academy students of the various cused woman, and declared that the schools and colleges of the county "confession" of Rene Collard, the was cheered by a hundred thousand actors who, as Jean Le Febre. de-1 spectators lining the Btreet for the clared he was guilty of the crimes of I two mile stretch required for the pa- wnicn ftime. atetnhell is accused, was rade. but a trick to Influence the jury In I The procession was formed on the the line of march ending in the great L- y g branded the actor a faker. . 1 auditorium, .which with Its twenty " " Thfl effnnt nf fho ..Uht.ii.d rttv nmvarf Anlv i.ruft " Tomorrow s program: nouneflmnnt hv tho antnr vhtKh 1mi I annriirh t 0-1 V A thA atnriAntu tnu-hnm FOrenOOB. th co.j,rt mto.an upyoar ha been-to and achool official seata-thousands """y V"1 influence the public " against lime, of spectators httvink "to itand ' With . J68 department of agrlcultuiet ford county education day la proving inin t(j 8pend tne day visiting the to- """"'"'' Dacco ; lactones . and warehouses in Greensboro. The city la thronged j Greensboro, The party is expected to leave Greensboro at 7:30 this even ing and reach Raleigh about 10 o'clock, ; There will be three sessions of the congress 'tomorrow, and a most in teresting program will be carried out. Probably the feature of the day will pe the address of Hon. James WllBOn, United States secretary of agriculture, who arrived here yester- r ;:iP! m ' msmti ' AT - , , , y&fe v-'V r j ' con fll' :.t rr,-litl,v P"llrj-o. miltn "YfM'. ! 1 . 1 ; 1 1 ci's:ty. TRINITY AinhnHsador Bryce Spent H"sy Iay 8s' mal and lndustri ii O)! c;e and ti c 1 ni United PRESIDENT'S BIG WELCOME IN SAVANNAH The speaker of the evening;' i When the meet.'ng was called to or-; der there was. a great crowd in the audience, the stage being-occupied by", a number of the state's distinguish-! ed men, among 'whom, besides the i Dr.' Andrew M. Soule, dean Geor- Vn, . gia. agricultural college: "Re-dlrec- PlQPlf AoonM'fo lnet,noa w.iu0. oh KPrPlVPfl Wlfh naflll fpratPfl Hoke, ex-Judge W. R. Winston, Pres- dent D. H. Hill, of A. & M Hon. John Skefton Williams: Makers and the Movers", Steinhell. , The note of favor in the! in the hippodrome or on the street cries of the, crowd about the Palais I outside. de Justice, whn she arrived today Is I After a concert of all voices Join- leas than it. man in fh flroi- Aavd nfltne In sincrintr " America' and "Caro the trial. , ; Una" the school ranks broke, a hums tion of Agricultural Activities", 'When: the "trflcln wlrinur'' Butane basket nlcnic dinner succeeding the I Chief Justice Walter Clark the court room today tp face another formal ceremonies in the additorlum. i "What the South Has and What She Prof Ben jamln Sledd of Wake grilling examination there was lttle I At tne opera nouse ur. Beeiuau trace of the Ustlessness which atKnapp addressed a packed audience times marked her attitude on the first on educational progress In the-south days. She was tense, but calm and era states, extolling the spirit of ad- evidently prepared for another sieee vancement everywhere prevalent, of fencing with the Judge. I notably as evidenced by the celebra- The session onened with th dn-ltlon here today, nunciatlon of the defense, anrt the. At 1 o'clock a special train arrived actor to which Maltre Aubin, the at- from Kale,gh and Durham, bringing torneV for !Mm. Steinhell. tonk - "ve nunareu oeieBBieB iiom wo ception. After a sharp clash Judge De Valles turned hla attention to the gabardines which It is alleged by the defense the band of murderers wore , i when theyTbound and killed M. Stein- ( hell, the painter, and Mme. Stein- hell's stepmother. Mme. japy, on May 81, 1SJ08. , t . . After, the murder it . was discov ered that two gabardines were miss- s ing from the wardrobe of the Jewish theatre. It is this point that the de fense, had embodied as one of the features of its case. Mme, Steinhel charging that the actors disappeared from the theatre at the time the gab- eriines were lost sight of. : , The president of 1 the court de clared that anly two of the long sin ister-looking robes had been taken from the theatre. Maltre Aubin de clared that the 'number was three. The three men Whom Mme, Steinhell described as being directed by a red headed woman In the attack on her tlonal Farmers' Congress now in ses sion at Raleigh. President Benehan Cameron, upon arrival, announced the presence of Commissioner of Ag riculture Wilson and British Ambas sador Bryce, amid cheers and enthus iastic demonstrations. : Ambassador Bryce was driven to the Normal College- where in the auditorium he ad dressed the seven hundred students and as many more visitors. The far mer delegates after dinner will be driven on tours of inspection of the Guilfords,Battle Ground, the State Normal closing the excursion at White Oak Mills, the largest demln manufacturing, plant in the world. A short address on agricultural and manufacturing development will be made by Commissioned Wilson to the five thousand employees of the Revolution, .Proximity and - White. Oak cotton, mills, in the White Oak auditorium at 4 o'clock. Tonight, will, be given to . educa tional- addresses and: conferences Needs' Afternoon. Prof. W. C. Massey: "Errors of Northern Settlers in the South' Hon. M. V. Richards: "Agricul ture and Transportation". Prof. H. E. Stockbridge, editor of I Southern Riiralist, Atlanta, Ga: "A I Study In Black and White". Hon. J. H. Small, M. C: "Water ways". Evening, akeFor-, Enthusiasm There as Every- est; Hon. Jas. R: Young, Rector G. W. Lay, of St. Mary's; Hon. Hilary Herbert, Ma. W. A. Graham, Dr. Edwin Poteat, of Wake Forest; Col. Joseph E. Pogue, Col. A. J. Peild, J. G. Roulhac Hamilton, of the Unlver city; Bishop Cheshire and many otners. i The stage was beautifully decorat-1 ed with North Carolina, United States and English flags, so entwined as to make a most pleasing appear-1 where in South AT THE BANQUET Gilbert Pearson, secretary national I ance. In an alcove the excellent band family were,, according to her story, among the county and city school su- clad In gabardines. In an exciting, tilt with the court, iixas- Steinhell declared vehemently . that two actors dropped from sight shortly after the crime. . The court : reiterated: "In the natural course of events the company changes its personnel, many of the members go ing away. ' With one of those flashes that have y shown the accused woman's mind to ; be as keen as that of any of her ac cusers, Mme. Steinhell interposed, "thV the, police should have found tnenv.", This remark was received by the perlntendents of the State session here. now - in WILLIAMS TO HEAD SEABOARD (By Leased. Wire to The Times) Baltimore, Nov. 5 General rail snectators much as thev would take I road opinion is that John Skelton clever thj-nBtj If witnessing a tenc-1 Williams is to become president of ine bout, ' ;v - I the -seaboard Air i,ine ; Kaiiway, Then the attack on the Witness was which was turned over oy tne re- resumed. The . prosecutor began a I ceivers to the company-at midnight line of auesUonlng intended to draw last night. from Mme. Steinhell the. possible mo- The property which had been held tlve of the hand accused of killing her I by the receivers since January, 1908, step-mother and husband. ; ; : jwas received , by General Manager On the night of the murder there Hix, who receipted for the physical was $1,300 in the home" She declared properties and Messrs. Nutt and Por to show that the Slayers purpose was4 teous for the other, assets, amounfr m)W. This axDlanatlbn is In ao-1 Ing to about 118,000,000, the built cord with the' aeclaration she made f which represent, the proceeds of when she was first arrestee. poe aaie n toe is,uuu,uuu or aa- The scene today was more harrow-1 juotmont S per cent, bonds. in than those of the flrBt two days I - The annual meeting. of the stock pf the trial. I noldera will be held at Petersburg, coauaue4 pa J&w Tw0-! I v:' NoTemD8 'i i- ' j j , ' . ;. . association Audubon Societies "Birds as Related to Agriculture" (Illustrated). Yesterday Afternoon . There Was a large crowd of dele gates' and visitors present yesterday at Pttllen Hall when the afternoon session was called to order at 3:30 o'clock. The first address was made by Dr. s. A. Knapp, or tne united states de partment of agriculture, on the sub ject "The ; Paramount Issue". The speaker was at hlB best, the address being full of practical suggestions and common-sense views. He said the paramount Issue, was how to increase the income of the people In order that they may secure the necessities and conveniences of modern civilisation, and any de velopment to be of paramount value must affect the masses.. At no time in our history have we so many prob lems to face as how, of the institution rendered suitable music. Col. J. Bryan Grimes read a most excellent , paper upon the value of marking the historic sites In North Carolina, He briefly reviewed the work that had been done along this line, and pointed many Important historic spots that should be suitably marked. He deplored the fact that there were no monuments, bronze slabs or paintings in our public build ings commemorating the historic events and men of North Carolina, south tLai he and gave a brief list of the men and where lie got f events that should thus be memorial ized. He advocated the erection of suitable state buildings for the pre servation of our records, stating that the present capitol and offices were very much crowded, and that our re cords and official departments were scattered over the city, being unsafe and inconvenient. He advocated the purchase of certain property and the got away The President Whs Kept l'p I'ntil 2 j O't-iock 1 liia Morriug and at t!ic Banquet Savannah Nominated llitu for tho l'res deucy-; Was Out I Again by 0 () "lock This Morn ng i for Trip Down t-ie River S'np ping in Harbor Festooned With Kings and 'I liO'.'sniHls of i c. pc Line the Shore Goes to Charles ton Tonight. i ROCKING GATHERS IN BLIND TIGERS Thirteen of the Padded Foot Gentry Locked up For Retailing Booze WARRANTS FOR 20 iters '.re 1 akiM by Surprise and iliivtecii of Them Are Arrcstt'd i!.-'s Kntcr Hull City and Town rhey See Lar unco Factory in the World. '). Hiycp iecial Guet at '.! .e Where Ho Speaks -Tames IT. Somite-ate Gov Vi' rlfOme jn Academy of utttHcg Go to Greensboro Lcrnoon. rial to The Tinw?) N, C, Nov. 5 The Na-'isw.-! Congress had a spec Mran"e in Durham this it iiti side trip while in na ention at Raleigh. ; at the Bast Durham cot- s screamed- the approach of itr special train bearing 1,000 far iifis the Merchants' Association and t -.ii),'. - o Board of Trade having the mere as their guests, Ambassador uryce and Raleigh newspaper men, and as it passed the hosiery mills and Golden Belt factories, these great engines turned loose. They con tinued to blow until the train pulled up to the Bull factory, where that awtul roar was heard for miles. The train divided here, one-half stopping go through the Bull factory and to .Hid Are I ( 1 Sa van ti the Harm 'I aft. is in lias 'icct will; "m ir.srrp. Placed in Jait Ilrloi'e Ihcy Aware oi the Fact That They Wanted- Wari-ai.ts Were ls- or I wenty i'ut Seven Cot , ,.i i i (is .!tcai'e.i 1. ifti liiond I., i in ;. Cuii' Mentsuring - I ti' kci'C Arrt-sted lor lie . i ll.s X, le. ' o. -I'lu-t - 1 )" aas visit west votes. tariff poll i 111 OVCi In ix Heru the cnti- ire' t' i is in .!! ,1 tut .11 cirm o tlipM- a soutti ttuu no Is ue ng y ce:ed unadulterated, . entliusiasm. Tins morning is no exception to last niaUi or last wk. It was five mint-tot after two O'clock wi:en the i :t tew If erection thereon of (1,500,000 state morning, but he was again in it The speaker then, took up and dis-k..,M' h,irti cussed the banking system, that as ,. Wfi1 nrenflred and conducted at present, the money of Q( grea historical value, be ng filled ter was boarded for the trip down t, e the people Is used for its own benefit wltn vaUaDie suggestions, sugges- r ver to, Fort Screven, the guns ot and not for the common good, It Is tl0M that the state should heed. We which soon began to boom in his; far trinra tiArAgfinrv fhaf VA AnnnAPVA ... ..... . i ..u... .. I r zzzz ;;,th,; r r;vr. nop.e l..KlTe mB pavr m lu" "u n the harbor nral resources. The people are de- nftrinr Col. Grimes' address Am-' festooned with, flags and bunt- manding a Sane banking system, one I DBgaador Bryce entered the hall and lnB, hundreds of people lined the that Will benefit the whole people, It I was accorded an ovation, the aud- shores and there was a bedlam of Is not the fault of our bankers that I iBn Hninv and remainlne standlnst .ht.n un. lZuVnXt mtil he had ascended to the platform mwg t0 the citv whose street3 system Itself, and a pruning, knife, and taken his place. A1 J ti. 4. . ,. hot dynamite, should be Used upon It. jn ft few brief s; and well chosen. WMe thronged with the enthusiastic, He then took up the subject ot words. President Junius Davis Intro- the president was dr ven around the railroads and freight charges saying duced the distinguished Englishman course of the Savannah motor race that it must be admitted that under and sneaker of the evening to the fh the present system railroads are bet- audience, saying he was one of the , ' DresIdent will ter for long hauls than for short ones, foremost scholars and statesmen of nad at the caslno- 1 lle President win The growth of cities is largely ac- the mother Country, and was as Well leave for Charleston, b. C, at 5:15 Cpunted tor by the lower freight rates I known In America as he was in Eng- p. m. this afternoon. Of much more they enjoy over the small towns, hand. Interest than his movements today thereby making them centers of inan-l : Hon James Bryce. ' were the events of the hanquet in the ufactnrlng industries, f The ambassador arose and was president's honor last night. Savan- The fiction of lower water rates! greeted with much applause. He be- nah nominated him for a second term forces rallroadu to give lower rates to I gan by Baying that In 'his search for with every one up waving handker- larce dities, "even below t operating I a subject for this address, he decided chiefs and. flags, The tobacco laden coSti and Snake it up on tne Interior upon the, name of the association as room with doves of peace somewhat country, j ,t he growiht i tritflo nks a proper one for him to discuss, a It t mid, it Is to be feared, darting made;- it almost impossible c for'; thO was devoted to two "subjects lltera- blindly about. It was almost 2 o'clocl: rSUfoads to Meet the demands t&ade ture And history and said the natoe when the president was accepting the upon then!. - Railroads are ot such) of this city Raielga.rgnggested nomination in, tne spirit in wutcn it ! .v'ra-r, j.,;n; ..toss and H-ei t . oi .,Bu u-M'.-i be. Aue 3pen l' , i.eaK aau An . 1 e w Leak. !i Richmond County Corn Club the other visiting the Duke, where its whistles told the Jast, part Of the, screaming programme. . - ' The farmers exchanged .visits and took in both factories, the first the largest manufacturer of smoking to bacco in the world, and the second the greatest cigarette roller on the globe. Watching two machines at work the farmers beheld seventy-five brands of tobacco going through them at a rate of 875 cigarettes a minute, 5,000,000 daily and more tuan 1,000,000,000 annually. Manager C. W. Toms took the vis itors over both factories, showing the mrmers, many of whom had never t-t en a tobacco factory, how the Amer ican Tobacco Company had grasped it.e situation. In 1886, four years iPiore tne sreat corporation's birth, but 4,000,000 pounds of granulated smokers were consumed yearly, Dur ban! alone sends out 33,000,000 !'i:in,!s annually in excess of the 3,- iii). (I'lv) tio.iiKis of tobacco put up in ;.:.r- nsanv r-rands of cigarettes. A uni in iftivn of ?,500 pe6ple employed i m tnf i:irn;s, among them 200 or i tnoi'c - ooni. lonally attractive girls, rr 1 ' ,'.-itor an entirely urex po, j, i -i(lv. of the work, while the 'I Mvt .'-fi"r.':;s nra filled with gradttate v'":'cr - Trinity College. The pay roil ! t.ne tobacco business in these .i-'psrtntealB alone is $16,000. i-roiu tne laetories. the farmers -.'.i n.,, ni rntv Academy of Music, where i1 i "j irate gave thee wel 1 r" r i . .,:;i,fc! were offered by i f'.it'ves of the congress, i .1 , i- bryce spoke briefly here 1 '"I'u'i aljourned to the ware- i ie- tt i (u i tion of tobacco, tho t,:j ' v. at.er of the year, was be hiq cv. r-i ttl tt " MiKinssn ior Bryce was the 'special ' 'f r',irifv College, - where h3 - 'a, it ,r- ini-r to the Etudcnts i'li-i'-'u, ' fonwing the sale of tho ioiKwo i ae; took the train for censboro, where they spent the re- 'i-amder of the day. no trip to Durham gave bnt three !o is o review the tobacco Interest nom which the whole city has been built up. More recently. there has continues the work ot measuring the contest acre yields. The officials will sprung up a cotton manufacturing ln- fin sh the work this week, Up to date Mr. Henry C. Dockery loads the contestants with a yield of 103 & bushels to the acre, Henry Brown, of Randolph county, was placed in jail here this week on the clarge of deserting his wife. He was arresteii on a warrant issued oy Rantioiph county. Deputy Sheriff D. C McMae caught him after a three days' chase. terest and the visitors had but scant opportunity to visit the million dol lar mill being built now at West Dur ham by the Erwin Company, owned largely by the Duke Interests. They had but a peep at the $400,000 hos pital given by George W, Watts, one of the tobacco magnates, and . less than a look at the seven structures now in course of construction, costing more than $2,000,000. . These unus- The contract for the erection of ual cond tions in a towa not exceed the Entwistle Manufacturing Com- ing 25,000 Inhabitants were hardly to pany's big plant has been let to W. J. be observed in the look' and run of Stephenson and Son, contractors, and the great organisation today, . work has already begun on the cot-, tages for . the operatives. The main Negroes liandod. in' Jail. building of the plant is to be one (By Leased Wire to The Times) ; hundred and twenty-nine feet wide Heidelburg, Mbis.,' Kov. K-T-Nlnbty and fifty long. Adequate cotton sheds men, with a. pack of,, bloodhounds, are to be built and comfortable cot- caught two negroes.; who aeuahUed ' -tages for the operatives, The new ; Miss Margaret , Windham,, 'daughter " plant Is to cost about three hundred of a wealthy plantation owner last thousand dollars, , I night, " 1 - ',"" -A- t . t- t t 4 ihlftilil
The Raleigh Times (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 5, 1909, edition 1
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