THE KALEIGH, DAILY TIMES, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1911. Ill WESTERN CAROLINA Jo Fcmalate Plans For Ad- vertisiag Western N. C. Xo Issue Invitations to Editora, Bust' new Men and Hotel Men to Attend Banquet Superior Court Begins 4 Monday, Judge Lane, fresimng- V Death of C. J. Hardee. :. . . . (Special to The Times.) x Asheville, September 27 At meeting of the committer appoin ed to formulaAe plans for better advertising western North Caro lina, It was decided to issue invita tions to the editors, business men and hotel proprietors of this section waking them to attend a banquet which will be held here October 9t at which President Finley of the Southern Railway will be asked to speak. The banquet will be held at 'Vne of the hotels and it is planned or a number of speakers to discuss the best plans to pursue to gain the desired end. The plans have not been perfected but the committee is considering the publication of an attractive booklet :in which the opportunities and re sources will be set forth, and the establishment of a general advertis ing fund to which the towns and cities of the section will be asuea ,to contriouie. On Monday. October 2nd Su "nerior Court for th trial of civ cases will convene with Judge Henry P. Lane, presiding. The calenda has been arranged for two weeks and Contains thirty-eight cases, ten of which are brought by the city of Asheville against property owners in the matter assessing benefits and damages Caused by widening streets and which has been continued from term to term. There are three cases against the Asheville Electric Com pany and five against the Southern Railway. '.V The management of the Western North Carolina Fair Association lias been the campaign of advertising for the fair this fall: Bills are being distributed by the Southern Rail way at the various stations and with in one week it is expected that the whole section for seventy-five to one hundred miles around Asheville will be thoroughly covered with bills, They have been sent as far as Mor ganton in the east, to Brevard In the south, to Murphy in the west and to Hot Springs in the northwest. The . management has : also begun the newspaper advertising, and today a page advertisement appears In the Gazette-News. Will Weaver to Be Tried. (Continued From Page One.) belonged to them and went down the road armed with shotguns to await the return of Hatcher and Nowell They claim that the negro and white boy attacked them with pistols and that they had to shoot Hatcher in self-defense. The younger Council knocked Nowell over the arm with his gun, drove him from the buggy and, according to the witness, shot at him as he ran off. Hatcher was not so fortunate and was shot in the back from the waist to the head. According to old man Council it !was a lively scrap and he and Se iwanee were in mortal fear of their lives. They neglected to pick up the pistols that their attackers dropped r but failed to use and declared that only one shot was fired, that shot which hit Hatcher. Hatcher and Nowell tell a different lale. They say that when they were returning driving the mule allotted Jo Nowell's father, the Councils step ped out in the road, ordered them to halt, and began laying on with the shotguns. Both jumped out of the buggy, and were shot at as they ran off, Willie Nowell escaping and John Hatcher receiving a load of shot, in his back. They had no pistols. . In charging the jury, Judge Peebles took occasion to say that the ballot box was withdrawn from the negro in 1900, but he was entitled to pro tection under the law, that it was the duty of white men to see that the iegro Is treated fairly. He said there waB no doctrine of reasonable doubt in this case, for both father and son were aiding and abetting the other and both are guilty if one is. The jury. must be satisfied that the Coun cils clubbed Noyell and shot Hatcher in self-defense. If the mule did not belong to Council, then the white me are guilty anyhow, because they .iiaij no right to Interfere with the ho and man. If it was Council's mule, the jury must be satisfied that the defendants were in danger of their lives in order to find them not guilty. - Solicitor Norris wag assisted by Mr. Chas. V. Harris. Messrs Arml Btead Jones Son and Col. J. C. L. Harjls, appeared for the defendants. The jury returned a verdict of guilty, but Judge Peebles has not passed sentence. ( Will Be Whipped. I l nj Biumi wuiia ,uujn will V9 whipped this afternoon in the pres ence Of Sheriff gears. Lincoln I lshed by his mother for going into a house and taking a shot gun. Lin i coin was visiting his grandfather in the country when he committed the trespass. Chester Ross, a 14-year-old boy of Zebulon, will' be thrashed before Sheriff Sears for taking some tickets from the Norfolk Southern depot at Zebulon. Pays Visit to Camps (Continued From Page One.) to perform any of the duties of the office of superintendent of . health without authority from, the county board of health for Wake county, or the superintendent of health. 5. That if any person shall vio late the rules and regulations made by the county board of health, he shall be guilty of a misdemeanor an fined $25.00 for each offense. 6. That it shall be the duty of the superintendent of health to pros ecute all persons for violations of the rules and regulations of the county board of health, and report all convictions to this board and th solicitor of this district. I, Z. V. Judtl, secretary to the county board of health of Wal county, certify that the foregoing Is a true and accurate transcript from the minutes of said board of health of a meeting held this September 1911, : -. Z. V. JIDI). Secretary. New Enterprises. The Arbutus' Club, of Kannapolis for social purposes; authorized cap ital, $5,000, with $40 paid In by A D. Pethel, Y. D. Allen, D. Y. Allen and Arthur Young. Itiinconilte County Farmers' Union Supply Company, of Asheville; au thorized' capital, $25,000, divided into shares of the par value of $5.00 each, with $510 paid in by J. C, Cowan, E. P. Stradley and others. Southern '-Lumber. Company, of Concord; authorized capital, $25, 000, with $5,000 subscribed by J. F Lentz, of Statesville, and D F. Can non and M. L. Cannon, of Concord Carolina Title Insurance Company of Wilmington; for examining titles to real estate, for furnishing ab stracts of title and for tracing gen ealogies and family records of heir to real estate; authorized, capital $100,000, all paid in, by K. C. Sid bury, B. T. King, Jr., and others. ANOTHER GAME SCHEDULED. tl. & M. to Meet V. M. I. at Ix-xin ... ton. -..' - The management of the A. & M football team has added another game to the already strong schedule They will meet Virginia Military In sti t lite at Lexington, Va., on October 14 . This college usually puts out a very fast team, and a battle is ex pected when these two elevens meet, ALLEGED HOME COMPANV ' AGENT SENT TO ROADS, Insurance Commissioner J. R Young returned today from High Point where yesterday he appeared as a witness against C. C. Whitehead an agent of the Standard Home Company, a New Jersey corporation with head office in Birmingham Ala. Whitehead was found, guilty of conducting a sort of building and loan business without a license and was sentenced to the roads for nine months. . This company has tried several times to secure license from the insurance department, but has been refused, as the business Is not considered a legitimate one. WATERWAYS HEARING AT ELIZABETH CITY SOON. Col. J. Bryan Grimes, secretary of state, today received a letter notifying him of times and : places f public hearings by the board of engineers for rivers and harbors with reference to the proposed in tra-coastal waterway from Norfolk to Beaufort. The first hearing will be held in Norfolk at 10 o'clock on October 10 and the second at Eliza beth City at night on the same date. Master George Pluck DpikI. Friends in Raleigh of Mrs. Katie Marsh Black, will regret to learn that her flve-year-oM son, George Black, died at 12:30 last night in Clinton. Mrs. Black formerly lived in Raleigh. Master George was a sturdy youngster and was thought to be recovering nicely from an at tack of neuralgia of the heart. Mr. George Marsh, an uncle, left this af ternoon for Clinton, to attend the fin neral. '- Mr. Willson Returns. Mr. Geo. H. Willson, for several years connected with the Yarborough House, but for the past two years In business In New York, returned to Raleigh today and will be connected with the Yarborough when it opens next month under its new manage ment. Mr. Willson knows the trav eling public and is a capable hotel man. ." Peace Juiblee and Reunion. Memphis, Sept. 27. Plana were made at the reunion of the union andconfederate veterans 'held! here today for a peace jubilee, and gener al reunion of blue and gray to take place In Washington in 1913. It'll aurnrlutn? hnw tnnfth tntAFAaf. ln.f.f ran ftarta in Ana LOCAL BRIEFS. Capt. W, A. Scott of the in surance department Is attending the Holly trial in Wilmington. Mr. J. R. Williams of Clayton a member of the Johnston county bar, is attending Wake superior court. Mr. E. L. Shepard of 704 John stou street, was carried to Rex hos pital today to undergo treatment for typhoid lever, i Col. J. R. Young, insurance com missioner, expects to begin moving into the temporary quarters of his department next week. The Wo man's Club building has been leased until the new state building is com pleted. ANTI-TAFT CAMPAIGN. October tflth Date for Insurgent Meeting After North Carolina. Washington, Sept. 27 Managers of the insurgent republicans believe October 16 will be a day fateful In political annals. Upon that date they expect to make a demonstration in Chicago that will prove the im possibility of re-electing President Taft. The inevitable result, they say, will be the nomination of an other man, a progressive republican on the national ticket. AS everybody knows their preference is Senator La Follette of Wisconsin. The forthcoming Chicago meeting is described as a "conference." Since the progressive republican head quarters were opened here a mouth ago, a staff of employes under the direction of Mr. Houserfi formerly La Follette's secretary of state, when the senator was governor of Wiscon sin, have been busy "perfecting the organization." There has been no lack of money. Such millionaires as Medill McCormick of Chicago Gifford Pinchot and Rudolph Spreck els of San Francisco have "kicked in liberally. Communication with the leaders of the radical wing of the republican party in every state of the union has been established. All of these leaders are bidden to the Chicago meeting, and a goodly host of them, it Is prophesied, will be on hand. Mr. Houser is confident such a showing of organized anti-Taft sentiment will be made that the im possibility of re-establishing repub lican supremacy under his leader ship will be conclusively proven Opinion here differs as to the ef fect of Canada's rejection of red procity with the republican party It is agreed that Canadian rejection of the treaty strengthens the demo crats, on the ground that President Taft's one tangible effort: to reduce tariffs failed. But. as a matter of nternational republican politics, the Canadian action removes one of the principal plans against Taft made by the insurgents. President Taft's friends will claim, simply, that lie drove too good a b argain for the United States and one which Can adians rejected for fear they would lose and Americans gain something Mr. Houser said today that he is confident that North Carolina will send anti-Taft delegates to the re publican national convention. He expects to flood the state wtih pro gressive literature and it is not at all unlikely that some of the "help' here will go to the Btate to espouse the case of the progressives. . , Mr. E. C. Duncan of Raleigh was a Washington visitor yesterday. Mr. Duncan has been on a business trip to New York and stopped over to break the monotony of the trip. Mrs. Nelle W. Price ot . Raleigh Is registered at the Raleigh Hotel SUES HER MOTHER-IN-LAW Mrs. eParl Bartlett Wants $10,000 for Loss of Husband's Love. New York, Sept. 27. Mrs. Pearl Bartlett, of Nutley, N. J., has sued her mother-in-law, Mrs. Carrie! O Bartlett, of Nutley,; for $10,000 in the Supreme Court at Newark charg- ng her iwth having alienated the af fections of her son, Bryant M. Bart lett. from the daughter-in-law. Young Mrs. Bartlett says that from the time of her marriage in 1903 until 1908, she and her hus band lived happily, then her hus band's mother induced Bartlett to leave here and live in the mother's house. The young We asserts fur ther that, Bartlett was attentive to another woman, and that his. mother encouraged thees attenions. : Mrs. Carrie Bartlett answers that her son acted of hfs own free will; also that he has disappeared and she does not know where he is. ITALY SENDS CsI-TIMATK Turkey Must Agree to Italian Occu pation of Tripoli. ' f London, Sept. 27 A Paris news dispatch says Italy has Bent an ulti matum to Turkey, saying the latter must agree to an Italian occupation of Tripoli and unless a reply 1b re ceived by tomorrow Italy will pro ceed Immediately with the threaten ed occupation. Railroad Employes Strike. Cairo, Ills., Sept. i7 The entire force of freight and yard clerks in the Illinois Central1 Railroad- yards here struck because' of the railroad's failure to recognize the .. employes' federation, I r"' Aff T 1 ,r-A y m A'toriH-j- (icnei-al Wiekorsnam who in an inU-i'Virw ni'"" ' bis siuiiint'r Imuih" in lH'cMnii (WHls, New Hanipshiiv. dtt'hiW-s lie Is pre ai'iiiK to soon iM'gln i riiiiiiml piirse, cut.ion of the biyj-cst liulfi of t"' ronntry.- Spiviking of i rfxiktil trust oflii'iiils, ho said: : "I inli'iKl to send winie of (lii'in to prison. There is no interest in the country Hint. can stop me. ... Cotton Seed Crop. (Continued From Page One.) who in a recent address endorsed cotton seed oil as a lood stuff, say ing: . 'i have always been an advo cate of the use of rot ton seed oi as human food. Tlii re is one food product against which no one has any objection.. I do not believe theral is a man. woman or child in this country, if the consumption of cotton seed oil was common but that 'would have better health and be a better judge of what to eat and be happio on acount' of .-his bettor health than he is today, I am pleading for the public;-' I am pleading for more widespread publicity lor cotton seed oil.' Few states furnish more cotton seed for crushing llian the Ciirolinas and it is a matter of record that her healthy citizens lire large con sumers of cotton seed oil products A Local "fish Trust" (Continued From Page One.) The noise made T.v Mr. Keater when he struck the water drew the atten Hon of the man 'Bryant and (lie lat ter hurried to .1 lip opening of the wharf. Mr, Ki-;it4 slated that ho was then helped niit of the '.valor. Mr, Keater went to th drug store mentioned, and as he seemed to lie in' great pain, he was advised to seek the services of a physician. V lie then left in search of a doctor. ATTACKS TUT 0,Y RECALL. Gov. Johnson I lei lare.s That a . Mis. taken Fight is Being Made. Lonp Meach. California, Sept. 27 Four thousand persons heard Gov. Hiram Johnson, Of California, attack President Taft in a bitter speech here. Although ' (he California exe cutive did not mention the presi dent's name, there was no doubf in the minds of his audience as to whom he meant. Referring tp Taft's atti tude on the Arizona constitution, he said: -' 'When the time conies that any man feels he has the power to say to a state that it shall not govern it self, then it Is time for the power of that man to Be halted. It is the people's right and the people's duty to call that halt." - : The governor declared that all this 'noise that has come out of Wish iugton has but the echoing of a mis ukjn fight against the principle, the ffect and the Intention of the re call." Gather for Eucharistic Congress. Cincinnati O.. Sept. 27. Many eminent clergy and laymen of the Roman Catholic church have arrived Cincinnati -to! take part in the Nati-nal EtichariKtic Congress which Is to meet tomorrow for"a session of four days. Archbishop of St. Paul will preach the 'opening 'sermon1 to morrow -..morning. Bishop Maes, of ovlngton. Will preside over the ses sions of the congress. '- ' ': '.". To Accompany Taft on. Iowa Trip. Council Bluffs, la., Sept. 2.7. Up on the arrival of his special train here early tomorrow morning, Presi dent Taft will be met by Governor Carroll, Senator Kenyon, and sev eral of the members of the Iowa con gressional deelgatlon.. ; Thai entire party will accompany the President on his Iowa tour, which will occupy two entire days and include stops in half a dozen or more. of the leading cities of the State. , , , Worcester Music . Festival Worcester, Mass., Sept. 27.-Music lovers from all'. over New England are here to attend toe annual Wor cester Music Festival, which opens tonight and will continue over to. morrow and Friday.. The works to be produced this year Includo Ban tock's "Omar Khayyam," the Beet hoven Mass In I Major, and "The Nuns," the last named a new work by Max Reger. which will be sung for the first time In America. WHITE MAN LYNCHED. Had' Killed Sheriff and ' Deputy in Battle. Dumas, Ark.-, Sept. 27. Breaking Into the county jail and overpower ing the officers, a mob of one hun dred men, took Charles Malpass, Sr., a white man, to the water tank, and lynched him. The lynching followed a battle yesterday at Mai pass'' home, where Sherleff Preston, Deputy Sheriff Stiel and two mulatto sons of Malpass were killed and Malpass wounded. The officers had gone to Malpass home to arrest his sons. The wife of Charles Malpass. Sr., a ne gress, and Malpass' younger son, es caped during the figatlng. Italian Warship Off Malta. Malta, Sept. 27 A private mes sage from Tripoli says an Italian warship with an expenditionary force is lying off Tripoli and there is panic among the Italians there. . It is feared troops landing would cause a massacre of Europeans. No Respect for a King. Very rude Of mosquitoes to annoy rier. Morgan.--New York American. The joJliest Dolls on earth, "The Campbell'- Kids." See Ihem at Toy land. MONEY TO LEND In Wake County Only. On Either Real or Personal Security tu Rooms 18-10 Pullon Building, City ASSOCIATE PRACTICE IR. H. "IV. GLASCOCK, DR. L. O. MORRIS, Osteopaths. All 'Phones Masonic Temple Hours: 0 to 12 a. m. 3 to B p. in SALE OF LAND FOR PARTITION By authority of a judgment of the Superior Court of Wake county, made in special proceeding before the clerk, entitled Ophelia H. Arnold and Others vs. Ella Scarborough and Others, being a proceeding for the sale of land for division between the heiis-a;-law of .1. M. Scarbor ough,- deceased, the undersigned Commissioners of the court will on Monday, October 23. 1011, at, 1 o'clock, m, at. the court house door of Wake county, sell to the highest bidder at public auction for cash, the following described tracts or parcels of land, situated In Wake Forest Little River and Raleigh Townships. Wake county, to-wit: First Tiact: Situated In Wake Forest Township and bounded on the North by the lands of J. T. Hag woon, .ejt tscarboro and others, on the East by the lands of Janet Moody nd others, on the South by the lands of Annie K. Debnam and oth ers, and on the West by the lands of A, J. Scarboro and others and known as the "Jim Williams Place," : con taining 100 acres. This tract will be sold subject to the dower or life- in terest of Ella Scarboro, wife of J. H. Scarboro, deceased. Second Traet: Situated in Little River Township and is bounded on he North by the lands of Dowd Srar- boro and Wes Alford, on the East and South hv the .lands of W. B Fowler and on the West by the lands of Janet Moody and Wes Alford and s known as the "Antioch Tract," containing 80 acres, subject to the dower or life Interest of the said El a Scarboro In 2:1 7-16 acres cut off of the North end of said tract. Third Tract: Situated in Little River Township and known as the 'Hominy Tract," containing 112 acres adjoining the lairds, of A. H. Horton, T. II. MasRey and others, be ing the tract oT land devised to J. H. Scarboro by W. H. lforton in his last will and testament recorded '1ri book Record of Wills, page 281 Iri the office of the. Clerk of the Superior Conrt of Wake county. ' Fourth Tract: Known as lot No. on the map of the Oakdale prop erty, located in the northern part of Raleigh,'. recorded In book 120, page 8 , In the office of the Register of Deeds of Wake county. It is bound ed "on" the north by the Louisburg Road and lot No. 7 on the Bast by lot No -.7' ' and lot No. 18, on the South by slot No. 5 and on the West by the Louisburg Road, fronting 70 leet on -tne said road and running back East on the .North side 144 feet and on the south side 164 feet. Being the last residence of the said .' H. Scarboro. : " .'-: . W. N. ' JONES, V F. E. HESTER, Commissioners. 27--o. a. w 4wks . Eczema, Acne, Tetter, Poison Oak, Pimples, etc., show that some unhealthy humor or acid impurity is diseasing the circulation,-and that a thorough cleansing oF this vital fluid is necessary in order to correct the trouble. Salves, washes, lotions, etc., may relieve some oF the itching and other discomForts caused by, skin diseases, but such treatment has no effect on the blood and thcreFore cannot do any permanent "good. Until the humor is removed from the circulation the cuticle will suffer the effects oF an acrid irritation. S.S.S.isthe, best and quickest remedy because it is the greatest oF all blood, purifiers. It goes into the circulation, and removes every particle of the humor, whether it be an infection of poisonous plants or from, other causes, and makes the blood pure, rich and healthy, allowing it to soothe and nourish the skin instead of irritating and inflaming it with acrid humors. Book on Skin Diseases and any medical advice desired sent free. 5. S.S. is for jsale at drug stores. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA. CA. PWf DE LUXE CLOTHES Satisfaction in every depart nient is guaranteed. Everything new. Prices right. Furnishing, Hats, Clothing. Just ask for what; you want. Come and see how they hug the neck. The Cream of the Pick Popularly Priced Just Now. Merchant Tailoring Tells the Tail Talk nil you plon about tiiiloi ing. true tailoring Is that tail oring which is iH'rfpttcd -from start to iinisli in the same place wIhtc the niPttMire is taken. Wc don't measure you up, and then say, "We'll get this order riilit off." Our worjt from the time the tape line strikes you to the moment when the last spark of dissatisfaction as to fit Is fln ished is handled rljht up here on these floors. There is a hit better feeling, more general satisfaction, and a great deal better appearance made, In the merchant tailored gar ments. See our line of exclusive one-pattern-to-theisult Woolens. Bridgers Tailoring Company Raleigh, N; Q. LACE CURTAIN CLEANING While your mind is on the Fall house cleaning, let us direct it to that important subject Curtain Cleaning. You ate reminded of the better American laun dry, when jyoi -receive your Curtains from this place. OAK CITY STEAM LAUNDRY. 117 We HrKeU Bt . RALEIGH, V. O. .Both rhoe, 7. THE COLLEGE STQRE All kinds of College and School Supplies. - College Linen Pound Paper, Bos Paper, College post Cards and Pictures, ' Tablet and Envelopes. Devotional and Miscellaneous Books, Sunday School Supplies, Blblesj Testaments, Prayer and Hymnals.. ,-i STANDARD FICTION. V ' Blank fiookaand Office Supplies Engravlngg of all kinds. .Phone 014F. Baptist Book StoreGomp'y itZ' FAYETTEVLLB STREET, .'. l'S,.s . .. RALEIGH. K..CVV For All the News From Eve Lt ' Tl:3 Eilc'h CUBES ECZEMA. ACHE. TETTER. POISON OAK. ETC lPLEASEDl They wear Booue's Do Lux p Clothes is the secret. When you get inside one of our Suits ---Yfltt- Will be Pleased Also C. R. BOONE, DE LUXE CLOTHIER. 226 Fayetteville St. NEXT TO IOC. STORE. J 226 Fayetteville Street. rywhere All the Tirae, Kcadi Dally Tincx" ;.( k , ' if i w I