TIIKKALEKJII DAILY TIMES,- MONDAY, DECEMBEK 4, 1QU, ;jJaUighbilg limes I : Every Afternoon Except Sunday. TIMES PUBLISHING COMPANT, JOHN A. PARK, President I J, E. CLARK, Editor, JNO A. PARK. Business Manager. SUBSCRIPTIOJl RATES: .(By MU.X J Year. 6 Mo. , $4.00 ! 1 Vr. ($5.00 $2.00 (By Carrier.) 6 Mo. 3 Mo. 1 Mo. 92.50 1.25 9 .45 3 Mo, 91.00 1 Wk, 9 .10 Ail Subscription Must B Paid In Advance. Fubllcatlon Office THE TIMES BUILDING 12-14 East Hargett Street, ASSOCIATED PRESS REPORTS. Eutered at the Postofflce at Raleigh, N. C, as Second-class Matter. I5TMA5t THE FISHING IXDISTKY. political machine.' But it will take more than the discourteous acts of politicians to stifle the convictions o man like Charles 1, The Wilnuntnn Stnt amnhnalplno. , 1 ? a courageous the importance of the proposed fish Coon convention, calls attention to some' 11 seems to us that the hidden of the conditions which the present nus ocen a little overdrawn. It wa system, or lack of system, in deal- '"U'olite, rertninly, hut nut bolster ing with this great resource of the olto all(1 tlle speaker was not ' howl . . . state have brought about: l uuwu. iNpt more tnan two or "The fish, ovster and came nrob- thlee dozen people engaged In the lem of North Carolina demands so- haiid-tluppiiiv that caused ihe rious attention and vigorous reme- speaker to give up and take his seat dies for their restoration. We hana- our heads in shame when Wllminir- and lr tle hiu he'd his ground he ton restauranteurs advertise Norfolk could have finished his speech with oysters while the once famous New River oyster has practically disap peared from the market. Now we have only excuses for the largo and lie wauled to AKE NOT QIITTKKS. It is time for the University of 'North Carolina bovs to quit the grid iron after the walloping the Vnlver- sily of Virginia, boys gave them in . Richmond. Greenville Reflector " Oh, No! The University. of North Carolina boys nor the North Carotin. boys of any other institution or in any. capacity are not quitters, we hope. If they are, thev will make men that are quitters and that would be tailing to live up to the standards! of the past. The men who have liiought the state thus far on the wav have suffered many adverses, some ol them overwhelming, but tliey nave never lost their courage and have never given up. And thev have won many victories and cleared iv.e way ior uie winning ol nianv more for those who come after them J ne sons or these men are not going to flinch and fall out of ranks when they .take, up the serious work of life - and tliey arc not. going to "lie flown" when thev meet defeat, in the formative period of life, whether it he in the s'rivnig after knowledge "or in the field of sports. Defends are to be expected, and tliey do good Hut they would not do good if they ever m-eepicu as me una I ver dict. Men or the right mould do not ; accept, them at final so long as strength Justs and bovs with the in gicdients in their make-up that arc going to win them success in after llle have their ambition fired to a brighter red when they meet disas ter. The fighting spirit, the ambi tion to retrieve and save tho day ...makes the disaster only temporary. This rather long sermon is only to say that the University of North Carolina boys, while ''beaten to a frazzle," are not conquered. They didn't run away. They look their "licking" like men. But thoy will "live to fight another day." There is no reason why thoy should quit the gridiron. They are clean-,--manly, sportsmen. They played the game with boys of tho same stamp ;and lost. But they would not be the boys they ought to bo if thoy had not already determined to make the de feat of today thai victory of tomor row. They are looking forward with hope and eagerness to next Thanks giving day. And that Is the spirit that counts and that will carry them successfully through life. Tnose who cannot meet defeat with that spirit will soon drop b;- the side. 1 ' '. ;,,:'"?,-'i,;:' .ii.-w-;il.p.Tf. .f luscious New River oysters, the pre mier of all the shell fish from Pe nobscot Bay to Bull's Bay. The New River oyster has so constantly dis appeared and the demand has be come so widespread that the whop pers are shipped awav for the con noisseurs of Washington, Baltimore, Philadelphia, and New York. Those markets have literally robbed us of the New River oyster, and what, we et are mixed with .Myrtle Grove Sound and Stump Sound products. However, our M.vrllc Grove and Stump Sound oysters would be the equal of New Rivers If the state were to do tlie right thing bv the ndustrv. Fine oysters and hsh. rom Currituck to Brunswick, could be produced in such abundance as not only to supply North Carolina, but other slates. Intelligent, legis- itiou must be substituted" for sel fish interests. When Wilmington buys o.vslers from Norf ilk and sort hell crabs from Baltimore, some- hing is radically wrong The wrong hoiild.be righted bv knocking out leanut politics with good hard cotil lon sense." dood. hard common sense is all lint is needed to solve the question nd solve it rightly so that instead robbing our rivers and bavs and sounds oi tneir nsn and ov.sters, we should be conserving them, takin plenty 'and leaving .plenty to increase the 'supply. But like many other matters that have to be solved bv our law-making bodies, it is hard to get an application or common sense statesmen, would apply that remedy bin politicians either predominate or are able in one wav and another to uuieai uie passage or anv compre hensive . laws . on the subject. Some of the people.'. ier!iaps the majority of them, engaged in fishing and ovs- tering, think it is their right to pur sue their business without anv inter ference whatever from the law These people have a vote and so hold a club over their representatives But they should begin to see bv this nine uiai inev stand to lose more than anybody else bv their policy me leiuaiKs oi me star are so time ly that we quote again: ' The broadest view to be taken of it is the ' Importance ' of ennsprvin!r Hid fostering a state source or wealth and food, a necessity which should be recognized as of equal im- out serious interruption or anv bois- teiousness, Hut he had said what say. ins speech was practically- lini.slied. And Ik thought It better to let it end in mill climax, because or the lact that tin audience was waiting lor anojici speaker, than to contend for the floor, even tor minute. Hut the incident does show that we have some mighty "sorry ' county super intendems, lor one ol them led the hand-clapping. Tho system of edu cation will not be what it ought-lo be. .no mailer what lis other (nulli ties, so long as even one man who is not ii gentleman can ..aspire to and succeed in getting that olllce. Well, I hope that von are -reeling duly thankful, was the greeting; ol' one Ciiaileslonian to another as they met on the street yesterday morning. I dp. was the .-response, "I could not leel otherwise, lor I have just finished reading The News and Courier. The News and Courier. Does that mean that the Cliarles otimn was so dull that he could nol ippreciale the delight I ill pages ""of tue News and Conner, and thai lie v poitance as the conservation of the waterpower and forest wealth of the state. For the same reason that eery North Carolinian is concerned in the Appalachian ' forest ' reserve, which aims to protect wide areas troni overflow and conserve the vast waterpower interests or the state, all the people of Hie state should be con cerned in fostering and preserving the state s fish and ovster industry. It. is not specially the Industry of eastern North Carolina, for when we get away from the individuals aetu- illy engaged In the fishing and oys ters business for the purpose of mak ing a living and acquiring a compe tency, the people of eastern North nplma are no more Individually 'oncerned than are the Inhabitants if middle and western Carolina. It is a state resource, and not a local ndustry, that must be conserved ' If the people of tins stale 'Would display half as much interest and zeal in practical and conservatory undertakings as thev do in polities. there would be constructive progress is than k I it 1 that he had completed I tn.sk-. winch all Chnrlesioninhs feel obligated to impose on - themselves every day in the voar? is''-' done, I should have clarified several congress with patronage after with- f passages. And particularly 1 should have changed the sentence where I proclaim the Payne tariff act the best ever passed." "Between two stations" In that pathetic admission Mr. Taft reveals the tatal weakness of his admiration. Honest, frank, sympathetic, well meaning, he has blundered along tactlessly, even stupidly, doiug the work of government from day to day without toresight and without weigh ing consequences. Ever since enter- holding ft from them when they op posed him. . It was "between two stations" that Mr. Taft permitted Attorney-General Wickersham to lend his aid to the conspiracy to remove Dr. Wiley. As he says of the Winona speech, "Had I known as much then as I do now, I should have realized that there are some things one cannot leave to he taken for granted." That a president of long Judicial training should have fallen into hab-t t ANYTHING IN PRINTING. V ' Phone 28 4; ing the white house he has led a its so improvident during his brief 112-114 East Hargett Street. -,T'S"l.,' .Miss Mabel Itoai-ilinaii. ol Wash ington, I). i, whose sis(cr Is the wife f .Senator ("raue, ol Massachusetts. Miss lloartliiian doiiiiiiales and piac- tcally (lneH-ts the activities of tlie mci'icaii leI ('eess .Society. She las complete louti-ol of Ilie oiganiji- ioii s rescue department and it is iihiii het- nwl thai aid is sent to stricken communities, holh hcie mid ibi'oad. .Miss Koaiilmaii has a com- inandiiig; presence and is a liuhlie penker nf gi--n( power and luil- imicv. ng,. for some HI the Tarheels are direct deseendanls of that sort ot happy-go-lucky existence. It was not enough that a good part or his official life should be spent I) n wheels; important acts that were to determine the iuture of his adiuin isration and his party were impro vised between stops. i It was "between two stations" that Mr. Talt composed the fatal Winona speech that slill plagues liiiu. He dictated it in haste and repented it at leisure. It was "between two stations" that .Mr. Talt involved luniselt hopelessly in the Hallinger affair. The ante- dating ot official papers and the sup pression ol evidence discredited his administration and shook public con fidence hevond repair. It was "between two stations" that Mr. Talt mobilized the army and ordered it to the Mexican border. He is quoted In the Outlook as sayingo1' '"I he whole thing was done between' two days. Congress was m recess and Knox was out of town. I had no one to counsel with on foreign aftairs." If lie had made at the time such an explanation of the move as he now offers, it would have had a reassuring eft ect upon the public, mind. Instead, there were only mys- stay in the white house makes Mr. Taft '8 case the more pitiful. An ordinary sense of prudence should have guarded him against the errors ho cominltteed in his haste "between two stations." A fuller sense of re-; sponsibility should have restrained him on more occasions than that of the unfortunate Winona speech from acting without deliberation, In his loss of popularity, in his political decline, Mr. Taft is paying the cost of trying to run the govern ment as In impromptu affair "bo tween two stations." New York World. HOTEL if ST. DENIS' H BROADWAY and 11th ST. A Dreadful Wound . from a knife, gun, tin can, rustv nail fireworks, or of any other nature, de mands prompt treatment with Buck len's Arnica Salve to prevent blood poison or gangrene. Its the quickest. surest healer for all such wounds as also for burns, boils, sores, ski eruptions, eczema, chapped hands corns or piles. 25c at Klng-Crowell Drug Co Women Siiy "Over 2 Sacratnenlo, Cal.. Dec. 4 Callfor nla s women voters are to be Teller Press Comment. illiiig to Help. Now tha lab is reallv doing something she finds that the other towns of the state are not unwilling to give her credit for it. Durham Herald. Sound lake Old Tillies. Ilow familiar sounds this quota. tion from a wireless dispatch froir the grounded steamship. " So soon as the extent of the dis aster had been ascertained we were informed, that .Mr. Bryan had gone to bed and had no comments to make." -Virginian-Pilot. (rougeix for hiiir. i ue iiaieign money lenders are surely gougers "for fair." The Times says money lenders in the capital city in some cases charged." five times the legal rate of interest which means 3d per cent.; and that paper very properly thinks it Ib time to invoke the law against nsu ry. Statesville Landmark. (Mir (ridirou Classic. 1 lie Tarheels came yesterday, they saw, and they were conquered on the gridiron. In spirit a North Caro i lain an is never defeated and a stranger hearing the White and Blue hosts yesterday after tho game, lift ing their voices In "The Old North State Forever," would have thought that they were the victors, and nol the vanquished. There is a never sayvdic spirit about the North-Curo- llanlan, particularly tho ' sou of Chapel Hill, that eommandii the ad miration of all who know It. And so it was yesterday, when the air was .crisp and the sunshine bright upon the -Held where a great inter state football buttle was fought. At. soon as the smoke of the first as sault had cleared away it was ap parent that the Virginians wero car rying the day, but the great Blue bank shouted louder than before and waved its banners more vigorously, putting even more emphasis into the md. material development on a huge i "dear old U. N. C" of their college scale In North Carolina. If everv hv,,.,. man were as anxious about fish, oys- After all, it Isn't the touchdown ters and game us he Is about the and It. isn't Mm winning tl.,t mni.n Initiative, tho referendum recall, we would be doing something to the real advantage and develop ment of the titato. It is not the hcoretleal but tho practical ques tions which should make us bestir . Dominion, nn this rret r. ourselves. Of course. It is all rlcht! thing about it all is the spirit or loyally. Kvery North Carolinian is glad that he is one, and every Vir ginian is glad ho is a. son of the Old d-letter day And every to keep abreast of all fundamental mother's son of them is glad that he limine, finesuons' 01 1110 day. but while we are doing It we should not be guilty of such woeful negloct as to let our fish and oysters interests go to smash, permit our great for ests to be destroyed, and fail to pro tect our Immense waterpower and land resources. went or goes to Chapel Hill' or Vfs glnia, as the case may be. State' ( pride and pride in ono's alma roator these are begotten or noble senti ment and generous feelings. Both state and college are in a sense In tangible, but they seem living and breathing and striving on such a day as yesterday. The Tarheel, with his armlet in colors, comes tramping down the way shouting ','Clvis North Carolina sum!" while right abreast of him is the personification: "I am a citizen of Virginia, no mean state." That Virginia eleven yesterday was barged, -'but the Orange and Blue warriors were tackling--in (he right ol them, .smearing and .capturing. Stonewall Rich was a 'whole hornets' test, and Andrew Jackson Tillett used all the tactics In the book; but he psychology ot the name was gainst them, and I heir men demon- trated that there s many a slip Iwixt niidlield and tile line that counts. But what of it? North Carolina lias a thousand more, chunces, and so has Virginia. There are still niightv men to come to chapel Hill out of the mountains, and Virginia's (Jood hue clan ls not dead in Texas. The point.. oi. the matter is that carloads of North Carolinians, joyous, hope ful, bubbling with state spirit, came over the line yesterday, and shook handB with the Virginians, who were glad to see them and wish they w-oyTd 'co'nie a little oftener. North Carolinians and Virginians jest at expense of each other in an amiable, kindly way, knowing that they have much in common much good to ' look back to and no unfriendliness' sometimes realizing that the ardor of battle shown by these twenty-two young men on a grassy field is re-1 miniscent oi that superb fighting' spirit, which sent North Carolinians and Virginians, side bv side, up the red hills of-wartime Virginia to the crest ot glory. Times-Dispatch. . ter.v and conflictinc rumors. The Bivl ,.,... f ...:iii.. North Carolina. Samson chained and ' . . . j cd of an embarrassing formality In '"" '"" j registration if a bill introduced to ...e circumstances ii was aosuru. (i;,r hi the legislature should become It was "between two stations" that 'a law. The measure provides that Mr, raft, according to his private "over 21" shall be sufficient answer secretary, Mr. Norton, offered to to the age Interrogation at reglstra square the insurgent republicans in tlon "POINSETTIAS" One Dozen Poinsettias to Outfit for $1.(10. Phone l's Your Order At Once. Waterman's Ideal Fountain Pens. BLANK HOOKS. THE OFFICE STATIONERY COMPANY. i- Office Furniture and Filing Device. , 113 Fayettevllle Street. 18 Fust Hargett Street. C. C. 'Phone 014-F. O. O. 'Phone 844-F. "Iletweeii Two Stations." In tlie authorized interview with Mr. Tall in the Outlook the president confesses that if he were to make the Winona speech over again he would express himself differently. "I dictated that speech to a sten ographer on the cars between two stations and glanced through it only enough to straighten its grammar. It was sent out bv tho press with cor respondingly little ceremony, so that the papers received it in all sorts of shapes. If 1 had prepared it two or three weeks belore and revised it deliberal ively, ua I ought to have BRILLIANT Laundry Work That Is the kind we do. Our customers say so. We don't blow much ourselves. We don't need wind to run our business; we put plenty of steam into it. The result is satisfaction to nil. We get the business and our customers get their Laundry work dune as they wish it. Send trial orders to the THE PEOPLES LAUNDRY Incorporated. 107 Fuyettevllle Street. TUli HKST. Phones 71. U, S. Department of Agricultum' W&ATHER BUREAU , WILUS L. MOORE. Ohm. y V 5.10 way This is the way the Greensboro News looks at It: 1 The boisterous and Impolite meth ods of the political convention were employed to howl down the presi dent of tneTchrs Issembly when ' "cracking' combination of artil he showed the courage to say things lery, infantry and cavalry, mostly he believed. The incident furnishes cavalry, with Joachim furat Todd's corroborative evidence that our pub- white helmet flashing far ahead. -The lie school Bygtem Is too much of a Light Brigade, metaphorically spe'aE- - x;. '''-;':;-''.::v;v.,',.',:V!,.;' v- 1 : 1 ; I WVv,' fyfr . ..... " ' . rA VC)ffi " A " W. 'fMliiiiiiMltt.wn "t VuaMlawliMIMlMkNl'' Im lmHit ait ot mm tlwn U i (9 Mn 9 tfowlri (g)raai (a)Mi f$ lull t wn th wind, rint tamMlaiw kwl U kou muni, k-bwir ritoll. U " Decembe r4, 1911: ' Forecast For Raleigh aud vicinity: Fair tonight - with freezing.' . temperature. Tuesday, fair. For North Carolina: Fair tonight, freezing temperature in east portion; Tuesday, fair, slightly warmer, west,, portion; moderate north winds. Weather Conditions: A disturbance that was central In the Ohio valley on Sunday has moved off the middle Atlantic coast, causing light rain or snow in the lake region and middle Atlantic states. High baro metric pressure. attended by. clear And colder weather covers all eastern and southern districts this morning. In the norfhwest and Jhe Paclfto coast states the weather is warmer and unsettled. The high pressure over the OhloitValley wllj advance pastwird,-and durjng. tonight the temperature will fall below the freezing point in Ws vicinity. - . k - .... s NOV YORK crrv term. Hall black from Wanamakaf '. Five minute' walk of Shoppinf DiMnct. NOTED FOR i ExceUeoca of ouum. comfoftabU appointment, courtou ma and homeluia unoundmia. taomt $1.00 per day and of With privilege of Bain SI .50 per day and us EUROPEAN PLAN TM I'HoU BrMktMt 0 WM.TAYLOR SON, Im. GROCERIES OF QUALITY New arrivals daily. Let us supply your Pantry with Seasonable Goodies, . Both 'phones. RUDY & BUFFALO, 108 Hargett Street, RjiIcUjIi. N. C. MONEY TO LEND In Wake Comity Only. . On Either Real or Personal Security. Rooms 18-10 PuIIen nuildin, City. VAIiUARLE CITY LOT AND PEIt- SONAL PROPERTV FOU SALE. By virtue ot authority conferred by a certain Mortgage irora Isham Fields and Callie Fields his wife, and Central Mercantile Company, reg istered In the office Of the Register of Deeds for Wake Co u nay, N. C, in Book 235, at page 10, I will at o'clock p. m. on Tuesday, Decem ber 5tb, 1911, sell at public outcry, at the County Court House Door in Raleigh, N. C, to the highest bidder for cash, real and personal property as follows: A certain lot adjoining the Trus tees of Rex Hospital Lands, in the -Southwest portion of the City of Raleigh,. N, C, bounded by a line as follows:. By a line beginning at a point on the South side of South Street, as extended, 42 feet East of where said Street would intersect Wn Boylan's line If extended across it; running thence East 52 1-2 feet; thence South 198 1-2 feet; tlience West 62 1-2 feet; thence North 198 1-2 feet to the beginning on South Street, and being lot No. 17 in Block 6 of the lands of the said Trustees of Rex Hospital, in the Southwestern part of the city of Raleigh as shown In a map recorded in Book 125, page 199, records of the Register of Deeds Office for Wake County, and being the same lot conveyed to Isham Fields, by the Trustees of Rex Hos pital, as shown by doed recorded in Book 125, page 779, records of said Register's office. : Also one hearse and one wagon and all poles, shafts, fixtures and attach ments purchased by the Central Mer cantile Company, of James Cunning- am Sons & Company. This November 3rd, 1911. Loo D. Heartt, Administrator, T. A. of Giles Edgar Leach, de ceased.' ';.:' Ernest Haywood. Attorney. ll-4d.t.s. VALUABLE CITV LOT FOR SALE. By virtue of authority conferred by a certain Mortgage from David Sanders and Sylvia Sanders, his wife, registered in the office of the Register of Deeds for Wake County, N. C, in Book 246 at pago 444, I will, at 2: 30 o'clock p. m.. on -Tuesday, De cember 5th, 191U sell at public out cry, at the County Court House Door in Raleigh, N. C, to the highest bid der for caBb, all that lot of land in the Southeastern ttprtiqn of the City of Raleigh, at thf8putn)rest' corner of the intersection of East and Worth Streets, adjoining (be W. H. Perry, the Holloway end John Gary lands, and bounded by n line as follows: Beginning at the Southwest corner of East and Worth Streets, runs thence South with t(ie rWoatorn line of p;ast Street' 139 Mti to W. H.' Perry's Northern line; thence . West In a lino parallel with Worth Street ., and 'with the Northern line of Bald . Porrv 1 AS fool- (henna Mnrlh In k . line parallel with East - Street 1?0 , feet to Worth Street; thence East, along the Southern line of Worth' ; Street 108 feet to the place of begin I nlng. Being the lot convoyed to David Senders by Isaac J., Kittrell and wife by deed recorded in Book 245, at page 266 In Register of Deeds office of Wake County, N. C. , i This November 8rd, 1911. Leo D.' Heartt, Administrator, C. T. A. , of Giles Edgar Leach, de- 'leased. ' Ernest Haywood, Attorney. ll-4d.t.i. "Nofhlng Succeeds Like Circulation," and Nearly Everybody Beads ..JzxJ.!tU Balolgii Dull Tta. i

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