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rj. .... , L "J 8tatUbrary r i . VOL. XXVIlI.-KoGt ;WW BIBIi CBATIS COUHTY, H C.t r TUf 8 'A 9 OCTOBIR 31. 1905 FIRST SECTION, 20Ui YEAR ra -scj" cottcs rsissi mmn, cnaafiEsr, ten . . TN Murray Cimniho SwTCkr Mm, FmOw. CMiwr Ink OIBBU MACHINIKT CO. CtlmabU, 3 . C. ' UE17SP1FEB niFOBTS- au ted Governor's Letter to - . ham's Sheriff, ' Dur RUSSIAN RIOTS " Ralejgh Fair Fakirs Harvest Raleigh, Oct : 28.-- The thousand fakirs who were at ths State Fair, the greatest number ever together in the Turnpikt to Top Blue Rldgs. Frank Os borne to Uavo Chsrlottt lor Now Ycrk. Hotpltal lor Inun. Splendid Cot ton Picking Wsathtr. Docrou . School AtUadancs. -J .. Raleigh, Oct. 28. Stale Treasurer Lacy says that work on the Wilkesboro Jefferson turnpike is . being done as rapidly as possible and it will be com pleted to the top of the Blue Ridge by the end of the year. This is not a macadam road, but is of earth. ' ' The Governor's letter to sheriff of Durham county instructing him not to show any favors to the prisoner Mur- ,ray. State, certainly had in ' their ranks a MV ima tn have ereatM mill atir. great number of professional thieves. The newspaper had said that Murray All hands are said by observant people was to be given all sorts of special to have stood together, and the public ( privileges and news to thaV effcct had t have certainly been plendered. So far jcome from other sources. .The Gover- Btgun I Province. Ttlograph Operators . Urged to ttrlks and Cut of all Communl- cation. . St Petersburg, Oct. 28. Advices re ceived from provincial centres show that r'oting, I which has been dreaded so long has at last begun. So far how ever the disturbance has not become general. Instances are recorded how ever where the troops fired on the peo ple and the demonstrations have been attended with bloodshed. What effect these encounters will have upon the people can only be guessed. If it stirs them to the point of demanding revenge for the wrongs to their fellows, terrible times are certain to follow, Strenuous efforts are being made to call out all the operators and this, the only remaining means of communication may be stopped before, the night is over. Dispatches coming into the city telling of disorders are meagre and give few details of rioting which has occurred. . . '.-. ' . more than 200 persons are known to have had their pockets picked. HALLOWEEN TONIGHT. A Tims Hoaond Gala Time whn Witch and Ghottt Got Loom. Today or rather tonight will be Hal loween. It is an occasion of mirth and joyous festivity and whatever of super stition there is about our nature, is ex ercised onthis night ... The custom originated in Scotland, and the quaint ' Scotch poet, Robert Burns,' describes the festival in one of his poems." It is one of the fads of society to have halloween parties and and an article in ' the Washington Star tells how it should properly be conducted. It aays that an open fireplace is a real necessity to car ry out the idea correctly, even the con ventional gas log will do if there is nothing better, or in extreme cases a kitchen stove with a red hot coal fire. The object is to have the spooks pla and aa is well known they will not come out there if any day light or artificial light save that made by the open grate. The grate fire lends a wierdness and mystery about the time that is favor able to BpooRs. - -. '- The party 'should not begin be fore 9 o'clock and better a little ater ' as the real fundoes not commence un til after midnight - It is not necessary to attire one's self in their best bib and tu :ker, tn fact it should be prohibited for quite likely there will be some rough play and good clothes maybe rained. : i .:'-.' The guests should be equally divided and the best results come from a small number of congenial friends, not over 24. " Among the requisites for a success ful party is first quantity of chestnuts which, may be either large or small, two or three pounds of stale marsh mallows and some rosy cheeked apples and have as many long thin- sticks of wood as there are guests. A good story teller and above all a good person to manage- the party - will be found to make the occaiion pleasant and memor able, . . ' There are -number of games and tricks to play and when properly con ducted there is no end of fun. After the games are over the guests get to the refreshment part which is just as wierd as the other part " They roa4 their chestnuts in ihe fire and the ap : pies and marsh mallows at the end of their sticks and the witches having been tempted out of their hiding places will come in the room. Ghosts too are no strangers at these parties, - Maryland Democrats Divide on Dis- franchisement of Negro. Washington, D. G. Oct 9-If the con census of opinion as expressed by men best informed as to political sentiment in Maryland be accepted, the Demo crats who are . making a fight for .the adoption of the Poe amendment to the Constitution, designed to eliminate the ne2;ro from the electorate, will be un successful. The party is not united on the question indeed, it is woefully nor's letter was to the sheriff, and this morning he said he had not heard from that official as yet But that news papers had published a denial that spec ial privileges were being given, "What the Governor had said had been based upon reports. , ;,,. Walter Murphy of Salsbury, who spent the day here to procure a charter for the Salisbury Transfer Company says he had an enjoyable visit to New York and got right into the big politi cal fiirht there. He says that J ames Osborne will be re-elected district at tomey and added that Frank I. Os borne of Charlotte will probably make New York his home. He is now in that city. " fj jr'-- A great deal of work is in progress at hospital for the insane here and the class of construction is of the very highest, equal in fact to that upon the original building, which is said to have been one of the best built structures in the State. The new wing for women will accom odate a large number, and has reached the third story. All the brick , work and nearly all the other work- on the new boiler house is now finished. i Rain fell again today, but was light. It is a singular fact that from -the first of September to this date there have been only three days in which cotton could not be picked all day, and on two of these days there was- picking : for half a day.'. This is a very remarkable condition of affairs. The reports on the public school at tendance show a decrease in the num ber of children of school age In thirty one of the counties as compared with last year, there being an increase in all the other counties. , Here in Wake the decrease is 438. In this county there is an increase of 176 colored children of school age. ; ' ROOSEVELT AND THE SOUTH. DISFIGURED i wins ra I found In Uu RUSSIAN EMPIRE TOTTERS Collision Botwpon Soldltrt and Cltlztnt. " Royal Treasures ot Czar Rtportod -. 8ont to" Denmark. - , St Petersbug, October 29. While the day passed quietly without blood shed in the Russian capital, and while the city is outwardly calm, today ' de velopments all indicate that a crisis is Ths President Visit Fraught With More lm portaneoThan tho Mors Visit. Ho Hit Established Himself In tho Heart of . the People. New Orleans, La., Oct 30. The real political significance of President Roose volt's southern tour, which terminated in a veritable blaze of glory at New Orleans, is fraught with far greater potentialities than is as yet generally recognized. In fact as well 'as theory he is how the leader of the southern people 'who through personal contact with him have come to recognize in the man that broad degree pf splendid Americanism which : stands for fair play, first, last and for all time, which strikes a responsive chord in the South erner's breast The effect on the na tion of this new f u i affection of the south for the na" on' t chief is sure to be far reaching. ' Si i;e the Civil ;War the bulwark of Rep iblican power has be3n the solid D ucratic front pre sented by the JSoi aern States, and as strength of tl ft jilwark the Republi can politician!, nave frequently banked The south has now accepted Mr. Roosevelt not as the embodiment of Republican party ideas, but as the em bodiment of the fair play dogma which every American is taught to believe in from the cradle. '. Thus, so accepting him. his opinion aud plans now find support in the Southern States which, at least so long as he occupies the Whitehouse, cannot fail to curtail the nower of the Republican party as a party. - The legislation proposed by Mr. Roosevelt is sweeping in its scope, but it dovetails perfectly with Tunerican ideas of fair play, hence the warmth of his receDtion at all southern cities visited by him. He has unfurled the banner of non partisanahiD has abandoned strict con struction of oartv politics; and for the first time in the history of . the new south the Democratic party as a whole has accepted a Republican President on his own terms. Clearly then a new era la dawning in the political affairs of the govornment at Washington. His advice to the negroes atTuskegee was to Improve themselves as artisans mechanics and in the trades, and to which Brushed Scales from Flee Like Powder-Hinder Physicians Six Months But Grew Worse -r Some Said Face Would Be Marked for Life Now Without a Blemish. ' CUTICURA REMEDIES. WORK WONDERS. - "As I was a sufferer with eczema I write to tell you what a great friend ticura Kemeaies. in six months I had tried three doctors, but did not get any . better.. .It' was on my body and on my feot so thick that I could hardly put a pin n me with out touching ec zema. My face was covered, my eyebrows came out, and then it eot in mv eve. I then went to another doctor. He asked me what I was taking for it, and I told him Cuticura. He said that was a very snorl thine, but that he tnought that mv face would be marked for life. . But Cuticura did its work andjmy face is now lust as clear as it evca Was. "My brother-in-law toine about the wonderful vuticura remedies. I took his advice and got the Ointment Cnnn an4 U 1 ..l.'OTl f ' T wnshUn With the Cuticura Soan and then applied the Ointment and took Cuticura Resolvent as directed.' Ia a short time my face began to get better, and when I had ' token one "bottle of Resolvent I could brush J;he scales off mv face like a powder?. When I had taken four bottles my face was as clear as ever. -. - V "I told all my friends about my remarkable cure. I feel so' thankful want everybody far and wide to know what Cuticura can do. It is a sure cure for eczema. ' (siened) Mrs. Emma White. 641 Cherner Place, Camden, N. J., April 25, 1905." Complrt External and Internal Trearmmt tor trsry Bumor.trom Pimp! to Scrofula, from Infancy to Are, Tent.Wc. (Inform of Chocolate Coated PlUt,25c. per vial Of Wl), maTDcnidoiaiianigffiHi. A (logic ter (manouna. jwter imis m mem. lorp., aoic rmpe., auuea free, - now ra uw Burst Pipe Drowns Three Chicago, Oct. 29 Three lives were lost, property . value! M jiau.SSU-.was destroyed, scores of families were made rebuilt as soon as possible, Father Price ' said. It was designed to be part of an . extensive quadrangle. In the upper '. homeless and freight traffic on the New rooms were sleeping apartments and cn York, Chicago & St. Louis Railroad the lower floor the refectory and . also was delayed for several hours, on ac- the printing establishment o the Truth count of the breaking of a three-foot . . , , water main at Eighteenth and Clark , t. c.f.o. streets today. Water from the bur.t a). - " ' water pipe flooded several blocks, - night at a late nour ai me store oi pipe damaging a number of houses and resi dences. , " imminent. . Although the streetajure fiilorlwirh trmra and reinforcements keep away from the professions. are now pouring in from Finland, hej he declared, already are overcrowded, government seems utterly powerless to cope with the situation, and many calm observers seem seriously to believe that the present regime is tottering to its fall.. ' ''' 'x'C di- London, October 80. A dispatch from Odessa, October 29th. says: , A collision between the Imilitary and a crowd of students and strikers oc curred an hour ago. in Tirapoloskays street The soldiers, without warning, fired point blank into the people, killing twenty and wounding sixty.. The stu dents are holding a stormy conclave at whereas labor is one of the great needs of the south. It is needless to say that tins also the south advocates heart ily. - - Clearly, then, social equality Is just as abhorrent to Mr. Roosevelt as it is to the southern people, and with his bar rier removed the President's policy of fair has logically enough,brought to play his standard in a body the manhood of the south, for there is no reason to be lieve the negro will ever again figure in the relations of Mr. Roosevelt and southern people. . '. the university. ' v:;:od-andthe Republicans are using reportedrom Kieff that thr tration to defeat the amendment As regiments have mutinied in the Soutb- conilitions are now, the amendment will western province,and therere alarm not win, unless there be a great change jng reports here of the doubtful fidelity in sentiment before the 7th of Nowra-' of y, bitadlion of infantry. ber, or unless practiced politicians nave misread public sentiment Makes indigestion and assimilation perfect Mikes new red blood and lone. That what Ilolliater's Rocky I'ountiiin Tea will do Atonic for the sick and weak. 35 cents, Tea or Tab lets. For sale by F. S. Duffy. , Manchester, England, Oct 30. A dispatch s authority for the statement the czar -has shipped all the roya plate and Jewelry to Copenhagen. Th valuables were shipped on an Englial v .1. The cargo is Insured for $3, . - ' ' Corham's Silver ;:'. is the world's standard of quality and skill in silver craft A beautiful va riety shown at J. O. Baxter's, the lead ing jeweler. - - New York Cotton Market. The following were the opening and ilosing prices on the New York- Cotton Exchange, Oct 30. - Open , High . Low Dec 10.42 ran , 10.54 , . ; " ch 10.71 ' - Receipts 66.933 Last Year 94,619 Close 10.55 BIS FIRES n and Near Raleigh Cause tress. Dis Cement Roman Catholic Orohasaae. Detth an4 Is juries . of . Oocussnte. Dry Gostft Haute Burns. Supt. Joyner Beck ' : rrom Europe. . Farmers Re- ported Buying CottOR to -8torslt Raleigh, Oct 30. Unbounded sym pathy is expressed here for the suffer ers by the fire yesterday morning, at the' Roman Catholic Orphanage ; at Nazareth, two miles west, of Raleigh Great bravery was shown by the priests in cttrge of the building which was burned and by Thomas Wallace of New York, a young seminarian who has been there a year oi more; and who climbed to the top of the roof and urged two boys, John Glavish of Columbus county and Elvin Buffaloe of Raleigh, who had taken refuge there, to leap to the ; ground with him as the only chance of saving life. Wallace leaped on a pile mattresses but the boys struck the ground. Glavish died last night His eyes were burned and both legs and arms were broken,, there being also internal injuries, the distance from the' roof to the ground being about 45 feet Buffaloe, though badly injured will pro bably recover, Last night it Was thought he would not recover, but to day it is stated that the outlook is much . more hopeful Wallace, the gallant young fellow who did so much. is doing well and will recover quickly. Father ! O'Brien, who leaped from a third ?tory window is in bed but is not seriously in jured and will soon be alright ' The building burned was a brick, very tall, and cost about $25,000, the insurance upon it being only $6,000. It will be . . v. Compouad Is an efficient durable and water proof covering suitable tot old or mw felt, tin or metal roofs. . ' " Hyman Supply Company, New Bern, N C, Sole Agents in Craven, Jones, Pamlico, Carteret and Onslow Counties. . Manufacturers are Holten and Collins Co., Philadelphia, Pa. . ?.'-.' Pnahluar the OU Folk Alde. When the babies are cross aud a man would like a quiet retreat there Is none forhlm. I!ut lu a few years, when the t-hlldreu ore grown and he is lh the way, the daughters and mother put their heads together aud originate a den. There Is no den for the mother be cause she -gracefully eliminates herself by sitting In the kitchen or running over to a neighbor's. It Is her natural disposition to bide to a corner or re move herself entirely, and it is not the natural disposition of the father; hence the den. It has a coucn and some pipes and tobacco and the books which the neighbors haven't got around to borrowing as yet though If father begins a story today the book will be found to bo loaned out when lie wants to finish It tomorrow. The den Is a fashionable way of pushing the old man out If there Is one In your bouse, Mr. Man don't be deceived. Atchison Globe. - " , " Hclaon'a Famoua Signal. ' It is a fact that Nelson's famous sig nal to the fleet at Trafalgar was In Its original form. "England 'confides' (not 'expects') that every man will do his duty." , This is the story as given by Captain Pasco, Nelson's flag lieutenant on the Victory: "His lordship cam to me on the poop, and after ordering cer tain signals to be made about a quar ter to noon he suld, 'Mr. Pasco, I wish to say to the fleet "England confides that every man will do his duty,"' And he added, 'Yon mnst ba quick, for I have one more to make, which is for close action.' I replied, 'If your lord ship will permit me to substitute "ex oects" for "confides,"-the signal will soon be completed, because the word "expects" Is In the vocabulary, where as "confides" must be spelled.' His lordship replied in haste and with seeming satisfaction. That will do, Pasco: make It directly.'" - And the famous signal was made. London Chronicle. If you want a pretty face andjdelight- f ul air, Rosy cheeks and lovely hair, 10 66 Wedding trip across the sea, Put your faith in Rocky Mountain Tea. ' ' "" " ": " ' For sale by F. S. Dnff William Woollcott, where there is a general stock, largely dry goods and clothing. It broke out on the third flooi1 which is damaged to the extent of j 100 per cent, the stock there, being worth about $9,000; the second floor ia damaged 75 per cent and the first floor about 50 per cent, the value of the stock on the second floor being about $20,000, and on the first floor $11,000. The total insurance on the $40,000 stock is $34,000. State Superintendent of Public In struction Joyner returned this morning from Europe where he had been in company with Prof. Charles D, Mclver of Greensboro a couple of months. Cotton farmers in this section fay they have already as much of their cot ton picked ai they had by the end of last year. That there was very little top cropnd,thatthey had as.a rule kept closely with the cotton.; Those who are holding cotton complain of the bringing into this market last Friday and Satur day of a large quantity and say it was a very unfortunate step. Some farm ers are buying cotton right and left and are storing it A great many of them are sure the price will go to 12 cento shortly. . , . i a aa in 4 Tired out worn out woman cannot sleep, eat or work; seems as if she would fly to pieces. Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea makes strong nerves ana rich red blood. 85 cents, Tea or Talv lets. For sale by F. S. Duffy. - 1 1 J f, mM illsM ,. I - - : lafMtiK MtCOgW I , ... I "" . MWramerwAMlai;IN? We Extend You a Cordial Invitation to attend the Majestic Baking Demonstration at our store October 30th to Nov ember 4th only. -A representative of the makers of the Magnificent Range will snperintend this in person and will take pleasure in explaining the merits of the Majestic, Hot Coffee and Biscuits will be served. fcMli'iWlliflillll1 J. G. WHITTY & CO, J L. HARTSFIELD, Contractor anil Builder. OFFICk 931-2 MIDDLE ST. PH0HI tttv Would be glaa to ha&e any one inspect my Itoorh as it goes up, Laths For Sale Old Papers To Sell, j Time to put down carpets after fall cleaning. Papers will be needed. Call at Journal office and secure them for 15c per hundred. . 10.84 v OADTOXltA. Woatten's Studio, sT 92 East "Ftont St Latest Styles in Photo Portrcii TO TIC: IIEncnAirrrifjhavoi't Red Meat Tobacco in stock, write the factory we wH supply you L J TO THE COIICUMER: Ve Kive you our absolute guarantee that each 10c plug of Red Meat Is mads of better tobacco and contains more good solid juicy chewing qual itv f n r.Hif r 1 Oc rlu" of pny wf : -ht c,r. red or wold by 8"V f irtory Vrlta nam and au Jrcaa plainly her I "lr 1 t.Im a enrd wl.ich wi'J en!-.!a Kim to one 5c cut of Eed Meat Tobacco TT.Z tt my gt - r - ' --i -i ' ( Ti ,re i.r-nZ 1 1. it ran a. , . . , , ,
New Berne Weekly Journal (New Bern, N.C.)
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Oct. 31, 1905, edition 1
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