Newspapers / Greensboro Daily News (Greensboro, … / May 5, 1907, edition 1 / Page 2
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DAILY INDUSTRIAL 1. 3 RHGEOH ' .'MM FOR PART 10 CLECTIQfl F S Grand Jury Brings la Indictments i-. Aflalnst Former Officers i - of City. WEN HIGHER UP BLAfltED : ChIaM..-Mi,T 4-A nud jury today nfturned four joint tndictmetits against Jormer Chief of Police John M. Collins - and five other police and oity officers in ooimeotian with alleged corruption in the Chicago polios. ttpartmU6. . XM notion 01 uie grana jury i Jesuit of en investigation mada by' the lrfl f errice commisaicrn growing -out M cAarge to the effect that the oity : toolioe loose hid boan used during the feoent mayoralty campaign in the inter yet of Mayor Edward B.. Dunne, w" aa defeated tor leelaotiaD, Those wider indictment arei John fcCd3bu Comedy chief of police ; fern COoanefl, formerly eommis- : SUHIBI' OI pUOIID WUIKUj UU ' pt the Cemooratio city committee i Ed Inund H. JSoehe, oity purchasing agent and member of the Democratic oity com mittee;' Frank D. Oomorford, former bolice .attorney! Dateotive James Mc- Ihathj Deteotive Patrick MoNutty... In its report the grand Jury started' lhat "while the erideaoe presented has tatoaad us to hold . the f ornurr chief of ipofloa and Ms associates in the nnlaw Hal taniaaetione chiefly responsible for the toanajpesskms, we consider the hi paetcrs, captains and Beutenanta guilty M repaehensible conduct and deserving f 'severe censure for their actions in Joeing parties to the soliciting and ac Jreptmg of contributions, under stress, iTrom uiose 01 wwrr ituu uu w w.ia force." ' ' This indictment against former Gbief Collins charges mutilization 'f officials Records of the police department and Jity of Chicago and violation of the Criminal code. The bonds of the higher officers were eplaced at $5,000 on each indictment. 1 this makes the bond of former Chief of Police Collins $15,000. The bonds of 7ConneU, Eoche and Comerford $5,000 'aoh, and that of the two detectives $2,000 each. . It DEMQCiHTlG WASTE (Continued From First Page ) Won is the largest city in North Caro lina baring a population of thirty-five to forty thousand., Tiber the aldermen receive $100 each a year. In Raleigh, says Mr. Rollins, they re rave the same amount, while in Ashe- kille the aldermen are paid $300 a year Mr 800 per cent. more. "Why this difference,' asks Mr. Rol- )ins. , ; Air. Rollins argues that the people of Asheville should no longer submit to the present oppressive and unsatisfac tory condition of city affairs. : .'. ATTACK ON MEXICANS AT SAUNA CRTJZ Mexico City, Mexico, May 4. -Telegrams received in Mexico City from Sa fioa Oruz late this afternoon tend to Confirm a report from Vera Cruz to the effect that the Guatemalans made an attack m the Mexican lighthoi69 at San J?enito, on the west coast .abouf eight een miles from the Guatemalan port of Ocos. " . Tike telegrams from Salina Cruz state if bat the same rumots current in Vera Cruz regarding the attacks on the light' mouse are in circulation at Salina Cruz, land that the report there even goes to fthe extent or naming some of the Mex' gleans on whom the asault was mada fehe attacking force, it is stated, was nuch greater than those who defended the lighthouse, and rifles were -used. At the state department and. at the thmiemalan legation nothing is known kf the reported attack. rKKars suit against EXCHANGE WITHDRAWN New York. May 4. Henrv W. Taft find William M. lvins, counsel respective ly for the Nerw York cotton exchange . i . r .m ana xneordore n. juries, tn the suit. J?rioe has brought against the exchange, aeaking to overthrow' the existing sys tem of classification of cotton grades, annonad tonight that he had been agreed to have the questions raised in Mr. Price's snit determined by a ref aree. The referee is to be agr sid upon by tha counsel. Jt was also agreed that Uie pending notion of Mr. Price for an injunction against the exchange, restraining it from eairying out its. elaastiicatiun scheme should be withdraws. SJEORGlA BOT, TWELVB " 1 YEARS OLD, MISSING Kew York, May 4. At the request of the polbe of Atlanta, Ga., tha police of thje city tonight sent out a general ' n lor (jnaries Ainnonao Bandera, tve years old, who, it was stated, ad been missing from hit borne at No. il4 Decatur etreet, Atlanta, since lAprfl 21 The Geocgi authorities are of the ; opinion that the boy ran away and cane a a aw xont. It you can't . digest coffee POSTUM FOOD COFFEE . r "There's a Renion ' Read "The Road to Wellville," b'paokagaa. ... Taft Leaves for ii i i r ' ; 1 V-' ' . -'---i V if' I P ! 1 H ; it iatom'.Was . . -f . -i SECRETARY Washington, D. C, May 4. Secre tary Taft ieft "Washington tonight for Hampton Heads on the Tegular line lat accompanied by Mrs. Taft and General Crozier, Associate Justice Moody and Miss Mabel T. Boardnian. L pon amval at irt Monroe tomor row inori.ing the party will tranship to a private yacht and spend two ds.ys S TO LIQUIDATE EXPOSITION'S DEBTS story that big show insolv. ENT IS EMPHATICALLY DENIED. . Norfolk, Va., May 4. To coxplote In detail the coaatrurtiyn of the James town Exposition and liquidity all the floating indebtedness of thj exposition company, the board of du-jecors of the Jamestown, Exposition Company at : a meeting late this ovcaing authorize! the issuaiMM of $400,000 in boaii, thi 500 acres of improcved property, including macrc'tiecnt permanent burofigs. bemj offered as security. The matter of "negolioting Hw bonds was loft with the board )i governors and Treasurer Nathaniel Do"man. who is president of the National ltnnk of Commerce. President Tucker, Chairman C. Brooks, Johnstone and J. Taylor Ellyson, of the board of governors, are in New York negotiating the Joan. The report that the exposition com pany is on a finii( ''tl preeipicj wa de clared to be absolutely without founda tion by Barton Myers, who heads the financial department of the company. He says that the company' assets are far in excess of its liabilities. : The board of governors, the adminis trative body of the company, was ijin imously indorsed by a rising vo.'C by the forty directors. A BARBER PHILOSOPHER AND HIS LITTLE GAME An Anglo-German Innocently Discovers Great Talent Indicated by the Customers. It 5s only fair to Bay that I started j with a prejudice against that barber, : says a writer in London Punch. : He was fat and obviously Teutonic, and he kept me waiting in tie grossest way while he ftoished off a red-haired being, to whom he was gabbling in a husky whisper. I noticed that this individual K ... ... .1 , 3 was smiling liKe a man weu pieasea, and I hated his broad, contented grin. So I threw myself into the chair at last with come little liauteur. I felt disinclined for trivial conversation, and I resolved to keep this Teuton at a distance. Pint for some few misutci he .clipped in ailenca, handling his ecu- U. - 1.U,..1 n1m..l Itouch. He spoke at last. "You Vve he murmured, confidentially, "de 'air of a gifted man." I was slightly startled, but not. 1 think, annoyed. The man's remark was eomewhat ambiguous. Was he referring to my mein or to my nairi i sat in a nleased silence, and in a moment he had enlightened me. "Yes," he said half dreamily, as thouerh confirmins a first impression. "Dare is no doubt aoout is. uw grp, fair 'air it can only belong to a maa of dalent, per'apt of genius. I 'ava no ticed it so often, and I do not mistalc." "What on earth are you talking about!" I asked him briskly, but with out undue asperity. "I am a student of niacter, Zare," ha answered. ."I "are fotod dat all girts and faulta are refleoted in da 'air. ' I cell de nature of every irentleman 'oo comes beneath my 'anda, and l am ever dnrth- lul. JJare are some wwi x juum ugn and aome, Uka . yoarseli, aon I faa Wstrv nleaaa." ; J I tonsed a while, and still I waa aot annoyed.' Perhaps .there was something in tiii'inan'a idea--ll .these Cermana - .1. . . JI- f imbibe pnuosopny irom iae craaie. j thought of the 'many blind unappreei evtive people about, and I longed to eon''anged for murder gommirted ia a bat the Exposition OP WAR TAFT. in a careful inspection of the James town Exposition and in visiting the an cient town die of Jamestown, return ing to Washington next Tuesdiy.. It is staled that the secretiri visit has so connection with tlio financial affairs of ihe exposition, although he is a member of the government commis sion.. - ' ', ' FIGHT MASKED MEN AIDED BY ANIMAL, MISS BESSIE GREENAMEYER DRIVES THREE BURGLARS FROM HER HOME. ; Sioux City, la May 3. Expecting to meet her sweetheart, Miss Bessie Greenameyer opened the front door of her home this evening for three masked robbers, who marched in with pistols drawn. Defying their threat to kill her if Bhe made a sound, ihe young woman creamed loudly and gave battle. The girls slstcr-in-law, Mrs. A. G. Greenameyer, ran from her room up stairs with her bulldog, Tige, and promptly attacked the intruders. But for the danger of killing one of their own number the men would have shot the dog, and possibly the woman, but the burglars fled as ibest they could to escape the teeth of Tige. The commotion aroused toe neighbors and the men, with tome of their apparel missing, boited for an alley, where tbe police later found their masks. Mr.; Greenameyer, who ie a wealthy livestock commission merchant, had gone to his club ,and his wit and sui ter were alone., Mrs. Greenameyer has one of the finest collection of diamonds in the city. The jewels were all in the house, and Miss Greenameyer say she screamea to warn her sister to hide them. She was choked and thrown to the floor, but only slightly hurt. Hair of His front them with thie Bfmple but dis cerning barber. I felt instinctively that me man waa nonest. "You 'ava a somewhat gomplex na jure, taie, na Tesumed in tbe same Hoarse murmur.' "You are brave, nf- though some might call von rash, van are gentle and yet so strong that soma migm gaii you stubborn. AU die is IB' oigatea by your gnan fair 'air. Even my great natural modest v could not hide from me the fact that this Teuton had put his fiinger urion tiuits which I had often noted in my own character. And I liked him for his aim pie truth felt that if mine had chanced to be a lesser nature he would not have hesitated to point it out to me. Such me, so careless of tips and their own base interests are seldom met with in this callous world. Hv heart warmed to him; for very little I would nave grasped jua not altogether spot less hand. "Tell me mora about your theory," I said, pleaaantly, . "Dare are many aorta of 'aire, Zare," ha said, "and to de drained eve each one must dell it dale. Dare was, for inetanee, as red- aired gendmnaa for oom you 'ad to watt yon liddle n ment. "What did yon think of him!" asked rather coldly. Personally X had not faaen to tjxa man, "Ach! muck 'air la most instroootive. Dose dark red gurls are like 4a danger Xk upon ae rauway una. a max zuch 'air a dat is berilous to en rage. 'E will strike- as soonlook. To aek men it is wall to be most rivi!" "And what did you tell him?" I asked 1 fetid la von liddle gotnpllment upon Is undoubted parage, but I ah to warn 'nl against 'ia aa 'aaty anger. I told 'iin that vonea I gut de 'ahr of zuch a man as im and afterwards dat man was L...J LLE YIELDS PIT Surrenders to Corporation Com mission in an Important -Detail 'Washington, D. CL, May 4. Official information reached the interstate com merce commission today of the cancel Uvtion of traffic rrangement entered into June 18, 1S03, between the South ern Pacific Company and the Kan redro, Loe Angeles and Salt Lake railroad. In the opinion of the commission, the abrogation of the agreement if of ffie highest importance. The facts concern ing it were developed at he inquiry re cently conducted by the commission in to the relations of the Southern Pacific Company with other corporations and were made the subject of much discus sion. It was known to be the opinion of members of the interstate commerce commission that the agreement was in regard to the restraint of faraffk, and that it might subject the officials who entered into it to prosecution under the Sherman antitrust act. A part of the commission's Inquiry into the operations ,. of tie Harriman lines, inchiding ihe Southern Pacific Qamnany, was conducted at Los- Ange les, On. In that inquiry J. Boss Clark, an official of the San Pedro line, and a froter of former United States Sena tor W. A. Clark, president of the San Pedro Toad, admitted oh the stand that he understood, when the traffic agree ment was made between his road and the Southern Pacific, that for ninety-nine years on the class of traffic mentioned in the agreement the San Pedro officials could not make a change of rate with out the consent of the Southern Pacific Mr. Clark further said that that pro vrsion was not put into the agreement at the instance of his line. It developed from the traffic agree ment and from further examination of Mr. Clark that the San Pedro Company hid Agreed not to construct, during the life of the contract, additions to its main line or ' branch lines that would be in competition with the Oregon Short Lines "northward of the parallel ofSatt Lake City. Utah. What effect the abrsgafion of the agreement will have on the pending in vestigation -into the Harriman lines is yet problematical, tout the announcement of "the cancellation of the agreement is received toy the interstate commerce commission with great gratification. aion. It was my duty ao to warn Im." It struck me that duty, to a man eo simple emd so conscientious, must bo dangerous at times. I quite admired the restraint of the red-headed man, and I also wondered at the pleased grin which I had noted upon fats countenance. These thoughts were interrupted by the voice of the Teutonie barber. "Be'ind you, Zare. is von 'oo walh 'is turn," he whispered hoarsely. "You may cratch a limvse of "im in the glass, if you so bleaee. Dare is von 'oom it is certain dat I must anger, 'is limp black 'air dells me dat 'e is both bad and foolish. De drnth ia often bainful. but it must be dold. Acht Dare ia de sad difference between auch 'air, and dat which I 'ave joost ubon finished gut ting now." I glanced at the man whom ha indi cated, and was compelled to agree With his sorrowful verdict. It is a curious and suggestive fact that the villain in melodrama is invariably daric. sucn men as G. R. Sims ara unfailing -judges of character. I gave my barber sixpence for simself and I seemed to see a certain aadneaa in his eye aa he beckoned th dark-haired man to approach the vacant chair. He had ''any sympathy in the painful task before mm. ' w - But I had forgotten my umbrella, and i I reentered the toneorkl chamber I caught the hoarse whisper from my philosopher that has puzzled ma ever since. "Such 'air troves great dalent," he was saying, and upon the face of the dark -haired man there ahona a gentle amile. ' SLATES STATE NORMAL HAS COMMENCEMENT EXERCISES Winston-Salem, X. C, May 4. The annual commencement of the Slater State Normal and Industrial School began last (right with an enUrtainat by the practice senooi aepartnunv mm was indeed creditable. Tomorrow morn ing at eleven o'eloak th annual sermon will be praaehed by the Bay, John A Whittoc. DB. GARDNER, 7 TO 10 FAVORITE EASY WINNER Mew York. May 4 Dr. Gardner, to 10 favorite, scored an easy victory in tbe Montague stakes, one mile and a sixteenth, which waa run orer a muddy track at Jamaica today. The Excelsior handicap winner was considered to out class his field so much that ha waa al ways an odds on favorite. In spite of tha Brioe he waa heavily played. He won bv two lengths. jrruette won tne jwseaaie ataxea py three lengtha. MADISON AND STONEVILLE WILL GO "DRY-SAYS PREACHER Winston-Salem. M. May- Tha Rev. K. u Davis, eUtc Jaetnaar for the Anti-Saloon League, was ta the city yesterday afternoon enroute to Greens boro. He returned to Madison today, where ha win make an address temor Mr. Davis told friends here that Mad son nnd Stoneville would both vote "dry" next Tuesday, That la, they will elect aldermen who ara opposed to li censed saloons. Ha has lectured at both d laces. Mr. Davis expect to deliver a series of temperance leoturea fai this city next fau. ' -v- THREB FATALIt'sORNED IH A MIDNIGHT FUE Grand Rapids, Mich., May 4 In a midnight fir that dsatroyed tha home of Mrs. Frank Telford at Eepklna etatkm, a few miles aouth of here, Thomas Com ing, ageds twenty-seven years, waa burnea to aeam and Mrs. 'jauora ana her daugMer Sadie, aged thirteen, snf tared fatal burns. . , liRI details of g::;.ft Enormous Prices Paid for Fur ulsfclngs for New tato Capitol Harrisburg, Pa,, May 4. According to the officials reports to the auditors of the capitol investigation commission, issued today, the, state paid $115,910.13 for decorations and furniture in the two rooms of the new capital occupied by the Senate librarian. Of this $105,- 046.99 was against the main room and tae Daianc against the private, ottice. AH of this went to John H. Sanderson & Co, except $56,138.78, which was paid to the Pennsylvania Contraction Company for metal filing cases. Sanderson was paid $1,641.60 for two typewriter desks; $1,780.20 for two sofas; $4,4i for three tables; $1,115.20 lor three pairs of silk curtains i 9225.90 for a- clock; $2,146.12 each for three bronze chandeliers, and $4,100 for paint ing and decorating. BACHELORS OFFER DHL fMHS ACCEPT WANT FINS IMPOSED IF DANVILLE WOMEN REFUSE TO WED OS RECEIVE WOOERS. i ;.y:. . , Danville, HI., May .4. An uneffeoted move has been made by the bachelors of Danville in the fight to prevent the appeal of the unmarried women for taxation of the aingle men . going through the council. in a counter petition the bachelors ask that the eity council enact an ordi nance fining every unmarried-woman who turns down a wife-seeking man $50. They also ask that council formulate some plan by ' which the unmarried women will be forced to meet the bach elors and give them an opportunity of pressing melt suits. . wmie Mayor jjewman, unmarried, has been" suffering great humiliation as a result oi toe attempt oi tne women to force their ordinance, he is not alone now. At first the women thought they would make the mayor their sola sub ject of attack, but ' now they have turned upon two candidates for other offices. The two are John Tbrrenoe, past fifty years, candidate for city clerk on the Republican ticket, and Oliver D. Mann, aingle and hopeless, candidate for city attorney on tne uemocratio ticket. Both men nave been told that unless they show some sign of changing their ways before election day, tomorrow, they will be snowed under by auch a storm of votes in favor of their married opponente that their friends will not recognize them, i ne nignt alter the notification of the candidates Mann ap peared at a ball aeoompanied by a wom an. . - . BODY OF MISSING 111 (Continued From First Page.) by tha fact that Dr. Marvin aa well af detectives who stood on the spot when they burned the tall saga grass from it. Further than tha marsh has been trampled ver time and again within tha last week by neighbors and no sign 01 the eaild waa aeon. Dr. Marvin went on a run to the place described by Pleasanton and gent ly picked up the little form, putting nis cap from the face to make sure that it waa Us boy. Being satisfied that it was bis son, the doctor wraped the body in a sheet and carried him to tha house, where he notified the family. Dr. Marvin ia convinced that hi aoa met with foul play. Shortly after tha body was found ha said: Though 1 am unable to examine Ho race closely - until tha aoroner ar rives, I am certain ha waa murdered, Ms body brought back and left lying on the marah to give tha impression that ha wandered out there and died. The clothing abowed no signs of having been burned, as would undoubtedly have been the case had tbe body laid there when the fire swept over tha marsh." The doctor would not allow an exam, nation to be mada by any on until tha coroner and a physician bad mada a full and complete investigation. Attor ney General Hastings and his deputy will ae to tha enuninatioB of the body, and if foul play ia shown, to order ar rests if possible. ;. Detectives who have been on tha caw ara inclined to tha belief that the wan dered into tha marshes from tha farm on tha dav of his disaDnearance. and be ing overcome by tne cold, teu exnauaiaa where tne noay was louno. WINSTON MISSIONARY Sneolal to Dally Industrial New. Winston-Salem. N. C May 4. The D. C. Rankin Miaalonary Society of fhe nrai rresoytenaa cnuren, aomposeai 01 tCa young ladies and tha young married laaiea in tne congregation, waa enter tained 04 yesterday afternoon by Misses Mary and Mitta Wiley, at their borne in Soruce street. ' About forty members war present. '-Mrs, Robert Nissen had a moat interesting paper on "Tbe Worn am Who Gave Herself." "Go, Giv. and Pray," furniebad the them for moat inafiuativa arUolaa, read by Mil Robina Miokl. and Flora Leak. . So enthuaiaaua waa Mrs. Henry, Bofctt in presenting, th need of money for the work in Africa, that $50 was nledeed in a abort while by those v eat for tha work, Uds lav additioa to their oot wnieh they ' Map up tn the ENaabeth Blak boepHaL at Souohow, a H. MoMaatera baa gone to Norfolk to aao tha Jetnaatowo . Evnoiiuoa, .- TV (-r . i - 1 ll PilODLEu SOLVED lailmi Km 8j a Bimplt Em ord Scbrn Tnii ' Dw It DETAILS OF THE ILAU. Biw the Vtto Borlag t Carda Will Chfifer the Fxogma From Station -U Ststio f Ever Car 1 ; ' iBTrastit . i That the preMsm af solving the tre Iaea4ena firelcht . ear abortage on tbe taUvaja Mrjm)Mt Aiperioa has heaa eeived, la the oslaion expressed by a striker of tha foremost railway men at aha entry when interviewed this mora, nkg wath regard to the plan now under aaaataaratlon hy the American Katlway House.- ' tea ta nothing mere er less than to keep all tae record of an an all Haea la the eoaatry fcr ana aat4 iS same aiatsia . a aatt at 'eartar aaaa, aneh as kaa altaadr been PM9aairf Keeei Oetmlestaa for voUaamlr mtmUtg eoeratUaa of aD i jM'TSicmM mm ' w Stm-fiL . .;" 1 .11 - at a et f "sign port" reaerda os ft dtCernt tTnltad States government lapartaaaata at Washtagten. Thl plan, leoordlng ta axpralona et eplalon ok lalned from the railroad men Interviewed, ipparently will prove th salvation ef the Mippero, wha now ara aUoiuUly unable ta get eagh freight ar to carry their roe da, and will relieve ta railroad f oeera ef the eanntfy ef an Immense amount ef detailed work and tone et boaka and ledgers. HOW CARS ARID TRACED. Uka all epoch-making Innovations, thla schema Is so simple a th fac ef It that railroad men are taking one another why nobody ever thought of tt before. Briefly, It Is a system ot card, indexed by "sign post" guides for station and ear num bers, ' whloh ahew at a glance the name of the t nipper, tha number af the oar. the goods being shipped, exactly wawe th ear 1 aeoardlag to It daily Droareaa. when tt la da, to retch It destination, and. vta aa well a post- oara ayamm wnareay ine man ai iae ether and af ta Ua la autlfled la ad vanoa lost exactly wbea hi goods will reaoh nun. It is Jvt ilka navtag a nuaiatura rail war riaht oa tha railroad amo man's deck. I! renr nleee of rolling Block and evarr town ar actually represented by a oar af a certain answer er etna, hvwbi eaa got last, n books ar aeoasaary, am tha Stan wha U watotttoc tha ear' prag ma haa th locadoa af n ear insUatly available at any moment wunoui loosing ikfink iv reoora ar ooiog any apegiai .kibTWa Tt I, hi ward, an automatls duplication ot th movement oi me vari ...... - , r ' , avail ronae oara awra nimw ana traitfit car eve any and 0 Ua, OORPOKATlONa OH TU iCMm - The ptan, aaaetdtaa; to Ohalraian Hale af the naiailsslia. la aethiag ether ta" thTrmte ttatea iUe DtreWai kat ike big fife Jaearaaoe -aia, w eamtatieu havo leag aaaae a apyaUKp M tSeae aard c mtoasa, walh aire aayeolrod lfoiatia at a 'V? oaWiaaHartamg Halaiii ef the plan ae aew eetuvC the Amerleaa Railway Olearlag Ho" m aao that ealie for a traae-awfk avt to Maatlfy tat ears ot eaoh anroad. a aaatter , en, waeae era C-'-r f t e iwaabif. ay the aae afTIaTt J mt H I asveetad that the a - brwJ alaat . j more tkaa taaiy a .Mt4 a 1 1 w. U cava wm he taataatiy . tn . a Mtoaable !" of thaee ...j Mtanta. as Diaaaad at preaeet. aew- tvor, U that the elork who la ka m Uk ef .tJiovejaU VpMtXsr M Jhjg flAl BJTttjV aa ao plot. t so a' r"7 at - etanj ; uadaratood, a line ef suuuaf cards that he emn eaallr duplicate 4n miniature em shitty rviUBf steak mad aa Dm ttir yi- WORK 07 TH ClMBSSt "1 . ' -Vp ta the praaeat feu haa been hanfled by aeustdlag tae etc? atmher te comae eocoe yetamea: Baah af ta alerka at tampttaa; ta this war mv track af tha ears ia asatgaad a eertala aariea af aaav bar to follow. Tor instanoa, one wodli havw ta ka traak at the awetaents at all fretant eara nnmbered from 4,000 ta 10000. another aa area 10.000 to 14,000, ata The remit Is that each clerk's ware (a araottoallf- known eair to nlmeelt. n4 n order t And the whereabouts of aajl one ear a prmr-aanea tke eotyfkf a Cblnea paacW an t K saag tWaajll wnn every Hew well tha new aehetae af aaMtraa m la W4mMmc to ahawn la the ftaert a cS Tjnf the bit roada with head. the t roada with head Te Oity.- tuiwrilM aasrten tJ lrtw Taif Oty. Aerdlasj ta tS anleC oterk, aay eoqAer af aa eaa this K7 mm f te wrk poet. mg aa raeeraa, t ao eaaaa iiaaa, slm- Sly by dividing up the -reeord cards saeag Man.-: -. .... , KB. HALO'S STATjaJBNT, . , Oar tracing is another Ham which, under the method w In vogoe, reqnlraa a (air. slsed army of competent ma working ander a chief ear accountant. A special arrangement haa been made ln this new System, wfaset) the ooaunleston ta now aenaldering, fer stafllfying this awtteg f oar tracing. As explained by Ohairmaa Rata, tha an ttra aoaema af tbe "ear pool" plan rta apea thsa fuadaitea: At present th freight oar throaghout th country are running onlyabeattwenty-fonf mileea day, which means that they ar la motion oa for each ear.-tuei in (raelag trelaM eai. aa average of only ana her tn "m. effort to relieve tni situation 07 ouyug mm tret (fat ear have fclUd-as a matter et faot. tha rallreada bought mere car laat year than ever be tare m th hlatery ef American rallroadlag. To aupplr awa. aunt additional traokage to aeep sne care la motion would mean an expenditure ot about 11400,004,000 a year far av year.. . . , : . BiMPMorrr or thb plan. The whole problem of solving th car shortage, therefore, has resolvtd Itself Into a Question ef being able ta keep south eaN cinc araTtp a ahasamaMaMsa n-ay.WieaaV. I- III S if -7H v '- I' " aa " 1 , , Postal ear to Bjgaa) ajad ant when ear lot sblpaaoat atarta, W4 U lUfta frees petnt t polat a tram and to saalledwaea deattaanoa 1 : such track af tha ear new ia eperatlen that they can be kept In motion a maxi mum amount ef the time. It la aat thla result waiea the plan now pat forward for th approval ef the American Rail road dear lag House expeota te aecem plUh. "Never 1 railroading history haa th car ahortage of thla country been ao general and severe," declared Chalnnaa w Bala , te-cnav -Itat.aaflr haa a pag aea a awaaaw a"?". v aadpaata, bat laataad at arwotaa brtgW ar. the situation ia eavkenlag daily. And aaleas m aahems of a araeucai aatar .... ' ?. . la adapted at coo tae annui a te gr week la week,' ; A BRIOOa KTDATXOKi . . Vraam -lfaaacor B. T. MUohear ef tha ptoW tork Osatral Uaee say the VaadeN but aratem la further behind ia, eedari than was th ease a year ago, th coal, train boiag much creator, while the aaaai baataaaa rtsolf t not antte so Wa. 4 atrlkmc example et aew this ear skortagt is atfoetlnk analnM la that th mtaet . depeadeal upoa th VanderbUt line a4 A been steadily ehuttlng dewa owjng t thi famine In earal . th la'ag af tha Aasartoaa RaOwM ClaartPf hlaaoo Oiajaita 1 bolsf moid axty awaited by railway ma all evoi . tae anatry, aa thay ad raallso the vttal and tMBMdiate aaoowtty f gattiag aaarj freight eara la motion and keeping trtol ; C tham tn acme sue eoonmoa-s so, HMv
Greensboro Daily News (Greensboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 5, 1907, edition 1
2
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