2 THE RALEIGH ENTERPRISE. Thursday, May 11, 1905. THE RALEIGH ENTERPRISE. An Independent Newspaper Pub lished Every Thursday J L. RAMSEY, -Editor and Prop., Raleigh, N. C. Office of publication, Law Build ing, 331 Fayetteville Street. Subscription Price : One Year, in advance, $1.00. A blue X mark on your paper shows that your subscription has ex pired, and is an invitation to renew. Remit by registered letter, money order or check. If renewal is not received within a week, paper will stop. Entered as ecnd-class matter May 12 1904, at the poBtofflce at Rale' ph. N. C, under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1879. That storv about soft-shell crabs being sent from New Bern to Denver by telegraph sounds a bit fishy. Baltimore has at last voted in favor of a sewerage system. That town votes slowly, but votes exceedingly fine. Four hundred thousand shad have been placed in Neuse River near New Bern. The shad may roe up the river. A minister at Monroe is talking of going into the poultry business. The poultry business is more likely to go into the minister. Of course the many car-loads of strawberries that rotted at Chad bourn were part of the crop that was injured by the frost. Mel vin Angel has surrendered at Asheville. He was wanted for coun terfeiting. Perhaps it will turn out that he was not much of an angel after all. It is understood that several of the professors at the A. and M. College have asked for an increase in salary. The Board is considering the question. Dr. Keller, the eye doctor, had to leave Charlotte because he couldn't make the officials see that he was the man to write legal prescriptions for whiskey. It is said that whiskey will make a man see double. Perhaps that Char lotte optician really thought his pre scriptions for whiskey would cure defective eyesight. If it reauired three thousand peo ple to witness the arrival of a train at the old depot in Durham, how many thousand will it require since the handsome new station was opened ? The Grand Lodge of Odd Fellows is now in session in this city, and the two hundred delegates are receiv ing a cordial welcome. The member ship in this State is about 11,000, being greater, we think, than that of any similiar order. DEATH OF WASHINGTON DUKE. Washington Duke died at his home in Durham Monday at 2 p. m. at the age of between eighty-four and eighty-five. He was probably the wealthiest man in the State, and had retired from business several years ago. ; Mr. Duke was a plain man, was not highly educated, and though he had an honorable record as a soldier, he was never known generally as "Colonel" or "General" Duke. He did not like titles, and they were never bestowed upon him, hence his acquaintances spoke of him as Wash ington Duke and that was more pleasing than any title that they might have bestowed. It has been said is often said that men acquire distinction in let ters, in business or politics, or great wealth because they are lucky, or through some chance fortune which is unexplainable. But that is all er roneous. Some acquire all of those things by industry, economy and similar traits. Others by possessing "the characteristics named, and by seizing opportunities overlooked by the average man. But if you will sit down and talk for fifteen minutes with a man who has achieved great ness in any line, you will soon learn something that you did not know, will be told something in words that you never heard used in that con nection before, and you will soon feel the overpowering influence of the man and decide then and there that you are not talking to an ordinary man..'., . Such a man was Washington Duke. In the plain unvarnished, ordinarily dressed man, a stranger would not have recognized the multi-millionair and founder of the American Tobac co Company. But had he come in contact with Mr, Duke he would have decided that this is not an ordinary man. Mr. Duke knew nothing of Latin or Greek. He cared nothing for it for his own purposes in life. But he regretted that his educaion was inferior to that which other men had. So he had Trinity College moved from Randolph County to Durham that is, the name and he and his sons have given more than a million dollars in aid of the great institution in order that a greater number of young men and young women might be educated, for in en dowing Trinity College he, by a mas ter stroke, compelled all the colleges in the State to open their doors to boys and girls and give them an equal chance for an education. When Washington Duke returned from the war it is said that he only had 50 cents. He began to work and raised tobacco. Forty years ago the manufacture of tobacco was an un known art. Mr. Duke saw the ad vantages of granulating the leaf and putting it up in small, neat bags for smokers. He soon had a growing business., The first "factory" was a small log building. Later he moved to Durham, then a small village on the North Carolina now Southern Railway, and built a little better factory. He trained his sons in manu facturing tobacco. He saw that the public preferred his output, and it grew rapidly. Competitors saw that it was a good thing and aome of them soon became powerful. All of them advertised liberally,, and the output of a few of, the larger fac tories went to every portion of the globe. The culmination was the organiza tion of the American Tobacco Com pany and the purchase of most of the leading tobacco factories in this country, and Mr. Duke was the first president of that company. Yet he was not the moving power, for it was not a part of his talents to en gineer great financial and consolidat ing schemes. His sons, J. B. and B. N. Duke, and others, did the ac tive work in that great corporation. The other son, B. L. Duke, was a son of Washington Duke by his first marriage. He has been engaged in manufacturing tobacco, but never was an active factor in the American Tobacco Company. As a philanthropist, Mr. Duke con fined his gifts to Trinity College and to various orphanages, though he may have helped the needy in his immediate locality at various times unknown to the public. Speaking of the overcrowded con dition of the insane department of the State Penitentiary, the Char lotte Observer makes a gQod sugges tion that the surplus be used to en large the insane department. We have suggested a number of schemes to dispose of that surplus, but they have never brought any results. If the penitentiary will not pay the na tional debt, it might make a few im provements at home. A TRIBUTE TO AMERICA. Some time ago an absurd rumor went abroad that Japan wanted the Philippine Islands, and that it would bring on war with this country soon er or later. A few days ago in New York, Baron Kaneko, of Japan, spoke to the toast, "Japan and the United States." He said in part: "The more I lived in this country I found that patriotism is born in the heart of every citizen, and we in Japan have told our soldiers to fight like the American colonists in the morning like boys, at noon like men, and in the afternoon like demons whenever they had to face their coun try's enemies. "Some say the Japanese are trying to drive the Americans out of the Philippines. I can say now for all of Japan that it is not so. I can say solemnly that the Japanese will not consent to have you Americans leave the Philippines, for you stand for justice and Anglo-Saxon civiliza tion, and we welcome you and want you to stay there. "When the Panama Canal is "fin ished, . America will rule the com merce of the world. We are not afraid of you, for you are our good neighbor, and the best friend we have. We will welcome your navy, for where the Star Spangled Banner goes there will be individual rights and political freedom and equality for all." ' The Enterprise will go to twenty six new subscribers this week, that number having been added since our last issue, which is worth talking about these dull days. PROGRESS OP THE WAR. There are indications that Mar shal Oyama intends to force the Russians to battle at an early date. The result will be a complete route, for the Russians have not been able to recruit as fast as the Japanese. It is believed that Rojestvensky and Niebogatoff have formed a junc tion. Under pressure the two admi rals have moved out of French wa ters ttnd the Japanese are in a good humor again. The claim is made that the Rus sian fleet is now 25 per cent stronger than the Japanese fleet, but this Russian claim is not taken seriously. Unless the Russians have learned more about handling ships and can do better shooting, the size of the fleet is immaterial. Togo is guard ing his movement s, and no doubt, will give a good account of himself when the crucial moment comes, if it ever does. At present the fleets are still some hundreds of miles apart. The esteemed Charlotte Evening Chronicle objects to our reference to that city as a "miniature Babylon." Of course we meant to say "modern. Babylon." The Asheboro Courier has adopted the cash-in-advance system. Stransre that others do not. How long would a railroad last if it carried passen gers on credit? How long would a bank last if it loaned money without endorsement or collateral ? The news paper that does a promiscuous credit business is taking as much risk, and but for the habit a portion of their subscribers have of "paying up" now and then, the paper would go under. The leaks in a business conducted in that manner are large enough to make a frugal man rich. iletropolis of the State. That's mean ! Ramsey's town, Ra leigh, has a Christian saloon that makes the city from five to ten thou sand dollars cash in each month, where the sick are supplied without prescriptions. Here we have to drink branch water three times a day, sev en days in the week, until we get sick on it, and when we get a few prescriptions filled, to cure us up then the metropolis of the State is called Babylon. Charlotte People's Paper. Overdid It. Mrs. Passay: Mary, wasn't that gentleman asking for me! The New Maid : No, mum. He described the lady he wanted to see as bein' about forty, an' I told him it couldn't be you. Mrs. Passay: Quite right, my dear. And you shall have an extra afternoon off to-morrow. The New Maid : Yes. mum thankee, mum. Yes, mum; I told him it couldn't be you, for you was about fifty.: m .: ; v Mrs. Passay: And while you're taking your afternoon off you'd bet ter hunt a new place! Cleveland Leader. Her Clever Scheme. Fanny: Why in the world do you send away for so many catalogues and then never buy anything ? Suzctte : To keep the postman coming here. I don't want those wo men across the street to know that Jack and I don't correspond any more. Detroit Free Press.