PAGE EIGHT
THE HALIL
1. MES
nHHiiiHiiiiiHimminniiiinimnmiitiimiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiii.niiinijiiiiiiiiiiiimmiiiiiij^
=
E
■ ^ S3
2
E
E
MBER 7, 1913.
Special Correspondents of The Times
A Roster of Writers Who Are Keeping Readers Posted On
the Daily Events of Their Respective Communities
Apex
Benson
Chapel Hill
Durham ,,
Durham .,..;.....
Dunn
Duke
Elizabeth City ....
Fuquay Springs ..
Goldsboro
Greenville -.......-.
Greensboro
Hillsboro
Henderson
Kinston ,.,,.
Louisburg .........
Littleton .....
Mebane
Mount Olive .
New Bern
New York City ....
Oxford
Pittsboro >,.......
Roxboro ..........
Rocky Mount
Rolesville
Sanford
Smithfield
Scotland Neck
Trinity College
Wake Forest
Wake Forest College
Washington
Washington, D. C. ..
Warsaw ...........
Wilmington
Wilson
Wilson
Youngsville
....Lucinda B. Allen.
....Jas. T. Le'e
...J. F. Hackler
■ ...O. G. Barker
. .. Miss Mildred Turner
... Clarence J. Smith
...E. S. Yarborough
...Herbert Peele
-. .> A. J. Fletcher
.■,>.Robt. L. Denmark
- •-. Miss Essie Whiehard
...Chas. A. Hines
... Jos. A. White
...Colin MaeNair
...O. W. McDevett
...A. 0. Dickens
• . .T. B. Rose, Jr.
...Rev. F. M. Hawley
• •. Homer Brock
...H. I. Crumpler
• ..0. O. McIntyre
• ••Mrs. W. L. Peace
■ ••Chas. A. Brown
• •■N. C. Yearby
• ■ ■ Robt. Dennis
• • • W. T. Debnam
• •• W. S. Weatherspoon
• • A. Vermont
• • - E. J. Procter
■ • • Banks Arendell
• • Mrs. J. R. Crozier
■ •P. S. Daniel
■ • -C. L. Payne
• •Geo. H. Manning
• • R. C. Pridgen
• •T. W. Pridgen
• •T. W. Chambliss
• • Mrs. J. R. McLean
• ■ W. L. Eddinger
THE TIMES GOES
ALL THE WAY TO
BROKE INTO BANK
CHARGES THE LAW
UiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiniuiiiiiiiiiniHiiHnniiiiHiiiiH)
AT BOYLAN-PEARCE’S
E
E
i]«MI988ilbEI8n839^9!II9K3hiiJ39ll9l9!S9il9li99!liillll!liiIin9IIHII3l9SI!i9ni!i!li9linill3HhHH9ll9nni!Hlin9!!9HiH3IH9l!!llii!9lllllin!9l!in
CLARENCE COLEY’S
What makes Admiral vif
si '
•W
JEWISH NEW YEAR
^ ID BE CELEBRATED
irpirz j out more, tb;
of our work depended, not upon our
equipment, but upon our motives.
The Jewish new year’s day, accord
ingly, is placed by a wise tradition at
the beginning of Autumn, when men
enter upon their enterprises and ob
ligations with zest and zeal. Just
^.ftruM^^.. J1
Home of Good Motion Pictures.
TODAY
Rabbi Brav To Offlcate at
Services To Be Held
Here
Fast Train Service Spreads
Today’s News Across
State oil Same Day
Th first essential of success for
an
afternoon newspaper is the ability to
deliver live news to the readers
while it’s news. A paper of “yes
terday” is not relished by progres
sive people of these modern times.
Today’s news on the day it happens
is what people now demand.
In order to reach those portions
of the State where readers’formerly
waited until next morning for their
favorite newspaper, THE TIMES
made the necessary arrangements for
an early edition, and now, with its
noon and 2:30 editions, covers all
of central and eastern North Caro
lina before night. Every train leav
ing the capital cRy after 12 o’clock
noon, and up urpil night time car
ries copies of THYE TIMES. People
in Morehead City, now receive this
paper at 7:30 p.-m. It gets to Tar
boro at 5:05 n. m., in Wilmington
at 6:10, and there are hundreds of
places where it can secure an audi
ence now instead of being a “back
number” as it was in the past.
Ordinarily, most out-of-town read
ers are glad to make regular trips
to their postoffices on arrival of the
afternoon mails bearing THE TIMES.
In a number of places, news agents
have been appointed to deliver pa
pers direct into readers’ homes with
out the necessity of a trip to the
postoffice. There are forty-seven of
these out-of-town news agents who
are delivering THE TIMES every
day to readers who want it “while
it’s news.” These agents are as fol
lows:
Aberdeen—Gordon Keith,
Benson—John F. Hall.
Burlington—Gayle Cruthfield.
Clinton—Joe Reynolds.
Chapel Hill—C. 8. Pendergraft.
Carthage—Carl Frye.
Carrboro—Paul Durham.
Durham—Malboume Cigar Stand.
Durham—Miles J. Smith.
Duke—Anson Jackson.
Fayetteville—The Hub.
Franklinton—J. O. Burnette,
Goldsboro—Union News Co.
Goldsboro—Kennon News Co.
Goldsboro—F. Connor.
Goldsboro—Jeff Wright.
Greenville—Proctor Neus Stand.
Greensboro—Huffin’s News Stand.
Greensboro—Union News Co,
Hope Mills—L. E. Sessoms.
Hillsboro—Paul Stutts.
Hamlet—Hamlet Hotel.
Henderson—Sunshine Parlor.
Kinston—-Moses Stadium.
Kinston—George Denmark,
La Grange^D, L. Fields.
Laurinburg-—J. c. McIntyre.
Louisburg—Masseaburg & White,
w tl* ^^ Ve — Raymond Hollings-
Little Colored Boy Said He
Put In Quarter Under
Wrong Impression
The seriousness of breaking Into
and robbing a bank was very force-
Impressed upon the mind of
Will Stephens, a fourteen-year-old
colored boy this morning as Capt.
Jack Beasley, after searching him,
locked him up in the guard-house
with nothing but a looking-glass, in
order that he might reflect. In the
pocket with the looking-glass the boy
had a knife, which was left on Capt.
Jack’s desk until the defendant
should be liberated or sentenced, as
the case may be.
Will—more formally William, the
most distorted name in the English
language probably—swore by all that
was in sight that he put a quarter in
the bank, which belonged to one
George Haywood.
“Jes’ let me ’splaln,” he pleaded,
between sniffles, after he had been
formally presented to Capt. Jack by
Officer Nichols, who, in a very grave
tone said: “Lock him up.”
“Yassir, jes’ lemme ’splain. I didn’
know there wuz any harm in it. He
told me, he say: 'Ef you put a quar
ter in dere, the do’ wil fly open’;
but the do’ didn’ fly open an’ I busted
The allegation of the law is that
the gas-meter coin wasn’t deposited
in the bank at all, but that the de
fendant blew the safe and secured
the two-bits without warning, which
was regarded as an extremely un
friendly act. It was also stated that
young William Tell, whose hands, it
is charged, are magnetized, once stole
the same bicycle twice and was go
ing after it the third time when a
motorcycle officer picked him ' p
The defendant Is given to sniffitug
and not to verbal outbursts such as
characterize some youths of his ag
Yet, he can very voc.-ferously ent
a plea of not guilty.
PRESENTATION OF
BROOKS PORTRAIT
Formal Exercises Held
Federal Court Room
Monday Night
In
Morehead City—William Bell
Moncure—Delmar Hackney,
New Bern—Homer Miller,
Nashville—Paul Vester.
Roxboro—Clyde Moore.
Selma—Walter Creech.
Sanford—Th'"
The portrait of Judge George W.
Brooks, the last federal judge of the
State of North Carolina, and the
first federal judge of the Eastern
District, was presented to the fed
eral court last night and will occupy
a prominent place on the walls of the
court room. The portrait is an ex
cellent one and was done by One of
the leading painters of the country.
United States District Attorney
Francis D. Winston made the speech
presenting the portrait, and adding
a sketch of the life of Judge
Brooks. Judge H. G. Connor ac
cepted the portrait for the court.
- Among relatives present, at whose
instance the portrait was presented,
were Dr. George W. Brooks, of Sun-
to
$65.00
2
uiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiniiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiHigiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiinuiHunjnifi
We are very anxious for you to
see the new Fall Coats and Coat
Suits that we have assembled here.
Because we feel that their chic,
snappy, stylishness will captivate
you as it has us. The new Coats
and Coat Suits are the very pretti-
tiest we have presented in many
seasons, and we are anxious for you
to come in and inspect them.
They are priced from
A $15,000,000 Loss
GALVESTON
DISASTER
Internate Pictures of the Actual
Event
BEGINS ON WEDNESDAY
Big Biograph Feature
WIRES OF MEN
One of Those Selig Annual
Dramas
THE JUNGLE
STOCKADE
LILLIAN WALKER
in the
GUTTERSNIPE
COLEY WILL SING A TATTLE
SONG
ALWAYS A WINNER AT THE
CRYSTAL
TODAY
Vitagraph Presents
FROM THE DREGS
Two-Act Drama With NED
' FINLEY, ELEANOR WOOD-
REEF and a Full Cast
of Vitagraph Stars
THE BACHELOR’S
BABY
Essanay Western Drama
MR. JARR AND
CAPTIVE MAID
Vitagraph Comedy
Thursday
CHARLES~CHAPLIN
THE DIAMOND
FROM THE SKY
EVERY SATURDAY
MISS MABEL ROBERTSON
Pianist
PURE SPRING WATER
Let me deliver Vandora Springy
Water to you daily (it a coat of
five cents per gallon. State Board
ot Hea ^ ^w^ ysk
(Successor to X. t. Foster)
Bell Pohne 743
TIMES WANT ADS PAY.
A Brief Sketch of the
Meaning of the Day
From a Jewish
Standpoint
The Jewish new year will begin on
Wednesday evening, September Sth,
with an ornate solemn service in the
Temples and Synagogues. Rabbi
Brav will officiate at services in this
city. The Thursday morning service
comprises a more elaborate form of
worship and combines some vestiges
of antique ritual with expressions of
human experiences and feelings true
and real for everybody and at all
times. •
A prominent Jewish leader says:
“The Jewish new year’s festival is
the oldest of all festivals celebrated
in the civilized world. But it is
unique for its significance as well as
for its antiquity. The secular new
year (on January 1st) is a day of
gratifications; men rejoice in what
they have achieved; it is a day for
sorbid inventories. The Jewish new
year’s day, however, is a time for
serious thought on the meaning of
life; it evokes pious contemplation
of the difficult and inevasible prob
lem as to right and wrong and its
appeal is not that we should get
more out of practical life but more
genuinely, more truthfully, more
morally the life God has entrusted
to us.
“Much of the success and failure
right interpreta-
tlof^Hiife and a true measure of its
values.
“The antique features of the rit
ual of that day express the aspira
tions all men feel equally. The Trum
pet Calls, constituting the central
part in the worship of that day are
appeals for the mortal stir which
men should feel when they contem
plate their experiences and seek for
re-enforcement of their hopes. The
calls are also an appeal to the large
sense of life. Our week-day wishes
and prayers are self-centered and do
not give us a perspective of our re
lations and obligations to the com
munity and fellowman, and of their
influence upon us. But the new
year’s day offers us an occasion to
re-afflrm our respect for and trust
in Providence which is the organiza
tion of all lives into an all-encom
passing justice. The Jew compre
hends this as a comfort in the case
of misfortunes and as monition in the
successes he may have. The func
tion of the new year’s day is to estab
lish a moral judgment in our life and
experiences.”
HEARIWlfUED
Southern Pines-—Ci L. Hayes,
Tarboro—Robert Williamson*
Varina—Gibson Cook.
Weldon—Jack Anderson.
Wilson—Harry O. Latta.
Wilson—Nixey Wheeler.
Wilson—Paul Barron.
Wake Forest—B. W. Maynard.
Washington—William Cherry.
Cincinnati, O.—Fountain News Co.
Petersburg, Va.—Sam Protuges.
Savannah, Ga.—Inter-State Co.
CITY NEWSDEALERS.
Bland News Company.
Broulet News Company,
Haves & Coke.
D. T. Moore.
Olive & Dixon. }
Redfront News Stand. ’ 1
Smokers’ Den.
Smoke House. ^ 1
Union News Company, -
Wright’s Hotel.
Yarborough Cigar Stand. ; /
DU»y, ouvus vvuxxv> , -e ^ 11x^0 o.
Brooks, Esq., of Elizabeth City;
Mrs. Hannah W. West, of Suffolk,
Va.; Miss Marie Brooks, of Sunbury,
Dr. George W. Brooks, Jr., of Suf
folk, Va., and Rev. Costen Harrell,
of Durham.
CALL FOR REPORTS
FROM STATE BANKS
UNTIL SEPTEMBER 16
The hearing in the federal court
of the application of the Seaboard
Air Line Railway for an injunction
against the North Carolina Corpo
ration Commission in the matter of
tax assessments, which was set for
today, has been continued until Sept.
16, a week from next Thursday.
OLD PAPERS. Ten cents a hun
dred, put up flat in neat bundles.
Three hundred for a quarter at THE
TIMES office, 14 East Hargett St
ALMO THEATRE
V. L. S. E. Day
Essanay Offers
Francis X. Bushman
and Ruth Stonehouse
Assisted by a Great All-Star Cast in George Ade’s
Famous Comedy
“The Slim Princess”
ADMISSION TODAY
11:30 a. m. to 6:30 p. m
6:30 p. m. to close,.
5 and 10c
10 and 15c
THURSO AY—CH ARLIE CHAPLIN
Levin’s Orchestra
^■w^r
REQUISITION FOR
Elizabeth City Man To Be
Extradited; Held In
Norfolk
Governor Craig today forwarded
to the governor of Virginia a requi
sition for the return of Charles E.
Hughes, wanted in Elizabeth City,
N. C., on the charge of deserting his
wife and family. He is held in Nor
folk, pending the honoring of the re
quisition.
The executive department is in re
ceipt of a requisition from the gov
ernor of South Carolina for Richard
8. Wilson, who escaped from the pub
lic works in that State. The requi
sition was honored.
210
Fayetteville
Street
all Suits of class
The North Carolina Corporation
Commission today issued a call for
a report from all State banks on
thelr condition at the conclusion of
business on September 2. The banks
are expected to respond within ten
days.
NEW ENTERPRISES
E. B. Newkirk Co., Winston-
Salem; authorized capital, $25,000;
paid in, $500; to do general con
tracting business; incorporators, E.
B. Newkirk, 0. W. and W. T. Baynes,
Jr.
Academy Music Co., Charlotte;
authorized capital, $10,000; paid in,
$2,000; incorporators, S. A. Lynch,
E. T. Henerey and Chas. G. Lee, all
of
Asheville.
Grand Circuit Meet
(By the Associated Press.)
HARTFORD, CONN., Set. 7.—
Three races are carded for today on
the Charter Oak track in the grand
circuit meet.
The morning weather was not
promising. The events are the 2:10
pace, purse $2,00, the 2:10 trot,
worth $1,000 and the trot for two
year olds for $2,000.
Get the want ad habit with
THE RALEIGH TIMES.
and distinction now await
your convenience to be inspect
ed. Our stock represents the
careful selection of authentic
styles from the most noted
makers.
S3 I ^ ^
MICHELIN-FOUNDED- 832
We Sell
TIRES
If
Carolina Cadillac Co
PHONE 796
RALEIGH, N. C
$1.00 Per Cylinder
1 he Best
JUST THY A MICHELIN
One Trial Will Convince You
All Sizes in Stock, and Prompt Service
116 East Morgan Street
MICHELIN
One Quality Only
You Are Not Getting the Mileage
You Expect
CARBON REMOVED FROM CYLINDERS
Electrolytic Process
Raleigh Motor Car & Machine Co.
RALEIGH, N. C.
Gierseli’s
Cafe
DULL KID BEADED
SLIPPERS
Style 724.
Price, $4.00
Raleigh,
North
Carolina
Is the convenient place to get
your meals. The Merchants*
Lunch served here is unsur
passed. GIVE US A TRIAL.
GIERSCH’S HOTEL
IN CONNECTION
ALL SIZES IN STOCK
ORDER NOW
Just What You Have Been
Waiting For
HELLER BROTHERS
RALEIGH, N. O.
Send For Our New Fall Catalog