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