1 10 C4 ii L-s fit if' ST ' (1 I IF I 4: $1,00 a Year, In Advance. FOR OOP, FOR COUNTRY, AND FOR TRUTH." Single Copy, 5 Cents. .. , , , ,M. ., ,, . .. ,. j - - - - - - - - , , , i. .. . i . i -,n VOL. XII. PLYMOUTH, N. C, FRIDAY, JANUARY 10, 1902. NO. 44. 1 . SUNK IN COLLISION Steamship Wrecked By a Sailng Vessel. TWENTY PEOPLE ARE KILLED Accident Occurred in The Waters of The Pacific Ocean Mu t Have Re sulted From Carelessness. San Francisco, Special. A collision at sea, early Thursday morning, be tween the steamship Walla Walla and aa unknown sailing vessel, resulted in the sinking of the steamship and the probable loss of at least 20 lives. The Walla Walla, owned by the Pacific Coast Steamship Company, sailed from San Francisco, January 1, for Pugct Sound ports. She carried 3G first-cla33 passengers, 28 seoond-clas3 and a evew of 80 men. When off Cape -Mendocino, on the California coast, at 4:10 o'clock, Thursday morning, an iron bark, be lieved, to be French, loomed up in the haze ajid crashed into the Walla Wal la's bow. Then the sailing vessel slid off into the darkness and was seen no more. All the passengers and crew of the Walla Walla, except the few on watch, were asleep, but were aroused by the crash. The steerage quarters were in the bow and it is believed that some of the steerage passengers and crew were crushed to death. A big hole was made in the steamer's bow and she sank in 25 minutes. The officers and crew maintained strict discipline and boats and life rafts wore lowered. All who were not killed in the col lission got en the boat except Cap tain Hall. Ho was picked up later un injured. A choppy sea was running and the small boats could not make a land ing on the shore, a few miles distance. They drifted about all day, and final ly 65 people were picked up by the steamer Dispatch, which took them to Eureka. Another boat under command of Engineer Brown, and containing 13 persons, attempted to land at Trinidad and was swamped. John Wilkinson, quartermaster; Wm. Marti el, fireman; L. Drub, passenger, and three un known men, were drowned. Those in the boat who were saved were En gineer Brown, Fireman McClcllan, Coal-Pa.ssor Wm. Shinn; Sailor O'Lea ry, Chief Cook Marshall and Passen gers Wm. B. Smith and Wm. Moore house. When the Dispatch reached Eu reka this morning with the survivors, tugs wero immediately sent out for missing boats. The tug Ranger picked up one containing 11 passengers and three of the crew. The Walla Walla was valued at about $250,000. She was formerly used as a collier and about ten years ago was converted Into a passenger vessel at a cost of $175,000. The vessel was insured for abut $200,000. George Ke"r,e of San Francisco, a member of the crew, gave the following account of tho disaster: "It was 4:10 when the French vessel hit the Walla Walla in the bow. All were asleep. The weather was clear, the sea wa3 rolling high. All were panic-stricken. The passengers rushed out of their state rooms and tho deck was crowded. Captain Hall went down Into the steerage and found a family cf seven fastened in a room by the force of the shock jamming the door. Two boys were pinoned beneath failon timbers. The girls were released and the family assisted out of their berths. The captain said the vessel would sink and all hurriedly prepared to leave.' Life boats and rafts were lowered; life preservers were put on and passen gers lowered to the boats. The collision happened at 4:10 and the vessel did not sink until 4:45. giving the crew and passengers 35 minutes to leave the steamer. Sixty-three were lowered Into the life-saving boats then being filled. Panic reignod among the re maining passengers; women screamed end men and boys hurriedly jumped oevrboard. Several did not leave until the vessel began to sink. The officers were cool and collected, doing every thing possible, to save the passengers. No one knows exactly how and when the collision occurred, excepting the second officer and he 13 missing. Im mediately after the collision, the French vessel withdrew and appar antly made no effort to render assist ance. v Sampson's Condition Hopeless. Washington, Special. Admiral Sampson's malady progresses slowly but very steadily toward the endMed Sca.l science cannot check 'it. Symptoms cf arterial degeneration have appear ed, such a3 is incident to his malady, injecting great uncertainty into the rase. Moreover, the patient becom ing les3 tra-ctable and re3posive to treatment THE TREASURY'S STRENGTH. The Government Begins the Year With Abundant Cash. Washington, Special. "The Treas ury is in a condition of unexampled strength," said Secretary Gage, when asked to briefly review the Treasury situation at the close of the year. "Only a month ago, m my annual ie port to Congress, I reviewed those con ditions. The figures far the last month have made but little change. For the calendar year -we show receipts in ex cess of the ordinary expenditures amounting roundly to $100,000,000. Such an excesss might have resulted in serious embarrassment had not fa Department been able, by means of this surplus to reduce the public debt in large amounts. Since April 1 last the Treasury has redeemed and cancel led United States bonds to tho par val ue of $53,714,700, which have been ap plied to the sinking fund and the dis bursement resulting therefrom was $212,218,645. The available cash on hand is therefore, about $30,000.00;) larger than the amount a year ago. '"Comparing the situation as it is to day with April 1st, 1S97, the result is most gratifying. On the latter day the Treasury held money of all kinds to tho amount of $25073,000, including $100,CO0,0C0 as a gold rcscc-ve, leaving therefore $150,C90,CCO as a cash balance Today in money of all kinds the Treas ury holds $29G.650,OJO, and if we deduct the $15O,OO0,0'0 now held as a gold ce- cerve the balance stands at $146,000,000 , or $4,000,000 less than it was April 1, 1 1897. It will be seen, therefore, that Gubstantial equilibrium has been main tained. "There has been a very material in crease in the money in circulation since March 1, 1897, as well as in the amount per capita. The volume of money on that date, outside the Treasury, was $1,675,094,953, and the amount per capi ta was $23.14. On the 1st of December last the amount of money cutside the Treasury was $2,250,256,230, and the ' amount per capita was $23.73. The in crease in amount, therefore, was $374, 5&1.277, and the increase per capita was 5.59." Another B. & L Fatlure. Roanoke, Va., Special. At the suit of W. W. Gwynn, of Huntington, W. Va., the Iron Belt Building and Loan Association has been placed in the hands of receivers by a decree entered by Judge Simcnton, United States cir cuit judge. The bill was filed cn De cember 27th in the United States Court at Lynchburg, and the decree was en tered by Judge Simonton, sitting in chambers at Charleston, S C, cn the 28th, appointing E. B. Jacobs and James R. Terry receivers. The passing of the January dividend on its full paid stock, because of recent West Vir ginia decisions, is the chief ground upon-which the suit is based. The asso ciation holds extensive properties in several Southern States and is one 0! the largest corporations of its kind in the South. Messrs. Jacobs and Terry, the receivers, reside at Roanoke. Schley to Make a Tour. Washington, D. C, Special. Admi ral Schley left here Tuesday afternoon for Baltimore to pay a long-deferred Visit to his sister. Ho will return on Thursday to act as honorary pall bearer at the funeral of the late Rear Admiral Roe. On January 8, Admiral Schley will go to Savannah, Ga., for a ten day's visit to General William W. Gordon. On the 25th, 2Cth and 27ih of January he will be the guest of the Hamilton Club, of Chicago. January 29th and 30th he will visit Louisville a3 the guest of tho board of trade and the Knights Templar of that city; Feb ruary 1, 2 and 3 he will be in Nash ville as the guest of. the board of trade and Knights Templar. He will visit Knoxville on February 5, end 6 as the guest of tho city. The Memphis trip ha3 been arranged finally for the last week of April. Censorship Withdrawn. New York, Special. The Commer cial Cable Company sends out the lol loping notice: "We are advised thai the Eastern Telegraph Company ma;;e the announcement that the American Government has withdrawn the censor ship on messages to Manila, but In' Government claims the right to inspect the messages to which this measure ap plies." Wages Increased. Philadelphia, Special The Presr says: "An increase cf from I to 12 per cent, in the wages of about 15,000 tli'$f lines owned or operated by the Pennsylvania Railroad Company. It will apply to all the trainmen on ail the lines own d or operated by tbe company. The clerical force is not included in the plan. THE YEAR'S RECORD Marvelous Achievements Marked ths Past Twelve Months. SCIENCE, ART, LITERATURE, WAR, Peace, Commerce, Invention Note worthy Progress in Ail Linus in Chronological Ord:r. JANUARY. Queen Victoria of England died on the 22d; cn the Gth Ignatius Donnelly, famous wiit.r and theorist; on the 21st Professor Llisha Gray, one of the in ventors of the telephone, and on the 26th Giuseppe Verai, famous musical composer. In the realm of science perhaps the most important announcement was that of Professor Pulpin's system of induc tion coils, which may revolutionize cable telephony. FEBRUARY. The centennial anniversary of the installation of Chief Justice Marshall was celcbtated at Washington on the 4th, on which date also accurred tho funeral pageant of Queen Victoria in London. The discovery cf the new star Perseus, later announced as a nebula likely to result in new worlds was dis covered on the 19th, and a photograph was taken. MARCH. On the 2d of March the popo celebra ted his E4st birthday. On tho 4th Presi dent McKinley and Vice President Roosevelt were inaugurated and ilv Fiity-sixth congress adjourned. On tho 11th there was a million dollar ilre in New York and another in Richmond Va. On the 23rd the Filipino chieftain Augmaldo was captured in h:.s moun tain re .1. eat by General Fred Funston A trolley car was produced in Ger many which, on its lirst test, made nearly 100 miles an hour. The obituaries Include Benjamin Harrison, ex-president of the United States, aged 6S, and Charlotte M. Vonge, famous authoress, 73. APRIL. Early in April it was given out that there were prospects of Atlantic lincxs crossing the ocean in about 100 hour3, through the installation in fast sailing passenger steamers of turbine cngmos, after the Parsons Dr Graydon pattern. MAY. The 4th of May was notable for the great fire in Jacksonville, Fla., with loss cf $15,000,OOJ. The Sth was noto rious for the Wall street panic. The day is now referred to as "Dirty Thurs day." On the 20th the great Pan-American exposition at Bufialo was opened. JUNE. The month's necrology exhibits such famous name3 as Hoshi Toru, Japanese statesman, assassinated; ex-Governor Hazea S. Pingree of Michigan, 61; Ed ward Moran, artist, 72; Sir Walter Besant, novelist, C5. It was announced this month that Thomas A. Edison, America's famous inventor, had at last brought to in fection tho electric storage battery up on which he had been at work for many years, and its successful app'k-a tion as a means of rapid and economi cal transit. JULY. On the 2d of July died Jacob S. Rog ers, locomotive manufacturer, aged G7, who left a legacy of S5,0v0,MJ to the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York city; also Professor John Fisk, lecturer and historian, 59; R. II. Newell (Or phcus C. Kerr), an old time humorist, 05; Charles Nordhoff, journalist, 71; Prince Hohenlohe, ex-chancellor oi Germany, 81, and Mrs. Oom Paul Krug cr, 65. On the 12th Santos-Dumont mado a successful aerial voyag-3 over Paris. On the 24th the Schley court of inquiry was ordered by the secretary of the navy; the 25th President McKinlov m o claimed free trade between the United States and Poito Rico. AUGUST. The Dowager Empress Frederick of Germany, edest daughter of the 1 itc Queen Victoria, died on the 4th, agt1 61; on the 11th Signor Crispl, Itaiiar. statesman, 82, and on the 33th General William Ludlow, U, S. N., aged 50. General Kitchener issued a procla mation of banishment against all Boers found In arms after Sept. 15. On.i of the most unique of Inventions was al so announced, consisting of clcrirc printing without ink. The greatest electrical discovery ur to that time was that of transmitting electric waves through the ground o the water to any desired point by which !! is claimed that an automobile torpedo boat can b operated three miles dis tant. SEPTEMBER. The most noteworthy as well as most terrible event of this month was th shooting of President McKinley In Leon Czolgosz. an anarchist, at a re ception at the Pan-American expnsi tion. Mr. McKinley died on the 14th: on which date Theodore Roosevelt took the oath of office as president of the United States. On the 28th occurred the massacre of fif'.y United States soldiers by Fili pino bolmen in the island of Samar. OCTOBER. On the 29th the assasin, Czolgosz, was electrocuted at Auburn, N. Y., for the murder of President McKinley. Aerial navigation by means of the dirigible balloon received an impetus by the notable trip of Santos-Dumont over Paris and around the Eiffel tower, thereby winning the Deutsch prize of $20,000. Early in October the Pan-American congress met in the City of Mexico, and another fact of international Impor tance was the negotiation of the Hay Pauncefote convention, precedent to the treaty for giving to the Untied States a free hand in the building of the isthmian canal. NOVEMBER. On the 5th a French fleet seized Turkish ports and brought the sultan to terms; the city of Colon, isthmus of Panama, was captured by Liberal in surgents, who were subsequently driv en out by government troops; a fusion mayor, Seth Low, was elected in Great er New York. On the 7th Earl Li Hung Chang, the great Chin: so statesman, died in Peking, aged 79, and also Kac Greenaway, artist and author. The world's record for speed of au tomobiles was broken by Henri Fo' nier. who made a mile in 51-4-5 seconds. , DECEMBER. , If the latest information anent wire less telegraphy proves to be correct, the last month of the year has seen the greatest achievement in the flashing across the ocean of a "wireless tele graph" message from Cornwall, Eng land, to Newfoundland, a distance of more than 2,200 mile3. This is sail to have been done cn Dec. 14, after much preliminary experimenting. The first Monday in December wit nessed the opening of the Fifty-seventh congress with a host of new subjects for legislation. Warfare still continue in South Africa, the Philippines and Colombia, with trouble between Chile and Argentina. A Jeweler Shoots Five Persons. Turner's Falls, Mass., Special Louis Bitzer, a jeweler of this place, shot five persons, two of whom his clerk, Miss Ida Columbe and Bitzer's uve-ycar-old son are dead. The other vic tims were his wife, Christina, and his two daughters, Annie, about 16 years of age, and Carrie, 12 years old. It is thought they will recover. There i3 evi dence that it was Bitzer's purpose also l.o take his own life, but his prompt ar est apparently prevented him from arrying out his purpose. He is about i5 years of age. Parker's Alan Located. Elizabeth City, N. C, Special. A ru mor was afloat here that the man who was met by Mn Parker between the Cropsey residence and Elizabeth City, has "been located. Mr. Parker was cn his way home from Mr. Fletcher's, about 7 miles from town, and in pass in? tho Cropsey residence, about 11 o'clock on the night of November 20th, saw a man and woman standing at the gate. Very little attention wa3 givra to this couple and Mr. Parker cnM not say definitely who they were, but afterwards he met another man, whom he thoroughly observed and described. The citizens' committee since then have been trying to locate th's party, s hn should bp able to throw some light on the tragic death of Nellie Crop sey. Southern Soap Makers. Atlanta, Special. It is understood that Southern soap manufacturers, see organizing for a consolidation of all places south of the Ohio river. Edward O'Neil, secretary of the larg est soap manufacturing concern in Atlanta, said that his company had been asked to join the combination, which Mr. Miles said, would affiliate with similar associations in the N'orth and West. The organization vill be known as the Southern Soap Manufacturers' Association. The Cuban E'ect on. Havana, By Cable. The indica tions are that the entire Palma tickvl. vill be elected, and that Thomas Es trada Palma, the Nationalist ennui late for the presidency of Cuba, will eceive unanimous vote of the electoral college. The adherents of General Bartolome Maso, (the Demo ratlc candidate who recently with lrew from the cr.mpaign) not onlv .vithdrew their candidates, but re .'used to go to the polls. A remark rbly light vote, was polled through out the island. CORPORATE WEALTH Laborers Employed and Amount of Wages Paid Them. MONEY AGGREGATE OF BILLIONS. Of the 2,203 Plants Reported, 174 Were Idle During the Census Year Valuable Statistics. Washington Special. Census statis tics made public on industrial combina tions show a total authorized capitali zation on May 31, 1900, for the 183 cor porations reported of$3,G07,539,200 and capital "stock issued $3,935,2CO,S6S. Of this total the authorized capital in cludes $270,127,250 in bonds; $2,529,510, 900 in preferred stock and $2,077,S71,050 common stock. The capital stock is sued comprises $216,412,751 in bonds, $1,0C6,525,9G3 in preferred stock " and $1,S02,262,14G in common stock. The total value cf all the products of the combinations reported is $l,G61,295,3i4 and subtracting the value of - the pro ducts of the hand trades, ce the me chanical and neighborhood industries, which amount to $1,216,165,160, tho pro ducts of the industrial combinations in 1900 are found equivalent to over 20 per cent, of the total gross products of the manufacturing industries of the country as they existed in 1830. Th3 133 corporations employed an average of 399,192 wage earners, receiving $191. 534,715 in wages. Employment also was given to 24,585 salaried officials, clea-ks, etc., receiving a total of $32,653,623 in salaries. Miscellaneous expenses of these combinations aggregated $151, 851,077. The total cost of material used was $1,0S5,0S3,828. The gross value of products, less the value of material pur chased in partly manufactured, form gives the net of true value of products of these combinations as $1,051,931,5SG. This represents the increase in the val ue of the raw materials resulting from the various processes of manufacture. The 183 corporations reported control 2,029 plant3 that were active during the census year and 174 reported a3 ?dl during that period.- The return! Bhowed an average of 11 active plants te each corporation. Of all these industrial combinations, 63 were organized prior to 1S97 and in the year 1S97, 1893, 1S99 and prior ta June 30, 1900. there were organized sev en, twenty, seventy-nine and thirteen corporations, respectively. Over 50 per cent, of the total number of such cor porations were chartered during the IS months from January 1, 1S99, to June 30, 1900. The statistics of industrial combinations exclude all corporations, manufacturing and distributing gai and electric light and power, it being impessibie to trace all of the latter, and they do net generally possess the same economic significance. The returns show that the Iron and steel industry is at the head of the list, with a gross product of $50S,626,4S2, which is more than double tha value of the product oi any other group, except food and kin dred products, and represents nearly one-third of tho total gross value of products of all the industrial combin3 tionscespective:y fol'ow: Iron and steel and their products, $341,799,945 and $50S.626,4S2; food and allied products, $246.G23.633 and $2S2. 40S.081; chemicals and allied products, S1T5,002,8S7 and $182,191,744; metala and metal products ether than steel and iron, $118,519,401 and $1S0.154,703; liquors and beverages, $113, 484,184 and $93,432,274; vehicles for land transpor tation, $85.9G5,6S3 and $35.3S3,533: to bacco. $16.191,S18 and $74,063,029; tex tile, $92,46S,G06 and $7183-3,202; leather and its finished products, $62,734,011 and $45.&84.S29; paper and printing, $59,271,691 and $44,418,417; c!ay, glass and stone products, $1G,S73,92S and 23 258, 1S2; lumber and its re-manufactures, $24,470,281 and $20,273,815; mis cellaneous industries, $45,4Q3,&69 and $48,605,873. ' Heavy Rain iu Tennessee, Chattanooga. Tenn., Special. Heavy rains over the entire upper basin of the Tennessee river will produce a flood tide. The weather bureau predicts that tho river will pa3s tho danger lino here by noon and flood warn'.nrs have been sent out. The crest of the rise can not be estimated at hi3 time, as rain ia still falling over tho entire Tenne3se river 6ystem, according to latest re ports received.