1 "FOR GOD, FOR COUNTRY AND FOR TRUTH." $1.00 a Year, In Advance. VOL. XXIV. PLYMOUTH, N. C FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER' 5, 1913. NO. 10. :1 BLOODY RIOTING BY IRISH STRIKERS HOSPITALS SO CROWDED, MANY OF INJURED SENT TO THEIR HOMES. 400 PERSONS ' ARE HURT Jn Many Sections of the City Pitched Battles Occurred Thirty Con stables Injured. Dublin, Ireland. Fierce rioting in connection with the tramway strike was renewed. Hundreds of persons were injured. All the hospitals are so crowded that many serious cases had to be sent to their homes for treatment. The strike committee, in the- inter est of peace, had rescinded the call for a mass meeting in O'Connell street, and had substituted a parade from Beresford place to Croydon park, at Fairview, a suburb on the north side of the city. The authorities mean while had prohibited the mass meet ing. Croydon park belongs to the Trans port Workers' union, and a meeting was held there without disorder. But on the return march attempts of the police by baton charges to disperse the constantly growing crowds led to rioting. The mob was further incensed by the arrest of one of the strike leaders, James Larkin, against 'whom a war rant had been out for 24 hours. Lar Tcin was on the balcony of a hotel in Sackville street. He was wearing a disguise for the purpose of eluding arrest, but an enthusiastic admirer raised the. cry, "Three cheers for Lar kin!" The police immediately pounced upon him and violent scenes ensued. The rioting became general in vari ous parts of the city. The police charged repeatedly with their sticks, and this led to pitched battles. Stones, brickbats and bottles were hurled by the infuriated rioters, and the streets were soon covered with prostrate forms. More than fifty arrests were made. The lord mayor announced his in tention of demanding a public Inquiry into the conduct of the police during the strike riots, and will send law of ficers of the corporation to attend the inquests over the two men who have died from their injuries. PACAFIC WATERS IN CANAL Last Remainig Barrier Blown Out by Charge of Dynamite. Panama. The last remaining barri er at the Pacific end of the Panama canal was blown out by dynamite. It was an intensely interesting specta cle. At exactly 9:30 o'clock an elec tric switch was turned on and the 1,500 spectators, including the Shrin ers visiting here from the United States and officers of the British cruis er New Zealand, were rewarded by a wonderful sight. Hundreds of tons mud 9nH stnnfl were thrown high If - in the air and the thunderous roar of the explosions re-echoed in the nearby hills. About twenty long tons, equivalent to 44,800 pounds, of 45 per cent, dyna mite constituted the blast, which was one of the largest ever set off in the canal. The charge, which was planted in S41 holes at an average depth of 36 feet, tore a big gap In the barrier, but not to a sufficient depth to permit water to flow through, as the sea level channel was at low tide. Equally interesting as the explosion was the actual breaking of the barrier at the time, the tide creeping stead ily up until it was level with the top of the gap. A workman seized a shovel and made a - small trench through which a rill of water trickled. Gradually . it widened, until an hour later a raging torrent, with a 35-foot fall,, poured through an opening' 400 feet wide into that part of the ca nal -between Gamboa Dike and the Miraflores locks,5 which previously had been excavated by steam shovels. This cut, which is 5,000 feet long, nftrt feet wide, and 41 feet deep below ! mean sea level, was entirely filled by the time the waters of the Pacific J laved for the first time the solid ma- sonry of the Miraflores locks. ;, i Put Five Bullets in Chief of Police. i Lena, S.C. J. B. Harter, chief of police at Allendale, S. C, was shot to I death at Lena. A. L. Walker is con vened in the Hampton county jail, Charged with the killing. While the tragedy occurred on the platform of the railway station, there were no witnesses, and as Walker refused to make a statement, nothing is known as to how or why Harter. was killed. ! An inquest will be held at which time an effort will be made to solve the mystery. The dead man was well known In this section. SEN0R DON ANGEL ALGARA Senor Algara, the popular young first secretary and charge d'affaires of the Mexican embassy In Washing ton, is a busy man these days. CONGRESS SUPPORTS WILSON PRESIDENT'S MESSAGE ON MEX ICO ENDORSED BY THE LEADERS. No Member of the Huerta Government Will Make Statement About the Message of Mr. Wilson. Washington. Congressional leaders declare that President Wilson's vig orous assertion of a definite policy i toward Mexico would have the effect of staying in congress for a time at least, open criticism of the admin istration. Those who discussed the message agreed in the general state ment that it presented a frank and full statement as to the recent nego tiations with the Huerta government, and, at the same time, definitely out lined the American policy for the future. Republicans joined with Democrats in the endorsement of the president's utterances. "The president's message is an ad mirable document," said Senator Ba con, chairman of the senate foreign re lations committee. "It sets forth the facts without reservation, and puts us right before the world. Moreover, I believe it will have a calming effect on our own people, and a soothing influence upon public expression in the United States. The magnificent ovation' given the president showed that he has behind him both branches of congress, without regard to party division." Mexico City. Without comment Frederico Gamboa, the minister of foreign affairs, presented to the stand ing committee of the Mexican con gress all the facts in the controversy between Mexico and the United States. The congressmen comprising the commtitee received the facts without comment other than that indulged in as individuals after adjournment. Un less there are new developments it is Improbable that discussion, even of a private character, will continue long. MISS JESSIE WILSON HURT President's Daughter Is Thrown From Horse Found by Roadside. Plalnfield, N. H. Miss Jessie Wil son, daughter of President Wilson, while riding near' here, was thrown from her ahorse and lay unconscious for more than half an hour on the rodside. She was found there by Dr. Charles W. Worthen of White River Junction, who applied remedies and restored her to consciousness. Later Miss Wilson was taken to a house nearby and the Cornish home of President Wilson was notified by telephone. Her injuries are not believed to be serious. Miss Wilson's fiancee, Franci3 B. Sayre, with whom she had started for a ride, had gone ahead of her and knew nothing of the accident until the riderless horse dashed past him. The scene of the accident was on the New Hampshire side of the Con necticut river. Just opposite the Ver mont town of North Hartland. Girls Clear $233 on Tomatoes. Raleigh, N. C How two Mecklen burg county girls cleared $233 on one fifth of an acre by raising and selling tomatoes was told by Miss Margaret Brown, aged 15 years, to 1,500 farm ers and more than 300 housewives here in annual convention. Misa Brown said she donned overalls and tended her crop. Mrs. Julian Heath of New York City, organizer of the Housewives League of America, urged the women to trade direct with the producer rather than give the middle man his profit. IT HALO 01 VISIT TO 0. FIRST LORD HIGH CHANCELLOR TO LEAVE GREAT BRITAIN SINCE WOLSEY. DISCUSSES MANY SUBJECTS Situation in Mexico Is Only Subject Tabooed by Distinguished Guest. New York. Viscount Haldane, the first lord high chancellor of Great Britain to leave his country since Cardinal Wolsey went to France four hundred years ago, arrived here on the steamship Lusitania for a flying visit in this country and Canada. The lord high chancellor, whose position in England corresponds to that of chief justice of the supreme court of the United States, is here as a guest of the American Bar Association, be fore which he will deliver an address at its annual meeting in Montreal. He was entertained at a dinner given in behalf of the association by C. A. Severance of St. Paul. His itinerary includes visits to West Point and Al bany. Previously warned that he might ex pect to be interviewed by American newspaper men on his arrival In New York, the chancellor smilingly greeted a delegation of them who boarded the Lusitania at quarantine and submit ted to another interview when he reached the hotel where he is making his headquarters in this city. Lord Haldane freely discussed many questions of the day, declared that he was in favor of woman suffrage, prophesied that a millennium of peace was far off, said the relations be tween Germany and England were never more cordial, praised the in tellectual growth of the United States and predicted that home rule for Ire land would soon be an accomplished fact. With a merry twinkle - in his blue eyes the lord high chancellor joked with his interviewers between sreious remarks and conceded that the American custom of interviewing dis tinguished visitors was "delightfully progressive." WANT WARSHIPS AS SCHOOLS Medical Inspection of Public Educa tional Institutions Recommended. Buffalo, N. Y. The fourth interna tional congress on school hygiene has adopted resolutions recommending a thorough medical inspection in all public schools and the use of discard ed battleships as open air schools. " The congress states it is convinced that the open air school is one of the most powerful agents in the pre vention and cure of tuberculosis in childhood. The resolution says: "That the fourth international con gress on school hygiene petitions the United States government to place at the disposal of the various states of the Union as many of the discard ed battleships and cruisers as possi ble to be anchored according to their size in rivers or at the seashore and to be utilized by the respective com munities for open air schools for chil dren or hospital sanatoria for adults. "That the congress expresses its ap preciation to the rtalian government for the example it has given by con secrating three of its discarded men of war to the combat of tuberculosis." Methods of correcting defects of vis oin in school children and preventing malnutrition were the principal sub jects discussed by the congress. At the closing public meeting G. Stanley Hall, president of Clark university, Worcester, Mass.," spoke on the hygi ene of appetite. 3 Shot, 6 Hurt, in Family Row. Redbank, N. J. Mrs. Frank Storck retains possession of her husband's home in the fashionable residential section of Redbank, after a fight made to dispossess her in which three per sons were shot, four injured by blows, an eighth broke his ankle and Mrs. Storck herself was thrown through a window and rendered unconscious when she fell on her head on the sidewalk. Storck, a piano dealer, di vorced his wife last month. She has since frustrated his efforts to force her to leave his residence here. He organized a raiding party. 7 Refused to Eat Editorials, Is Shot. Sulphur, Okla. J. I. Scheneck, edit or of the Sulphur Democrat, was shot and killed here, and John Lindsay, former treasurer of Murray county, is charged with the killing, was hurried from the Sulphur jail to the more secure prison at the nearby town of Norman, when mob violence was threatened. Lindsay, it is alleged, opened fire on Scheneck with a shot gun when the editor refused to "eat" a copy of his paper "which contained adverse editorial comment concerning Lindsay. N. BROWN Mill, mi nJL-' ' AKi.rfX.sa I Tr xlx Af i' E. N. Brown Is one of the men espe cially interested In the critical Mexi can situation, for he is vice-president of the Mexican National railways. CLAIM GLYNN IS GOVERN GLYNN IS RECOGNIZED BY THE NEW YORK GENERAL ASSEMBLY. Action Came After Bitter Fight. Vote 43 for Recognitiftn to 29 Against. Albany, N. Y. Lieut. Gov. Martin H. Glynn was formally, recognized as acting governor by the assembly af ter a bitter debate. The vote of such recognition stood 48 for to 29 against. This recognition came in the fori of official acceptance of messages sent by Mr. Glynn as acting governor to the legislature. Messages also wte received by the senate, but with the express understanding that objection could be made later to their official action , as though no action had been taken. The senate session was brief and colorless, but the assembly remained in session long after midnight. Its proceedings were characterized by sharp criticism and the bandying of epithets between friends and oppo nents of Governor Sulzer. Referring to alleged attempts to punish him through the medium of criminal in dictments for the part he had taken in the impeachment proceedings, Ma jority Leader Levy bitterly denounc ed Lynn J. -Arnold, one of Governor Sulzer's trusted lieutenants, who has been active in this matter. NEW RULES FOR CARRIERS -Carriers Not Required to Collecf Coins. Washington. Picking up loose money has grown to be such a hard ship for the overworked rural free delivery carrier that the postoffice department issued an order warning reckless citizens against leaving loose coins lying around. Hereafter coins must be tied in bundles or inclosed in envelopes whenever the patron of a rural route wants stamps from a carrier and leaves the necessary amount in the wayside box. "The attention of postmasters at ru ral delivery offices and of rural car riers," says Fourth Assistant Postmas ter General Blakelee, "is again direct ed to the fact that rural carriers are not required to collect 'loose coins from rural mail boxes. "Patrons should Inclose coins in an envelope, wrap them securely in paper or deposit them in a coin holding re ceptacle so they can be easily and quickly taken from boxes and car riers, will be required to lift such coins and when accompanied by mail for dispatch, attach the requisite stamps." 21 Persons Injured in Wreck. Lynchburg, Va. Twenty-one people were injured in a wreck of a mixed train on the Buckingham branch of the Chesapeake and Ohio railroad. near Breno. The train was derailed bv sDreading rails and the passenger coach and three freight cars loaded with lumber rolled over a 20-foot em bankment. American Murdered by Mexicans. Washington. State department re ports telling of the attack by Mexi can federals upon employees of the Madera Lumber company at Madera, Mexico, said that Edmond Hayes, Jr., and a negro known as "Tom" were killed. General Cordoba, commanding the federals in that vicinity, immedi ately arrested all of the men impiica ed in the attack, according to the report. Hayes was killed, the consul at Chihuahua, reported, by a bandit named Castillo, who, with about eigh tv men. FRENCH AVIATOR'S REMARKABLE FEAT EPOCH-MAKING EXPERIMENT TO WARD ATTAINMENT OF SAF ETY IN AIR. . MAKE FLIGHT UPSIDE DOWN Rose to a Height of 3,000 Feet, Took a Headlong Plunge But Retained Perfect Control of His Machine. Other Feats. Juvisy, France. The daring French aviator Pegoud, who on August 20 made a parachute drop from an aero plane from a height of 900 feet, ac complished a much more remarkable feat, while at first sight appears to have been a piece of extraordinary aerial acrobatics, but which experts declare was an epoch-making experi ment toward the attainment of safety in the air. Briefly, Pegoud caused his monoplane to describe a gigantic letter "S" In the sky during which he was flying upside down for about a quarter of a mile. The strictest secrecy was maintain ed prior to the test and only a few persons were present when Pegoud took the air. He mounted rapidly to a height of more than 3,000 feet, de scribing a curve; then the forward part of the machine was observed to incline towards the earth. Through glasses the spectators saw the pro peller and the monoplane further in cline until it was perpendicular with the earth. It seemed as if nothing could stop the headlong plunge. As the machine dropped swiftly the tail dipped again towards the earth and the pilot appeared head-downward. Seconds which seemed houis passed. With an almost imperceptible curve the machine shifted its course to a straight line, the pilot in the same position. How long he remained up side down the anxious watchers csuld not determine but it was long enough to cause them to believe that he would never right himself. Presently the machine dipped again and with a graceful curve assumed an erect position. Pegoud flew for a few minutes to and fro and descended by a series of beautiful spirals. On landing the aviator said: "Everything went splendidly. The levers answered the slightest touch. Weakness of Naval Stations. Washington. Lack of berthing slips and drydocks is pointed out as the distinctly important weakness of our naval stations located north of Cape Hatteras, in a report to the Secretary of the Navy . by the Naval Board of Inspectors of all Northern Navy Yards. Additional drydocks on the North At lantic Coast, in the opinion of the board, are essential for the needs of the Atlantic fleet and it suggests that Jamacia Island at the Portsmouth Navy Yard should be acquired as the stie of two additional drydocks. Americans Attacked By Mexicans. Los Angeles. American refugees are in force here, having landed at San Diego. Sixty persons were brought north from Guaymas and vic inity by the United States cruiser Pittsburg. Among them was T. L. Findley, who still is suffering from the effects of a bayonet wound re ceived at the hands of an intoxicated rebel while lying sick in bed at his home in Durango. Findley gave a graphic description of the raid on the city of Durango by a band of 6,000 rebels. Mexican Situation Marking Time. Washington. Senator Bacon, chair man of the foreign relations commit tee, conferred more than an hour with Secretary Bryan, after which he declared the Mexican situation seem ed to be marking time. "So far as I know," said the senator, "the Mexican situation is absolutely at a standstill. No word of importance has been re ceived from Mexico City and nothing has come from Mr. Lind, who re mains in Vera Cruz. I do not know what he plans to do." Charlton Undergoes Interrogation. Como, Italy. Porter Charlton, the young American who was extradited from the United States to stand trial on a charge of murdering his wife, was subjected to a preliminary Inter rogation. Judge Rognoni, the exam ining magistrate, and Signor MellinI, Charlton's counsel, accompanied by a clerk, and an interpreter appeared at the prison soon after the breakfast hour. During the examination Charl ton was self possessed. The prison officials declare they have not ob served any sign of mental deficiency. FROM THE TAR HEEL STATE Short Paragraphs of State News That Has Been Condensed For Busy People of State. , Washington. Messrs. Davis and, Davis, Washington patent attorneys, report the grant to Jerry M. Hassell, Warsaw, of a patent on a logging-car. Oxford. Mrs. Kate Hays Flem ing, one of Oxford's most accomplish ed teachers, was appointed by Gov. Craig a delegate to the Fourth Inter national Congress on school hygiene, now, being held in Buffalo, N. Y. : Warrenton. Thi3 county is stirred over the proposition of a bond issue of $100,000 for good roads. The ques tion will be decided at the polls Sep tember 16 and both, sides are hard at work. Salisbury. The hookworm cam paign, which has been under way in Rowan county for six weeks, was concluded recently. The work was done in a thorough manner by Dr.' G. F. Leonard and Mr. H. E. Jenkins. Fairmont. Several days ago the Robeson county veterans held a re union here and a great crowd was in attendance. There were 85 veter ans present, 18 of whom were over 75 years old. Mr. L. R. Varser, of Lumberton, was the orator of the day. Concord. Supt. A. S. Webb, of the city schools has notified the teachers that Septtember 22 is tthe opening day. He has instructed the teachers to meet their pupils on Friday, Sep ttember 19, for the purpose of giving out book lists and assigning lessons for Monday's work. Charlotte That Willie Stevens was justified in slaying- George Smith on May 25th was the decision of the jury sitting on the case in the supe rior court after a deliberation of an hour and forty minutes. The decision was announced after court had been adjourned nearly two hours. The trial continued through two days. Dunn. At a meeting of a commit tee from the chamber of commerce selected to handle thel question of a union depot for Dunn and several of the leading business men of the town it was decided to accept the propo-,, sition made by the Atlantic Coast Line and the Durham & Southern to build a modern station at the junction of the two roads. Henderson. From present indica tions the extensive preparations now being made will result in greatly In creasing the tobacco interests of Hen derson and a part of this Increase will be show? this season. The Farm ers' Sales' Warehouse, nearing com pletion, is the largest stiucture of the kind erected In the city since it be came a tobacco market. Asheville. The dream of a "great white way" for Asheville appears to he materializing, workmen having' al ready started the task of installing the light standards on Patton Avenue. The work of placing the standards will be completed within the next week or ten days and then the "juice will be turned on on that street as well as North and South Pack square. Durham. Mrs. J. E. Keith, of the Creedmore section of Granville coun ty, met a tragic death several days ago, when she was killed in the ele vator of the Trust building. Mrs. Keith and her daughter were on the car, and the body of the elder lady was fearfully mangled, death result ing instantly. The daughter was a witness to the fearful death of her mother. Salisbury. A narrow, escape from serious injury and perhaps death, was experienced recently near Salisbury by Mr. Reed Rusher, Miss Annie Rusher and Miss Olga Brown of Faith. In driving a young horse by a street car on a fill near the city limits the animal dashed down a high embankment turning the buggy over several times.' The occupants escap ed with slight bruises. Raleigh. The state fair will this year make of its tobacco and it has arranged for the exhibition with Col. John S. Cunningham and Dr. J. Ir. Burgess in charge. The competittion is limited to North Carolina growers and the prizes are numerous and sub stantial. In the selection of the men in charge the fair association has chosen two of the state's best tobac co mcsi. The directors will spend $330 in prizes alone and will confer all diplomas that mean a great deal. Greensboro. The preliminary trial of Ed Hargis, charged with the mur der of his son, was held several days ago. The defendant was held with out bail for superior court. The principal evidence against him Is the story of the killing told by his daughter. Greenville. The county commis sioners visited the connty home and are considering the matter of re building with modern improvements, either at the present site or nearer town. This matter has been aglta'Jwl much of late, all agreeing that a. new home Is a necessitr.