1 Ji SEMSlfi Motion of the Fiva iVlon Convictcd of Violaiing the Sharman Anti-Trust Law, for an Arrsst of Judgment Rsfused—Shottsr and fi/iyers Sentenced to Jail. I be was a witness boi'ore the jfiand A Savannah dispatch of F:\riav I Ar n j g^yg. ■ Aioiler s sentence was made ' _ heavy becar.sij of his connection with UverruUn" tae motion in arrest of] the terminal yards in Jacksonville, judgmeut, offered by the defense, Ire-?i‘adin^ and re-gaugins JuJg^ William Sheppard Friday I WMtllNCTON Kazors were a;^ain used Monday in a hostile attack uf)on the rates of the Aldrich bill pending- before the Seu-j ate. ri'io (Oiijniitlce on ilnan^vi had' increased the rates cn rr.zois in roir;- | men use from about 55 to li)0 per I cent adviilorera, and as soon as '.he I CrtTTn ) r* c- ■ 1 fri 1 *1 t -I* . I look up the ciitierv schedrde, Favanna^, Ga„ .-ocal.-The hotly j |,ulVr. At rr.,t Judoe Emory amendments rferH bv ’,Ir Sinrao.-" contested suit ogainst v\hat is knowji i who was presiilm;;. stated that i’M' • • as the Terpentine Ti-ust ended last j *‘7'” 'V "'oi'l.i be imix)sed, I Saturday night by findms I be.,, :l.ue^7mn Se^at.a' Sto,re ofer"l teuds of the combined infi'us'.s n'omer cooasicn, when Ihs ,^and jury tb- rjalies cn guilty cf violafins the Sheruiau anti-j‘etui-ned a “i;o bill” against him, as trust law. NORTH STATE f^EWS NOTES Items oi‘ Slate Interest Gathered from Jitwc aa»d There and Told Briefly for Busy Rea-dera. THE WEATHER BUREAU AND Its latest caiiic. afternoon, sentenced the five men found gTiilty of violating the Slier- maa anti-trust law, and lor the tlrst time, so far as is known, jail sen tences, in two cases, were imposed. The sentences follow: Spencer P. Shotter, chairman of the directors of the American Xaval; Stores Company,’ three months in jail and a fice of $5,000. Edmund S. Nafh, president of the weer alleg-ed to have taken place. The ca.se will bo appealed to the United Slates Court of Appeals, just as soon as the bill of exceptions can be prepared, and certiiied to by the eouft. In the meantime, a motion for a new trial will' not be made before Judn'e .Sheppard. A writ of error citino; tifty-tliree grounds were filed by the defense immediately after sen tence Was passed. Councel attack nearly everything the court permitted to come before the jurj', to which the defense entered protest. It be gins with the court’s failure to sus- D.n:4ky comply, 13.000 the ^demurre^tc; Ihe i;;di;;im;:t J. Cooper Al.yers, vice prrsideat i and ends with an exception to the of the American company and pres- Jni-y’s verdict. ident of the National Transportation , in the sum of $20,000 was and Terminal Comp.iny, three months P'"'" defendants joint- ; • Ii-oiitiis 1 jjj discharged, pend- .n jai: and r. hne of $2,500, l„,g the determination of thfir ap^p"al. Qeorge ile.-id Bom-draan, of New 5Toik, treasurer of tho American Na- t-ul Stores Compnay, $2,000 fine. Carl MoUer, of .Taeksouville, Fla., •gent of the Ami'rieau .Tnd general manager of the National Transporta tion and Terminal Company in Jack sonville, $5,0l.'0 tine. Ml. Shotter and Mr. ,'vlyers were sentenced to terms in the Chatham county jail. Judge Sheppard impos ing the punisljment upon them, be cause they had been before the court two yeai s ago, entering pleas of The costs they must pay, if the con viction and sentemyps stand, will, it is said, reach $17,000, which will, in the event the sentences stand, be ap portioned among the five comacted men. The defendants Avere sentenced separately. ,Jr.dge Sheppard made no long address, but merel.v gave them ;in opportunity to say why sentence should not be pronounced, a prinlege of which they took but small advan- tage, and then passed the sentences. Mr. Shotter was the last to be sen tenced. Judge Sheppard made his longest speech then, probably a hun dred words. razors to the latLS of bill. The judiciary committee of tho Senate referred the Connoj' ajjpoiut- B:ent to a sub-committee composed of iJorah, of Idaho; Brandegee. of Connecticut, jind Overman, of North Carolina. This oonimitt-'e will con sider the matter within the ue-':t fow days. Senator Dixon, of Montana, says that he is getting a number of letters from North Carolina Republicans protesting against Ihe confirmation of Connor on the ground that his ap pointment is a political mi.,take. as they see it. Jama'S T. Williams. Jr., who was appointed civil service commissioner by Pre.sident Taft, has tendered his resignation and will go to New Mexi co for liis health. He has disejvered within the last week that he has tu berculosis. Thi.s eomos as a severe blow to Air. Williams and his friends. Although he is under 30 years of age be has made an enviable record here. THE DAVIS EROTHERS CHARGED WITH MUCH WRONG C.'brothers with forgery and false pre- X, I tenses. ■lip I The embezzlement charges go far i32.ilOA. 'liii,!! \Ya.shington, Special.—John Davis ann his brother., Martin c 1 n iniWe la I _ — —oo*In j addition he knows of & case where bezdem7rr“:n'V"‘'‘“‘"“'“ from a person, rast S™ms of T complaint up to auLr “ of tre claimants, it is ex" .- f the foiged papers and peeted, desiring to avoid publicity, fi-y AleJiili' were indicted by the’grand ,iW Ihnrsdsy. The indictments char^ ’ *'■’*nd other^ citie.s j h)s attention aggregate $150,000 Crtino TnT*v It—_ _ a false pretenses. Five true bills, charging embezzle- flient and two charging forgery and utterance, weie returned again?; .John C. Davis. Embezzlement from the Potomac Building and Loan Associs have not m.ade complaint. Including these rlaims, United States^ Attorrey Baker estimated al •f'lSOjOCO, the total amount secured by John Damn's from investors. Mr. Baker Thursday made a state- tion 1,; lur. naKer ’Jbursday made i tr“ak,rerr S for^^Ir^ Tl “"1 Thomas A. Owen again^^t Martin T Bavis Tn arrested on a charpe of con- After several houis spent in the Senate ednesday in discus.sing the windovv' glass sclierluie of the tr.riti' bill. Senator Aldrich asked that that paragraph be passed ovrn-. Some oth er seel ions relating to gl.iss manufac tured articles, that previously had been passe dover, were agreed to. The Senate proceeded to the consid eration of parsed over sections until Ihe iron ore paragraph wes reached, when Senator Crawford spoke at length upon the lack of wi^om of any tariff that encouraged the ex haustion of natural n-.sonrees. which could not readily be reproduced. Pie insisted that there should be no taritl On iron ore, oil, lumber and coal. Early in tho session, Senator Payn- ter spoke at length iu favor of thn remova'I of the duty of six cents a pound upon ;eaf robacco o'” '* means for freeing the tobacco g s from lo'> Ihosa siiwrL'Sted by c.t-:iaor C;iiJ?f mnis in his amendment to the same I paragraph Tuesday. “The rates proposed bv you are the rates of the Wilson bill, are they not'!” inquired Mr. Aldrich, address ing the Senator from North Carolina. replied Mr. Simmons, smiling and hesitating, “that .should not he an arg iment against them. I think if that is the case it would rather be a commendation ” SERIES OF tornadoes SWEEP THE SOUTH Kansas City, Mo., Special.—A ser- ’’’ Kensas, Missori and Oklahoma late Friday killed a dozen persons, injured about 100, de- vastated Hollis, Kan., wrecked a train and did^ great damage to property. Twenty-live were injured in suburbs 31 Kansas City. At Hollis three men were killed and ten seriously injured. The Eck- strom family of five persons is miss ing and may bo dead in the ruins of the home. Near Gre.it Bend, a tornado killed two and injured 20. All wireS are down in that vicinity and it is feared that the death list may be greater. William Ackerly, a Saute Fe en gineer, was killed while working with a bri.lgfl sang between Great BeiW 8nd Kinsley. Frank Vichwlson, a conductor, was also killed. The storm spread over a widt farming area and laid waste man> farm houses and barns. An estimati of the rtral cafulties could cot be ob tained. At Hoisington, Ka.i., a tornado in- .lured a number of persons and greatly damaged farm property. At Pond Creek, Okln., a seve'*^ wind storm injured four persons and iHiroofed several houses. ^ Man.v wa.shouts interrupted trafRc Electrical disturbanees crippled tele graph and telephone wires. KILLED WM?LE TRVIMO TO SHOOT ANOTHER Roanoke, Va., Special-William Bailpy and t-J. M. Young, two young men of promir-eni families oif Lc-e county, (his State, shot and killed ftach other while trying to kill an other man Thursday night at a .school entertainment at Dryden. Young Bailey had an altercation with William Jesse over the matter of tickets 01 aaniission. Youn^ and I tainmeni was Bailey abused Jesse and the lattei struck one of tliem, Jesst and Young clinch*d and Bailey, in an effort to shoot Jesse, shot Yonu?, As Youno ^’as failing he fired aimlessly, th ball killinjr his friend, Bailev.' Jesse was shot in the side and another^nan ^vas slightly wounded. Pandemonium lei^ed in the ball where the enter- hcld. STRICT PARTY LINES ARE BROKEN ON THE TAR.IFF Washington, Speoial;—After day devoted to discussing the dut.v on iron ore, tha Senate, just before ad journment Thnrs.lay adopted by a vote of 61 to 24, the recommendation of the committee on tiaance for ."i duty of 2f) cents per ton on. iron ore. The- House had placed that aitiole on ihe free list while tho pivscnt law » vies a duty on it of 40 cents per ton. In this vote pa.f.y iines were annhilat- ed, .IS fisventoMi Deinocn'.ts voted ‘aye” with the Itepublicons and Substantial progress ivas made in the consideration of the' tariff Tues day, tl'.e amendments of the tcm- mittee on finaaea being upheld by the Senate b.v sub.-itantial majorities. A feature of the day’s session was a g'eneral discussion concerning the great disparity between wholesale and retail priees of commodities. Re publican Senalors declared that this difference was so great as to demon strate that the duty levied by a pro tective tariff had small effect on the price paid by ;ne consumer. On motion of Mr. Aldrich the sec tion relating to -^oap was .-'mended so to place a duty of 50 per cent ad xalorem on perfumed soap. The House provision on sulphur was further nmonded so as to place crude sulphur on ihe free list and to provide for a duty of $-1 a ton on re fined sulphur. Speaking in favor of a reduction of the duties on stone and earthenware as a means of giving the people gen erally cheaper goods of that kind, Jfr. Bacon offered an amendment re ducing the rate from 60 to 35 per cent ad valorem. Mr. Bacon 's amendment was de feated by a vote of 25 to 54, Senator LaFollette being the only Kepublican who voted in the afErmative with the Democrats. Raleigh, Special.—The work that is being done by the U. S. Weathei Bureau is perhaps bi'tler known lo Ihe majority cf clti;:ei:s than that of any olhor E-uiean of the Goverii- m}nt, and i! htrdly seems necessai'^-^ to defend it from such attacks as for initajice that v.hich appeared iu Ev-1 erybody’s Magazine for ilay. This' attack was ivritTer. by >tr. Kmerson j Houg'h, who makes specific charji^es, j and these charges will be reviewed' and ansvored in order. . First, he charsfos that the Weather! Bureau is unduly expensive, but does! not e^lain t]^at iho appropriation > tor this sei-vice is examined critical-' l.y, item by item by a committc.e of Congress, and that tliis committee vojuntai-ily increased the appropria tion asked for by $133,200.00, and that last year more than $50,000.00 was returned to the U. S. Treasury. The Honorable Ja.i. R. Mann said that this seiTice is the most economi cally administered service, with tLe work that has been done, in the Gov ernment servic-'j anywhere. Second, that it doe-s not progres-s. It would seem that progress is being tnade from the fact that representa tives of weather organizations of Europe have visited this country for the ex]jress purpose of studying meth ods and forecasting under’the Chief of the U. S. Weather Bur.eau. Re searches of great value to the science of meteorology are being cai'ried on by this Bureau, and the world’s re cord for tl:.;> i^'reatest height reaohed by a kite carrying a meteorological instrument was attained by this Bu- rciiu. gt Mt. W'.eather, , Va.. the . re search observatorv. Third, that it is excessively explan atory. This is rather a virtu-e than a fault. The W^eather Bureau has notning that it wishes to keep secret. Its tcethods and results, however, must be made known, or the public would not. hav* that sympathetic re lation with this Bureau that it now holds. Fourth, that the senice is general and not specific. A kimwledge of the nr/ib*e,Tis iMifolvtd in -'■i--' •r 8pr>'iSg .. V 'V..# ' are lutuiAW as file i.no>,ledge of the conditions will war rant. Fifth, that it is ev.isivo and inten- tioiialiy ambiguous. TIm forecasts are formulated W’ith great care, and cannot have not in anv sense a Del phic interpretation. They are made to cover a definite period and all fore casts are carefully examined to ascer tain the percentage of accuracy which varies fi-om 80 to So per cent. Sixth, that it off»rs no w.^ll-found- ed hope of impiovemeut in local fore casting. On the contrary every in ducement is made to officials in the Weather Bureau to exc.;l in local fore casting, and the practical test of merit of ail experiments and al! theoretical work is the measure of how much it will improve the for-s- casting of the weather. j In the cases of the Galveston storm and the storm in which the steam.ship Portland was wrecked, I which Mr. Hough claims the Bureau | failed to fon^cast. the records ofi marine associations, of the local press, I and of the ^veatJier Bureau bear un-1 im{Hiachable testimony to the ftct| that the Bureau gave aiapk warning! of the coming of the Galveston storm that the Gulf was praeticolly clear-! ed of Vessels of commerce and no loss 1 of property occurred in tiie open sea, j and that the luorniiig before the pas-1 sage of the slorin hurricane signals 1 vrere ordered and other Gtdf ports. ■ - ■ -■ la regard to ehn j f the Port- jland the New ' es of Dec. j 1, 1S96 said; ' I “In lea\;ng Boston Saturday ligtit th! captain of the Portl.ind took chances whicii no man m. his posi tion had a right to take. Fi'om a source that warranted ;>,?plicit be lief, he, like every otiier „aptain on Ibe Atlr.ntic coast, had received wai'n- ing that a stcnn of e:;eeptional sever ity would strik.3 him as soon as he I lecc-jed open water, and that he knew I that Ilia steamer, though well baiit and comparatively new, was of a type much better designed for ent»r- J ing shallow haibors than for eucoun- ! taring winter gales on as dangerous I a cort as theie is in the world. D?- j spite all this and according to his i employer, iu defiance of implTcit or- cleit, ho steamed out into the gather ing tempest. Why? Perhaps he be- lo.iged to the class, once large, but now small and rapidly disappearing, the members of w'hich sneer at the Government Weather Bur/'au, and prefer to rely upon old ‘‘sji.-ns” in stead of on new scienc.i as the basis of m.eteorological prcjjhecy. Per haps a score of thing;. Oni.y this is certain, he should not hav.j sailed, and he should not have been allowed to sail.” Odt PcUowE Meet in Charlotte. Charlotte, N. C., Spe«'ial.—Char lotte was the property of the Odd Fellows of North Carolina Tuesday. Delegates to the meeting of the Grand Lodge were hero by the hundreds and the streets ot; the City were aswarm with uniformed officers, representa tives of every town iu the State in which is located a lodge of this great order. Others arrivec*d latei. Ar rangements were made by tiie IoclI entertainment committee to care for not less than 500 visitors. The vjrr- ious lodges of the State sent not less than 300 accredited delegates and many more were present for the pur pose of attending the meeting of the Grand Lodge, which occupied three days. Indian Badly Wotwded. Asheville,^ _ Speciu' — A ,sej*io»3» ; shfj-'t.-sV .o^ctrf, e-.. !‘'rif1:!y Att.'tnoi.ar >' '' ( 'p -i.., !r, 'what WBS %i‘, aUjgl!:, Mown 'H3 tie H-yaiher “soft drink” place on south Lexing- t« avenue, -R+en it is alleged that W ade VYilsou shot an Indian nam-ed "Whippoorwill. Whippoorwill was drunk or near drunk and doesn’t know much about it. At first lie said that the shooting was au accident and later that he was ordered out of the place and that the shooting followed. The Indian was taken to th/;- City Hall, his woiieds dressed and lie was then sent to a hospital. He was shot through the arm and the breast and is said to be bleeding internally. Thxongh Truck Train to New York. I Newbem, Special.—Monday at a j meeting of the truckere, Superiten- I dent Foster, of the Norfolk & South ern, and Superintendent Fountain, held here, it was decided for the new through truck train to leave here at II a. m., for Goldsboro, where it wii! be made a through train for New York on the Atlautic Coast Line. The train will at prcsci/v run on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays and the Atlantic Coast Line will furnish as far as possible ventilated cars for fie service. The sehedule is satisfactory to all and means bettor piitf^s for tho truckers as the goods will r''ach the markets earlier and in belter condi tion than as is the case with present schedule. the the Democrats. During the day Sen ator Baile.y, iu aanotinciug that hf proposed tn vote for tho duty on iron ore as a revenue measure, declared that such action did not affect the prosperity of the United States Steel Corporation, .n:d added that even if It did there w»b a befter way to deal ihx ocii.n- vvith that organization, wliich was) "’bo had complained of the fail- of the anti-tnist law '"■» that committee to provide more Almost the entire session of the Senate Friday was given up to a de bate on the profits of tbe United States Steel Coiporatien and toward the end of tho day, pei-sonalities were freely indulged in by Senators. This occurred after Senator Root had spoken in defense of the finance committee .ind in criticism of Sen.i an enforcement of the anti-tnist law against it. He declar‘d that he ex pected to see this law enforced and he e.\presscd confidence that eventu ally the cfTiceis of the steel eorpara- tion wojld cither bo in the peniten- twelve Kepubjicans voted “no” ;tir.ry or fugitives from justice. J luiiple infonuatiou concerning various schedules. Mr. Money resented what he characterized as a lecture to the Senate, by Senator Root, and said if he desired less speaking iu the body “he should do less of it himself.” Times Mercury Chs.ages Hacds. Hickory^, Special.—A stock com pany, with J. Kiilian as president, and R. G. Maco as business manager, has bought the Times-Mei^Mtry. and will continue its publication, but as a strictly Republican paper. Mr. Click is no longer ccinnected with the paper, but ivill devote his time to tho Nutshell, a semi-monthly, which he began publishing a few months' Ex-Sheriff Urcps Dead. Salisbury, Special. — J. Hodg« Krider, former sherilV of fiowan coun ty, dropped dead at his home in Salis bury Friday from heart failure. He I was called for breakfast, and when he I foiled lo appear was found dead in I ins bed. If.-.' was 52 yeai-s old, a well I known olticei, and is s:urvived by one I son, seven d.-aishters, two brothers and a sister. The funeral takes plaoe with Mastonic honors. Dr. E, Y. yates Dies Suddenly. Durham, Special.—Dr. E. Y. Yates, veten-an minister of the Methodist church, and for nearly niue years I lecturer in the department of Biblical Literature at Trinity College, died sittii.g in a chair at'his hotel Friday afternoon. Ho had been ailiug since Sunday with a dft-jp cold, but was up the street I'lis morning. After eat- i’^'g his mid-day lunch, he wont *o the fnmt porch and was sitting reading the paper when bis her.d dropped for- w.-ird and he was dead in a faw min utes. H--.‘srt trouble, with which he hod been afflic-tod for several years, was the cause of liis death. Bandits Hold Tip Train. Spokane, Wash.. Special.—Follow ing the hold-up of the Great ^Nolth em passenger train by six bandits between Colbert and .Mead Saturday night, 12 persons were injured when tho locomotive and the raait car?, cut off from the rest of the trr.in, were rtiii back wild bv thr bandits, afttT they had rifled Ihe rest of the train. The conductor saw th.? wild cars coming back -at 25 miles an hour. Ha and another trainman placed a tie on the track, but the cars, though part ly Siopped, plunged into ihe coaches, throwing passengera from their seats, cuttir.,; them with broken