THE MORNING STAR, .WILMINGTON,. N.; G; SATURDAY; NOVEMBER i 3, 1915. TWO DAUOSAI FESTIVAL IN KIOTO HAS COMMENCED One of the Three Great Rites of Coronation. YORK HERALO AIMS yiTAGRAPH BROADWAY .. STAR; FEATURE Money Refunded for Anything-hAlwayt. FOR MB PLANNED "Through Troubled fin r. ,v - By General Home Mission ' Committee of tHe'Synod." Predicts He Will Have "Serious smon in .io PRESBYTERIANS WOff NEW M, " 1 1 mi,, - , ; , " III II ill Hew Emperor Offers the First Crop of the First Harvest of Riee to the Imperial Ancestors, Gods and Goddesses. Kioto. Nov. 12. The Daijosai Fes tival, or Grand Thanksgiving Festival, the ceremony of offering sacred rice to the imperial ancestors and the gods and goddesses of beaten and earth, began today at the imperial palace. This ceremony is one oifthe three great rites of the coronation and is of very ancient origin. When Ninigino-mikoto, the grand son of the Sun Goddess, Amaterasu Omikaml, founder of the Japanese im perial dynasty, descended "from the heavenly domain, as it is traditionally told, to Mount Takachiho, in Kyushu, and established imperial handojuarters there, he sowed the seeds of rice plants and presented the first crop to the Sun Goddess before himself tasting the food. This was the very 'beginning of the Daijosai festival. Rice constitutes the most important daily food of the Japanese people, and the land was, in the mythological pe riod, called the Land of Sacred Rice. Since that time the ceremony is ob served as an essential function by every ruler who succeeds to the throne. The rite was ordained by an imperial edict issued by Emperor Mutsuhito in it 71, three years after his late .Ma jesty's succession. The central idea is that the new Em peror,' invested with the suzerainty of the Land of the "Sacred Rice, offers, to the imperial ancestors and the gods and goddesses of heaven and earth the first crop of the first harvest in his reign. It is, therefore, observed as a etate ceremony and not as a court ceremony. ' Related Jto It is a ceremony of minor importance, which is annually held in the imperial court ori November 23 and simultaneously at the grand ehrines at Ise. It is called the harvest festival. As the rice on which sixty millions of the subjects of ' the im perial house sustain their lives had been granted by the imperial ancestor, as related above, fevery sovereign of the land expresses his thanks for the benevolence of the imperial ancestor in behalf of his millions of subjects. v-. : - Important Meeting Jest Held at San- Walker Taylor, of WUmln--ton, Among Members. '; Saya ; He SbWd ( Rcelgn an .Majority -;X.tatorjif eOtosrBewise'' Be , Doesn't Agree iWltn Presi dent's Policy. NEGRO IS l,YJfCHED (Hob of Sfas&ed Hen Take Him From Jail Fired at Deputy. Aberdeen, Miss.," Nov. 12 John Tay lor,; a negro, charged "with haying fired at a deputy sheriff while the latter was attempting to arrest an other negro who had -taken refuge on Taylor's farm last Tuesday, was takr en from jail here last night by a moo of masked men and lynched. .. His body was found today swinging from a bridge twd miles south of here. ' (Special Star Correspondent.) ' ' Sanford, N. C, Nov. 12 A large and. enthusiastic meeting of ; the general home mission 'omymitt?ei Of the Synod of North Carolina Was held at ; San-, ford, Thursday atfternpoW with the" chairman and superintendent. Rev. ; jC W. Crawford, and seven; ministers and; five elders from different parts of the State: Rev. Messrs. H ?. Hill, D. D., of Alaxton; R. A. Miller, Lowell; J. M. Wells, D. D., Wilmington; "Wil liam mack, Leonard Gill. Charlotte ; Letcher Smltn, FayettevillerS. M. Ran kin, Greensboro, and ruling elders: W. H. Belk, Charlotte;. James R. Young, Raleigh; Col. Walker Taylor, Wilming ton; A. F. Fatterson, Laurel Hill, and J. H. Kennedy, Gastonia. Encouraged by the unusual results of the year just closed, in which there were more professions of faith and additions to: th8 church than any previous year In the history of the upon every hand throughout the State, I me commmee arter live and careful deliberation took, steps toward a great iorward movement in the advance ment of the work. .- - The committee aave srjerial atten tion to its financial problems. Amoner the actions taken wpw i The third Sunday in January was di rected 10 oe oDserved throughout the churches and Sabbath schools of the Synod as "Rally Day" for Synod's home mission work, and the chairman of home missions, elders YandJ'resbyte rial evangelists in thetkv respective Presbyteries were instructed to divide the territory among themselves, and furnish the churches with literature. and personally present the work and nwa conierences with the officers end church members. 2. A publicity com mittee was appointed to get great and striking facts Of: the. work before the people. 3. It kWjs Resolved to pay all workers in tliiyHeJd on the first of each month, and a' financial committee was asked to assist the treasurer in matters of finance. 4. The commit tee action heartily endorsing the movement aroon the presbtyerles to wards securing aft evangelist in each presbytery. For all departments of home mission work in the State for the year clos ing with Synod, including the work of the congregations," the presby teries and the Synod, there was ex pended SF74.lll.00. Washington, Nov. 12, President Wilson today issued an order author ising Major General Hugh L.; Scott, chief of staff, of the army, "to per form the duties of Secretary of War during the illness or temporary absence from the seat of government of the Secretary of War, whenever during such illness or absence the assistant secretary of war is also absent." ARRESTED FOR FORGERY. J. B. Cllftea Confesses Charge to Pa f lice at Meridian, Miss. V Meridian, Mis; ; Nov. 12. "J B. Clif ton, with a number of aliases, was .ar rested here today .on .a forgery charge. According to the police he told them he "had operated In several Westesai and Southern cities, passing worthless checks in Kansas City, ChlcaKO, New, Orleans, Birmingham v.juii Memphis; Clifton, who was also known as Burns and Hicks, had In his' possession nlai.k checks from almost every city in the South. . -.(Special Star Telegram.) ' Wintiingn 'p. q., Nov. 12.-Predict ing thatVbe will: have "serious opposir tlpn'C; for. Congress next year and that he ' should ::resign as majority leader, of tiie -coming 4 Congress because be does not agree With President Wil son on his National Defense pro gramme, the New York Herald, pub lished in New York and Paris and with a decided gleaning " for the Allies and everything Republican, has started out to beat Claude KUcbin for Congress next yeafc. ,f . ' In a column story in today's issue, The Herald gives a yelp about Kit chin's disagreement with the adminis tration that could be heard from New York to London if such a thing were possible. -It is significant that the resident's National defense policy is about the only thing advocated by the present administration that has pleas ed the Herald. ." In alj other proposi tions advocated by the administration the erad has been pleased to oppose and delighted when Democratic lead ers disagreed with Mr. Wilson. According to te Herald's story, George W. Connor, of Wilson, and N. J. Rouse, of K-lnston, will oppose Mr. Kitchin for Congress next year, chief ly because Kitchin is . not willing to vote for a proposition that will com mit this country to the greatest mil itary system known to the world. The Herald says that "getting out of line with his, party organization is more1 or' lejstf'6f a favorite .pastime of Mr. Kltchttfc.J There is a past fct North Carolina which sheds a little light on the present attitude." If Kitchin has ever voted against his party platform no one , in -Washington has heard about ; it. P. R. A. .- M .I ; - a GONDOS BROTHER? CHARGED TTlTB TTEMPTE EXTORTION , : d jfi . -I.. Held Yesterday hy Grand Jury Under f 10,000 BaU Each New York, Nov. 12. Alexander and Victor Gondos, editor and publisher, respectively, of the . Bridgeport Daily News, were held for the grand Jury in bail of 110,000 each today,- after the charge of extorting $2,000 from Julius Pernitzer, president of the Trans-Atlantic Trust Company, of this city, was reduced to one of attempted ex tortion. Pernitzer testified that the Gondos brothers called upon him and produc ed a plan written in Hungarian, of a campaign to be made against the trust company. One section of the plan translated read: "The money for the Fay bomb plot was sent from Germany through the Trans-Atlantic Trust Co." Still another declared: "The Trans AtlantleTrUst . Company represents here a policy Xf inducing immigrants to -return homev" Pernitzer denied that! he . knew. Fay- or his alleged plot. The Fay referred to Is Robert. Fay. claiming .to -be aa lieutenant of the German army; who,- with- four others, is held" oj:a, &iaTg;of attempting to blow up munition -ehips. ITALIAN LINER SUNK BY AUSTRIAN SUBMARINE. K- C- - v';4 fan- pm ; ' bwr mm m , infr' A HI s m ywSr - VMS? A , I . . lSsSa II UP TILL 11 -QIISrfONIGM Griffon Clothes In Blocht GlotKes Schloss Brfithers Clothes All the Standard Brands. Your price is OURS, s 16 REASONABLE OFFER REFUSED EXTRA SPECIAL! SlfGIAt EXTRA! $2i50 Grade IVianhattan5 i . ALL SIZES. Get here today to get your sise. A WORD TO Thousands of Boys' and Children' MOTHERS SUITS AND OVERCOATS . All Styles, Sizes and Makes. Take your pick at your own price for our story of the ' Fleet-Davis Go's. Stock --AND Palace Cldtliiiig Go's. Stock 4 will. end tonight. Bring your pennies today, for they will do the work of dollars. mm wm Fleet Davis SUnd, 207 North Front street, next to Bijou. Baltimore, M cL Richmond, Va. Petersburg, Va. i I cr I !leaUL INFLUENCE OF CHINESE COST OR. GARDNER HIS POSITION Charge Followlas Rlnatton aa In- eetor and Interpreter. ne Th Italian liner Ancona, found for .the United States with a large number of women and children, was sunk by an Austrian submarine, oft the coast of Sardinia. November 8. Dr. stocco, .BUn Bur f von CaptaUa Flotro Maaaatrtfo. ' itala Zolaiusl, CUet OffHseft San rrancico, Nov. 12.-Dr. John E. Gardner, Chinese inspector ' and inter preter at this port for thirty-two years, whose resignation yesterday wa3 offered and accepted at Washington, charged today that the influence of Wong Doo i-in?, a powerful Chinese recently deported, cost him his posi tion. JJr. Gardner resigned rather than accept transfer to Gloucester, N. J., which he said, is an unimportant post. ' "The boast was made by Chinese a year ago that I would be demoted or transferred for- my work in the Wong Doo King case," Dr. Gardner said' to day. "Six weeks ago. a Chinese told me I could avoid demotion by lending money to the wife of an immigration official." , . When t)r. Gardner's transfer .was ordered, a telegram asking its revo cation was sent to Washington, signed by brads of various departments here and .by-i'ae,ral judges, he said. Wbrtg Dob ' King, a leader among Cftihese, and said to have been the head of the Un$ Kong Tong, fought deportation for years. His power was said to match that of the, great Chin ese Six companies. SHOULD DISPOSE OF TREATY Senator Stone Say Courtesy Demand Settlement With . Celambla. - Washington. Nor. 18. Common courtesy among nations demands that the Senate dispose of the pending treaty with Colombia in the near fu ture," declared Senator Stone, chairman of the-foreign relations committee, in discussing today the affairs which wilt demand the immediate attention of his committee when Congress convenes. The principal provision of the pend ing convention which has been a stumbling block for two years, is that the United States shall pay $25,000. 000 to Colombia for the Panama canal strip. Several Democratic members ot the committee have joined with Repub licans in contendin gtbat the figure is exhorbitant. , ' ' EDITOR W. C BIVENS ELECTED To Sacceed Profcaaor Kiker M Super . intendent of Schools in Anson. ' (Special to Star correspondence.) wadesboro, N. C, 12. At a call meet ing, held today, of the board of edu cation for Anson county, Superintend ent of Fublic Instruction Paul- J. Kiker tendered his resignation, to take effect January 1. His resignation was accepted. A number .of nominations for the office were at once placed be for the board. Among this number was the nomination of! Mr. w. c. BJv ens, editor of the Wadesboro Anson ian, who was unanimously elected by the board to All the unexpired term of Frotessof Kiker. No. Six-Sixty-Six This Is a preecriptfoa prepared especially for MALARIA or CHILLS A. FEVER. Five or six doses will break any case, end if taken then as tonic the Fever will not return. It acts on the liver better than Calomel and does not gripe or sicken. 25c TJ3ttiMOJA03W3M Read Star Business Locals. HORSE SHOW CLOSES. Absence of ForeltfB Exhibitors Detract ' - ed " SoMenrhat front' 'Snow. ( : New York, Nov. 12.-The 1916 horse showt ended tonight with" the, jumping Contest 'for United States army officers' horses. The absence of foreign exhib itors detracted BomewMat from the. show, but the interest of American ex hibitors was as-keen as formerly. Miss Loula Long, . of Kansas City, broved one of the surprises -of the Na tional exhibit. With 25 entries of v&r lous classes she won 15 ribbons and Cups. One of her last victories was with Heveiation, when she won the Baudouhte. cup , for horses driven ' to phaetons, ladies driving. FIVE PRISONERS ESCAPE. Break ThroagU Root of Building at Kansas Penitentiary. Leayehwort,h, - Ka.. Nov. 12. Five prisoners escaped from the Kansas penitentiary at Lansing, at 8 o'clock tonight and at a lata hour still wers at iargs. TheyVfcroke through the roof of the buiiaing with an iron bar and let themselves down Outside the Wail by. a. rope made of bed sheets. William Latrasse, convicted of train robbery, was the leader. He was found guilty of holding up and ' robbing a Missouri Pacifl'o train near Kansas City in 1910. r . . ,y-y-.-, , c Ban Franeiseo,? Ca.r Nov. l2.New Orleans was selected today & the piaoa t6t the lftie convention Of the Nation al Association of Professional Baseball Leagues in convention here. ff There's Always Something Around zg the House that heeds Reffbishing--- 9 An old piece of furniture you hate to part with, worn J floors or scratched doors, and as you look about g you'll find infinite uses for Pee Gee RE-NU-LAC. Q TbJs combined Stain nnd Varnish U txtndc for beautifying your D - home. You can easily apply it on any kind of wood. On Try Pea Gee RE-NtTLAC to-day. if a In . expensire and assure best result eiwaya. PacGe RE'NU'LAC comet in II Natural Wood colon, White, Gold and Stiver Enamel D D 0 U D D D U Q Q g U D rt u P a PEASLEE-GAULBERT CO.. Incorobratetl n Manuf acturera ' ' t.mtUvill. U Louisville, Ky- loaaannaao: A. M. MOKK13 CO. H D 1 Wilmincrton. N. C u laaoaoapaDoaoooaaaaaDaaaarJcaDtv .. , Waters" In Three Reels Featuring ALFRED VOSBURGH "The Fable of the Statesman Who Didn't Make Good" ; eWey ly Qeorge Ae Coawfy Drama "The Auction Sale Of Run-Down Ranch" Featuring TQM Kq; ORDIAXCE AH BXDIJT& TRAFFIC .. . . REGULATIONS Adopted November 10th, 19t5. Be ordained by the Councii of the City of Wilmington, it is hereby ordained by authority of the same: 1- Tha.t troin aad after the 20th day of November, 1915, it shall bs unlawful to leave standing', whether occupied or not, any vehicle except street cars, either ' on . Front or f rineeas streets within fifty (50) feet of the intersection of said streets. S. That the provisions of this ordi nance shall not apply to vehicles at the time, actually engaged n receiving and delivering goods and merchandise from places of business within the lim its hereinbefore prescribed. THQS. p. JIEARES, no 13 sa it . . Clerk and Treasurer. ordinance: amending tax ordinance Adopted November loth, 1915. Be it ordained by the Council of the City of Wilmington: that Section t$ of tho Tux Ordinance for the year 1915, be and is hereby amended as follows: Strike' out the words or figures One Hundred Pollars per annum pay able annually and insert in Heu there of "on mills with capacity exceeding 80,000 feet per Jay, $100.00 per annum payable quarterly; on mills with ca- ?actty of 50.000 feet per day or less 50.00 per annum payable quarterly." BO 13 $a 4t Clerk and Treasurer. ordinance amending tax ordinance: Ad nnted October 27th. IBIS. "Be it ordained by the Council of the City of Wilmington, N. c. That the Tax Ordinance for the year 1915, be and is hereby amended as follows: Section 39 is hereby repealed, to take effect the First day of December J015. - The following words shall be added to Sections 40 and 8l, to-wlt "Con tractors, carrying stock and having a place of business where stock is kept an riisnlaverL shall nav. in addition to above, the regular tax imposed upon dealers under aection ao -oi inn vrai nance." THOS. J. MEARES, no 12 sa 4t Clrk and Treasurer. ORDINANCIu AMENDING TRAFFIC REGULATIONS , Adopted .November 3rd 1915. "Be it ordained by the Council of the City of Wilmington and it is here by ordained by authority of the same that an ordinance relating to the turn ing of vehicles on certain streets of and is hereby amended as follows: Add to said ordinance the following: "Providing this ordinance shall not apply to vehicles at the time being used for the purpose of delivering or receiving merchandise to or from plac es Of pusiness, within the limits herein above) set out." THOS. D. MEARES, no 13 sa 4t Clerk and Treasurer. ORDINANCE AMENDING TAX ORDINANCE Adopted. November 10thf 1915 "Bs it ordained by the Council of tha City of Wilmington and U is here by ordained by authority of the same, that Section 46 of the Tax Ordinance for the year 1915 be and is hereby amended to read as follows: " "Wholesale dealers in, manufactur ers Of, maintaining or operating plants outside of the limits of the City and who maintain offices within the City, or any person, firm or corporation acting as agent of any other person, firm or corporation, in the sale of fer tilisers who has or maintains an office or, place of business or private ware house for storage of fertilizers in tn City of Wilmington, shall pay a license tax of $100.00 per annum." THOS. D. MEARES, no 1? sa '4t , Clerk and Treasurer. ORDINANCE AMENDING TAX ORDINANCE Adopted November 10th, 1015. "Be it ordained by the Council the City of Wilmington, and it is here by ordained by authority of the sam that Section 45 of the Tax Ordinance Of 1915 be and is hereby repealed. THOS. D. MEAREo, HO 12 sa 4t Clerk and Treasurer. IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE United States for ths Eastern V 'trict of North Carolina. In the Matter of H. H. Ford, olun ' tary Bankrupt. In Bankruptcy. . . To th creditors of H. H. Ford, Wilmington, in Ihe County of Hanover and pistrict aforesaid, bankrupt; - th. Kotice is hereby given that on tn Uth day of . November. A. jws. w eaid H. H. Ford was duly adjudicsMJ bankrupt, and that the first metni of his creditors will be held at w United States Court Room, Yml ton, N. C on tha 23rd day of ovs br, A. C, 1915. at 11 o'clock in " forenoon, at which time the 6ld,c". Iters may tttend, prove their eisttg appoint a Trustee, examine the fan rupt. ahd transact such other du ness as ay properly come before meeting. OEO. H. HOWELL Referee in Bankruptcy. Wilmington, N. C November 12. i n 7 f