r..'.V-j-.-.-r-.r in.);,-,,,.,-., . .. - ... -, ... , 6TABUSHEP iaa i'f &il?El?fefa)SE NBER FOSU REG0GUITI01I FOR CARRAUZA PITBIiiqlORAliS.ACX. m-e . wn a HERS OF FAR AND NEAR. Tim THE r CHW J Buchanan. -streefc-rneat . the. lallwax 1 7f the Mrs. nr. Charles Bvf . L. of this city, and Miss Vir- - a seay, of Shore, -Va., were Pd yesterday afternoon at iHAjum T 'c bride's parents. Mrs. ReaW ,sf lister of Mrs. A. H. ohnsonpf this city- .. . . ,4 To Waste Basket. Because the .-rr neglected the simple huiMmr cortant matter of signing his.h name to the communication, a batch If Rrick church items received- eek found their way into -tl y&ste . stpad of the wuitins 5ot casncL v- Little Boy Dead. Oscar thrpe-vear-old son of Mr. and n Rudd, of Brown Summit. -died-i Sunday night, following a brief ill ness of diphtheria. The funeral was held from the home Monday after-' noon and interment made int ' the burying ground at MonticellO. Pastor Called. The congregation of Asheboro Street Baptist church last night extended a cal to Rev.VW. r. White, of Campbellsburg, Ky., to tecome pastor of the church to- suc ceed Rev. R. P. Walker, who recent ly moved to Albemarle. It is thought the call will be accepted and . that Rev. Mr. White will take lip therork in about 30 days. .. Aged Woman Dead. Mrs. Martha j. Andrews, the aged , mother of Rev. r. M. Andrews, pastor of Grace Meth cdist Protestant church, died yester day morning at 2 o'clock at her home in Burlington. She was taken sud denlv and seriously ill Tuesday and her death came as a ahock to her rel atives and friends. She was 80 years old and is survived by six children. Case Settled. Mr. H.,E. Williams, of Oak Ridge, whose automobile ran over and injured Messrs. E.M. Oz ment and E. L. Holder last Thursday night, was in Municipal court yester day on a charge of reckless driving The case was settled by tbe defend ant paying the court costs and giving Messrs. Ozment and Holder a check for $80 to cover their loss of time, medical attention, etc. A Credit Guide. Representatives of a mercantile agency are in the city gathering data for a local credit guide to be published soon. The book will seek to give the proper Tatin? of people who run accounts as to their ability and inclination to pay their hills. Such information would be of much value to business con cerns that are called upon to extend credit to strangers and new custom-; ers. - Special Meeting. A special meet ing oi the North Carolina Children's Home Society was held Monday af ternoon at the society's headquarters in this city and several mattess in connection with the details of the work were considered. Mr. L. Putman, the new superintendent of the society, reported that 30 cases of needy and homeless children had been considered during the flrst"half of October. Changes Name. The directors of the Social Welfare League; formerly the Greensboro Inter-Church Associa tion, have voted to change the name of the organization to the Board of Public Welfare, the change being made in order to avoid confusion with the social welfare departments of the Y. W. C. A. and the Woman's Club. Mrs. Blanche Carr has been . acting as secretary of the organiza tion since the retirement9 of Rev. E. J. Harold several months ago. Retailers in Court. The Munici pal court had another run of blind tiger cases this week, the result of ine work of a detective import e irom Raleigh by the city.- The de tective ' turned up" a doaen negroes n charges of retailing and all of them werp fnnnH criifltTT Vlovon of defendants were men and were sentences on the citv street force. The lone woman' caught . in tne raid was sent to the work house. The sentences ranged from four to' 3 2 months. 8 ( - Murchison Promoted-' Many 4ers of T he Patriotwlio remember Ir- J- C. Murchison as a former of ficial of the old C. P. & Y. V. Rail way and later as a furniture manu- THE WAt! PREPAREDrFOR PEACE. Station, waa closed Tii esAa.v bv RhAr. AMNESTY SOON. in eianora Dy an order or the Su perior uotlrt undetVhat is -known aat Washington, Oct. 19. Venustiano the GuiHortf county pu&ic Inoralsr Carrarizavas formally recognized to inaiter will Vome up at ther day a8' the chief executive of the re- wBbelTvil trtnof court tor:aifubUc of Mexico by the governments joraer:!ior;tnej8aietioi::the property, 'si v"c uuucu aw,'cB "" Argenima, uuaiemaia, uinvia, Uru guay, "Colombia and Nicaragua. - Diplomatic representatives of the first six Latin-American soun tries, se lected in the order of their rank here, were' parties to the Pan-American -conference on Mexican affairs, but the action of Colombia and Nicaragua indicates that all the other republics of the western hemisphere will fol low the lead of their sister nations in extending recognition. Jbjacn or tne governments sent a letter to Eliseo Arredondo, personal representative here of Mr. Carrahza. All were couched in the same form, and that of the United States added a formal expression of an intention soon to accredit an ambassador to Mexico. Henry Prather Fletcher, at present American ambassador to Chile, practically has been decided upon for the post. Although a Re publican in politics, he was elevated from the rank of minister to ambas sador by President Wilson after a long and successful record in the diplomatic service. ' Secretary Lan sing's letter of recognition referred only to the intention to accredit an ambassador soon. This document the goal of Mex ican revolutionary elements for near ly three years was delivered with- i'f Jtonday. cMrsxP. ?;W. Brown, who had been Tunning the Jefferson forf some : nmevf was - in Municipal court-1 iira'rged T -with keeping a disorderly: houe-and? fwas fined $ 50 0 -and costs ,She' ' appealed Superior co'urt and gvejfepnd?inhe sum of $50 0 for her abearance f a December. Three wb men whb!Tiadv been stopping at the place during fair week were also arrested. One gave bond and left the city before the trial, while" the other two were used as witnesses against the "Brown woman. The Jefferson hotel is owned and formerly was operated by Mr. J. C. Bishop, who is now in Boston, Mass.' It is a valuable piece of "property, probably being worth $15,000 or more; and should the court makean order for "its sale under the public morals' act, ! the case' would doubtless be carried through the higher courts to test the tionstitutiohality of the act. - There is much interest on the part of -the public in the final out come of the matter. yOMliOP?JETraERSEY:- GIVE - BIG -MAJORITY AGAINST THE OTJESTION. v Maj;-Gen-. ,SIr. Ian.1HamiIton ha beea.sreiieve4"ot theJBqmjnand:?f the Sritiah forces; jto tee aaneirerand -called i home-- to -make a report-to v the: WILIi .IlE O a y pREsnjEOT xwitsoirv In feciatolectioir held 681; GjtiiipoU Campaign: day thfefi? otera- New 'Jersey defeat- d by ig majority ' a --proposed amenaraent , to tne : state constitution Incomplete returns 'indicate that ithe He is 4ot be succeeded byMai Gen Charles CarrnichaelM on ro, who. has seenlwideierViceT T ' " The Dardanelles operations have notbeen-aa successful as the British mr&T"1 range from'50'00t to Uaromce and.toepeopVeould wish; 60,000 ;AmajOHty of 23,71 was recorded on unbnicial -returns from SO 4 of jtjieatate's' 91 districts; the vote basing - 66,66-for and 80,347 against the amendments " Theat;:wasffconceaed"by Mrs. Ei.. P.-lcltern'presidenttbf the New Jersey IState .Woman. Suffrage Asso- clationrteradmi&sion -was ' borne and of late there has" been --much criti cism because of the failure of "the .- ? - ,..yj . . . v"-,: -in ¬ land andea forces to make progress that' seemed, material to the-ultlmate aim o t the ; expedition,- which 'was to reaih. Constantinople. .." ' ; Another important inejdent on-the British side of the war4t; the resig- OUt bWMinOfflctl.Pftrlv rfnr frrtm v.-- ..- i- : l.u T rard Carson,-the Ulster leader, who lorati- on-nnintoi) ottAfno'ir cofioral loot dicatedmat the maiof ity against suf- Vr Wo? tion ministry. ,; .disagreements ar re ported, .(o;. have - arisen tween Sir Edward T and other members -of the cabinent. ; ; : . " - . . . .While; the Serbians and Mpntegrins in-northern, and Cwestern I.Serbia are strenuously contesting the . march, of the t Teutons; and on the east the Ser bians are fighting hard against BuK garian -attacksfc the Anglo-Prench forces v to,' the south are declared- in unofficial reports to be making prog 'frage ''g'etlMvV-:i'"'f''''-- : , Present iWtlsoh's' own precinct, the snth?electi6n -district - of Priheericmghl - voted - against suffragj' :vsmaloritF-o' more' than two to fsceithe figures being: For 64, agamsll , ; k - i-:"t-i-' Theytone the 21 counties in the stafwhichT appeared to be cer tain tQiigo- for '.suffrage "was. Cape May. fitoyreturn indicated 1 that the mlorityr for the" amendment there wonld-approximate SOO In soiectitma of Hhe Btate early 1 res! : eeffor.ts, to bring, reliet to Gift For Veteran Conductor. Mr. L.rI. Harris, who ran the first street car ever " operated in Greens boro from electric current, recently returned to his old home near Tar boro. However, at the urgent re quest of officers of the North Caro lina Public Service Company, he came back last week to help handle the crowds at the fair. Before re turning to his home this week Mr. C. H. Andrews, local manager of the Public Service Company, on behalf of the employes and officers of the company, presented Mr. Harris with a nanqsome..gow-neaaea cane aa token of their esteem. Mr. Harris was not only the oldest but the most popular conductor . on tho street car lines here, and many friends regret that he has retired from the service. He came to Greensboro in order to educate his children at the colleges, and now that they are educated, he feels that his place for the declining years of life is back in his old coun ty, where he has property enough to be independent. returnapUidiiatedthat 'Hbe vote against jsuff rage -was -more than two to oneWhere;mnffraeetriuMrtbii. the unofoplal returns showed the ina- joritiesMhe small; Returiaame in . much more rap idly thJ had been anticipatedi -The out ceremony by a state department messenger at noon to Mr. Arrendondo I tlde SWfcP way-galnt woman uuiag-jeaaers at tne neaaquar- ters of ie: suffrage association real ized eary.tin the ,. eyfling that only a landsiide-ln the rural sections could Teachers of Sunday School Training School. Mr.- J Norman Wills, director of the Greensboro training school Iter Sunday school workers, the fall term of. which opens tonight with a public meeting in West Market-Street Meth odist church, has announced & the members of the faculty as follows: . Mrs. E. R .Michaux will have charge of the department for begin ners and primary teachers. Dr. John A. Lesch, of the State Normal and Industrial College, will instruct teachers of boys' classes. Miss Martha Dozier will have charge of the -department for teach ers of girls' classes. Prof. F. S. Bennett, of Greensboro College for Women, will be at the head of the department Qf educa tion. The adult department and the de partment of Sunday school organiza tion will elect their own instructors. the given tturer of this city, will be interest ed to know that he has been appoint d assistant general superintendent f the third district of the Atlantic oast Line, with headquarter -"dCKsonville. Fla . , -- ven or eight years he has been su perintendent of the Charleston ditl lon f the Coast Line. Negroes Raising Ubrary Money. The negroes of Greensboro have inaugurated a campaign to raise $1, 300 by the sale of souvenir buttons in order to have a first-class library in the city. They have received an offer from Mr. Andrew Carnegie of a si n.0o0vsrift for a building on the condition that the support of the library which would be thus estab lished be guaranteed. This offer from the Carnegie estate came to the city commission and the influential negroes have taken up the matter of raising: part of the money needed for the local end. The souvenir buttons are sold, at $1 each. President Wilson yesterday de clared an embargo on tne shipment of arms and ammunition to Mexico. The president signed a supplement tary order, however, which-excepts General' Carranza's government from at the Mexican embassy building Thursday Mr. Arredondo leaves here for Saltillo to deliver in person the letters of recognition. Several diplomats, among them the Argentine ambassador, the Bolivian and Gua temalan ministers, and John R. Silli man, personal representative o President. Wilson in Mexico, mailed at the Mexicah embassy during the afternoon and many felicitations came by. telegram r messenger. Mr. Arredondo tonight issued a formal statement saying: "Recognition of the government of Mr. Carranza is a triumph of Pan American policy and without doubt win oring aDout very soon the le establishment of peace and normal conditions in Mexico. "For this, her sister republics and their worthy representatives here de serve "sincere and fraternal felicita tion as this act of justice has been donefor one of .the republics which has -been and shall continue to be an integral part of the international American concert. I - "Foreigners have and will continue to have the protection to which they are entitled by international law and existing treaties in accordance with international amity. Foreign capital will be welcomed, and very soon a decree of amnesty which Mr. Carran za is preparing will be issued that will permit the Mexicans whose pres ence in Mexico will not constitute a vital menace to the peace and con solidation of the government to re turn from their exile, which has caused them to suffer on account of the civil war. "The United States has shown it self through the last three years, since the overthrow of Madero, the constant friend of the revolution and in sympathy with its liberal princi ples. We today celebrate not only this but -a triumph of Pan-American policy.";. 1 Mr. Arredondo also gave 'out a dis- s e tujJYuy zor tnem ; juate re turns sagged that instead; of the hoped Moxs landslide, the-country- commu fiitie s , . had,... Ih many leases; votdinftimjEd was, , notably , true In Essex county. where nine of Newark's suburbs ar rayed themselves solidly against suf frage. The suffragists carried on a vigor ous campaign, many women stump ing the state for "the cause." their harassed allies. ; Report-has, ; it that Anglo-French troops, already have occuHed-the Im portant strategic town of Strumiisa. in the extreme southwestern part ; of Bulgaria,, and thai a landing has -been made by thein m Tnrkey---at Enos, at the . moutn; of ;lthe Maritza river-,-a short distance southeast of the Bul- arian port of Dedeaghatchi Both Berlin; T :and':' Vienna claim their troops " and thoseXQff Bulgaria; are making nroeress in Serbia, btlt this progress is slowv"5Ye.nna cl? that several additional vantage pointsj hav V I AfnalionaK defense- program probably .means, ait-iexpendrture nT- the ariny ri?d a njivyf upwards? billion, dollars .inline next six-years will be laia oetore -ane. peopie -Dy President wnson iNOvemDer- vwnen he goes to Kew York c to'-. make ;his;s nrstpnbiic : adosssincej ne acopt -Of :th"epolicy upon wWcnisadmin;? known. ' He .. will.speak: bef ore xihex Manhattan Club on .-national .defense - and the' reasons which ave .Impellea 4 him to approve plans tp,ab6ut;4iouble; - the naVy and quadruple, .the. trailed? ; fighting forces ashore wunm .rew; - years; - - - j'.vj - f With the,esUttmtes,MawandU ; idepaKments f sudtohei yrieoreautnj vi .wnu-:':- ra v, f otq tlAxfcta irirtlf V aS tO?, hess is being realized.' it, shapes up. "iJ""toto?.fiSw0f inincredj 0 .8 that: fNavyiiI?orj uersonnel in five years,..; and ammunition) within four years i 1Q5,0 0 0,000.. - W the proposed increase in the reguiar'. ; nts- pfbbbivlie anything . increasing; appropriation!; tpoughlSlthc! which- would make the total expend!-? ethirtoe Ttiegrand spitnT tthu; actually. planned would fie fS42,000,- ' r "2 - " - . I These expenditures would produce d batcrulseiru Lfleet of coast7 defense, suhmarines that- uld trine tfenMcid Paclftc liaBtrith"anaiin of in' Jtrior def ensagttac cj nearlyi 7Stroyera?aiia -squad-; erDeeir uKesL jjsl-fae" iuu)n,ua , t4as! - - r'orrrrae: ;rray President Votes For Suffragre. Washington, Oct. 19. President Wilson returned to Washington to night from Princeton after casting the first ballot ever given by a chief executive of the United States in favor of woman suffrage. The president's brief visit to his legal residence was marked by a more enthusiastic welcome from the Princeton students than ever before had been given him in any of his numerous trips there since he entered the White House. The young men gave noisy evidences of their ap proval of. his stand on the suffrage question. Cheering, singing, whistling and marching in close formation, they greeted the former head of their university uproariously and hundreds of them remained near him from the time he arrived until his departure. Woman suffragists were not much in evidence during the president's visit, and only two approached him to tnank him for voting for their cause. There were no women watch ers at the polling place and no wo men in the vicinity soliciting votes. have gained' grouml-Iil the ; mountain- j ous country and further south have advanced over Egri Palanka in their attempt to gain the Uskup-Nish Railway, the cutting of which prob ably would delay the progress of the French and British troops from Sal-oniki. Artillery bombardments and fight ing by means of hand grenades have been the sole method of warfare along the French line, while on the Russian, front the attempt of Fild Marshal von Hindenburg to push through to Dvihsk has brought out the hardest fighting. Berlin asserts that good progress has been made by von Hindenburg to the south of Riga and that near Hloukst Russian posi tions extending over a front .of nearly two miles have been captured. Stubborn fighting continues in the Austre-ltalian zone, with the Italians on the offensive. On the plateau of Doberdo. the Italians in an attack reached the Austrian entanglements at some places, but Vienna says were finally driven off. Seven Men Plead Guilty. Seven men on trial In the United States District court at Port Smith. Ark., charged with conspiracy to de fraud the government in the manu- the end of six years trained 1,200,0(H) men, including a regular: army of 140,000 and the proposed continental army and reserves? a ting of fully manned coast defenses, equipped with -the largest and most powerful guns yet built and.. .a. -vast reserve of field guns, machine gUns, Howitzers and big gun ammunition. In addition, the enormously incresed capacity of private munition- plants would give assurance of ample'sup plies of small arms and field gun am- munition. . -- CHARLESTON SHOOTING , k: AFFAIR INVESTIGATED. Lawyer Turns Agriculturist. Mr. A. L, Brooks is pretty well auvwu in iuis pari 01 iu'j country as i a successful lawyer, a distinguished J hev pistols to the meeting orator and a nolitician of no-mn i because of the "high tension due to 'Charleston, S. C.Oct. 19. The coiners inquest Into the death of Sidney J. Cohen, a newspaper report erfkilled at a meeting, liere last Frio" ay of the city Democratic, execu tive, com to nigfit in ?an effort to r complete the hearing. Several witnesses ". tonight told of the stampede from the1 room on the outbreak of the shooting which resulted in the death of Co- hen and the wounding of four others. Several - of these called, to the stand, ' it -was said, admitted ,tha.t ability, but until recently he had ; Me Primary. not been suspected of possessing an ambition to be classed also as an agriculturist. Since moving out to his new home north of the city he has The first testimony in which any of the witnesses said they saw any of the victims fall when certain men ! fired came today from Jeremiah become interested in planting and AJann wnnn was quoted as testiry trrowine thines on hilac and thi 1 Ing that E. R. McDoiialdCommittee- patch he 4iad received from General acture of blockade whiskey yester Carranza stating that no Carranza . y entered P,eas of guilty. Two of trbops had crossed into Guatemala, as reported, add that strict orders had. been given to avoid, any; compli cations on the Guatemalan border. In past Seven Killed In -Wreck. Sevfn persons were killed Tues day ; and a - score of. passengers in jured when a Rock Island passenger train collidedhead on near . Chicka- :8ha4 Okla-with a freight trains None oif Jthe passengers was fatally hurt, according' to physicians. - - Of the dead, three were trainmen!, while the other four were said hy ritilroad officials to have been riding the "blind baggage,': William .Pcfwell,.! engineer of the the defendants are former residents of WinstonSalem- John L. Casoer, of Kansas City, the alleged head of the conspiracy, and S. L. Williams, who resigned a position in the reve nue service to go into business with Casper, it is expected that sentences will be pronounced today. Won Prizes; The 1 Greensboro . and High Point military companies par ticipated in a competitive drill bjr a number of companies of the North Carolina .national guard afr the state fair in Raleigh yesterday.' The first prize of $100 was awarded to the ( High Point' company and the second prize" of $75 to the Greeosboro com pany The Greensboro company also iL jiU Wo i-va on1 . Taimiti munitions 1 - Lilts cuiuatKu j- :'.irr i- . m-.M. to go throoBK to him unhimperta. 1 "-" " u,:--, won the second priie (50ior inak- first prize of $100 being lions. opposed ; to .the goment llT which the -United States has cogA r , fTi awarded to the Durham company. .- -, . v - :.- - - - I cause' oc- tne wicjik . - - -r- ? . ... . ; - . - ---i nized. - - - . . - - : - 1 r - ' r A $7 - year his chief success in this line was a crop of fine street potatoes. Al though they were- grown in red soil, which Is not supposed to be adapted to potatoes, the yield was surprising ly good. As visible evidence of liis success in his new-j-ole, Mr. Brooks exhibited at his office a few days ago a potato that weighed five pounds, and he said there were lots more nearly as large.- Surprise Marriage. Mr. James B. Fleet, of Richmond, Va., and Miss May Hendrix, a talented and popular young, woman of this city, were mar ried Mdndayat noon at the home of thev bride's - parents. Charles A. Hendrix.' man Hancock and Polfcemaja ; La f ourcase had fought over; the posses sion of a pistol. McDonald obtained it and fired It. Sidney" Cohen, who then was. in a window trying to get out, fell at that moment. Dunn-; is accredited with saying. ' McDonald is in jail on a charge of conspiracy to commit murder, assault and battery' with; totent tpTcilIr: u Dunn also' Is quot as sayingjhe. saw Henry j. jBrownybjyf og a charge of murder fire on' W. E. WIngate, whe'was : Randolph ... J. I on uase acaia. A Washington dispatch" fin .this :- Mr. and Mi. 2 morning-snarioweo The ceremnnvl "Charles, h! Redag. and A;' bCo1 was witnessed only by members of ot anaoipuj counxy are nere the family, and -was performed : by making plana to hayetheaUeged .-rio RevViH Mi Blalrveditor Carolina Crisiisa AdSrb nouncemen s4 ben madei of Jthe estiaofi.1. A repcrtTii.tctCttr uu&vxmsv, HAWcauiw m a -surprise f!rrl :r- - V to all saTjTi favored few 3 : MarioarttUerfor presa tha hMda;o-!& aw - - . .. - r . , k- mm. - 1 --- . S : T- -5r ' - v. . jv " - - .f.'. - T- .-,-;pjr,-' , r----. 3 si 3 lr