THE CHATHAM RECORD It A: LONDON, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR Terms of Subscription $1.50 Per Year Strictly in Advance THE CHATHAM RECORD Rates of Advertising One Square, on bisrtio L00 One Square, two owrtkw $1J50 On Square, one month , . . $2Q For Larger Advertisements Liberal Contracts will be made. VOL. XXXV v- HTTSBOaO, CHATHAM COUNTY, N. C., NOVEMBER 13. 1912. NO. 14. . . ' I vi Ijf 1 - III ' EF HENS NOTES FOR THE BUSY i MOST IMPORTANT EVENTS OF THE PAST WEEK TOLD IN j i CONDENSED FORM. WORLD'S NEWS EPITOMIZED Corplete Review of Happening of Greatest Interest From AH Parts of World. Southern. Nine men are known to have been killed, one fatally injured and fifteen hurt in a terrific head-on collision near Cartersville, Ga., between a Western and Atlantic and a Louis ville and Nashville freight. Six oth er men are missing, and their bodies lie beneath the wreckage. This has prevented the railroad from burning the splintered remains of the cars as the quickest means of clearing the tracks- Misunderstanding of flag or ders was the cause of the wreck. S;dna Allen and Wesley .Edwards, two of the Allen clan, who, on March 14. last, shot up Carroll county court, and killed five persons, including the presiding judge, were taken to Wytheville from Roanoke, where they have been in jail since their cap lure at DesMoines. William A. Travers of St. Thom as, Ontario, was rescued from drown ing in the Mississippi river at New Orleans by Mrs. Lemmcns of Okla homa. Travels fell into the river -rorn his launch, in which he and Mrs. Travers had been making a river trip. While he was struggling in the current, with his wife help less to aid him, a witness, Mrs. Lem mons, from a nearby launch, plunged into the water, caught him just as he was sinking and swam with him to the shore. The Dallas, Texas, police made public a confession given them by G. H. Rose, asserting that 24 years ago at Covington, Ky., he killed a. man. He" said he went under the name of N. W. Ingersoll when he kill ed the man. His confession asserts that about a year ago he burned his home in Dallas and obtained $1,030 insurance. The east basin of the reservoir of Nashville, Tenn., which is located on a high hill, gave way and the water poured down Eighth avenue and into Lynwood. Several houses were wash ed away, and many residences were flooded. While a number of residents of the neighborhood are missing it is not known that any lives Were lost. T. M. Heffey, wife and child were washed out of their home, but were saved by climbing into the limbs of a nee. W. A. Arzinger and wife were awakened by the roar of the waters, and felt their house moving down the street. General. The northbound Shasta limited, the Southern Pacific coast train de luxe, was held up and robbed and one ban dit killed at Delta, 30 miles north of Redding, Cal. A companion of ihe dead bandit escaped w-ith the reg istered mail. None of the passengers was injured. A plucky brakeman nearly frustrated the robbers, and ac counted for the one killed. The train stopped-at Delta for water and two bandirs climbed aboard. One climbed over the tender and covered the fire ms.li and engineer with a revolver. The other entered the mail car and held up the mail clerks. John L. Wilson, owner of the Se attle Post Intelligencer, died at a ho tel in Washington, D. C, of angina pectoris, after an illness of one hour. His body was taken to his birthplace at Crawfordsville, Ind., for burial. Air. Wilson was a former United States senator. He had served two terms in the house and a part of a third, when he resigned to go to the senate to fill the unexpired term of John B. Allen. He was a brother of Henry Lane Wilson, ambassador to Mexico. Vaults of the Kirby Savings bank of Chicago, which was taken charge f by receivers on the discovery that William . T. Kirby, president of the institution,, had not been found for some time, were found to contain but Sv"2. A mob of several hundred per-j-us, representing about $50,000 in de Posits, it is said, waited outside the uink doors and shouted in rage when i he information as to the amount of 1'incls was given them. Police were summoned to disperse the' crowd. August F. Siebel, of Chicago, in an swering his wife's divorce complaint, 'iuimed the distinction of the most henpecked husband in the world. His svitv- hit him with a stove he related x" the jury. Every week - New Yorkers consume -0ioo,000 quarts of beer, 40,000 quarts rjf champagne and much whisky. Secretary of the Treasury Mac- eairh hoc: nffiriallv TPOcfrrToA too 'h otip of the right of women by i'lithnrizing the opening of a "tea )orV in the treasury department, 'ii re 100 individual pots of tea keep a merry song during lunch hour. Sixteen persons were injured at Louisville, Ky., when a hook and lad der truck collided with a street car at. Eighth and "Walnut, streets. Eight of the injured were women, and many' ere "shook ut." Gen. Jose Maria Valladres, the not ed revolutionist, who, in years? past, has caused much trouble in the gov ernments of Honduras and Nicaragua, has fomented his last uprising. He was killed by government troops in a skirmish near Ojojona, his native town, which lies twenty-five miles southwest of Tegucigalpa. John Jacob Astor, the infant son of Mrs. Madeline Force Astor will have" an allowance of $3,333 a year for his support during the next three years. In her petition Mrs. Astor said she wanted the income on her $3,000,000 trust fund to accumulate until the child attained his majority. President-elect Woodrow Wilson turned away an avalanche of tele grams and messages of congratula tion the day after the election and went off for a brisk walk. For five miles he walked, swinging a heavy black cane, which came to grief on the fourth mile, when" Capt. "Bill" McDonald, Texas ranger and body guard, tried to kill a rattlesnake. The governor spied the snake, curl ing through the leaves and pointed it out to the captain, who borrowed the governor cane and killed it, but in doing so broke the cane. Fifteen thousand persons on board fifty steamers on the Pacific ocean received election returns by wrireess from stations in San Francisco. The first wireless election bulletin was flashed at eight o'clock on the night of the election. Suffrage for women becomes part of the organic law of four more states because of the presidential election. Michigan, Kansas, Oregon and Arizona voted favorably on such an amendment. Wisconsin defeated it decisively. Every child named for Col. Willis Brewer, former congressman and au thor who died at "The Cedars," near Montgomery, Ala., will receive a share of his estate. The will has been filed for probate. "The Ce dars" consists of sbout 800 acres of land seven miles from Montgomery, and is one of the finest country hemes in the state. An ambition to become the moving picture magnate of the Pacific coast is alleged to have led Wallace J. Po land, until recently cashier of fhe San Francisco office of the International Harvester company, to embezzle $84, 000 of his employer's money. Judge K. M. Greene, attorney for the Har vester company, caused - Poland's ar rest on the charge of having em bezzled $1,500. Judge Green said Po land admitted this speculation, and that admission of other thefts brought the totatl amount up to $8'4,000. As a result of the entrance Into Canada of a new and powerful group of English capitalists and continental bankers, Canada is sure of another inter-ocean railway. The proposed railway line, when completed, will ex tend from the Pacific ocean to Hud son Bay, and will be known as the Alberta, Peace River and Eastern rail way. By the display of personal courage and a drawn revolver, Sheriff Davis of Evansville, Ind., cowed more than sixty maddened prisoners in the coun ty jail after four of their number had overpowered a deputy and escap ed. One of the fugitives is Levi Lock hart, awaiting trial accused of kill ing an Owensboro, Ky., policeman. The break occurred when Jailor Saunders took breakfast into the bull pen and a trusty assailed him. Representative" Kinkaid of Nebras ka is preparing to present to con gress the case of EdVard D. Cahota, a Chinese resident of Nebraska, who desires to be admitted to citizenship, in spite of the Chinese exclusion act. After drugging a trusty, sawing: sawing through eleven iron bars and scaling a jail yard wall, four inmates of the Kern county, California, jail, are fleeing through the hills with two posses in pursuit. Wrhen the trusty became unconscious in the corridor from the effects of the drug, the jail breakers sawed through eight iron bars in their cell and three in a jail .window. They descended to the ground by a rope made of bed clothes and scaled the 20-foot jail wall by a wire suspended from the top of 'the wall and made their escape. WILSON ELECTED; ROOSEVELT RUNS AHEAD Of TAFT Democratic Candidate for Presi dent Carries the Majority of States, Including New York Maine, After Sixty Years, Votld for a Democratic President Massachu setts Swells the List Surprising Vote for Roosevelt in Southern Districts Socialists Double Their Vote Congress Will Be Democrat ic, and the Democrats Will Control the Senate Entire Democratic Ticket in New York State Goes Through With Wilson and Marshall. fc POPULAR VOTE. 8 tt Wilson ..J 6,476,601 2 Roosevelt 4,289,077 15 ft Taft 3.519,103 0 Bryan's total popular vote in X M908 was, in the final official count, 6,412,805. $ lOGOOOOOGOOOOOOOOOCCOCOOOC- Gov. "Wilson not only carried his own State, New Jersey, by a large ma jority; but he carried also the States of his opponents, the State of his own running-mate, Indiana, and the State of Col. Roosevelt's running-mate, Cali fornia. Control of-the Legislature in New Jersey assures to the 'Democrats the choice of Gov. Wilson's successor in the gubernatorial chair; and the choice of William Hughes as Senator to succeed Senator Briggs, Republican. THE ELECTORAL VOTE. For Wilson. Alabama Arizona Arkansas California Colorado Connecticut Delaware Florida Georgia Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas '. Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts Mississippi " Missouri Montana , . . . Nebraska Nevada New Hampshire New Jersey New Mexico New York - North Carolina North Dakota Ohio Oklahoma Oregon Rhode Island South Carolina Tennessee Texas 12 ; 3 ! 9 ! 13 i C : Virginia West Virginia Wisconsin Wyoming ...... Total.. : 442 For Roosevelt. Michigan 15 Minnesota 12 Pennsylvania I . . . 38 South Dakota 5 Washington : 7 Washington. President Taft has issued the an nual Thanksgiving proclamation, set ting aside November 28 for the ob servance of that day. He felicitates the country that it is at peace, free from the perturbations and calamities that have afflicted other peoples of the world, and says that the over flow of our . prosperity has been of advantage to the whole world. A sharp arraignment of the farm ers' wives and daughters of the coun try and incidentally their city sisters, is contained in a report made by George K. Holmes, chief of the divi sion of production and distribution of the national agricultural department. Although -wages have risen steadily during 44 years, Mr. Holmes declares that the women of the present age have forgotten or are too proud to indulge in household work of the farm. He blames the lure of society In promulgating the first revision of the equity rules of Federal courts in the last fifty years, the Supreme court of the United States prohibited the granting of preliminary injunc tions without notice, and restricted the granting of temporary restraining orders. The court embodied in the new rule many of the points of the Clayton anti-injunction bill, for which labor leaders have been fighting which has passed the house and waits in the senate. The new rules do not require those' procuring the restrain ing order to give a bond or the judge to fi vp reasons, for granting it. Total . Idaho . ; . . Utah Vermont Total . . !' For Taft. Necessary for choice; 266. In 1896 McKinley received 271 elec toral votes and Bryan 176. In 1900. McKinley received 292 elec toral votes and Bryan 155. In 1904 Roosevelt received 366 elec toral votes and Parker 140. In 1908 Taft received votes and Bryan 162.' Overturning big Republican majori ties in States never before captured by" the Democrats in a Presidential election, the Wilson-Marshall Presi dential ticket was swept into office on a wave that carried with it State of fices, Congressional seats, and the con trol of several Legislatures that will have the opportunity to' oust Republi cans from the United States Senate, and add to the Democratic strength in that body. - New York. The corrected returns increased the magnitude of the vic tory of Woodrow Wilson and the Dem ocratic party generally throughout the country. The net results of the generaLelec tion were staggering to even the most sanguine of Democrats. They includ ed: . The election of Wilson and Mar shall, the Democratic candidates for President and Vice-President, by the largest electoral majority ever return ed. ; An assured majority of the United States Senate coincident with the in- auguration of President-elect Wilson. A majority of 149 in the next House of Representatives. The election of 19 Democratic Gov ernors to replace Republicans. The control, by the Democrats of New Jersey and New York, of the Legislative branches in 'those States, which insures a Democratic successor to President-elect Wilsonas Governor of New Jersey and William Hughes (Dem.) as United States Senator to succeed Briggs (Rep.). An increase in the T Socialist vote, which may approach the 700.000 mark, the total in New York City alone reaching 33,438, and 160 000 in Illinois. The election of Progressives to the Legislative bodies in several States, including New York, and of twelve Progressive Congressmen. Illinois, . the great State which the Progressives all alcg lelt surest of carrying, swung over to Wilson. The Democratic vote in the Electoral College was thereby increased to 42. Roosevelt's dropped to. 77, with Michi gan, Minnesota, Pennsylvania, South Dakota, and Washington safely in his colmmn, and Taft kept his 12 votes from Utah, Idaho, and Vermont. In Illinois Wilson secured a lead, and the result was no longer open to doubt. Senator Funk, the Progressive candidate for Governor, ran far behind the Bull Moose leader, with the result ! that' Dunne, Democrat, has a much j larger plurality than Wilson. His lead was more than 110,000. California remains in the Wilson column, although the margin in his favor is not great. j The Republicans got a crumb of j comfort from Massachusetts, where I the counting of the ballots for minor i State officers showed that, although J the Democrats had elected the Gov I ernor, Lieutenant Governor, and Secre j tary of State, the Republican candi j dates for State Treasurer, Auditor, and Attorney General had been saved ! from the wreckage by pluralities of ! 2,000 to 5,000. The Legislature is Re- publican also, so that the expectation ' of a Democratic gain in the filling of ! WT. Murray Crane's seat will not be i realized. In Wisconsin, which was carried by Wilson for President, Gov. McGovern, I Republican candidate for Governor, j was re-elected. He was the Roose I velt candidate for Chairman of the : Republican National Convention and 3 ; paign, thereby incurring the displeas- ureof Senator La Follette, who, how ever, advocated his election. In Minnesota the ending of the count assured Roosevelt's victory, with a plurality of 15,000. The same is true of South Dakota, where Roosevelt's lead was 5,000. Returns confirmed Wilson's victory in West Virginia, although the Legis lature is Republican. In Iowa the Democratic candidate's plurality reached 20,000. The effect of more complete returns on the Legislature from the doubtful States was to cut down the estimated Democratic maority in the Senate, but left no" doubt that the President would have the support of at least forty-eight members of his own party, just half the membership, which with Gov. Mar shall of Indiana in the chair as Vice President, with the casting vote, would mean the control of the upper house. New Hampshire shows a Republi can majority in the Legislature of six teen, and that body will elect the Gov ernor, as well as a Senator, none of the candidates having received a ma jority at the polls. As the fag ends of the ballots are counted, fresh evidences of a great gain in the Socialist vote come to hand from scattered parts of the coun- try. In San Francisco, where the labor element has long been strong in poli tics, the Socialist vote is trebled over 1908, and in Los Angeles, where the McNamara case has been a disturbing element, it is quadrupled. The total Socialist vote in California so far counted is 63,000 and will be increased by later returns. In 1908 the total was 28,000. The Socialist vote for mem bers of Congress and the Legislature i3 greater in the aggregate than that for Debs. In agricultural Iowa the count of the Socialist vote shows that it has near ly doubled in four years. In Ohio the Socialist vote ran close to 100,000, and in Cuyahoga and Lucas counties the Socialists claim a greater vote for Debs than that cost for Taft. Four years ago Debs's total in the State was 33,000.. Their gain in Cin cinnati, President Taft's home, was 6.00G over 1908. In New York State the counting of the ballots got around to the referen dum authorizing the issue of $50,00C, 000 bonds for highway improvement, and the returns indicate its adoption by a plurality of 305,000.- Among the interesting results re corded were these; Oregon declared positively for wom an suffrage, being the third Pacific Coast State to give women the ballot. Women now vote in every Pacific State. West Virginia voted for prohibition, but the law will not go into effect till July 1, 1914. In Madison County, Ind., Eugene V. Debs, who is a resident, beat Taft by more than two hundred votes in the Presidential race. Governor Wilson carried New York by over 200,000. He has the city of New, York by 100,000. He has Mis souri by 50,000. He has New Jersey. He has Massachusetts. The sweep ran through Connecticut, Maine and Rhode Island, and won him Ohio. In the Middle West Colonel Roosevelt stopped him, practically in the North western States. " u 14 29 15 13 10 13 10 G 8 18 10 18 4 4 14 3 45 12 5 24 10 5 5 9 12 20 12 S 13 3 77 4 4 -4 L2 DEMOCRATS HAVE BIG CONGRESS MAJORITY Next House Will Consist of 297 Democrats, 122 Republicans . and 16 Progressives ELIMINATION OF CANNON Republican Leaders McKinley, Rod denberg, Crumpacker, and Hill Also Defeated with "Un cle Joe." Washington. The 'practically jeora plete returns of the general Con gressional elections show that the po litical classification of the next House of Representatives will be: Demo crats,. 297; Republicans, 122; Pro gressives, 16. This gives he Democrats a major ity of 159 over Republicans and Pro gressives combined, and a plurality over the Republicans of 175. During the Congress session which ended in August the Democrats had a majority of 66 over the Republicans.' Many notable changes in the per sonnel of the House of Representa tives will result from Tuesday's Con gressional landslide. The most con spicuous figure that will disappear from public life in consequence of the great Democratic victory is ex-Speaker Joseph G. Cannon, familiarly known as "Uncle Joe," who has been defeated for re-election from the Eigh teenth District of Illinois by F. J. O'Hair. Until last evening the result in Mr. Cannon's district was in doubt, but the completed count shows that Mr. Cannon has lost by a narrow ma jority. This is Mr. Cannon's second defeat for Congress. He was out of the House of Representatives for one term, having been defeated for elec tion in 1890. He was even then a vet eran member of the House. Since 1892 "Uncle Joe" has been sent back regularly to Washington, and for many years was the dominating figure in the lower branch of Congress. James R. Mann, the Republican floor leader in the House, has been re-elected from tne Chicago district which he has represented for many terms. But other Republican House leaders from Illinois shared the fate of Mr. Cannon. Representative William B. McKinley, Chairman of the Republican Congres sional Campaign Committee and Presi dent Taft's manager in the pre-conven-tion campaign for the Republican Presidential-nomination, shared the fate of many of his Republican associates in the House. Another Republican House leader from Illinois who suffered de feat is Representative William J. Rod denberg, one of ex-Speaker Cannon's lieutenants. Still another prominent House Republican to be buried under the Democratic victory is J. ri. David son of the Sixth Wisconsin District. He has been a conspicuous member of the House for many years, but has shown decided Progressive leanings for several terms. The Democrats made a clean sweep of the Indiana Congressional districts and retired the veteran Crumpacker, who had been foremost in the Repub lican ranks in the House. Representa tive Edwin Ebenezer Hill of Connecti cut suffered defeat also. His State, like Indiana, is sending a solid Demo cratic delegation to Congress, which politically is a remarkable overturn in a State that is strongly devoted to the protection policy. Representative Sereno E. Payne, wrho was floor leader of the Republi cans in the House during Mr. Can non's incumbency of the Speakership, was returned from New York. Jo seph W. Fordney, another of Mr. Can non's lieutenants and firm friends, was elected from the Michigan district that has sent him back to Congress time and again. Representative Nich olas Longworth, son-in-law of " Col. Roosevelt, did not escape defeat in the First Ohio District, which is locat ed in the City of Cincinnati. Mr. Long worth ran as a regular Republican, and his strength in the district was weakened by the fact that he was op posed by a candidate of his father-in-law's new third party. Another conspicuous member of the House who was rejected by the voters of his district is Representative Cyrus Sulloway of New Hampshire. Sullo way is a giant in size and always at tracted much attention from the gal leries when the House was in session. The defeat of the two Republicans can didates for Congress from "his State was one of the great surprises of the the election. All the Democratic House leaders, including Speaker Champ Clark and Representative Oscar W. Underwood of Alabama, Chairman of the Commit tee on Ways and Means and Democra tic floor leader, were returned. POPULAR VOTE FOR PRESIDENT. State. Wilson. Alabama .... 80000 Arizona 16465 Arkansas 96200 California ... 332250 Colorado 100000 Connecticut 73601 Delaware 22359 Florida 38000 Georgia 102465 Idaho 38000 Illinois ...... 405033 Indiana 300000 Iowa ... . 169162 Kansas 98800 Kentucky . . . 191467 Louisiana . . . 70000 Maine ........ 50946 Maryland ... XI 212 2 Massachusetts 170995 Michigan 210000 Minnesota . . . 84117 Mississippi . . '65000 Missouri 351938 Montana 44920 Nebraska .... 109000 Nevada . 9538 New Hamp... 34846 New Jersey.. 168000 New Mexico.. 27000 New York. . . . 648376 No. Carolina. 150000 North Dakota 35000 Ohio 446760 Oklahoma .' . . 130000 Oregon 24480 Pennsylvania. 407447 Rhode Island. 30299 So. Carolina. . 60000 So. Dakota... 55000 Tennessee . . . 133000 Texas 220000 Utah 35000 Vermont . . ; . 15397 Virginia 78681 Washington . 94130 West Virsinia 111849 Wisconsin . . . 213500 Wyoming 17000 Taft. , 8350 4755 30400 3085 75000 67258 16144 8000 9976 40000 250000 160000 111084 501Q0 93138 5000 26504 54643 152255 190000 5799 ' -3000 215986 27760 58000 3515 33105 .110000 1 15000 449560 35000 25000 312600 100000 22490 315145 27755 1200 No bal't ' 60500 35000 40000 23247 21131 75145 55114 173500 15000 Roose velt. 16750 11335 37550 319345 83000 33546 8629 7000 28752 28000 415300 170000 149540 80000 93036 .15000 48387 57679 140152 250000 91985' - 5000 145288 22540 74000 6275 19812 133000 22000 381499 50000 27500. 253564 No bal't 22020 443708 16488 3000 66000 45600 47500 13000 22323 18670 126265. 72943 35000 8000 IU REBELS ME- DESPERATE ISSUE MANIFESTO SUGGESTING TREVINO AS PROVISIONAL PRESIDENT. TACTICS WILL BE RESUMED , The Defeat of Zapatistas Has Inciteo i Them to More Horrible Outrages Many Bands Are Committing Mur der and Arson- - Wilson 6,476,601 Roosevelt 4,289,077 Taft 3,519,108 Popular Vote for President Election of 1908. at State. Alabama Arkansas California Colorado Connecticut .. Delaware Florida ...-... Georgia Idaho Illinois Indiana .; Iowa Kansas Kentucky .... Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts Michigan ...... Minnesota .... Mississippi ... Missouri Montana Nebraska , Nevada New Hamp.... New York .... New Jersey... North Carolina North Dak.... Ohio Oklahoma .... Oregon Pennsylvania. . Rhode Island. So. Carolina.. So. Dakota Tennessee .... Texas Utah , Vermont Virginia Washington .. West Virginia. Wisconsin Wyoming Taft. Rep. 25,305 57.791 214,390 123,700 112,815 25,007 20,654 41,692 52.657 629,932 348,993 275,210 197.216 235,711 8,958 66.9S7 116,513 265,966 333,313 195,835 4,505 346.915 32,333 126.997 10.214 53,144 S70.070 265.298 114,824 57.741 572,312 110,558 62.530 745.779 43.942 3.963 67,466 11S.519 65.602 61,015 39.552 52.573 106.062 137.S69 247.747 20,846 Bryan. Dem. 74,374 85,584 127,492 126,644 68,255 22,072 31,104 72,350 36.195 450.S10 338.2ti2 200,771 161.209 244,092 63,568 35,403 115,908 155,543 . 174.313 109,401 60.876 345,889 29,326 131,099 10,655 33,655 667.46 182.522 136.928 32,935 502,721 122,406 38.049 448,785 24,706 62.2S8 40,266 135.819 216.737 42,601 11.496 82.946 58,691 111.418 166.632 14.918 Chafln. Pro. 662 1,151 11.770 5,559 2.3S0 677 1,356 1.059 2.003 29.364 18.045 9,837 5,033 6,887 1.487 3,302 4,374 16.705 10,114 4.212 827 5,179 ""905 22,667 4,930 360 1.156 11,402 "2.682 36.694 1,016 268 799 1,111 4.700 5.139 11,564 66 Debs. Soc. 1.347 5,750 28,659 7,974 5,113 240 3,747 5S4 6.405 34,711 13,475 8i287 12,420 4.000 2.53S 1,758 10779 11,527 14,469 1.048 15,398 5,855 3.524 2.029 1.299 88.451 10,249 337 2,424 33.795 21,779 7.339 33.913 1,365 10ft 2,846 1,882 4,895 14.177 3.679 2S,64 1.715 , Mexico City. Gen. Geronimo Tre ' vino recently retired at his own re quest from the army ia suggested as provisional President of Mexico, in a new revolutionary manifesto which has just reached the caprtai:' The document is signed by Gaudenciro de ! La Llave, colonel of regulars, who i lately joined the insurrection, Benja ' min Rodriguez and F. .R, Pradillo, the latter with Orozco's army'uhtirhe in curred Oronozco's displeasure by tak ing Emilio Vasquez GoraCz from San Antonio at Juarez. '. ' The manifesto ia dated Puebla, the ; day after the capture of Gen. Felix Diaz. The newspapers of Mexico City v have refrained from mentioning the manifesto and it is not believed Gen Gene'ral Trevino is interested. ' ' Another revolutionary document obtained by the police from? Zapatista prisoners was made public. It appears . to reveal the inteitno oif thei Zapata brothers and the leading insurrectory : chiefs, whose names are signed, to imitate the French revolution. Prom ises are made to the insurgent army, to which the document is addressed, that a guillotine will be erected in the capital and that the heads of many of the rich will fall. It also promises that "others will end their 1 days in the Mexican bastile." Notwithstanding the failure of the apatistas to take Cuernavaca, activ ities in the states of Morelos, Guerre ro and Mexico, continue and the Gov ernment is planning to "resume the extermination"' tactics employed, by General Robies a few months, ago with some success. What Committees Will Do.;' Washington. The days immediate ly preceding the convening of 'Con gress will be marked by exceptional activity on the part of the investigat ing committees. The Senate and the House each has two such organiza tions which promise to go . -down to work in advance, of the convening of the next session. The two Senate committees are the Clapp Campaign Contribution Committee and. the com mittee of which Senator , Smith of Michigan is chairman, appointed to inquire into revolutions in Mexico "and Cuba. " The House committees '. are those, making inquiries into the oper ations of the so-called money trust, headed by Representative Pujo of Louisiana and interpretation of mer chant marine of the country. ' Total ...7,677,021 6.405.182 250,481 412,330' THE NEW SENATORS. States. Probable Incumbents Alabama Bankhead, (Dem.) Arkansas Davis (Dem.) Colorado J. F. Shafroth (Dem.) Colorado, vacancy C. S. Thomas (Dem.) Delaware Saulsbury (Dem.) Georgia Bacon (Dem.) Idaho . . Borah (Rep.) Idaho, vacancy a Republican Illinois '. ....... Doubtful Illinois, vacancy.:'.. Doubtful Iowa Kansas. . . Kansas. . . Louisiana . . . Maine . . . A . . ! Massachusetts Michigan JERSEY SWEPT CLEAN. Trenton. The cumbrous blanket ballot and split tickets delayed the work of the election boards in tallying the vote throughout New Jersey. The figures on the Presidential vote were as follows: Wilson, 174,691; Taft, 76, 853; Roosevelt, 135,93? ; Wilson's plu rality, 38,753. .Eleven of the twelve Congressmen will be Democrats ; the State Senate, 12 Democrats to 9 Republicans, and the Assembly, 50 Democrats to 10 Re publicans. A Democratic United States Senator and a Democrat to fill Gov ernor Wilson's unexpired term are as- a Democrat Stubbs (B. M.) W. H. Thompson (Dem.) Ransdell (Dem.) ..Burleigh (Rep.) Doubtful a Republican Minnesota Nelson (Rep.) Mississippi Vardaman (Dem.) Montana : . . . ... . . .Walsh (Dem.) Nebraska. ... 1 . 1 .Norris (Rep.) Nevada Pittman (Dem.) New Hampshire a Democrat New Jersey Hughes (Dem.) North Carolina .a Democrat Oklahoma.. Owen (Dem.) Oregon.... Lane (Dem.) Rhode Island L. B. Colt (Rep.) South Carolina ..Tillman Dem.) South Dakota. . .Thos. Sterling (Rep.) Disease Threatens Turkey's Capital Constantinople. The outbreak of cholera ia assuming serious propor tions. Twenty-three cases had occurr ed among the troops along the Tcha talja lines up to last report. There are many more suspected cases among the wounded. A train load of wound ed "ias just reached here, eight of the soldiers having died on the way, pre sumably from cholera. The disease is ; getting a firmer hold on account of the massing of troops, the lack of proper food and the complete absence of : sanitary arrangements. . Victorious Sweep of Balkan Allies. London. Another milestone in tbe victorious sweep of the Balkan allies . was the entry of the Greek Army into Saloniki, which, means almost, as much to the Greeks as the ancient capital Uskup to the Servians. CroWn i Prince -Constantine, after an interview with the commandant and the foreign c onsuls, received the surrender of the Turkish Army under conditions , im posed by him. The report of a m;fWa- ; ere in the city has not been confirmed ' md is not credited. Tennessee Texas Virginia'..: West Virginia.. Wyoming. . Doubtful . Sheppard (Dem.) Martin (Dem.) a Republican ...Warren (Rep.) Already elected or named in a primary that is equivalent to election. MINNESOTA BULL MOOSE. Minneapolis. Roosevelt has carried Minnesota. He won the State by 20, 000. Minnesota first was in the Wilson column, then doubtful, then in the Wilson column again. The President elect received a heavy vote in the cities. KANSAS FOR WILSON BY 12,000. Topeka, Kan. That Wilson has car ried Kansas by 12,000, and that Stubbs for United States Senator has been beaten by Thompson, Democrat, by 12,000, members of both the Demo cratic and Republican State commit tees were aereed. J Systematic Mail Robbery. Nashville, Tenn. It was announced here that a capias has been issued for the arrest of Mrs. M. N. Parker, daughter of A. H. Faulkner, post master of McMinnville, Tenn., charged with robbing the mails. Mrs. Parker was a clerk in the postofnee at Mc Minnville. Execution of the capias has been temporarily stayed on ac count of her physical condition. On evidence secured by postoffice inspec tors, Mrs. Parker was recently indict ed by the Federal gfand jury charged with robbing th mails. Two Killed in Auto Wreck. Valdosta, Ga. Harris Myrick, a well-known naval stores operator, and hvs wife' of Valdosta. were killed and two other occupants of their automo bile were injured here when the ma ! chine turned turtle. The .accident i happened .while the party was en route from Boston, Ga., to Valdosta. The lights of the automobile were not burning brightly and Myrick discov ered a wagon only a few. feet ahead. He attempted to turn out of the road, but he threw the wrong gear too far and the machine turned over. 1 1 1 t ; i t; it ! v5 1 "1 i i n It r . ! 4 'HI!