1 * | 'M' 1 ' I i \ift * ?I Cornerstone of Arlin Monument to be I William Jennings WuklBCton, Nov. 11?North! Ctrollu Is to be well represented jePI here at the nineteenth annual meet-??u Uur of the United Daughters of the i E Confederacy which will assemble lnbRU Washington Tuesday. More than 50 |S. delegates are expected and many old* H. soldiers. The convention Is to be a?Cli great Southern occasion. :;Ab Not only the District Daughters of' ma .the Confederacy, but also the capl-! 1 tal city Of the nation, are making lair unusual arrangements to entertain tal the convention. This is the first time to that this great organisation of 75,- cat 00 Southern women has held its Wi annual contention outside of Dixie. m? The occasion for its coming to the tio national capital thiB year is to be an present at the laying of the corner- th? stone of the Confederate monument Bn to be erected at Arlington, now a 15 federal ctifttetery. and formerly the home of Gen. Robert E. Lee. tin Advices received up to date Indl- an cat? that this "will be the largest con- rei ventlon that the Daughters of the pei Confederacy ever held. ml Mrs. Marion Butler, president of is the district dhapter and chairman of ne the committee on arrangements for th the ArUegtdo monument, expresses co: great pleasure at the successful ar- m< - rangements already made for the en- in! tertainment of the convention and for vo, the laying of the cornerstone of the Ar monument,0 which is to be the larg* . est and fcnbat lmposlnb at Arlington, of! Arrangements ror guests on me so grandstand af Arlington have been In | . - enlarged on account of the great mi number' of roQueats for seats from tb every part of the country. It la now thought that at least 10.000 people tb will bvprtMDi ?n that o : APPRISED LAST WEEK < f .'MH'M Last lommer at the Instance ot the Washtppton Light and Wate* |W F pany through their treasurer, air. m Wilcox, of Pennsylvania, and the J Board of City Alder/nep held a conference tiers for the purpose of apfe, praising the city water plant. At this * conference it wm decided that the 0 company appoint an appraiser and a the city one. these appraisers met li : here last week and went over the c< a-1 plant. Mr. J. L. Ludlow, of Winston- J Selam, >#, C.,. represented .the city & and jfr. McCUntock. of New York, a i /'" the water company. As yet their re- a S port as to die physical vfclue of the plaxft has not been received by the feV Mayor or Aldermen. This appraisal j7 . . Is not binding at all but is simply to | arrive at some intelligent physical F 3$ value of the plant. ( A WKLCOMK VI8ITOH. \ Mrs Ada Cherry, of Oreenvllle, N. 3 5 C . is visiting Miss Sue yeCluer at ( the MeCluer House on West Main t street and expects to be here for [ several days. p.: ^ Mrs. Cherry^charmed Abe^congre IBM EOT gtbn Confederate ^aid. Oration by Bryan k number of representative Soutblers baa beefa selected by Mr*, tier to act aa ushers Tuesday as lows: Charles A. Douglas, Henry Davis, Edwin C. Dutton. Thomas ffln, William H. llobeson. Edward Munford, H. Rosier Dulany, Abner Ferguson, William de-C. Ravenel, irence J. Owens. Benjamin Mlcou. salom Waller, Clifford K. Berry.n and Marion Bntler. In addition to the announcements eady made ot the various enternmenta arranged for the delegates the convention of the Pan-Araeri1 Union, the Southern Society of ishington and the Southern ('omrclal Congress, wilj give a recepn In honor of the national officers d the Daughters In the "Hall of i Americas," Pan-American Union tiding. Friday evening, November , from t to IS. This building la owned by all of s republics of the two Americas 0 la the headquarters for their rep- ' tentative* who co-operate for the See and the Industrial advance>nt of all American republics. It one of the most beautiful buildings at to the Congressional Library. In b world. Every delegate to this nvention will carry home pleasant g monies of this delightful occasion ? such a maamiflcent temnle de- i ted to the great association of nerican republics. For the convention and the laying the corner atone of the monument, me of the moat prominent clergy the country hare been secured to ske the invocations and pronounce a benedictions. At the laying of the cornerstone e Invocation will be made by Bisht Robert A. aa?l ttltntbl., ?nn the invocation will be made by irdinal Qlbbons. The other sessions of the convenjn will be opened by prayer by Dr. allaoe Radcllffe of the New York venue Presbyterian church; Dr. ixnuel H. Greene of the Calvary iptlst church, and Dr. W. P. Wedirepoon of the Foundry Methodist lurch. ' r IIBRB. ' 4 - * vort to the Daily Sew# that f earthquake shock or some o'clock A.t the First Presets upon the morning serv rl an >>11ifh en thnf rt'lP /lllli* the building. that tHey felt distinctly the i the lower part of Beaufort t perceptible than in Wash ,:::' < &ft%5 ASTCR SEARICII ffllf A SERIESOF SKRNIOHS Rev. H. B. Searight, pastor of the trait Presbyterian / church, la now Wed (n preaching & aeries of ser- 1 ions on the "Things to Come." On last riunday night the topic aa; "Second Advent' of Chrlat." n yesterday morning his subject 'aa: "The Resurrection," and on tat night th'e "Millennium." The timing subjects will be: "The Final nd{fment''; "Hell and He'aVen." The services on yesterday. were 'ell attended and .both discourses rere listened to attentively. ' CARD OF THANKS. The Ladies' Aid 8oclety of the rlrst Methodic: Cuurch wish to reurn,thanks to Hr. Jonathan Havens or the ns? of his building for the iirrpose of holding the recent rumnage sale, and site to Mr. If.- B. Charles for hln kindness In furnishng lights. : * 5; MMR8. MARY P. BAUQHAM. k President. SPECIAL EXAMINATION. "71 n ? laiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiii ana [3505? g^nn? ?'opyrl*M.? 'Womans* Bettern Special Meetin A few yeaiji ago In the auditorium it the public Khool, there gathered everal Washington ladles, for the >urpose of organising a Betterment \ssociatiou. uui or me targe num>er who Joined only a small part of hem have attended the meetings regularly. Tbeae faithful members tare accomplished a goodly amount ii charitable work. It Is their desire jo have a much larger attendance, tad they earnestly request all the ladles within the town limits to Join he rooms of the Public Library. For the benefit of the Interested public we desire to remind them of a tew things we have acomplished and sbjects toward which we bope to move in the near future, htnong the things accomplished luring the Association's - short life: We have given 950 to buy Stoddard's lectures for the Public Library; and a $50 picture to the public school. Also planted grasi snd trees on the lawn at the school and flowers and plants In the Jail yard. We spent over $60 towards th? playground back of the rectory foi children not so fortunate as to hav< play grounds st home. We distributed fly poijson to help rid the city ol these disease spreading pests: we sent out 1.000 bulletins asking citizens ol the town to myet with us at' a mass meeting called to discuss the present unsanitary conditions existing ii waantngton. we asKea every doctor personally, to be present and to glv< us helpful suggestions towards lm proving these conditions. Among a few of the objects w< have in view are: To raise a func for benefit of cleaning up city am beautifying same (prices to be of Hsred to boys under 16 years of agi ior- beet results in eleantng town prises to be offered to the girls undei * * ^ ? NEW VAUDEVILLE ACT ATJLYRIC T0NIGB1 "Morrell ft Jaeger' in * singlni talking act Is tho^offei'lng at th Lyric for the flrsObree days of thi week opening tonight at this place o of amusement. The above mentioned artist ar highly featured for their-refined act and reportB are that their act Is novelty and cater only to the beite claas. ' For-the last half of the week "Th Cryle Comedy Co." is slated for three day's engagement, conslstlni of eight people with a chorus of fir beautiful girls. This company offer entire changes every night and n doubt but what this will have <-apa< lty houses every night. The regular , motion picture bill a the Lyric continues to be only th beet, and as s whole the msnagemen spares no expense In offering th amusement lovers pood entertalt raent at the lowest possible price. Mr. J. W. Boll, of BelfaOTon, N. C la I* *0 cite. T NORTH CAROLINA, MONI?T AFTER!* ^onIqt|t and Tomo . J \i '-, i I ~ tent Association , I g on November 12. 16 years of age for best results In beautifying their horn* Jots, aide, walks, and public places, as (for InItance) our railway stations. a Wo have enrolled over seventy ^ members. We hope within the year g1 to have three times this number. We tll collect no fees, donations are volun- g) tary. a The officers and the executive com- tc mittees are as follow*: \ p, Mrs. John C. Rodman, president.- ^ Mrs. H. -W. Carter, viee-precldent. | Mrs. II. L. Su?m*a. lr??4urtr. Miss Mary Wright, secretary. o| Mrs. Junius D. Grimes, assistant tl secretary. * r T Executive Committee?Civic De- j OJ partment: Mrs. Samuel F*owle, Miss n( > L. T. Rodman, Mrs. John H. Small. u| Mrs. S. C. Bragaw, Mrs. B. Q. Mora. w Executive Committee?Home De- y partment: Mra. Nathaniel Harding, w ' Mrs. George Studdert, D. T. Tayloe; W. C. Rodman, i Finance Committee?Mrs. Dave t Carter, Mrs. Baugham, Mrs. N. L. . Simmons, Mrs. Hugh Paul and Mrs. 1 Tim Harding. Any ladles desiring to become > members will be cordiall} welcomed r and are requested to hand in their i names to Mrs. Whitnev or Mra J TV Grimes, and are earnestly requested g f to be present at our next meeting, t November 12th, Tuesday afternoon j f st four o'clock in the rooms of the Public Library. . ?. 0 t To the citizens of our town we tl i would say: Do you not Bee our ul, timate object is the welfare of your -j i town. We are working to make p - Washington sanitary and beautiful t and to accomplish this we must have t t Washington interests and her co-op- f v ftStty a i ,rWf ?io not ask for office, t - do not ask Jot funds? j i Ww only want the interest, - j Of your daughters and your f r sons."' | " t NEW SCHOOL BUILDINGS ; [ ERECTED IN THE COUNTY; i l Beaufort county 1b forging rapid- c e ly ahead in the way of erecting new s school houses in different sections. i f A new two-room building is being erected at Pinevllle, Washington ^ township, in dietrlct .reignere. The Unalga wilt patrol the coast .?j( f Asia Minor pending the arrival of ie cruisers Montana and Tennessee. tr( hese two big warships, under rush te| rders for the Mediterranean. wll| at be able to sail from Philadelphia ca ntil Monday and it will require two ^ eeks to make the voyage. The j , nlted States stationship Scorpion a ill remain at Constantinople to af- W) >rd protection to Americans there. Should anti-foreign feeling be eQ inned Into a flame as a climax of re ie struggle between the Christian? | nd the Turks, before the arrival or He American warships, it is general- Bu f supposed the British men-of war ^ round Constatinople will protect gt le Americans if the Scorpion proaction is inadequate. Color was $y iven to this belief by a conference Mlay by President Taft and James ? iryce the British Ambassador. -j The Unalga first will go to Beirut, ^ er ascertaining the eituation there he cutter wljl start tor Smyrna, 'here ta no intention of sending the evenue cutter to Constantinople at his time. The fortunate position of he Unalga so close to scene of warare, created a feeling of relief here a It is believed that the cutter will 1,1 ie able to give adequate protection to H Americans and their property in k Isiustic Turkey. She can easily af- y ord asylum for more than 500 peo- g tie and transport to safety and re- u urn or more. ai The Unalga. turned out of the hlpyard at Newport News, Only last iprlng, is a 1,100-ton vessel, armed e: with three high-power six-pounder, a apid-fire guns. She can make 14 cnots an hour. Capt. R. O. Crisp a, commands the ship and she has a :rew of 70 men. ^ American Ambassador Rockhill, at a Constantinople, advised the State De- y >artment today that 3lx more vessels would be sent by the European pow- " ?rs to reinforce the six comprising s :he .International fleet already lying t( it anchor in the harbor of Constant!- Q lople. He reports Constantinople is j >rderl>\ ^ i. e. ScbTotices . i for cmitt weeki t The following announcement for T the First. Methodist church were 8 u made by the paator yesterday: t The Brigade held an Interesting c meeting Sunday afternoon at four o'clock. The Ladies' Aid Society met this afternoon at the nana! hour y with Mrs. O. A. Spencer- on East Second street. Tha stewards will meet tonight In the Baraca room of the chnreh. Fall attendance to de- ii Bp3ft . Atwkl -ij* -\..>Stedj xLu of .. - - . . _ NE? I'MANIGAL JUL tfMI rells How he Around in Suit Think of Danger Indianapolis, Ind., Nor. 11.? rapblc stories of how he caused exoslons. carried dynamite In suit iaes on passenger trains and che< kl the explosive at railway stations Lthout thinking of danger to others, >w he waited to place bombs so ght watchmen would not see him id how from every city where he ew up a "job" he seat a souvenir iooh home to hiB wife in Chicago ere related by Orle E. Mc.Manigal i the witness tand in the trial of the I accused "dynamite plotters" Sat day. "Ping" an aiias of Herbet S. Hock, McManigal said was the pass word ? gave to labor leaders in various ties so they would know he was the an sent to do a "job'\ He named rank C. Webb, of New York; Micbil J. Young, Boston; Richard H. oulihan, of Chicago: James Coney, Chicago, and Frank M. Ryan, all Bclals ot the International Assocla>n of Bridge and Structural Iron orkers as among the defendants belles the McNamara brothers, who low he was employed as a dynaIter. Young and Webb actually pointed it non-union Jobs for him to blow i, he said Hockin, now secretary : the union, he described as the i lcf of the McNamara dynamiting, ew and said Ryan, president of the i lion, had spoken to him about anil plouion. 1 McManigal, confessed accomplice/ the McNamara brothers, appeared ,' the chief witness for the govern- j ent in Its charges that the men now j j . trial illegally transported explo- I res on passeiiger trains in connec- i ?n with the series of explosions, i ie witness is prisoner of Los Anles county and appeared as * i Jan" to the federal government. * 1 After describing explosions at De- < jit and at Clinton, la., McManigal ? stifled: ' "Hockin came to my bouse In Chi- 1 go in October, 1908, and said he d a job for me at Holyoke, Mass. i said I had a good job working in i new hotel in Chicago and did not I int to give it up. He insisted, say- i g he knew Huptcr, my superintend- i ,t and would fix it up so 1 might . turn to work. Finally I consented, i left Chicago October 13, carrying out SO pounds of dyuamite in a i ill ease, arriving at Sprtngtield, i a6s., I checked the suit case at the! atlon and went to Holyoke to look: "er the job. Ou October 15 I set the i rnamite on eome steel work, coil-] 5r. E. W. Sih iti #*? ww uo/w/iyn Dr. E. W. Slices, professor of Hie?ry in Wake Forest College, is comig to Washington this week to dever three lectures under what is nown in North Carolina as "The niverslty Extension Lecture Series ystem." This movement was inaugrated in our state about two years | go by the State Literary and Mistical Association. This association has done sonic xcellent work in our state in prototing literary activity Snd in preervlng the state's history, it will be', Ben that this work is practically new : i North Carolina. In the north and 'est, university lectures have been n upbuilding force for a number of ears. ired. The committee on the revis-i >n of the roll of the church will leet at the residence of Mrs. Claude ordan on West Second street Tuesay evening at 7:30 o'clock. Prayer leeting Wednesday evening at the sual hour. The Brigade will celebrate a Mite Box opening at the resi-( ence of Mrs. W. E. Swindell on East lecond street Friday evening. The Cottage prayer meeting in Nlcholsonllle on Friday evening will be held it he residence of Mr. Giles Gurganis. The meeting will be led by paeDr, R. H Broom, of the First Methidlst Church. Mr. H. E. Hodges, of Old Ford, ras on our streets Saturday. Mr. E. P. Young, of Wilmington, in the city. ? ? , - YTlr? ^5' fgfoZ rs 1 lates story fl lite outrages w Carried Dynamite Case and Didn't fl ing the 50 feet of fuse inside Ibe suit ! case so the night watchman would ! not see the smoke. I then took a train, for Chicago. ..ll "Hockln soon came and said there had been no explosion at Holyoke as * the watchman had discovered the bomb. He said the iron workers union executive board would not allow me the regular fee for that, but he handed me $100 for expenses. "About this time I met Coonejr. uuion busiuess agent in Chicago. He introduced me to Ryan. Ryan wanted to know whether ! had seen Hockin about the Holyoke job and 1 told him I had. "In February 1000 I met Cooney again while both of us were working at Lockport, III. Cooney asked I'.'w me about blowlug up jobs for the Chicago union. I told him 1 was not permitted to work for anybody, but the international union. He replied: 'Well then, all right, I'll get that gang of safe blowers 1 had before.' "While I was at Lockport Hock in came down and informed uie he had two more Jobs for me to do -one at Roston and another at Hoboken. N. J. I went to Jollet and there bought 50 pounds of dynafite. Hockin said I was first to go to Boston and get in V touch with Mike Young and then I wa* to go to New York and get in touch with Webb. He said I should tell them that Ping had sent roe - j there and they would understand what I came for. After the Jobs were blown up I was to send a telegram to L. A. Noel. 208 Vermont ivenue, Detroit, saying stock bad >een sold in Boston and Hoboken and tignifylng the dates of the explo uona And slguing 'Ptng * I "At Boctoa ! eb?ck?d U>e utl<.?. ww* U mil ,r J fcwt Vouttt.'^IU' tWk n?e >01 Mid allowed me ?h?n the, were ?r?ct*?ij a ms opera boos*, and said. Put a shot in there that'll raise "At night on March 27 1 put the suit case containing 2 5 pounds of lynamite in the building, and after lighting a .50-foot fuse went to the station, but finding I had missed my [rain 1 went to a hotel for the night, after sending a souvenir spoon to my wife, as 1 did at each city. "The next day 1 went to New York and called at a labor hall in 4 2d street. From a man there 1 learned tnat Webb lived in 123d stret.. I saw Webb at his housp, an dsaid 'Ping sent me here.* He replied. Yes, 1 thought you were the man.' zs to Lecture on This Week 1 Dr. Sikes will lecture in the public school auditorium Thursday evening and Friday afternoon of this week --the subject of these two lectures will be the history of Poiltcal Parties in America. On Friday evening he will lecture on ecinnmlM the subject bcinp "Wealth and Poverty." Dr. Sikcs com* s to Washington under the aupsfces of the public school and public library. The hours for his lectures will be announced in >2 due time as will also the syllabus of each of his lectures. These will be published In the Daily News. Bvery citizen is cordially invited to be present at each of these lectures. There is no charge for admission. :em?e1hocks felt in county yesterday . n p Mr. J. A. Wilkinson, of Helhaven, N. C., was a passenger on the Norfolk Southern this morning. Mr. Wilkinson states that yesterday there $8 were distinct earthquake shocks felt in the town of Edenton and the shock and roar was so perceptible that pcxvple attending the different "churches Efl left the edifices. Around Pungo? Pantego and other places in the low- 3a er part of the county the ahock was J also felt. No little excitement was . j canted thereby. Mr. Wilkinson saya 2 that the shock lasted at leant one ' half hour.