/ulcanite Rooffng, A complete line* ^ILLE, N. C. iws and keep posted ONLY NEWSPAPER IN TRANSYLVANIA COUNTY A. J. J.MHERieWRf* AND MANAGER ^ HOME i»AI*ER FOR HOME PEOPLE-ALL HOME PRINT yOLUIE^XVI BREVARD, NORTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 17.1911. y NUMBER*? VILE PLOT TO BULL COnON MARKET Startlli( Disclosure Made Governor-elect Smith. lU TO SPREAD BOLL WEEVIL Plot 18 Said to Be on Foot to Intro duce the Boll Weevil Plague Into the Cotton Fields of Georgia. To scatter boll weevils broadcast over Georgia and South Carolina in or der to bull next year’s cotton market is the gist of a plot just revealed to Governor-elect Hoke Smith, it is said. Two men, according to Mr: Smith’a information, are now headed toward Georgia with several thousand healthy weevils in their possession, plannirg to turn them loose upon the unsuspect- in farmers in the cotton-raising sec tions of the state as soon as cotton has begun to bloom. One of the men comes from Texas, it is said, while the other is thought to be a native of Chicago. To a reputable business man of New Orleans, one of the men outlined his nefarious plan and in support of nis story, showed a box containing sev eral thousand healthy weevils. The plotters, according to the busi ness man’s story, expect to speculate in cotton futures next spring. In order to produce a bull tendency in the mar ket they are planning to turn loose hundreds, of weevils at different points in Georgia and South Carolina, believ ing that reports that weevils have been found in these sections will have a tendency to raise the price of cotton. The plotters expect to buy futures be fore the announcement is made and thus profit handsomely by the rise in futures. Governor-elect Smith* had his. first intimation that such a plot was on foot early in last week, when he re ceived a letter from New Orleans. In this letter, the writer, who did not sign his name, went fully into the de tails of the plan, setting out that one of the plotters had told him the story in confidence while slightly under the influence of whiskey. He also shov/- ed the New Orleans man a box of live weevils in support of his story. Mr. Smith communicated his intelli gence to Commissioner of Agriculture Hudson and other prominent men and it is certain that some measures will be taken to nip in the bud the int<^n- tions of the plotters against the cottoD crop of the state. BATTLE ON THE BORDER. American Troops Under Fire Five Hours From Mexican Shells. A dispatch from Mulata, Mexico, tells of a battle between American soldiers and Mexicans. The American soldiers were under fire opposite Mulata Friday. Tbe fed- erals, under General Luque, made a de termined assault on the town, but were repulsed with heavy loss. During the battle the Mexican sol diers used two field guns. Four of the shells burst on the American side of the river near Troop H, of the Third artillery, which patroJled the river. The American troops were un der fire for five hours. A Mexican was shct in the leg while standing beside Captain Williams. The battle was a spectacular one. Mulata stands on the banks of the Rio Grande, and the bullets and shells swept across the river. Several times the Mexican sol diers deliberately fired volleys at wo men and children refugees on the American side, it is reported. GRISCOM PUZZLED. Disappearance of Miss Arnold Mystery to Alleged Lover. George S. Griscom, Jr., of Pittsburg, Pa., whose acquaintance and corre spondence with Miss Dorothy Arnold brought his name into print in con nection with the two months’ search for her, arrived at New York from Italy on the North German Lloyd steamer Berlin. “The case is as much of a mystery as ever to me,” said Griscom to re* porters, “but it is, I may say frankly, part of m3’^ purpose in coming home to offer what assistance I can to the Ai^- noid family, I haven’t the slightest theory regarding Miss Arnold’s disap pearance.” He did, however, scout the belief which the missing girl’s father, Fran cis W. Arnold, entertains that the girl is dead. He said emphatically when ques tioned that he was not, and never had heen, engaged to marry Miss Arnold. He saw her first on November 3 be fore he departed with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. G. S. Griscom, for a visit to Jem Driscoll, featherweight cham pion of England, retained the cham pionship in his fight with Spike Rob son. Driscoll won in the seventh round. UPRISING OF GREEKS. Several Men Killed and Injured Ip Battle in Utah. , An armed uprising of Greek coal miners at Kenilworth, Carbon county, Utah, was suppressed, after four men had been killed, one fatally wounded and several o,thers wounded by bul lets. The trouble began last Friday, when the Greek miners complained that dis crimination was shown in the weigh ing of coal in favor of Americans. A proposal from the mine superintend ent that they appoint their owp weigh ers failed to give satisfaction. The Greeks took to the foothills and began a desultory fire on the Ameri cans who were going to work. In at tempting to dislodge the sharpshoot ers, Deputy Sheriff Thomas Jackson was killed, and another deputy was fatally wounded. When two of the Gi?eeks had been killed, one mortally' wounded and five others captured, the<i rest took to flight. • TARIFF BOARD FAVORED. Democratic Members Opposed Bill "■’Passed by House. ALABAMA FAVORS LOCAL OmON PLAN Deat!) Ul of State Wide Frc- ill PARKS BILL iS#8PTED. House Passed Bill by Vote of 58 to 44, and It Is Almost Certain That the Senate Will Also Favor the Meas ure. « • By a ‘ strict party vote, all of the democrats in opposition, the senate committee on finance voted to report favorably the bill passed by the house to create a permanent tariff board Several important amendments were adopted. The opposition cf '^he democrats on the committee was based on \the plea that the executive should not be em powered to gather tariff information; that this function belongs to congress, and that if a commission is desired, j, it should be a congressional body, sim ilar to the national monetary commis sion. One of the* most important changes made by the committee requires that the five members of the board shall be confirmed by the senate. Under the house bill, the executive would have absolute control of the personnel. Under an amendment- adopted, the board will not be requierd to divulge the names of informant or witnesses furnishing information, but the pro vision that information gathered must be for confidential use was eliminated. ROBBER IS ROBBED. Man Who Stole Large Sum Himself Victim of Thieves. Even a thief isn’t safe in Chicago, is the plea of Charles Willard, made to the police when he confessed that he held up Rector’s restaurant a few daTys ago and secured $3,300. Willard’s joy in his possessiosn was short-lived, however, for, as he was leaving the cafe door, he was greeted by three men, who, with a revolver pressed against his side, escorted him to an alley and robbed the robber. Willard, according to his confession, was one of three conspirators who planned and executed the Rector hold up. He in turn was the victim of a conspiracy devise^ by a supposed friend to whom he confided the plan for robbing the cafe. The story, incredible as it at first seemed to the police, was corroborated by them. Five hundred dollars of the money was recovered, and William Loftus, a saloonkeeper, has been re arrested and charged with being an accessory to the robbery and with having received stolen property. ' 27 SEAMEN LOST. Lon^ Survivor Relates Thrilling Narra* tive of His Experiences. The only survivor of a crew of twen ty-eight men who were on board a dredge of the International Wrecking Company, wh«n the vessel foundered in the Gulf while en route from N. Y. to Galveston, T. J. Farrell reached Mobile recen^tly, coming overland from a point on the south beach, where he was put ashore at his own request, for purpose of reaching Fort Morgan. Far rell states that the dredge ran into heavy seas soon after entering the Gulf and that the vessel foundered. As the vessel went down%e leaped overboard with a life preserver and was subsequently picked up by a bark bound for Pensacola, the officers of which put him ashore between Perdido Bay and Fort Morgan, but, missing his way, he walked to Foley, Ala., from where he came to. Mobile by train. How ai*e the mighty fallen! Thebat- tl^hip Texas, which was one of the vessels that made history in the battle off Santiago only twelve and a half years ago, is to become a target for the newer warships at practice. For some time she has been a receiving ship. Things move rapidly toward the junk pile in our navy. A man writes in who says he is the best poet in the state and wants us to print some of his poetry. Advertising rates given on application. By a vote of\J8 to 44, the Alabama house of representatives passed the Parks local option^bill, after a debate lasting five* hours and after a contin uous session o^ seven houVs and a half. As the senate is known to bfe over whelmingly in favor of a local option bill, it is believed that the Parks bill will be rushed through that body and become a law. This does not mean that the state will .be thrown open to the sale of liquor ipimediately, for the Parks bill was Iso amended as to make it inoperative until regulation meas ures to accompany it^are enacted. The principal fight? was bn the mo tion of Speaker Almon to. substitute his dispensary bill fey* the Parks bill, but the discussion, participated In by local option, dispensary and prohibi- ton leaders, covered the whole field of liquor regulation and absolute prohi bition. On a vote the motion to sub stitute the Almon bill for the Parks bill was lopt bry 56 to 47. Then fol lowed some parliamentary skiiqnishing by the prohibitionists, with the adop tion of a minor amendment, the battle finally ending with passing of the Parks bill by the above vote. $10,000,0G0 ON DEPOSIT. SoutKern Claimants fAay Get Chance at Big Fund. « The house has;" awptod an amend ment to tbe codification bill, which, if ratified by the senate and approved by the president, will extend the provis ions of the captured and abandoned property act of March 12, 1863, and permit claims to be brought for'somf* $10,000,000 collectei^ under that act, which still remains in the federal treasury. The adoption of this amendment by a vote of 125 to 85 was a victory for Representative Bartlett, of Georgia, who introducd and urged it in a stron" speech. Not only are the provisions of the act of 1863, formerly limited in its op erations to two years, made to apply to suits which may hereafter be brought ixi the court of claims, but the former requirement that the claimant must prove “loyalty” is stricken. Representative Bartlett, in his state ment to the house, sai-d that the pro ceeds from the sale of captured cot- tcn, amounting to $4,695,000, and from other property to the value of $5,000,- 000, converted into the treasury under this act, remain on deposit. He ar gued that this money should be dis- ♦ nrsed to the original claimants or Tieir descendants. CHANGE CENTRAL OFFICES Executive Offices of Road to Go to Chicago. Executive offices of the Central of Georgia railway and the Ocean Steanji- ship company, of Savannah, will be re moved to Chicago, following the elec tion of President Charles H. Mark ham, of the Illinois Central railroad, to the presidency of these two com panies. It is believed that the actual opera tion of the railroad will be in the hands . of Vive-President Winburn, while *the legal business will be di rected by Vice-President Lawton, as heretofore. The financial direction of the road will be from the Chicago of ficers. * The operation of the steamship com pany, as heretofore, will be from the office at Savannah of Vice-President W. H. Pleasants, with the financial direction in Mr. Markham’s hands. It is said that other offices of the road and ocean line will remain where they are. WORLD’S RECORD MADE. News Received From Steafrner Korea, 4,492 Miles Away. It is claimed that a world’s record for wireless comnranication between sMp and shore was made when a mes sage was received at a local station at San Francisco, from the steamer Korea 4,492 miles away. The local op erator heard a faint call from ,the Ko rea. The message came faintly, but could be distinguished. “Seamer Korea, 4,492 out; all well.’ The operator repeated the message and received an "O. K.’* GENERAL . News reached *T)alton, NEWS Ga., of an explosion of a NOTES. boiler, which occurred at a sawmill at Old Fort, Tenn., just across the Georgia‘line, in which Joe Lowry was killed, and several others employed about the sawmill were se riously injured. L^wry is well known in Murray county, .where his family lives. His remains will be brougM back to Spring Placa for itnerment.' The Atlanta Athletic Club announces that on May 15th, on its course at East Lake, -the first golf tournament^for the championship of the South for women golfers is to be held. Sir Cups are. offered conditional on having thirty- two starts. Mrs. George Harrington, of Atlanta, may be addressed for in formation. The election of United States sena tors by direct vote of the people and the proposed Canadian reciprocity agreement are favored by former Pres ident Theodore Roosevelt. In a speech ^t Topeka, Kan., at the Lincoln Club’s banquet Colonel Roosevelt came out squarely in favOr of the change, it is said. Mrs.-Della Whitmire, wife of S. S. Whitmire, was burned,^to death at Ra bun Gap, Ga. at 2 o’clock. She was alone at home, her husband being absent at his store, when her clothing, by some accident, took fire and burned so rap idly she was unable to extinguish the flames. The Most Rev. Patrick John Ryan, archbishop of Philadelphia, and metro politan of Pennsylvania, died at the archepuisCopal residence in that city. The death' of the archbishop came as a distinct shock, as the prelate was thought to be on the way to r^overy, after making a brave* fight against death. Miss Virginia McCormick, daughter of the late millionaire harvester man ufacturer of Chicago-, and who lives on a beautiful estate near Huntsville, Ala., presented the Y. M. C. A. of that city with a check for $10,000 for the purpose of completing a handsome building in the course of construction. A dispatch from Eagleville, Cal., says: Harry Cambron, John Laxgaue^ B. Indiano.and P. Erramuspe, wealthy stockmen, who have been missing since January 1, are reported to ha^/e been murdered. The men left'^amp January 1 to go to a sheep camp seven miles distant. It has been learned that the missing men had, trouble with cattle rustlers from Oregon. A wagon carrying twelve school children was hit by a train southeast of Wichita, Kan. Harley Hartenbower, 15 years old, and Grover Hartenbower, 19 years old, were injured internally and will die. Three daughters of Mrs. Ellen Allen were caught on the en gine pilot and carried a half mile, but were only slightly injured. Penniless and. despondent because he was unable to obtain employment, Jacob Van Hasolt, 45 years old, pro fessor in music, and son of a Holland nobleman, committed suicide by shoot ing himself at Chicago. The body, frozen stiff, was found in a snowbank by a policeman. Ten shop employes of the Missouri, Kansas and Texas railroad were torn to fragments, and seven others were injured when an engine under repair exploded in the Smithville, Tex., yards. Besides the loss of life, railroad prop erty Valued at $20,000 was destroyed. Two sad deaths of little girls have occurred at Swainsbffro, Ga. Ruth Edenfield, aged 8, thinking it harm less, drank a quantity of belladona, and little Flora Hayes, while wander ing in the garden, ate some yellow jessamine blossoms. Despite medical aid, both children died. The will of the late Elizabeth Stuart Phelps Ward, the authoress, was filed in the Middlesex probate court at Cambridge, Mass. It leaves the bulk of her estate, valued at $95,000, to her two brothers. Lawrence Phelps, of At lanta, Ga., and Edward J. Phelps, of Chicago. The Intermarriage of an American with the Japanese or any other Asiatic race is prohibited in a bill passed by the Nevada legislature. It makes the performance of such a marriage by a minister or justice of the peace a mis demeanor. As a result of a democratic caucus of Wisconsin legislators a joint reso lution was introduced in both houses favoring the immediate adoption of the proposed reciprocity agreement be tween the United States and Canada. The Kansas senate passed the reso lution to submit the amendment to the constitution giving women the right to vote in all elections. The vote was 27 to 12. The resolution had pre viously pas sc* i the The supreme court of Kansas held constitutic nal the new liquor law which prohibits' the sale of liquor for I'.edicifial or mechanical purposes. Packey McFarland, of Chicago, and Jack Britton, of Indianapolis, fought eighty rounds to a draw before the Ar mory Athletic Club at Memphis. The New York American Club re ceived the signed contracts of Pitch* ers Harry Abies, who was with San An tonio last year, and of R. H. RevellSk Ast year with Richmond. County GovernmenL. Representative—Ttos. S. Wood. • Clerk Superior Court- Cos. Paxton. Sheriff and Tax Collector — Fred. A Shuf ord. ' \ Treasurer—Z. W. Nichols. Register of Deeds^B. A. Gillespie. Coroner—Dr. A. E. Lyday. Surveyor—J. C. Wike. Commissioners—W. L. Brooks, G. T. Ly day, Arthiir Miller. Superintendent of Schools—I*. C. Hen derson. / Physici^—Dr. Goode Cheatham. Attorney—R. L. Gash. Town Government*. • Mayor—W. E. Breese, jr. Board of Aldermen—T. H. Shipman. J M. Kilpatrick, T. M. Mitchell, F. L. De- Vane, E. W. Carter. Marshal—J. A. Galloway. Clerk and Tax Collector—T. H. Gallo way. • Treasurer—T. H. Shipman. Health OflScer—Dr. C. W. Hunt. Regular meetings—First Monday night in each month. Professional Cords. R. Tj. GASIL LAWYER 11 and 13 McMinn Building Notary Public. W. W. ZASHARY Attorney-at>-Law BBEVABD, N. C. H. G. Bailey \ Civil and Consulting Engineer and Surveyor BREVARD AND HENDERSOlfflrLLI^. H. C, NOTICE OF SALE AND PURCHASE OF REAL ESTATE FOR TAXES. Notice is hereby given that at a sale of land for taxes made at the court house door, in the Town pf Brevard, on the 2nd day of May, 1910, by C. C. Kilpatrick, sheriff of Transylvania county, one tract of land containing 100 acres, in Boyd Township, listed for taxation in the name of A. E. Reece, was sold to the undersigned for the sum of $5.19, and unless redemp tion is made on or before the 2nd day of May, 1911; the purchaser will apply to the sheriff for a deed to said land. W.C. REECE. NOTICE OF SALE AND PURCHASE OF REAL ESTATE FOR TAXES. Notice is hereby given that at a sale of land for taxes made at the court house door, in the Town of Brevard, on the 2nd day of May, 1910. by C. C. Kilpatrick, sheriff of Transylvania county, one tract of land containing 30 acres, in Boyd Township, listed for taxation in the name of Mrs. Eiiza Reese, was sold to the under signed for the sum of $2.61, and unless re demption is made on or before the 2nd day of May, 1911, the purchaser will apply to the said Sheriff for a deed for the said land. W. C. REECE. NOTICE OF SALE AND PURCHASE OF REAL ESTATE FOR TAXES. Notice is hereby given that at a sale of land for taxes made at the court house door, in the Town of Brevard, on the 2nd day of May, 1910, by C. C. Kilpatrick,' sheriff of Transylvania county, one tract of land containing 16 acres, in Eastatoe Township, listed for taxation in the name of Emily Aiken, was sold to the under signed for the sum of $2.02, and unless redemption is made on or before the 2nd day of May, 1911, the purchaser wijl apply to the said sheriff for a deed tov the said land. ♦ M. C. AIKEN. Execut^rix Notice* Notice is hereby given that the under signed has been appointed Executrix of the last will and testament of W. B. Duck worth, deceased. All persons having claims against said estate are hereby noti fied that they must present same before the 25th day of November, 1911, or this noticc will 1^ plead in bar of their recov ery. All persons owing said estate are required to make immediate payment. MRS. ELLA F. DUCKWORTH. * The Rev. Irl R. Hicks 1911 Almanac The Rev. Irl R. Hicks Almanac for 1911, that guardian Angel in a hnndred thotisand honies, is now ready.* Not many are now willing to be without it and the Rev. Irl R. Hicks Magazine, Word and V^orks. The two are only One Dollar-a year. The Almanac is 35c prepaiid. No home or office should fail to send for them to^ "VVord and Works Publishing Company, St. Louis, Mo.

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