rices , and one s commu- \ >?’th 25c 'i r.o yd', at Toe- only newspaper in TRANSYLVANIA COUNTY J. J. MINER, OWNER AND MANAGER VOLUIE*XVI A. HOMJE B'OR HOME AliLi HOME PRINT , - - - - - . ■ _■ ■ ^ • I I I . - , • y • BRSViSO. NOETH CAR0LIS1.TEIDAY. MARCH 8. mi. NUMBEH*9 HOUSE HAS VOTED TO FORTIFY CANAL Appropriates $3,00pJ)00 Begin Work. /'to ROBBfiD^ OF~fIo;S23: Postmistress of Kansas Town Is - Held Up. T0TAIE$TIM«TE$12,(I00,000. Action of the House Practically Set tles the Question of Fortification^ as the Sentiment of the Senate is in Favor of Same. The house of representatives voted overwhelmingly in favor of the policy of fortifying the Panama canal, and appropriated ^3,000,000 to begin the work, the total cost of which has befen estimated at $12,000,000, after a lengthy debate. The action of the house practically settles the question of fortification, for the sentiment in the senate is said to be more -than 2 to 1 in favor of pro tecting the Isthmian waterway by seacoast batteries. The real test in the house came on an amendment proposed' by Repre sentative Tawney, of Minnesota, chair man of the committee on appropria tions. Mr. Tawney has been opposed to fortifying the canal from the first, and made a forceful speech against that policy near the close of the de bate. He Vien offered an amendment, which provided that no part of the money set aside for fortification phould be used until the president of the United States had attempted to ne gotiate treaties wjth all of the leading maritime nations guaranteeing the neutrality and international protection of the canal. Representative Sherley, of Ken tucky, bitterly attacked this amend ment and warned members that it had been introduced for the sole purpose of defeating the appropriation. The Tawney amendment then was voted down, 130 to 63. A motion by Representative Keifer, of Ohio, to strike out all provision for the fortifi cation of the canal was lost, 135 to 51. The final interest In the debate seemed to center • in the Tawney amendment, and the speeches made for and against it by Mr. Tawney and Mr. Sherley. Mrs. Gus Joseph, postmistress at Fuller, a coal camp, ne^ar Pittsburg, Kan., was held up by two highwaymen and robbed of $10,000, whi^h she had Just received by express from Kansas City. The money was to have been used to pay off employes of the Sheri dan Coal Company.^ / The money was in one ^package. Two other packages, containing $10,- 000 each, were not found by the rob bers. The' money was sent frongi Kansas City. There was $30,523 in the three packages. The train was met by Mrs. Joseph and Albert Briggs, cashier of the company. The money yras consigned to aji ex press company, of which. Mrs. Joseph was agent. ^ ' Mrs. Joseph took a package contain ing $10,523 and left the depot first. As she stepped out of the door, a masked man, with a revovler, confronted her and demanded the money. Another robber stood near by. Mrs'. Joseph handed over the money. Briggs, who was close behind, saw what was going on, and threw his two packages, containing $10,000 each, into a corner. The robbers did not linger to deter mine whether they had secured all the money, but ran to a buggy and escaped. TERRELL RECOVERING. Georgia Member Is on Fair Road to Recovery. Senator Terrell has been removed from the hospital where he has been confined for over Wo weeks, or since his sudden attack of cerebral hemorr hage, to his apartments in the Hotel Cochran, Washington, D. C. The senator’s condition is reported to be much imk>roved, and he even ex pects to be able to attend a session of the senate before adjournment, March 4. He sees, several visitors each day, and a day or so ago had a long inter view with his secretary, J. G. Perry, on business, matters. “Senatof' Terreff Is maWng'^a in ning fight against his illness, and will make a winning fight before the Geor gia legislature,” said Mr. Perry after the conference. “He is in the contest to the close.” , THREE DEAD, $500,000 LOST. WAS SOLDIER OF FORTUNE Louisiana Town Practically Wiped Out John Boyd, Hero of Crimean War, and Raging Fire. British Writer Dies in Huntsville. ^ estimated at $500,000 was sus- tained Wednesday when flames, origi- John Boyd, chief editorial writer of' mating in the kitchen of the Nicolls ho- the Mercury-Banner and Weekly Mer- * spread rapidly and almost totally cury, of Huntsville, Ala., and for many 1 destroyed the business district of Don- years connected with the staffs of | aldsonville, La. Three lives are report- many newspapers in the east and It *s understood that the fire was started by an explosion of a gasoline stove. With almost incredible rapidity the fiames leaped across the street and fed by highly inflammable material de veloped into a conflagration beyond the control of the local fire fighters. Hurry calls and special trains were sent to neighboring cities for apparatus. The flames starte^d shortly after 9 o’clock in the morning, but it was 5 o’clock in the afternoon before they were under con trol. ARE RUN 1EARTK ■ J Gang of Train R(Ms Said to ' BeiMfl4 GAUeHTJN^n After Long Chase of JWany Days OfH* cers of the Law Believe They Have Caught the Gang'Wih^'''R6i3bed South* ern’s Fast Mail. GENERAL W. H. BIXBY. Army Officer Who Is Raieing ^Wreck of Battleship Maine. '’*^0 -I ^ ^ ' / 5 'N Three men arrested in Lumpkin county, Ga., in conecti(5n with the hold up and robbery of the Southern rail way’s fast mail. No. 36, near White Sulphur Springs, last Saturday, have been fully identified by parties^ connect ed in the case, including a portion oi the train crew on th% run the morning the train was robbed.'*' One of these prisoners, aged 65, who gives his name as ^ John Doe, John Luck and also John Anderson, is sullen and reluctant to talk on the> crime for which he is l^Id. The other two seem perfectly will ing to .talk in regardr to the robbery, and have confessed everything. Upon their arrival at Gaipesville, Ga., they were in a condition ^that necessitated their being placed iri4he hospital ward of the jail. Both refuse to divulge their identity. One the men impart- Georgia Mob Dealt Swift Vengeance TWO LYNCHINGS. to Negro Slayers. ed information to dtgtectives that led to tha discovery of several valuable papers, documents, mortgages and jew- Two negroes were taken from the elry, taken from the blown safe in the jail at Warrenton, Ga., and lynched, express car, and burigd near the scene They were carried to the outskirts of of the robbery. ,1 ' town, strung up and riddled with bul- Two more suspectsj arrested at Ball lets. Ground, Ga., were brought to Gaines-1 One of the negroes was Charlie ville, and efforts ard being made to Jones, who shot and killed Conductor connect them with the hold-up. i W. W. Thompson Thursday night, and When the thr’ee men were captured the other was John Veazey, who, in In Lumpkin county there was found November of last year, killed Charlie only $3 American money on the entire parham, a white farmer, of this trio, while they possessed over $2,000 county. In British coin. | ^ The mob was quiet and orderly and Mrs. Cooper, of White Sulphur jjq resistance, as the sheHff was Springs, has identifi^ out of the city at the time the jail was -whd bought a smafi .coal ^ ^ oil from her store on the evening of^ Few people of the town knew of the the robbery. . * ^ ' occurrence until daylight. The two younger prisoners stated, bodies were unclaimed and that Luck secured the larger amount o shipped to the Atlanta College of the booty, which caused a row J>etween^j^yg.^j^^ Surgeons by Dr. G. R. the three, followed by a separation and autlioriz- their immediate arrest. They also stated that they were headed for Ten nessee when captured. north, died in that city, after a brief illness. Mr. Boyd was about 75 years old and leaves a widow. Mr. Boyd was born in Ireland and in early life entered the British army. He fought in the Crimean war and in the campaign in India that suppress ed the Sepoy rebellion. He was a sol dier in the column that cut its way through millions of Sepoy’s to the re lief of Lucknow, and his descriptive writings of that campaign, appearing in the Liverpool Gazette a short time later, attracted much attention. As a staff correspondent of the Liv erpool paper, he came to America and was so charmed with this country that he remained and took up journalistic work in the large cities of the east. Thirty years ago he was with the Cin cinnati Enquirer, later with the Re publican Banner in Nashville and then came to Huntsville and became a member of the first staff of the Daily Mercury. His writings covered a wide range of subjects and his knowledge of politics and history was apparently unlimited. CANAL BONDS. Issue of $50,000,000 May Be Made by Government. tain to be made as soon as congress passes the bill authorizing the secre tary of the treasury to withhold the new securities from use as a basis for additional national bank notes. In the event that the present oppo sition to the legislation affecting the bonds should prevent its passage, an issue of 3 per cent certificates of in debtedness, having one year to run, ia probable. That is the treasury’s ten tative plan now. In view of the sale of about $100,- 000,000 industrial improvement bond« during January and Vie prediction that about $500,000,000 more will find thel# to market in the next fevr months, treasury ofilcials agree thin Is a propitious time for an. issue ol government securities. Atlantic Liners. It takes 7,000 tons of coal to bring j®ne of the modern liners across the •A-tlantic ocean. RAID ON OCEAN LINER. ing the anatomical board of Georgia to dispose of unclaimed bodies. Conspiracy to Violate U, S, Immigra tion Laws. ROBBED OF JEWELS. Mrs. Drummond Loses Fortune Gems on Ship. in An issue of $30,000,000 to $50,000,000 Ota per cent Panama bonds seems cer-kjaimB all7rs7tmafturtV7n Mrs. Maldwin Drummond, formerly Mrs. Marshall Field, Jr., of Chicago, was robbed of a fortune in jewels aboard a trans-Atlantic liner. Diamonds, pearls and other gems to the value of approximately $130,000 disappeared mysteriously from her stateroom on the steamship Amerika, of the Hamburg-American line. The Ibss was reported immediately the liner docked at Hob<^'en, and the police of Hoboken and Nfew York are ! working on the case. Mrs. Drummond hurried to the Ho tel Plaza, declining to discuss her i loa^4 The Hamburg-American line dls- tbat passengers leave jewels In their state rooms at the owner’s risk. BISHOP HEALIN DIES. Widely Known Dignitary pf Roman CathoHc Church. Right Rev. Thomas Healin, ittth bish- pp of the diocese of Natchez, Miss., and one of the most widely known dig nitaries of the Roman Catholic Church In the southern states, died at the Epis- f copal residence in Natohez, his death resulting from an attack of heart! trouble and Bright’s disease, and the added complication of pneumonia. Bishop Healin has .been in indiffei^ ent health the greater part of the iiast year but It was not until several days ago that his condition was regarded at serious. . ^ • Bishop Healin was' a native of Tr# land and was in his 64tSi year. Federal officers swept aboard a trans-Atlantic liner when she ma^e her pier in New York and arrested every man in authority from captain down. All are .charged with con spiracy to violate the United States Immigration laws. The steamship Is the Athinal, of the Hellenic Trans-Atlantic Steamship Company, whose general agent at New York also was arrested. The government charges that the company has been smuggling in aliens for more than a year, some of them disguised as members of the crew, others hidden about the ship until there was no dan ger of search. Nikolas A. Galanos, the agent, was released under $20,000 bond, and his confidential secretary in $15,000. Cap tain Gekas Klouras was released in $10,000, as were his first oflicer, chief engineer, and Dr. Gerasimos Diakova- tos, the ship’s surgeon. Three other officers were held in $10,000 bail each, and each of the eighteen members of the crew in $5,000 each. In all thfe governmffint required $195,- 000 bail. Judge Chatfleld, sitting in the United State’s circuit court, before whom the indictments were read, set trial for March 1. The penalty for conspiracy is $10,000 fine and two years’ imprisonment, either or both, and for violating Section 8 of the im migration laws $5,000 and two years, •ither or both. A field agent-»of the immigration bu reau at Washington, who work6d up the case, had seventy-six names on ills list, but only twenty-nine of them could be found on the Athinai when he boarded her at quarantine. No ar rests were made until the ship moored In Brooklyn. The passengers were taken ofiC with out confusion, and federal officers then searched the ship, arresting those wanted who could be found. $2,688,371 INCREASE. Earnings of Railroads In Georgia for Year 1910. Ah increase in net earnings amount ing to $2,688,371.29 is shown in the re port just completed by the railroad commission of*the net earnings of all the railroads operating in the state of Georgia, for the fiscal year ending ■ June 30, 1910, in comparison with the ! net earnings of the previoils year. The year 1907, just before the big panic, I was the largest year on record pre- • vious to the year ending June 30, 1909, ! and the net earnings for the year end ing June 30, 1910, show an increase over the net earnings of that year ^ amounting to $5,107,342.75. i The gross earnings of the railroads ' for the year ending June 30, 1910, ex- I ceeded the gross earnings of the i>re- i vious year by $4,665,568.31, and ex- ■ ceeded the gross earnings of the ban ner year, 1907, by $3,443,790.69. FOR BETTER RATIONS. Fight Begun More Than a Year Ago Is Sucjcessful. ‘ ’ The fight inaugurated more than a year ago for the betterment of the rations served in the various national soldiers’ homes was won at Washing ton when the provision in the sundry civil bill, increasing the appropriation for this purpose by $160,000, was adopted. Representative Cox, of Ohio, called attention to, the fact last year that the average ration in the soldiers’ homes was 14% cents, and^that in some It was as low as 11 cents, or about the same as in the federal penitentiaries. The increase provided wil^ bring the average rations up to 17 cents. Through her attorneys. Colonel M. U. Moody and John 'McDougald; XiUther Waller and Henry*Terry died at Umpson, Texas, fropoL the effects of injuries < sustained when a boiler exploded at a lumber mill near Timpson. Five other work men were injured but it is not thought fa^l^y. A Nashville, Tenn-, dispatch says; Just before living for a business trip to Birmingham, Governor Hooper ve toed the Nashville charter bill recently passed by the legislature. The bill for passage over his veto will come up im- mediately after the recess./' GENERAL NEWS NOTES. Colonel E. A. Jones, Mrs W. W. Smith, of LaGrange, Ga., filed suit for $40,000 against the Atlanta, Birmingham and Atlantic railroad for the death /of her son, Cusler Ssiith, who was killed by the A., B. & A. switch engine, in the LaGrange yard, on the night of February 7, while coupling cars near the ^P0(t. Three, passengers were killed, two other persons were fatally injured and ^many js^riousl^ hurt In a wreck of the : Atphiso^^ Topeka and" Santa Fe .pas senger train Ijjlo. 410 near Stillwater, Okla. ~ The wreck was caused by the der^ment of three coaches. It is be- I UeyeA the recent heavy rains under- j mined the track. * - County Govemmentf. Representative—Thos. S. Wood. » Cleric SuBerior Court-N^^Cos. Paxton. ^ Sheriff and Tax CollectorFred, A '• Shuford. ' ' Treasurer-^. W. Nichols. ' „ Register of Dee3s-^B. A. Gillespitej^ : " Coiipner—Dr. A. E. Lyday. Suitor—J. C. Wike. ' Gommi^'c:^»e^l^. L. Bfotoks, G. T. Ly- day, Arthur Miller. - Supetin^dent of Schools-rT. C. Hen- ' dersqn. I ’ Physicia»-~Df. Goode Cheatham. ' Attorney—R. L. Gash. ^ ■' , ' > Town Government*. Mayor—W. E. Breese, jr.l Board of'Aldermen—T. H. Shipman. J ' M. Kilpatrick, T. M. Mitchell, F. L. De- Vane, E. W. Carter. Marshall—J. A. Galloway. • Clerk and Tax Collector—T. H. Gallo- ' way. - Treasurer—T. H. Sh^fnah. ' Health Officer—Dr. W. Hunt. , Regular me^ings—First Monday night in each month. SOUTHEHN RAILWAY COMPANY Transylvania Divibion. • *In effect January 2,1911. ® -^Schedules flgur^ given br information only, auU not guaranteed. O eS ;z;q Eastern Standard Time /STATIONS , P M 3 40 3 45 4 4' 5 00 5 05 5 08 6 18 5 20 6 26 5 84 5 36 5 4'^ 5 55 6 02 em 6 12 6 21 6 30 6 40 Lv...'.... Asheville Jir Ly ..Heiiden>onvilie...Ar ...West Hendersonville Yale ::: *-...Hors.e Shoe Cannon Etowah Biantyre Penrose Davidson River...... ........ Pisgah Forest.. Ar Brevard - Lv ............. SeKca Cherryfleid ....' ..i.,.!.......Calvert„ -.'.t.'.r.r,'. Rosman Quebec........ Reid’s Ar...Lalie Toxaway...Lv A M 11 80 •10 25 10 22 10 10 10 05 10 02 9 66 9 49 9 42 9 33 9 30 9 24 9 08 9 01 8 58 8 54 8 8'43 8 84 8 25 Ncs. 5 and 6 are through trains between A.'“heville and Lake Toxaway. No. 5 connects ■ at Hei de'rsonville with the Carolina Special for Spartanbur^, Columbia and Cha»^]eston, and at Spartanburg with No$. 11 ard 12 for Atlanta and Charlotte. ' For tickets and fall information apply to E. W. CARTER, Ag’t. J. H. WOOD, Dist. Pass. Ag’t, Asheville, N. 0 Professional Cords. L. GASIL LAWYER. 11 and 12 McMinn Building Notary Public. , W.W.ZiSHARY Attorney-at^Law . BREVARD, N. C. H. G. BAILEY Civil and Consulting Engineer and Surveyor^ " BREVARD AND ^ HENDERSOIINILLE. N. C. NOTICE-Change ' in Hour of Meeting. J By a vote of Dnnns Rock Lodge at last regular communication the hour of meeting was changed and the following will be the hours un til further notice: Jan. 13, 1911, m*eeting at 2 p. m. Hereafter the meetings will, alternate—^February, meetiiig at 8 p. m^l, March, at 3 p. m., etc. All members* are urged to attend these meetings. ' Visiting Masons cordially invited.. Jan. 9,1911. Welch Galloway, Sec’y. The Rev. Irl R. Hicks 1911 Almanac The Rev. Irl ]^. Hicks 'Al^nac for 1911, that guardian Angel in av hundred thousand homes, is now ready. Not many are now willing to be without it and the Rev. Irl R. Hicks Magazine, Word and Works. The^two are only One Dollar a year. The ^Almanab is S5c prepaid., No home or oflSce should fail to send for them to Word and Works PubliihingiCompany, ^St. libui^' Mo.