THE WEATHER FAIR VOL- XXIX., NO 300. HUERTA REJECTS OFUNfTED STATES 'Declares Against Mediation or Similar Suggestion from Any Foreign Government foETS TIME LIMIT FOR RECOGNITION Believed to Mean Severance of All Relations Between Two Countries liLEXIOO CITY, Aug. 18. The I'lUtod States . government has been given until midnight to. night by IrMi4(tot Huerta to f recognize Mexico, it U officially stated. Tbe government is not specific in Uie public announcement as to what t'oui-He then will bo pur -f sued but It Is understood that it means Hie severing of all rola- Uons between the two countries. WASHINGTON. Aug. la.-Admlnis- tratlon officials were puzzled late to -night when they received the an nouncement through press dispatches that ProvSjional President Huerta had delivered an ultimatum demanding recognition of his government in Mexico by the United States. Secretary Tumulty, at the white house, read the Associated Press dis patch from Mexico City received short ly before midnight, stating the in tention of the Huerta governetnnt and Immediately communicated it to Sec retary Bryan. President Wilson had retired early and was not awakened. Secretary Bryan said he had re ceived merely cablegrams announcing the rejection by the Huerta govern ment of the American suggestions for a peaceful settlement. In the ab sence of official confirmation Secre tary Bryan said no announcement would be made by this government Huerta Rejecta Plans. MEXICO CITY, Aug. 18. Provi sional President Huerta, replying today Ho President Wilson's note, . which iwas recently delivered to the Mexl ican government through ex-Governor John Lind, refused mediation in the iMexlcan situation or any similar sug gestions made by a foreign govern ment. Mr. Lind has forwarded Gen eral Huerta's answer to Washington land Is awaiting a reply. President Huerta, in his reply, told the United States that he would toler ate no Interference, even . though that Interference might be character ized as friendly mediation. The char acter of the reply of Washington to President Huerta's note will deter- (Omitimied on Page Five.) N.G.0EPHTY GOUECTDRS MAY BE EXPECTED SOON Collector Watts Confers With Commissioner Os borne About Charges. MANY ELIGIBLE (By George II. Manning.) WASHINGTON, Aug. 18. Almost H complete house cleaning may be texpeoted among the deputy internal revenue collectors in North Carolina Shortly. Collector Watts held a con ference today with Commissioner Os borne and the civil service commission to familiarize himself with the rules governing the ousting of the present deputies and replacing them wHh men who have successfully passed the ex aminations for deputies held in the State within the past few days. While a number of democratic deputies have been appointed pending the examin ations they took laM week, the greater nun.b.-r of republican holdovers will be discharged in the next few weeks as soon as the list of eligibles is made Op from the hundred or more other applicants who have Just taken the examinations. It Is probable that within a month from now it will be liard to find a republican employe tn the the internal revenue service in .North Carolina. Congresman Godwin, chairman of the committee on reform in the civil Service, is on the wr path against the officials of the railway mall service who are responsible for the placing of negroes In positions of authority over white mail clerks in North Caro lina. Ills anger was aroused by the receipt of a letter from the mail clerks runninc out of Wilmington, who com plained asainst having to take orders from negroes. He is not altogether opposed to the promotion of negroes but believes they should be segregat ed and placed in authority over their own race. E. L. Auman, recently recommend ed for appointment as postmaster at - Aiheboro. today filed his answer with i tui wit against i his appolntiAsa PEACE PROPOSALS THE IS CHIEF EXECUTIVE OF EMPIRE STATE Attorney-General Carmody so Declares In an Official Opinion N.Y. ASSEMBLY WAS WITHIN ITS RIGHTS Was Legally Empowered to Consider Charges Against Gov.Sulzer ALBANY, JT. T., Aug. 18. Ueir- tenant Governor Martin H. Glynn is tne lawful chief executive of Now York state .pending the outcome of Impeachment proceedings against Gov ernor Bubser, according to an official opinion handed down today by Attorney-General Thomas Carmody to Sec retary of Stat-! Mitchell May. Mr. Car mody holds that the assembly was within Its rights in instituting im peachment proceedings at an extraor dinary kession. "When th governor Is Impeached by the assembly," says the opinion, "all of his powers are automatically suspended until he has been acquitted or the impcai hment proceedings dis missed by the court of impeachment In the meantime the lieutenant gov ernor acts as governor. This is the plain Intent of the constitution. Any other construction would nullify its express provision." With reference to the authority of the assembly to initiate Impeachment proceedings the attorney-general says'. Assembly WlUiin KlglitH. "It If,' my opinion that if the assem bly was not assembled, either In ex traordinary or regular session. It might assemble Itself and proceed to the discharge of its power in this re gard. Otherwise the governor of the state could prevent the Impeachment of himself and hit friends In office, for crimes, however great, after the adjournment of the regular session of the legislature, by the simple process of omitting to call the legislature In session." ' Neither Oovernor Sulxer, Lieuten ant Governor Olynn or their counsel would discuss the attorney general'! opinion tonight. " " V- 14 " ' T' The activities of the rival guber natorial camps during the day cen tered largely on the escape of Harry K. Thaw from Matteawan and the meeting of the pubi'e board to open bids for reconstruction work In the capital. The bids for Capitol con struction were opened In Mr. Sulxer's presence by Chester C. Flatt, secretary of the board, an opinion having been rendered by the attorney-general that such action met legal require ments. The Glynn partisans were elated at the stand taken by the attorney-general, as it Is customary for the state departments to heed his legal opinions. This tends further to isolate Gov ernor Sulzer from the rest of the state machinery. The policy adopted by Mr. Sulzer of screening his offi cial acts from the public was rigid ly adhered to today. Attorney-General Carmody's opin- (Continued on Page Five.) E KILLS FORMER HUSBAND AND FATALLY Judge Godbee Dies Instant ly and Wife Lives But Few Minutes. WOMAN ARRESTED MILLEN, Ga., Aug. 18. W. S. God bee, prominent citizen of this place, and his wife, Mrs. Florence Godbee,. were shot to death here today by Mrs. J Edna Perkins Godbee, from whom he j was divorced several years ago. I The shooting occurred at the en-1 trance of the Millen postofflce. The j divorced woman used a large calibre revolver, which she had concealed In a handbag. Without warning she fired l three shots at her former husband, all j of them taking effect and killing him ! instantly. She then turned upon Mrs., Godbee. inflicting three wounds from I which she died this afternoon. j After the shooting, Mrs. Edna Per-1 kins Godbee, replaced her weapon inj the handbag, and walked quietly to her home, several blocks distant. She was later arrested there and held without bail. She would make no statement, beyond saying she was perfectly sat- ! Isfled with the sucees of her attempt Mr. Godbee was well known through out this section of Georgia, He was a; member of the board of commission- ers of Jenkins county, and had been extensively interested in politics. Al though both he and Mrs. Edna Per kins Godbee maintained their resi dences here after they were divorced, they were not known to have had any dealings with one another. Mrs. Florence Godbee, who married the murdered man only recently, was TU1 11!. Jl 1 WlMB Toungstown. Pa. n LAWFUL ASHEVIL ASHEVILLE, N C., E sties ny 5 Steamer "State of California" Sinks In Cambier Bay In In Three Minutes MANY PASSENGERS IN STATE-ROOMS Survivors Are on Board the Steamer Jefferson List of Dead Not Complete JUNEAU, Alaska, Aug. 18 Twenty five or mdYa passengers and seven members of the Pacific Coast Steam ship company's steamer Stats of Call fornla, perished Sunday morning in Cambier bay, 80 miles south of Ju iienu, when the vessel struck an un chartered rock and sank In threa minutes, with many passengers Im prisoned in their state rooma The steamship left 8eattle last Wed nesday night for Skagway and way points. The purser lost all of his ro- ords and it is not possible to give a complete list of the missing. lead 'ltecovered. Following is a list of the dead whose bodies have been, recovered: Mrs. A. Burnbaum. Mrs. Stella Reardan. Mrs. Slant Vanderlas. Wins Llllie Ward. daughter of Ed ward C. Ward, asistant manager of the Pacific Coast Steamship company, died after being taken off a Hfe raft Mrs, Nellie B. Ward, mother of Mil Lilla. Four unidentified women. Following Is an uncomplete list of the missing, who are believed to have perished: Miss Anne L. Cassldy. Miss May Dixon. W. A. Dyer. Blanche Frldd. Mlnette E. Harlan. Leslie Hobro, manager of the Pa cific Coast Steamship company's of fice in San Francisco. J. Holman. Miss Alice Johnson. Lillian B. Norman. Nick Plttutaa. Miss Readran. ,t Mrs, V B. -Upkhilt and child. " Ben A. Wade. ' ' Miss Wilson. The uninjured survivors, crew and passengers are being taken to Seattle on the steamer Jefferson and will ar rive thero Thursday. A great hole was torn In the bot tom of the ship. The veeset, cargo mall and express, are a total loss. The ship was valued at 1400,000. The steamship Jefferson, of the A I. aka Steamship line, southbound heardth e wireless call of the sinking vessel and turned back to rescue the survivors who had taken to small boats and life rafts. Ten of the pas sengers had suffered so severely from exposure that It was necessary to take them to a hospital In Juneau for treat ment. 1 he State of California, an iron steamship of 2,276 gross tons, was built at Philadelphia in 187( and ear ned a crew of seventy five men. For many years she had carried passeng ers between Puget Sound and San Francisco. JAIL AT SPARTANBURG Al DYNAMITES WALL Three Men Shot During Attack and Portion of Walls Destroyed. ASSAULT CASE HPAIiTANRURCr, R C, Aug II. Three men, Frank Eopley, J. C. Owensby and John Turner were seriously wounded tonieht when a ss ncEii OR MORE PERISH mou stormed tne county jail in an or- ' , " " ,;day made an extended statement In fort to lynch Will Fair, a negro prta-1 Representative Calloway, of, ' oner, charged with assaulting a Texas; Bjwdle, of OWo, and other.' " own behalf at .tha close of which young white woman near here today, talked agUnst the bill, while Repre- the defense announced Its case corn Sheriff White and a deputy, facing sentatives Weaver, of Oklahoma, and i ,,i,tel. the mob alone, repeatedly drove them back with pistol dhots when they ad- vanced with battering rams. Members of the moo finally re turned the fire and In the darkness the three men were struck. They were not fatally wounded but were taken to a hospital for attention. The young woman was assaulted in a lonely farm house this morning in the absence of her husband. Several charges of dynamite were exploded late tonight by the mob In effort to enter the Jail. After they had blown down a portion of the outer wall they were impressed by the show of strength inside the jail and retired, but threats were made to return later with nitro-glycerlne which they proposed to obtain from a rail road contraction camp. Hundreds of platoi and rifle shots were fired when the dynamite was exploded, but so far as can be learned no others were injured. Oovernor Blease was appealed to late tonight to call out the militia to protect Fair. He refused, tout icedtharii-weTrtdTeTrTVit turn f court to trr the negro. UAli TUESDAY MORNING, AUGUST 19, 1913. IF 0IU OOVT ctr , pfterry soon urn hau TO LOOK rORANQTHl eta.Qtueveni- i HMLttT BiNAtrV papc ron ovtn a net, 5ont,iAH THAW CAN BE ARRESTED IN ANY STATE IN THE UNION SAYS SUPREME COURT; NO TRACE OF FUGITIVE YET FOUND On Technical Charge of Conspiracy WarrantB Are Issued upon Which Slayer of Stanford White Can Mother NEW YORK, Aug. 18. -Rundown tonight marked tt thIrty-sUth hour of Harry K. Thaw's freedom and th police of the United States and Cana da have not picked up his trail. They eek him not as the slayer of Stan- ford Whit, or as escsd lunatic, but i on a warrant Issued at Poughkeepsle tcday charging him with, conspiring with the used keeper, Howard Barn um, and the five men who managed the asylum delivery. On such a tech nicality does New York state base Its hope of bringing ,alout the fugitive's return. Bth factions of the double- barrelled government at Albany, have promised rigid Investigation and the exertion of every effort to bring about hia capture, -v -sj"' ( . : -:ThaVs elaslotWanf "tbtllrht.' was absolute. Out of th aloud of dust which swirled in-the wake of the black automobile bearing hlm( and his liberators from Matteswan Hun day morning nothing tlnglhle' had come except a lanconlc letter from Thaw himself assuring his aged mother In New York that he desired rest and would In due time join her at the Thaw country place, Elmhurst, at Cretteon, Pa. In obedience to this plan, Mrs. Thaw purposes to start for Cresson tomorrow morning. Ills Mother Happy. Happy, girlish almost In- her joy, Mrs. Thaw exhibited the hastily scrawled note from the' Sim whose escapades have cnut the family a mil lion and added tht whatever Hurry did would meet with her approval. This, In view of his announced In tention of entering Pennsylvania, gave basis to the belief that was preparing to take his case before the courts of that state and relying j Into New York state lay open to him. on the kink in American laws relative! )no lay norih by land to Canada! to the Insane charged with no crime, thence southwest along the border of to oppose extradition and duplicate In ! the Great Iikes and across Lake Pennsylvania, If pimsible, the course j Erie to a north Jutting nubbin of of John Armstrong Ohaloner, In Vlr- j Pennsylvania. The other Is the water ginla. route. Ab cird ship in the sea Thaw It was in anticipation of such a could hide his time In comparative move that the New York authorities' safety and make his way to Phlladel caused tho warrant to be sworn out .hia via tho Delaware river and Dei st Poughlceepeie. Conspiracy, accord-1 ;tvare bay. T Calloway Offers Substitute Based on Scotland's Bank ing System. WASHINGTON, Aug. 18. Currency 'Insurgent" continued their attacks on the administration currency ol Brown, oi west Virginia, memwri oi lne oanaing ami cuirmrey committee. aeTenaea it. Tne net ruit was a fur ther delay In taking up the measure for amendment and general debate may not be concluded In tha caucus tomorrow. Representative Calloway during a long speech declared ho hoped there was "some way to bring pressure to bear to make the chairman of the currency oommlttee, or members who know, tell who it was that originally drew this bill" Mr. Calljway added that he under stood the measure was drawn by! John V. Farwell, of Chicago, and ether representative, of banking in - teresta. He opposed the plan In Its entirety and declared he had a aubstl - tute or nis own basea on tne system used in Scotland for 217. years and Canada for a shorter period, without panic. Representative Bowdle pleaded for delay until the December session of congress, - Maying the cauc-t was pleading coneral lgnoranc and try-j ejmllaclflaad author CITIZEN be Taken Anywhere in the United States Thaw's Receives Scrawled Note from Her Son. : . , Ing to the district attorney of Dutch ess county, constitutes an extraditable offense. , Close amoclates In U family Indi cated tonight that the ground work cf a legal fight in Pennsylvania had already been laid. Dr. Brlttnn D. Evans, the alienist who testified in Thaw's behalf , at the murUor trials. held a telephone conference with Mrs. Thaw this afternoon, and It was said that ha would accompany her to Pennsylvania tomorrow, There are to be conferences with , counsel and meantime it Is understood Thaw is to remain in hiding. lrt Cloud of Dust. vs. Figuratively welt as literally. Thaw left behind him only a cloud of Dotflhesr county dustrwimoTlrTirrilce sSldIhey wouM detain him If passagedescriptions of blac -uto- Nw Tor requested It Connecticut mobiles, talc of yacht tmardlns i mitook the view that ho could bo' held Long Island sound, epoukled the day's there as an Insane fugitive but Mass news. The yacht KnUyroion of George j achusetts officials were inclined to lauder, Jr., a distant relative of the (think that nothing short of a crim Thuws by marriage, round mention inal charge would warrant his deten In the crop of rumors. After having tlon In that atato. I.ft Vineyard Haven, Mas.., tho craft, Pw,on4 ony t0 lb, ttMrch tor Tnaw was rcpor-ed as cruising somewhere; th,t for Blchard j. BuUer, Roger in the sound, possibly not far from; Thompson, Michael O'Keefe, Eugene Bouth Nurwalk, Conn., repeatedly j rw r-tw.ni.. irw h. noint.r mentioned an ss objective point for Thaw had he cared to take to sea. Inquiry at the New York Yacht club disclosed that the Kndymlon- was a slow boat Rnd attaches there scouted the Idea that Thaw would have gons aboard. While there was nothing to sup port tho theory thut Thaw had taken to the seas, this seemed to those who have followed the caste to be tho like - Thawliet course. leaving Matteawan only j two routs which did not double back LED Mi FRANK, ON STAND In Extended Statement, He Tells Jury of Movements On Day of Murder. ' ATLANTA, Ga., Aug. 18. Leo M. Frank, on trial here for the murder f furteen year old Mary Phagan, to- ( AftPr roitttig to the Jury the story of his early life, leading up to the time he assumed charge of the Na tional Pencil company's plan here, Frank made a sweeping denial of the acts with which he is charged by the stale. He described in detail his ' movements on the day of Mary Pha- gan's -disappearance as well as that following when the girl's mutilated body was diacovered in the factory basement. Frank characterized James Conley's testimony as a "tissue of lies" and der :n,ocl thilt hafl evcP b,.p RUuly of immorai conduct such as that descrlb. 1 e(1 hy ttu, lieKro. jn concluding his itatement, tYank said: Some newspaper man has called me the 'silent man In the Tower.' : I have kept my words for the proper place and the proper time. This is the place and the hour. I have told you the whole truth." . It Is expected that ntroductlon of MIS WINE DENIAL i begin tomorrow. Not In Ouuidsh In view of the fact that Mranca into Canada might mean a daub, with the Immigration authorities there, the theory was advanced that Thaw's ad visers would not havs him take any Uch risk. - Dispatches from Ottawa, though quoting no official, said that if Thaw halted within tha dominion he might be deport! as an "undesirable alien," clthourh,if, he had through ticket to Europe, thero would bs no stop ping htm. The ut authorities at llarriiburg, Pa., indicated that If cams within that state his cue would ho' referred to the attorney general'i pfftflV'prwWsa Hew Tork asked lor bis extradition. The TfUdelphl po- Duffy and Thomas Flood, tho quintet whose muscle, nerve and skill wtth automobiles' did the stop watch work. No trace of these has yet been found. " pouonxEBPSiK, h: T., Aug.' It. If Harry K. Thaw has not left the country, he will be arrested on a war rant charging him with ' conspiracy and returned to the Matteawan atate , hospital for tho criminal Insane. Ao- tlon with this end In view was taken In a special term of the supreme court here this afternoon when Justice Joseph Morschauser Issued a warrant for the arrest of Thaw, charging him with conspiracy with Keeper Howard Barnum and five other men In mak ing his esreapa from Matteawan, Hlmllsr warrants were also Issued for Richard J. Butler, Roger Thomp son, MlehiM O'Keefe, Eugene Duffy 'Continued on I'ago NEGRESS CLAIMS ESTATE LEFT BY JILLFGEO NEGRO Claims to Be Wife of Late Publisher Who Lived as White Man. CHICAOO, Aug. U. William H. Lee, head of a publishing firm who lived In Chicago as a white man and died apparently without heirs, was claimed In the probate court today by Luclnda Anderson, a negress, of Ben ton Harbor, Michigan, as her hus band. Lee began his career In a small towa In New Hampshire, It Is said, after serving 'as valet In the civil war to a Confederate officer. In a petition filed for the claimant It is believed that the publUher's real name was William A. Anderson, that he was a negro, though of light com plexion, and that he deserted his wife thirty years ago. The woman lays claim to the estate of the late publisher. It was valued at first at 1200, but much of It was in plates of value to Lee's business alone.' Lee or Anderson never talked of his personal affairs and his antece dents were a mystery when he died. The woman makes the identification by means of newspaper photographs whioh she has seen. The body win be exhumed to allow her to confirm her Identification, THE WEATHEH. WASHINGTON, Aug. Forecast for North Carolina: Fair west, local thundershowers east portion Tuesday. fWenesday' probably fair; light ' to mod- tarate variable wind CITIZEN WANT ADS BRINO RESULTS PRICE FIVE CENTS i HIS INNOCENCE IN THE Til ESCAPE Says Laxness of Admlnistra. Hon of Asylum Is to be Blamed THAW WAS ALLOWED FREEDOM OF GROUNDS Superintendent Knew He was Allowed In Yard- Barnura Did All He Could MATTEAWAij'. N. f., Auf. 11.-4 Attacking the Matteswan asylum au thorltles for their laxnrns of adminis tration and maintaining that he is In. nocent of complicity with Harry K. Thaw in his plot to oscaps, Howard It. Carnum, for seventeen years an arylum Attendant, made a' statement tonight giving In detail nil move ments when Thaw made his dash for liberty, Barnum la blamed by tha asylum BUthorttlss for allowing Thaw to escape. ' : Barnum'i statement, , which was mado through his attorney, Ferdinand ' A. Hvyl, of Matteawan, after explain Ing thai as keeper of the rear gats It was his duty to admit any person who had business at tha hospital, ton tlnuea: - ' ' ' IMrntun'a Butoownt ' Por soma time Harry Thaw ha loen assigned by tha superintendent as an assistant In tha atora room and It has been tha custom tor the keeper tn charge to permit him at certain times in tha day to exercise In tha outer yard. This yard is surrounded by a high board fence In which ther l ona gate and there la nothing but this fonos between tha yard and tha road. They have been tn the habit of allowing Thaw tho liberty of this yard enrsrat days every week and his presence there I a usual occurrence." Barnum then described at length tha manner In which Thaw ! .dashed through the gata to the automobile waiting outside when tha keeper ad mitted the milkman, and tha stata- mant oontlnues:. , . - u - Had Aorrsa'to Yard.'' "Thaw has had accee to the yard ana ' permitted at will to go to any part vi . r. nai ninnina o wnn regulating his movetnents and ha was to the habit of going out to tha gato when I opened and closed It, tlma and tlma again. Ha was given access to tha yard by the storekeeper with tha knowledga of Dr. Kleb, tha superintendent i . "None of the attendant Is per mitted, under tha- rule to carry any firearms or weapon of any kind and the gate Is so wide that it I Impos sible for any men guarding It to pre vent a patient darting out if he felt o disposed. From the time that Thaw came up behind and leaped from the gate to tha tlma that he was tn (Obnttnned on Pag Five) FIGHT TO SEAT GLffll AS ALABAMA SENATOR. HIS BEGH EARNEST Senator Bankhead Upholds , Action of Gov- O'Neal In Appointment. ISSUES STATEMENT WAfiHTNaTON, Aug. ll.-TheflBJhl to Beat Henry D. Clayton as senator from Alabama began In earnest today. A statement by Henator Bobinson, of Arkarmaa, upholding Oovernor O'Neal' aetion in appointing a suo cesor to the late Henator Johnatoa became public early in tho day and right, Senator Bankhead, of Alabama, asked permission for tha public print ing of the it-gal opinions upon which the governor baed his action, Henator Bankhead said Mr. Clay ton's credentials would bo presented to the senate later, but tha time had not been fixed. , f; "A wltuation exists tn ' the senate which will require a most careful and painstaking investigation," he told his colleagues. 'The governor of Alabama has no pride of opinion in the mat ter. When the vacancy occurred and the question of filling It was put MP to him, he called upon hia legal ad visers for opinions as to his author ity; and ne based his action upon these opinions now sutrmltted." The Alabama case la tha first to test the a'llhorlty of a governor to fill a vacancy since the direct elec tion amendment to the constitution was adopted. The contest centers around the In terpretation of the concluding words of tho new amendment to the consti tution providing that the amendment shall not be so construed as to af fect the election or "term of any sen ator" chosen before It became valid as part Of the constitution. Senator Robinson asserted tn his statement there were decision holding that a "term of office doe not end with tha death of the occupant, but that the term "continue until tha aUtulory parted." Hill DECLARES