TheNews has the Largest Circulation of Any Afterrtooii Pa, per Published in the Two Carolina. V i 13 II ""1 Tl i -rw it- a m as jT 8 XSW w cr la v -4. -r- . rnnn" -JH ffl. THE ONLY EVENING ASSOCIATED PRESS NEWSPAPER IN CHARLOTTE. PQTABLISHED 888. CHARLOTTE, N. WEDNESDAY EVENING, JANUARY 15, 1908 PRICE 5 CENTS. a Session Will Be Witnesses All Declare Thaw Was Irrational Before The Shooting .4 ked To Pass. State Prohibition Law SO x:cutive Commh. o uti-Saloon Leagut.? cuh's to Ask Special St, siuti to Pass State Pro lillntion Bill. Meeting to Be Held Night (it 7 he 21st. Nezv In corporations Mayor J: rank! in Confers With Governor. . ;; ' -.t The News. j':. X. C, Jan. 13. In the sen . i '. the executive committee u v. X'.n'ih Carolina Anti-Saloon i :r : last night and had a three !;.-:: .'.-iou. It prepared the fol : . ".ivss to the people of North -.he members of tho executive c, !.;;-.o ef the Anti-Saloon League, .i'u! consideration and after :: ; ; ::n with leading and various - of the state, are of the unani . Ir.ieu that the special session r ;. Lt 'i.-ra! assembly presents a fit : ; ; i unity of securing an act rir.e: the manufacture and sale in this state. We believe a r of the people of this state ,; w'x this legislation and the time ; : - c -me fcr the enactment of the With anything like unanimity ::!:: the temperance people of the ,-, . v.v believe the general assembly ,vi'' a.- fitch an act. riotie men demand that the ' . v question shall be removed ! riizan politics and settled fbr ;: the interest of morality. We r. ; ' call upon all friends of tem ;. to use their influence with the : ;I assembly and especially with Immediate representatives and i era to vote for prohibition; and v: ; . v. all friends of temperance to ; convention to be held in Ral , (:; Tuesday, January 21, 190S. -The crystalization of public senti-n.vn- ;r.akes this the opportunity of our v.--v-n for settling for all time this re 'val issue, and one -week's ae rmv may count more now than r. (:: kiary lifetime of temperance Y' :h. Let every man do his duty." Thi- address and call is signed by .'.!-.-. John A. Oates, chairman ex if. lvo committee; Heriot Clarkson, .!-; nizer: W. S. CVB. Robinson; '.V. ii. runt, W. B. Cooper, Clarence 'I. '. j;.mos I. Johnson, W. N. Jones. IT. Pen, H. G. Fenncll, R. B. v- i:h. . W. C. Douglass, J. A. Hartness, ;. !,. Dro-.ighton, I. C. Blair, Josephus !'; : h i. II. A. London and Q. K. Xim Charlotte Charters. e 1. h-h, X. C, Jan. 13. Mayor T. S. I". r! :h!i, of Charlotte, held a confer i '. vt C.ovc rr.or Glenn, relative to h er.-.-ihiiitv of securing legislation :. t :-pecial session that will ; e vii-'- - intendment of minor im - n iif' to the charter cf Charlotte. ! :.; :: t-u: that ouite a number of 1 ;:; ff this character will be offered . ih" special session in the event ::. r;:l'.-s to be adopted in the caucus ! s-n:.;' tho i.TOduction or misceiiaiiw - ill'-. An i'lvf-ndmcnt. is entered for th? f'; '.- r rf the Charlotte Sanitarium, the , wh.rrcbv 5123.000 capital is di- i f;tudly in preferred and common ; f . ";ir. D. A. Tompkins is one of s rincipal incorporators. New Charters Granted. Tie- Furniture Warehouse Company : i;e i3 chartered at a $100,000 subscribed by W. E. White, J. ' W hirr, and E. J. Jackson, for con- ''': a warehouse for storing fur :: : iiji-! other merchandise with au, h:f :h j Iho to manufacture furniture. Tl:- Pomona Cotton Manufacturing ;e ;. of Greensboro procures an ! ; .r:i! iit to its charter allowing an - of preferred stock from $100, ' ' ? -00,000. Lee H. Battle is pres- -hm Moss Hardware Company ' t.fii-n-.on is chartered at $25,000 ' : e by S. II. Allen, W. E. Moss Ihdcomb, of Elkin, received a 1 do a general mercantile bus a capital of $25,000 authoriz ! ?fi,00'0 subscribed, by E. E. Hcl md others. -;nor Glenn left today for.Wash- on business connected with the Carolina building at the James-i'h-:i:o:-.ition. Funer-il of Mr. Schenck. ' The News. ' '.nry, X. C, Jan. 15. The fuuer- -'i!'. Daniel Schenck was held from m Lutheran Church yesterday. ' !;'-:! k was one cf the best farm n P.owan. lie was 52 years old 'ounty did not claim a better ' ioy;. citizen. or Senators Elected. l;y Associated Press. A!;!.;Tlo!is, Md., Jan. 15. The gen- '''-I usr.cmbly in joint session elect-; ;! lotin Walter Smith United States '"j- for a long term at the same ' v' flaring Senator Whyte for a :"' !t term. "HiO oust v.nrrl nf thr Ko'iihorn 7 . , k;!,:V7(v (lf.net ia l,mnr fl;ic;hr't clpan Vfiy every week, Decision in Case Involving $20,000,000 Worth of Land By Associated Press Danville, Ills., Jan. i5...Judge right, m the federal court, yesterday rendered a decision in the case of David Somers, et al., against the Illi nois state Trust Company, of East bt. Louis, involving about $20,000,000 worth of railroad land and timber pro perty in lorida. The complainant asked tw tho Trust Company be restrained from' ioreciosmg and selling mortgages on the Appalactncola Northern Railroad Company, Florida Development Com pany, and Florida Land Company. Judge Wright overruled the motion for a temporary restraining order.. The decision leaves the Trust Com pany free to hold a sale of mortgages advertised for last month at East St. Louis. Due West And Donalds, S. C, Connected by Railway Special to The News. Due West, S. C, Jan. 15 The branch railroad recently projected by the citi zens and merchants of Due West, to connect with the Southern at Don alds, is now in effective operation. Tne J new road, which is four miles in length ! has been tested and officially accepted Mr. Jas. McClintock, of Due West, has been appointed as conductor of the car, winch will make four trips each day from Due . . est to Donalds.. The road, engine and cars are owned and operated exclusively by the Due West Railway Company, of which Mr. R. S. Galloway is president and principal stockholder. For a half century the two colleges here have suffered on ac count of the lack of adequate communi cation with Donalds. Thus, the new enterprise satisfies a longfelt need of an up-to-date railroad train, which will, no doubt, change the future his tory of Due West. Boy Charged With Murder. By Associated Press. Salt Lake, Utah, Jan. 15. Suspected of the murder of Richard Smith, at Eliza, Ala., a year ago, Walter Simms, 19 years old, is in the Salt Lake jail. Drug Company Reorganized. Special to The News. Salisbury, N. C, Jan. 15. The Chest nut Hill Drug Company, which recent ly failed, has been reorganized and is iioyv known as the Higgins Drug Com pany, with Dr. C. M. Higgins in chargo as manager. Aftermath o f Big Disaster By Associated Press. Boyertown, Pa., Jan. 15. With the opening of the four improvised morgues in which lay the victims of Monday night's theatre holocaust, the inhabitants of this borough began to realize the awful extent of thc tragedy. The hand of sorrow has touched probably every family in town and in the neighbroing villages. The gruesome scenes following the disaster bring a shudder to the stout est heart and many of the thousands who have come as curiosity seekers have gone away declaring they never want, to witness another sight like it. The morgues contain 1G2 bodies. Most of theT bodies were in such con dition that few of them will be recog nized by their features. In nearly every case the upper por tion cf the bodies were burned, some of them to a crisp. , That the victims were not confined to the residence of Boyertown was hown by the number of unclaimed teams at the hotels. There s no clue to the identity ct the owners of a number of teams. The merry parties of four and six that drove into Boyertown in these teams are- believed to bo among the unidentified dead in the various morgues. Onlv one of the Christmas prizes offorprl bv the iewelry firm of Gari baldi, Bruns & Dixon, has been called. for. This was the second pme, $o and Mr. J. Henklc, of Lexington, put in a claim for it. Important to Lumbermen By Associated Press. Macon, Ga., Jan. i5 Judge Speer, in federal court, last night rendered an opinion denying the right of rail roads in the Southeastern Tariff As sociation to modify or set aside the order of the court which indicated that any and all shippers of lumber affected by the advance in rates made June 22, 1903, were entitled to make a claim for overcharges amounting in the aggregate to vast Attorneys for the railroads have contended that the only parties to the suit of H. H. Tift et al vs. Southern Railway et al were entitled to put in a claim under the mandate of the United States Supreme Court to which the case had gone. A Vast Sam for -a-r t-i -rr lyavyiLacit rear By Associated Press. Washington, D. C, Jan. 15. Repre sentative Hohson had a conference with the president today and on leav ing the White House he said he would have the president's support in behalf of the bill he has nearly completed, . providing for continuing the naval pro gram. The Hobson bill will provide for an annual appropriation of ?50,000,000 to be expended in the manner to be do-. emeu on eacii year uy rue .pro-uuent i and the experts of the navy for new battleships. Mr. Hobson said the appropriation made would be sufficient to build five J battleships of the Dreadnought type each year. WORK -OF GRAND LODGE. Report of Temple Building Commit tee Adopted A Rreprieve Grant ed. Raleigh, N. C, Jan. 15. The North Carolina Grand Lodge devoted the morning principally to the exempli cation of secret work. After lengthy discussion of the re port of the temple building com mittee it was adopted. The report was a full an denthusiastic endorse ment of the course of the committee thus far clothing- them with full lCi i. ill 4 Cl 11 Li UUlllUi 1L V VI L li V Lodge for the prosecution of the. work to the earliest possible com pletion. Governor Glenn grants a reprieve to Robert McDowell unaer sentence) ties, United States currency notes to to be hanged in McDowell county, j the exaent Gf 100 per cent of the par Feb. 20, for murder. The reprieve! value in the caBe of the United states is to March G, on account of the bon(ls deposited as security, and 75 the fact the superior court of Mc- per cent 0f the par value of- the state, Dowell will be in session the first county or municipal bonds or obliga date. tions. r News "A Youth, Who Bore, A Bar.ner With the Stranne Device EXCELSIOR!" Longfellow. Secretary Cortelyou Makes a Denial By Associated Press. Washington, D. C, Jan. 15. Secre tary Cortelyou was at his desk in the treasury department today. At the White House it is said positively that nothing whatever is known as to the secretary's reported resignation. The secretary's appearance at the depart- riei.t tf(lay was or the first time s'incc recent illness which begun about lour weeks ago. Ho characterized as without founda tion the stories that he was to leave thc cabinet. He said he expected to rrmH tn .lf. Roorptnrv nf lh treasury. Currency Bill Of B aeon By Associated Press. Washington, D. C, Jan. 15. Senator Bacon introduced a currency bill today and explained its chief features to the senate. The bill provides that any national hanking association with circulating notes outstanding, secured by deposits of United States bonds of not less than 50 per cent of their capital stock and with a surplus of not less than 20 per cent of the capital stock, bay secure the circulation, by deposit of security with the treasury department. The . i . , -i -i i -. i -- by the United States or any state, and it is provided that such institutions may secure, on a basis of these securi II I intflTffTliUr I If ..IT TlfMf ! 1-1T1 Tl T Tl Tl H 11 T TTlTn Take Care of Your . Business AND IT WILL TAKE CARE OF YOU Advertising is the nourishment on which business thrives and fat tens. That the merchants of Charlotte are more prosperous than in any city in the Carolinas is largely" due to. the fact that they are liberal ad vertisers. ' That The Charlotte News publishes more advertising than any Char lotte paper is due to the fact that the merchants know it reaches the great est number of people who do their buying here. Cf 11.75G inches of advertising published in Charlotte papers January 8, 9. 10, 11, 13 and 14 the division was as follows: Chronicle - - 2495 If the brightest, most prosperous business men of Charlotte do the greater part of their advertising in The News don't you think it would ho wiae to follow the methods by which they have prospered? Situation In Japan By Associated Press. Tokio, Jan. 15. An accurate predic tion concerning the probable life of the Marquis Saionji's cabinet is improba ble. The inability of the government to avert the climax and the resigna tions of ministers of finance and com munications created a situation ap proaching a political panic. The con sensus of opinion is that the present cabinet either with double the port folios or possible additions will face a, new diet which, after the general elections of the spring, will open July 22. The ministers of finance and com munications, made vacant yesterday were filled temporarily by the minis ter cf justice, combining finance, and the minister of the interior, combining communications portfolio. The opposi tion and even the friends of the gov ernment see determined to force the government to appeal to the country. With the unpopular budget, the con stitutionalists lack nine votes of an ac tual majority in the lower house. Re liable authorities think the constitu tionalists will refuse to accept the gov ernment's financial policy, when the budget is presented. In that event the cabinet will resign, the diet will be dis solved and the former budget contin ued until another cabinet is formed and a new budget passed. Salisbury Bank Meeting. Special to The News. Salisbury, N. C, Jan. 15. The stock holders of the First National Bank met in the office at the bank yesterday 'at noon and elected the following officers: W. C. Coughenour, president; Thomas C. Linn, vice president; William H. White, cashier; Ernest Woodson, tell er. A hoard of directors was named. Tl ' m T U IW m mimim UJ11-HIIM Don't Think Railroads Should Bear Expense Special to The News. Salisbury, N. C. Jan. 15. Editor John M. Julian, of the Post, goes to Ualeigh next Sunday to be present at the opening of the extra session of the legislature on Monday, the 21st. Mr. Julian is one of the representatives trom Rowan and, like many others, does not believe that the railroads should be allowed to pay the expenses of holding an extra session to pass upon a Question affecting the roads, es pecially when it is virtually to right a wrong done the roads by this same legislature. Representative Julian pre dicts an interesting session. Walter Murphy, Esq., another Rowan representative, and who was a candi date for speaker of the house at the regular session, has announced his in tention of opposing, on the floor of the house, on the opening day of the gener al assembly, that feature of the rail road rate question, which calls for the payment of the expenses of the session by tne railroads. Mr. Murphy says such a thing is unconstitutional, and is unprecedented. That this feature, at least, of the agreement is going to be bitterly opposed in both the house and senate goes without question. Americans Treated Roy ally At Rio Janeiro By Associated Press. Rio Janeiro, Jan. 15. The events on the official program today for the en tertainment of the visiting American officers are a breakfast at the resi dence of the president at Petropolis at noon and in the agternoon a garden party at the American embassy in the same suburb. s Read Admirals Thomas, Sperry and Emory will represent the fleet at the presidential function. In addition to these officers the only guests of the president will be Ambassador and Mrs. Dudley, the Brazilian minister of mar ine, the minister of way, chief of the naval staff and members of the presi dent's personal staff. The newspapers here all comment favorably upon the good behavior of the soldiers who had shore leave yes terday. The men all had a .good time and perfect order was maintained.' Not less than 4,000 men visited the city. It is calculated that between the buying of supplies for the ships and the money spent by the officers and sailors, not less than a quarter of a million dollars will have been left be hind in Rio Janeiro by the time the vessels sail. Chairman Oats Optimistic Special to The News. Raleigh, N. C, Jan. 15. Chairman Jno. Oats, of the North Carolina Anti- i Saloon League is enthusiastic over the 'prospect for securing prohibition for (the whole state at once by legislative enactment at tne extra session io con vene sext Tuesday. He says he finds the temperance forces in all parts of the state alive to the situation and the realization that this is the time for the supreme effort; to be made, that offers every prospect of splendid victory in securing pro hibition for the whole state and averting the necessity for local faction al contests over the whiskey evil that engender breaches in the localities that it takes years to heal. He ex- pects a very large attendance at the state convention called by the execu convention called by executive commit teen Tuesday, when it is proposed to ! demonstrate to the legislature in no us- certain way the wide-spread demand the temperance leaders contend there is for immediate action in providing sta tutory prohibition for the whole state. He says every member of the state anti-saloon committee,, in a protracted caucus last night, heartily supports the position set out in the resolution for a supreme effort the coming week for state prohibition. Mr. Bean Located. Special to The News. Salisbury, N. C, Jan. 15. Mr. Eu gene H. BeanJ who is almost as well known in Charlotte as his native city Salisbury and familiarly known among his friends as "Major," has hung out his shingle and will practice law in this city. Physician Is Robbed Spartanburg, S. C, Jan. 15. Dr. W. G. Sexton, a prominent physician of this city, was assaulted and robbed by two men at an early hour this morning while in his stable looking after the feeding of his horses. He had just entered the stable when a man appeared from behind and catching hold of the physician jerked him to the ground and sat on his head. The other robber went through Dr. Sexton's pockets securing $21 being weak from a recent operation Dr. Sexton was unable -to make much resistance. In falling to the ground his back was painfully injured. The Day Was Consumed in The Famous Trial by Taking Testimony Of Several Witnesses For The Defense. Manner of TheDefendent on Day of Tragedy Des cribedHis Conduct at Whist Club The Day's Proceedings. By Associated Press. New York, Jan. 15. Dr. Horatius C. Wood, of Philadelphia, was called to the stand today as the first witness in the Thaw trial. Dr. Wood some years ago made an examination of Harriett Alice Thaw, a elative of the defendant. District Attorney Jerome objected to this physician's testimony, but was overruled by the court, as the relation cf the attending physician and the pa tient did not exist in this case. Dr. Wood said that Miss Thaw was of unsound mind. The next witness to be heard, told of some new eccentricities of Thaw just before the killing of Stanford White. He was Christofer Baggan, a steward at the New York Whist Club. He said that Thaw was at the club on June 20, 1906, just five days before the reof garden tragedy. Although the day was hot. Thaw insisted on taking a screen with him wherever he went about the rooms. He was highly ner vous and excitable and irritable, and once when he passed the witness he was muttering: "This is awful!" Baggan said that Thaw finally came up to him and asked him to have a package put in the safe. "What was in this package?" asked Mr. Littleton. "Cigarettes, wrapped in tin foil." Thaw's eyes, the witness said, had a pectriiar stFe. -A telephone- most ;. -,e came for him, and when the witness touched him to attract his attention, Thaw trembled all over. "Did Thaw impress you as rational or irrational?" the witness was asked. "Irrational," the witness replied. On cross-examination he said Thaw was in the club playing whist the day of the tragedy. The witness could not say if they were playing for money. The witness "guessed" Thaw was able to hold his own at bridge.' He said that Thaw had been more or less ner cous ever since he had known him. Thaw was at the telephone the better part of an hour the day of the tragedy and the witness heard him repeat "This is awful!" Thaw's nervousness had increased notably, he said, during the last year he had known him. Many Witnesses Called. Miss Matilda Stein, who was a telephone operator at the Grand hotel in 1003 and 1904, when Thaw was a guest there, testified she knew Thaw under the name of Farr. She saw him often and his eyes were always staring and bulging. His manner was irration al. One morning Thaw put in 75 telephone calls in les sthan " three hours. One morning he ordered his breakfast three times in 20 minutes. On cross examination Miss Stem said Evelyn Nesbit also was a guest at the Grand hotel under the name of 'Miss Farr. Mrs. Carolyn Lowry and William A. Johnson, newspaper wirters, who wit nessed the tragedy, declared in turn upos the stand that Thaw impressed them as decidedly irrational. Lionel Straus, portrait painter and eye witness, also characterized Thaw's actions as irrational. Francis McGuiness, who was a mem ber of the coroner's jury which con ducted the inquest in White's death, testified that Thaw at the inquest ap peared irrational. While Henry Schafer, another mem ber of the coroner's jury was testify ing that Thaw appeared irrational at the inquest, Foreman Gremmals, cf the jury, asked: "Did Thaw's eyes ap pear then as they do now?" "No sir," said the witness. Henry W. Schmall, another member of the coroner's jury, also testified as to the defendant's irrationality. They all said the jurors discussed Thaw's ! mental condition after rendering their verdict. Littleton here sprung something of a surprise by asking the witness if he had read Jerome's comments on th mental condition at the former trial. He replied in the affirmative. "Did my remarks influeuce your judgment," demanded Jerome. "In a way they did," said Schmall. A luncheon recess was then taken. No Senator Elected Yet. By Associated Press. ' Louisville, Ky., Jan. 15. A mess age from Frankfort, says the ballot was taken in the joint session for United States senator without re sult today. Beckham 66, BranrUey, 64, scattering 5 and two absentees. A meeting of Mecklenburg Pres bytery has been called for the23dr inst. in the First Presbyterian i Church to act on the resignation ol Rev. Mr. West, of Huntersyille.