n QUICK RESULTS USE THE NEWS CLASSIFIED ADS—THEY BRING BEST RESULTS—ONE CENT A WORC) 9 Pages : SECTION. JL ■ IE CHARLOTTE NE r— s. • » • ONE SECTION. , 2, NO. 9 CHARLOTrE, N. C.. SUNDAY MORNING, MARCH 12, 1911 PRICE 5 CENTS rty Thousand jottars Is Paid For Vernon Place ntal {>f $! for ’•..:u’ty during the ■; a'ie srvoot dwell- i b' Mi'. K. L. Vrrnon \)n inio the \ I of tho firm ' anr.-Miy. roal op- 1 ■ 'A luirt'has-e- - itV . . h*r thive that 1 > i*!tl - adjoins purchased I itia,' h\ Mr ~ • >;rthpv a front- ' 1 >trrct. divorly .'.•'itcs N’int. that d',>:.rt niont i- 'Ui hiii!;I ‘ I V. il' tu ak '.^1' • r\inior por- . :ii Tower ('ntii- .>!• ;’nj. » rect a htMV in N ■ V O h'.i Tiam- ■','li' nrhot)d as - :f\ T\’nch ' • lat' 'n tho ’ ^ i'^up' piacffi fhr Trnwlp' -• \';ir''c Park, pur- 1 ■ -r- w hjt'h ro- ‘ : for n v ompan'- wi'i - f -ihr. will br • M'i'urt'an iint- f>\ > lo ivint.'- M'tun- i-A.nor. is con- V' rhr f>\pr«^ssioii t >. . I'id ottou la I ^ome are -'ip r> .'i^.vrv now > .1. haspd 1 \f n. n from > .i.i’iiii It ha? In tl'Tt tiiue. ,’i'f di. i i i.at ■■'t i-n hundr-'-d ■ he next fivo - : ■r.'-i'! "i to the Ot ■ ' iiif) by h^pp i ' 'IUm . \. and , 'hr'*'' o*' ■ -IV ; r.^ hf'inu ■ ■.■ivuiv’''''Or*, it i - V ri \ a'! a onnd I tho i)OKtofRco that can be bought is be- ! in.u sought by real estate men. Busi- ; nesb- bids fair to switch just a trifle I from Indopcudeuce Square towards ; the depot. I Further down Trade street is the \\ ilknr. pro(iorty about which much has bppn said of late and upon which it was inHmated the shops of the intertirban would bo placed. An op tion has been held on this property for some tnne. Whole Section Involved. That this whole section ol the town is involved in some ?reat project, or I de\elopniont, is Mire. The property I owners on Fourth street from the I'rowley property, sold several days I ago to the railroad have been ap- I proachod by roal estate men within ■ the past lew days, in regard to sell- inc. Tlip V hole blo'k is inchiiled in a wotild-i>e i>iircha£e.. Those approached in regard to sell- ins are Messrs. C'has. Moody, \Vm. Anderson. .1. \V. Zimmerman, H. C. Irv\in. K. B. Littlefield and tieorgc Xewcomb. I'lie News learns that Mr. Moody has put his^ tiguros at .SiT.onu Paid iv!r H. C. Irwin today don’t know what lo do i hate to sell my p'ace for it is very convenient and suits nu’ familv i think my neighbors feel as I do about it." Nor aro necotiations confined to T'ourth street. F'ronositions have-been made to .Mr. W. P. Buchanan for his three pieces of property on Mint irirect. faring Tan^e Park, also to Mr. R .1. Sifford for his two laces, are on the corner of Mint and P'ounh, 1 (' othvi on Mint just in rear of the corner. It is understood that the real estate conipanv owning the rresb>terian hos- pit.^1 building \ alues its property at $inO.p-Mi. The property sold several years a so at i^un’or that Mars-hall Fields ihe great department store kingi; from diicggo. T\ould come to fharlo'te is ' denied by those who are in a posi- !tlon to know. Bui x^hiie this firm may I not locate here, it is believed that i other rapitalists from away arp con- ] "idorably interested in the growth of j the Queen City and use an opportunity I to nurchase now before Charlotte dirt t bf'eo'noif^ au\ dearer. ^ Vv m Secret Behind Decision To Mobilize Troops Gradually Leaking Out Washington, March 11.—The secretj around that Ambassador Wilson had history of the orders to 20,000 Unit- made very gloomy reports about the ed State® troops to guard the Mexi- conditions in Mexico and the inabil- can border is gradually unfolding atjity of Diaz to i.on;roI the situation. oard of Governors Southern Commeicial Congi ess Holds Meeting ' - The ne\^ ly • of Ihe C' nuess mot 11(1 u') tiif ItUoi- ■ .. V hil l; closed I r a xt \ ear's • ft t-' th- pxecu- ii-ni'd adoi'tod I'esiilent Taft, .le other si ^ak- !i -'fending, and r :ariiza’ions of i ! f he nipeting a ’o enlarge th' ■ r!\ by c.reat,- .: i' nrr of good 11.—Stales oiM'ained a stib- :• ( niied States Haile' , of Texas, I wime.^s in the S‘naior John J. ho is chargpd ' nator David H. : hun SL’.oOO for '.'■'inier for Unit- ^ deposit slip ■ htate hank of aid he deposited ■as taken to '^^'aslJ• . i:)mraitiee invei^ti '• Iion and the last ■ in>re?bouts of t.lio ■la'fr,- fiiiiley held it : siieech in the ! Loriir.er and dc- • M^'or\ Bailoj’s e.v V iiilc he was ad- ■ ;i' >ome one took 1 nnd and that lie ho It was ■ ' ;.et fur trial Mon- lie Statement. iireh II.—Although li' 'o a late hour to- 1 : (M ved with the sub- Jiini to testify in > S(;nator Broderick, '■n ;i i.tateinent con- • ‘I'l'^arance of an aflfi- ■I' relative to the de- n the state national ■ i'- ScnuU»r Holstlaw, ' iiavc taken place in roads and commissioner of education. The new hoard of governors includes thf* following; i-''lorid:). Senator Duncan T- Fletch- ei'. .iucksonville, and Dr. Lincoln i-lul- ley. D-,land. (^•eor da—.Vsa G. Candler. Atlanta. N rth Carolina—General Julian S. C'^'■r. Durham, and C. N. Evans, Wil mington. South Carolina. H. J. Haynsw’orth, Greenville, and John J. McMahan, Co lumbia. Mrginia—Thomas S. Southgate, Nor folk. and flenry’ C. Stuart. Elk Gar den. \\>‘st \ irginia—R. B. Naylor. Wheel ing, and Dr. 1. C. White. Morgantow^n. Anti-T. reatmg Bill Is Passed Jefferson City. Mo., March 11.—'^he anti-treating bill passed the house this afLornoon by a vote of 82 to 17. If the ;-enate should concur in this action and tho governor sign the bill, it will no longer be lawful to invite a friend to partake of a cooling or invigorating libation in a thirst parlor. Mr. Bedsworth of Callaway county called the measure under the suspen sion of the rules, and to the surprise even of the legislators themselves, it was passed. Some of the members re- forving jocularl.v to the provisions of th(/bill but a large majority considered it seriously. The act in brief applies only to ireatiiig places where liquor is sold. It will not liar a person from '‘Betting 'em up'’ in his own home. CPiurbER MONTANA COALING Hon CRUISE. In this picturr is shown one of Uncle Sam’s great fighting boats in the act of coaling for the cruise to r/Iexico which will btart in the immediate future. This is one of the ships of the Fifth division that has been ordered to prepare for active service immediately and as soon as the orders are given it will proceed with its sis ter ships of the sauadron to the waters off ih? Texas Const. In the top left hand corner is shov.'n a piciiure of Captain J. G. Quinby who has charge of the vessel. Mrs. Rosa Hayes Was Justified In Shooting FlOy d So Says a Jury at Whiteville the Mexico City. March 11.—The repub lic of Mexico is now'^ under a mild form ofmaruallawasthcresultof cmfwyE m of martial law as tlie reault of the suspension of the constitutional guar- [ latter one was nolle pressed at beginning of the trial this week. , - • , hii ;7« V^r/iirf Tnt^l much time was'lost in securing; antees by the government this after- uy lib VcraiCl Jxenucieu LrUie\ ^^ men^' er of whieh wis noon. Tlic; !-'r:>.-l3irtation also ordered I minister of the (.fospel and who fon- summary military trials for the accus- ducted religious services while the ed and craf\\ ypshrdletaonicmfypwcmf jury v.as in its rooms eacli night. Tho student from Yesterday Ajternoorr, Ac- quitting Her of Murder. [Rl OUT INFIBHT WITH mum ■ ■' for High Point. arc preparing plans or .Nir. S. U DaviK, and -f" cL ot Uiuli Point. New York, March 11-—After a ;-.iruggle which has been going on for three years, during which German op- po.sition and local prejudice have had to be fought constantly, the right to develop the vafet mineral wealth of I (iuatemala has at last been secured ■ by a group of American capitalists. ' At the head of tiiis combination are former Govil'nor A. E. Springs, of Montana; former Senator William A. Clark, of that »tate, and a number of capitalists closely identified with the Guggenheim Interests. French capital |s also invested In the deal. Kidnaped Boy Escape*. Corry, Fa., March 11,—James, H* ycav-old adopted son of Edward Beck- • or was kidnapped by a strange man late yesterday, but he jumped front j tbo buggy five miles from here and ' walked home, arriving about midnight. ^ Meanwhile his relatives had searched ' the town. She Pleaded She was Defend ing Her Honor When She Fired With Automatic Re volver Bullets Into Boay of Medical Student, Special to The News. Whiteville, N. C., March 11.—"Not guilty” was the verdict of the jury late this afternoon, and Mrs. Rosa D. Ilayes, who some time ago shot to death Robert M. Floyd, a popular med ical student from Charleston who havl been called to her home to treat a mole on her face, walked from tne court room a free woman. Her hus band who had been charged with ac cessory to the murder was also acquit ted and he accompanied his wife to the home in the door of which Floyd’s dead Ijody lay some weeks ago, with more than nine bulMs throngli it. Never before in the history of White- ,-lile has the place been so aroused as it has been by the killing of the young man. Floyd was popular with all who knew- him. He had kuown Mr?. Hayes before her marriage, was well acquainted with her husband and had been in Whiteville but a few hours when his lifeless body was talxn from the stoop of the Mayes home. Stand ing above the body was the young wife with a smoking automatic revol ver in her hand. She had fired in defense of her hon or, so she graphically told the jury, and the tw'elve men believed her re cital of the facts and justified her act. Able counsel for the state and for the defense had argued all of the day. Every phase of the case had been dwelt upon. As a woman scorned Mrs. Hayes was pictured by the pros ecution. It w'as attempted to show^ that she loved Floyd and learning that l.e might soon be married, shot him. In contradiction to this was the testimony of the woman defendant—the only eye witness to the shooting. Floyd, so she told the jtiry in a straightforward manner, with but little evidence of nervousness, came to her home in the afternoon .after having just left her husband’s harbor i-hop. He inquired how' the mole on her face w-as getting along, and then forced himself upon her. In a tussle both fell upon the bed. and she reached under a pillow, found the automatic revolver and, backing away from the man com menced to fire rapidly. Not until the revolver w'as empty did she 2ease. and even then she found another revolver and fired two shots. Literally riddled with bullets the young medical student fell just in the door. Death was almost instantaneous. Hearing the shots Mr. Hayes left his barber shop and w'ent to his home and there learned from his wife what had happened. WMthin a few hours afterw’ards Mrs. Hayes was arrested and charged with the murder. She all along said she shot in defense of her honor. Soon af ter her incarceration her husband was arrested as an accessory and another member of the family was soon, too, I in the toils. The case against the .^tate offered a young C’harleston who qualified as an ex pert in handwriting and who testified to having read letters from Mrs. Hayes to Floyd in which she spoke in tho most affeciionat.e terms. One letter had requested F'oy dto come to White ville and treat the mole on her i'ace, there being some fear that it was a cancer. Many witnesses testified to the ex emplary character of the dead man. All praised him in the highest terms. None spoke ill of Robei't Floyd. His relatives employed eminent counsel to assist the prosecution and every inch of groimd w'as contested. Hayes retained the best counsel who made powerful appeals to the jury in behalf of Mrs. Hayes. With her little child playing about her, inno cent of all that was transpiring, Mrs. Hayes presented a picture on the wit ness sta'nd that appealed at once to the jurymen. They believed her every word, for they did not deliberate long when given the judge's charge. The argument had all ended early in the afternoon and both sides submitted charges to the jury. The judge read the charge in the afternoon, and amid intense silence the jury filed out of tbo room with the fate of the young wife and mother in its hands. When a knock came on the jury door and It aws announced that a ver dict had been reached, the court room was crowded. The drop of a pin could have been heard, so Intense was the suppressed excitement. “Gentlemen, have you arrived upon a verdict?” asked the court. The foreman handed the indictment to the clerk and in a clear voice the words rang out: ‘'We the jury find the prisoner not guilty.’’ Mrs. Hayes leaned slightly forward, breathed a deep sigh of relief, and turned to her husband in whose arms she w’ept. After the congratulations of their friends, Mr. and Mrs. Hayes returned to their home, the first night they have spent there since the terri ble tragedy that shocked tw^o states. ed of pillage and of destroying rail roads. telegraph lines and all other public servicep roperty. The cival trials have been stopped. the state department and the war department. It is stated that disquieting and alarming dispatches w'ere being from time to time received from Ambassa dor Henry Lane Wilson in Mexico and he stated himself this morning that he was summoned to Washing ton. On his arrival here all the offi cials, from the high and to the 'lewd est, declared that he came home en tirely for personal reasons, although he stated the opposite himself in the interview given out last night at Indianapolis. Mr. Wilson was called into confer ence at the state department on Mo:i-| . day, the day before the orders were caled issued for the troops to move. His conl’erence was with Mr. Huntington Wilson, the assistant secretary of state. On that day, the result of the talk between Ambassador Wilson, and the state department was com- mtinieated to the secretary of war, and the secretary ordered the quar termaster’s department and the com missary department lo get up a plan in conjunction with the '"hief of staff and general Witherspoon, the head of the war college, for the mobiliza tion of a division bf the army. In structions were also sent to the navy department to prepare tentative or ders for the immediaLe sailing of the cruiser squadron from New York. No orders w'ere issued for the movement of troops on Monday. The cabinet meeting was to be held on the foiiowing day. At 11 o’clock, the time for the meeting of the cabinet, the president still withheld the orders for the troops to move. Secretary of War Dickinson went to the whits houes at It o’clock, but he returned in haste to the war department and sent for Huntington Wilson, with whom he had a half hour’s confer ence. Mr. Wilson also saw General Wood, the chief of staff. After this conference Dickinson returned to the white house at mid day, the hour to which the cabinet meeting had been postponed. General Wood and his staff remained at their posts ready to send the orders and a few minutes before the adjourn ment of the cabinet, Col. Bailey, who is now with a regiment at Galveston, rushed over -fo the war department official and said: “Let her go,” and it went. Later in the day it w'as buzzed Those outlaws w^hohavebeenscourg- Thot-e outlaws who have been scourging Mexico during the revolti- tion, under the provisions of today’s proclamation, will likely meet fate, but little less- severe than that dealt out at the summary trials of brigands soon after the adoption of he Mexican constitution in 1857, wiien every accus ed offender was shot. The Mexican constitution, changed from its original form by several amendments, is now' almos-t identical with that of the United States. Each state has its ow'n judicial officers and its ow'n special code, but the federal laws always supersede. Those Killed At Casas Giandes JOSE LIMANTOUR RILED AT THOUGHT OF PRESIDENCY. New York, March 11.—Senor Liman- tour, the Mexican minister of finance, was manifestly indignant tonight when his attention w'as called to the story that American financial interests with dominating holdings in Mexico have on foot a plan to procure the resigna tion of President Diaz and to set up Senor Limantour himself in the execu tive chair. “OUR MEANING PEACEFUL,” SAYS TAFT TO DIAZ And that perfectly explains the mission of the great num ber of News “Want Ads” print ed today—more than printed in any other newspaper published in the Carollnas. Soldiers of Fortune that Car ry the Password. By OTHEMAN STEVENS. El Paso, Tex,. March 11.—The mem bers of the foreign legion killed at Casas Grandes on Monday were; Raoul Madero. brother of President Francisco I Madero; R. A. Harrington, captain of American legion, soldier of fortune, former resident of New York city; Gius>eppi Garibaldi, ranking ma jor and member of the staff, grand son ot Garibaldi, the Italian patriot and liberator. Young Garibaldi is a well known soldier of fortune of the present generation. He served as-at tache under the British in South Af lica and held the commission of cap tain in the Italian army and has been colonel of cavalry in Venezuela and Nicaragua and other south and Cen tral American republics. John Greer, former deputy sheriff at Lincoln, N. M., and well known in El Paso and vicinity; Lieutenant A. Valencia, of El Paso; Roderiguez Gutien z de Lara, Mexican socialist, former judge at Guerrero, late of Los Angeles; Cap tain F. J. Casavantes, engineer from Guerrero; f^eorge Moore, Sergeants Heath and Bedwell. It wa.s understood that all American officials were disinclined to say pub licly that Ambassador Wilson v as the authority tor tiiese alarming re ports which reflected on the Diaz administration for the reason that they would naturally make him per sonal non grata, either at This time, or in the future. The mystery of the Pituation that existed from .Monday until Tuesday at 1 o’clock is wliai was the addi tional information received specifical ly between 11 a. m. and 12 middav on Tuesday v.hicii Secretary Dickin son took with him fo the cabinet meeting on which Col. Bailey predi- his famous order, “Let her so.” It will, of course, require the pro duction of the official correspondenco to detcimiiie whether the Ambassa dor Wilson reports and what the daily report.^ from consular ofticets were alone sufficient to justify the hurry orders to the troops. Tt will reqtiire these documents also to'show whether or not Ambas sador Wilson iirouaht any personal requests from President Diaz. The message of President Taft to President Diaz in w’hich he says It is the duty of the American gover,nment “to maintain Ihe sovereignty” of tho other republics is regarded here as Taft’s definition of the Monroe doc* trine. It has been taken to mean that President Taft is to sustain and maintain the present sovereignty of Mexico as against any attempt from the outside to interfere with Its in ternal affairs. This is, how^ever, only another way of defining the tradi tional policy of the United States with regard to the republics on the western hemiaphere. In qr.oting Pres ident Taft’s language Ambassador de La Barra intimated very strongly that the United States would apply this doctrine with intensive force to Mcxico as against interference by foreign powers. Reports from Mexico are that the ambassador has not been popular among the Ame'iran residents there. Though accredited lo a Spanish speaking ■ repui.iic, tie doe.' not un derstand the Spanish language, an impediment, it may be pointed out, agaihst a thorough and complete un derstanding of the situation in the country to '-vhich he is accredited. ^ THE WEATHER. ♦ Washington, March 11—Fore- ♦ cast for Sunday and Monday— ♦ North Carolina, fair Sunday; ^ Monday fair in southern, prob- ♦ ably rain in north portion; slightly warmer Sunday. ^ South Carolina, generally fair ♦ Sunday; Monday unsettled; moderate northeast to east ^ winds. E CO. MEN STRIKE No Right to Interfere. New Haven, Conn., March 11,—Pro fessor Arthur M. Wheeler, head of the history department of Yale, said to night that America has no right to in terfere in Mexican affairs except un der extraordinary conditions. “This should not be done” said Professor Wheeler, “unless some overt act affect ing our interest w^as the result of in surrection now' in progress, or unless the Mexican government asked us to interfere, when we could interfere if we cared to do so. Watch the Want Ad Page 8. Black Hugger Sentenced. Media, Pa., March 11.—Seven years’ freedam from the unbidden endear ments of Alonzo Madison, the colored hugger, were guaranteed the w'hite women of this section who the negro had annoyed, when Judge Broomall sentenced the man to the Eastern penitentiary for that term. Madison would hug his victims and murmur endearing terms to them. OAY WITH TE SOLDIERS m IT New York. March 11.—Fifteen hun dred drivers employed by the Adams Express Company went on strike to day and leaders of the greater New York district council of the Interna tional Brotherhood of Teamsters an nounced tonight that the strike would extend Monday to all large express companies. Statements declaring a determina tion to fight to a finish were issued by both the union and the representa tives of the Adams Company. Attempts by the concern to move freight with the aid of strike breakers resulted in a few incidents of violence during the day. The union members assert that the express companies since the settle ment of the -strike last fall on an “open shop” basis, have been deliber ately weeding out the union members from the roll of employes. A statement by the district council said: —^ “Realizing that they would be cn- can, commander of the department of tirely wiped out if they did not take Texas and a squadron of cavalry. He a stand in the matter of a strike im- was taken at once to the manouvre mediately, the Adams Express men grounds. As thirteen cannon boomed in came to the conclusion that it would, salute the entire camp w a.s not.ificU be advisable to strike now, while the j of his arrival. General Duncan at once express season is still at its height, I turned the command over to his supo- rather than lose their entire member- rior officer. Waiting in camp for Gen- ship. The same sentiment exists eral Carter were Brigadier General;! San Antonia. Tex., March 11—With the themometer above ninety degrees and the*sun pouring down on an un sheltered camp, the officers and en listed men arriving at the manouvre grounds at Fort Sam Houston, are suffering terribly. Many of them came out of the North and the change was very sudden. Summer clothes are be ing Issued but this has done little to relieve the situation. A number of prostrations from heat occurred dur ing the day, btit none of them are of a serious naliire. The dust at the camp is terrific and this is adding greatly to the discomfort. The day was without developments of a sensational nature. The feature was the arrival of General \\ illiam H. Carter, who immediately assumed com mand. The officers were kept busy arranging for the arrival of new^ bodies? of troops. Since before daylig'ht this morning train after train load of sol diers have been rolling into Fort Sam Houston. The terminals of the three railroads in San Antonio are packed with cars. The trains came so rapidly that the spur to Fort Sam Houston could not accommodate them and the soldiers had to V'c detrained in the ,\ards of the various railroads. Thia resulted in column after column of troops march’ng through the city to the sound of drums and bugles. At 6:4^ o’clock this morning Major General William H. Carter arrived in the city. He w’as met at the depot by Brigadier General Joseph W. Dun- among the express drivers of all of the other companies. The strike will become general on Monda.v.” Union leaders said that the men would fight for a closed shop this time. Conflcting Lav^s Clash. Lancaster, Pa., March 11.—A con- flicet between the State Health de partment and the City Board of health has resulted in the arrest of Dr. J. M. Shartle, of this city. State Regis trar. A local ordinance requires that hpysicians shall report deaths to the City Board of Health, under penalty of a fine of $10. Dr. Shartle holds that, having re ported to the State Health Department he had fulfilled all legal obligations. As it is desirous to determine the author ity of the state in the premises. Dr. Shartle will be represrented' by the At torney General’s department. F. A. Smith, R. W. Hoyt and Joseiih W. Duncan. Brigadier Generals M. P. Mans and W. S. Schuyler arrived to night. Before 0 o'clock General Carter had inspected the camp and complimented Brigadier General Duncan on the ex cellent and ^tompleleness of tho prep arations which had been made. The tents went up like magic. There .are now on the tented fiehl more than ten thousand officers and enlist,ed men. By Sunday night the full 17,500 will be in camp. Acid Tinge to Contest. Wilkes-Barre, Pa., March 11.—The hearing in the McLean-Bowman Con gressional contest was enlivened by Congressman Bow'man insinuating that one of the lawyers against him was a liar. Then it looks as though there would be a big row. But things wer« finally quieted down.