vv anted. For SaK^ .atest Edition ten pages. VOL. 45. NO. 8081 Latest Edition CHARLdJTE N. C.. SATURDAY mking Massacre Unparalleled In Modem History — - * — --- ' . iity the Shambles Of/gggiji QiustFOT ..anchu Butcher-Ag^ oabies in Arms Slaugn-; JO^€th€T*~No MtTCy gy Asscx^ated Pres*. New York, Nov. 11.—Acting on Infor mation received from St. Louis the 'district attorney’s oQce here today be- hTOWn Into Panic by 'e^n quest for Mtteoo stolen by the D hha Ji/tnriK David Rothschild, the wrecker of Of Koooer nanas— Federal Bank in 1»04. This sum is '^^ovwation Suspendid *ald to have been deposited by him un- der the assumed name of Levy in two , :is Announce JheywtU safety deposit vaults where the money ‘ ' has remained since.« i >anO Chow, 1 From the date of his conviction. May 20, 1904, until his deatti in Sing ..V 11. P mi—Tne sing on ..ov. 18, 1908 , Rothschild ;ameni alternated be- steadfastly refused to give any infor- d>' pair today. This mation regarding the location of his ,rl^ was* received hidden treasure, which at that time u' i. in which he stat- was supposed to total only $270,000. to come to Pe-! The fact that the actual sum stolen » pessimistic by Rothschild was $422,000 and not A second mes- $270,000 is said to have been revealed hours later, in a confession made by Rothschild’s , .rful note. '''if© in St. Louis where she Is now liv- re directed to ttie ing, having married again. Most of ud in the tirst Yuan ihe treasure Is said to be in a safety (teposit vault in Jersey City, but the decidedly gloomy, firmer Mrs. Rothschild declares she to be able to effect cannot recall the name of the bank, r Mon. Moreover, my It i believed the records of the safety that 1 am imabie deposit companies must show the . : _ «n(l assume the ' transaction. I Rothschild came to New York from ,i tolpgram informed ' Cincinnati about 20 years ago and for WOMEN IN FUVLtC SERVICE The u|»p«r picture is that M « Los Angeles, Cal., peNca woman. ^«low la the photograph of the first jury '“''m- liosed entirely of women, rece^^ > paneled In Us Antielea to editor accused of printing in^ viola tion of law. The>'^^^ .i married wo men and thel* ' .fS wore Interested spectators of t ^ proccedlnga In court. The caso wat tried before Juttlco Cas* sidy who gave the wom^ jui«v% the; privilege of wearing thelrS^ts, If they ao desired, dctrlng the proeeedlnga. 'Vhe Jury was compoted of Mrs. Floronco Bralnard, Mra. Nellie Mooman) Mra. Carrie A. Ray, Mrs. N. Stfner, Mrs.tA. D. Leavitt, Mrs. J. Hill and IjVlrs.. Essie FInnecy. By Associated Press. Washington, cast: North Carolina, local rains to night or Sunday warmer tonight. i-'lf i ion. , al hours rd tliat negotiations many years was a familiar figure at re- Vnen Heng. leader sorts where gambling for high stakes >ui ts. had taken a was an amusement. He embarked in •rr. and that General ^ the banking business and various pro* ;gn of becoming less . raoting schemes, d \)robably would j Negro Elude* Poose.. Bv Associated Press. Tampa, Fla. Nov. 11.—After night in the woods surrounding sw’amp near Plant City in which Lee Armistead, a negro, had taken refuge after shooting and probably fatally wounding Town Marshall Yates and a convict guard named Gamer, the If o fire, rapine, deso-[ posse of 100 armed men who were 11’ iierv unrecorded m searching for the ne^o entered the swamp only to ^ftnd that their quar- in ' Manchu and im* ry had slipped through the lines in . -^oldi rs held Purple the night and made his escape, me ere entrenched, | search is being continued today. I heir stronghoW The wounded men are still alive them hordes of city. Innocent ful ; cm promise in or* Miii.-r bloodshed. Yuan colleagues differed on :!ioy and that trouble niong ‘hem. irrible Slaughter • na. Nov. 11.—Historic ’ was the sham- M"n'hu butcher. The sun tti-y ■r. ath r\='rything behind r : k n I' d de^tl- but there is little hope for their re covery. Meeting Cfooet the fields at the By Associated Press. .i m forces. The lat-1 Richmond. Va., Nov and i tional convention of the unltea THE WEATHER. Fore- South Carolina, local rams to night or Sunday warmer tonight. m * Copy Dally—I Conta Sunday, f {v&Vi/£#fQi}tatde Charlotte S Cents a Copy Dally and Suaday. Methodists Make Good Pi ogi ess In r«#i» WOULD BREAK THE PAPER TRUST. By Associated Press. Washington, Nov. 11.—Representa tive Stanley, of Kentucky, who ii chairman of the horuse steel Investi* gating committee stated in an Inteir* view here that he favored breaking the so-called paper tr\]Kt by permit ting free Impo^tlon of wood pulp and print paper from Germany, Nor way and Sweden. He said he did not think this action would make such a dlffenerce in revenues that the ways and means committee could not re coup and the people" would welcome both the Ruction in taxation and the smaAhlttg of a trust. ■ Fim Pmchm Received Fi(M Connection With tH OMjennce-Eleven Can- di^tis Received on Jrial -•Btismess Session. Name Minister Who Deser- ted Sis Charge Stricken from Con/erence RoU--Keen In- tetest' and Speculation m the Matter of Salaries. Special to The New*. Sta.tesvllle, Noy> 11.—^The most im- Orphana Attend Jubilee. By Associated Press. Atlanta, Nov. 11.—Two hundred and fifty orphims from the Thornwell or phanage 4t Clinton, S. C-i are expected portanf transactldn irt this morning's to arrive heje this afternoon on a session of the conference was the ^lal train to attend a Presbyterian into'full connection witn jubilee which will be held here to-l . . . , ^ morrow. Dr. Wllltam P. Jacobs, tta O*® conference ot a class o, tour founder and president of the orphan-1 young preachers. The morning ."'es-^ age will bead the party. An automobile sion was largely devoted to bub'- tour of the city this afternoon will be one of the features of their visit mauera. N[W EVIDENCE IN POISON INS By Associated Press. Chicago. Nov. 11.—New evldeiice which has come, into the possession I of the officials Inyeatlgatlng the f “ Eleven candidates,were received on trial In the conference, and sev eral members of the first year class were advanced to the second year. The name of D. J. Miller waa stricken from the conference roll l>e- caUse he left his work soon alter his appointment at the session of the conference last year. He left with out giving any explanation, and is said to have gone out of the United States.' B. A. York and J. A. Snow were received by transfer from the North Carolina conference, and L. B, Sta cey was granted supernumerary reia- ^ V 1 « I A cltss of thirteen preachers were deaths by poison of which ^ L^^^nced to the class of the fourth LouIto VermllyA Is suspected, \rtll while two members of the class In all probability result m the the third year. A class ot rest of another venon tom. . twelve were elected oWerf. The ad- PlaM o* officials dress by Bishop Hoss to the class known after which was received Into full connec- polson had been found In the viscera conference was heard of two more victims had been made.j gpedal Interest. He emphasized was said that the suspect slept the Importance of the call to tbe •tween 20,000 to check the the slain be- .. k of ammunition, had delayed a attack upon Daughters of the Confederacy wWl close this afternoon with the elec tion T)f officers and a reception by the Daughters of the American Rev- the ! olution. The early hours of the morn- ' the arrival of am- ■ d from Shanghai, r advantage of the /'ionists made a deter- ' f did little shooting ' tr'A fatalities. The .pformers remained miles distant from Ming the arrival of am ■ n'orcements are f pvery direction. j Bdt' e WMI Be Desperate. ing session which was late in start ing was marked by spirited cam paigning among the various delega tions for candidates for president- general and 'other officers. ADVANCE IN CEMENT RATES. ■ht Bv Associated Press. Washington, Nov. 11.—Advances In also the freight rates on cement plaster 'from Oklahoma points to destinations ia Texas, made by the Southewestern •V and ragged“Vecruitsl lines in a tariff filed today, were sus- .roinises to be desper- pended by the Interstate commerce commission until February 1, 191*.. By Asosciated Press. Louisville, Nov. ll.~Like t are being treated., ^ trnnn consideration. When • > re opened yesterday! ■ people thronged toward , parh arrying his be- “ i .l iven by the imperial-^ ‘ i irdp the carnage be- the nisht of November S first aMark was made by ■luHnn' ts, the lartar general ! ■ = r] to terrorize the in i’ ‘ holesale executions, lo: f' nneup had been cut oil ^^^ad•d by the dozen, but. r for a general slaugb-! n thf» whole native city j d ?he .Manchu soldiers { ' miu.?aored men, wo- ( hi d. i n The aged, tbe U r in arms were shown Amoy in Panic. ‘ nv 1 - Attncks by rob-' 1! difterent quarters threw ito a panic early today. ■ r patrol c aptured'a plrati- iid it crew of IH men await in. Coast navigation has suspended, ana: assumed office today. ^ ■ lal and members of the party proposed estab- ' " temporary Independence 'V find the adoption of a „;:i toward the revolu- I'idiralb, however, favored n th.'^ city to the revo- this policy probably W. ■ low. a city with a poula- d aa high as lt),00,0UU, miles west by north oi I'l-jrt^. that the rebels an- fii* c'lty will be occupied No- The people are fleeing plr; p. , a ring a repetition v r; nof^ r,f the Taiping re- ! ^ i' rs re in no danger, t from Foo Chow state that •itinft there ceased last even- ' n tbp Mane bus surrender- a ghost from the romantic past of the Missis sippi and Ohio valleys, an awkward lit tle river craft puffed and tooted .and churned her way out from the Louis- vlllj^iS^harf today to continue her cruise down stream as fast as New Or leans. Image of that brave packet, the "New Orleans” which was the first steam-propelled craft to make her way down the Mlsslssiiipi and Ohio rivers, the 1911 “New Orleans” is churning from Pittsburg to the Gulf, partly as a means of marking the centennial of river navigation and in an effort to further the campaign for revival of inland water trade. Louisville perhaps made more fuss over the arrival of the “New Orleans'' yesterday than any other city west of Pittsburg and from this point her journey iB sure to be marked by con tinued receptions at all river points. Resembled Original. In every detail the craft resembles her original, which left her dock four years after Robert Fulton, sruccessful- ly navigated the Hudson. Nicholas J. Koosevelt made a t^rlp the length of the Ohio and Mississippi on a flat boat to observe conditions before in- vetiting In the enterprise. It was March 17th, 1811, when the New Or leans was launched- Her first trip was attended with prophecies of finan: ^anli^ls ^tdlljie and th«l , >^ew Miidrid eart£riudl^ 4iappeiililg whtt© ttio; ctal.t; was stlil 'in .OJflo wateJ^, ^ to the Iron and wood thh^ seemed to defy ciertain Itfvvw The^K^. Orleans, hbVeve^, • steiuh^ her-\^i^y,. down to th'e city f6r" which* named and- ffever ‘rettirild^dv-fSbe used In the NatchM tradd,. sutA oltc^; and raised and rebuilt'; 4 Reception for Guests.' .7" vr The special* doinmlttee of the' S^Ais- lana historical^ society at a ,^etih* yesterday reported that a r^feption, luncheon, dlhner party and aiii^toa^:; bilfr' Hide about the city had ar-i ranged for the gue^a^rd the boat* 'New•' Orleanfefiipdn its jt^Val ^ere from bt. Louts lipoh thie lOOtb a^- ntv^eary of the original New:' Orleau^ the first .steamboat t^/ navJ’gateV,the. Misslsisppl ’ river. C. G.^ T)ubl©’ was elected flag lieirtenant Commodore Elmer Ei.'.Wobd, command *tho rlvor pageah^wmch^ will weicome the yisitprs. The Or leans left. pLuisviUe, Ky*, • w&Strmdi^ J8y- - Press, f- ' ll;-^WtJ*eie8s messages :€rom tl]fe; ^ianier' M of the 'dredt ^Jrthiern. Stisa^hip > Company; ti^t ' the vessel h^d fttraaied* xfin' thei jcimishipia passage later floated and >^ci^;«etied for Kobe. > , ^ The .Mlrine'sQta., Is a ship of 1.:?,- '32-4 tons, and' one .of thie Jfinest of. the Pacffic liners. She .-is , 6^ feet long and ^ was-buHt a,t: Lojidon in 1904. She sailed ^ froim i ^ttle on Sefetefnher IB pn'hw* reg?;|li^ U to Yokohama,. . Manila V and ‘ '^bh^ Kong, leaving* the latter 'cl^''ab.out Novem ber 1 on her.retiirn trip. ministry, religious work, although he probably was not a ware I j^port of the board of educa- a. n ui-w I tion recommended that a campaign of A meeting between Coroner Hoff-1 be undertaken during the It recommended further the ap- pd of L. .B. Abefnethy as the the^state^ attoraeys office ^ secretary of education, at uled to take place in the ® « ^lary of $2,500 per pear. His duty office today knd the arrest will P^b- » conduct an 'educational ably follow. campaign. ' Mrs. *" The conference committee recom- A conf^ence mended that $140,000 be raised for edu- ^etween States Attorney WaymM I and Lieutenant James Mwney, o conference to the rep- the Kensington resentatlve phurch at Washington, cide to what extent they will carry] 4 p^ge Two. the investigation regarding the deaths of John McDonald, at Kala- _ FROM mazoo, Mich., and Warren Thorpe, at PTOMAIN POISONING. Jackson, Mich., former husbands of Mrs. Jane Quinn, held to the srand Agg„elated Press, jury yesterday charged with the mur- McAlister, Okla., Nov. 11.—Lleuten- der of her husband, John Quinn. Governor J. J. McAlester, his wife Reports and his son who became violently 111 tives sent to the Michigan cities to pgach make investigations. near here, are recovering, according Mrs. Qulru spent her night in received today. It Is said that jail last night in a cell adjoining the uiness was ptomaine poisoning, one occupied by Mrs. Louise form eating canned goods. GOMPERS .4:: LYNCHING WAS Sh ' BY revolt^ Cameron, -‘Np^ llv^Rov.o^^^. scenes th;& lyiiciiifag/of> Fer^ nahdo Gomev,: a Mexican lad/at dale, la?t June, were d^crlbed in coiirt yesterday by. Alfred ^Wilson, flrst witness callfed^in'-ttte-'^lal - of 'Z. T. Gore, jr., charged* with' particlpat-; Ihg In the ihurder.'^' V ; - ;' " Wilson .testified that >e was guard-' ing the boy, .G'Q.meVj,'aft,ei*> the Alex- lean had been arrested -the'qhar|^ of having stabbed to d^th ' CSiarles Zletungi a gagragekeeper. Gore and three other men, the witness ?aid, took the lad from him by force. LtTsuMc — One ol^ the\four.. men, according tiD cialm^ster and fore^ spirit- the witness, G^mey away af H^'RD CROKER TO WINTER IN FLORIDA. Vork, Nov. 11.—Richard former head of Tammany ■ expeeted In New York city ^•eek and will leave at once ^ rida where as usual he will " 0 winter. nal retribution before she had proceed ed far. She couldn’t pass the falls of iSie Ohio on account of low water but surprised her critics by her ability to make good headway up stream from t,ouisvllle. Navigated Falls. At the first good stage she success fully navigated the falls. A^ comet was vl&lble at the time she steamed, into Louisville one. midnight and , the coin cidence threw superstitious natives in.- to a panic. Her whls^e as she round ed the bends frightened people and ter" a trace ihftin had bee/; hfarfitenied^ AND PAfiTY . O^F FOR ATWANTA. W^hingtoh; ^ Nov.. ll.r^President Samiiel 0omj),ers, Vice-president John Mitcfte'Tl and .Secrfa^ry Frarik Morri son, of the ^^deratipn of Labor le?t Iasiitflgfet;,f9r ., Atlanta to atl^hd thfe thtrty-fir^t^ annual . Gonveh- ti^ of the federatloijL It, is said tJiat t1^' officeTs' expect a ^strenuous bat tle .with‘the;. ^^Iall8t ;^ei|ient in tne brgahiaatioh. However,; before leaving Washihgfqn. ^all three expressed, en tire'cbrifl^^ce of .Te^lobtion. Piif0Reb^ ; M Pnnce ^ Berlin, Kov. 11.—-A public and semi- official, rebiike' has -been administered to Cr6wn Prince-;Frederick William through-an inspired telegram from Ber lin/pubiished in the. Cblbgi^ Gazette ^day >iid which fully Goh^rms the re port that Bmpeirof William reprimand ed his ^ son for ^‘having-openly dem- ya, accused of the ^murder of Arthur Bissonette. ]EKMST[R!i STRIKE THRHIEIIS TO Yale Meets Brown. I By Associated Press. New Haven, Conn., Nov. 11. When Yale clashed with Brown on the gridiron this afternoon the blue not only hoped for victory, but desired to make a big score in revenge for defeat a year ago by Brown. Probable line up; Yale. Position. Bomelsler.. .i •• •• Left end. Brown. Adams i Scully.. Francis.. Left tackle Left Guard. ....Kratz . ..Kublp th^ horseman stop^ ami^;,^ Numbera; bf' in, this'AoW, w said, kfckfed the ’pi;Oiie seiohs fbrpi. of: thfe, l^^xlca^ fllctlng bnflses/ atout and^face; ;theh GoiSik^v wjis-ha^ telep6(*e p^e. ‘ ] ? I MRS. KELLOG DURLAND. Mr*. Kellogg DuHand, known aa Oi- nevieve Grevllle, the author and play wright who has tired of her husband, Kellogg Durland, the author of-the ‘‘Red.Reign of Russia,"’ and recently served hfm with papers for a divorce in New York City. The gifted and beau tiful authoress gives as her reason for her aotloh, that her husband Js « and is afflicted with '‘Wanderlust.' She sums up her whole matrimonial experience by the romark, “Tj^ liter* ary persons should probabijr nevsr marry.” TheEl^enth about the neck of thje young M^xlcajj;/ Als approyil' of the attapks The n^in. who . dragged^the^ gov^nmeht’s ^Moroccan PoUcy Wilson te^lfiod, was on .hortfeba^ a . bellicose : utterances In the puWic cen- one must :o' 1863>. when :iCTOwn Prince s; rebuked for criticisms ^j^fsms^rk’s: pollgy in a _ _ _ ol -f^tg. V to the Colpfne Gazette ?We: bellofe It, to he*; the right dirty bt lire , hseir to the throne to ttke ah'iht^*^st- in pofttiiw- He can- hbt’ fcb^r^'efcdaeh^ forming,his own o^lttbB,-,®^^ ’if i.t xosonant with .liidi^rial' i»lii?K. w,e ;fi^per. do not J tk%t in la: in Ike' ftffwY. whlth we, consider ^ - .. =' "Xt^eSem withoat. Question, twt the epteote^d'^.Pjess bonunents ^ere- u^n‘ M to’tlJe'E iMid' the iabBoiiiBe o£;th^.*Gfo^i^ wipce ^ Friday's stttliig was due tt> the Bm- I^iior* to. 1%wi?®iaF s -even^: ai^ the . oosislde^i^ ^ involved therfeln oann^ •Iser^eepi^e'” , .. \ _ .T|)^/Ci©;^ P*|i^ wUl ^ zts'rthia :€ren^^ ven By Associated Press. y New York, Nov. 11.—Today « Noteniher 11, 201V tho^h o^ possible to write the date ^^h the^ reoetltlon six times of a single digit- a close appiDbxl*aatim Jb" It Tt ^8 the eleventh day bf the eleventh 12:12^ as 'a ^orr^t It is the eievenin^aay o so the date; ,Bight>^^dr,f(d .years ago rf U »ve It thi. By Associated Press. New York, Nov. 11.—Most dread ed of all labor troubles, a general j Ketcham teamsters strike threatens New York unless the city speedily settles its | McDevitt. difference with the several-thousand laborers In the street cleaning de-|Paul partment. The strike of the cartmen who collect the city’s ashes and garb-j Avery age, extended to the street sweep ers today; and tonight the depart-j Howe. ment store drivers and others will meet to consider Quitting work In| Freeman, sympathy with the city employes. Meanwhile the city is suffering! Camp.. from a prodigious accumulation of rubbish and garbage. Ordinarily 9,- 000 cartloads are removed every day. The strike since last Wednesday has permitted rubbish of all kinds to pile up until today it Is a menace to health. Ii\ many apartment houses bewildered jaiiltOTs haVte dumped their accumulations on the rtreet,itn« _ making some - thoroughfaw ^ Washington, D. C., Dunn ^ Center. Right guard Right tackle Right end Quarter back Left half Right half Full back Donovan ....Gelb . .BarUett .Ashbaugh .. .Sprackling Bean Tenney ....Snell WII.L MEET IN WASHINGTON. Richmond, Va., Nov. ll^By a vote e aumpea IW to 219 the United Daughters of accumulations on the. street, [the Confederacy Vtnlil ♦•Via , . J 4. ibTo-nv of the Daughters felt that xney le street cleaning department be- j Ma ^ ^ WashlnKton through gan work today with several rea^d In 1910 strike breakers but the men Rlchmbnd was chos- Srome""«taS*aS"SS? «‘Slen «tL”conventlon city tor this year. "^o striker, ! .TAL.AN8 VCTR10U8. places were guarded by nearly 5,000 policemen and every member of the reserve was on duty today in antic- 1 pa tion ef more riots. Already these disturbances have cost the life ot ofae strike breaker driver and sent several others to the hospital. The aitacks generally come from house to^ and by the time the police.. ^lmb up . to the places frpn^ which missiles came the assailants has . disaiM^red* , l^he department has commissioned sereral detective agencies to hire 5i200 strtke bfeakoni. By Associated Press. ^ Washington, D. C., Nov. ll.Itallan victories yesterday following u^n Turkish and Arab atacks on the Ital ian entrenchments were reported to the Italian emhasy here today from Tripoli. The* dispatches indicated tnat the Italian troops, after repulsing the small attacks of Arabs, had canred their pursuit of the attacking parties up to the TurJtteh eiitrenchments. , Goliipli&. S. C., Nov. 11.—Spot midtong steady 8 3-4.