\Vanted, For Sale, For Rent, Lost lmd^^tin^ i^ers,.Rooms or Roomer latest Edition ten pages. THE yOL. 45. NO. 8082 CHARLOTTE N. C., MONDAY^ JEVENiNG, NOVEM 13 I9I | Supreme Court of Appeals Upholds Action of Lower Court in Beattie Case Semy Beattie Ji Doomed To Die In Electi ic Chav A TRIPPLE MURDER. ^ ^.■rmg Executive Clemency,^ Ymg Wife Murder, oj\* ___ ^ -\y-07ld IS Doomed to Die>^ By Associated Press. for His Crime Soon. tourioj Appeals Refuses to Atlowa Reopening ofihe] famm Case—Petition Bad', Sein Fikd Last Week. I ^ . tnp- p!e murder was cor V ,ted to day in Brooklyn. women, mother and daugu , and the child of one of them were found dead in a dwelling on Park avenue. The father of the child is sought by the police. Presf. Va.. Nov. 5-DAY SLEEPER HAS RELAPSE. IS.—The 8U- Tlllle William# Drop* Off Again While HHLTH DEPIIRT- MENT MAY TAKE HANO IN STRIKE j Bj Associateo Press. New York, Nov. the garbage gatherers strike is not broken today the health dei^artment will step in to save New York from the evil effects of Ecme 40,000 cart loads of refuse that has accumulated since the men who d'i-\e ’ne -street claning department’s wagont; Quit work because they ob jected to night hours. Fear of the strikers and their friends has ktpr, r rofesslonal strike breakers from oceiitirg the high wages the city offers for fci'bstitutes and dread of the Teanisters' Union has prevented con tractors from bidding to perform the i work usually done by the city de partment. Ihe health department in tervened today when its men took out I several huiidred barrels of dianfectant to sprinkle on the piles of rottin? 1,'arhage :n the poorer and more thick- t'rp r ■ if appeals today denied Tor a writ of error by P-vtle. Jr.. convicted of | sleep after attending a dance at Music tines z.duiinietcrf j at Moving Picture Show. • ly IKUn.aleo districts. I Williams of this village, who went to, . Wife last JUI.V. | weeks a.o and slumbei ed , ThatlLVh^^^d D on the appeal from the > ® ® » mnJiff ^ while at- taught the &rr‘>.i sympathizers a les ■ he Chesterfield «>att,, 5 Miss Wliflamt >f.-terday'e riots we- >r.ced him to die in the elec- j went to sleep in a chair while watch- * r*. Nov. .4 iB final. Only clem- “i e by Governor Mann e condemned man. Governor to Isue Statement. •t , '’i' nope of judicial In- dashed when :erp ■i-'ai coii; the ' announced that "the i-lmnly correct in its appeal is theretore exten.'^ive the police had to in7lh7'Z7mes " " cope with the strike began there w.r. A physician was summoned and the I young woman was removed in an auto if, arrests has l>een to the home of her grandfather, Silas H. Case, on Greenwich etreet. It was believed she had entirely recovered from the effects of her last seizure. ’U'lBg anc tJe .T.ieu. No further comment was made the case. T.-fj.M n* the penitentiary » ^ uot tell Beattie oi but would leave that fat'--', and brother. ■’u'. iuJuencee are said to he on Governor Maan lor ”f - either commutation or ^ " Ti . believed he will in- >11 ■ir said he would issue tomorrow. Supreme Comt Gives Decisions ,-«ri A’fd t resB. ^ .u P. C.. Nov. 13.-The "re siu.tb; nl>-fought contest over •e power f the iater&tate commerce to prohibit railroads from 'n operators of elevators com- atlou nr elevating grain in trans- - f.r.,illy decided today w'hen • ' rr- i supreme court the ’ ’ n possessed no such pow- Moving iPcturc Shows. ''' !Dg :)ii?are show promoters re- )day when the supreme c of 'he rnited States decided moving pirtures based on the :?r- if r fc,;v-ightecl book may ;'!»’!tute in ir'rinaiement of the copy- ‘rt* on the book or the reserved l-iEht*- to dranffttij'e. Rebels Continue Succisses in China 1 f. •.stnriatf (i Press. P*;;’"? .Nov. m.-Yuan Shi Kal, ac- ' 'VO thousand troops, ':un >Sial entry today into the ‘bich he was driven in ^ear8 aeo. 5 hat the strong man of - id been prevailed upon sive the tottering throne f'f his counsels became »■ his arrival; and a vast il lined the route from p‘ation to the temple vcn jirovided for his resi- ret hetiPti- b.f:> mSIlTESM Sp«^al to The News. Statesville, N. C., Nov. 13.—The morning session of the conference was occupied mostly with discussion of the reports of the committee on the spiritual jit^te ■ of the church, and the report of the board of edu cation. The report on tfte spiritual state of the church r^ommended that pastors themselvei hold meet ings in churches Instead of employ ing evangelists, except ^ special cases. It recommended the appoint ment of a committee on evangelism consisting of J. B. Abemetfay, L. T. Cordell, J. W. Moore. It recommended also employing a conference evangel ist of song in the person of S. A. Fisher, his salary to be provided without asking the conference tor aid. C. H. Neal, H. K. Boyer, C. vv. Byrd and J. S. Martin, the last nam-. ed being laymen spoke to the report. Dr. Byrd and Mr. Martin emphasiz ed the importance of making evan gelistic services of the regular serv ices of the church in order to give opportunity for people to become Christians and unite with the church. Report number 2 of the board of education recommending an Increase of live hundred dollars on the as sessment for education, created much discusion. An amendment was ofter- ed to strike out the increase. Sev eral speaches were made after which the report was adopted Including the increased assessment. An amendment to the report on temperance was offered by W. B. Hales and others and was adopted recommending that the conference re spectfully request the management of all daily papers now carrying liquor advertisements to discontinue same; when present contracts ex pire. The afternoon session was set for 3 o’clock. When appointments will be read. The opinion prevails that man changes will be made. The Shot by Sweetheart Woman Dies By Associated Press, Chicago, 111., Nov. 13.—Miss B3*tha Atwood, 26 years of age, who Is sup posed to have come to Chica^jo from New Orleans and who is be'ioved to have had a s•^ter in St. J.ou’ls, died in a hosiptcl h(-re today, the rjsult of having been shot In the neck last Mon- jday by h'ir 8weetheai.*t, WiUium J. j oTilSh ^ — ~- I Grush conltfitttted iuiclde directly ^er he had ^hot the young woman. The shooting Is said to have followed Miss Atwood’s refusal to marry him. appointments were by cabinet this • 1 iiale and heartv hiH an-^ session. The appointment l ln'/'.;:"l«rt"r*.pSrt.T. S. B. Turrentlne a« - -ndition which had been! of the Winston district wUl :-.n ti p'cr.,.,0 for his delav in Obey- ^ surprising to quite a num • "^t^rl^^^dS^^^he conference ' prom\'" "w. P. Few president of ™^Col- tmnprinl edict of Nov 1 E- A* Cole and P. T. Durham, w ■ ^’ions to thp 1^ the Interwt of colleges; O. 8. ; eHsed UiB unwillingness ^M^®rw^mont ^In ' ’ e .-nd whether he could J* A. Baldwin, president Piedmont In- ; i to re-ronsider this decis- dustrial InBtitute. ■ n a rjueetlon of much spec-' B. Abernethy, conference secre- 1 tary of education, spoke. -n Shi Kai Arrives Reports ol tHe Epworth League ■ fable dispatches ^®ard and committees of district con- 1’ ' lounce that Yuan .f®rence records J . F'eking this morn- relations, were heard. The tem- iiavc an audience with P®rance report recommended tnat tne ■ 'Ih\ to riiBcuHs the Bitua- conference do not support papers ad- ‘ d that Yuan will not verUsing liquor. A Uv«ly discussion p‘ ” '-miershii), ensued, special mention being made or o/eign Consul* to Quit Nankina Papers that carry liquor advertisement ^Nv. in the discussion. A subsUtute was ere. . r " nsuiR and foreigners un to request the paper* tion will move out of continue liquor advertiseinenti and the Captain and Thtee* Men Drowned 3y Associated Press. New Haven, Conn., Nov. 13.—The schooner Witch Hazel, from New York for Provincetown went down in the sound off New Haven during the storm of last night. The captain and three men were drowned and two others were saved. WOMEN PREPARING TO RUN THE CITY. By Associated Press. Chicago, Nov. 13.—Believing that the time is not far distant when wo men may be elected aldermen and a woman wielding the gavel in the mayor’s chair, Chocago’s suffragists are interesting themselves in a school for the instruction of munici pal employes which will be opened tonight. Women especially are Invited to attend the classes which will be con ducted by John Curtis Kennedy oI the University of Chicago. "We may have a woman mayor and women councilmen in a short time," said Mrs. Mary E. McDowell, of the University of Chicago settlement in making the announcement of the new school, “and It Is well to get our in struction now." F L AT ATUNTA, CA. By Associated Press, Atlanta, Ga., Nov, 13.—^Approximate ly 400 delegates, representing every state of the union and including fra ternal delegates from England and Canada are in Atlanta for the opening session today of the thirty-first annual convention of the American Federation of Labor. With the leaders of every branch of organized labor: in attend ance and questions of far reaching im portance to the labor world on the pro gram for discussion, the proceedings of the convention will be watched with interest. The opening session of the' conven tion. which is to be preceded by a pa rade of all the delegates to the con vention and members of the labor unions of Atlanta, will consist chiefly of addresses of welcome and the read ing of the report of President Gomp- r* - % z:' ‘f}?. w. NEWS. kZ / . • • Southern Tiain No. 37 Wrecked And Engineer Killed THE WEATHER. By Associated Press. Washington, Nov. 13.—Fore cast: North Carolina, fair tonight, freezing temperature on ' the coast, slightly warmer in Ex treme west poi'tion; Tuesday fair, with slowly rising temper- perature. South Carolina, fair tonight with freezing temperature; Tuesday fair, slowly rising- temperature. BOY: EMPEROR AND DOWAGER EMPRESS. The boy emperor of China (upper picturie) and .the present Dowager Em press, .who is tive widow of Emperor^ kwang^Su, who. died In 1908. Both the boy. emperor and'his mother had to flee the Chinese capital, for fear of the revolutionists, who’ are sweeping over the country and have estaiilished a republican forttn of-government. Wave V' mM.ediately/The'^commanh- ^ ^ ■ torMsn w.rship, today notl- that thev roniH nnt the closIng business. Rev. J. H. : and property Weaver having presided during the ingide the city morning. Ccmtinued on Bight. The busineM of the convention until Friday, it is stated, will consist large ly of the Introduction of reecdutions T^ich then wil be referred to commit tees for consideration and later report ed to the convention for action. The conTention Is expected to be In session here for about two weeks By Associated Press. ^ i ' ' New Orleans,.. Nov. 13.—Con.sidera- ble damage was done the ^siigar ahd^ trucking industries in Louisiana and Texas by the unseasonable low temper atures of yesterday 'ahd tbday* Freez ing weather extended as f^r som^'' as the middle gulf cioast tbdSiy with the temperature 27 degrees as far south as Alexandria, La. r - In a large part ^f the. sugar belt cane is still''standing‘ ln,the fli&lds and the cold snap came so suddenly that few planters had- time or sufficient force to give ajiy; protection . to the crop. The cold came too late to do much damage to cotton except* to injure the grade but the high winds of yesterday stripped the scattiered open bolls cleaji in some sections. increasing cloudiness ’-i is ' in,dic:ated for the* west gulf .stlLtes toni^t and Tuesday but the weather hureaii prom' ises a general rise in temperatures. , Atlanta, Qa., Nov. 13.—Atlanta is shivering In the grip of one of the coldest snaj>s experienced in •■Novjem- ber since 188*?' when ' the . mercury dropped to * 16 degn^.' ■ At 1 o’clock this mom|ng > the, ofllcial temperature w'as given as 22 degrees,' a^drbp of 46 degrees . since' 7 ^ o’clock a. m. Sunday. The cold snap, is thought 'to .have caused little, dami^e to cdtton as most of the ero^-had been a^ strong wind, hpweir^T. prec93ed toe drop of the >mercury and. Iiiv'Soi^m sections ' odtton; wMch. . h^^ left in the' bolls was at^^d' ahd scattered* through . the fleSw;; Montgomery. - Ala., Not. iS.^\^th one exception wi^^er .rekjdrds, ^or the first half of November for tlie past 39-years'Were-broken in Mont gomery this jnorning. The tempera ture registered here by the weather bureau wa» 27. This is, the lowest on record so early in the month except November 12, 194, when a temperature 'of 26 was reached, Bristol, Tenn., Nov. 13.—The coldest weather Bristol has experienced this winter came this morning when the mercury fell to 10 degrees above zero. This is unusually cold for Bristol at this season’of the'year. Nfew 'Orleans, La., Nov, 13,—Joseph A. Gonzales, aged 64, a fisherman, died at the door of his ca1t>in on Lake Pont- chartraln today as the' result of ex posure to the. cold. The old man was caught by a'trap door falling across his body early today and thus pinion ed, di€!d as; a result of the cold. The minimum temperature here was 34. WHAT ABOUT ANTI- TmJST LEGISLATION. Washington, Nov. 13.—President Taft discussed ^ay with Attorney General Wickerslam the advisability of supplemental ^ ‘ anti-trust legisla tion, at the, coming session of con gress. The conference related par- ticiilarly: to Jthe likelihood of passing a' 'federal- Incor^ratlon ^ct. It was pointed : out that a provision of this kind might-be made to allow corpora tions whose method of doing business :wa8 in riolatibn of the Sherman anti- trpat law to re-organize under a act.- V iipnatoir^^moot who had a long talk w4n» ' tHe’; ‘pfiBSident expressed the 9^1oii^it^ would be impossible to pass aiyr and-tnist ; legislation whatever >g Mission of congress. BEUTEO BEPORTS By Associated Irress. Nashville, Tenn., Nov. 13.—Belated reports of the storm that swept oyer Middle Tennessee Sunday night and Sunday morning, reache- ing a climax in a cyclone at Joelton, this county, are comihg in today. In a number of towns houses were unroofed# fences and wires blown away and corn fields leveled. At Pulaski the fe^s of the people were accentuated by a blazing me-^ teor and I^wrenceburg spent me' night in darkness, the light wires becoming crossed with telephone wires and the current cut off to pre vent a conflagration. It io a coincidence that a storm of such extent in Tennessee should come, during the voyage of the repli ca of the ilrst steamboat to cruise down the Ohio and Mississippi rivers. While the old “New England" was steaming down the Ohio near the mouth the first of the earth quake shocks which formed Reel Foot Lake in West Tennessee oc curred, the crew of the Jittle boat witnessing the sudden disappearauce ; of isl^ds and shore lines. an4 na.t- tirai phfeiioffieMt fBSfc leff' tti^' iibpi’e of the middle West panic strickeh. The first of those shocks came on December 11, 1‘811. DeToilment Occutred Between Bentja And Reidsville About Iwenty Miles North of Gretnsbord^ tause of Derail ment Could not be Determined RAilBDIDS OF STATE FIGHTING Special to The News. Raleigh, Nov. 13.—Chairman Franklin McNeill and Secretary A. J. Maxwell, of the Corporation Commission, and Attorney General T. W. Bickett have gone to Washington for a hearing this week before the new commerce court, on the appeal of the Norfolk & West ern Railway Company, from the order procured by the North Carolina com mission from the,Interstate Commerce Commission for a substantial reduo- tion in freight rates from Cincinnati and other western points to Durham and Winston-Salem as the North Caro lina terminals. The Southern Railway Company has joined in the fight with the Norfolk & Western against the reduced rates on the ground that the North Carolina commission intends to undertake to require the Sotuhern to apply similar reductions to Greensboro and the dan ger to railroads of the state geenrally that may lead to reductions to such North Carolina * shipping points as Charlotte, Wilmington, Raleigh and others. —Mr. Geo, A. Howell, Jr., is home from Davidson College spending a few days with his parents. Colored Fireman Seriously In- jured—Engine lutned Over And Four Sleepers and Two Mail Coaches Left Track— Engineer Kinney Well Known Engineer W. A. Kinney was killed, and Foreman Ed Tbwnesend, colored, was so seriously injured that he may die, when Southern train No. 37, run ning from Washington to New Orleans was derailed this morning between Beneja and Reidsville, about twenty njiles north of Greensboro. The e.i- gine turned over, and four sleepers auci two mail coaches left the track. The mail clerks and passengers v/ere bad ly shaken up, but according to early reports none were injured. The pause of the derailment vu1d not. be determined on first examina tion. The train was running at a good rate of speed when without warning the engine left the track and turned completely over dras^in^^ with it «iix coaches. The engln^r was crush!>d and burned and died almost instantly. Fireman Townsend, thoifgh seriously hurt, may recover. It is considered al most a miracle that no others were killed, and the circumstanc is probably due to the steel ffonstruction of the cars. " Train No. 37 is the famous vestibule limited, and known as the finest train run in the south. It passes Charlotte, on schedule time, at 11 o’clock in the morning. Engineer Kinney was running the train that was in collision with Presi. Spencer’s special, on Thanksgiving Dflty^ about six years ago, when Presi dent Spencer, of the Southern Rail^y, JjjJjled. He. la the a family ^6f engineers, his father and 'two broth ers having been -killed before him. Later Story. Special to The News. Greensboro, N. C., Nov. 13,—Num ber thirty-seven, the Southern Kali- way-New York & New Orleans Pull- nian train consisting of two mall, one combination sleeper and baggage and seven pullmans running forty minutes late was wrecked near Benaja, Rockingham,, caimty midway between Reidsville and Greensboro at seven forty-five o’clock this morii- ing. Engineer W. A, Kinney was kiUed, and colored fireman Ed. Townes of Spencer was badly hurt in back and hip. No passengers were seriously hurt. D. E, Line of Baltimore suffered a sprained wrist, A. M, Short, ticket collector, Atlanta, had his head lac erated. Henry Morrey, Greensboro had his thigh wrenched, R. F. Arrington, colored porter, Washington had his head cut. Several mail clerks were badly shaken up, but none seriously injured. There was grjeat excitement here over the first report of many killed and injured before the tacts became known. Only six cars, the two postal, one combination, alid three pullmans left the track. The accldnt is supposed to have been caused from spreading rails but it is impossible to say what the exact cause was since the track was completely torn up for two hun dred yards. The remarkable escape from death and casuality was due to the heroism of the engineer, the steel cars and the bank which cause the cars following the engine to lay over on the bank when the engine ploughed into the soft embankment and was literally buried, crushing the engineer on his seat. The fireman wast brown out of the cab into the Continued on Page Nine. Steamer With Fifty Persons On Board Headed Far Rocks Helpless In Tetrific Gale ' ■ ^ * ~ A * t {Washington, which ran ashore«n Pea- Portland, Ore., Nov. 13.-—A wireless f cock spit yesterday afternoon is being mesMge td the weather bureau here driven by a southeast gale toward the crews have sue-1 Rock Island between Cape Disappoint- ® and North Head. It in believed steamer Washington at the mouth of the Columbia. **•« a - vu. i7vwrAj The steamer was in a worse position runnine that many or all of the fifty persons on board are doomed. A terrific esa is this morning than when darkness fell and shut her'off from the view of the watchers on shore. A terrific south- At 9 • 45 o’clock the ^ Washington was drifting closer to shore between Cape Dissapointment and North at the ■ east gale was blowing; and slowly but!„ a «rn 3 « surely she was creeping toward the j ready to fire The only hope for the fifty persons) aboard was in the bravery of the Unit-1 * the life saving station ed Stat^ life saving crews from the ^ says the Washington is Cai^ Disappointment and Point Adams I"^ rapidly and was expected to stations. These men patrolled the’f® smake from her beach all night witing for the vessel *^®®el c^Id be seen. It was believed to drift close enouugh to shore that!®^® of water. ^ life lines might be fired over her. , | Ih spite of the heavy sea, life savers The tugboats Tatoosh and GoliaJh lefV P^'^'P^ed to launch tlieir boat in the Astoijia early toda^ for the. scene but hope of picking up any who might be their captains had little hope that washed from the wfeck or jump over- they would be able to get close enough board. Two of the crew of the Wash to the stranded vessel to afford any.lngton were washed overboard aud kind of aid. f . ! drowned.' The life saving crews havo Astoria. Ore.. Nov. 13.--^e steamer not sot a line on board the veasaL '