GROWING S PA P RTH CAROLINA GIARLO H NIGHT EDITION TODAY 4 i V-l GREATER CHARLOTTE'S HOME NEWSPAPER" PAW- 1 r". 1- : Daily, 1888 Sunday 1910. CHARLOTTE, N. C, SATURDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 22, 1913. Price Daily 2c; Sunday 5c THE F A STE ST NEW MEWS UL - U . U A ueita UpUsoT 'hat Purpoit to Be Instructors Issutd Before Election Kccch New York A Zanarkable Set of Orders. Mexican t'nss Displays Stories DecUrmg That U. S. Will Shortly Recognize President gu(tia Latest Develop ments of The Day. Sr Xidr-i Pre?? Nett. York. Nov. 22. The facsimile instructions which purports b? ir.o.-- :?sued by Gen. Huerta in rer"ro" 'be recent jpresiden ' al eleciion in Mexico tas been re ared here. A translation of the doc-' ..,, tnrrp.etics as showing some o the precautions taken by Gen. Kjcnn to keep himself in power as t'twfional rw'dent. 'Tr'p "instructions apply particularly ;n the state Ffouebla and read in part a? follows: -1 if any of the municipal presi dents are m league with any of the rrvolutionary parties they must be removed front office discreetly so that there may be entire co-operation beta-fen the municipal presidents and inp jef5 politicos. j jt i,; especially advisable that ? men appointed to supervise' the l-rllins shall he trustworthy persons nhn will nr.hesitatinalv ohev orders ;iven t" them. "."if there is still time orders are tn lie siven that the booths intended m receive the votes of persons iiv i;;s on ranches hall not be installed :n the towns or villages correspond in; to the ranches but in one of the 'arches to that watchers may not at iffid. then rincipal object aimed at to otjiH elections in. at -least two-third? of the polling booths in "ach district. For this reason . not more than booths are to be m- tailpil in your district. "1 Blank ballots will be used in h" polling booths which may be -ui;'lithed so that the absolute ma ority of vote? cast shall give . the blowing resuit: "President (General Victoriano H'lerta. "Vi'e President General Aurliamo H'anqutt. "" In snite of the fact that article prescribes that the returns be sent ""fi'y tn the chamber of deputies :i -'uervisors mut be instructed to ' 1 ' ' ' over to the jefe politico, v'ili examine them and if He 1 :nat they are in accord with ; - instructions he will return tr. the supervisor with instruc- ';nd them to thee hamber ' ! '.ves. if the jefe politico finds 'i or" than one-third of the poll- v in the district have been v'iH omit the forwarding ;t sufficient number of returns so -h? chamber of deputies shall 'iviu muie man uiie : i -louirdete liberty must be ,'v'(! T 'itizens and political par tn ail booths where votes are to 1C!;m-tTed to be cast so that they '.' ? .annulate protests of any de -H'iptmn so nn? as the protests are -'ainst violation of the law bv par-i-an? or any of . the candidates in n eiectoiD! contest but in no case such protest be allowed to m '.,r!. Wllh rhe order set forth in -!?r of lhesp instructions. I' thp examination by the jefs !P,eals that the returns do .v,nrreKpnnd v'ith these instruc- V:pnlTy make Whatever ar' 'po"SrivCntS Inay l e nece5sary so that nirh .;)n" sba!I orrespon.d entirely 'n sa instructions." l' S' BA'TLESHIP RETURNS, TO VERA CRUZ. uror,. Nov. 22. Rear Adml- -r rabl:-i today that tne ' xp" Hampshire had !ett :'! ret urn tn Vc-n '"niK ction with the pledge rt.'!..,.7','"'l! Asuiilar. the Mexican , V'.': ',' :o;:;!!: commander, that his " '; molest foreign proper find H JUS AskMr. H. M. Parker what he thinks about News Want Ads. : Mr. Parker conducts a grocery store at 1101 th Mint street and needed a new man to soli ' t orders and deliver goods. He knew how to fi;- kim quick 'Used The News Want Ad Way" -Twenty one men applied before seven o'clock test night. - "'' NUF Stacked Cards In V lection G a m e? ly, the movement was regarded as ev idence of the restoration of order be tween Tuxpam and Tampico. The Madero refugees were trans ferred late last night to the scout cruiser Chester from the , battleship Rhode Island and the Chester sailed for Havana. With the full realization that there probably can be no immediate devel opments in a doplimatic sense pend ing a clearing of the Mexican tangle in which the Mexican congress has involved itself, interest is now center ed in the naval situation on the gulf coast. The approach of two British cruis ers was communicated to the state department through the British em bassy without eliciting any expres sions of disapproval and that is taken at another evidence that the United States and Great Britain are acting in perfect harmony as to na val forces to protect foreign inter ests. It is pointed out in naval circles that wiih German and French war ships in the same waters there could be no objection to the presence ot British ships. Unofficial advices from the govern ment agents in the sections ot Mex ico where the constitutionalists are operating suggests a revival of a plan , to seek recognition from the United States for a defacto govern ment claiming jurisdiction by right of possession; the establishment of a capital and of an organized adminis tration in all that part of Mexico north of a line drawn about due west from Tuxpam or Tampico. So far, however, the local constitu tionalists representatives here are unwilling to admit that General Car ranza would ' be satisfied wfth any thing less than a conquest of the whole of Mexico and the elimination of General Huerta. REAL BAD BOYS WERE SCARCE By Associated Press. Pittsburg. Pa., Nov. 22. Jack Rob bins of Chicago, president of the Glen wood National Fellowship Boys' Club, who came here yesterday to inspect bad boys, examined 45 of them and found "there wras not a "real bad boy" in Pittsburg. The campaign of the club is unique and has for its purpose the rounding up of the 12 "worst" boys available; placing them on a western farm; educating them and trying to make them useful citizens. It is said the club has over, half the boys. Out of the 45 "worst7' boys here 21 are working, nine have jobs and 15 go to school. The average wage of the 21 is $7 a week. Two have bank books, one has $100 invested and an other is paying on a mortgage on his father's peanut stand. Five of the lads go to church every Sunday and seven once in a while. FUND FOR SUFFRAGE CAMPAIGN RAISED. By Associated Press. New York, Nov. 22. It is announced from the New York suffrage head quarters that the $20,000 required be fore the campaign for a suffrage vic tory in 1915 could be begun has been raised. A committee known as the Empire State campaign committee has been forme'd with Mrs. Carrie Chapman Cat.t as chairman. In it now are rep resentatives of the New York State Suffrage Association, the woman suf frage party of New York city, the equal franchise society, the collegiate equal suffrage league, the men's league for equal suffrage and the political equality association. Additional members to oe assea win include representatives of the Wo man 's Christian Temperance Union, State Grange, trades and labor unions and the chairmen of the eleven cam paign districts into which the state has been divided to facilitate the work. Conferences lasting from three to six days will be held in each district with a" school for suffrage workers. A speakers' bureau has been organized in this city and special headquarters will be opened. ' . ' . ' ' 'CED. .JAN USE OF ZEPPELINS NOT By Associated Press. Berlin Nov. 22.-The two disasters to Zeppelin airships in September and October are not to result in checking the use of these craft in Germany i11! Is decision apparently reach fw C -!e v,:rnment, the concerns that build airships, and by what mav be called the earial traveling public. The recent fatal accidents in the Aofth Sea when 14 men were killed and at Johannisthal, when 2S persons lost their lives, have not reduced the number of sailings in the vicinity of Berlin of the Hansa, statione d at Pots dam. This airship is still making two trips daily, and only recently it cele brated its three hundrpHth flight at-0 over, the German Airship Navigation ompany, who owns the Hansa and two other airships, is preparing for a much more extended schedule of sail ings. To the company's eight stations, located at Potsdam, Hamburg, Dussel dorf,. Frankfort, Baden-Baden, Gotha, Leipzig and Friedrichshafen, are to be iuuea eignt more at Emden, Bremen, Hanover. Brunswick rireodon e,if' gart, Munich and Copenhagen. It is aiso intended later to establish stations at towns in the more eastern part of the empire, such as Breslau, and probably at Dantsic and Konisberg. From a recent issue of the "aerial time table" it appears that regular air routes and fixed sailings will be main tained. Between Friedrichshafen and Copenhagen the airships will sail eith er via Hamburg and Brunswick, or by way of Brunswick, Potsdam, Leipzig, Gotha and Stuttgart. Another line will connect Dresden and Hamburg by w-ay Potsdam and Brunswick. Vessels trav eling betwen Bremen and Emden will ioiiow the same course as far as Brunswick. Between Dresden and Dus seldorf the route will also be by way of Brunswick. The last named city is thus to be a sort of central station for the whole system. Owins to the laree number of sta tions that eventually will be in op eration, it is expected that the air craft will be able to find readv refuse when surprised bv bad weather. Most of the stations are constructed to ac commodate two ships. The population of Berlin is decreas i -ir. Not only-aje-the-laboring-classes moving out to the country to find work, but the wealthy are forsaking the city for- more pretentious homes in the nearby suburbs. The exodus has been so steady during the past eight months that Berlin today has over 41,000 less inhabitants than it had on March 1. The present year is the only one to show a decrease in population since 1873. For six years past the rate of increase has been comparatively slow, but as recently as 1906 there was a gain of 54,000 in 12 months. Now the tide has turned the other way, and the municipality is alarmed over the departure of 19 millionaires, in the German sense, in the three months ended June 30. The city's tax receipts are correspondingly reduced. The loss this year appears to be not wholly due to the movement of the people into suburban towns, for such prosperous neighbors as Charlotten burg and Schoeneberg also show small losses, and the gains in other adjacent municipalities are not large enougn to account for the removals from the capita!. The demand for labor in Greater Berlin this year has been very slack, and in spite of the emigration to fields where work can be secured, the number of the unemployed is as suming alarming proportions. Even the building trades, which normally em ploy many thousands, report very limited activity.. W. W. Husband, an agent of the Unit ed States department of commerce and labor, has. just returned to Ber lin after an 8,000-mile trip through the interior of Russia, investigating the conditions of Russian emigration to the United States on the spot. The work of Mr. Husband's indi cates the attention paid by the depart ment to questions of this nature. Emi gration of the orthodox Russians, in distinction from the Russian Jews wht have for years made up so large a portion of the stream of human traf fic to the United States, began only recently and the department empower ed Mr. Husband to make this extended trip to discover the conditions which were leading them to seek the United States- whether they were being in duced 'to do so against the provisions of the law on contract labor, and whether they would probably form per manent elements of the American pop ulation It is understood that on the first point a satisfactory answer was received It would appear, however, that these Russians emigrants like many of the Italians, go to the United States only with the intention of re maining long enough to hoard upj little fortune which will enable them to return and live in comfort in their home country. . , Mr Husband was accompanied on his trip bv Samuel Harper, son of the late president of the University of Chicago, as interpreter. He is now starting for the Balkans on a similar trip of investigation, and hopes that conditions have now become sufficient ly settled, after the wars, to enable him to get the information desired by the department. " FOR CHAMPIONSHIP FOK OF LOUISIANA. Baton Rouge, La., Nov. 22. The championship of Louisiana is the stake in the football game here this afternoon between Tnlane and Louis iana State University. The Tnlane snuad. is outweighed by the Tigers. CHECKED ST Ml j '. .v. o . . -iv".- t i . 'i i i t - 'r r v" "i r. . -, -, v--, 4 v -n- THE WEATHER. i'f Forecast for North Carolina: -;i- X Fair tonight and Sunday. Light to moderate variable winds. Final Day Of Labor Meeting By Associated Press. Seattle, Washn., Nov. 22 The final iday of ;e American Federation of Labor Convention opened -.dth the re port of the committee on resolutions requesting a federal investigation of charges that Michigan copper com panies obtained possesison of land il legally. A resolution disposing of the split in the Brotherhood of Elec trical Workers recommended refer ence to the executive council. The election of officers, fixed for 3 o'clock this afternoon, was the en grossing topic. Second Vice Presi dent John Mitchell announced a year ago that he wished to retire from of fice. When he arrived in Seattle to attend the present convention he learned that a combination of conser vatives had been formed to prevent him from naming John P. White, pres ident of the United Mine Workers, s his successor. Mitchell took smart part in the con vention but he campaigned for White so well that on Thursday night it was said he had promise of votes to give him control of the entire administra tion if he wished, including the choice of himself as president to succeed Samuel Gompers. Mitchell" had refused up to today to discuss his position but it was known he was reluctant to display Gompers and that he had been asked to take the presidency at the 1914 convention. In the balloting John H. Walker, a socialist, held the 3,708 votes of the United Mine Workers of America, one fifth of the total vote of the conven tion. The Western Federation of Miners, the Brewery Workers, the Printing Pressmeh and th . Machinists were c unted on to vote as Mitchell dictated. . It was said to be the purpose of the radicals to stampede the convention for Mitchell; who is the only industrial unionist on the present executive board, ,.. , .:..-... : : .... . ,. s . HE FOREST SET EFEATINE DAVIDSON Special to The News. Wake Forest, Nov. 22. With only three days more of practice left before the final clash with Davidson in Char lotte on Thanksgiving Day, the foot ball team is displaying the best form seen this vear. This week's "practice is secret, but those who have been permitted to see the work ot the team this week do not hesitate to predict a victory for the Baptists. The coaches have put the 'varsity through an hour's scrimmage every day this week with the exception of Monday when the work was light.- The line men have been working on the bucking machine each day. . Savage, who for the first time this esaon, is in prime condition, has been devoting a good deal of time every day to kicking and has been averaging good distances on all of his punts. It is expected that he will show better form in this de Thanksgiving than at any other time during the season. Captain Carter, who in the eany part ot cue season was shifted to tackle, is back at his old position at center and it is expected that Powell and Moore will plav the tackles in the big game. Cuthrell and Harris, who have both been out of the last few games on account of injuries, have both report ed and while they have not engageu in any of the scrimmages as yet, are expected to start at the ends against the Presbyterians. Both Bill ings and Daniel have been playing in good form at quarter and while Coach Thompson has made no announcement of his selection, the former will prob ably start. Lee, who made a splendid showing in the Gallaudit game, is ex pected to be Trust's running mate in the backfield. On the whole, the team is believed to be in the best of con dition and able to win Thanksgiving. At the same time the coaches are fully aware of their opponents' strength and realize from past experience that a game is never won from Davidson until the last whistle. . Chief Rooter Pennell has announced that over two hundred students will make the trip . to Charlotte, ..headed by the college band. The team will have their final prac tice Tuesday and will leave Wednes day for Charlotte, going straight through. Manager Goode announces that this year the team will be quar tered at the Selwyn. The special train carrying the rooters will leave here early Thursday morning and will ar rive at Charlotte at 11 o'clock. PRESIDENT'DEPLORES DEATH OF MARBLE. By Associated Press; Washington, Nov.- 23. President Wilson today expressed regret at the sudden death of John H. Marble of the interstate commerce commission and sent flowers and condolences. ON G OF GUN CAUSES A FATAL ACCIDENT Special to The News. Salisbury, Nov. 22. While handling a gun. preparing to go hunting, a young white boy named McKinnon, 13 years old, shot and killed a negro boy about his own age at the home of George Hendrix "In Davie county yesterday. The shooting is said to have been purely accidental. Postmaster S. J. Smith, of Porters, Stanly county, was arrested by Post office Inspectors Hodgin and Lemen, charged with rifling mails. He was caught, according to the inspectors, with marked mail on his person. Bond in the amount of $500 was arranged here, Mr. Smith being "bound over to the April term of Federal court in Sal isbury. Will Iddings, who is held on the charge of impersonating an officer and holding up a Salisbury letter carrier, will be given a hearing next Tues day. - Thursday and Friday have been ta ken up in superior court, and a night session held, in the trial of a case against the Salisbury Ice and Fuel company on the charge of short weight, the main prosecuting wit ness being a competitor in the coal business. It is one of the most inter esting case to be tried at this term. At a meeting of the county com misioners today it was agreed not to pay any more money to the contractors building the court house until they signed an agreement that such pay ment was not to be taken as accept ance of the building.' In view of this action the cases against the commis sioners were continued till next term by Judge Long. A reward of $100 is up for the arrest of the first person to be convicted of turning in false fire alrams. A false alarm was sent in at 3 o'clock this morning. A real estate transaction of some im portance was the transfer of the hand some home of T. J. Jerome on South Fulton street to George W. Wright, the consideration being $10,000. In Rowan superior court Judge Long imposed a sentence of two years on A. W. Hicks who was found gtiilty of false entries while cashier of the Spencer branch of the Wachovia Bank and Trust Company. ; An -appeal was taken and the' tvond was fixed at $5,000, which was given. Many prom inent citizens of Salisbury and Spen cer appeared before Judge Long and testified to the splendid character of Mr. Hicks. He has a wife and six children and since coming to Spencer some years ago has been one of the leading citizens of that place. Buret Haynes was found not guilty of the charge of manslaughter. While driving an automobile some months ago through China Grove young Haynes ran into and killed Albert Kimball who was riding a bicycle. Buck Trollinger, who appealed from a heavy fine in the county court, the charge being an affray at the South ern hotel, in which he all but killed another young white man named Woodrum was found not guilty. The grand jury in its report to Judge Long takes a fling at Rowan's new court house which is nearing comple tion in these words: "We desire to express our disgust at what should have been a grand and noble structure, to see its beauty disfigured and marr ed by inferior material and had posi tion. We had hoped if the court house had to be built it would have done credit to and been an advertisement for Rowan county granite." Judge Long referred this report to the com missioners with special instructions to guard the county's interests in the matter. Col. H. B. Smith, president of the Salisbury Culvert Company, has re turned from Indianapolis to which place he was called during the recent serious street car trouble. Col. Smith holds a commission in the state mi litia of Indiana under appointment of Vice President Marshall when he was governor of that state. Jones Charged With Flashing Checks By Associated .Press. Raleigh, Nov. 22. Addison P. Jones, a young man claiming Baltimore as his home, , is under arrest in this city charged with flashing checks and is also wanted for the same offense in Columbia, S. C, Washington, N. C, Philadelphia, Baltimore and several other cities. Jones took the name of "E. B. Evans of Chicago," during operations in this city and another of his aliases is A. J. Montague. In a confession he said he was employed, by A. Shaffer of Phila delphia to check up banks in the south for northern bonding houses. He said he turned over all his money to the Philadelphia man. . WW WWW "WWWf -"! WWWWWWWWWWW WW O'- w w THE DAY IN CONGRESS. w W ' " 4,ai. juui..juuuu..v. 'z-'t''z'z?zi'zl'ii'zl'i i'sis WW WWWWWWWWWW WWWW li-WWWWW'A '1 By Associated Press. Washington, Nov. 22. Senate. Met at noon. Administration currency bill form ally reported with divergent views of the banking committee. Elections committee recommended passage of temporary law for direct elections of Senators. , House. Me tat noon. Representative Johnson of Washing ton made a conservation speech. - Final Legislative Battle For President s Cur j en c y Bill PRINCEKAIK LAST OF THE By Associated Press. New York, Nov. 22. The death of Prince Keiki Tokugawa, announced in a brief cablegram from Tokio today, severs a connecting link betkeen the old and new Japan. None of the con temporaries of the pre-meijiera of the days of the Shogunate enjoyed such distinction as hedged about Prince Keiki, "the last of the Sh i In these latter days of the era of eimgntenment in Japan it is doubtful if the average foreign visitor or even resident was aware of the 1 unobtru sive existence of a man who barely 50 years ago was the de facto ruler of Japan. In contrast with the unassailable dignity with which he sat as the lord of lords in the feudal days when it was a capital crime for ordinary folk to look the Shoguns in the face and when he could scarcely stir a step without the observance of a high bound code of solemn ceremonial the Shogun in his modern role of prince adopted such democratic sim plicity that he rode about the streets of Tokio almost unnoticed on a bi cycle. As Shogun, or the hereditary com mander in chief of the army, he wore the odd dress of the Samurai with wing-like projections over the shoul ders and two swords, one long and the other short. Amid twentieth century surroundings, living as a somewhat retiring old man, he discarded all the pomp and even on state occasions ap peared in an ordinary frock coat. He held his exalted office as Shot gun for nearly ten months in the year 1867-8: During the Ghogunate preceding him Japan had enjoyed an unbroken interval of peace and tran quility for nearly three centuries Ef forts made by Emperor Mutsuhito to re-establish the imperial authority led to such internecine strife ' that it threatened to exhaust the nation's resources and Keiki voluntarily ' ab dicated and restored the powers of government to the imperial throne. CLAIM AGENT 1UST EXPLA By Associated Press. Chicago, Nov. 22. R. J. Chester, of Mobile, Ala,, claim agent for the. Mo bile and Ohio railroad, yesterday was ordered "to be in Chicago Monday to explain to Federal Judge K .M.. Lan disfhow lje induced Mrs. Mary Panek, a widow, to accept $750 for the death of her son Edward, a United States sol dier. Panek, with others, lost his life in a wreck near Buckatumna, Miss.,- Oct. 16. Mrs. Panek sued the railroad for $10,000 and when the suit was called Mrs. Panek. notified the court she had settled with the claim agent. "I got $750," she said. "At first the agent offered $400 and gradually rais ed until I thought that if I didn t take $750 1 would not get that." "Seven hundred and fifty dollars for a United States soldier" ruminated Judge Landis. "I would like to know how the claim- agent petsuaded this woman to accept $750 for the life of her son. Chester must be hefe Mon day."" Attorney Jeffrey said in defense of the settlement that the mother had told him the son never had been any support to her and that when the road offered $750 she was glad to accept it in lieu of a long course of litigation. THE MARY CURZON HOTEL FOR WOMEN OPEN. By Associated Press. - - London, Nov. 22. Queen Mother Alexandra and her daughter, the Princess Victoria, formally opened to day the "Mary Curzon Hotel for Wo men"', erected at. King's Cross in the north of London. The building is a memorial to the American vicerine of India, the 2ate Lady Curzon of Kedles ton, who before her marriage was Mary Victoria Leiter of Chicago. The Queen Mother and Princess were received at the hotel by the Duchecs of Marlborough, who was Consuelo Vanderbilt of New York and by Lord Curzon of Kedleston. The function was a private one. NO STRIKE AT SCHENECTADY. By Associated Press. Schenectady, N. Y., Nov. 22. Re ports that the 12,000 union men and women in the General Electric Works would walk out at 9 o'clock this morn ing: unless two discharged leaders were reinstated proved untrue. Representatives of the unions were in conference with James A. Smith, general superintendent, during the morning, and there was hope that an amicable agreement would be reached. SHUNS, DEAD Reports From The Divided Banking Committees Are Submitted to 7 he Senate To day How Reports Differ. Chairman Owen Announced He Would Open Debet Monday -DiQe rtnees In Committee Are Reviewed "in Report By Associated Press. " Washington, Nov. 22. The final leg islative battle for President Wilson's currency bill began in the senate today with the presentation of reports from the divided banking committee. Sub mitting a report for the administration democrats Chairman Owen gave notice he would open debate Monday. This bill follows closely the line of the house measure and contains only such amendments as President Wilson was willing, to accept. Senator Hitchcock, democrat, and the five republicans submitted a draft materially changing the bill and propos ing four reserve banks owned by the public and controlled by the govern ment. Both sections of .the committee agreed on concentration of reserve's, their volume and mobilization, the vol ume of the capital of the propose c banks, promotion of an open discount market, provision for elastic currency, the issuance of federal reserve notes! that the federal' notes should be obli gations of the United States, that the system should be a regional federal re serve bank system instead of a central bank; and upon the control of the system itself by the government. The report of the ' admtnistratioc democrats reviewing the difference it the committee concludes: "These differences arise in the main because of two schools of thought, one part "of the committee believing in t central bank administered by a centra board and the other part of the com mittee propo'sing to establish a numbei of comparatively independent district banks administered by boards of direc tors chosen from the several districts. '; 'The report submitted by Senatoj Hitchcock declared many amendments it recommended had been endorsee in the entire committee before the ad ministration and" anti-administratior forces separated and added that its signers were generally in favor of government owned central bank. "Waiving a strong preference which prevailed in committee in favor of c single government bank with branch es," said the report, "we accepted the regional bank plan as the only hope ful outlook for action by this congress but retained the amendment substi- tuting four regional banks for twelve. While the single government bank plan would produce the only perfect mobilization of reserves, as has been demonstrated by the experience of oth. er countries, the adoption of four regional banks under a single control will, it is thought, approximate this re suit and, in a country so large as ours, with so many banks, probably prove efficient." Senator Hitchcock will speak fol lowing Senator Owen. The presentation of the divided re port today placed before the senate without amendment the bill as it pass ed the house. The amendments re com mended by the two wings of the com mittee will be taken up in the debate, DR. McCLURE AT 10th. AVENUE PRESBYTERI AN CHURCH MONDAY A great treat is in store for those who avail themselves of the opportun ity to attend the union meeting of the opportunity to attend the u young people's societies to be held al Tenth Avenue Presbyterian church or Monday evening at 8 o'clock. Dr. A D. McClure of Wilmington will be tb speaker of the occasion and it woulc be difficult to secure a more appropri ate one, he being president of the Christian Endeavor Societies of Nortt Carolina and not only greatly interest ed in young people's societies, bu having a wonderful power over young people. In addition to the address. Dr. McClure has consented to sing s few selections. He not only is a lover of nusic but has a wonderfu' voice himself. The meeting was orig inated for the young people's societies and all are given a most cordial wel come to attend, regardless of denom ination. I ' ZEPPERLIN WAR AIRSHIP ON FIRST TRIF Friedrjchshafen, Germany, Nov. 22. The latest of the Zepperlin war air ships, the Zepperlin VI., ascended from Lake Constance today and started on its first trip, a 250 mile flight to Gotha. The big dirigible is intended for ser vice in the German army. Work is being pushed on the new naval eZpperlin which is to replace the one destroyed in the catastrophe at Johannisthal on October -17 when 28 officers and men were killed. The airship under construction embodies improvements designed to prevent a similar disaster. .