X A bra? mark tii (mii taat the i- acriber to this cofy of The New wibe hind oa subscrlt'on Please make if f,v' tnent as oonaa cow Tenient. AfOUtfl AIRY, NORTH CAROLINA, THURSDAYS DECEMBER 18, 1013. JVO. or. Whit , I, , V V AWFtfL story op BLOODSHED. Conditions in Mexico u Depicted By An American Missionary. Rev. J. O. Dale, Missionary of the Associate Reformed Church in Mexico, in Associate Re formed Presbyterian. The Atila of Mexico, Zapata, has headed a revolution in the southwest of the . republic for three vears. From hit secret mountain fastnesses his horde have swooped down on the rich farms and defenceless ranches, looting and ruHbing anil killing ami burning. The times are al most iast counting when he has liurned bridges on the railroad or opened the track, wrecking trains, robbintg passengers ami butchering the soldiers who were going as military escort. Towns by the hundreds hajve gone np in smoke, It has been an almost incmtble story of wholesale bloodshed. Almost daily its re citals of horrors have filled col umna of the press. The government has paid them pack! in their own coin. Months ago an order went from Mexico City directing the inhabitant of the State of Morelos, the hot bed of "Zapatismo,"who did not sympathize with, the bloody ban dit to gather in certain cities in dicated. T:.en the Federal eol diers went through the Staite kill ing all men, women and children outside of the cities named and burning the homes. All such persons were thus understood to be followers of Zapata and this was the dreadful punislunent met ed out to them. The press strictly censured all these months, had! nothing to say of the nor rors of this measure of blood. Only that it was executed. The imagination paints scenes that - k c - o&et - wk e- - night.- Z.p ata, however, i&iGl lives and with machete (dirk), rifle and torch continues his deadly work. A thousand Indians of the Huasteca Potosina rose in arms against the Huerta government burning San Miguel, Tantizaniche and Tam giamolon, leaving, according to report, only the Catlnolic church standing in the last named town. The Federal soldiers in vaded the distrio tfrom which the wiklmen came ami left mountain ranches blazing for miles and any one coming from that general sec tion of country without a docu ment is shot without any further investigation. A Federal garrison killed sev eral rebels in a fight in Guer rero, S. L. P. The victims were dragged through the streets of the town as an image lemm for all those who should, like the, no tflflnit to governmental au thority. And the rebels lost i opportunity to "get even." Ten days ago a rebel band attacked Aliuiuiiies, of our field. Twice they were repulsed. At last tliey found on the outskirts of the town a lot of Indian rum, under the inspiration of which t!uy rushed pell inell into the town who ping vengeance. The Federal force gave way, but there was iw cscajie. Their pow dir was all gone and they wen' at the mercy of their relentless foes. Mounted on their ponies thi.y rode through the streets at breakneck1 speed ami throwing their 'ussoes over the heads of the Ffderal infantry, dragged them over the rough cobble stones, turning suddenly around telegraph poles to further mangle the lifeless bodies. Other (meth ods of torture equally infernal Avere put into operation. A friend who saw it all testified that the scene haunted him like a very nightmare for night and nights. When the rebel lender, Fran cisco, Villa, t'ok the city of Tor reon a month ago, he had cut off the head of flencral Alvirez, the defending general, and hung it on to get'com for the begs. The the pi fli lie. square, precisely as h;,d willingly went on the errand, they did with Hidalgo more than Jn.it realizing that he was ruh a hundred yenrs apo. Up and 'ing to hi death. A minute or dwn the railroad lines nuiv b : " ,....... ."i IOIMI Illll IHHIII'V III il'l III lirinl r'IllMW hangiitg to telegraph j.leS. where tl icv remain nnl tiniteiy. Along the raihvav rut anvone travel ing on foot aiwl not able to givw a satisfactory amount of hinis- If, is sununarily shot then and there. Every few day military trains are blown up. And there are many mere, nobody doubts, of which the press has nothing to aay. . It would1 grow common wen it not to appalling. Sometimes a "crazy engine" (as they call them) is turned loose, throttle wide open, to go down the track to derail or srrnash to pieces an other train, known to be just ahead. The more usual way, how ever, is with dynamite. The lat est example will suffice. A mil itary escort of 125 soldiers were aboard a train just ahead of a passenger train. The trap was set. Dynamite was laid ami the rebels hid in the bushes near by. The train whirled along at the rate of 40 miles an hour. When it struck, the dynamite, according to reports, the engine, coaches and soldiers were thrown high into the air to come down, the engine and coaches torn into thousands of pieces and men pil ed up on the wreck, dead or wounded or dying. The conceal ed rebels at once poured into this mass of dead and dying men a rain of shot which soon finished their demonical work and the life less garrison of soldiers were left there- on the mass of debris. Verily, the ways of our revolu tion are those of fire and blood.' The heart gest sick at times and will cry out, "Oh, Lord, how long?" Richest Mexican Flees Paso. to El El raso, Tex., Dec. 15. After a horseback journey across the Mexican desert of two weeks' duration, lacking a day, Don Luis Terrazas, richest man in all Mexico, is quartered in, the most sumptuous suite of rooms in the best hotel in El Paso. Though more than eighty years old, the grey4earded, white haired! old don! who was old enough to La a general and fight against MTXsrnilian in the 60 s, today dismissed queries regard ing his trip across the Mexican Jorando del Muerto the journey of death! with a shrug of the shoulders and a wave of tin hand, as if the mere riding of thirteen days on mule back over desert audi mountain were nothing. General Terrazas declined to discuss the imprisonment of his son, Luis Terrazas, Jr., by Gen eral Villa, at Chihuahua, and re fused absolutely to discuss Mex ican affairs under the circum stances. However, it is known that meinlxers of his party are conferring here with representa tives of Villa, who is demanding $350,000 for the release of young Terrazas. The general was said not to be so much disturbed over paying the ransom as over the problom of getting the women members of his family to the border. They were left behind in charge of young Terrazas when the general departed for the bonier with the fdeeral soldiers. The conference between members of his party ami representatives of Villa, it is understood, is to ascertain what sum Villa is willing to ao cejtf for the release of his soul ami the women. The revolution alreadv has cixst General Terrazas 10,000,0(K), yet he is conMilered the r idlest man in Mexico. Killed by Trap Set for Thief. Big Laurel, Va., Dec. 3. The nine-year-old son of Nathan Dell, a farmer, of near Phillips, Wise county, was instantly killed yes terday afternoon by a trap set by his father intended for a thief who had been robbing his com crib. Early in the mornint? Mr. Dell set the trap in his corn house, using a shot gun, the trigger be irlr connected with the door. The son not aware of the trap being set, late in the afternoon was sent 1' bus fit ier to the crib so after the boy departed, Mr. fl .!! w.. I... I. A I . . . 1 I i ' ii i.-ui.-u nun. ne iiii.i inn i.u.i the child of the trap. He start- cd flp the barn, ealhr.ir to his! son not to touch the dor. He was too late, however, and wl-n the fatiwr readied the lad he found him dead, his head being almost completely blown away from hw Vly. Mr. Dell is grief atricLcn. Efforst to Create a Panic WQl Fail. Washington, Dec. 11. "The efforts of a little coterie- of mon eyed men who control big finan ces in this eountry to bring about panicky conditions in the rail road manufacturing and commer cial world because of the pas sage of the new tariff law, the proposed currency ami trust leg islation is going to prove a fail ure," said fsenator F. M. Sim mons, chairman of the Senate Finance Committee today. "The reports for the first month after the new tariff went into effect justifies the claims of the Presi dent and the Democratic leaders in the Congress durinjg the con sideration of the tariff bill. There has not been any great flood of foreign made goods to the United States, but in the course of time we will get enough of for eign goods to keep the domestic manufacturer from raising the prices on us. "I have realized that certain men who control millions of dol lars were trying to bring about conditions that would brighten the President and Congress but they will fail. The Democratic platform pledges as to the tariff have Wen carried out, and those on currnecy and monopolies will be carried out. You cannot put your hand on the men who are calling in 'their money, dropping off their laborers, but you can see signs of their efforts. The 'nigger' is showing in the wood pile. "A Wg concern like the Mor gans of New York dominate vroukl not mind losing $40,000,000 or $00,000,000 m a financial cnish if it era'd blocW certain legis lation. "' , The truth is" ibo great rich mei of affairs have had control so long that they cannot now real! "e that Ih ynas t&ih Hth Whit- House and at the Capitol as o'.h-'r people d They still believe that hey will dominate. " Senator Simmons made the foregoing1 comment upon receiv Secretary Redfield 'a report show ing that America's foreign trade is still growing. The Redfield report slwnvs "a falling1 off of imports in the first four months July, August, .September and Oeteler of this fiscal year of nearly $46,000,000 as comparts! with the same period of 1912." "The flooding of our markets, therefore," says Mr. Redfield, "with the alleged cheap wares of Europe has not happened." Investigators Put Blame on the Hen. Wash in got n, Dec. 11. After sweral weeks of investigation over the entire United States, of ficials of the Department of Jus tice have concluded that there is little ground for belief that a Nationwide cold storage trust exists. Every United States at torney in the country was pressed into service for a quick survey of the cold storage field and their rejKrts t Washington indicate that while coui'biiwi have been formed in a few largo cities, there is no conclusive evidence of a cold storage trust controlling the price of eggs and other products in all parts of the country. Sufficient evidence has been fortlicuming, however, to show that in some of the cities such combinations do exist, and the department already has turned its attention to a more careful scrutiny of the operations of cold stin-Jte men th re. Its next step will be to trace the lins of interstate-combination between the dealers hi these large cities, for without connection between thenijare kiu wn as "culls." This wmj acrews State lines the ShennnniU Hold at 15" cents a cord on th act would not be available. j stump. The trees are selected The Nationwide inquiry has, by the rangers and are clearly tended to put the Department branded with a big " U. S." driv of Justice on the side of the De-'en deep into the wood, partmeii t.J" Agriculture, pi. icing! After the wood is corded the much of the hh.ine for high srr rangers must also brai d every and poultry prices, nt on cold ' t icki and a removal of the wo.d storage men but 'ii the hen.; without this brand subjects the eeonii :r to reports nw at 1 1 1 A 1 m naim, eoia .siorage men nave sul- fered from a mark.1 lat-.k of eggs ' and (,tlier nr.wlnet I'n;t..lit,. ..n ..-;i...t States attorneys have reported in! nriny instaiu'e.s that old storage dealers have stocks on hard far under tdoeka in previous years and that they nee little prwpeet of r.lief unlc.s the hens get busy at ouoo. CORN CLUB WINNER TO WASHINGTON? Raised One Eimdred and Ninety Bushels Marion Broown and E. C, Moorman Won District . Prizes. Three sturdy young North Car olina farmers are today on their way to "Y.'ashington, D. C, to sIend a week visiting the many places of interest in . the Nation al Capital as guests of the State Department of Agriculture and Congressman Small and Godwin as a result of winning prizes in the State Boys Oorn Club con test this year. J. Ray Cameron, age 17, of Kinston, Route 1, got first prize for the biggest yield per acre offered by the Depart incnt of Agriculture. Marvin Brown, age 14, of Washington, Route 1, wbn the district prize offered by Congressman J. II Small; and E. C. Morgan, age 16, of Marietta, Roberson county, got the district prize offered by Congressman II. L. Godwin. Young1 Mr. Cameron, who won the first prize in the State this year, raised 190 2-5 bushels of corn on; his acre at a cost of 32 cents per bushel. lie also won $50 offered by the Hastings Seed Company, of Atlanta, Ga. Mar vin Brown, the youngest and smallest of the champion corn growers, goes to Washington bv the aid of Congressman Small's offer. His raise was 101 bushels to the acre at a cost of 25 cU. and waa the best record in his district. E. M. Morgan raised his crop at a cost of only 13Va cents per bushel, very much low er -than any of the other two. HI yield vaa 6 -buhelat-.- The prize-winners will stay In Washington seven days and will visit President Wilson, Secretary Houston, of the Department of Agriculture; Secretary Josephua Daniels, oNrth Carolina Senators and Congressmen, and also visit the places of interest there. All their expenses will be paid while in the National Capital. Messrs. Cameron and Brown left Raleigh last night for Wash ington aixl were accompanied by Mr. A. K. Robertson, assistant in Boys' Com Club work of the State Department of Agriculture. Mr. Morgan took' the trio from Wilson and will join the party ujHin arrival today in Washing ton. The Government's Forest Reserve in Our Mountains. Salisbury Dispatch to Charlotte Okserver. Burning eordwood bearing the "U. S." government brand ' an unusual experience with many in North Carolina. The wihhI comes from the United States reserva tions in McDowell and other counties in the mountains of wes tern North Carolina, where 32,- 000 acres are under government control. This is the first season that wood has been sold ,by the govern meut and more than 4,000 cords have been dwiHi'sed of at 25 eta. a cord. Three government repre sentatives, known as rangers, under the leadership of Jim Ycaing, stationed at Old Fort, earn, for the reservation and see that Uncle Sam's rights are re spited. The citizens of the sec tion are allowed to hunt and fish on the lands, but miwt not cut timber, except under the di rection of the rangers. Only; such tree.s are allowed to be used for wood as are undesirable and' dealer to prosecut son in the I ed-1 w . 1 eral courts. It ls regarded as nothing than "blkading" the proper brand rannem f the section are al lowed grazing privileges at 75 cents a heal for the nea.s.in. They may al. cultivate the. land bv payutr $1 a year Uncle Sam. the acre to. State Hospital's Record for the Year. Statcville, Dec. 11 R. R. Claris of Statesville, who is a member, of tho Board of Direc tors of the State Hospital at Morganton and secretary to the board, attended the meeting uf the Executive Committee at the hospital Tuesday and the regular meeting of the board there" Wed nesday. With two exception there was a full attendance of the directors. A. I). Tate of High Point was present at the mee.tii' of the Executive (1om mrtfee, but had to leave for Wash ington before the regular board meeting. Dr. L. N. Glenn of Gxstonia, recently appointed as a member of the -board to succeed Mr. J. W. Noell of Roxsborp, was the only absentee. Charles P. Matheson of Taylors ville, recently appointed to suc ceed J. G. Hall of Lenoir, deceas ed, took the oath of office. ' ine leauire oi tne -meeting was the report of Supt. John McCam-j Thursday. "This is my grave. I pbell for the year ending Nov-jam not goin to commit suicide, ember 30. The report shows' I am going to wait here for the that the ninmber of patieuts in lend and I shall fight whneeever the hospital at the beginning of; I have to. I could have killed the year was 1,330, of which 763, more men than I have. Time and were women ami 5b7 men. Dur - ing the year there have been admitted t the institution 91 men and 97 women, a total of 188; total under treatment, 1,518; discharged an recovered, 27 men ard 2o women; discharged as improved, 17 men and 16 womrtn; one man was discharged not im proved and two men were dis charged as not insane, while an other was transferred fo Ral eigh. During the year 64 pati ents died 31 men and 33 women making a total removal of 153, 79 men and 74 women. Re maknirtig November 30, 1913, 579 men and 786 women, a total of 1,35. , , . , " The death 'rate for .'the- year waa very small comma red -with similar institutions and the re covery rate, which is 27.6 per cent, based on the number of ad minsions, is a very favorable show ing. The general health of the patients is good and ik serious accident has occurred during the year. The great demand for admis sion of patients to the hospital is unabated, it having been neces sary to deny the a Imission of 162 applicants during- the year on account of a lack: of room. The Legislature appropriated $50,000 last Winter for an additional building and ground has been broken for the receiving building for women but there is delay in the work because the money ap propriated is not available. The building will hardly be ready for oceujpancy before next Summer. The vacancies in the hospital caused by dith or dweharge do not begin to keep pace with the implications for admission and the tnanagnnent of the hospital and the directors must constantly hear dwt resting appeals which they are powerless to heed be cause of the lack of room. 15 Maine Hunters Dead; 10,000 Deer, 200 Moose. Bangor, Maine, Dec. 15. To date 15 persons have lost their lives in the Maine hunting season closed December 15 five by the accidental discharge of their own weaon.s, four h trough being mis taken for deer, three dy dragging guns imtzzle first, two by acciden tal shooting by others and one by drowning. Tliree of the hunters who k'ill- d men in mistake for deer are under bonds for appearance at court. The maximiun penalty in ease th? victim dies is 10 years' Mnprisonment, the minimum $10tK) fine. The law is seldom enforced, howeer, and the extreme penal ty has never been imimsed. Receipts of game at Bangor for the season, are about 2100 deer, 50 moose ami 16 bears. On this basis it is estimatid that there have been killed in the entire State about 10.000 d -er and 200 moose. No accurate record is kept of bears. October, the first month of the season, was rainy and little hunting was done. Then has been very little snow in Maine thus far, and the track ing of game has been difficult. The moose kilbsl were mostly young bulLs. and good bemads have been few. The buck deer have been larger and fatter tlun usual, LOPEZ NOT FOUND. Slayejr of Six Mean, and Majte Mare still in the Tunnel or Elsewhere at Large. Bingham, Utah, Dec. 13. The search for Raiph Lopez, slayer of six men, was resumed, by sher iffs tonight in the workings of the Utah-Apex mine. The offi cers had suspended operations all day today on objection of the mine owners that the process of searching a section and then bulkheading it is beginning to halt mining operations. After. a conferenec. however, the company withdrew its objection. Sam Rogers told early today of having talked with Lopez twice in one of the tunnels of of the mine during the last two days, and of the d"perado re marking they would meet again today. "I know they have me corner ed in this mine," Lopez w ouot- ed b Koerera no toltintr him i again I have followed twmhou in here and heard their plans for kiliirg me. Nobody would know I was in here if it had not been for Julio Corrello and Mkke Sle fano, who I thought were my friends. If I could kill them both I would die happy." The Crime of Arson. Arson is a crime, and the person who commits it should be punished just the same as the horse thief and the murderer. The man who fires a building, either his own or his neighbor's does ao withau tany guarantee that he (will not cause loss of dife tither-riil' oioieerio! ;trithr UW fire an the buildimg he aims to burn, or in en adjoining building. The crime of arson w a difficult one to fasten on a person, no matter how guilty he may be, for the ev idence must be largely cir cumstantial, because no one in his right mdnd pets fire to pro perly in the presence of witness es. I tus fact proves a stumblinsr bbxlk in the way of bringing1 in cendiaries to justice.' There- is a stnmg sentinvent against the murxlerer, the horse thief and the violator of the prohibitory law, but the "fire-bug-" is hawk ed upon s a myth in many firanters ami is regarded too of ten as a subterfuge manufactured by the insurance cxmipany to kd-ed from baviryg to pay the in surance policy. Ami the incen diary, instead of gotting his just dues, gets sympathy m his bat Mi with the company or with the State authority who investigates the fire. Tlie jierson who commits arson has many Advantages. He usual ly operates in his own honv or place of business and can choose his own time and for seit- ting the fire. He can also pre pare an vlili in advance and can prave that he was nowhere near when the fire was discuvered. If the fire is successful, from the Ioinit of vitw of the property owner, the evidence burns up and there w nothing left but suspic ious circumstances. Greatly Reduced Fares for the Xm&s and New Tear Holidays. For the Christmas anil New Year Holidays the Southern llaii way will sell round trip tickets .at greatly reduced fares. Dates of sale December 17th lo 25th, December 31st, 1913 and Jan nary 1st, 1914, with filial re turn limit Jantiary 6th, 1914. For further and detailed hi formatkm aqly to any Southern Iiailwuy Ticiket Agent, or, R. II. DeButts, I). P. A., Charlotte, N. C. 1 Bed Bugs and Disease. Seienits lire b'ginning to g"ive the ix-dlmg tlie attenlhwi which his bad character has long merited. They find b'uu as ili reputable, ail, j rhaps, more dairerous 4han the fly, mosjutto, flea or louse. At leaat tic in fectious dseas", including ty phoid, are already known to be tniiismittt-d by the bed fug, hjuI as the invent igation of his tKibits contiuurs nuiiilcr will daoLt- lcsa grow. o