1 ELECT81C PLANT ' COMPLETED. The power with;Which the tfour nal is published this ; week comes from the new power house of the til----. - ' L' 'J-S-- TT-rt . . ; At- - J, DiiiSDoro ana oyiva xiecmc vxm pany on th'i Tuckaseigee river. The work of constructing the dam and installing the machinery ' has been in progress for about a a year. The current was turned on Wtdnes- day. . , - -".V .x . " The towns of Dillsboro and, Sylva are furnished with power a from this plant as are the C. J. Harris Tan nery, the Sylva Lumber and Manu facturing Company and the manu facturing enterprises at Dillsboro. Since the dam on ; Scott's creek gave way during the spring floods last vear. the electric current has;' been generated at , the Tannery at Sylva and the Power Company has done it's utmost to meet the de mands under adverse circumstances. Now the completion of, the dam at Dillsboro removes the difficulties and the power supply wil lbe ample to meet the demands of the two towns and the manufacturing en terprises. SYLVA GETS NEW TRAIN From the following report in the Gazette News it would seem that the Sylva Board of Trade has been successful in it's efforts to secure additional mmmmMmMUMJ and this i mtionffW1 Mutphy division. Says the Gazette News: V S. H. Hardwick passenger traffic manager of the Southern. Railway Company, has just written John W. Neely. president of the AsheviFe Merchant's association; informing men or mine guards or both, aqcord o choHnlp PnnfprPnfP ! inS to the verdict rendered by the which was held in Washington April 25, an additional passenger train be tween this city and Bryson City will be put O.n, beginning .-..Sunday, j Riley, a Colorado and Southern fire July 5, to be Operated daily Until man, said he was on tne engine of a o 4. j' a.,x oq ' freight train which pulled up at the Saturday August 29 Ludlow station in the hottest of the The following schedule Will be IOl- battle. He said two tents already lowed during the time this: train is j were in flames. operated: Leave AshevOle 5:45 p.m. ta to t; arrive Bryson Uty u:cu p. m., leave Brvson Citv 7 a. m. arriving in Ashe- villell a. m. The train will make! Yiiicii a.iii.iuu.iu. m j intermediate stops ana win eonsisi of engine, combined baggage car and coach and two straight coaches. This additional train will be of great service during- the summer 11 moon tfifit npnnlp inuiiuio auu mi . living in Bryson City and along the route of the train can come to Ashe- ville, spend the day and return home the same day. v CHURCH DIRECTORY Methodist' Episcopal Church South Rev. L. B. Abernethy, Ph. D, Pas tor. Preaching 1st and .3rd Sun days at li a. m. and 7:30 p. m. ; Sunday school every, : Sunday morning at. 10 o'clock, Chas. L. Allison, Stipt. " ! . ; v . , V- Baptist Church , . , R3v. R P, Ellington. Pastor. Preaching 2nd and 4th Sundays at 11 a. m. and 7:30 p. m. T v Sunday school every Sunday morn ing at 10 o'clock. T. C.Bryson Supt. . .' : - ,'v . Union Prayer , Meeting every Friday evening at . 7:30. v ' St John's Episopat Services every Sunday morning i V "MISTER,'-" WHICH ;,1S i DEl'DlBE6ii(Hlcb WOMEN AND BABES DOOMED TO DEATH Coroner's Jury on the, Ludlow Honor MILITIAMEN ARE BLAMED in Tent Colony-r-Vain Attempt of Victims to Escape. , The fire that destroyed the Ludlow tent colony on the night of April 20. causing vthe death or thirteen women and children, was started by militia- coroners jury at Trinidad, Colo. D. J. Riley testified that a man in a' militia uniform ptf a torch to a tent in the Ludlow colony at 7:05 said. He said he saw women and chil- dlen teaming on the railroad right, of-way, apparently trying to escape from the colony. When the train drew up at the station, Hiley said, several militiamen put guns to the engineer's head and ordered him to "pujl out, and do it quick." v J. S. Harriman, conductor of the sanip train. tPstifipd that as thP trnin puiied, out of the station and past the tent colony he heard women and chil dren screaming and apparently trying to. escap He said that during this time the militia was firing into the colony. ; . ' ; Worse in Colorado Than in Mexico. ' "Our boys in blue .have gone to Mexico to compel the Mexicans to salute the Stars and Stripes, while out in Colorado they are tearing the fla.g out of our hands and shootmg men for daring to proclaim what it stands for,"- John P. White, president of the United. Mine Workers .of America; declared inan addjtess - at; Scammoii, Kan. . r 1 y y "More men have been ' killed in Colorado in the last f two tweeks than in Mexico," President - White. coh -tinued. ; "As 'to John. :D.--Rockefeller, Jr.i he'has lost interestin the liuihan value ills me, m spice ox uis xicnes, is empty. -He has devoted his g.-eat brain to money making. 'V ,r . First MoVc to Disarm. .: V The first; move-; toward actual dis ariha ment in vthJ son them Colorado strike, zone was1 maSe at Walsenburg, Polo!. When it was amionriceli 4 that Matteson, aistant. arensral manacrt?r of the C-irorado.'I'uet and Jron, voiiipany had agreed to: deiiver to the TTnited State's regulars ;aU, tl.e SYLyA,::; - c;;MAy,8 ; awi4 ., -Rehse m Nlw York World. ATLMA IS MECCA OF ALL SHRINEDOM Caravans Coming by Land aed "Sea 35,000 VISITORiEXPECTED In the ssemblnigof the Shriners - wry of North America, the Georgia City Expects the greatest Conven tion in Her History.; Atlanta is pluming herself for the biggest convention ever within her .gates. Ec;;':n:g :iay 12, the im perial council of the Shrine vdll be held in that city. The festivities will last a week. Thousands of visitors are coming, from all quarters of the North Ameri can continent, from every state in the Union, from Canada, some from Mexico. , The estimate is that 35.000 will attend. Not all of these will be Shriners. The low i-a:iroad rates from every point have attracted mul titudes who know nothing of the "high sign" but who do know a" good travel opportunity when they see it. For over a year tne preparations have been under way for this horde of visitors. Even before the Dallas meeting of the Shriners, in May, 1913, the Atlanta hotels signed con tracts to Taarab temple for over two thirds of their accommodations. The meeting will be the biggest the Shrin ers ever have held anywhere. It will be a week of carnival, of music and dancing and feasting and parading. For seven days Atlanta will be awake constantly. CANTRELL'S SAD PLIGHT. Condemned Man May Lose Eyesight Completely. A Gainesville, Ga., dispatch says: Jim Cantrell, convicted accessory, be-, fore the fact in the Hawkins murder, and recently granted a respite until May 29 by Governor Jhn M. Sla ton, is now thought will lose bis eyesight as a result of the measles having settled in his eyes. Cantrell suffered a severe attack of pneumo nia recently iwhich ws accompanied l?y pleurisy and later hfeaslres devel oped. ' . ' K- ' -Cantrell's physician' -is doing aU possible for the young; man, but lit tle hope is held out" that he will be able to save his eyesight. - , Cahtrell, with his younger broth er,' principal tri the murder casey wiU be hanged atGamesUoh aj29, Tiniess Governor Slatdn;cah' be" pre vailed upon to commute their sen tences to life imprisonment. I Womaii Dies at gt or iwo. " Mrs Mamaar Goldinanr died; at her hom near incolntoGta.; denlv. at the age of 106. She was the oldest woinanin'thtsectioii and wag born" four years"before the war COnMCEElENT AT ? ; CDLLOVHEE N. & I. Like the great drbof rmn that sometimes precedethe snowers, the entertainments giyen by the Column bian and Erosophian laocieties on Friday and Saturday wenings of last week gave warning that; the commencement season ' was near. These two evenings iWerev truly de lightfuL The large audience; gave every toen of their appreciation of the interesting and successful efforts of the young people. ' Medals for excellence in society; work were awarded to Mr. Roy Bird, Mr. B. C Jones, Mr. Raymond Howell. Mr. C C Bennett, Miss ; Bessie Harwood and Miss Bettie Snider. Sunday evening, ReV. R. P. Elling ton, of Sylva. spoke to the Y. MC. A. and the Y. W. C. A. Mr. Elling ton's address was enjoyed greatly, as was evidenced by the apprecia tion expressed. Monday morning Rev. Rodney R. Swope, rector of All Souls' Church, 1 - . .-, ' Bi.tmore, preached the annual ser mon. His discburse was clear, log ical, and very .interesting arid in structive. It was. indeed, a grea pleasure to have Dr. Swope with us. Monday afternoon a number of young ladies a id gentlemen gave delightful readings and recitations. Monday evening vies rs. F. L Wells, C. C. Bennett, W. E. Bird and 3, 0, Wood Rebated the; question. Should 'Adopt' Reciprocal Trade Treaties with F6reign Nations. As flusal these young gentlemen ac quitted themselves well. . ' - Tuesday morning came the grad uating exercises. Mr. B. C. Jones, the class orator, delivered in a force ful manner an excellent original oration entitled "The Unsceptred Man." . Miss Euphremia Collins, valedictorian, captivated the entire audience by her splendid manner of delivery and with the unusual and most excellent character of her valedictory. Following these exercises came the' annual address by Rev. W. . E Abernethy, of Shelby, N. C. Mr. Abernethy is a scholarly man and pleased the audience with his im pressive utterances. At 8:30 P. M. perhaps the largest audience that ever crowded into the school auditorium on a "pay night" assembled to witness the annual concert. The institution has had a success ful year. Very few students have enrolled who came for anything else than business. The work done by many of them is equal to that of higher institutions. The school has also succeeded in completing the splendid new administration building, one of the best owned by. the State in Western North Carolina. The summer school will open June 16 and continue six weeks. , A large attendance is expected.-even at thisfirst session. ; l- The people of this section : of the State are finding out that they have a grand opportunity at Cullowhee. How long vwill it be "before some Jackson CoWty man, or men, Will open hearW pocketbook and do- to the school the funds for a much needed library? How Jong, will it be before the people of the county patriotically raise a fund for the erection of a Jackson County Me- " . ..-... 3 . e ......... .. morial HaU on the school grounds? $1.00 THE YEAR IN ADVANCE i 'jV-K 4k SYLVA LOSES. In a rather poorly played and un- interestingame of ball at OuUo- whee, Tuesday, Svlva lost to" the Cullowhee Normal team by" the (core of 6 to 1. - , . J Norton for Cullowhee f pitched a no-hit game and, at several times when a hit would have turned" the t tide the ylya boys failed to con nect with the ball. Campbell for Cullwhee starred on third and Mor ris of Sylva. distinguished himself by his work at second and his bril liant base-running, he inakingT the only score for Sylva. GREEN'S CREEK. Our Green's Creek correspondent seems to "have eloped without any one knowing a thing about it, so I will take the liberty of rilling the vacancy, h Mr. Hubert Potts ofDaytona, 3Fla., is here for the summer. His many friends are glad to see him back. Miss Maye Deitz and sister. Ber tha, were at home Saturday and Sunday with their parents, return ing to Dillsboro Monday. Rev. R. W Green, Messrs. S.' M, Brooks and Mitchell Sutton attend J ed church Sunday at East Fork. Mr. 0. V. Cagle was notified from Washington Monday of his appoint ment as postmaster for this place. We extend to him our ;hearty con gratulations. P ; 'Farme'rs M.laare inaking looking Very favorMneV ' .fi'Salllt Buchanan andVJlies. Annie Reed were visiting Mrs. Roxie Rogers at Harris Sunday. - Miss Carmie Tatham of Gay spent Saturday and Sunday with Miss Stella Cagle. We are exceedingly glad to hear that Mr. R. H. Hall is able to resume his work. He was in the Hospital at Richmond for a month. Mrs. C. H. Wyman, of Daytona Fia , is expected to arrive in a few days to visit , friends and relatives at this place. Which is winning the greatest favor of the public, "Politics" or the "Tango Dance?" Answer this and 111 come again. "So long" Cap. Jupiter. CITY LOCALS Thos. A. Cox and little daughter of Cullowhee was in the city Thurs day. Prof. Dean of Cullowhee was in the city Thursday, James Sellers of Wilmot was in the city this week. "" Mrs.. Zachary suffered quite a painful accident l&st week When she fell and broke her wrist Mrs.' Zach ary was going down stair at the borne other grand-daughter Mrs,A. A; Nich ols, and thmking shehad not reach ed the landing; : took rpne step to many and fell striking her wrist Dr. Ed. J. Bryson was in town yesterday from Cullowhee. Mts. M. D. Cowan left- Thursday for, Henderson ville where she and Miss Helen Cathey will represent the Womans Missionary Society; of .the Methodist Church at the Missionary Conference atJHendersonville. lirs; Mary Carter Brinson arrived , Wednesdey &om Cullowhee and wiU spend thCsiimmer.in Sylva, 1 4 mm "sit? j ':i;V-i.r v.; if 11 .O'clock, S alsei and Bouse. j v . f :. ;. ; - - - : it- tr.