VOL. IV. TROY, N. C, TTOTRSBAY, NqVEMBER 19,1908. NO. 35. f0RTH STATE HAPPENINGS OccurrtAces of Interest Gleamed From All Secticoa of the Busy i ' - ftr Heel Slate Thirty Yean for, Jap. , Newton, Special. Henry Yamo kuchi, the Japanese showman who killed his fellow showman' and countryman in Newton October 11th, was found guilty in Catawba Su perior Court of murder in the second degree, and was sentenced by Judge Murphy to thirty years in the peni tentiary at hard labor. Sympathy was very strong for the accused man throughout the trial on account of the general belief that the quarrel over the cruel treatment of the two little Japanese girls by Kikuchi, the man who was killed. The bearing of the little Jap on the witness stand ftl.n tiMrAi$ iim TTa AA tint nlA.d - self-defense or endeavor to explain how ' he come to shoot the man in the back, only claiming that, he was so much excited that he could not remember how the killing occurred. He was ably defended by ' W. C. Feimster, of Newton, and W. A. Self, 1 of Hickory. v- Lonnie Rader, who killed Miss Ballinger in the Startown Baptist church in September, was declared insane by a jury and sentenced to the department of criminal insane in the State penitentiary. f The Governor's Thanksgiving Procla mation. . Raleigh, Special Governor Glenn's Thanksgiving proclamation was is sued last week as follows: "We have much for which to be thankful; no pestilences or famine 'or other dire evil, -save rains and floods in cen.al53istricts, have visit ed our people; but with this one ex ception our (crops have been abund ant, bringing fair prices; and in spite of a panic producing distress in , other states North Carolina to a great extent has been entirely free from want, employment paying profit able wages, 'Not a single instance of ' mob violence has occurred during the year, but all have acquiesced in and obeyed the law. Tremendous progress has been made along alt lines of in dustry and thrift. The State is out of debt and prosperous and aggressive in business activity. Educatninally we have -mode greater advancement than ever before and are spending in ' the education of our youth as large a per eent., ccording to the value of onr property as any State in the Union." A Sood Showing. Ralcigh Soecial. B. C. Beckwith, of the Stat board of internal im provements, the duty of which is to . inspect and report upon the various v State-aided institutions, railways, etc., says that everything is progress ing without trouble at these and that there arc no complaints as to manage ment. Most have been inspected and all will be by the end of the year. The number "f pupils at the State school for tlu- white blind and the school- for cr loioil blind and deaf " mutes reached .""0. 25 more than ever ' before. Nexf Thursday the contract will be let for .the. 5,00ft -library building at the school for the white blind. It wiJ face to the south and 'Wjll bebafween the main building and the auditorium. Four Convicts taxSoned. Raleigh, Speeial. Governor Glena pardons conditionally four convicts as follows: Edward Horton,v larceny, Durham county, nine years, the Gov ernor not believing him guilty and having no confidence in the prosecu tor; John Atkins, larceny, Stanly, one year, on account of his age and good behaviour in prison; William Davis, Beanfort, larceny, one 'year, he having been seriously and perman ently injured on the chaingang; Wil liam Wilcox, secret assault, Mitchell, four years, because if guilty he had great provocation, the prosecutor having wronged "him fearfully, caus ing him and bis wife to separate. The Governor refuses pardon in six eases: William Lav. larceny, Cataw ba; J. C. Black, Jr., forgery, Colum bus; Charles Horey, larceny. Bun combe; Ernest Murray, assault, Dup lin; Horace Welton, highway robbery, Buncombe ; William ' Zeigler, gamb ling, Mecklenburg. ' - Thanksgiving Day Orphans' Day The good people of North Caro lina have chosen Thanksgiving Day as a time for special offerings to the orphans' home of our State. We have abundant cause for grati tude to God. Can we in a better way express our thanks to Him than by heartily joining in to care , for and train aright homeless, orphan jf child ren 1 When, impelled by a spirit of grat itude, we do for thoso little ones. does the great Father of the father less not accept. it -as-done for Him? At present the demands upon and needs of the orphans' homes of North Carolina are unusually large. . The Thansgiving offering will be a great factor in enabling these institutions to continue their beneficent work. The cause appeals to our sympa thies, to our reason, to our sense of justice. We hope even a larger number of our people will unite this time in the interest of this work and that the gifts will be, in , all respects greater than any of the-offerings of former years. We bebeve the in terest of our people in this cause is deepening and we look for "even more liberal support to our orphanages v , Apology Met With Bullet. Asheville, Special. James Moody, son of ex-Congressman Moody, shot and probably fatally wounded Dave IB. Vaughn, a traveling salesman, at v aynesviiie early Thursday evening. The affair occurred on the main s-eet just at dusk. The difficulty leading up to the shooting js not definitely known, but is is stated by eye witnesses that Vaughn stopped Moody on the street for the purpose of apo logizing for an alleged insult that Moody called Vaughn a d -d rascal and immediately shot him, and then made his escape before he could be apprehended. The bullet penetrated the abdomen. Bystanders picked up the wounded man and medical aid was given him. Later several physi cians-were catted-to the wounded man from Asheville. THE CUBAN ELECTION CHINA IS AFFLICTED Somes, liberal .Candidate, Elected President By Large Majority. ' Havana, By Cable At the close of in election which was conducted with great enthusiasm and complete ab sence of disorder,' it appears practic ally certain that General Jose Mig- Qel Gomez and Alfredo Zayas have been chosen President and Vice Pres ident respectively of the new Cuban republic, with strong 'liberal ma jorities in the Senate and House. hroughout the island, according to the reports, an extraordinary heavy vote was cast, vastly in excess of that cast in the August election where 182,000 failed to vote in. a total registration ' of 450,000. This was especially so in Havana City, where the vote pobably will reach 56 per cent of the registration against 49 per cent in August. The heavy vote was due, not only to the prevalence of fine weather, but the strenuous efforts made to bring out the silent vote. The slow incoming of the returns is attributed partly to the heavy vote and partly to scratch ed ballots on Representatives. In complete official returns from the precinct of Havana indicated that the city was overwhelmingly Liberal. Few returns have been received from the provinces but estimates give the island to General Gomez by from 25,000 to 30,00. The Conserva tive leaders generally admit the de feat of their party. Emperor and Empress Die On : ; Same Day : ' THE PEOPLE TAKE IT QUIETLY Shortly After 5 O'clock, Saturday, the Emperor Breathed His 'Last " Prince Chun, His Brother, Now Re gent, May Be Accepted as .Sucoes eor. 7 - v FUNERAL OF MR. GARMACK Negro Kills Eight. Okumulgee, Okla., Special. Eight persons were killed and ten others were wouijfled Sunday in a fight be tween James Deckard, a negro des perado and officers. The dead. Edgar Robinson, sheriff of Ok mulgee county. Henry Klaber, assistant chief of police of Okmulgee. Two negroes named Chapman, brothers. Three unidentified negroes. The wounded: Steve Grayson, Indian boy, probab ly fatally beaten Victor Fa?T, chief of Sioux, shot through shoulder; De puty Sheriff, arm broken. - Seven others, slightly wounded. President-Elect Taft Invited to Spar tanburg Banquet. Spartanburg, S. C, Special. Pres ident-elect iTaft has been invited by t the chamber of commerce to be the guest of Spartanburg upon the oc- casion of a banquet to be given No vember 20th, celebrating the build ing of the Carolina, Clinchfield & Ohio Railroad to this city. A com mittee of citizens from the chamber of commerce, the city council and the board of trade will go to Hot Spnncrs and extend the invitations, The banquet will be attended by the Governors of five States and the presidents of half a dozen railroad systems. Pekin, China, By Cable The , Emperor of China died shortly after 5 o'clock Saturday" evening As early as 3 o'clock in the af(jj?rnoon, it was reported that the Emperor was so low that his death-was re garded as imminent.. The, --Pe-ieign" Board of the government has con firmed the report circulated Fri day that the Dowager Empress is also mortally ill. The Emperor had been ill for a long time and during recent audi ences with foreign representatives he was unable either to sit up on the throne or even in an erect position. It was evident for a long time that he would be unable to' withstand a crisis which sooner or later must de velop in the disease from wtiich he was -suffering. Recent climatic ex tremes caused the develomeint of fatal complications that resulted in his death. ' At the moment of death the Em- perer. tee uowagrer impress- own death chamber chair was waiting in the courtyard. She, too, had been in a serious condition, and word that 1 was brought her earlier in the day that the Emperor was dying, caused her to collapse. This has prevented her from assuming the relationship of errand, mother to the successor to the throne, which, according to the Chinese system Would enormously ingment her authority. Tuere is little indication ot emo tion among the people over the events which have been transpiring. The Emperor's death and the prob able death of the Dowager impress ivitbin a very short time have had but little effect upon the Chinese, who are pursuing the even tenor of heir way without signs of mourn ing. Kuang-Hsu's -later life was a pit iable spectacle to his attendants. His feebleness had rendered him a mere Duppet and he had suffered long Handsome Building for Fayetteville. - ".Fayetteville, Special. At a meet- ing of the executive committee of the Southern Life Insurance Company ' here last week, it was decided to im- mediately erect a handsome build ing for home offices of the company at. the eorner of Hay and Burgess streets. The building will cost $30- 000, and will stand directly opposite " the Federal building to be erected toon.- ' Big Snow in Haywood. Waynesville, Special. Sunday morning Wavnesville and' Haywood county are in the grip of another seemingly premature snowstorm. It commenced Saturday about noon and continued until about 10 o'clock p. m. when it turned into a rain. For two hours the rain came down, when it turned into a regular northeast snow storm which raged the remainder of the night. Sunday morning it was snowing fiercely with' about three inches upon the ground on a level and some ten inches in the mountains. : North State Notes. Charters are granted the Bnrgra how Company, capital $125,000. the -North State Realty Company, $150, 000, and the Burgrahaw Inter-urban . Company, $.500,000. All these -companies are intended to develop the three towns of Burlington, Graham, and Haw River. The purpose is to connect these by an electric railway, . furnish power and heat and to de- velop real .estate at all the points. Rv "W. ; Bishop, ' patent attorney, Washington, D. C., reports the issue of the following patents on the 10th Instant, to residents ' of North Caro lina Mail box, J. T. Denhy, Cromar tiej safe, L.' N. Davis, Charlotte"; cul tivator, Al, J. Compton, Cedar Grove. . ' The Governdr offers, two reward, each of $50, for murders at Durham where there have been four homl '!.'' in the past. three months, one 1 cinjf for Charles Merritt, who killed wife with' a razor, and the other - Susannah ;Hinton, ,alsiaa'-. Ray, ' lied Roena Harm, colored. , ! :;! "citizens of Washington, N. '.have Bew , il-jintcd delegate to A tlacrtie .-and waterways con ioti, and it Is intended to have a il etrt for them and the other is. 'This car will ; be .gaily- ' with streamers bearing the "Washington Boosters." T !- Big Fire at Henderson. Henderson, Special The second largest fire in the history of this town for thirty years occurred Sun day morning at 4:30 o'clock, when Parham Bros.' four-story brick build ing bagging factory was totally de stroyed, with its adjoining buildings ron Wyiider avenue. By strenuous efforts the residenc -n the opposite side of the street v... a saved. , Eeceiver for Daily News. ' Greensboro, Special. In the Unit ed States Court Judge - James E. Boyd" named W. Underwood ' as receiver of The Daily Industrial News, the appointment - being made on the . petition of certain ' creditors presented, to the court by O.- S. Bradshaw as attorney. The receiver is ordered' by tne court to continue the publication of the paper, and he is ' directed to employ any and all necessary help in the advancement of his trusts." The subpoena on the bankrupt corporation is made return able next baturday, : W. H. Q. Conference at AsheviSe. Asheville, Special. The Methodists of Asheville have completed arrange ments for the mf ertammcnt of '. the annual session of the Western.' North Carolina Methodist Conference. .It is expected that there will -be between 400 and 500 .ministers and ; lay dele-ftf8-: sad 'convention', visitors pres- Deep Gloom Pervades His . Native City Business Entirely Suspended ' and . Public . Buildings Draped. '.While the Distinguished Son is Laid Among His Fathers. Columbia, Tenn., Special. Busi ness was entirely suspended and the people , of this city 'and county, to gether with large delegationa from many other-Tennessee counties turned out t in force to do honor to the memory of the' late Senator Carmack. Public buildings were draped out of respect to his memory and , a deep gloom pervades this entire community. The funeral was help at 11 o'clock in the Methodist church. The sarv- ices we're very simple, but impressive, and . the scenes at the church and at the grave where the distinguished statesman was laid to rest were such as will never be forgotten, by the as semblage present. The funeral services at the church were in charge of Rev. W. T. Boah, pastor of the First Christian church here, the church of which Senator Carmack Was a member. Rev. Lin Cave, of Nashville, delivered the ad dress -at the church. At the grave the burial was conducted with Mas- sonic honors, the deceased being an honored member of the Masonic order. These Maconic exercises were presided over by Major John Wil liamson, of this city, past grand master. Floral offerings were sent from all parts of the State. The offering from the citizens of Columbia and Maury county was a magnificient pall, which covered the entire casket. When thfe funeral train reached the church shortly after 11 o'clock, there was a deathlike hush over the great conereeration. For a full hour before the time for the funeral great crowds of sorrowing friends began to gather at the church and the auditorium was paefced to overflowing by 10 :30 o'clock, while hundreds were turned away, being unable to gain admission Within the chancel was a large likeness of Senator Carmack draped in black. There were prominent men present representing all sections of Tennessee leading supporters and personal mends of the dead Senator. Hel3 on Murder Charge. Nashville, Tenn.,' Special. A State warrant charging him with the mur der of former United States Senator ... -ii i.-ii.i- i. i i: j v.----.cu 7 ....-w. ...... - ifcc.ward vv. Carmack was served on wun iear ana aespair . uu J m: . Robin Cooper at a hogpital Cooper Taft Renders Tribute. New York, Special. While can non boomed, awakening patriotic memories of those sailor and soldier heroes who died in British prison ships in the revolutionary war, the prison ship martyrs monument at Fort Greene Park, Brooklyn, was dedicated with impressive ceremonies Satujday in the presence of President-elect Taft, Secretary of Wai Wright, Governor Hughes and thou sands bf people who thronged the knoll on which the tall doric column stands. Mr. Taft made the oration of the occasion and after the cere monies left for Washington, where he will meet President Roosevelt. Pushing Work on C. C. and O. Road. ' Spartanburg, Special. The con tractors are pushing tho work on"thf C. C. and O. Road. They are re eeiving steam shovels and all sortz of road machinery and the noise joi the blasting is like the cannonading around Charleston in' 1864, only it if not so constant and dangerous. Passenger Trains Collide. Jacksonville, Special. Passengei trains - Nos. ,39 and; 10, of - the At lantic Coast Line, came together ir a head-ori collision near Camden,.' s small station about ten miles frcoi this city Saturday morning, killing James A King, 'of Sanford, Fbjw ac Alenxander A. Bell, of Palatka, hot, negr mail,, clerks, ' and - slightly in juring several ' others. . A relief, trait Was sent out from here and the dead and injured' brought to JacksonyHle. The' trains, it is said, had orders ft meet at Camden, .but No. 39 rim bj with the fatal results. . - ' .k ; Morris Saas a' Snidd. ; . San Francisco, Special. Morrii Haas, who shot Francis-' J.. Honey committed suicide at the bounty jal by, BhopUng Mmaelf through the bend. "One report says that' the pistol 'witl which Haas shot; himself was -con- -".1 in his Fvoe wWre he hi! it ba liowed marked signs of mental dis turbances, and ev.en went so far last August as to declare himself nad. The foregoing dispatch from Pekin sets at rest the conflicting rumors of :he past two days that have origi nated in Pekin and been published around the world. The Emperor of China is dead. The report from London of his improvement probably rcferre1 to a temporary dilion only. The Pekin message is the first unqualified statement to come from the Chinese capital and' it specifi cally gives the time of the passing away of His Majesty. The regent is Prince Chun, the Em peror's brother, and if he is accepted by the government before the Dow ager Empress dies, the likelihood of any revolutionary outbreak in China will be materially reduced. . Dowager Empress Dead. ;. Pekin, By Cable. Tsze Hsi- An, the Dowager Empress of China, the autocratic bead of the government, which she " directed without . success ful interference since 1861 and with out protest since 1881, died at 2 o'nlnck Stindiiv afternoon. ;' '' The announcement of the' Dowager Empress' death was official' and fol lowed closely upon the announcement that -Kuane-Hsu the Emperor, : had died Saturday at 5 o'clock in the af ternoon, but it is believed .'that the death of . both the Emperor nd i the Down per Eitinress occurred a consid erable time before ihat set down in; the official statements. An ediet issued at 3 o'clock Sun day mprninsr placed upon the throne "Prince Pu-Yi, the 3-year-old; son .pf Prince Chun, the Regent of the. Em pire, in accordance withi a ; promise given by the Dowager Empress soon after the marriage of Pripoe Chun in 1903. . An eiet issued on Friday made . Pu-Yi heir presumptive. 4 'Prominent Coiif derate Veteran Dead Washington, - SpeeiaL-rAlbert .- J Q. Holland, a . member of the first, com pany organized, in -.Washington: to I fight, for the CJonfederacy; -died sndt- denly vin thiscity, Sunday. "Mr. Hol land tooV?psrt in the first, battle of Manassas, fought A valiantly' V until jeaptured ';and sent ;to Camp. Chase,' - where he wa s released at the close of the war - He was a''rnmbeT'rof the firm at Copeland ,&CoJ and itlwaa staid manufactured flags for the Fed eral government while it rwas his aim to destroy them during the war... ( .: GREAT YIELD OF CORN A Total Production of 2,642,687,000 Bushels Indicated in the Prelimi nary Estimate of the Department of Agriculture. Washington, Special. An average yield of 26.2 bushels of corn per acre and an indicated total production of 2,642,687,000 bushels of corn are preliminary estimates announced in the report of the Department of Ag riculture, summarizing' corn and five other crops. The yield of corn per acre in 1907 was 25.9, as finally esti mated and averaged 25.6 for ten years while the production is compared with 2,592,320,000 bushels finally es timated in 1907. Quality of corn is 86.9 per cent., compared with 82.8 in 1907, and 84. 3 ten-year average. About 2.7 per cent, or 71,124,000 bushels, is estimated to have been in the farmers' hands on November 1st, against 4.5 per cent, or 130,995,000 bushels a year ago, and a ten-year average of 4.5 per cent. The preliminary figures for import ant States, giving in bushels the yield per acre and total production, re spectively, include: Missouri 27 and 203,634,000. Texas 25.7 and 201,848,000; Kentucky 25.2 and 84,823,000; Tennessee 24.8 and 74,747,000; Georgia 12.6 and 56,438,- 000: .Alabama 14.7 and 44,835,000; Virginia 26 and 48,828,000; North Carolina 18 and 50,166,000; Arkansas 20.2 and 52,540,000. The preliminary estimates of pota-. toes, tobacco and rice growing aver-r-, age yields per acre and comparisons with final estimates for 1907 and for periods of years as follows: Potatoes yield 85.9 bushels against 95.4 in 1907 and ten-year av erage 88.6. Production 274,660,000 bushels against 294,929,000, in 1907. Quality 86 per cent, against 83.3 last year, and ten-year average of 87.6. Tobacco yeild 825.2 pounds againsst 850.5 pounds in 1907 and ten-year average 797.6. Production 629,634,000 pounds against 698;126, 000 in 1907. Quality 87.9 per cent as against 90 a year ago and a ten-yeas average of 85.8. Rye yield 34.7 bushels against 29.9 in 1907 and a ten-year average of 30.6. Production 22,718,000 -bushels in 1907 and a ten-year average of 30.6. Production 22,718,000 bushels against 18,738,000 in 1907. A 10 CENT MINIM Set By Convention of Sou&eca Cotton Growers "NIGHT RIDING" IS CONDO Governor Patterson, of Ti iiiwiiiBp, Welcomes Delegates to Mzmg&m Officers of Conference Chases. Industrial Education .to Be Promoted r Atlanta; Ga. SpeeiaL The. second atmual convention of ' the .,- national society for the promotion of Indus- trial , education, , the membership . of which includes s'oine'of the-jnojst dia ticirtiishei' educators in' the country, .'l be hdd in Atlmti Thursday, Fri- is now in -harge of three deputy sheriffs. lt will be removed to the county jail as soon as his con dition permits. It developed, ac cording to the physician who is at tending young Cooper, that two shots j were fired at the young man, one penetrating his shoulder, the other going through his coat sleeve. The excitement in this city over the -terrible tragedy Monday after noon in which Edward W. Carmack, former United States Senator from Tennessee, this city, "as shot and killed by Robin Cooper a young at torney of Nashville, and son of Col. Duncan B. Cooper, a close personal and political friend of Governor Malcolm R. Patterson,: has to a cer tain extent abated yet the tragedy is still the s'6le topic of conversation in political circles., both in thi city and throughout the ,Sta,te. Colonel Cooper; who' was with his Son when- the latter shot Mr. Car mack; has been -remanded to jail without bond, charged with murder Young Cooper remains under guard at a local hospital; where his wound ed arm is being-retreated. His pre liminary trial, on the charge of mur der wilr be held -as soon as he is able toleftv,e the" "hospital. Both the Cboperi.iand Sehator Carmack have manVi'friert'ds . here1 and throughout the State. Cooper's statement is that the , affair was merely" a street duel in which both sides inet and both l-bee-an firing. . The friends of the Coopers claim they had tried to aybid a meeting with1- Carmack, ;it is said, and they were on their way to the State capi tal in response to a telephone mes sage fronv Governor Patterson when the - tragedy occurred; V that Senator Carmack-had been warned and was expecting trouble. " - : iFriends of Senator Carmack stren uously claim, that the .killing was the result of a conspiracy, purer and sim ple; that When Senator Carmack left The Tennessean omce for his board ing' house7 the 'fact was telephoned from fe ftouse near The Tenn&sean office and the. Coopers were notified thai the: Senator-was on his way and to be on the "-alert-' ' w ; i,..It , now : develops; according y-fo friends 'of Mr. Carmaek jiat there was a thifd - party - mlth, the Coopers just', before the shooting,, a, fonner county, official who is a close pexsoni al - friend of - both ' the Coopers !.and Patterson. Friends of the dead Sen ator- intimate that there will be sen sational ' developments .within the next day or so regarding the aiTair. Cotton Ginned to November 1. Washington, Special. There wer 26,295 active, ginneries and 8,199,782 bales of cotton ginned from the growth of 1908 to November 1st. These figures, announced by the Cen sus Bureau are against 26,069 ginner ies and 6,128,562 bales at the corres ponding date in 1907; 27,370 ginner ies and 6,906,395 bales in 1906, and 27,802 'ginneries and 6,457,595 bales m 1905. The report counts ronnd bales as half bales and includes 149,- 340 round bales for 1908; 125,785 for 1907, and 169,741 for 1906, and 183,- 870 for 1905. The number of Sea Island bales included for 1908 is 45,- 495; for 1907, 33.331; for 1906, 21,706 and for 1905, 49,161. The corrected figures of the quantity of cotton ginned this season to October 18th are 6,296,166 bales. The number of bales and active ginneries respectively by States on November 1st, 1908, follows: :. Mistrial In Case of Postmaster. Norfolk.' Vav. Special, Tho aury In the' case' of James T Red, former assistant ' : postmaster, " at j Newport News. .'Vol charged- with the 'embez zlement of $6,462 1 in money order fund-j'arr'ounced.its hopeless f dis 8,rer:Et and was discharged. The State. Alabama' .. .. Arkansas . . Florida Georgia Kentucky Louisiana Mississippi.. .. Missouri , New Mexico .. North Carolina Oklahom South Carolina Tennessee.. .. Texas Bales. Ginneries. . 894,123 3,363 . 43,065 241 . 43,065 241 .1,385,816 4,321 ..954 4 . 290,099 1,559 . 893,548 . 30,409 954 . 373.1S8 , 219,860 . 822,369 . 199,621 .2,504,886 Virginia 4,607 3,309 69 4 2,606 941 3,133 605 4,046 82 Great Playwright Sardou Deal Paris, By Cable, France's great est playwright and one of the great est the world has has ever known is the general verdict heard regarding M. Victoria Sardou, who lies dead at Ins Paris apartments. Sarou died Sunday of congestion of the lungs. He was 77 years old. For fifty-eight years Sardou wrote plays for the -French stage. Memphis, Tenn., SpeeiaL -Tfa Southern Cotton Conference was call ed here last week. Gov. M. &. Pat terson welcomed the delegates. T responses were made by Charles SL ijay, or Montgomery, and Jordan, of Atlanta, president of southern Cotton Growers' tion. Governor Noel, of Missiswv also spoke. Harvie Jordan was aaA permanent chairman, and GeaegB cloppe, of Memphis, and W. IL Gil bert, of Chiclet, Ark., were ebasam secretaries. An address by Bishop Thomas X. Sainor, of the Episcopal Dioecse Tennessee, on "The Keynote of (km Conference" concluded the fotnsdl addresses of the opening session. Mr. Jordan, in his remarks a chairman, said it was fitting that conference should be assemble this, the largest interior cottcv : ket in the world. . "We have assembled." he tinued, "to safeguard and pniaefi the . great staple crop of the Sofc from the artificial and depressing - uuences or tederated interests operate to the detriment of business interest in this sectxw ff America. We face a serious dition, and whether we will equal to the emergency and our interests as men of brain msM business sagacity, or indifferently ac cept the situation and parade beStsMt the world our voluntary weakness, m the issue whieh presents itself to convention. ' ' Mr. Jordan said raw eotton is only great staple commodity in O word today which is selling beSwr the cost of production, notwithstand ing the fact that it represents one rf the world's greatest necessities. "That this great staple should war sell at a price to the cotton growers of less than 10 cents a pound," Jft Jordan continued, "is a reSeefjaar ,.. upon the manhood and intelligent tht Sosthern people. If the cot&n growers, bankers, merchants adi Hied business interests of the 'SoaSb will determine that the price of spatt cotton must and shall jro baek to 19 cents before November passes, t&tt price will be protected the finamciai future of the South will be save, and not a spindle in the world wiM bo injured." Mr. Jordan stronylv condennwJ "night riding" and urged that t&e convention give its attention to tie boll weevil menace. He also reccj mended the formation of a chain 4t warehouses wherefrom receipts eeAA be issued which would be aceeptaWte as collateral for short-time loans the leading financial institutions m this country and in Europe. Ten Cents as a Minimum. Memphis, Tenn., Special. Djums ciation of "night-riding," and a fiary defense of the "night-riders" threw the convention of the Southern Ch ton Growers' and Ginners' Associa tion into disorder and nearly ieraei nated the session before ihe pijogrwa had fairly begun. While excited del egates hurled charges and eomrter charges, T. U. Sisson, of Mississippi moved that the convention adjoin sine die. President Jordan finally brongfct m semblance of quiet and made a pEa for order. The general committee on rearfb tions presented their report, wtidh was unanimously adorned. mending that so far as possible each individual case, none of the ea of -1908, still in the ownership ot I producer, be sold below 10 cents pound for short staple cotton. urging growers to hold the erofi ast as to prevent selling in excess of mm-. tenth per month of the remanrins-' crop of 190S. ' The cotton ftiunm are urged to apply to the local basSoi. for loans secured by warehouse aav , ccipts representing cotton to be MSI for the purpose of being martcrtril only when demanded for. actual sumption. . 'c ' ; 1 .; Re- Wants Tariff on Jute Bagging duced. .- . v-..-.-' New Orleans,": La,, SpeciaL-r-Xhe New Orleans exchange passed resolu tions - calling upoir- Congress to re duce the present tariff -on jute' bag- 'ging1 used tor, baling cotton. " This tax is a direct burden on the cotton raising industry of the South for the benefit of. a few ' manufacturers . who are enabled to thrive at the expense of the most important class of agri culturalists in this country,'?' declares the resolution, . The Case of B. Clay1 Pierce. . Austin, Tex1,, Special.-Arrangfr-mants' havetbeea made for the- trial ox xi. a viay . .fierce, neaa.i oi ine Waters-Pierce Oil Comfanv." a Stand ard auxiliary:' wfio f was indicted in this county on th charge of ' false stearin?. The case will be called Over 300 Men, Entombed. ' Hsaan, Westphalia, Germany, : Ef Cable, The greatest mine disaster is' many years in Germany Thursday moinine in . the mine, about three miles from trface. -There was a heavy Most immjediately the mine tocjSp. ' tho ground at the time and only cis escaped witnout injury. inircj urn -were taken out slightly injured 37 were dead when brought f month of the pit. The remaining 33 have been given Up for lost. f . t Tog Ginks In Pamlico . "r't,.. Espaes. , Norfolk. Va.. 'Srecial-New ' reached the 4tf of the sinking f C tr.g' Hamptott in .Pai'ulico Soaa Z, IL during tae-prevalence til a.s:- northwest gale, and of fha" I t 2 Cpta;n W." J. Hawley, c -et