, . f ,- r V«i« DISPATCHES VOLUME XXVI mill cut mm CEITENNHLOCT.iI The Plans Include Broad casting of “The Old North State” From Big Radio Station. PROGRAM OF THE * DAY’S EVENTS Gov. McLean’s Address Al so to Be Broadcasted.— Day’s Events Will In clude a Military Review. Tribune Broca u Sir Walter Hotel Philadelphia, Sept. 28.—Prelimi nary plans for the observance of Xorlh Carolina Day October 11th at the Sen<|ni-('entenninl include the broadcasting of "The Old State” from a big station for the first time and a radio address by (Sovernor McLean from the main dining room of the Benjamin Franklin Hotel. Orchestra tion of the State song is being ar ranged by Director Oppenheim of the Il'tel Benjamin Franklin orchestra, rvho does Uis own announcing and who stated today he would formally intro duce Governor McLean at Philadel phia. Pa., and the world at large through W. 1. I‘. on the evening of North Carolina Day. Impressive exercises will be held in honor of North Carolina's visiting governor. He will be met by officials and accompanied to the Sesqui grounds into which he will be escorted by mili tary detachments and a salute will be fired in his honor. Later, when he visits the navy yard, there will be another salute fired. The day's events will include a military review and an address jin the grounds at 11 a. m. by the governor from a stand to be built at the North Carolina pylon. Governor McLean will pay an official | visit to the North Carolina booth. It is not known here yet just who will accompany the governor but the hope was expressed today by a mem ber of the committee in charge that he would bring a delegation with him. Also an effort will be made to have all resident North Carolinians possible present uj the day's exercises. A scofe of highway photographs Carolina* - Vahehiilr system added much to the appearance pf the North Carolina booth this week, as dH the arrival for display of hydro-electric ma'p of the state. Much interest is being .taken in the agricultural map of the state and numerous visitors have taken away agricultural, eduentionul and other literature. Adjoining the North Carolina ex hibit is one that iH attracting quite a bit of attention. It is the exhibit of the North State Pottery Company, of Sanford, N. C„ in charge of H. A. Cooper. The exhibit ia housed in alpine long cabin, sdrroumled by pine trees and a rustic fence. On the other side flip exhibit of the R. ,1. Reynolds Co., of Winston, is very imposing. It is simple but artis tically arranged. Many North Carolinians, here for the big fight, registered at the State booth, including such sportsmen as Dr. John McKee, Herbert and Jerome Rosenthal and I)r. Freeman, all of Raleigh, and others. Representatives from practically ev ery state in the Cnion have regis tered. Visitors from more than twen ty states have inscribed their names tliis week. Many of them have been highly complimentary in their ref erences to the. North Carolina exhibit, which consists of a compilation of in teresting information about the state and a collection of graphic pictu’res and charts. As has been pointed out, it is not an exhibit of product* but of information about the state which lias bet'ii gotten up in such shape that it can be distributed among and car ried away by visitors. PERSONS HURT IN • WRECK ARE IMPROVED Reports From Hospital Where Score or More of Injured Were Taken. Are Encouraging. Bethlehem. Pa.. Sept. 28.— UP) — Encouraging reports from the condi tion of two score passengers and train men injuretl here yesterday in the crash of the Central Railroad of New Jersey Scranton Flyer, and the Lehigh Vnlley Midnight Limited in which seven passengers and a bag gage man were killed, came from St. Luke Hospital today. Thrity-four of the injured remain ed at the hospital today. They were reported “resting comfortably,’’ and all were expected to recover.' Three separate investigations were underway to determine responsibility for the accident. ’ The Fleetwood Will Be Completed in a Pew Months. (By International News Service) Hendersonville, N. C., Sept. 28. The construction of the Hotel Fleet wood here on Mount Hop-olf is rapid ly progressing and the frame of thy building is rising skyward. The hotel will be completed in a -. few months. Work on the building was stopped two or three times, one time by court action. Tax on hotel bills In Italy has been abolished and there is now no Government tax whatever in Italy ' payable by toorWta. ■' ti " ■- The Concord Daily Tribune ■ • North Carolina’s Leading Small City Daily [~Tries to Smile lpKl9|' * * ,SsMT in Estelle Taylor held up bravely when she arrived in Philadel phia to console her Tunney : damaged husband, Jack Dempsey. __ STORM WARNINGS ARE ISSUED AGAIN Washington, D. C„ Sept. 28. (A s )—The weather bureau today issued the following storm warn ing: “Advisory 10 a. m. There are indications of tropical disturbance central several hundred miles north of Porto Rico, .intensity un known. It is likely moving north- I west or west northwest.” CHICAGO’S RUM ROW DEATH TOLA. NEAR END Principal Bands at Beer Runners Are About “Shot to Pieces.’’ Chicago, Sept. 28.— UP)— The death r«U of Chicago’s Rum Row, which ,h«* reached 75 in the last two years ttf_gjuqfwarferer i* ainms'i complete, in the opinion of veteran pol’ce ob served, and . the principal bands of beef fuhttefs and alcohol dealers are about “shot to pieces.” The leaders and many of the fol lowers of these gangs have been the object of elaborate funerals, or arc in the hands of police and federal author ities. The i-oroner's statistics show that mauy more have been eliminated by bullets than by law, but eventually most of the still alive have been ar rested, and another "wild west" epic, as lurid as any of the past, is closed. Beginning of “War.” A police legend now accepted as fact traces the beginning of the gang war to the death, in November, 11)24, of Mike Merlo,^acknowledged leader of the West side Italians. He is said to have forbidden hostilities against riv als in the business of manufacturing and dispensing .illicit liquor. While he lived, occasional liquor robberies known as “hijacking" were the only outbursts. Merlo died of pneumonia, not bullets. The day following his funeral, Dion O’Banion. head of a composite group, chiefly with Irish surnames, was shot down nnd the war was on. Sometimes the police were able to encounter an auto load of gangsters and a few of them met death in conflict with the law. But nearly always competitors got to them first with little or no traces of the assassins. Revenge in Death. Os Merlo's lieutenants were the six Genna brothers, three of whom were quiekly slnin in revenge for the O'- Banion shooting. Mauy of the other gangs were “taken for a ride,” shot and thrown from an automobile along suburban roads. An assistant state’s attorney, James MeSwiggan, happened to get in the way of a gangster’s machine gun, and was killed, with two others. One of them, the man really sought, was a boyhood friend of MeSwiggan. The death roll grew until 54 names were added in the first eight months of 11)26 and then the leaders of the Saltis-McErlane group, about the last of the list, were taken on murder charges. "BISHOP’S” CHAUFFEUR FINED FOR SPEEDING Woman Says She Was Bringing Groce Here When Arrested For Speeding in Charlotte. Charlotte, Sept. 28 —(A S )—A fine of $5 and costs was the judgment is sued aga'nst the wife of M. M, Mad den, negro minister and chief lieuten ant of “Bishop” C. M. Grace, when she appeared in Magistrate court here this morning on a charge of speeding. The woman judge at the time she was arrested yesterday she was driving the “Faith Healer" to Concord so he could catch a train for Washington, D. Cl, to visit his “flock” there. TM Plant Has Five-Day Week- Detroit, Sept. 25—The Ford Motor company announced today that after two months experiment, the five day week had been made a permanent i policy in the company’s plants here. There has been no daily wage in crease except on merit. i GOVERNMENT CALLS LAST WITNESS IN DAUGHERTY TRIAL Richard Merton, Who Was I First Witness, Is Also the Eighteenth and Last For Prosecution. i j WILL SAIL FOR j HOME TOMORROW! Called to Stand So Defense| Would Have Opportun ity to Cross Examine Him Again at Trial. I i ; i New York, Sept. 28— OP)—' The I rri secutiin cal'ed its last and 18:li j witness in the Rnugberty-Miiler con-) j spiracy trinl today. r ) ; Richard Merton, German mgtul j j magnate who testified lie paid John | IT. King, .ate Republican national j j committee man from Connectieutt, ! $441,000 for the release of $7,000,000 j impounded enemy shares, was the last witness called. He also was the r first. Merton was recalled by the gov ernment to give the defense an op portunity to further cross-examine him : before he sails for (Jeinnny tomorrow. T.ie eightieth witness identified the 251st government exhibit. He was . Emuunel Harris, New York attorney, . who gave testimony about the estnte of King. Thomas IV. Miller as alien proper ty custodian and Harry M. Daugher ty as attorney general are charged with conspiracy in connection with the payment to Merton of the $7,000,- 000 shares of American .Metal Com pany which the United States had sized as enemy-owned. William S. Rand, counsel for Mil ler, broug'.it from Merton a reitera tion of his belief that the claims he presented on behalf of the Societe Suisse l’our Vnleurs de Metaux • were valid. The government had adduced testi mony to show that the claims were not valid. United States Attorney ’ Emory R. Buckner lias maintained throughout the trial tCiat he does not 1 have to prove the claims were false in order to shoxv the alleged conspir acy attending their payment. TEACHERS' ASSEMBLY - i at Kfinehm march it Fully 2,000 Teachers From All Over the State Expected to Attend. Tribune Brueau Sir Walter Hotel Raleigh, Sept. 28.—The teachers of North Carolina will again meet in Italeigh for the annual convention of I’.ie North Carolina Teachers’ Asso ciation on Mard) 24, 25 and 26, it has been announced by Jule B. War ren, secretary of the association. The date was selected at a meeting of the executive committee here recently when plans for the convention were worked out, and fully 2,000 teachers from ait sections of the State are ex pected to attend. As was to be expected, the asso ciation plans to put up a determined fight for the eight months school term and will bring all its pressure to bear to get One general assembly to submit the question to a vote of the people. And from present indications, it is believed that the approaching general i assembly will do this. However, if it does submit the question to the peo ple as a constitutional amendment in the general election of 1028 the as sociation plans to keep up an unre lenting campaign in favor of the long er school term, and have it submitted to the people in 1030. However, the members of the as sociation' feel very liiut’j encouraged at the manner in which the longer school term is being regarded over the state and the surprising thing is that more opposition lias not developed, ac cording to Mr. Warren. “The response so far has been very gratifying,” said Mr. Warren today, "and we {gel much encouraged at the outlook tor the eight mont’.is school term. seem to be realizing 1 the need for it more and more, and while tßfre is still much opposition to it*in some quarters, we are hoping that this ftin eventually be overcome.” Speakers for the convention have not yet been decided upon, but they 1 will be men of outstanding note in the 1 educational world, Mr. Warren said. Would Put Husband Into Bsnkrtqitcy. Madison, Wis., Sept. 28.—(A*)—Mir iam Noel Wright moved today in an attempt to force her estranged hus band, Frank Lloyd Wright, noted 1 architect, into bankruptcy. Arthur D. Cloud, Chicago attorney, represent ! ing Mrs. Wright, announced today that he planned to file an involuntary petition in bankruptcy against Wright? ' 90 Dairies in Gotham Charged as “Bootleggers.” N»w York, Sept. 27.—Fifty dtfKes 1 within city limits, possessing 2,600 ‘ cows, are under inquiry by the' • health department, which chargee ‘ some of- them ' have been “bootleg ‘ giug” in the sale of raw milk With i out submitting it to inspection. i Dempsey Fans Walking Home From thf Fight, Asheville. Sept. 27.—Two Ashe ville men are walking hack from ■ Philadelphia,> according to a message • received by friends here. Although - no details were contained in the t laconic wire stating that they ex . pected to arrive tomorrow, it whs re - called that they were ardent Demp sey supporter*. CONCORD, N. C„ TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, leST Getting Bigger and Better Year By Year—Cabarrus Fair The Cabarrus Fair, annually'stag ed in Concord, will be hed this year, October 12, 13, 14. 15 and 16. This will be Cabarrus County's fourth an nual and indications are that if will , ’ bigger nnd better than ever.” It in really more than a strictly On bams County Fair as the officials have extended their premium list to | ta ke in Rowan. Iredell. Stanly. !! Mf.' klenhuhg nnd Union count)**. '( One known reason for the success •of thin fair is that professional #x j hibifor.s are barred and profensioepls 1: from other stale* cannot mine -in ami kill eomiictition and carry off n l the premiums. i The entertainment features of this | fair are always the best that money Jean buy. Resides the free attractions 'in front of grand stands there will a'so be an array of shows, rides, cqn censions of all kinds—nnd the hsst lof all. horse races, j It it! said that the Cabarrus track is one of the best half-mile tricks in America. The fastest mile Over made 'in a race in North Carolina Was j made on this truck, j At the fair they have both after noon and night performances. Raich : night they feature fireworks specta |cie that alone is more than worth the price of admission. The admission prices to this fair are only fifty cents for adults in the 1 •'V *. - it. '.L-y "■■■ PLAN FOR REDUCING COTTON PRODUCTION Growers VVlvj Will Pledge Redac tion or Elimination of Crop. New Year to Be Financed. St. Matthews. S. ('.. Sept. 28.—A plan to retire 3.000,000 bales of cot ton from the present crop under the pledge of reduction in cotton acreage for the coining year has been ap proved by some of the leading grow ers, bankers nnd busiiuvs men in the south (plowing a conference here of I bankers and business men called by the American Cotton association, the association announced today. It was stated that the plan, de vised to solve the economic problem facing cotton growers, has the in doruenieiit of many of the financial institutions extending credit in the cotton belt. The plan contains the following financial provisions: 1. For growers who have pledged the growing of no cotton for 1!)27 the entire cotton production for the* present year will be financed on warehouse certificates of storage for cotton fully insured for 70 per cent of the value, these loans falling die oft May t 1027. -■ growers signing p*cdg«t?Ao reduce their cotton for IQ£7 Os 50 per cent as compared with 1026, ane half of the cotton they produce the present year will be taken off the market for them and carried on loans secured by certificates of storage, loans falling due May 1. 1027. 3. For ail growers who sign pled ges to reduce their cotton acreage for 1027 by one-third of the amount pro duced this year will be carried for them on loans secured by certificates of storage until May 1 next. Should a grower fail to carry out his pledge, his loan would be called in May and a renewal refused. Grow ers who carry out their pledges will have their loans renewed until the fall of the year. CHARLOTTE OFFICERS INJURED IN ACCIDENT Rushed to Salisbury Hospital After Car Was Wrecked Near China i Grove. Three Charlotte police officers, en route to High Point on a "test riot call’ were hurt about noon today when their ear was wrecked on a curve near Chiua Grove. One of the officers was named Moore, China Grove reports state, but the names of the others were not known there. The injuretl officers were rushed to a Salisbury hospital, necording to in formation received from a China Grove man over long distance at 2 o'clock this afternoon. One of the men was believed seriously hurt. The cause of the accident had not been determined, the China Grove man stated but it is believed the officers tried to take the curve too fast. Among the passengers on an air liner in a recent trip between London and Paris was a two-months-old baby, lying on a pillow in its mother’s lap. HroaHßroaaßroßßroßroarororoßaanßsaaana^roi^BiaroaßßßaroaaaaaßroaroMro ANNOUNCEMENT The 58th Series in this old reliable Building and Loan Association will open on October 2nd, 1926. RUNNING SHARES COST 25 CENTS PER SHARE PER WEEK. PREPAI DSHARES COST $72.25 PER SHARE. ALL STOCK IS NON-TAXABLE. STOCK HAS BEEN MATURING IN. 328 WEEKS. THE BOOKS ARE NOW OPEN FOR SUBSCRIP TIONS FOR SHARES IN SERIES NO. 58. START SAVING FOR A RAINY DAY—SAVE TO OWN YOUR OWN HOME. BEGIN NOW. CABARRUS COUNTY BUILDING LOAN AND wftvlNGS ASSOCIATION. Office in the Concord National Bank mm day time nnd twenty-five cents for the children. At night, twenty-five rente to all. Those remaining from the aficr noon performance do not. have to pay anything at night. Come with dawn’s early light, stay until the rockets last glare. Thie fair has enjoyed a steady growth in attendance each year nnd last year more than 60.000 people passed through their gates- Preparations this year are very much more elaborate than ever be-' fore and with the good roads leading into Concord from every direction and the extensive advertising that is being done—lt is predicted that the attendance this year will exceed the 75.000 mark. Tuesday. October 12. opening day, has been designated as educational day. The school children of Cabar rus. Stanly, Mecklenburg. ICotvan. Union and Iredell counties will be admitted to the grounds free of charge. Each of the five days has been es pecially designated to one particular county, Cabarrus county day being Thursday, October 14th. Let's all go and enjoy this great fair this year. Afternoon program commences promptly nt 1 :30 and night at 6:45 o’clock promptly. Use the entire mornings visiting the exposition nnd exhibition buildings. NOT READY TO LET NEWTON CONTRACT Page Refutes Recently Published In terview Promising Action in Oc tober. Raleigh. Sept. 28.—Contract for the Statesville-Xewton link of Route 10, recently featured ill a Supreme Court case, will not be let any time soon, according to Frank Page. State Highwny Commissioner, yesterday, when his attention was called to a I published interview purporting to be from W. C. Wilkinson, commissioner from the Sixth District, stating j that the contract would be let in October. "The contract will not be let within the next month." said Mr. Page. Survpys nre being made with a view to avoiding the route which the Highway Commission is enjoined from building, and to comply with the law as interpreted by the Su preme Court, which said that the Highway Commission must follow the 1921 legislative mail. Mr. Page said that he did not know when the road would be in shape for the con tract to be let, but indicated that. H. might be some time before a route could be determined uflpn . which wou’d not be open so further in junctions. An injunction waa secured by the town of Newton to force the High way Commission to bring the high way by the new court house rather than through the edge of town as planned by the commission. The case was taken to the Supreme Court, which upheld the contentions of Newton, nnd added some restrictions of their own. The link is about 20 miles long, lying half in Catawba and half in Iredell. It also includes a concrete bridge over the Catawba river, and the entire project is expected to cost about $1,000,000. Iredell and Cataw ba Counties are both advancing part ial loans to the Btgtc. the remainder of the funds to be furnished from the highway fund. With Our Advertisers. The Southern Railway Company will sell round trip fares to Atlanta and Birmingham on Thursday, Octo ber 7th. The fare from Concord i.t Atlanta and return will be $7.50. and to Birmingham $9.50. Tickets good till October 11th and 13 respectively. See ad. in this paper. M. R. Pounds is now located in his new quarters in the Corl building op posite the hotel. Dry cleaning and tailoring done promptly. D'orsay has a perfume for each costume of each individual. At Gib son Drug Store. W. J. Hetheox sells standard brands of electrical goods. Always nt yonr service. Worthwhile lumber that's certain to please you at the E. L. Morrison Lumber Company. The color called “Burnt Umber" is named from the province of Umbria, in Italy, red earth from which when baked makes the pigment. EPIDEMIC DANGER | IN FLORIDA GONE WORKERS BELIEVE 1 Warning by Press, Efforts | of Workers, Outside Aid ( and Ideal Weather Min-j } imize Epidemic Danger. PHYSICIANS AND NURSES PRAISED Conditions Improving So i Rapidly Troops Will Be Relieved of Duty in Sev ! eral Cities Today. West Palm Beach. Sept. 28.—OP)— Belief that all danger from an epi- j domic in Florida's hurricane stricken area has passed, has been expressed by doctors, nurses and relief workers j in the score or more communities in the path of the gale. Timely warning by the press, ideal weather, energetic efforts of doctors and nurses and the response of the populace to immunization efforts has fast minimized danger of epidemic, according to Dr. William R. Redden, director of the Red Cross. "The splendid immunization work of the doctors constituted one of the finest pieces of preventive work the country has ever seen outside of mili tary forces," he said. "The few cases of typhoid fever and other diseases now found are hardly more than the usual number at this time of the year." Inoculation continued yesterday, and several hundred persons in vari ous sections of the storm area bared their arms to the anti-typhoid needle. I With the clearing of wreckage, the growing means of sheltering the home less and the rebuilding of sanitation systems progressing, national guards men who have been assisting civil au t’.iorities in the storm-torn communi tics have begun to lenve for their homes. A small contingent left Miami yes terday with others scheduled to leave within the next few days. Troops at Fort Lauderdale will be ordered back to Orlando, their mobil ization point, today it was announced by Major Preston Ayres. Requests for assistance from ap proximately 490 persons huve been received from the citizens relief com mittee nt Miami. Actual needs in each case will govern the extent of aid given, officials said.' Accurate information as to the num ber of dead, seriously injured or miss ing will not be available for several days, the Red Cross announced. The number of known dead com piled fr.om various sources and ' Dempsey Sued For Striking “Blow” After the Fight. ' I’hilade’phia. Sept. 27.—Suit for $35,000 damages was entered here 1 today against Jack Dempsey, former heavyweight champion, by two spec t;itons who saw the fighter lose hi title. They are M. 1,, l.uroche and his wife, Mabel. It is alleged that while Dempsqj was making his way through the crowd from the ring 'to his dressing • room in the Sesqui-Centennial stad ' iunr after the fight with Gene Tun ' ney last Thursday night he struck ' Mrs. Larcoehe in the side with his - elbow and she fell, suffering injuries. • The exnct nature of the injuries were i not disclosed. ■ Judge F( rguson in common pleas ■ court is'-ued a capias for Dempsey but it cannot be served on him un i less he comes into the state. The E judge fixed bail at SI,OOO in the : event the capias ‘ - born 52 years ago. Tlie prospective husband is 32 years old, « native of Rome. i Tetrazzini says yihe will spend No i vember in Rome in her own palace - and later may go on a concert tour in the United States. THE TRIBUNE PRINTS TODAY’S NEWS TODAI NO. 229 ; i DC LIEVE[ITOIIffI ifIINERS ARE ALM AND CAN BE Ml Rescue Workers at Pabsjyl Mine Hear Sounds They a Say the Trapped Mein Made. 1 DARING WORKER I I ENTERS THE MINB j Alfred Neki Descended! With Safety Line Says He Heard the ftfefl* Working. I Iron wood, Mich.. Sept. Sj6.— Indications of life from the rpek- ,1 bound eighth level of the Pabst Mina-9 where 43 men were entombed, by' S-E shaft cave-’n last Friday, imbued it*' 'm cue crews today with a do-oar-die spir*,;S it.' ;j Tlie first indication came when a distinct signal on a watif -1 pipe was heard by a crew of worteetSßW in reply to staccato hammerings. £|mH er Alfred Neki. a dauntless rescl»_ 3 worker descended with a safety line J about ill's waist, and made his wotßß through debris to the nearest iwrnt'lß™ tlie miners yet penetrated. 1 'I lieard men working.” he re "It was distant but definite. sure of it. they are alive.” ' 1 Neki made another discovery which 1 was more disconcerting. His passaj||||l was blocked 50 beyond the where tlie rescue party is working ia l flic mine shaft to clear away wrcckagjlM which blocks tlie entrance to tM : 49 eighth level. 1 Doctors and nurses are hold 'n J readiness at the mine. I An attempt to communicate with 1 the entombed men by telegraph * using iron pipe as transmission mode 1 . ium failed early today. -I The code for "O K“ was hammered 3 on tlie pipe more than a times by a telegrapher. There was' response. One of the entombed ers understands tlie code, mine said. 1 DELIVER ULTIMATUM I IN ASHEVILLE STRIKE J Street Car Workers Must Return to 3 Work or Lose Seniority Rights To*;R day. , J A shewn* Sept? 27.—With i Woipidl tomorrow set as the minute Whets old M employes may return with seniqriMr ,1 irivi.eges by the Carolina Power & l Light Company, leaders of lln idiMttjdß ing carmen's organization tonigfit I conferring in an effort to decide what 1 steps if any are to be takeii. 1 In tlie meantime p.ie officials of the ] company are going quietly a bo'll ( the-M work of restoring partial serviae wiHEB their street cars supplemented by attglW mented bus scliedules in order' thhs || the general public may not be, !ncbfP§!B cenieneed. 1 No conferences have been held be- tl tween officials of the street car com- A )any and strike leaders, so far,ns caigll bo learned, since the refusal of the i general manager to discuss the matters after the walkout which came last || Saturday morning wit’lioitt nptic6l”jgl Asheville was moving on a normal ,3 ilane today, the automobiles having j absorbed the street chr traffit \wth- A iut appreciable congestion or iucon- u venience. Indications are that the 1 next 24 hours will see the strike setr 11 tied one way or another. Eithej a J nrge number of men will return to 3 work or they will be definitely reatj jl >ut of the running and their places S taken by men who are beiug rapidly a recruited from a long list of applj- 3 •ants at the power company’s office 1 * prior to Itie walkout. Protest Against Conscript of Lab*#. <1 in Honda Filed. New York. Sept. 27.—A ’ protezfe*d| against. reported conscription y 1 United States marines.” “AI” Will Run Again. ’ill Syracuse, N. Y., Sept. 28. —OPtMM Democrats of New York State u uani"'|] mously and for the fifth time nomi-l nateel Alfred E. Smith, of New Ypfljfa City for Governor. The nomination was aceompanlect j by a demonstration of tremendous etjrj t inis in sm. —, . Passengers Rescued. New York. Sept. 28.—0W—P**dj sengers abort! tlie Ward line steararEH Mexico which was grounded yestet-® day on a reef off the Yucatan cottßtJl were removed today by the steamer ! Rio Grava and will be landed at QgJ vana. There were about ninety pwjll sengers oil the stranded ship. THE WEATHER ||J| Mostly cloudy fonight and WednHH day, probably light showers tVrdnPH day .In west portion. Moderale tkQMH and northeast winds. "'1