TT? Weather Fair Local Cotton 22 Cents 1C 11 11 VOL. XLIII. NO. 219 GASTONIA, N. C, WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, SEPT. 13, 1922 SINGLE COPY 5 CENTS 'Tl A 1 1 11 v REPUBLICAN SENATORS OVERCAME OPPOSITION BY COMFORTABLE LEAD Townsend, Lodge and Poin dexter Favored for Sen-v ate From Their States. CONTESTS WERE SPIRITED Many State and Congressional Primaries Held Tuesday Over the Nation. CHICAGO, Sept. . 13. The three Republican incumbent Senators involved in Tuesday's eight 8tate primaries over came strong opposition by apparently safe margins, according to . incomplete returns available early today. Senator Townsend of Michigan led the nearest of his trhee opponents, Herbert F. Baker, by more than 20,000 Votes with nearly two thirds of the State 's precincts reported. Senator Lodge, of Massachusetts, roll ed up a 40,000 majority over Joseph Walker with returns two thirds com plete. Senator Poindexter, "of Washington, led the nearest of his five opponents, Ceorge Lamping, of -Seattle, by 3,154, on returns fifteen per cent, complete. Mrs, Frances C. Axtell, vras fourth in the race. William E, Sweet, of Denver had a big lead over' Fred A. Cabin in the Democratic Gubernatorial race in Colo rado, while Benj. Griffith, of Denver led Lieutenant Governor Earl Cooley for the Republican nomination. Congressman C. CTimberlake apparently had won re nomination 'in .the second district. ' Redflcld Proctor was apparently cer tain of victory over Lieutenant Cover nor A. 'W. Foote in the Vermont Re publican Gubernatorial contest. Sena torial candidates were unopposed. Former Governor Cole L. Blease, of J South Carolina, was defeated for the Democratic nomination, for Governor by Thomas G. McLeod, in a bitter contest. Supporters of Charles B. Ward and former Governor G. - W. P. Hunt, ot Arizona, both were claiming victory in the race for democratic nomination for Governor of Arizona, with meagre re" turns indicating a close race. Governor Campbell is unopposed for the Republi can nomination and Senator Ashurst, Democratic, also wad no opposition for re-nomination. " .. . " In the Massachusetts Gubernatorial contest, Governor Cox had an easy vic tory , for the Republican- nomination. William A. Gaston, Boston banker, was well in the lead for the Democratic Senatorial nomination in late returns., Governor Groesbeck, of .Michigan, easily defeated two opponents for re nomination while James vBalch had a" small lead over Alva M. Cummins, on early returns for the Democratic nomi nation. 1 ' f Congressman II. G. Dupre, of the sec ond Louisiana district had a substantial majority in early returns. t GEORGIA VOTERS HAVE . , . HOT PRIMARY TODAY Ku Klux Issue Has Been In jected Into the Campaign By Hardwijk Congress man Upshaw Is Opposed By ' Mayor Key. ATLANTA, Ga, Sept. 13. With fair weather in evidence, Georgia voters went to the primary polls, today to nominate state and county officers and congressional representative, and vntji the participation of women in the vot ing an unusually large vote was ex pected to be cast. . '.'Of chief interest was the contest for nomination for governor between Thomas W. Hardwiek, incumbent, and Clifford M. Walker, unsuccessful can didate two years ago. Up to the clos ing of the campaign last night, both candidates had waged a determined fight. Governor Hardwiek injected the Ku Klux Klan issue into the race when lie declared Mr. . Walker was the can- , didate of the Klan and being supported .by the "radical union, labor element." Mr. Walker has flayed the present ad ministration's taxation policy. "'. " The announcement of Senator Thomas E. Watson that he would not vote for Mr. Hardwiek were he in Georgia on the day of the primary, was an added feature. Senator Watson charg ed Governor Hardwiek had 'broken every promise he -has ever made me." The Georgia senator and the governor were closely united in the last election, and were familiarly known as "the two Toms." ; . r Wide interest also nas been created in the races for commissioner of agri culture and state superintendent of schools. In the former contest J. J. Brown, ineumbent, is opposed by A. O. Blalock and O. M. Houser. In the latter, Nicholas M. Sowder has inject ed a spirited campaign against political administration of the office and has announced his opposition to the book trust with b ' promise to support free text nooks if elected. N. H. Ballard .and M. I. Duggan, who is now con nected with the school office, are also candidates for the office. . - , In the fiftl congressional district race, Congressman William D. Upshaw is opposed by Mayor James L. Key, of Atlanta, and Ralph O. Cochran. Upshaw is a prohibition candidate and Cochran is running on a light wine and beer platform. . THE. WEATHER ..Fair tonight and Thursday. Juice Is Short In City of 'Salisbury, Says S. P. Co. SALISBURY, N. C, Sept 13. The Southern Power Company has sent notices to local users of power that their power may be cut off for at least one day each 'week in the near future unless some way is found to get coal delivered. The company hat year's supply of coal contracted for, the notice .said, but it has ben able to get only five cars since July 31. The season is too dry to secure enough hydro-electric power to supply the demand, it was said. . FOUR TEXAS WOMEN, "LADIES OF INVISIBLE EYE," FLOG ANOTHER Mrs. I. C. Tatum, Accused of Ruining Her Daughter, Is. Whipped. RECEIVED 100 LASHES Floggers Claim to Be Mem bers of a Secret , Society. . FORT WORTH, TEXAS, Sept. 13. Mrs. I. C. Tatum, aged 44, was reported in a serious condition today as the result of a flogging administered last night by four . women, one of them masked, who , described themselves as a committee . of the Invisible Eye."" Mrs. Tatum, who received 100. lashes, it was said, was accused by the four of '.'ruin ing her daughter.' - ' ' , The women, who announced them-; k selves as members of a secret so- - ciety, enticed Mrs. Tatum into an . automobile by promising to take her to her daughter. The car was then . driven six miles from her home at Stop Six, Dallas Pike, where her as sailants, she said, applied straps ', with balls fastened to the ends. According to a Mrs. Floyd, aunt ( of the victim, Mrs. Tatum's body was a mass of bniises. Mrs. Floyd said that Mrs. Tatum believed she could recognize two of her abduc-;, tors. ' ; ',- . . .- .... ' . OLD CAMP CHRONICLE ' OUTFIT TO BE DECORATED 147th Field Artillery, Which Trained at Camp Greene and Also at Camp Chronicle, "to Get Croix de Guerre. MITCHELL, S. D., Sept. 11. Gen oral John J. Pershing will come -to Mitchell September 29, to officially dec orate the colors of the 147th. Field Ar tillery with the French Croix de Guerre. At tho same time, Colonel Boyd Wales, who commanded the regiment during the war, will be decorated. The decoratious are to be made in recognition of the services of the regi ment during the breaking of the "Hin denburg" Line at Juvigny of the west ern front in France. The action began August 28, 1918, and lasted until Sep tember 6. The 147th Field Artillery was ordered to eliminate German ma chine gun nests in the vale before Ju vigny and later those nlong the Tserny Sowiy road to tho Kast. The work of the regiment and of the 32nd Division, of which the 147th was a part, brought citations by General Manguin, command ing the Tenth French Army and in charge of operations in the sector,- Other regiments of the division re ceived their decorations at the hands of. General Manguin, but through an oversight the 147th was left out. There were four artillery regiments in the division, and this being unknown to the official who made provision for the dec oration ceremonies, only three regiments were ordered to participate. . When it was discovered that no provision had been eiade to decorate the 147th colors, the French government communicated with the United states secretary of war. When negotiations were completed .the regiment was back home and demobil ized. The dec-orations for the regi ment were forwarded to the secretary of war, who has instructed General Pershing to confer the decorations. William A. Hazle, adjutant general of South Dakota, who served as lieu tenant colonel of the 147th during tn war, will participate in the ceremonies and has invited all former members ef the regiment and all former service men in the state to attend . The regiment was organized in Octo ber, 1917. The regiment was then in camp at Camp Greene, Charlotte, X. C, as part of the Fourth South Dakota In fantry. Two batteries of the regiment were of the Oregon National Guard, the balanee being South Dakota men and replacements. The above artillery outfit was part of the brgiade which received Hs train ing in firing at Camp Chronicle. The artillery units from. Camp Greene used the Camp Chronicle range for practice. VENIZELOS ARRIVES IN - PARIS FROM SWITZERLAND PARIS, isept. 13. (By The Asso ciated Press.) Former Premier Veni zelos, of Greec, arrived in Paris today from Switzerland. His friends here. de clared he planned his present visit here for conference with political and person al friends regarding the situation in Athena with a view, it was felt, to the possibility of his being called back to power in Greece. ,j FREE MAIL DELIVERY EXTENDED TO SERVE 3,000 MORE PEOPLE Postmaster Slate Secured Im proved Service Af ter N Months of Effort. ONE NEW CARRIER Town Resurveyed; Extension Will Release Many P. O. Boxes for New Users. Within the next few. days 2,600 more Gastonians will be' served daily Jy the free' letter carrier system. Announce ment to this effect was made this morn ing by Postmaster F. A. Slate, who gave out for publication at the same time a schedule showing the routes to be fol lowed by the carriers.- This schedule appears below and should be kept for reference by. interested persons. .Recently an inspector from the Post office Department spent some time here making an entire re-survey of the city, na n rp.nlt nt which the town was en tirely re-mapped, the old routes extended and one new carrier added. The net re sult of this is that af least 2,600 more people will henceforth have their mail aeiiverea iwicc uaiy uu uicjr uuiucd. Postmaster Slate has been working on thin nronrntitinn for several months.' He made at least one trip to Washington in his efforts and left no stone unturned to secure for Gastonia the additional pestal service which the srrowth of the town really justified. . V Other improvements in me locai posiai service include the recent addition of a motor truck for the delivery of parcel post, packages and the installation oi nrntv.fniir more street mail boxes of the latest type- These are here and are to be erected within the next few days. - The inspector who was assignea to me task of resurv,eying Gastonia and map ping out the enlarged city delivery ser vice, is quoted as saying that the per eentage of growth of the postal business in Gastonia for the past five years has Wen the largest in the State,, based on population statistics. A few months ago this office was advanced to the first class. - For the' past two or three years there has been a very great shortage in ,the supply of boxes at the postoffice, as a re sult of which the general delivery has been overcrowded and niany,newjusines8 firms have had difficulty in getting their mail . There are always at least a hundred applications on file for boxes which cannot be filled. Now that a large number of people are to be served by ft-n itr inlivnrv Postmaster Slate aslrs that these people co-operate with him by giving up their- boxes so tney may oe as signed to business houses and others in the up town district who are now forced to use the general delivery. He feels confident that this co-operation win oe fnrthenminir and that as a result Of it boxes will be available for a large num ber of the applicants whose applications have been on filo for a long time. Vnllnwinor ' ia the romillcte schedule showing the routes covered by the four city earners: Description of Territory Covered by City Koute no. i. Airline Avenue, both sides, from South Street to west side of Ransom Street. Rankin n Avenue, both sides, from Boyce street to West side of Highland street. Hiirhljind street, both sides, from Air line Avenue to Nos. 309 and 306 High land. Pri6r Street, both sides, from Airline Avenue to Nos. 309 and 316 Ptyor. ' Morris Street, both sides, from Airline Avenue to 300 block Morris. : Boyce Street, both sides, from Airline Avenue to Nos. 313 and 308 Boyce. lui. Avenue, both Rides, from Dallas Street to Ravino at east end of street.- ' Page Avenue, both sides, from -west end of street to pakland Street. Walnut Avenue .both sides, from York Street to Oakland Street. Granite Avenue, both sides, from l ork Street to Falls Street. . V Lincoln Avenue, both sides, from York to Marietta Street' Bradley Avenue, both sides, from ork to Falls. York Street, both sides, from Airlins (Continued on page 2.) GASTON COUNTY DAY AT ' EXPOSITION IS SEPT. 27 Chamber of Commerce and Gaston County Fair ' Will Have Double Booth Every body Is Urged to Go. . Plans for the Gaston county exhibit at the Mude-In-Carolinas Exposition were gone over with exposition officials in Charlotte Tuesday by . the executive secretary of the Gastonia Chamber ot Commerce. There is every reason to believe that the Gastonia and Gaston exhibit will prove one of the choicest of the entire exposition space. ; A booth has beea provided the cham ber of commerce through participating mills paying the extra expense and in addition, a booth has been provided for the Big Gaston County Fair through other arrangements. These will be ilirown together and will provide a dou ble size booth extending from one aisle to another, giving double frontage. Gaston county day is planned for Wednesday, September 27th. and every one in the county who potisibty can do so. i urged to plan to attend on that day. Every motorist "is expected to be in line, for the publicity thus to be derived for the city and county. Special low rites on the railroads will be in force for those not going by motor. Starts Fad J km y.X 4-4 A ' X 1 mi.' : Here's Herman Wledfeldt, son of Germany's ambassador to Wash, lngton riding bis bike In the na tional capital. H6 i owrtea a wj jyclinar fad among the younger , set In diplomatic circles. : ", . ' SEEKERS OF EL DORA. . , DO DRUGGED, ROBBED ' ' AND ABANDONED HAVANA, CUBA, Sept. 12... Nine emigrants from Central Europe and one from China recently paid 150 each for a 10-hour motor boat ride, a cup of drugged coffee and the privilege of footing it 35 miles back to Havana after being robbed pf $1,500. ' , According to the story they teld the police, three men agreed to land them on the Florida coast without bothering the American immigration authorities. Boarding a motor boat at dusk near Marianaothey put to sea? At dawn the next 'day, after several hours deep slumber brought on by what they believe was drugged coffee, they were landed in a deso late cove, told they were on American soil snd left to shift for themselves aftr all their cash and valuables had been taken at the point of a pistol. A little scouting located the Cuban village of Jibacoa and a rural guard who pointed out the road to Havana. The police are holding a man who says he is an American, and a Cuban, charged as principals; the third man has not yet been found. CREAMERY MATTER TO BE DISCUSSED AT MEETING NEXT TUESDAY EVENING John A. Arey, Dairy Expert From State Department, to Be Present Full Attend ance Is Desired. EVery farmer in Gaston bounty inter ested in tho establishment of a creamery is asked to attend a meeting in tho Chamber of Commerce auditorium Tues day night at 7:4.5 o'clock, called at the request of many interested dairymen. John A. Airey, dairy specialist, will be present from Raleigh, to explain the entire matter and to supply any infor mation desired. The meeting will be an important one and upon the interest shown by the size of . the attendance depends in large measure the question of whether the creamery will be established or dropiwd. Tho committee is not trying to push it on the peoplo but is only co-operating by request and endeavoring to help ascertain real sentiment and put the proposition on its feet if the people desire it. Moving pictures of interest will also be shown by County Agent. Altman if a suitable film can be obtained in time. This, however, cannot ' be definitely stated yet. HOUSE PAVES THE WAY FOR ACTION ON BONUS BILL WASHINGTON, ept. 13. The House, meeting an hour and a half ear lier than usual, planned to take final ac tion on the Administration tariff bill before adjournment late today, thus pav ing the way for its final action tomorrow on the Soldiers' Bonus Bill. The first order of procedure was the reading of the 162-page conference re port followed by four hours of general debute with a final vote to follow im mediately afterwards. Spirited ex changes between Democratic opponents, and Republican proponents were looked for. - The tariff bill, which has been nearly two years in the making, is the -most amended measure in the history of the American Congress. The Senate finance committee made 2,087 changes in the original House bill. the Senate increased this number to zf 436 and the conferees in perfecting the measure added several hundred more, running the total to around 3,000. , m Casar Shooting Affair Seems To Be a Case of Whom to Believe Newspaper Correspondent De clares That Kohloss' Report Shows No Investigation. E. A. HOUSER " REPLIES Occupants of Car Claim There Was No Whiskey In the Car. , SHELBY, Sept. 12. Everett A. Houser, newspaper correspondent who handled the story appearing in Friday's papers in regard to the shooting of Mrs. I. B. Miller by officers who stopped a car near Casar, stated today that the attack on the veracity of the report published in state papers shows that Mr. Kohloss has made no investi. gatiou of the matter; that he has merely taken the explanation of Prohi bition Officer Houser, who went to Salisbury to see Mr. Kohloss. The correspondent also declares that the statement that Mrs. Miller was shot 15 miles from where the car was stop ped is refuted by statements of officers themselves, Officer - Houser having ad mitted to the correspondent, iu tho presence of at least SO people, that some shooting ( occurred at Casar. Mrs. Miller was shot at Lattiniore, but this bullet was presumably fired by Policeman Cabaniss, of that place, who Cad been telephoned by Officer Houser 's party that a mau had been killed at Casar, the correspondent states, but Mrs. Miller was also shot, near Casar, he said,' this bullet having admittedly been fired by a .-member of Houser 's party. . . t The man injured was not hurt near Lattiniore, as per the Kohloss state ment, but in Casar, everybody agreeing that this was purely an accident, ac cording to the newspaper man . The first time Mrs. Miller was shot was before this accident occurred, Koh loss' statement in regard to this also being wrong, the correspondent said, adding that Officer Houser declared at Shelby the day following the shooting that he was standing on the running board of the car when it was suddenly started, throwing him to the ground. He said nothing at that time of having been hit with a fruit jar, nor did he mention being knocked unconscious, as is stated by Kohloss. . The officers aver that there was whiskey in the ear. Mr. and Mrs. Thompson and Mr. Miller deny this. Mrs. Miller is in no condition to dis cuss tho incident. No broken fruit jars were found where the first shooting oc curred, near Casar. The newspaper correspondent declares that the statement of Kohloss that " ac tions of officers were exaggerated and magnified for the purpose of arousing sentiment which would bo detrimental towards the enforcement of prohibi tion" is a misstatement of tho facts. The correspondent further charges that no federal officer has been in the county to make an investigation in re gard to the shooting. Ho also avers that Kohloss has made reckless charges without having made any investigation and that these statemeuts cannot be substantiated. MRS. HARDING'S CONDITION SHOWS IMPROVEMENT Rapid Change for the Better Is Noted Operation Is PostponedRespiration and Pulse Better. WASHINGTON, Sept. 13. General appearances indicate us rapid improve ment in Mrs. Harding's condition us can reasonably be expected, a bulletin issul at the White House Bhortly after 9 o'clock today snid. The bulletin folows: "Mrs. Hurding's condition 8 a. m. Temperature- 98.8 ; pulse 88; respira tion 28. ' "She had quite comfortable night, sleeping longer with less interruptions. Elimination increasing. Tenderness and swelling slowly subsiding. General ap pearances indicate as rapid improve ment as can reasonably be expected. " CRISIS IN MRS. HARDING'S ILLNESS HAS PASSED WASHINGTON, Sept. 13. Iadica tions at the White House at an early hour today were that Mrs. Harding was continuing to show the same favorable progress toward recovery which brought expressions of confidence from attending physicians yesterday and last night that the crisis of her illness had ben passed. In view of this improvement, the ques tion of an operation at this time was no longer under consideration today, de- finite announcement having been made ' for the first time late yesterday that surgical relief would not be necessary at present. QUARRELED ABOUT HOGS; MURDER IS RESULT EASTMAN, GA.. Sept. 13. As the J result of an altercation between Willi White and Daniel White, brothers, over some hoes, the latter was struck over the head with a heavy board and fatally injured, and the former was lo!ged in the rounty jail today on a charge of murder. MAT.T Sit. 13. The British mili- tnrv fronsnnrt KonialL bound for India has been inverted to Malta to take a British battalion to Constantinople, Policeman Cabaniss, of Latti niore, Is Fourth Officer . Arrested. MUCH FEELING AROUSED Shooting Is Sole Topic of Con versation In Cleveland and Rutherford. The following is from the Cleveland Star relative to the Miller shooting at Casar: The arrest of Policeman Cabaniss, of Lattimore, who is charged with having fired tho second shot which hit Mrs. I. B. Miller, of Caroleen, is about the only new development in the case which has caused much comment in this county and over the entire state. Mrs. Miller was declared to be resting fairly well by authorities at the Rutherford hospital, where slie is undergoing treat ment. The bullet which penetrated the jaw lias been removed but no attempt has as yet been made to search for the other bullet. Policeman Cabaniss was Saturday placed under a $500 bond . He is charged ' with having shot Mrs. Miller in the neck, Mr. Miller declaring that the shot which was fired at Lattimore struck his wife in the back of the neck. At the preliminary hearing Cabaniss admitted having shot one time but he declares that he was shooting in the ground. Other men who were in the car with him also stated that he fired but they were unable to say in . what direction the gun was pointed. The whole trial was a John Doe investiga tion to find out who it was that fired the shot at Lattimore. The defense of Mr. Cabaniss, it is understood, will be based on the claim that he had been informed by tho of ficers at Casar that a man had been killed when run over by the car and that he was naturally led to believe the car contained desperate people. It will also be his contention that Mrs. Miller was shot both times at Casar; that the bullet he fired went into the ground. This last contention, however, seems to be refuted by Mr, Miller's statement and by that of Mr. and Mrs. Thomp son,' who. state that Mrs. Miller was shot in the back at Casar and that the bullet which entered the bark of her neck, circling around her head and breaking the jaw bone, was fired at Lattimore. A report reaching The Star as to Hie occurrence at Casar whilo unverified, is given as it was received. It is claimed that there were two cars pro ceeding along tho road. The ear in which tho Caroleen party was riding was behind the other machine. ' Both machines were stopped. Houser search ed tho machine which . was in front. Wesson searched the car in which (Mr. and Mrs. Miller were riding and, find ing no whiskey told them to drive on. As the car passed the one which Houser had stopped, Houser made a jump for the running board, missed his step- and fell to the ground. Then the shooting started. : '..' This report, of course, is unverified. (Continued on page 8.) BLEASE SUPPORT. IN SOUTH CAROLINA FAILED Many Counties Which Were Formerly Strong Blease Centers Give Him Only Small Majorities. COLUMBIA, S. C. Sept. 13. Cole L. Blease, aspirant for a third term in the governor's chair, was defeated by approximately 13,000 votes out of a total of 182,000 in tho second primary of Tuesday, according to practically complete returns gathered here today, Thomas G. McLeod, attorney, of Bish opville being the nominee of the party. J. II . Hope, of Union, was nomi nated state superintendent of educa tion over J. E. Swearingeu, incumbent, by an almost two-to-one ballot. With only a few scattering boxes out, McLeod 's vote is 9V00; Blease 's, 83, 293. Hope's vote is 104,503; Swear ingen's, 73,528. . In several counties where release has in former elections received strong ma jorities, he received much smaller votes yestprday. In Charleston where the former governor has heretofore been a lader, his leadd windled to only about one hundred votes. In Anderson, which has in former years gone wild for Blease, his vote was only 4,621 to McLeod 's 4.412. York and Cherokee counties, always, heretofore considered I wo of the strongest Blease counties, gave him only small leads in the votes counted here today. J. E. Swearingen, superintendent of education, carried only ten counties nut of 46 in his race for re-election. Mr. Swearingen 's defeat, it is claimed,- was due in part to the fact that he an nounced himself for governor some months ago and then after a number of prominent citizens, including two women, entered the race for his office, he altered his plans and changed over to the race for re-election as tuperin- tnnilnnf ' In the Sixth congressional district I ongrefsman r. tl. eto is defeated by A'. H. Gasque, of Florence. LONDON, Sept. 13. "Various American establishments " were amon; the properties damaged b the mob in Constantinople Sunday according to a despatch to The Dui!y Kxprt ss from Ctintauti!ioj.'!e. SOME ROADS MAY SETTLE THE STRIKE BY SEPARATE IS Meeting Last Night Was Broken Up By Janitor Who Put Them Out. 'j SOME PROGRESS IS MADE B. M. Jewell Declares That , They Were Getting Somewhere. CHICAGO,' Sept 13. Hearing on the government's application for a per manent injunction against striking rail way shopmen cotinued today before James H. Wilkerson, while the shop crafts policy committee of ninety as sembled again with prospects appar ently favoring a vote today on pro posals for ending the strike on some roads on the basis f separate agree ments. Althugh B. M. Jewell, chief strike leader, and his associates were guard ed in their statements and declined to comment on prospects as the meeting convened, Mr. Jewell said the union chief "hoped to get somewhere," when their meeting yesterday was "unfor tunately interrupted." The interruption was made by a jan itor, who single-handed, broke up tho meeting of shop craft Headers at a critical stage of the proceedings. With mop and broom in hand, the janitor told the railroad men they would have to "clera out" so he could "clean up for some women' ' who, f r a night meetiug, had rented the hall where tho shop craft chieftains were assembled.. With rumors afloat or more than a week of impending settlements on as many as sixty roads, Mr. Jewell and, his associates persistently declined to comment upon the reports. Assurance was given the executive council by B. J. Tallon, head of the Canadian shopmen, that workers on Canadian . railways would 'hold their strike call in abeyance pending definite action by the policy committee here. A report of the wage grievances and the strike vqte of Canadian shopmen was submitted to Mr. Jewell. Taking up the injunction proceedings w here they left off yesterday, govern ment attorneys resumed presentation of their mass of evidence supporting charges of sabotage and violence iu connection with the strike. Judge Wilkerson suggested- that op posing attorneys try to reach an agree ment over the introduction of evidence to expedite the proceedings. Blackburn, Estrline, assistant to the solicitor gen eral, who yesterday read nearly 200 a.. davits of assaults, said .he would read into the record reports of disorders in every state, unless an agreement was reache to shorten proceedings. Arguments on the motion of Donald R. Bichberg and Frank Mulholland, counsel for B. M. Jewell and John Scott, chief executive and secretary ef the shop crafts organization, or modi fication a the restraining order, was de. ferred by Judgo Wilkerson pending the introduction of evidence; ; CAPT. SALISBURY IS IN SEARCH OF MISSING LINK , SAN FRANCISCO, Sept 13. ; Captain Edward A. Salisbury, scien- ; tist and explorer, today was en route for the Malay Peninsula, where he ; will search for what has been term-, : ed in science "the "missing lint,' J Accompanying Captain Salisbury were M. C. Cooper, former lientenant colonel in the aviation corps of the; ; United States Army; Duke Seller,' : experienced explorer Edward Burg- ; hard, of Columbia University, New ; York; Miss Dorothy Salisbury, the- explorer's daughter, and two motion ; picture men. The party will leave the steamer ; President Taft at Singapore, where t ' Captain Salisbury's yacht Wisdom , II, is anchored. The yacht is being; ; outfitted by Nelson Taylor, a gradu- ate of Stanford University, and George McNeil, a Yale graduate. On ; the vessel is a fine laboratory for . carrying on experiments near the ; scene ef the exploration. Captain Salisbury said rumors had come across the Pacific Ocean from , time to time about a tribe of wild men in the jungles of the Malay . Archipelago who had short, vesti gial tails. More, the reports said, their foreheads receded and their ' 1 brow ridges protruded after the man- ' nerof the Neanderthal man. Not that the captai believed these stories, for he said he was in search of what ever was to be found and that his object was to find man in his most primitive form. 30 MULES BURNED. M ACOX, OA., Sept. 13. Thirty head of mules, several tons of hay and other feedstuff and other property, in cluding the stable buildings, belonging to The Atlantic Coal and Ice Company, were destroyed by fire of undetermined origin last night. The loss is JU.OO'J partly -coered by insurance. COTTON MARKET CLOSING BIDS ON THE NEw YORK MARKET K WYORK. Sept. 13. Cotton fu tures cloned easv. October 21..: Decem ber 213; January 21.0"; Mmh L'l."-'; May 21.31 ; July 21.5. S-;-U ! I quiet at 21. Si), .it puii.t.i d.iwn. gastonia cone:;. (KcjHirtd 1 v I. A. (' r I Receipts rrice AGREEMENT REPORT