-; ' V " ' V pAVV,:,.; V.:r V Ay"":Vt.-V t?;V:V,, ;-; V f ',.." '' -.'- V-' f vVF';Vik;TfVX, t; VV :?v' j-r' V'SH;:!y V'V-i;'? rt:-'t?'''i'J-Si: ;,i!J-J-:;:'Srift;-W 'fe 'J7-i -rV -'',-'' ; Y K. b Si ''A V7':'' ';J-"V-"VV- VVf ;rV',:!- V',V: 4'. i V. ' - r v." ' , --Jvv ' N - - - , , - , :,X"0S THE DISPATCH Delivered In the City by Carrier or sent anywhere by Mall at 35 Cents Per Month. ..;r..rk;e Wife VOLUME SEVENTEEN j WILMINGTON, N. C., TOUR SD AY, APRIL 14t 1911 PRICE THREE CENTS ,,f. i';. T STAND B! Jay Gould and Miss Ann Fiancee In an - Automobile at Lakewood; N. J; fer? x-..- - 0;viO.- rr:- "T7: ( 51115 .s.. ' , .. ' J '...:.... . " ' fl ' ' JJJj'tf t to south winds. . , . -I ,.f .. ..... , .. , .... .. . . . ' i 1 ..' T : 1, r- '' i . i , : - . ' . ' : ,.'-,!; . . . , ; , - , ' : . '. r. '.fev , .-.-7 - .': V. Ilil DolDg Fine " . . . . . ' . - ML lID Tornado taps (taonri Viith Fatal Effect Nine Dead Already Reported and De tails Cannot Be Had As Yet Two White Women Dead, and Two Men Killed White Riding In an Automo bile Property Damage and De struction of Crops Heavy. St. Lcuis, Mo., April 14. Nine per sons are dead and nearly a hundred injured as result of a wind and hail storm, which swept over eastern Mil souri yesterday afternoon, according to belated reports reaching here. In this city three are dead and property val ued at two million dollars was destroy ed. . . , ' -. Two Women Among Victims. Desoto, Moi April 14. With the telephones south of here crippled, re ports from the districts swept by the tornado yesterday are coming in slow ly. It will be late' today before com plete estimates of the damage can be compiled. Eight persons were kill ed in the Valley Mines, Cadet and vicinity. Four negroes were found dead at the' Valley Mines and two white women at Cadet. Two men, John Powers, of Cape Girardeau, and Jos. J. Boyers, of Desoto, were killed while riding in an automobile in Jef ferson county. A third occupant of the machine is missing. The chauf feur escaped and ; telephoned the re port here. Great . havoc throughout Jefferson county is reported. ';' Farm buildings have been ' demolished and there is great damage to crops. CHAMPAGNE RIOTS ARE PERHAPS ALL OVER . Eperney, France, April 14. Calm prevailed during the night throughout the department of Marine, the scene of the three days' riotous outbreak by discontented wine growers. -The au thorities this morning are hopeful that the rioting is over. The Chamber of Deputies vote, nullifying the action of the Senate, with reference to delim itation of champagne districts and the expressed intention of the Premier to refer the question to the council of State for settlement it is believed have' appeased the excited , populace The army corps sent to quell the outbreak and prevent further destruction of property remains in the disturbed area. ASSAULTED TWICE. Awful Deed Committed In Louisiana and Lynching lmminen.t r ' Monroe, La., April 14. Mrs. Leila McKnight, victim of assault at tha hands of two negroes yesterday,; is in a critical condition. She has recover ed sufficiently to make a statement. She declares a negro named Allen was the first to assault her and he was followed by another, whom she did not know, but would be able to iden tify. A mob of several hundred citi zens surrounded the jail last night. The excitement is intense ,If the ne groes are captured a double lynching is almost certain. " TEN THOUSAND GREET HM. . Big Reception to Roosevelt Continues In West. Faren. N. D.. ADril 14. Former President Roosevelt passed through Fargo on a Northern Pacific train for St. Paul on schedule time". Ten thou sand nersons gave him a hearty re ception as he appeared for five min utes on the rear platform. In the Recorder's court this morn ing C. W. Futch was given a hearing for hitting T. L. Ruth, and" judgment was suspended on payment of costs, There were no other cases. ', All RAILROAD CONNECTIONS BUT ONE CUT OFF El Paso. Texas. Anril 14. The Le rado gateway is now the only rail road open fromt he United States to the interim rif MtIp.O. the Rebels having cut off communication " south of Ciudad Porfirio Diaz by burning six railroad bridees. This is the first serious ' disturbance In the State of Coahuila.-' "A Flash of Light." ' Biograph production at Grand The atre todiy. . It. He Prepared the Bill Which Would Place Over Hundred Articles On the Free List How the Free List Would Benefit the People. Washington, April 14 The Ways and Means Committee bills, one to rat ify th.e reciprocity treaty and the other to give the" farmers duty-free imple ments and 'other necessities, introduced will be hurried through the House. -The bill to place on the free list ag ricultural implements, cotton bagging, leather,, boots and shoes; and other things carries more than a hundred articles, including many products of i Beef Trust, the Steel Trust, the Farm implement Trust, the Biscuit Trust, the Sewing Machine Trust, the Leath er Trust and the Salt Trust. This list was prepared by Represen tatiye Kitehin, a member of the com mittee, and he studied it carefully with a view to striking in the high places. He said today: ' "The duty on bacon and ham is 4 cents a. pound. "Foreigners are able to buy American bacon and ham for about 2 cents less than we do. The trust fixes the price here. We import ed 11,350,000 worth of meat products in 1909, including $94,885 of bacon and h&ms. The duties are literally prohib itive. These things we transfer to the free list." Lard is on the Underwood free list. In 1909 this country exported '$53,000, 000, and imported $54,000 worth. The duty was reduced by the Payne-Ald-ricn ill- from '2 cents to 1 1-2 cents a pound. " - - In the farmers' implement list there are at least one .hundred different Idnds all carrying duties. " Common farm wagons pay 35 per qent. A ag on, thai sells fdr $100 in Canada brings $135 here. Hay tedders, feed cutters gralnV crushers, field rollers and ma nure spreaders pay 45 per cent. ' Free cotton bagging and cotton ties, it is argued, will save the farmers' 10 cents a bale, or $1,300,000 on a 13,000, 000 bale crop, . and sacks for wheat,' corn and peanuts, $5,000,000 annually. The. advalorem duty on coarse sacks, is 33 per cenL Wire, fencing pays a duty of 45 per cent. The Underwood bill will save the American farmer $5,000,000, its framers say, and cheat the Govern ment out of very little revenue. Lum ber, rough, planed and dressed, comes in free. It is estimated that this will save Western people $20,000,000. Flour is used as an illustration of what the free ljst will do. The ad valo rem duty is 25 per cent. Transferred to tne free list, flour will cross the Can adian line at a saving of $1.17 a barrel to the "American consumer. Putting Bewing' machines on ' the free list should reduce the price by from $5 to $7.50 a machine, as they had a duty of 30 per cent. ; GEORGIA CONGRESSMAN WANTS T4TH AMENDMENT REPEALED Washington April 14. A bill intro duced in the House by Representative Hardwick, of Georgia, provides for the repeal of the fourteenth amendment to the constitution. . The measure seeks to prevent Congress from limiting the representation of Southern States be cause of the disfranchisement of the negro, which curtails the voting popu lation of the. States. , GETS EIGHTEEN YEARS. Sentance Passed on Virginia Mai . Who Murdered: Negress. Hampton, Va., April 14. M. J. Gar land, found guilty of murdering Jes sie Banks, a negress, at Pheobus ;n December, was sentenced today to eighteen years in the penitentiary. . , . ' ."Mother Nevyman Retires. Wellsley, Mass., April 14 Mrs. Anna Newmani known tb thousands of Wellesley graduates the world over as "Mother" and "Aunt," is to quit her post as had of Noruinbega Cottage, which she has occupied for twenty-five years, f Mrs. Newman presided 'over Norumbega destinies almost since it was built and she was considered among the undergraduates as a guard Ian angel. The girls told her their sorrows and joys and he advice was always of the soundest. Ajlrs. Newman is going to remove to Pittsfleld, Mass., where she is to retire to private life. "Red's Request. Great, drama by Selig Stock Com- JpanyJ Grand Theatre today. . It 1911, by American Press Association. . Mr. Gould and Miss Graham will be married in St. Thomas' church, NewTork city, on April 29. The wedding '(will be a simple one. Owing to the recent death of Miss Graham's aunt a limited number will be asked to the church, and relatives and a very few intimate friends.only have. been invited to the reception. .In the; picture Mr. -Gould is seated at the wheel. In the rear seat Is Morgan J. O'Brien,'. Jr. The hatless young man Is George J. Gould, Jr. This la tba first picture of Mr. Gould and Miss Graham taken together. . , . .. - IUP0RTAI Commis'sioner of Immigration for the . Southern Commercial Congress to Soon Enter Upon His Duties He Talks In Interesting Way. Washington, i April 14. LeRoy Hodges, at present with the Tariff Board, will inr a few months becoma Commissioner of Immigrafion of the Southern Commercial Congress. Injhe Interval, he will co-operate with Sena tor Fletcher and Managing Director Dawe, in organizing to successfully carry out the deljcate task' thus as signed to him by the executive com mittee. Mr. Hodges is in .complete Sympathy with the Southern ' Commer cial Congress in its repeated declara tions that the lands of the South would better remain empty than bring on a second racial problem. In a written -communication to the execu tive committee, Mr. Hodges says: "There is , a pressing demand now In the South for skilled industrial la borers, as well as for unskilled work men, who can be relied on, and , who will not further complicate our negro problem. v , . "I would advocate, however, that the energy of the Southern Commer cial. Congress be . directed towards turning agriculturalists towards the South. The large tracts of land which are now lying idle throughout the South should be placed in condition to produce not only subsistence for the army of workers. who will be at tracted, to the regidVin quest of em ployment as our : industrial develop ment: continues, but .also to furnish the . raw cotton, tobacco.-sugar cane, and the other, commodities which our own mills and factories will require outside of 'the export demands. While this may be "made the main work ot the congress for the present, I do not mean-to say that the demand for in dustrial laborers, and skilled artisans should be overlooked, for I believe that as far as it is practical an effort should be exerted to supply this need. But as these latter classes are sel dompermanent settlers in any one locality, the Southern Commercial Congress can best serve the South by guiding within her -boundaries those who will become real factors in the communities ; in which theyv take up their residence. N V.- Sir? ;i cs 4 x i sy r wv HILL STEPS DUI Ambassador to Germany Tenders. His Resignation, Which Is Accepted By President Taft Comes In Nature of Surprise. ' Washington, April 14. David Jayne Hill, of Rochester, N. Y., Ambassador of the United States to Germany, has resigned, and his resignation has been accepted by the President. Neither in Hill's letter of resigna tion, nor in the president's letter of acceptance Js the reason given for the Ambassadors action. The President thanks Hill for his services at, Berlin and says he is glad to know, he will remain until July 1, when the resigna tion becomes effective. Hill became Ambassador to Berlin April 2, 1908. His resignation was a great surprise to officials in Washington. It was ar gued that the fact that he is to remain at his, post until July indicates there was nothing urgent in the Ambassa-. dor's action. ; ' ; Mr. Hodges is a native of North Carolina, although reared in Virginia where he received his early education in Gatewood's Naval Preparatory school at Norfolk. His education in economics and law was received in Washington . & Lee University, and at the University of Chicago. He has spent abouttwo years in railroad and general , engineering, having served under the Seaboard Air Line and the Augusta and Florida - railroads, , and several construction companies. From July 24th, 1908, until Novem ber, 1910, with the exception of about four months spent in the law school at . Washington and Lee University, he was a .special agent and the geo grapher of the United States Immigra tion Commission. Resigning his posi tion with- the Immigration Commis sion, he . was appointed commercial geographer of the - Tariff . Board, No vember 21st, 1910, .which position-he now holds. ' , ; ' ' , The Orchestra. :. . At the. Grand will play' "Judy For get," today. , " . . It. If your pair came from us, you can bet it is the latest style. 1 Boylan & Hancock. v . - .2t blood nniniiiis Mexican Insurrectos, Including Amer- " icans, Capture An Important Point Young .Virginian Killed in the Bat tle. ' .' I' : " Agua Prieta, Mexico, ?ift.pril l4.-j-The Revolutionists, under "Red- Lopez," hold this town,' which they captured yesterday, . after a three hours' -battle with Mexican troops., . The town as a port of entry is an. important point The Insurrectos hope . by keeping it to secure recognition from the United States of their belligerency. Further fighting is expected.. Fourteen. Amer icans fought .with the - -, Insurrectos! force and one of them,, J C. Edwards', of Roanoke, Va,, was killed. .Two of the Federal - officers and twenty-nine of their njen fled across the Interna tional linel' where they were disarm edby American troops. . Thousands of Americans stood upon: the border witnessing the fight. Battle Hourly Expected. ; Douglas, Ari., April 14. .Citizens of Douglas are hourly expecting another battle across the line at Agua Prieta, which may - result more disastrously to American nonTcombatants than the one yesterday. Three hundred rebels are in full possession of Agua Prieta today and the port is closed. Mexi can Federal troops are believed to , be approaching Agua 5 Prieta -from the south, bringing with them machine guns for an assault upon the- city. A PREMIER BAIL PLAYER PASSES OUT OF . LIFE Toledo, Ohio.'Aprjl 14. Addle Joss, the premier pitcher of tne Cleveiana American League baseball 'team, died this morning of tubercular meningitis, aged thirty-one years. .He is surviv ed by a wife and two children. . ,v . Stage of water - in Cape" Fear river at Fayetteville, N. C. at 8 a. m. yes ierday 8.7 f eej. ' The most comDlete stock Ladies' Low Cuts in the city. Boylan &r Han cock. ' ' , 2t And I'lll Hie So for Sewa! Dais Chairman Underwood Gives Notice That -Nothing Will, Be. Allowed to Bar Way of Canadian Reciprocity v Measure Rucker Bill as to Public ity fop Campaign Expenses, Will Llkdy Pass the House Today. Washington, April 14. The Cana dian reciprocity will be the order of business in the House of Representa tives for the next few days, Chairman Underwood ; made known this, morning his determination to take up the re ciprocity bill this afternoon and keeo it before the House : until finally acted upon. An effort to bring up the Ruck er bill for the publicity of campaign contributions before,, election was the only' other - business "brought before the House today. The Rucker bill was brought up immediately after the House coirvened with the understand ing that it would be laid aside if it threatened to delay consideration of the reciprocity bill. : . ..v, ; .. The Rucker bill providing for addi tional publicity of campaign contribu tions, is the second of the Democratic measures taken up In the House. It will1 be passed this afternoon with many Republican,; votes in its favor. This fact became clear after an hour's debate , of the bill. When the pub licity bill is disposed of the House will ' proceed late this - afternoon r to consider action on the Canadian re ciprocity . measure. Several days will be consumed in . debate -Chairman Underwood, ... of . the ..Ways and Means Committee, will . concede ample time for debateboth td;the . opponents jand friends of the measure. , 'k HREPPOLWIDII IN i HEWfORKs CITY New York, April 14. Fire this'morn- ing damaged "the Polo Grounds hase- "ball grandstand and adjacent property, doing two hundred and fifty thousand dollars damage.. Three flre'men Iwere seriously injured, when they were pre cipitated upon the burning embers when the stand collapsed. The New York Nationals have ; been forced to call off today's game. CALLS FOR TROOPS Sheriff Wants Such to Preserve Order .r In Strike Zone. ' Muscatine, la., April 14. The Sher iff has asked Governor Carroll for four companies ,of State . Troops to .assist him in preserving order among, the button workers here, yrho have ; been on a strike several weeks. GEO. S. TERRY DEAD. Assistant Treasurer qf . the United '' " ' States Dies In the Souths r Washington, April, 14. George ; S. fTrry, f Assistant' Treasurer of ' the United States at New York, died this morning at a hotel" in Aiken, S. O., where-he had been ill for some time. WELL KNOWN ACTOR PASSES x OVER THE STAGE OF LIFE West Swanzey, N. H.j April 141 Denman Thompson, one of America's oldest and best known actors, ; th4 man who made famous - "The Old Homestead," died today. Thompson haS been ill with .heart trouble ,and uraemia since last month. Thompson was born in Log Cabin Beachwood Hamlet, near Girard, Pa., in 1833: " . , H ook Tears a Boy "Whip." Middletown, Conn., April 14. In a game -of snap-the-whip : Harry 1 le Vaughn, Jr.; nine year? old, was at the end of the" line. : When the snap came he was swung against an; iron hook on the side of a .barn I ' i; The point "of the hook entered hi3 mouth and came out ; through hi3 "cheek. Playmates tried 1 to release him and in their attempt , his cheek wag ripped open to the mouth. In the hos pital a score of stitches had to be tak en to close the wound. His recovery is in doubt. " Easter Hosiery, all colors. 'Boylan & Hancock. . , - ; - ' : 2t , , , , The Orchestra. At the Grand will play "Judy For get," today. ' . : j. it. Is Advice CiYsn bf Coy. 7ood Wilson row He Clearly Denned the Line' of Battle In His Address t to the National League' of democratic Clubs Great '. Speech Detfvered in Indianapolis." Indianapolis, Ind, April 14. Urging the Democratic party; , to ' ; state it creed in the concrete and define clear ly the especial forms of privilege it declares against ; in a general cam- , palgn 'Tor the rights of, the people," r Governor. Woodrw t, Wilson, of New Jersey, in an address to the National League of Democratic Clubs here last night set forth the objects of Ahe par-: iy as he" believed they exist and i should be stated.- Governor Wilson .' said, in part: ., r . '.; ' ' . ; :'. "We are' fond of speaking of our- ": selyes as, the party of Jefferson i and " Jackson,; not because' we are a party of old men reminiscent of thlng3 : gone by. in love with what ' has been, but "because we are a party touched .with . the , ideals . which - made these men great, whose' names we recall' with such reverence and enthusiasm, -because the breath of our party's life is its utter faith in the principles of Democracy. It 'is its' devotion to the rights of the people of whatever class ' or degree as against all claims of priv ilege, as against all selfish vested in terests which seek control instead of freely serving; the life and develop- . ment of'the nation. 'V--.K. j- . , . "It is; so far from being a party of ; mere " reminiscence, a party which . tries jrto . draAV .the cquntr back to . , y. policies which; belong to another time, ' to the circumstances, ot another age,,: , ? that; it is, .above all others, a young, v . man's party, because a, party of move; ment, -of Readjustment a party that U X 1S'U-' J; jstbard,h shakeafalth, with unwavering confl- : . : dence and ever renewed hopes and, aspirations , for the- principles of free '. l; , dbm, which r are none other than the . ;: principles of opportunity,-- the princi- " ' pies of men not made, but on the . make; struggling from achievement to k '.achievement '' in-' a : free .exercise of , ; their powers. V - . , "These things are embodied in Jef-. f fersori," the thoughtful, philosophical,, penetrating thinker for mankind, ' and in the rugged Jackson, who seemed to mut his way toward the right by . rough instinct and! the mere energy, of an honest, indomitable nature; and; so we see embodied in them the two sides of Democracy, Its thoughtful ness, its vision of hope, its confidence in the progress and liberation of man kind, and 'linked with these its force as of the common people, its abound ing energy outside as well as within the " field of cultivated thought. ; "Democracy is not , a mere theory' of ''Government - It is an energy of life dwelling in the rank and file, in terpreted - once and again : by. great leaders, but not confined to their pri vate cult' and understanding. Its 1 blood is the blood of the people. Its purposes are the purposes shared by all mankind- Its hopes are the hopes of all rational civilization. ' This is the day upon which we utter - Our creed and renew our views.' It'behooYes us to ask ourselves what our creed is, and to answer the ques tiojn without subtlety or serphistica tian, in the plain terms of everyday, life. We must state our creed in the' concrete, not in the abstract. Our thoughts run back of course, to the great Declaration of Independence which Jefferson gave us,, but we can not stop with that. The Declaration of Independence did not mention the ; questions of our day. It is a mere starting point for our thoughts. It Is of no consequence to us unless we can translate its general terms , into examples of the present. day ..and sub-, stitute them in some vital, way for. the examples it itself gives, so con crete, so intimately Involved in the circumstances of. the day . in which it was -conceived and written. It IsJ an eminently practical document meant for ttie use of practical men, not a thesis for philosophers, but a whip for tyrants; not a theory of gov ernment,1 '.but -a program of action.:; TJnlesS' -w'e can-translate It into ques- V. tions of our own day, we are not -worthy of itT we are not , sons- of the -Sires " who acted " in! responce to its , challenge. ' ' .V-' - : ' -".' '-:' V "We say .that we are against, priv ilege and for the rights of the people, but privilege has worn' many forms. What is ihe especial form of privilege we now fight? How does it endanger .1 the rights of the people, and what do we mean to do in order to make our contest against it effectual? What X are . to . be the items , of our , new, dec- j laratlon- of independence? x , (Continued on Seventh Page.) ; ! U 111' t'h !"Kf'!f ; i 'Mm : f --;j r -s ; I . m J-1,.i--f.'-P..::: tr.;;v.iC'!"'.v 1 1.-.. i 5" vJ.l- feil mm- mm jar rt..-, i v 'V - -' 1' i-.-' .: .' ' 1 V U-:iV h.':i tit .,'?. -;V" it-..-it t ri A;.'; I if (;:: t k' '': mm-.- is v iTi'Si;,"? ?! i. ' 3 v V if ;' - 1 :--v. i : il' lij- It 4 v. r v wf' t-v m ti':'! .'-t ; mm 4 ;'';.'. --i .,- mm -1