Newspapers / The Wilmington Dispatch (Wilmington, … / Nov. 14, 1912, edition 1 / Page 1
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4 - ' r? .Curried Ky the EVv Carrie Wiif i If: patch. Together With, KitinVcW v Correspondence. - " i Tanfl -'colder tonfghl an&fcri day. Moderate west winds. VOLUME WILMINGTON, N. C., THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1912 v .- - - , PRICE THREE CENTS SIEPS ill 1 1 i v -j-VS n h n h a wvbw www . . - . I 0 o r R 1 ATLAS 6GI0 the Stand lay Jgos as Treasurer of Yet Daughters Put In ited States Hard Day's H - - ITkTw: Wl Third Day o, th. Convents , the Structural Iron Workers, Tell ing of Having Conversed With Him About the Kansas City Job Savs Ryan Advised Dynamiters to Dis guise Themselves. Likely Succeed Him Nothlnn of. njte Give mt ATjOut Reason of resignation, But Friction Believed to Have Caused It. united Daughters of Confederacy and Busy Sessions Being Held White House Reception is on Tapis Toaay. Indianapolis. Ind.. Nov 14 nw ' "6W"' .V-VV, " ine an- wasnmgton, Nov. 14. With half ' . s ill ij ri r&iTvi Avt .kr -i.i . i j . resident of m "o, VL resignation or Lee uozen social functions, including reception, on the pr knowledge of the explosions and that trl i - ' rresiaent tui bb me aeiegates to the annual con he even advised the dynamiters toXK, m McClug tendered his resigna- jentJon of the Daughters of the Con- guise themselves, were made by Ortie ". l , eouierence uciac. toaay put m many- strenu- McManigal in his confession af dyna TJlZf t0day', ItS hoursV This-ls third day of mite conspiracy trial today. "I hTd IS nSfJS& 8 from the annual convention. The day be- blown u pthe Kansas City job-August Tu-T""."? ela" """a.a no.ur ?Vs.meSs sessIon- tne 26. 1910. and stODDed off at Pnria - 7Z.T ,? riU"B r"snea vomn- leaiure oi wmcn was reports by my way back," McManiga tesUfieT S Jf .at CamM.Stat divisions- Other mat- "At Peoria I got in touch with Edwjirri uiscusseu. Smvth. thA Trnr wvo. TT'' wm succeed Mcuiung. The committee reports will be submitted azent. Smvtk hnw I tK " It1 declined to discuss his re- tomorrow. President Taft received the " v uuu-uu-i iirpmenT . hn i i : . . , , . i ... . ion iobs he wanted mo in nn -vr ,- 1, 0 lumureu mac nis uul"'u women m tne nistoric UJast T tnM Smvth I h.i h9ii rr I wcia,J muveagn. weauug me rea ana wnue rib- " --u .uv aiivausas MCCIUMT Wnn snnnlnfoj . I hnn f nol,n j J uy, wnere i lost lour quarts of nltro-laeo WnrmorW , w 7 elvcerinp and thrM niai-m I 7 : "aB a umciai i " uuwu yerauuany to fresraent ITZ L 1 iEZZ T i00: f the Southern Railroad. Thompson's Taft. Tonight's session will be devot- . -v. auuwu ttinnnAnifmAii A -i t . ... . i , . . . Npw Vnrt v, ! -r"u.cui iu suuueeu uim win De fol- r1 lu neanng tne mstonan lienerals' uuu uctu aiuuuu i irranoi it fa KUJ , I . . .x x Pnria nnd hn m o.,i . 1. .cv. UJ luiiueaiaie re- lcIls 11 um various oiaies. - w "-o Duopn,iuuo ui mm. i mm of choriM r xun .i- - T thintinr ho m?o-h K it . . "1 XTeSl- T . - oyjr ul me iNa-iaent's secretary ci,iuio AOBuciaiion. wnen 11 returned to Indianapolis I saw Ryan I told Ryan about the Kansas City ex plosion and showed him a newspaper account about it.' McManigal spoke' of the ti meMcNa- mara was in Kansas City and Omaha. While in Kansas City, on this trip, ihe n a i - - . uuveiumeai aneges wciNamara nad a talk withBert Brown, the business an-1 Washington, INJECTED INTO RELIGION AGAINST PRISON CONTRACT SYSTEM Sepo Baltimore, Md., Nov. 14. The con tract system of orison lahnr Wile rrm- I iVnrh hnrcr 7o Mnt f 1 "Wf. MAmj a ,i i . - ., agent about McNamara hein n h , ' vvomaa u"' tuuaj' ux a report oi tne uom- IZ L nl ra.be .n? on tne. suffrage has been made an issue be- xnittee on Prison Labor. DresentPd to a. wwn.ni in tfiiM Tin v rn m i . Los Angeles I conference of the Methodist J the Congress of American Prison Assc- --tr.c.i vuuivju, oouui, iu us ses-itauou in annual session nere. The sion here. A resolution was intro- report maintained that th AmTiifiv. uucea toaay providing for the appoint-1 ment of prisoners should be directed ment of a committee to deal with the entirely by the State, and that the woman suffrage question and report I products of this labor should be dis- at next -year's ferencei--'TfI)i sub- posed of by the State. ject will likely provoke a bitter dis- JMS P!Cture sl0Ws a familiar scene to the residents of the cities in the Balkans, where there has been such desperate fighting. It shows bounded Montenegrins being transported from Rieka to Cetnfe. The MontZt nave suffered heavy losses in killed and WOllTldorJ or, A Viv datlons have been more than taxed. "u- GOV, WILSON ISSUES HIS PROCLAHATIOII Does Suitable EdUcatiom, Contends Authority Before Congress of the American Prison Association Dis cussed "The .Influence of Education in th Prevention of Crime." Princeton1, N: J 'Nov. 14. As Gov ses- i cussion. There is . much -oppositioaJ to injecting the issue into religious ernor. Wood row Wilonn trtdav i0 """ "" enny, or j,; ;Wf T" . Kwiunona, delivered an address this nf tho iwiittiMt-Mmn.j- -w 111 v"us over tne ,.r.-n,i. - . ,. i sions. nnuudi mieuue or passion. Members of his class of 1879, of Princeton, have arranged to give the Governor a dinner at University Club, in New York, Friday night. It will be a private affair, but will bring to gether one of the most distinguished (classes that has graduated from Princeton. Besides Gov. Wilson, some Mohw, Ac t Wytheville, Va., Nov. 14. Dexter uo f HZTnlTJ00 the Carro11 coty court clerk, Court cTeand 7 a banke?! Tcicd P," d f Cyrus Mccormick, millionaire Har- MlX H. for murdering Judge Mas Hoard of TPor Tuinoi. tjJ Blev EarIy was a Prominent figure D , nwi. 1V trooo,, onI n .!t Bridgers, magazine editor, and Con- " '""!Twn Z . . v ,roo t,wh f ttmq ,. the Commonwealth. He repeated the SUFFRA6 ETTES TO HAVE "BONNET BURNING' STAR WITNESS TODAY 111 THE ALLEN TRIAL Baltimore, Nov. l"The Influence JSiaucation m tbe ; Prevention of Crime" was discussed -yesterday be- iore tne Congress of the American Prison Association by Dr. Daniel Phe lan, president of the American Asso ciation of Prison Surgeons and sur geon of the Dominion Penitentiary at Torpnto, Canada. "The old saying that an ounce of prevention is wSrth more gressman Talcott of Utica. The din ner will be the first occasion on which the class has honored Gov. Wilson since he entered public life. The Gov- story of how five persons were killed in the shooting in the Hillsville court room. The prisoner's wife and little ernor will leave New York Saturday 7,,"; f I, e T, vi ,i. day- Allen follows, the proceedings for his vacation. He is looking for ward to several bicycle trips. "I have bicycled all' over England, Scotland and Wales," said the President-elect today. closely and often prompts his coun sel. OCTOPUS CAUGHT FOUND INDIAN VILLAGE IN SAN FRANCISCO BAY San Francisco, Nov. 14. Beneath the waters of the bay close to where the buildings of the aPnama-Pacific Exposition sobn will be erected, sci entists of the anthrapological depart ment of the University of California have discovered traces of an Indian village that existed between 500 and 700 years ago The discovery was made when the dredgers of the exposition company uncovered what appears to be a three foot "layer of shell and bone that had been dropped by human hands. The dredgers were stopped long enough to permit the scientists to make a cur sory examination. ; Prof. A."L. Kroeber, head of the de partment of anthropology at the Uni versity announced the discovery .of the ancient village. The settlement was probably that of the sea lion hunters of the peninsu la. The finds have been incorporated in the university's anthropological mu seum at the Affiliated Colleges, where they will be of considerable interest in 1915. One interesting point in con nection with the report of Prof. Kroeb er is that San Francisco has sunk into th eocean twenty-six' inches since the early Indian hunters frequented this district. . MINISTER TO JAPAN Washington Man Named to Succeed Charles Page Bryan. . Washington, Nov. 14. Lars Ander son, of Washington -the American Minister to Belgium, has been ap pointed Ambassador to Japan,1 suc ceeding Charles . Page Bryan, whose resigatotton was announced recently. Strange Sea Varmint Was Hooked by Local Angler. . While fishing a day or two ago with a party of friends near the wreck, east of Lumina, at Wrightsville Beach, Mr. Sidbury, a clerk at the Southside Drug Company, corner Front and Cas tle streets, had the rather unusual luck for fishermen hereabouts, to catch an- octopus. The cuttle-fish weighed four or five pounds . It's ten tacles, arms, feet, or whatever you wish "to call 'em," were nearly twenty Inches In length. When the strange varmint was got ten aboard, it spouted a stream of wa ter from its gills, several feet in the air. This is the first octopus reported as having been caught in this vicin ity in a long time.. Rev. John C. Wooten and Mr. Walter E. Yopp were members of the party with Mr. Sid bury, when the latter made his strange catch. The octopus was sent to th Univer sity of North Carolina biological de partment. I ; Will Leave Tomorrow. Dr. C. D. Bell and family will leave tomorrow morning for Gatesville, N. C, , which place . will be their future home. Scores of friends in this city regret extremely their removal. Dr; Bell has been coroner of this county for a "number of years and he' has made a splendidfficial. Many friends will wish for him and ! his family a full measure of prosperity and happiness in their new home. Pittsburg, Kas., Nov. 14. The wom an suffragists have arranged to cele brate their recent victory at the polls tnan a Pound of cure," said Dr. Phe- by a big "bonnet burning" tonight. Ian' ln opening his address, "is trite Thft nr... n.S11 . 1 . i I hilt VOITT trt-in 1-n xA X huujcu win wane a Dig oonnre I j " m i csm u to me crimes in the city hall square. which become daily more prevalent in TO CO TO JURY Has Not Been Officially Confirmed as Tei war correspondent Reports i nat Bulgarians Have Been Guilty of Atrocities Cholera Increasing' at Constantinople. ijeigraae, jnov. 14. A report that tne Turkish fortress, Adrianople, has fallen before an attack by Bulgarians ana Servians is current here, but with out official confirmation. Turkey SeelS "Armistice. London, Nov. 14. Official confirma tion that Kasim Pasha had addressed King Ferdinand, of Bulgaria, directly asking for conclusion of an armistice, iwiiuwg negotiation of peace pre liminaries, was received, from Constan Turkey's appeal for armistice made the stock market strong. Bulgars Alleged to be Barbaric. Berlin, Nov. 14 Insinuations that the Bulgarians are euiltv of atrnrftfm against the Turks and that the pres ent war is more butchery, than war- rare, are made by the war correspon uciit oi me vesBische Zeitung. The correspondent says the . Bulgarian troops mutilated bodies of Turks after tne battle. of Kirk Kilisseh and car- led the Turks heads about on the points of bayonets. Cholera is Increasing. . New York, Nov, 14 Former Turk ish Ambassador Straus has received the following cablegram from Ambas sador Rockhill, at Constantinople: 'There are fourteen thousand sick and wounded, soldiers here. Cholera seems increasing. There is much sickness and destitution among the High Fatal Automobile Accident Today and in Whteh a Woman Was Killed Two Men Seriously Injured and Two Held on Charge of Homicide Woman's Fate the Result of an Escapade. New York, Nov. 14. An antnnnnhilo containing four men and one woman! tumbled backward over a hundred and fifty foot precipice at the edge of High land Boulevard, in Brooklyn, early this morning, killing the woman. Mrs Andrew , Reid, and iserjouslv fsjurhig two of the ufou ' . The chauffeur" int control of theKcar.;:'The victim was the wife of a bromitidnt; :ninhfiWniAW the husband, knowitig nothing; about the escapade, found' the wife's 'l-ndv In tiie police station. Mta. j 'Reid's Jewelry; valued at six thousand !doliars, was found in the: pockets of one of the injured men.; The other two men are held on a charge of homicide. II BETTfMG READY FOR HIS VACATION Greensboro Man Beaten and Shot onl11111 thousand refugees." Train Has Right to Have Jury Pass ' - ' SS52 WHAT SEiTORjll VOTE SHOWS WANT MONEY SPENT ON (.IT. VERNON ROAD Washington, Nov. 14. Senator Mar- tion or early training has mucn to do tin and Representative Carlin, of Vir- with the nreventinn of h ,ihh. rrlnlr. .1 , m . . I .. ' w.. 6m,tt- iwaj' uiBeu rresiaeni iart to i cation of those who lead irregular use his influence to expend the five lives in th world. T hsvp eoioro,i hundred thousand dollar appropriation, particular question as the subject of granted by Congress for experimental my brief investigation. As the lack postal roads, on building a highway of proper education is the cause of a from Washington to Mount Vernon laree nemAnta nf o and Washington's tomb. The Virgin- versely; the encouragement of suit ians said -the President promised to aid able education must necessarily tend mo iiiojecL I to thfi diminifshine' of th nurKo those enemies of society who are present so frequently amongst us. "We all know that the impressions made on the young mind are the most lasting and wield the greatest influ ence in shaping the future life of the individual. It is generally conceded that the only way the State can deter permanently the malefactor from th Jacksonville, Fla., Nov. 14. Preach commission of his evil deeds is hv Niles, the negro charged with killing educating him, for the weakness of Miss .Mary Stevenson, aged eighteen, the will nower of the voiith whn ft and J. B. Berges, aged eighty, near afflicted with evil tendencies can he Gainesville, late yesterday is iajail at strengthened by training and suitable Ocala, Fla., where he was taken to es- education, the main purpose of which cape a mob's vengeance. Berges was is not to enlighten the mind by means killed when he attempted to save the of a proficiency in certain studies; girl from her assailant. The negro rather is it to prepare the individual cut the girl's throat. Niles, wearing to live in society, to awaken in him bloodstained clothing, was arrested favorable tendencies to ahtinn intoi. Dispatch News .Burean. Raleigh, N. C, Novrl4rim.;i; Because the Southern majlay did not provide adequate protection on an execursion train from Greensboro1 to Special to The Dispatch .Norfolk and return in August. 1910.1 Raleigh, N. C. Nov. 14. With nrar. R. T. Stanley, a Greensboro man, will I tically complete returns from every set ins case to tne jury, he having county, but Avery, which has not been Deen nit with a beer bottle and driven I heard from, the vote in the Senatorial from one coach to another and shot I primary as footed up today for the tnrougn tne body by some negroes. rotate Committee tonight, stood: TVU i- , , . . Hi..! . . xue nam was a mixea affair and was uumi, Kitchin. 46.971: Sim- returning to Greensboro when Stanley mons, 84,644. bcLW JLiUtner tTOCtor. annthor whita Simmons' mainritw nvar v..v the world and which constitute a veri-'man, struggling with some negroes in aents was 21,251; over Clark 68,222 xuav-c to eoieiy, mucn tnougnt a coiorea coacn and went to the res-ana over Kitchin, 37,673. Kitchin beat uao uteu given to aevismg means cue. The negroes had taken Proctor's Clark 30,449. whereby they might be lessened. f liquor and were beatine him nn . For The official returns were not ro. The criminal tendencies come from j lis Pains in the affair Stanley receiv- ceived from Wake, Moore, Nash. Row- d RflTTld hJoH7cj on1 o 4-T i ;i . I On on1 Qtn1r. .-J SlL'jSk'ii.-i. . - u ouui lui uugu me i m aiuico, uui tiie unomciai re- )ody. The lower court nonsuited the turns are correct. Kitchin eot a few (Continued on fifth Page.) more hundred votes than Simmons In the Tenth. his fellow man. Chairman Webb, Secretary Brock heredity, environment, the atmosphere in which they have been condemned to live, and from other and equally seir-evident sources, but since educa TRYING TO KEEP ' HIM FROM THE MOB "Take a poor, neglected youth, in-1 1111(1 other members of the' committee clined to evil tendencies, and alive I arrived today. with ungovernable passion, and light! In an interview today, in which he up for him the torch of knowledge, thanks his friends for their support, and touch the hardness of his heart, if says it -would be impossible to answer such is possible, even as Moses struck aI1 letters, Governor Kitchin said: "I the rock and the water gushed forth, Bha'1 nver regret the open fight we and you will perceive the transforma- made for Democratic principles, and tion. If he has a spark of goodness in interests of the people." riim, his mind becomes clearer, the feelings more tender, his aspirations more elevated, his yearnings more in accord with the inherent nobility, of man's disposition, and his conduct more in harmony with the fundament al principles of social well-being. His cruel, heartless desire to prey upon tne afflictions and sufferings, as well as upon the property and rights, yes, even upon the lives of others, are at EXPRESS OFfIG! ROBBED OF $25,000 Princeton, N. J Nov. 14. President- elect Wilson will lead the newspaper men a merry chase when he begins his vacation next week. He plans makine a long bicycle trip, as he has been ac customed to do on former vacations. The President-elect sails Saturdav for his retreat a short distance from New rork, where he will spend the month. There will go along a small party of newspaper men, who are now training for the bicycle journey. Besides bicyc ling, Governor Wilson will ride horse back a great deal. He will return "about the middle f December, MOOSERS THE IT - OF SOME FREAK BETS Bangor, Me., Nov. 14! Henry J. Winterbottom of Sidelinger's Mills, Piscataquis county, made a ,wager with George W. Byther of Bowerbank, by the terms of which, if Roosevelt ' did not carry Maine, he was to give Byther a large red apple for everv vote of Wilson's plurality. Consider ing that Wilson carried the State bv- about 2,500 votes, and that each and every apple must be perfect in all respects and full red, Winterbottom may have to pick over his entire croo of apples to get the required number of quality and description stipulated. In Jackman, ma Saunders, another defeated Bull Mooser, must pay the penalty of poor judgment by polishing Ed Mosher's boots every morning for six months, while Ed sits on the post- office steps. In Macwahoc, Ansel Gilley, a Bull Mooser, must pay for ; all the tobacco . tester Ord way .uses until next Fourth of July, and in the meantime abstain from tobacco himself: and Ansel is the champion chewer of Aroostook county. ., . .. . Real Moose are very scarce in Maine this fall. On election day onlv one carcass was brought to Bangor, and . it, was a poor specimen. at that. . - ." , w THE RECORDER'S COURT. soon after the crime was committed. An infuriated mob was organized near Gainesville, but the officers having the prisoner rushed him away to safety. DEFENSE HAVING IN TAR CASE Nick Long worth Was Defeated. Cincinnati, O., Nov. 14. An Official Count shows that Nicholas Longworth was defeated for Congress by Stanley Bowdle, by ninety seven vdtes. " Subscribe to The Evening Dispatch, Norwalk, O., Nov. 14. The defense's efforts to prove alibi for Ernest Welch, the first of the six men being tried for tarring Minnie La Valley, a young girl, near West Clarsfield last August, oc cupied the attention of court today. Welch's mother and other relatives testified that Welch was at home when the tarring occurred. Witnesses were called to tell of the. girl's repu tation in the community. iThey all said It was bad. The defense rested its .case today. The prosecution exam ined "several witnesses in rebuttal. Subscribe to The Evening Dispatch lectual incentives to goodness, and the highest sentiments of moral obli gation. The germs- of moral insanity and also of crime are no doubt devel oped early in life, as th youth passes through a nervous and irritable state incident to his growth and develop' ment, and is consequently mqre emo tional, impulsive, and Wilful during that critical period. Early education should, therefore, be directed towards correcting the inherited aftd anti-social impulses. "The. state has it in its power to greatly improve conditions; to estab lish means by which proper instruc tion can be given on -Certain lines, and suitable training gitfen to the. mind; the will, and the moral senses. Philanthropy has a vast field whereon to exercise its. benevolence and its en deavors; remembering, however, that the education which" I aim at point ing out as a .means of making the good citizen, is especially, one of moral j severely punished may 4)e attributed as well as physical training, and not the cultivation of the mind alone! An individual enjoying such an education Is worthy of the best consideration of to a neglect of education on; the prop er lines, one snouid endeavor with all the means in his power to seek the proper remedy," LIED TO SAVE THE MAN SHE LOVED Lake Charles, La., Nov. 14. The Wells Fargo Express Company's office least for-a time effaced he looks up- W&S tC?day robbed of a ?ackage of cur on life with other eyes and other as- rency' counting to twenty five thou- Dirations. This is merelv a nortrait. Baua aoiiars. J. n;. unavis, night ex- 'ire of the effects which education press clerk' wno rePrted the robbery wnnld lilrolv havo .,n w aires teu. .. - uuc nuu naa possessed of the finer feelings . but who had no opportunity for their de velopment. This is the early training which is one's best friend and sup port this is the early education which 'chastens vice, guides virtue, gives fresh aspirations to the mind, and no ble pulsations to the heart.' "If the views which I entertain can awaken in our citizens a full realiza tion of the danger that hangs like a cloud over society, on account of the lack of proper and timely education, then I have done some good, and will experience the delightful sensation of the Roman Emperor who thanked the gods that he had never lost "a day without having performed some worthy deed. If we are to kgep from things base, of importance their is the shaping and the cultivation - of the mind, 'a mind,' as Seneca says, 'whieh is free, upright, undaunted and stead fast, which thinks nothing good but honor, and nothing bad except Shame.' When one considers for a moment the great responsibility which rests upon the State, and how many of .the offenses which are not unfrequently Columbus, O., Nov. 14. The police admitted on the witness stand today in Cecelia Farley's trial for mur der, that the latter did not confess killing Alvin Zollonger until she was told Jerome Quigley, her fiance, was accused. The defense claims the girl confessed falsely because of her love for Quigley. "GYP THE BLOOD" GOES Oil STAND New York, Nov. 14. "Gyp the Blood" took the stand this" afternoon in the four gunmen's trial for the Rosenthal murder. He swore that Vallon and Webber fired the shots at Rosenthal. r Subscribe to The Evening iispatch. Only Two Cases Tried in County Trib unal Today. Two cases were tried before Re corder Furlong this morning, one be ing larceny and sent up to the higher court. The other was assault and bat tery and the defendant was fined. William Jones, white, charged with assault and battery, was fined $5. Herbert Quince, a negro youth, was given preliminary hearing in a case in which he was charged with having stolen a bicycle-valued at more than $20 from the Payne- DrugCompany. Probable cause was found, and as the value of - the property took It out of the hands of the Recorder the case was sent up to the Superior Court for final disposition. The boy arranged a $100 bond. Many Soldiers Drowned. Bucharest, Roumania; "Nov, 14 For ty ; four Roumanian soldiers were drowned while cr03smg Calarist Iake. The boat capsized. r - Eleven Go to Watery Graves. Ottawa, Nov. H.-Eleven periBhed when the steamboat Mayflower sank In the Madowaska River. Seaboard Stockholders Meeting. t Richmond, Va., Nov. 14. The Seaboard Air Line stockholders are holding the annual meeting today in , - Petersburg.; Many 4 changes in the directorate are expected. n.A it "i - If .4 ft - .t
The Wilmington Dispatch (Wilmington, N.C.)
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Nov. 14, 1912, edition 1
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