WEATHER FORECAST, ... JJJISPATGI I Flil EDITION ; Ruin tonight and Tuesday. Notll much change intemperature. THE LARGEST CIRCULATION IN WILMINGTON. WILMINGTON, NORf CAROLINA, MO ND AY, AFTERNOON, OCTOBERS), 1916. PRICE 5 CENTS r - V( .. XXII. Sit ) 7Qfl . . ' T 9 . . ----- t .frinnnrn nrrnsir -r- . rr ' CP Ij vx i xi ii iii,7i 1 1 ui I l vviiji in 1 1 : u tm :r i ' ..a,. . si Another Ship Also Sunk But Was Trying to Escape AMERICAN CONSUL MAKES THE REPORT No Loss of Lives Has Yet Been Reported . Steamer Was Engaged in the Trans Atlantic Trade and Was Over Five Thousand Tons Gross AMERICAN CITIZENS D0WN-.4 ED. 4 London, Oct. 30. A private tel- egram at the American consulate 4 this afternoon from Crookhaven v i said that-a number of Americans were drowned when the British 4 steamer Alarina was sunk by a German submarine. 4.4. London, Oct. 30. The American embassy today received a report from the American consul, at Queens town, that tile British steamship, Marina, had been torpedoed without warning. It is believed that there were a number of Americans on board. Only 34 members of a crew of 104 have been picked up at Crookhaven, Ireland. The Marina was engaged in the Trans-Atlantic passenger service and was a .vesseofSM gross ons and was built in ISW. She was reported ;is arriving at Glasgow, Scotland, on October 10, after having sailed from Newport News on September 21. Lloyds reports that a steamer, an chored off Crookhaven, signalled that f lu- had picked up members of the crew of the steamer Marina, of Glas gow. Washington Receives the News. Washington, Oct. '3. Dispatches to ihe State Department say that the Marina when sank had a mixed crew M British and Americans and that she was sunk by gunfire without warn ing. Consul Frost, at Queenstown, said that the information he received was "provisional." Investigations will be made at once to determine whether any of Germany's pledges to the United States have been violated. Half Hundred Americans Aboard. Newport News, Va., Oct. 30. There were fifty Americans on board the s vainer Marina, reported torpedoed today without warning, in today's dis patch from London, when she sailed . trom Newport News. The Americans were signed on her as horsemen. They were all white men and gave 'heir homes in different parts of the country. According to jnforjnation gained at offices of the local agents for the owners of the vessel, she carried a cargo of horses and a general cargo, fable advices reported the Marina leaving Glasgow for Newport News October 25, in ballast. Getting Affidavits from Survivors. London, Oct. 30. The consul is now procuring affidavits from the sur vivors. A report of the sinking on October 2'i of the British steamship, Rowan more, also was made to the American embassy by Consul Frost, who stated 'hat the vessel was torpedoed. Seven Americans, including five, Filipinos, v"ere on board the Rowanmore. Several of them haye given Mr. Frost affidavits, stating that a sub marine shelled the lifeboats, while thpy were being lowered and after thfy were clear of the ship, but with out the loss of a life. Might Reopen Controversy Washington, Oct. 30. Destruction of the horse transport, Marina, by a German submarine without warning, with the possible loss of American lives and the endangering of Amerl v0v0 ; ' , X t suomanne au on the British freight steamer, Row- Hnmore, reported from Queenstown by American Consul Frost, contained possibilities of reopening the subma rine Issue between Germany and the j United States. Officials realized that it may be dis closed that there has been no viola tion of the German pledges to this country. WASSHQTDOWN BY 'WAR HEROES ' PiP ENGLM1N DAILYJiONORED, ; , I Emperior Much Affected by Reported Death of Cap tain Boelke London, Oct. 30. Captain Boelke, the noted German aviator, whose death was reported yesterday in a dis patch from Amsterdam, was said to have been brought down by a British aviator, near Cambrai. A Cologne message brought the news. Captain Boelke was a personal friend of the German Emperor. The' news, it is said, made a deep I impression on the Emperor, who had lately seen the aviator in action at the front. INTERESTING CASE WAS BEGUN TODAY, Shephard Chemical Co. Seeks Recover Damages-for Alleg ed Breach of Contract One of the interesting cases to be s4artedsittee -the .pteaemt - tafm- ol court was convened was ' begun, this morning and is that of the Shephard Chemical Company against A. D. O'Brien, contractor, in which the plaintiff is sueing the defendant for about $3,000. The case will probab ly go to the jury early this afternoon. It is understood that a case in which the defendant has entered against the plaintiff may be consolidated with the one being tried. The Shephard Chemical Company is seeking to recover $2,000 damages for an alleged breach of contract, and $900 because a building that was be ing erected for the plaintiff by the defendant was not completed within the specified time. In the complaint it is stated that the building that was being erected is defective, being leaky, inferior and shoddy. It also states that the! contract called the completion of the building by April, 1914, ahd that the plaintiff was not able to move in un til July of that year. t Judge Connor ordered a judgment of $40 against Mr. W. F. Penney, a failed to'appear this morning. Notice inrvman. wno was - summoned ana is to be given him to appear and show why the judgment rendered should not be absolute. Judgmen't was awarded the defend ant in default in the case of the Odell Hardware Company against K. C. Sid bury. In the case of Ethel Bowen et al. against F. A. Montgomery et al., an order for new parties wa3 made. In the case of W. W. Pridgen against the Levering Manufacturing Company an order for reference wasj made. the Marina refers to the ship as "a British horse transport." If it turns out that the transport was in the ser vice of the British government it may be found that the mixed crew of British and American, horse-tenders could claim- none of the immunity against attack without warning at- tributed to merchant ships. Orders have been dispatched to gather in details of the statements of the Marina's crew. Although no American lives were lost in the submarine attack of the Rowanmore, the ship altering her own status by attempting to run off, officials were disturbed by the report ita sbit me ! shelled facts are expected to be thoroughly investigated, for which the order has i been given. The Rowanmore was Baltimore from Liverpool ouna r .W1L11 a. UiiAu , - j next year train at Tampa Florida, ac- 0n Way Back to America. (cording to officials of the Chicago Na Newport News, Oct. 30. The Ma-tionai League club. The Cubs' con rina was returning to Newport News, J tract for spring training grounds at according to a statement issued from . Tampa has' still two years to run. but the office of the local agents. She j officials of the Brooklyn club have had on board a part cargo of general .agreed to take if off their hands. The merchandise for this port from Glas-tCttbs will train at Pasadena, Calif or- The Wearing of Military Deco-j ' jf ? ration is Passport to all j . I -, , f2F - t French Houses i ' v ' - " " ' ' " Paris, Oct. 30. The psychology of the military decoration is showing up I more obviously every day in Paris j life; it is even getting into-the po- lice courts. The wearers of thena have multiplied rapidly since the be ginning of the battles of Verdun and the Somme, and increasing numbers of them are seen on the lapels of men who have been mustered out' and have reappeared in civilian attire, but their prestige is undiminished. The Cross of tfie Lpeion nf Honor, thfi mil. itary medal and the war cross are i shown a deference that amounts al-j most to a pass-key to every place and j to everything; to illegitimate wear-i ers of them it amounts to a sort ofj stock in trade. Tramway or subway passengers who, contrary to the traditional French politeness, were remarkably selfish as to seats before the war, now give way to the soldier with a medal on his breast-or with a ribbon in his buttonhole, although they still it t vumeu butnu. mis ueierence is i not always acceptable, xi. ' man is likot-u -tr nrnflt from tVi o aar rifice, but the valid mian, home- oni puperfluoiis manifestation on the part j of the civilian, and resents the sup-1 position that there may be some phy-1 eical reason for it. One of them ac cepted a seat offered by. a civilian-in the subway the other day, but instead of occupying it himself furnished a double object lesson by offering it in turn to k woman. The sympathy that, goes spontane ously to maimed soldiers has become the capital of men who lost legs or arms in accidents or brawls not even remotely connected vun war. or a( few francs they can buy any one or all three of the decoration ribbons at any one of the dozen shops that are now doing a thriving trade with the mutilated soldiers who have been j mustered out. Most ofc them use the ribbons as a cover for simple beg- ging, others for swindling, some to, get work and not a few in mere vain and fraudulent show. VESSEL STILL AGROUND AH Efforts Thus Far to Move Idillion Fruitless All efforts thus far to move the Ital ian steamer Edillio, which is aground on the bar at the entrance to the Cape Fear river, have failed and in all prob ability a part of the vessel's cargo of steel will have to be lightered. This morning the cutter Seminole, again, with several fish steamers, strained the big freighter, but without avail. As the big tramp went on shore at the edge of the channel at high tide, wiU be a difflcuit matter to get it off. The steamer is loaded with steel taken on at Baltimore and is bound here for cotton. It is drawing about 20 feet of water. The British tramp Wingate, Cap tain Dew, arrived in port from Huelva, j Spain this morning with a cargo of ,pyrites to t,e discharged at the plant j Qf the Virginia-Carolina Chemical Company. The - Chilian Transport hMaipo which .owing to its great draft, was obliged to have part of its cargo lightered at Southport, arrived in the I.. yesterday afternoon. The Standard Oil barge No. 58, that has just completed discharging a car go of oils at the local station here, sailed yesterday morning in tow of the tug Security. BROOKLYN NATIONALS : TO TRAIN AT TAMPA " ; Chicago, ill., uct. 3U. rne jorooKiyn National League Club, winners of the rnnT,, t,, rhamoionshin. will ma. r::::X::;::::::x::::::::x-:x iii; sg i ' - " v , - s 1I2 CLIFFORD Aurora, 111., Oct. 30. Mrs. Cliff ord Cherry, who has been called the "prettiest woman in Illinois," has been granted $150 a month temporary alimony pending her suit for divorce band. Mrs. Cherry alleeed that ano j . charm to her husband than she. Mrs. llt preSent with Mrs. Cherry's parent Mrs. Cherrv was a Miss Ruth Mevers NEEO ASSISTANCE! High Cost of Living In Europe' Calls for More Money For Govt. Officials Washington, Oct. 30. Urgent need i of financjai assistance for American consular officials and clerks is need ed by the European offices as the price of foodstuffs and necessities have advanced in price over three times their former costs, The $15000 allowance," given by congress, as a war fund to be distrib- uted to consular offices to meet the demands, has all been allotted and the Department of State is now with out means of extending relief. No provision was made for the relief of clerks and other employes and, with the exception of those whose salaries have been raised, no assistance has been given. Nothing is possible un til Congress provides. It is thought that Congress will take action on this subject in "December. No where in the,.war zone has the cost of living decreased and in some localities it is six times what it was. TRABUE MURDER CASE TO TRIAL Nashville, Tenn., Oct. 30. Public interest has been aroused to a high pitch in the trial of Charles C. Tra- bue, accused of the murder of Harry S. Stokes, which -is scheduled to be gin in the Davidson County Criminal Court here tomorrow. Both the ac cused man and his alleged victim stood high in legal circles in Nash ville. The interest arising from this fact has been increased by the gen eral supposition that local politics was closely interwoven with the trag edy. - . Harry S. Stokes, the slain man, was the chief counsel for the taxpayers in the so-called "taxpayers' suit," involv ing the investigation into the manage ment of the city's . affairs. On the morning of April -26, -last,-he was shot and killed in his private office by Trahue, who" had been engaged as special counsel to represent counsel to represent the city in the taxpayers' litigation. While the exact cause of the tragedy has never been made pub lic, either by Trahue or his counsel, it is generally, supposed that the mo tive for the killing originated in the bitter feeling engendered between Stokes and Trabue as a result of the exchange of personal remarks in the hearings before committee'.- ' the investigating .'I ... ! i l 1 P ' '' I . ." ,T " ' v 1 - ' ' j n i nil 1 1 r b 1 1 n 1 1 t tt 1 1 1 1 ri 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 n ini ntji n ni?r bUliaULfln UrrlbLniUUnnHm IVIHIi CWK. - tl from her millionaire land-owner hus tlier woman had Droven of greater Cherry and her infant daughter are s" in Boston. Before her marriage of that, citv . - KILLED FRIEND Shot Resident of Own House When He Was Making Entry In Window Durham, N. C, Oct. 30. J. E. Creech, Jr., shot and instantly killed John Emory a young white man who lived with him, Saturday night- at 12 o'clock. Emory, who had been out late, at tempted to enter the house by way of a window to keep from waking the family and it was when he was com ing through the window that he was shot by Creech, who presumed that he was a burglar. Immediately after the shooting on finding out who he had shot, Creech notified officers of the law, who went to the scene, but as no evldecne of foul play was found Creech was not arrested. Both men are farmers and are thought well of in the community in which they lived. Creech, it is re- i ported, is stricken with remorse over! the shooting. . A CONCEDED THE SIXTH Fayetteville, Oct. 30.-Democratic candidates and officials are conceded the Sixth district by an undisputed majority again this year and at the close the Republicans have perpetuat ed a grandiloquent farce. This is the judgment of Republicans who are disgusted with. Frank" Lin ney's recall of all his Sixth district appointments and the denial of the State Committee of all funds in this. contest. LIQUIDATION CAUSED COTTON TO DECLINE j New York, Oct. 30. A renewal of During this' time St. Paul's was the heavy liquidation caused a big de- military chapel of theEnglish offi cline in prices here today. January cers. contracts sold at $2.25 a bale below 1 in l7gg immedialely after the in Saturday's closing figures. Reports rati6n of Washiagton as first of slackening in spor demands and , pres-dent of the United stateSf he, uneasiness over shipping seemed , bQth hougeg Qf Congre8S march. hardly accountable for the drop. j ed frQm present site of the sub- NOTED CONFEDERATE OFFICER IS ILL Huntington, W. Va., Oct. 30. Gen eral Wayne P. Ferguson, a noted Con federate officer, is ill at Kenova near here. He suffered a pnysicai . coii n about a weeK ago. nw considered serious. THEY DRIVE WEDGE FURTHER IN THE E T So Report the British and French As to Their New Attack DEATH OF AVIATOR IS NOW CONFIRMED Died After Bringing Down Forty Enemy Aeroplanes Germans Advance in Volhynia Both the British and French report successful conclusion of the effort to drive the point of the wedge created by the offensives further in the Ger man lines on the Somme front. The point at present projects across the Perronne-Bapaume road at Sailly Saillisel. I Last night the French struck the j German front and, according to a J Paris statement, a system of trenches j northwest of Sailly-Saillisel was cap- tured, the French advancing as far i as Sailly church. To the northwest at the joining point of the British and French ! fronts the British have been pound- in for two days at the German posi- I lloU8 uear irans;oy ana nave re : '"Jllcu ustyLure of several 1.1 vuvuov reiterate the message that Captain Boelke, the famous German aviator. j who last Friday sho down his for tieth hostile airship, was killed in an I engagement. He is said to have been ! brought down by a British airman with whom he was engaged near Cambri, France. Germans Made Advances. Berlin (Via Wireless to Sayville), Oct. 30. Massed attacks of Russian infantry in Volhynia yesterday, after unusual artillery preparation, broke down under German fire, the war of fice announced today. Heavy Fighting in Monastir. Berlin (Via Wireless to Sayville), Oct. 30. Heavy fighting is in prog ress on the Macedonian front throughout the Monastir region. The repulse of the French and Serbian attack was anounced by the war of fice today. Several Positions Captured. Tho capture of several' positions near the Hungarian-Rumanian fron tier was announced by the war office today. In Dobrudja, Field Marshal von Mackensen's forces, continuing their pursuit of the Russians ana Ru- i manians, have come in contact with the Russians. v HISTORIC CHAPEL IS 1 50 YEARS OLD New York, Oct. 30. Old St. Paul's Chapel, at Broadway and Fulton street, today began a week of celebra tion in . honor of the 150th anniver sary of its founding. It is the oldest public building and the only colonial church building in the metropolis. Other congregations are as old but St. Paul's is the "only building that stands as it was before the Revolu tion. While in New York as commander-in-chief of the American forces Gen eral Washington attended St. Paul's. After the disastrous battle of Long Island, he was driven out of New York by Lord Howe and the city fell into the possession of the British. treasury building in Wall Street, to St. Paul's chapels where an appropri ate service was held Since the Revolutionary days St. Paul's has continued to be prominent in the life of New 'York, changing with the demands of the time and growing in historic value. The old graveyard, as well as the church it self, is rich in relics and monuments. SOW 1 Chairman of National Commit tee Enthusiastic for Demo cratic Nominee MAKES STATEMENT AFTER CONFERENCE: Asserts West is Loyal to Wil son and New York State Be Democratic Repub- licans Claims Over Three Hundred Electoral Votes for Hughes. Chicago, Oct. 30. "The West is on fire for Wilson and it looks like a land slide for the Democratic party," is the opinion of the Democratic Nation al Committee, as expressed by Mr. McCormick after a conference hero today with Senator Thomas Walsh, manager of the Western Democratic headquarters. "The West has the edge on the East in this matter of loyalty to the Pres ident," Mr. McCormick said. "Some States that have been doubt ful may now safely be counted for the President. New York State Is for th President and for him 'big.' Lea-, '. g of organizations confidently beT g the city will register one of the EOPflTiiiD est upheavals of a Democratic plural ity in years. "I see that Mr. Frank Hitchcock! claims th9 election of Hughes and gives a list of the States- that he pro nounces will go Republican. Of the 26 states he claims . for the Republi can party 'I cannot regard six as byj any means certain for the Republican candidate. I confidently expect the President to carry Connecticutt, New Jersey, Delaware, Maryland and Wesfi Virginia! "The swing is toward the President and I see no sign of abatement. V. , Certain Hughes Be Elected. mat Mr. tiugnes would nave more than 300 electoral votes was made to day by Chairman Willcox, of the lte publican National Committee. "Mr. Hughes will have 310 electoral votes or more," Mr. Willcox said. "1 regard as certain that Ohio, Illinois and Indiana will go Republican, as will also New York State." BANNER MEETING IN OHIO TONIGHT Columbus, Ohio, Oct. 30.' What Re-" publicans say will be the banner meeting of the Ohio campaign will be held in Columbus tonight with Charles Evans Hughes the centre of attrac tion. Mi. Hughes, accompanied by A his wife, will arrive here at 7 p. m. from Zanesville. Mr. Hughes is to deliver an address at 8 o'clock. Before speaking he will review a parade from a hotel. After a meeting with Ohio party leaders he expects to leave for Indianapolis shortly after midnight. GETS NEW ASSIGNMENT. Lieutenant Monroe With Machine Gun Company On Border. Friends here wil be glad to learn that Lieut. William P. Monroe," of the Second North Carolina Regiment, now on the Mexican border, who is assist ant chief of the Wilmington Fire De partment, has been selected tohe one of the officers of the machine gun company of that organization. , ' Lieutenant Monroe is assigned to the quartermaster department of the Second Regiment and his assignment as an officer in the machine gun com pany will be in connection with his present duties. START SPELLING. REVIVAL. Fifty-three Rotary Club Members Begin One Out West. Springfield, 111., Oct. 30. Fifty three business men, members of the" local Rotary Club, believed they were spellers of average ability, but learn ed they were not. "' As a result they have started a , movement to revive the ancient art of spelling and are seeking to enlist other Rotary clubs in their plan. ' The club was In session recently and Francis G. Blair, State superln-; tendent of instruction, was among those present He offered to cohduct a spelling contest for amusement After the fifty-three entered Blair gave them the following words: Leg- " ible, ledger, loathsome, malice, mu cilage, niece, sieve, siege and notice; able. They looked asy, out only- one of the fifty-three spelled of them correctly. The others refuse to tell just how much they did score, but. they are active boosters for the movement in favor of improved spelling. II I! ) The report on the destruction of goWi i p t .1 ' A, l v