Hart Is Found Guilty On All Counts; Given Term In Penitentiary Sentence of Two Yeaes and Six Months in Prison Im posed llpon Convicted Al beintrle Bank Teller JURY OUT HALF HOUR Defendant Generally Re Hxarded as Vietim of Oir cumstances. Rather Ttiau Deliberate Criminal A sentence of two years and six months in the State's Prison was imposed Saturday on N. E. Hart, colored, teller of the Albemarle Bank, which failed December 24, last, af ter a jury in Superior Court had found him guilty on . charges of embezzlement and making false entries in the! bank's records. Tbe cue went to the Jury at j 11:45 o'clock, sod the verdict wan | returned ai>out half an hour later. ! In Imposing sentence. Judge Hen- 1 ry A. Grady, presiding over the i court, declared he would under take to procure Hart's release af- j ter a year. If the prisoner had u good penitentiary record then. Trial of the case opened Thurs- j day morning. The taking of tes- 1 4lmony was concluded Friday at i noon, and argumenta were begun j at the opening of court at 2 o'clock in the afternoon. These j were finished at afternoon ad- j Journment, and Judge Grady , charged the jury Saturday morn lag, beginning immediately after the opening of the court session. W. H. Holland, cashier of the bank, was Sentenced to? three ; mrx and nine months In prison , Jit the Msrctv ttfU of Superior ; ?Court here, after he had pleaded PsniXy to misapplication of the hank's funds and to the making of false entries In its records, in the oourse of ? statement at that time, he Implicated Hart, and the teller's arrest aqcTmdlctment fol ? tewed. Hart bad been In Jail here. slnce, In default of $6,000 appear ance bond. There has been a general din position here to regard Hart an more or less of a victim of a train of events beyond his comprehen sion, and not as having been guilty , of deliberately criminal intent in ? whatever part he might have had ! In the wrecking of the bank. In , the trial, he vehemently denied having had any part* In the Irreg ularities, or any knowledge of them. FORMER DOWAGER QUEEN OLGA DEAD Rome, June 19, ? Former dow ager queen Olga of Qreece, grand jnother of the late King Alexander1 and widow of King Qeorge I., Is dead, aged 75. at her home, the Villa Anastsla. Members of the family were at her bedside. YOUNG PHOPIjK KNJOY DKM'KMAN (X>NFKKKN'('K The following members of -the Young Peoples' Service league of | Christ Church have Just returned from the dtocesaa conference held I at Washington June 14 and 16: Misses Blllle Meltck. Margie I ^Fearing, Gertrude Olover, Shirley Mfrgrtng, Vivian Turner and Jane j ? ICIise Hastings. The Kev. and Mrs. 'J&ao. F. Hill attended as council ors. All the delegates report the best- time ever, the yonnp, people of Wsshlngton knowing just ex j sctly how to rnske one happy. The I conference was especially Interest- ! Ing. On the first night a banquet | was given In honor of Bishop snd i | Mrs. Dsrst. At this banquet Bish op Darst was prsseoted k beautl- j - fui loving cup by the young peo ple. Dr. Dean of Wilmington, Mr. McAllister from New York and Bishop Penlck of the diocese of North Carolina all made most In teresting talks. At the first business meeting the ofTlcers were elected for the fol lowing yesr. Miss Blllle Mellck of this city was elated diocesan sec retsry snd publicity secretary of the Y. P. S. L. This Is n most liw portant office In tbe?Y. P. 8. L. At a later meetiag In the old | church at Bath the newly elected officers were Installed by Bishop | Dsrst. The service wss s m o* t j impresHlve ons. The conference closed with a most sajoyabl* evsnlag spent pic alciag, bsthlng, gad so on st Riv erside Park. , CHILDKKN MAY KttltOM, POIt VAC ATION MHOOL . J The dally viaallon Bible school I^Pill open at Black well Memorial ^Pnireh Monday morning at 0 ? < lock. Dr. J. H. Thayer, the pas tor. sanounces, aai children who ; have ebt yet registered will be glv ea an opportunity both Mundsy sad Monday aiorala# Children | SA-r-r'-fl Kiwanis Ralph A. Amerman. of 8cranton. Pa., a the n?wVprfild?nt of Klwanla In. ternatlona.. Active In Klwanla clr rlea for year*, he waa elected to tho preridency at the annual convention In Montreal thla month. ARMY ENGINEERS FOR WATERWAY i Anltrd Coiigreiw fur Expen | dilure of $3,200,000 for Beaufort to ( -Jl|>e Fear Iik tercoaatnl Waterway Washington, Juno 19. ? Expen diture of $3,200.000 wax rerom ! mended today for an Intercoaital | waterway from Beaufort, North Carolina to the Cape Koar River at WUmingtoiV, to Congrcaa by United Stat??s Army engineers. The proposed Intercoastal canal would be eight feet deep and 00 feet wide. Prorbloni would Iio I made for a tidal lock at the Cape | Fear end of the canal and a blgh i way bridge would be constructed jin the vicinity of the tidal lock, i An initial appropriation of $950,000 was recommended for the first year, $900,000 for the Hecohd year, $500.000 respective ly for the thlfd and fourth years, and $360,000 for the fiftl* year. | An appropriation or $100,000 I annually was recommended for I maintenance. Ix?cal intiiMti would be required to furnish with out coat to the Government It right of way 1,000 feet wide and give satisfactory asnurance to the Sec retary of War that they would take over the highway bridge up on its completion and maintain and operate it perpetually. MAD CAT CALLS AT HPK.XCB-HOLI/OWKLL CO. Foaming at the mouth, arro gant, snorting and jumping here and there, a mad cat reported at Kpence-Hollowell Company about 9 o'clock Saturday morning. I H. V. Owens. 225 West Fearing street, attracted by the peculiar netlonH ef the cat. started to grab, j it but decided thin hardly safe j when t lie cat made a move for hlin. i 'At thla Juncture Mr. Owens picked I up a stick and put the suffering animal to uleep. This Is the first mad cat so far reported this season. Cat* go .iuad when bitten by a mad dog, accord- : Ing to Dr. Victor Flnck. So Go I cows, homes and mule*. "The thing lo do." Dr. Flnck says, "I* to innoculate the dogs aa they are the spreaders of the dis ease." It la. hoped that the mad I dog epidemic will soon be cleared away aa over 200 dogs have been ' Innocutated thus far. DRY I'KKIOD IlKOKKN Charlotte, Juno 19. ? The long dry period had generally been broken In North Carolina today with rain reported from wlder I spresd sections of the State. Fray- 1 er services have been held In many towns and village* in the State apd rain has fallen In Ra-j lelgh, Winston -Ha lem. Oastonla. High Point, Charlotte, Salisbury and (lreensboro. IXITTOK ftfAHKKT New York. June If- -Cotton fu tures opened at the following let els: July 17.66, October 16 43. December 16.41, January 16.25. March 16.45. ? New York, June It.? Spot col ton cloaed quiet, middling 16.26. points unchanged. Futures, clos ing bids: July 17.62, Oct 16.41. Dec. 16.61. Jan. 16.40. Mar 16.67. A Chicago girl of 17 has three husbaad. while many girls twles her ace havsn't more than ofte or two. NEW CODE ETHICS MAY RESULT FOR THE LAWMAKERS Senator* lfeed Iiiv?f?i|{atiiui! the Primary lla* Steered] the Inquiry Ju?t Wlierej He Had Wished WAS aftkrleagije ' Had in Mind Exposing Methods of Anti-Saloon Organization A11 While ( and Achieved His Aim j By DA VIM LAWRKNt'K (OaSVUM. iw. fc? *??????> | Washington. June 19. ? A now I rode of ethics tor member* of J Congress may result from the rev- J elation thai sdveral of the moat J promlnet "dry champions" in the| House and Stenate hare been on ?the payroll of the Anti-Saloon I League as public speakers. I Senator James Heed of Mia- 1 sourla, Democrat, who has been Lconductlng the cross examination 1 of witnesses In thd Pennsylvania primary contest finally steered the I Inquiry to the point he has fori months been seeking to establish, namely that '"dry" organisation* are engaged Ih a system of elec tioneering which to his mind is as I reprehensible as the urging of vot ers by another group of organiza tion which pays for Ita workers. Having ? developed the fact that the Pennsylvania campaign cosi nearly J2.000.000 and that votes : were obtained through paid I I watchers, the Missouri Senator now turns the spotlight on other influences in the same election. | namely the wet and dry side. He knew that the "drys" would open , up on the part played by the "wets" and no doubt there will be [exposures showlug whnt I "wet" organisations did to help I Representative Vare. But the striking thing which [Senator Iteod has uncovored and| | on which there probably will be no j parallel on the "wet" aid* is the fart that members of Congress are] j hired to make speeches for the dry cause and are paid substantial fees for so doing. It has long been an unwritten j rule In Washington that members of Congress shall not have a pe I c u n l u r y interest tn-any legislation I pending before CongresB. Indeed, this Is -carried so far that Wash- 1 |: Ington correspondents are not ev en given the privileges of the I press gallery if they happen to be I: employed also by organisation* || seeking to Influence Congress to adopt or kill pending legislation. I' Not long ago Senator Wheeler of '| Montana. Democrat, was Indicted |l because It was alleged lie accepted |!a fee for appearing as rounsel be fore a Government department on lj behalf of a constituent. He was ; subsequently acquitted on the {'charge. So also In the case of n I f member of the Tariff Commission wha was disqualified by act Con gress from sitting In Judgment on a mailer of tariff duties on a com I modify In which his family was | Interested. I Many members of Congress lec I ture during the summer montli*. Somo make speeches for pay dur I lug the session of Congress. These [are usually for Isolated organiza tion. With the exception of the I Antl-8sloon League no national | organisation 1b hiring members of i Congress to make speeches. If the I manufacturers association or the | steel trust or the International ^banking houses were to pay mem I bers of Congress to make Speech - 1 I en aecrylng certain proposals lj aimed at them and the Informa tion were made public, the prac- 1 I life would cause a furore. Yet I the Missouri Senator na* been try I Ing for a long time to point out j that the payment of mowy lo ; members of Congress by the Antl I Saloon league presents an anal ogous caae and that when dry leaders who are on the Anti-Sa loon I/oague payroll get up In j Congress to champion the cause of 1 f dry legislation they are In a sen#* i [interested parties. 1 This form of attack has been j [ carried on by the wets for several years but they have not until this I session of Congress succewled In focusing attention on the custom Congress Itself csn discipline !t* members, but It never hss taken ! offense at what has been generally known, namely that speeches for ] the dry cause were frequently paid j for b r the Ant I Saloon I?eaK?i? j The difficulty of drawing I which would not rostrlct a fflem ber of Congress from earning ad dltloaal nMMiey through lecture ?nKagei?+a| has vastly prevented the enactment* of a law against i |lthe whol? practice. Senator He??d didn't Mart oat with the Idea of Inreallgatlng the Penpaylvanla primaries. He had | been trying to get a resolution] adopted to Investigate all Con- j | gresslonal election expenditures when along came the Pennsyl vanla contest sirfl furnished the necessary momentum to get th?< j resolution of Inoulry adopted. Mr, Heed had In mild not only expos 1 Ing methods of the Anti-Saloon ; League but whon the Senate com 1 mitten gets through with Pennsyl ?anla, ha will ask that it g? to II Steamer Sinks Near Csinjock The steamer Virginia I>are. pf the Elizabeth City Boat Lin*', operating bHweon this city and '* Norfolk via the Albemarle 'jft Chesapeake Canal. sank la?t f night at 11 o'clock at Colnjoefc L Bridge, nu the Inland Watefr r way link crowing the Currituck mainland from North River fo Currituck Sound. -4 The steamer had I.SQA'bflf rel* of early lrlsfc potatoes aboard, and t ho sinking in a*- * trlbutcd to overloading. There wera no ca.-oialth ?. Prepara tions wore under way today to raise her. a wrecking tug huv* Ing arrived frum Norfolk. Accouut? of the sinking re ceived ? here today staled that the ateamer tipped over and I went down slowly, giving all on , board ample opportunity to m | cape. Captain Monroe Richard son. of this city. In commander ; of the* Virginia Dare. TRIBUTE IS PAID TO MRS. NEWBOLD erative Association into a receiver ship was announced by Judge I. M. Meekins at noon today, at the close of a hearing in1 Federal Court. Judge Meek-' ins announced that he would appoint three receivers, and that he would name them later in the day, after the re quisite receivership order had been drawn up by the plain-; tiffs in the action. In stating his decision. Judge declared thai while ordi narily a receivership was unsatis factory In many ways, and that while li wax lite duty of a court ot etiulty lo urdef a receivership on ly when It could not properly do otherwise, he wan a little dlsap pointed ovlr the course of event* In the lam three months. In that Ihe asportation |n little better condition now than then, Judging from the reports rendered. Judge Meekins declared he was a firm believer In the principle of co-operation marketing, and that he did not wish to do anything that might unintentionally throt tle It, but that In the lighl of Oli ver Hand*' position, he felt the condition of the Tobacco (irow er* Association should lie looked Into, and that that could not be ac complished to advantage except through a receivership. The association and the Federal Intermediate Credit Bank, of llal tiniore. which financed its opera tions largely, and which was made a co-defendant In Ihe suit, fought the receivership petition vigor ously In the hearing. The asso ciation was represented by Major w T. Joyner, of Raleigh, and the Halflmore banking Interests by I I Whitehead, of that cltv. In op posing ihe receivership. Mr Whitehead argued ihm ihe a**o elation was entirely solvent, ah dis closed by n recent examination of !u a?Q,rfl representative* of the Federal Intermediate Credit Hank; and that a receivership wag uniiNMMry and Inadvisable.' through the circumstance that It might brhiK a Ions of millions of dollars to grower members throw ing much tobacco immediately- on the market. Mr. Whitehead stated that the Danker* felt thpy were fully pro tected by the Holvency of the mak ers of notes representing largely the asset* of the association, lie offered the additional objection that It would be difficult or per haps Impossible for the association ' to obtain credit under a receiver ship on the ground that the bnnks could not lend money properly to the court, whose agents the re ceivers would be. Judge Meekins discounted this argument on the ground that. If the association was solvent, the re ceivership fthould prove no barrier i to Its borrowing funds. The dozen or more grower mem-' J???rs of the association who had borught the receivership action were represented by Judge J V "orlon. of Raleigh, and Ed- 1 ward Fluford. of Lawrenccvllle. ' PEAKI, DOMEAND IS GIVEN FIFTEEN YEARS Banduskv. Mich.. June 19. ? Pearl Dorland was sentenced In circuit oeurt today to serve 16'] years' Imprisonment for 'laying ; March ? last of l!?-year-old Roy I,ee. Dorland Vas found guilty of j manslaughter yesterday. RXrwrmsAi, t.u.kxt ih KVIDKNCKD IN HWITAb Of Interest to Kl|xab*th C'lt y people who are fond of music was Ihe recital given Friday ?evening st the First Baptist Church by M Iss . Miserere Vlettrlck. talented 11 year old pupil of irtrs. I. M Meekins. Mis* Hetlrlek In both piano and organ numbers showed unn*ual ability and exceptional talent In her last number, Alegro Maestoso by ftchnelder. Ihe audience was particularly Impressed by the richness of orchestration ami III eaae with which ahe rendered dif ficult pedal passages. Iler pro gram follows: Improvisation In R Flat ? or gan-? Clark; Cradle Bong ? or gan-Ruck; Anltra's Dance ? plano O r leg: Polish Dance - piano -flcharwenka . Melodle Pas torals ? organ ? Den a rest ; Alegro LETTING OF BIDS ON NEW THEATER DEFERRED AGAIN Company Backing IMay Iioiim- (U?tifronl<-tl l>> Di lemma in IJt'sirt* to Build Kinent of Kind i" State KSTIM ATES KX< '.KKI > Kl ) CukI of Structure Tlireul ens K u it $25,000 ^ Above ? Preliminary Estimate*. Diiltw Tin y S Irt m p Postponement In the lcliinu of contracts for erection of the hand so m** iit'w Carolina TIi?'bi? r imt#. hriicilu l?-d for Friday afti rnoon. waa uunoun*?4 Saturday by offi- j rial* of th?* Carolina Investment A: Insurance Conuiany. du*' changes In the plans m-eeasltat.d bv tin* bids offend bavins run hoiiio I2&.000 , above what they hail anticipated. New bid* will be called for. to bo opened Friday | night ai 7 o'clock. The company s plana rail for a theater which, they declnre, would be iuhIIv the lineal In the Hlate, nnd comparable In thin action on- j ly to the netf LoeWa playhouse, lu Norfolk. However, the coat is running far higher than they had anticipated, and they are b uny considering what alternative course Uiey may take. They stale | frtM.lv that by skimping on certain detalia of eonatructlon. they can readily bring the coat within their original eat I mates, but they are uuwlllng to do that. If It can be i uvolded. . At yesterday r meeting, tin j company organised with the fol lowing officers: Dr. A. I*. I et?dle? j ion. president; W. T. Culpepper., v loo president, and J. H. ^Koy. J Jr.. secretary-treasurer. liesutes the officers, the board <>f doctor" comprise Walter I- Small. W. I Skinner. J. C. !??wyor olid L. ?. I Cordon. ... . 1 The Carolina Theater will be erecU-4 at tile rear "t the Carolina i Hank Building. In the heart of the downtown district. *??'' a I. arcade entrance from Main stre. t thrmish the hank building. The plana call for the moat moderd lighting. heating. ventilation and | sealing arrangetnenta. anil for an interior of unuaual beauty. CAMPAIGN FUJI0 j COMMITTEE KESTS Washington. June J9.-- -The Senate campaign funds committee suddenly called off today'" scs ?lon of ll? hearings and announced that It would r?aume lla liniulry Monday with Wayne It. Wlo-'M I of the Anll-S*loon league on tin Washington/ June 19 - A row l? the I'ennaytvanla Women Christian Temperanco Union over; the deposition of a large aunt raised for prohibition enforcement work l? til he aired before the Si n- . ale campaign fund, committee A auhpoena wan Issued today j for Mrs. Kiln Oeorge of I Ht? burgh. president u t tho associa tion She will appear Monday. Mrs .Maude Seymour of Met on- 1 nollstiurg. ?h" ?'?? demanded an accounting of the fund alieady ta. under auhpoena and will be l"a'dj the aiinie day. IJtate Klynn of Pittsburgh haa told the committee there were reporta or the rataln* of ?200.000 by the w - men 'a Chrlatlau Tethpe ranee l_n lon to aid In enforcing the dry' law In the Keystone State, tie said Mrs. Seymour had made charges In spwehea during tbe ?'""STl vanla primary campaign that the money was not needed for law n forcement and had demanded an Inquiry as to whtaher any of It was diverted to political tinea. BI TTt HFl.tWI AKO MOTllH THIS WOMAN'S tu SI N V AS Miami. Fla.. June l?.-^'ad jn , khaki skirt and a w'de hrlmmed r;jwhi"."no'M"i.*r *ijs woman of slight build and whHe hair goes forth each day In search of butterfll,, and moths. . For collecting am) breeding beautifully marked apec imena of this apeele, of laaect ta ? wfth Mrs. Kllaaheth O. (trove. She: haa one of the lartteal laboratories of Its nature In the lountry Hhe receives ordsrs for rsre but terfllea from sclsntlflc Inatltntlon* and collegea that apec allae In na ture atudy. from Jewellers and col lectors. . i j During her flr.l season she sold more than $400 worth of Ihe t Iny blue winged butterfly that eed. on the coontle. This la said to be , raro apeclmen In olher "?<>,??"? , hut common In Florida. M droves aUo collect, grssshopteTs^ She doesn't knew what they wi re wanted tor. but each waa worth Ihree cent,. HKV. I/OVK ItK-rt'ttXS I Dev. r. It. l^>ve. pastor of the I First Methodist Church, haa re turned from the t'aalors' Summer school at Ouke tlalverslty and al 1 so from attending a meeting of the lleneral Hoard of Missions of Ihe Southern Methodist Churehat l Nashville a.,d will jjeacb at M ?the mora leg and evening eenrlee Sunday. Architects Hired By Commissioners Kmployuient of I lie archi tects" firm ??/ Kudolph. Conk ? k Licuweii. of Norfolk, lo dtaw liluiis for I'asqiiotan t( Count \ '* hair million dollar (vui't limiae was divided u|mui by i It. - lloaiil Of (.'oil lll\ Colli III Issiol, era. In apecial aesalou Saturday. The architect were ? in |?l?*y *??! Willi tin* stipulation that if plant* iti Imkim* bondu for filt ered Ion of the courthous*. t>r . for n iiHideliuK t ho present structure failed, the} wm> lo receive no compensation. The architects were directed to kii limit plans both for a new court liouae. and for I ho r?in*.d ('lillK. Although I he commissioner:* have Kunoon record an favoring a now courthouse outriuht, In atead of remodeling the exist ing building. their stipulation in employ^*; the architects lit taken ait indicating they may possibly taku tho latter course, on aceou tit of the heavy expen diture Involved in the more am bitious plan. VANDERLIP H A S WESTERN PALACE Efforts at Ki'furmiiif; (iov eminent Ended. U Itoilil in# Einpiri' of Own H) JOIIN K. i:.M(iK lUmmil ins* Hr IM tliMWi San I'edro, Cal.. Juno 1ft. ? On one or the high hllln of the old l'alos Verdea raurh, overlooking the PuclHc where ships strain In and out of the Lou Angeles Har bor. Frank A. Vanderllp, former New York bank preaident and once a stormy petrel In public af fairs at Washington, la bulldltiK a bono* that combines the architec ture of palace and caatle. In It he hopes to dwell for many years as a sort of overlord ot much of the nurrou tiding terrlloif. His efforts at reforming the Government having ended, Iho owner of Sparta, unincorporated "model vllluge" near Onslning. New York, hsn become a realtor on a large acale. The 1G.OO0 acre Paloa Verden ranch, an old Span lah grant. waft two yearn ago vir tually undeveloped, remaining one of the great open npacea of the Southwest . whore ruins of old hacienda atlrrcd faint memories of Lhe period wheu Ca boiler o and Henorlta sang and danced with careh'M Joy. Tho riew owner has spent al most $60,000 on a network of roads and la making his little em pire the largest real oatate devel opment of recent years In l. i cii rately Predicted It) ItOltttKX T. SMALL < Cu??ri??it. I?*. fc? Til* A il??ne? ) Washington. June 19. ? New York City Ih not m-arly ho Immune h from earthquake perils as It seems 'i to think, but It could Ih? made a af* I - which It Isn't. The name cttO . dit Ion. or theory, applies to all ! t ho Atlantic CiMmt from Nova Bco I t Ui to the Carollnas. New ' Ytfrk II Ih considered first because of tlie I vuMt billions of wealth represent- T ed In ItH downtown district. A real disaster there by quake' or 'fire, would not only shock KUt financially disarrange the eatire world. i The tower buildings of Np* York, which to the layman wOtityl Heetn the points of greatest danger i in an earthquake are held by the expert* to be the safest. It Wjl. , ? been found In earthquake* of th. pant that where solid and squat buildings have been ihaktta to pleceH, tall chimney* nearby h'a*e been left Intact. The taller gtrftfe turee seem to posmu* the * to abHorb the lateral movement -Of , the earth wlhout fatal damage.' ? Washington Is beinu visited JttOt now by Dr. Thomas Augustus Jag gifr, Jr.. probably the moot i ent volcanologlst of the who niakoa his home at the vdl- ?; cano house In Hawaii. -Dr. Jaggar 1 Ih In charge of the Covcrnmoat observatory In the Islands. visited all of the earthquake *?!?? ters of the past quarter of i eoil- ? tury and hoa hurried b la ulnvi~ ? I lent febt U> every volcanic erup tlon of moment. He hiu? studied j In Harvard, Munich and HvMtf* berg, baa tuughi neology In Har vard and Mq**nchu?ett* Institute or Technology, baa been aseoelqt ed with tho Government*! surfer and egtabllahed in Hawaii a .*ol cauo experiment station. In abort. l>r. Jaggbrd Is considered Just about the last word In volcanic and earthquake lore. j . Dr. Juggur bellevea the time, la not far dlatant when earthquake* can be predicted with virtually ?bo same precision 'that astronomeia can tell of the coming of a conoft Tliat is why he Is a supporter of the geological school of thoufftt which believes in the study of 11^ In g procaaseH of today rather t ha# In the foasil record* of the, pool. The present earl h crust *hoy*W i brought under Innumerable oneefr vat ions so that new rock may & studied In Its relation to .time. Ae t rnnqmerg, measuring lb'' lllglit of a comet can calculate when It will reappear. Dr. bellevea that by watching, eruptions and other living 1 < h of today, earthquake cycJf* may In* forecast with more than a reaa onable degree of preeiafoui' v* Speaking of the Atlantic Coaat* al region. Dr. Jaggar recalled t he quake* of 17D6 and 1797 l#.PWl York and Boat on aa well a* Charleston tremorn of 1886. The 1 7 6 C Hlrake In lloalon wai a ae-,. 1 vere one. Ju*t when the. cycle will bring another shake In this section he could not say, but theie Ih continental rock running north and south along the coast which Is consider* d fallow ground far tremor*. This rock is known to geologist* as the Newark V r? r mo tion. The I'allsndea of the Hud Hon. famed for their beauty aru of volcanic origin So are th? fa inou* Boat Hock *1 New HaVtt. the Hanging HIHh in connect!*^ and flAckn In Southeastern Peon I sylvaula The Hudson Hlver ran* In what la known as a fa?W 111 and tnat I* what makes straight. IHIT . .. ... am Dr. Jananr railed *MrnUMjj#^_ the nyiUrlMi aounda 1? in* nertlrul Hirer Valley known a? [till' " Moodua nolnea." iiiikmIu, Inx the anclrnl name of what U now K?at Hull",. ConnMtlqt. The rNHn th?l till' r..a?t?l tr* Klona of th. HUM"'! SUli" ar? n* j.-et to atrtHqnakra l? ""'J i'! In no eonllnMital rotk runnlnt j*al II nd weat. Th" ahocka ?r? lalt. therefor*, In * north and """n llr. JaKKlr feela lhal New. Yifo i and other ?!!