N, V i.-Vt .-. ... &s J : , - ?I-oa Yer n Advance. . FOR GOD, FOR COUNTRY AND FOR TRUTH. " . Slor Cfy f CsCa, VOL. XX. PLYMOUTH. N. C. FRIDAY NOVEMBER 20. "i909 , NO. 25. v NORTH STATE NEWS Items of State Interest Gathered and Told iu Brief. Investigating Coble Murder. Greensboro, Special. The prelirai Tiary hearing of Daniel Coble and .Hiram Elliott, charged with the inur--der or Simpson Coble, son and brother-in-law of the accused, consumed -till of Wednesday morning. The State l'.adj concluded its case at 4:30, and Dirviel Coble, the first witness for vixi'Alefense, was on the stand at the time of adjournment. There were no witnesses who gave -any account of a fight at an illicit still operated by one of the defen dants, but in the quarrel which is -said to have occurred between Elliott and Simpson Coble earlier in tho afternoon, Coble is reported to have threatened to report the distillery to "the officers. The next morning he was fouud unconscious lying in a ditch 2o yards from Elliott's home, while -about 150 yards from the body the bloody hat and poeketbook of Simp son was found, together with a large pool of blood. His skull was crushed, bis cheekbone broken and there were several bruises on his body. He never regained consciousness. Killed by Brother. Lin coin ton, Special. Charles Keep, 1he 13-year-old son of Mr. L. Jacob Keep, -a prominent farmer of this 'county, was accidentally shot and kill ed Tuesday by his brother, Aubrey Keep, aged 19. It seems that a dog bad c based a rabbit into a hollow tree ;nnd the boys took their shotgun and went out about noon to get him out. They failed to do this, however, and the younger boy was trying to root a rabbit out of a branch bank. He iiimself ran out about the same time "the rabbit did and was shot in the right side, about 200 shot entering Siis right lung. He was attended with in an hour by Dr. W. C. Riser, who states that bo lived six hours after the shooting and that he was con scious up to five minutes of his ileath. The accident happened near the Siome of the boys' father about seven itcilos west of Lincolnton. Hosiery Finishing Mill Burns. Hendersonville, Special. The fin 'tshing building of the Skyland Hos iery. Company at East Flat Eoek with its contents, was entirely destroyed . "by fire Thursday morning at 5 o'clock. The. loss on the building is $60,000 and on its contents $15,000. The .in surance will cover the entire loss, it is believ'cd. The origin of the fire is not known. The main building of the r.ill is uninjured, but three hundred 'crnployts will be out of work for a 'eouple of months. New machinery -was wired for Thursday morning and ;a new reinforced concrete structure -will be built' immediately. This is the second fire in one year at this com pany's works, the last destroying the "Tryon plant completely. Salisbury an Electric Centre. Salisbury, Special. With a voltage -capacity of 100,000 a new transform er on the power lines ofth eSouth ern Power Company was placed in operation in Salisbury Tuesday. The enormous amount of current is brought to Salisbury from the big electric plant at Lancaster, S. C, by way of Monroe, N. C, and Albe marleby the use of huge towers car Tying the high voltage lines 100 feet above ground. Salisbury will here nfter be the principal distributing point for electric power used in Lex ington. High Point. Greensboro, Winston-Salem and other cities served "by the Southern Power Compairy. ' Tcung Man Meets Death at Saw MilL Spring Hope,. Special There wa a Tearful accident oen' mile from Nash ville at the saw mill of William Sel lers Tuesdaj', when the boiler explod ed, instantly killing his son, John Seller' The young man was eigh teen years of age. Colersncc For Education to Hold "Next Meeting in Little Rock-."Winston-Salem, Special, The ex ecutive committee of the Conference Tor Education in the South at a meeting Wednesday night with Col. W. A. Blair decided to hold the next Ti-ecting of the conference in Little T?ook, Ark., April 6. 7, 8. The invi 1 at ion from Arkansas came in the f'bnpe of a bound volume, containing letlers from the Governor, Legislature r.nd prominent educators. Various details were worked out, but the pro gram will not be given out at this meeting. SAD DEATHJNSALISBURY Mrs. D. S. Brown, a Helpless Para lytic, Burend While Her Blind Father tJould Only Give the Alarm. Salisbury, Special. Mrs. D. S. Drown was fatally burned at her home on North Long street Friday afternoon, dying in a short while. Every thread of clothing was buru ed from her body, the flesh being also horribly burned and the flame being inhaled. Mrs. Brown had sueered for some time with paralysis and, with the exception of her aged father, Mr. Greene Cauble, who is blind, was alone in the room where an open fire was burning, and the exact manner in which her clothing caught firo will never be known. Her father gave the alarm and neighbors rushed in. Dr. W. W. McKenzie was quickly summoned but he stated at once that the woman was hopeless, it being probably the worst case of the kind to come to his attention. Escaped From Doomed Ship. Wilmington, Special' The un known four-masted schooner pre viously reported ashore on Frying Pan Shoals Thursday proved to be the Eleazer W. Clark, 849 tons, Capt. F. W. Wyman, bound from New York to Savannah with asphalt pav ing blocks. . Both vessel and cargo were a complete loss, the tugs Blanche and Sea King and the rev enue cutter Seminole having been un able to render assistance Wednesday night on account of the southwest gale prevailing along the cost. Capt. Wyman and crew of seven men left the vessel at 8 o'clock Wednesday night in two yawls as she began to go to pieces and after a terrible battle with wind and wave until daylight they were thrown up on Bald Head Island beach whence they were taken over to Southport, N. C, and brought to Wilmington Thursday night. . Forset Fires in Buncombe. Canton, Special. Heavy,, forest fires have been raging around Can ton during the past few days of dry weather. Just to the northeast of town, along the high mountains be tween the pigeon valley and the New Found and Leicester section of Bun combe county great lines of fire have been seen for several nights. Then back in the Mount Pisgah lands of the Vanderbilt section can be seen the blaze at night and clouds of smoke by day. It is said that these fires on the Vanderbilt lands are set out by hunters to run the deer out side. Elliott Confesses Killing. Greensboro, Spedal Hiram Elliott who with Dan Coble bis father-in-Jaw, was sent to jail without bond to await the action of the grand jury on a charge of killing Simpson Coble, his brother-in-law, practically confessed Friday that he was the man who struck the blow which resulted in Simpson Coble's death. The confes sion of Elliott competely exonerates Dan Coble of any connection with the actual killing of his son or assisting in removing the body. Cave-in at Brown Creek on the South bound. Wadesboro, Special. The work men at the' crossing of .the Winston Salem Southbound at Brown creek, north of Wadesboro," had a narrow escape from serious disaster Friday. The contractor for the bridge oyer the creek is having the excavation made for the bridge piers and th3 bank commenced caving. One of the laborers noticed the cracking of the earth and gave the alarm in time for those working beneath to escape. Ex-Mayor of North Wilkesboro Ar rested. " North Wilkesboro, Special. J. It. Caffey, ex-mayor of North Wilkes boro, was arrested here Saturday on a charge of graft and bribery While mavor. following the finding of a true Pbill by the Wilkes county grand jury, He gave bond for appearanee at the March term of superior court. Excitement About Liquor Selling. Wadesboro, Special. The continu ed violation of the prohibition law here was the topic of conversation on the street Saturday. Friday's issue of The Ansonian editorially went af ter the officials for their apparent neglect of duty. One editorial brief that attracted particular attention and that caused much of the curb gossip was the following: "Officers of the law, as .well as most of the citizens of Wadesboro and Anson county, know that at one place in this town whiskey has beer 'red-ily fearn ished' the thirstv for. some time." NIGA'RAGUAN MUSS Zelaya Orders Two Americans Summarily Shot. LOUIS GROCE AND LEROY CANNON Captured in Revolutionary Army Are Denied Trial Gunboats Sent to the Scene President Taft Enraged. News has reached the depart ment that two American citizens, Leroy Cannon and Louis Groce caught by the Zelaya forces in Nicaragua from the insurgent forces were summarily shot, has produced a disturbed condition of things. Washington, Special. Two Ameri can vessels have been ordered to pro ceed to Nicaraguan waters and Pres ident Taft has postponed idefinitely his meeting of Isidore Hasera, the new minister from Nicaragua to this country as the result of news receiv ed here to the effect that two Ameri cans, Louis Groce and Leroy Can non, captured while serving with the revolutionist army in Nicaragua have been sentenced to death by President Zelaya 's orders and it is understood that sentence has already been carried out. Orders has been issued for the cruiser Vicksburg to proceed in 'all haste to Corinto and the gunboat-Des Moines will proceed at once to Port Limon to observe events there and report the situation at that point by wireless. President Taft, upon receipt of the news of the execution was .so incensed that he .immediately announced he would have no communication what ever with the new Nicaraguan minis ter. That official was promptly so in formed. Brooding quite settled down Friday on the strained situation this govern ment finds itself in with Nicaragua. But if everything was quiet on the surface, there was plenty stirring be neath. A communication was receiv ed at the State Department from the Nicaraguan legation, the purport of which was not divulged, and the min isters from Guatemala and Costa Rica held a mysterious conference with Assistant Secretary Wilson in the afternoon. ' A significant develop ment of the day, inasmuch as it dis closed this government's unyielding determination not to interfere with the Nicaraguan revolutionists, was the reiterated announcement that the State Department would not act to insure the safety of any American vessels that might be held up or seiz ed by the insurrectionary war ves sels now blockading the government forces at Greytown or elsewhere on the Guatemalan coast.. The deepest itnerest is apparent as to the confer ence between Assistant Secretary Wilson, Senar Calvo; minister from Costa Rica, and Dr. Ilerrarte, minis ter from Guatemala. It is believed that the instruction of the pan-American treaty, signed here a little over two years ago, was the chief matter discussed. The violation of the agree ment was committed by General Tole do, in command of Jresident Zelaya 's forces, when ho invaded Costa Rican territory in his advance on Greytown,' where practically he is now besieged. In the threatened trouble between Nicaragua and Venezuela, only .a short time ago, the United States stood ready to prevent by force if necessary, the passage of the bellig erents across the neutral territory of Honduras. Zelaya Slays by Hundred. New Orleans, Special. A :nble to The Picayune from Panama says: Passengers arriving from Nicaragua report that a reign of terror exist3 throughout the portion of that coun try controlled by President Zelaya. Government tro.-ps are rounding up every person suspected of sympathy with the revolutionists and executing them without trial. Sheriff at Cairo Loses His Place Be cause of Lynching. Springfield, 111., Special. Governor Charles S. Dcneen Thursday declared the office cf sheriff of Alexander county vacant because Sharff Frank E. Davis allowed William James, a negro murderer, and Henry Salzncr, white, to be taken from his care and lynched at Cairo by a mob on Novem ber 11. The Governor acted in ob servance of a law that provides that whenever a sheriff surrenders a pris oner to a mob his cfliee expires immediately. SNAPPY AND BRIEF Items Gathered and Told While You Hold Ycur Breath. SOME EVERY DAY HAPPENINGS Lively and Crisp as They Are Gar nered From the Fields of Action at Heme and Abroad. An unauthentic but credible report from Nicaragua ..s that two Ameri cans, Louis Grocflg and Leroy Can non having been . captured among the insurrection forces were summarily shot by order of President Selaya. President Taft is greatly shocked and has ordered an investigation. Twenty bodies of victims have been located in the Illinois mine and five have been brought to the surface. Two persons were killed and three injured in a S. A. L. wreck Thurs day near Denmark, S. C. Collector Loeb at New York, sum marily dismissed six officers in the custom house, who were implicated in the sugar frauds and is proceed ing to clean house. Ochopedology, or the scienco of rendering a mechanical abnormal body mechanically normal, will cure 100 per cent, o'f all coses of tubercu losis of the lungs in its first and sec ondary stages, according to Dr. Ban ning, professor f surgery at Hering College, Chicago, 80 per cent in tho third stage, and 20 per cent in the last stage. Lee MeMichael, night watchman at the Ameridus, Ga., construction com pany's shops was attacked by an un known person Wednesday night, his lantern being knocked over. A fire ensued that did a $50,000 damage. Charles R. Warriner, the default ing treasurer of the Big Four railroad lias been arrested and jailed. Mrs. Jeanett Ford,, his asserted black mailer, is occupying a room in tho same jail. The sugar fraud, exposure in the custom house at New York is said to involve 17 per cent of the employes. The combination of the Western Union Telegraph company with the Bell company it is believed will run a rarrow escape of dissolution as a violation of the anti-trust law. Mine. Steinleil's troubles are not all over for an American newspaper man is suing her for charging him with the murder for which she was tried. Ruth Butler, 4 years old, of Char lotte, Mich., some time ago pushed a baby sister off the bed and it strangled to death. On last Tuesday she saw her mother use chloroform for toothache. She got hold of the bottle and playfully administered the chloroform to lier 15-day-old sister with fatal effect. Eastern Kansas had a series of de luging rains early last week that put the streams higher than was ever known for the season and drove eiti zens to the higher lands. . The Atlantic Coast Line railroad company hate "authorized a bond issue of $200,000,000. President Finlej of the Southern Railway was an honored guest of Salisbury, N. C, Wednesday and made address more especially to the fanners. The new Armony at Georgetown, S. C, was formally dedicated on the 17th, with parade and appropriate ceremony. Earl Bullock, an all-round bad young fellow and William McKay, 15 years old, whom he lured, robbed the bank at, Eudora, Kan., Friday and severely wounded Fred Starr, the banker. Bullock fought desper ately against capture and fired his last bullet into his own head and will probably die. McKay was cap tured. Prof. Antonio Mantagna, a Roman scientist believes he has discovered a method by which to take photographs by telegram or telephone. Sheriff Shipp, of Hamilton coun ty, Tenn., along with five fellow countymen were sentenced to terms in jail for contempt of the U. S. court. Charges against them grew out of the lynching of a negro in Chatta nooga, and their failure to use their best efforts to pi-event it. 1 By the arrest of thirteen Italian.1? I nited States secret service men and the Italian squad of New York police think they have rounded up the lead ers of a band which has trafficked for at least a jear in a large amount of counterfeit money made in Pal ermo, Italy, and circulated in Ameri ca. The mail steamer La Se.vne, of the Message ries Maritimes service, run ning between Java and Singapore, collided with the steamer Onda, of the British-India Line, .and sank within two ' minutes. Nearly 400 men and boys are be- i lieved to be dead as a result of a mine disaster at Cherry, 111. Inquiry is being pushed by the government into the so-called sugar fraud cases and ' the investigation may equal, the insurance upheaval of 1003. Ten or twelve men, Italians .and negroes, were entombed by an em bankment cave-in on the Southbound railroad near Winston-Salem Tuesday. . Archer C. Christian, a football player on the University or Virginia team, died Sunday from injuries re ceived in a game last week. The man who nominated Wm. J. Bryan for President was. adjudged in contempt of court at Lincoln, Neb., Tuesday and indefinitely suspended from' legal practice. The 100th birthday of Fletcher Me doris, of Ireens Fork, Ind., was be ing celebrated on Tuesday. He col lapsed amid the festivities and died at their close. A student at Drexel Institute,, Philadelphia undertook to play the Black .Hand game on a wealthy cit izen there to get money to take his course in school. Eockfeller Commission to Attend At . lanta Meeting in January. Atlanta, Ga., Special. The Rocke feller commission for the eradication of the hookworm disease is expected to attend in a body the first national conference for the study of this dis ease, to be held in Atlanta January 18 and 19. Already the' chairman, Dr. Wiliam II. Welch, and other members of the commission, have signified their intention of attending. President Taft at Hampton. Hampton, Va., Special. Assuming "bis duties a sa member of the board of trustee sand declaring that he wished by that representation to tes tify to the interest of the American people in the problems being worked out by the school, President Taft spent all of Saturday at the Hampton Normal Institute for Indian and ne gro boys and girls. He attended dur ing the morning a meeting of the board, ' inspected the buildings and guns, reviewed the students. Cleaning New York Custom House. Washington, Special. The elimina tion from the customs service of act ing Deputy Collector James F. Vail, the abolition of that office in the New York customs house, the dismissal of 104 men and demotion of 123 other men at New York from March 4 up to Wednesday night with about a score of other changes included in Collector Loeb's statement Friday from New York were announced by Secretary MacVeagh Friday night. Five Bodies Recovered. Cherry, 111., Special. With the fire in the St. Paul mine greatly cheeked and five of the three hundred bodies of men who were killed by last Sat urday's fire recovered, it is hoped that much progress towards cleaning the mine will be made from now on. Charity has poured aid into the homes of suffering survivors but this could not subdue the grief of Cherry's in habitants when the sight of the dead, lifted from the tomb, exploded their hopes of rescuing them alive. President Finley in Salisbury. Salisbury, N. C, Special. Wednes day was Finley day in Salisbury. Had the genial president of the Southern been the Chief Executive of the Unit ed States his welcome could not have been more cordial nor his entertain ment more complete and satisfying, for in Salisbury's levicon hospitality embraces the men who 3o things. From the moment he arrived to the end of the banquet the city was his. After electing as its officers those i who served during the past year and adopting reports of committees, the convention of the National Associa tion of Railway Commissioners Fri day adjourned to meet next year in Wasington. A resolution was dis cussed recommending legislation to control and limit the issue of the soks and bonds of railroads engag ed in interstate commerce. Spirited discussio nwa brought about by Mr. Prentis. of Virginia, who desired to know whether State or Federal con trol was contemplated Children's Clothes. The favorite materials for schools coats are heavy tweeds, plain or with a double face, and wool serges. Manj of the dress coats are in wnito. curly lamb, or in white fur-trimnid cloth. Quantities of ready-to-wear models are offered in plush and ot'-.er cloths that imitate furs. fThe fancy for the all-white outer costume tor children vyirer S was never before so gener ally followed. Sometimes it is var ied by an all-black costume (where the family is in mourning), or bv a pa'e tan or gray suit. The Imitntion and real fur suits usually comprise leggings and caps or bonnets to match. Harper's Bazar. HITS STANDARD OIL Circuit Court Files Decree Dissolution. of GOVERNMENT WINS A VICTORY Judges Sanborn, Vandeventer, Hool and Adams Concur in Favor oi Every Count Contended For Ap peal to Supreme Court Will hi Taken. St. Paul, Minn., Special. In an opinion written by Judge Walter N". Sanborn, of St. Paul and concurred in by Judges Vandeventer, Hook and Adams with a special concurring opinion by Judge Hook, the United States Circuit Court for the eastern district of Missouri Saturday handed down an opinion declaring th Standard Oil Company of New Jersey, an illegal combination operating in restraint of trade and orders its dis solution. The opinion of the court was filed simultaneously in St. Louis and id St. Paul. In this decision the government oi the United States wins a sweeping victory and according to Frank B. Kellog of this city, who was the gov ernment 's special prosecuting officer, the government has won every point for which it contended. The case will be appealed dircet to the United States Supreme Court as the judges who signed the decree, are in effect the judges of the United States circuit court' of appeals, al though they were sitting for the pur pose'of trying this case as the circuit court for the eastern district of Mis souri. The decree of the court dissolving the Standard Oil trust becomes effec tive in 30 days when no doubt a stay will be granted for the purpose of an appeal. When the decree takes effect unless a stay is granted, an injunction will issue restraining the Standard Oil Company from a further continuance of its business under its present form ation. TWENTY LIVE MINERS. Parties Searching For and Bringing Cut the Dead Find the Living. Cherry, 111., Special. -The gamut from deepest despair to an hysteria of hope was run here Saturday when 20 miners, entombed in the St. Paul mine for a week, almost to the hour, were brought to the surface alive. The story of their sufferings and the heroism of their resourceful lead ers is one of the most thrilling in all the black history of mining disasters. Dawn broke with the bearers of stretchers moving from the pit mouth to the tent which served as a morgue? with bodies swollen and scorched al most beyond human semblance. Forty of them had been brought up and most of them identified when , the marvelous report shot through the prostrate community: "They've found them alive they've found them alive." In a moment the morgue was de serted; scarcely to be revived while the crowd, fairly insane with the great hope which bad sprung like a miraculous flame from the ashes of despair, rushed to the spot. All thought was of the men who were alive. It took six hours to brin: the survivors to the surface. Mean while a report spread that seventy or more men were alive in a far reach of the mine, cut off from escape by a bank of black damp between their barricade and the main shaft. Searching parties on Sunday, how ever, found no more living and con ditions crush all hope of further suc cess at rescue. Thirty-seven corpses were removed and buried Sunday. Awful Auto Tragedy. Cuthbcrt, Ga., Special. Three per sons are dead and two probably fa tally Injured as a result of an automo- ' bile accident here late Sunday. The dead: Curtis Wiliams, of Port Caines, Ga. James Shepard, of Edison. Ga. Hor- , ace Shepard, of Edison, Ga. The in jured: Miss Helene Mattox. aged 20, Coleman, Ga. Shepard and Miss Mat ton were sroing to be married. Prominent Pennsylvania Politician Kills Himself Accidentally. Franklin, Pa., Special. "Acciden tal, slipped and " was the con tents of a note found Sunday. night in a dense thicket beside the body of I. R. Borland, aged 50 years, former county treasurer and a prominent politician, who had been missing from , home since Friday. A wound in the left leg caused Borland to bleed -to death, according 1o the-coroner. Th'i accident was the result of a hnnting" trip. It wan eidcnt that Borland began to write the note but fell ex hausted before he could finish it. "