1 it. V. I I 4 ) xe a Ymt, Is Adrmae. "FOR OOD, F03 COUNTRY AND FOR TRUTH." VOL. XXI. PLYMOUTH, N, C. FRIDAY, JANUAKY 13, 1911, 3.1 N. C; GENERAL" ASSENBLY 1 jK . P 1 fr At Y A. NEW CONGRESSMEN . t - House Committees Plan to In crease Membership. AFFECT ON DIFFERENT STATES. Bill Introduced In House of Represen tatives to Reapportion Membership Not Many Changes in South Re ferred to Census Committee. ' Washington.' Congressional reap portionment uSdtjr tha new censnflg ures so as to increase ths membership of the Hduse to 433 is the plan ten tatively favored by the House com mittee on 'c&isus. This figure would protect each State from diminished numerical' representation and is ex clusive of Arizona and New Mexico. The apportionment bill introduced by Chairman Crumpacker fixes the membership of the House at 433. The apportionment of the member ship of the House amongst the va rious States,- under the proposed ' ar rangement, will be as follows: Alabama, 10; Arkansas, 7; -.California, 11 $ Colorado, 4; 'Georgia, li; Idaho, 2; vlniionis, 27; Indiana, 13; Iowa, 11; Kansas, 8; .-Kentucky, IV; Loulslan, S;Maine, Maryland, 6;Ma sachusetts, 16; Michigan, 13; Minne sota, 10; Mississippi, 8; Missouri, .16.; Montana, 2; Nebraska, 6; Nevada, 1; New Hampshire, 2; New Jersey, 12;, Kew York 43 r North Carolina, 10'; North Dakota, 3; Ohio, 22; Oklahoma 8; Oregon -3; Pennsylvania, 38; Rhode Islaud-3 ; South Carolina, 7; South Dakota 3;' Tennesee 10; Texas 13; Utah 2; Vermont, 2;. Virginia 10; "Washington 5; West Virginia 6; Wis consin, 11; Wyoming 1. ; V " This represents an increase over , the present membership in the House . as follows: ' Alabama, Colorado, Florida, Geor gia, Idaho, Louisiana, Michigan, ' Min- . nesota, Montana,, North Dakota, Ohio, , Oregon, , Rhode Island, South Dakotat Utah and West Virginia,, one each; Illinois,, Massachusetts, New Jersey, Texas and Washington 2 each; Cali fornia and Oklahoma 3 each; Pennsyl vania 4 and New York 6. A majority of ttie members of the committee believe this plan of ap portionment will prevail. INITIAL CARRIER LIABLE. Carmack Amendment is Declared . Constitutional. New Law. Washington. The. new policy of law, making an initial carrier, of inter state commerce liable for loss of ship- ments while in transportation, not r only on its lines, but on those of con necting carriers, has been declared constitutional by the Supreme Court of the United States. The policy was incorporated-, in the so-called "Car- mack amendment" to the Hepburn rate law, enacted by Congress in 1906. ... One objection to the law was that .it interfered with the freedom - of contract. Justice Lurton replied that there was no such thing as absolute freedom of contract." "Contracts which contravene public policy," said Justice Lurton, "cannot be lawfully made at all and the power to make contracts may1 in -all cases be regulated as t6 form, evidence and validity as to third -persons. : The power of government extends to the denial of liberty of contract to th extent of forbidding or regulating every contract which is reasonably calculated to injuriously affect the public 'interests." - V" Danced Into Motherhood. " IfZmericus, Ga. A few hours after she had sung and danced at a. local theatre, a Japanese chorus girl gave birth to a boy. After National Corn Show. -Columbia," S. C Launched by Mr. R"t.herford P. Hayes, of Asheville, on of the late President Rutherfprd B. Hayes, a campaign to. have the next annual meeting of the .National Corn Association held in Columbia has been taken, up with great enthu- :. slasm by .Mr. -A. P. Hudson, of New berry, president of the South Carolina " . Corn Breeders' Association, and also head of the South Atlantic Corn Ex position held last, jnonth in Columbia. Other prominent men wiHaid. . . Fines Don't Stop Wealthy Men. Washington. "Fines are not effec tive against men of wealth. Imprison ment Is necessary." So declared President Taft in a statement in which he denied the application for commutation of sentence in the case of J. S. Harlan, manager of a great lumber and turpentine company do-, ing business in Florida and Alabama, who was indicted and convicted on a charge of conspiracy to violate the peonage statue of Florida. Harlan was given IS months and fined $5,000. DUE TO FREIGHT RATES. A . Millionaire Says That People Are Bled to Pay Dividends on Nine Billions of Watered Stock. Akron, O. Declaring that excessive freight rates are responsible for the high cost of living, Ohio C. Barber, the millionaire match magnate, has sent a letter to every member of con gress demanding reforms. In .addition to the regulation of freight rates, he demands that laws be passed that will effectually limit railroad and industrial capitalization. He declares the freight business oi the railroads costs each family $87 a year. This latter, coupled with the other earnings of the railroads, he as serts, has boosted the average rail road cost per family to $127 annually. Barber starts his letter to the con gressmen with th,se, three demands: "What i3 the matter with Ameica? "What is the matter with congress? "Why has the seat of goevrnment been transferred to Wall street?" Continuing, he says: "Personally, I appreciate fully the importance of stability of vested rights in property, corporate or personal. "But I vigorously contend' that the commission of excesses in the capital ization of corporate companies for feits instantly the right to claim face value for such capitalization in the levying of a tax upon the . American public, for the payment of dividetfdij upon this watered stock. And in this offense the railroads always have setr the pace. "Conceived in the master minds of Huntington, Morgan, Hill and. Harri man, this policy has been' worked out to a nicety. These- clothed the scheme in the pretty catch phrase of a 'community of interests' and cleverly set about to grab all the through trunk lines of railroad from coast to coast. . . "They argued plausibly, and with truth, that these trunk lines were" the great arteries which maintained the life of commerce; that they were a necessity for quick transportation. "Approximately nine billions of this 18 .billions of railroad capitalization- is fictitious: purely and simply water ed stock upon which the people of the United States are taxed in rail road rates to miantain the annual div idends. "Despite thi3 tremendous -stock wa tering, the railway net earnings have advanced steadily and the aevrage dividend rate has more than doubled in the last 15 years. "In 1894 the dividend rate was 1.66 per cent. Last year it averaged 3.68 per cent and ths railroads earned a net income of $S52,153,280. "And the. people paid the freight! 'Railroad presidents indignantly deny that freight rates affect the-cost of existence. Jame3 J. Hill and W. C Browne declare low acreage produc tion by the farmer 4s responsible for high prices. "Trust magnates disagree. All seek to shift the responsibility. S. R. Gug genheim says it i3 extravagance on the part of the laborer. , Ogden Ar rn6ur says It is the law of nature. , "This one problem of railroad freight rate's is the great economic question of the agev Were it fairly solved all other lines of commerce and- trade would soon adjust them selves and a more equitable distribu tion of the products of business would result. "What are you going to do about it? "Yours In militant sincerity, (Signed) "O. C. BARBER." Rats Eat a Prisoner. , Fort Worth, Texas. William Wig gins, 75 years old, was found dead in the emergency ward of the citj jail here, death having resulted from the lc-33 of blood sucked from his body by rats. When discovered one eye and a hand had been eaten off by the rodents. Takes Viney From Superstitious. '1 Atlanta. Will Williams, a negro who sprang into' notice not long ago when he was given a workhouse sen tence for driving a tack into an old negro man's head on the pretense of Curing "him of blindness, is back in the spotlight again. This time he is charged with swindling a negro wo man who called him in to "attend a sick child. He rubbed the child vig orously with a rock, collected a fee of $1.50 and departed. For this of fense he was fined $100. Hardtack .For Rebel Leaders. . .vftio Janeiro. According- toCandido, leader of the recent revolt in the navy, and 44 other mutineers have met sudden deaths. Candido suc cumbed to gangrene while a prisoner, 26 of his' associates died, from sun stroke while engaged in repairing the fortress on Cobras island and 18 oth era were suffocated' in their cells in the prison on , Villegainon island. A rigid censorship is maintained by the government since the revolting ciry was put dowa. DIFFERENT DEATHS. 1 2,608 Suicides Money Em bezzled Increased. LEGAL EXECUTIONS ARE LESS Number of Deaths by Personal Vio lence of Ail Kinds, Except Suicides end Lynchings, 8,975 Record Given by States Women Lynched. Chicago. Statistics for the year 1910 . show there was a marked in crease in the number of suicides and homicides and a decrease in the num ber of lynchings. The amount of money embezzled increased 300 per cent.. - , - Suicides- numbered 12,608 as com pared with .10,230 in 1903. The pro portion' of suicides as between men and women remains' about the same, being 8,252 males and 4,356 females. Physicians, a3 usual, head the list among professional men, the number beig 51, as compared to 27 in J.909 and 42 in 1908, and clergymen next, 11 of them having taken their own lives. The number of deaths by personal violence of all kinds in 1910, except suicides and lynchings, was 8,975, as compared with S.O? in 1909. This record is not confined to such Cases of murder and homicide as result in arrest and trial, but include deaths by every form of violence. The prin cipal Caups of these- deaths were: Quarrels, 4,049; unknowja, 984; liquor, .798; by highwaymen, 930; jealousy, ,6i2; infanticide, 125; highwaymen 'killed, 73; ; resisting arrest, 100; in sanity, 225. v , . The most striking feature of these figures is the increase in murders .committed by thugs, thieves, burglars and, hold-up men, the number being an increase' of 33 over that of 1909. " The number of legal executions is slightly less than the number in. 1909, being 14 compared with 107 in the latter year and 92 in 1908. Classified by States, the record is as follows: i Alabama, 6; Arkansas, -7-; Califor nia, 2; Connecticut, 1; NortlV Dakota, 1; Florida, 4; Georgia, 7; Illinois, 2; Iowa, 1; Kentucky, 2; Louisiana, 4; Massachusetts, 1; Mississippi, 3; Mis souri, 3; New York, 9; New Jersey, 4 ; Nevada, 1 ; North Carolina, 2 ; Ohio, 4; Oklahoma, 1; Oregon, 1; Pennsylvania, 9; South Carolina, 7; Tennessee, 4; Texas, 6; Virginia, 11; Washington, 2. There were 37 execu tions in Northern and 67 in Southern States and in these cases 50. were whites, 53 negroes- and 1 Indian. The crimes for which they were executed were murder, 94; criminal assault, 9, and attempted criminal assault, 1. The number of lynchings shows a decrease, being 74 as compared with 87 in 1909, 100 in.,1908 and 68 in 1907. The number of lyn.chings in the var ious States was: Alabama, 8; Arkansas, 9; Florida, 17; Georgia,. 12; Kentucky, 1; Louis iana, 3; Mississippi, 5; Missouri, 2; North Carolina, 1; Ohio, 1; Oklahoma, 2; South Carolina, 2; Tennesee, 2; Texas, 7; Virginia, 1; New Mexico, 1. Of the total number there were 9 whites and, 65 negroes, among the latter 3 women. There was but one lynching in the North, in Ohio. There was one In Illinois in 1909. -- The record of embezzlements, for geries and bank wrecking shows a material increase over 1909, being in round numbers about $25,000,000 as compared with $8,0.00,000 in 1909 and $13,000,000 in 1908. Carnegie Turns Loose $1,250,000. Berlin Announcement is made that Andrew Carnegie had given $1,250,000 for a ''Carnegie foundation for life savers' in Germany. West Virginia Complications. Charleston, W. Va. The death of Senator Elkin3 adds to the political complications in. West Virginia. The Democratic Legislature, which al ready was charged with the duty of electing a successor to Senator Nathan- Bay Scott, Republican, and wifich, for the first time In years, has a large Democratic majority, Is now confronted r with two Senatorships. Governor Glasscock, Republican, has "the power; to appoint a Senator to succeed Senator Elklns .temporarily. ThlrdBank Ruined by Robin.. , New York A third bank across which the shadow of Joseph G. Robin, the indicted promoter, had fallen has closed its doors, and the State super intendent of banks is in possession of theiCarnegie Trust Company, an institution capitalized at $L500,000, having wide Southern and Western affiliations. An application for the appointment of a committee to take charge of the personal estate of Robin was Jdenied his sister, Dr. Louise Robiaovitch, by Justice Goff. FIRST LINK COMPLETED. Celebration of the Completion of Im portant Link of Inland Waterway ; Canal From Maine to Florida. . Wilmington, N. C. Twenty-five hundred people, including many men prominent in State and nation, attend ed the public celebration pt the com pletion of the first link of the propos ed inland waterways canal from Maine to Flprida, on the- banks of the waterway near Beaufort, N. C. The celebration was preceded by a parade of naval and government boats head ed by the revenue cutter Pamlico. Senator F. M. Simmons of North Carolina, master of ceremonies, wel comed the visitors and paid tribute to Capt. Earle I. Brown, corps of United States engineers The canal has been under con struction since 1907 and was complet ed last December. It shortens the distance from Oriental, Newbern and other points to Beaufort and Southern points about 90 miles and gives double the depth, of water. The canal is 90 to 250 feet wide and 10 feet deep at mean low water, which at high tide will give about twelve feet. The length Is twenty miles, five of which were cut through dry land, the re mainder by dredging and straighten ing Adams and Cranes creeks. It con nects 3,100 square mile3 of naviga ble,' sound waters and 1,700 miles of navigable rivers as well as giving an inside route to coastwise vessels en abling them to avoid treacherous Hat- teras and Cape Lookout. ' SENATOR ELKINS SLEEPS. Body Laid to Rest in Town That Bears His" Name. . Elkins, W. Va. Under a brilliant winter's sky the body . of Senator Stephen B. Elkins was laid to. rest on the crest of a wind-swept hill over looking the town that bears his name. As the bronze coffin was lowered into the grave the great, concourse of mourners uncovered, standing silent in the presence of death. The simple service at the cemetery was preceded STEPHEN B. ELKINS. U. S. Senator from West Virginia. by services at the Davis Memorial church. The Rev. Dr. Barron, pas tor of the church, officiated, and Dr. Wallace Radcliffe, of the Presbyter ian church In Washington, at 'which Senator .'Elkins was wont to worship, pronounced tle, f eulogy. When the coffin was removed from the special funeral train which had brought it from Washington. It was placed on a flat, low-bedded open wagon, heavily draped in black and drawn by two powerful horses, likewise accourted. The ma-rch. to the church, then began Immediately behind, the catafaulque were the members of the Senate com mittee led " by Senator Scott and Bailey. 'Behind them followed . the House delegates. All were afoot. After the church services the journay to the grave was made In carriages. Fire Loss $300,000. Troy, N. Y. The business section of Greenville, N. Y., a village of 5,000 inhabitants abotJt fifty miles north of this city was swept by fire with a loss of $300,000. : Flames Cost a $1,000,000. Little Rock, Ark. Fire originating in the Hollenberg Musical Company's building, destroyed the entire block1 of business houses here, the loss 'on the buildings and stocks of goods amounting to $1,000,000. Soldiers Aidtd Prisoners to Escape. Atlanta, Ga. Privates A. J. Lamb and Henry Hollaenger of Company E, Seventeenth United , States Infantry, were positively identified as the men who supplied Harry Langdo,n with the saws which enabled Langdon and four companions to escape from the Fulton county jail.- . The Identification was made by John. Wlthrow, a convicted wife murderer, who was one of the jailbirds. As a result of the evidence obtained a court martial probably will be ordered.'. Proceedings of the Senate and HotI -Governor's Message a Compre hensive Paper Constitutional Convention Provided For. The North Carolina General As sembly got right down to business at the very beginning of the session. The election of Hon. W. C. Dowd to the " Speakership, and Hon. J. .M. Pharr President Pro Tem. of the Senate was a signal honor conferred upon Mecklenburg. ''$J? Special Interest attached i6Mh speech of,, acceptance by, Speaker Dowd, especially his reference to in creased support to State educational institutions, he having been president . of the Baptist State Convention that protested against increased support as detrimental to denominational col leges. Governor Kitchin's Message Governor William Walton KitChin'a message is a document of 37 pages and treats the whole scope, of State affairs. He makes an urgent, plea for an investigation of the operations of fire insurance companies ' and dis cusses at length State-wide prohibi-, tlon, which has been in force in this State for the past two years. He re commends, the incorporation into the State laws of the principal provisions f of the federal ranti-trnst law for legislation" authorizing L pipy counsel to. assist in V. tlon-vof tioists. . t He also recommends an ' the number .cf supreme cm reducing of passenger f;:r roads to two , cents "a rr. placing of public service selling heat an,d light to under th'e corporation c He reeomniendsV too. p6wer of the governor ' tional amendment, tb.hy; State in which the gove " have that power. Other amendments proposed, elimination of the wr and substitution of il Between the States" power of the leglBl., ing of local and sp granting of corpor; cial act. . He urges that lb f be' prohibited an 1 ' done that .the h V license to sell In'. near-beer license Also that in ;.. wares or merchant', the State or any ; i that it be prov:.U-l ' shall be given to t; dependent manuf.... :. The Governor . " erly safe-guard.'.! law. One ti ;-t - i ; nomination cf : officers. The rati.1 :);: ; amendment'.'.) ' tion proyiahiV is recommer That thQ ( at $6,000. , v. ' That cl.il : I tories be pre .' work be O '. . s January ! . 1 '.' That f " ; five - day .' month's ; zo , !. . ;ir . The n ; -tem of li-- 1 - - - . " -V & -; TbV- -'. school. Tl , ; ! : chal' " ' itaU T f" coir e I' ll. at: : ti : 1; C-.. li : I - . '"ill Wm 'X 1 WILLIAM 'W. KITCHft Governor df- tyorth Cart '" : f A r ? m "INSUIlGLi; Chairrryan '.:f Upheld' . Which ' i Speaker WasM-i . had his hi. Badly ban storm tr.T.: March the Spe:ik to hisl his up ' decided! "y Tbe f overw whjj- 21?, p n i r