Itt IT ipJWJ lykyS 11.1 Ml) in i hi Mir in ii W4YMf,lnAdniic. FOR GOD, FOR COUNTRY AND FOR TRUTH." Sfaegto Ofy 0 C9, VOL. XXI. PLYMOUTH, N' C. RIDAY MARCH10. 1911, NO. 38. r " i . ' ' - - ... WORK IS FINISHED GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF 1011 A MATTER OF HISTORY LAWS OF GENERAL INTEREST. PRESIDING OFFICERS' ' WORK- Senators and Representatives Mani fest Esteem Held For Speaker and Lieutenant Governor Torrens Bill Shamelessly Murdered. Governor's Salary $3,000. Raleigh. The first of final cere monies for adjournment ' was when members of the house presented to . Speaker" Bowd a splendid silver ser vice as a testimonial of the regard jmd esteem of the members of the house. Mr. Turlington of Iredell pre sided for the ceremony and Mr. Dil lard of Cherokee was spokesman. In a chaste, eloquent and brief address, he presented the testimonial as com ing from appreciative hearts for the Speaker's impartial, able and kind administration of his high and re sponsible duties. Speaker Dowd was deeply affected, expressing in most appreciative terms his appreciation for this manifestation of esteem. Members of the house stood while the speaker was responding and applaud ed greatly. The house passed the Torrens land title bill similar to that the senate recently defeated and sent it by special messenger to the senate for its action. The house vote was 67 to 11. The house passed the Pothel bill to regulate crossings of railroads and electric lines with an amendmen' that it do not apply to towns of less than 5,000. . The house defeated 60 to 2S the Dillard bill to create a state game commission. The house also passed the bill re quiring additional educational quali fications for medical licenses. This measure was defeated in the two pre ' vicus session of the assembly. It passed this time almost without op position. Insurance Investigation Off. The Koonco resolution from the house for investigation of the conduct of fire insurance companies in North Carolina caused debate. The senate voted to refer to the insurance com mittee. . The senate passed the committee bill to reapportion the senate mem bership and sent it to the house The only change is that it combiner Edgecombe and Halifax counties in one district with two senators, there by making 33 instead cf 39 districts: in the senate. The house resolubn passad to in vestigate the sale of the Atlantic & Yadkin railroad to the Atlantic Coast Line and its dismemberment in divis ion with the Southern was voted down by the senate over the stren uous protest cf Senator Hobgood. The senate concurred in the house amendment to increase the Gov ernor's salary to five instead of si?: thousand dollars. It was announced by Senator Gard ner that a classification cf counties as to pauper status by the state treasurer lifted sixteen out of the pauper class and placed them in the surplus column. The Hobgood bill to allow life in surance companies to withdraw se curities from the State Commissioner of Insurance only with the consent of the policyholders affected, the bill to. provide for an additional clerk in the Governor's office and Increase the salaries of the others, and to provide a reformatory for colored youths passed and were sent to the house. House Changes Reapportionment. The house passed the senate bil" making a reapportionment for the state senate, the only change the house made in the bill as it came from the senate being that Lee coun ty was changed from the twenty first to the fourteenth district, so as to make the fourteenth, with Samp son county in it, Democratic. The house took up the congres sional apportionment bill as it came from the senate and, on motion of Williams of uBncombe, voted to transfer Catawba from the eighth to the ninth district. This change was Applied for Regular Soldiers. Adjutant General R. L. Leinster, has made application to the United States War department for a com pany of regulars to de detailed to Raleigh during May for the purpose of demonstrating a great variety of military maneuver for the benefit of the officers' cainp of instruction that is to be held there for officers cf the North Carolina National Guard as a sort cf initiation for the new rifle rang? Just 'completed. A wide scope of irJsitary srvice will be demonstrate;. advocated by Speaker Dowd and others. The senate concurred. The senate gave final reading to the bill to chano the name of law clerk in the attorney generald's of fice to assistant attorney general. In cluded among the raft of local bills passed and sent to the house were: bills to provide engineering assis tances to counties in. the construction of good reads; allow one dollar a day extra to legislative clerks. Bills rat ified : to incorporate the Durham & Danville railway; establish the North Carolina School for the Feeble minded; incorporate the Davidson Intorurban railway company. The senate considered for nearly two hours the Hobgood bills to pro hibit railroad companies from exact ing liability release contracts from employes, the bill having the effect of breaking up the relief association cf the Atlantic Coast Line. In the end tho roll-call vote was 2G to 7 against the bill. Senators advocating the bill were Hobgood, Bassett and Graham, while those opposing were Hartsell, Johnson, Thorne, Armstrong and Barnes. When-They Woke Up. The sensation of the . session was the discovery that the senate had unknowingly passed and ordered en rolled the Torrens land title bill, which had passed the house earlier in the day and sent to the senate, no senator grasping its meaning by the conundrum reading of the title by the reading clerk. The senate several days ago killed the senate bill on this subject by a decisive majority, and, when it was discovered that it pass ed "unbeknownst" an identical bill from the house, a wave of excitement ran through the senate chamber, but the oversight was soon corrected by a vote to reconsider and recalling the bill from enrolling clerk's office. This incident put all senators on their guard and the careful scrutiny given each measure given- promise of no recurrence of such a blunder. Primary System Defeated. After two hours of the most spir ited argument of the whole session the house tabled the Hobgood bill from the senate for a state-wide pri mary to apply to all counties and all parties with primaries on the same day and voting places. The test vote was cn an amendment by Mr. Dough ton to exempt any county or any party by vote of county . executive committees. This was a roll call vote- and was 68 to 36 for the amend ment. It was after this amendment was adopted that Mr. Ross, in charge of the bill, moved to table on the ground that the amendment defeated the very purpose for which the friends of the measure sought its en actment. Senator Bcyden's appeal in behalf of tho Confederate veterans won, the annual appropriation to the Soldiers' Home being fixed at $40,000 instead of $30,000, as recommended by the appropriations committee and passed by the house in the general appro priations bill. This was the only amendment, made, three others being voted down. Turlington house anti-trust bill wa3 received and Senator Hobgood asked that it go on the calendar as it is a copy cf his bill now in committee hands. Senators Graham and Bassett objected, declaring that this is too important a matter not to be duly considered by committee. It was re ferred to the judiciary committee. ' Esteem Senate Presiding Officer. Lieutenant Governor W. C. New land was presented with a handsome silver service by Senator Thorne on. behalf of the senators of both parties a3 a token of their esteem and love for him. Senator Starbuck, Republican lead er, made a graceful talk, thanking the presiding officer for hia fair rul ings and expressing the high regard the Republican members have for him. Senator Hyatt also expressed hit appreciation of the worth of the pre siding officer, who was deeply moved and made a graceful speech of ac ceptance. The machinery act passed third reading and was sent to the house for concurrence in the senate amend ments. The joint legislative committee on agriculture voted to report unfavor ably the bill by Speaker Dowd for the consolidation of the State Agri cultural department and the A. and M college, and to recommend that the legislature provide a committee to in vestigate the ad7i?ability of such a merger and report to the next legis lature. Triangular High School Debate. In a contest spirited from start ito finish, Mr. Carey J. Hunter, Jr., Mr. Clifton Beckwith, Mr. Philip Wooli cott, and Mr. Oliver Smith won places on the team to represent the Raleigh High School in the triangular de bate between Charlotte, Greensboro, and Raleigh. The query was: "Resolved, That the Federal Government Should Levy a Graduated Tax on Income, Carrying Constitutional Objections." The debate will be held in the dree cities on the niht of April 14th. SUMMARY OF THE WHAT WAS DONE AND LEFT UN DONE BY THE NATIONAL LAWMAKERS RESULTS IN EXTRA SESSION rew Things of Importance Were Ac complished in the Last Short Session. Washington. In the retrospect the Sixty-first congress, which has just txpired by constitutional limitation, appears to have been distinguished by three things: the revision of the :ariff in the so-called Payne-Aldrich bill, which was passed at an extra session in the summer of 1909; the large amount of important legislation, much of it upon the recommendation of President Taft, enacted at the reg ular session cf 1909-1910, and the ex ceedingly small product of the "short session," so-called, now closed. The interval between the last two sessions was marked by the political upheaval registered at the general election of last November, which changed a large Republican majority in the house of representatives, cut the Republican majority in the sen ate almost to the vanishing point and incidentally effecting striking changes In the senate personnel. The failure of this session to enact much important legislation has re sulted in the practical certainty that the new Sixty-second congress will be called almost immediately in extraor dinary session, especially by reason of the strong desire of President Taft to secure action upon the pending reciprocity agreement with Canada, to the consummation of which the con tracting parties pledged the utmost efforts .cf the two governments. In strong contrast with the support which the Taft administration receiv ed from the Republican majority in the matter of legislation in the regu lar session of 1909-10 is the fact that at the present session the majority has been anything but united; the reciprocity agreement was passed in the house by the aid of a large pro portion cf Democratic vote3, while in the senate the rift in the majority be tween the "Regulars" and "Insurg ents" has been an important factor in its sidetracking and in the conse quent summoning of the extra ses sion. To this division in the majority was largely due the most dramatic fea ture of the previous long session the protracted . and sensational conflict last spring which ended in material changes in the rules of the house gen srally interpreted as "the overthrow of the speaker," and which after a bitter fight lasting many hours and including an all-night struggle, stop ped only just short of the actual un seating of Speaker Cannon. While the acrimcny between Regulars and Insurgents neither began nor ended with tho battle over the rules, that v as its most conspicuous episode, and there has been little peace between the factions since in either house. Iln the senate the most sensational feature of this session was the un availing effort, in which the Insurg ents wore most active, to unseat William Lorimer as ' junior senator from Illinois, on the ground of alleg ed bribery .n connection with his election by the legislature of that state in the spring of 1909. The ech oes of this battle are still reverberat ing, and its bitterness added friction to the closing hours of the senate session. Another important recent action of the senate was the defeat of the reso lution embodying a proposed amend ment to the Constitution of the Unit ed States to provide for the direct election of senators by the people. This resolution received more than a majority of the senate, but it need ed a two-thirds vote, and fell short by only 4. Had tho senate passed, it the house almost certainly would have done so. The friends of this propo sition entertain little doubt that it will pass the next congress and go to the senate for ratification or de- j feat. The output of this session in the way of general measures consists chiefly of the appropriation bills, and several of those seemed in danger Burglars Get Fortune. Dartona. Fla. A series of robber ies culminating with the burglary ot the home of Mrs. Roger Whinfield at Seabreeze, is estimated to have net ted a gang of burglars more than 50,000 in jewelry. According to tho report of Mrs. Whinfield, jewelry val ued at 125,000 was secured from her home. Including a pearl brooch and two diamond pendants worth $10,000. This robbery followed the burglariz ing of the homes of E. R. Hotchkiss here and J. D. Price at Ormond. SIXTY - FIRST CONK more than once in the tense sit uation of the last few days, when long hours passed away in filibuster ing on one side or the other. Thousands of bills have been intro duced and several thousand more came to the closing session as a her itage from the first and second ses sions. In all, there were between 35, 000 and 45,000 measures before the congress when it came to a clobe. Failure eo enact many laws was not due to lack of raw material. These are some of the more import ant measures, outside appropriation bill3, that the final session of this congress enacted Into law: Providing for forest reserves in the southern Appalachian and White mountains. Providing for the Inspection of boil ers on locomotives. Providing for the purchase or erec tion of embassies, legations and con sular buildings abroad. An ocean mail bill passed the sen ate, but the house did not manifest enough liking for it to send it on to the white house. Barren as the final session may have been of fruitful legislation, the Republican leaders point to the pre ceding sessions as more fruitful. ' For the first, or extra , session, they point to: .' , The Payne-Aldrich tariff act, with its maximum and minimum features and corporation tax provisions, and its customs court. The resolution providing for an In come tax amendment to the Constitu tion. For the first regular session they refer to laws for: Establishment of postal savings banks. Admission of New Mexico and Ari zona to statehood. The most extensive census evei taken. Creation of the commerce courts, and sweeping amendments to the in terstate commerce act. Ballinger-Pinchot investigation. Conservation legislation, including authorization of withdrawal of public lands to preserve water sites, and au thorization of the issue of $20,000,000 in bends for completing irrigating projects. Legislation designed to suppress the "white slave trade." Publicity of campaign contributions at election of members of the house. Amendment to the employers' lia bility act of 1908; supplemental safe ty appliance act; requirement that railroads report accidents to interstate commerce commission, and establish ment of a bureau of mines. Reorganization of lighthouse serv ice. Authorization of expenditure of $28, 000,000 for public buildings. HIGH LICENSE IN ALABAMA. One Saloon in Birmingham for Every 3,000 Inhabitants of the City. Montgomery, Ala. The house of representatives passed the Smith bill, which regulates the sale of liquor In Alabama by a vote of 5S to 27. A number of amendments were of fered and few adopted. Walker Per cy of Birmingham got in an amend ment fixing the saloon license in his county at $3,000 and the number of saloons to one for every 3,000 inhabit ants. His amendment to take the pow er of appointing the excise boards out of the hands of the governor failed. The Smith bill fixes the license in Mobile and Montgomery at $1,500 and In Mobile one saloon to every 750 people, and .in Montgomery one to every 1,000. Excise boards are created to con trol the sale of liquor, and the Wiley pure food regulations are adopted to govern the quality of liquors to be sold. This measure is said to be the most stringent ever enacted in any state In the Union. "Hookworms of World' Chicago. "The Hookworms of the World," a fraternal organization among members of the National As sociation of Retail Hardware Dealers, will be organized at the next annual convention to be. held in Little Rock, Ark. Wyoming Bars Prize ' Fights. Cheyenne, Wyo. Governor Cary vetoed the Umshler bill legalizing prize fights of 25 rounds' in Wyoming. Merger of Cotton Mills. Boston, Mass. One millions dol lars has been subscribet'. by Bcstcu capitalists for the proposed merger of nine big cotton mill industries, all valued at $10,000,000, to be known un der the consolidation as the Parkers Mills company. This will be the third largest concern of its kind in the world, being exceeded in number o spindles only by the Amoskeag corpo ration, of Manchester, N. H., and the New England Cotton Yarn company. The mills which it is proposed tc merge are all in Scuth Carolina. CGiMuncbS ELEVATES PEARY. m0mimmm f Robert E. Peary. WAS A WHIRLWIND FINISH CONGRESSIONAL REAPPORTION MENT BILL PASSED BY HOUSE HELD UP IN THE SENATE. Explorer Peary Given Thanks of Con gress Higher Postage on Maga zines Killed in the Senate. Washington. There was no con gressional reapportionment by the Sixty-first congress. The reappor tionment bill fixing the number of representatives at 433, which passed the house earlier in the session, met with serious opposition in the senate. and wa3 not brought out by the com mittee having it in charge. Robert E. Peary, civil engineer in the United States navy, was elevated to the roll of fame by congress, plac ed on the retired list with the rank of rear admiral and the highest pay of that grade, and extended the thanks of congress "for his Arctic explora tions, resulting in reaching the North Pole." The pay of a rear admiral of the corps of civil engineers is less than that Commander Peary is now re ceiving, so he does not benefit con spicuously in a financial way from the action of congress. However, only six men have been given the thanks of congress in the past thirty-five years. The senate passed the postofflce ap propriation bill, carrying about $258, 000,000, after striking from It the pro vision increasing to 4 cents a pound the postal rate , on the advertising sections of the large magazines. Among the amendments adopted In the postofflce appropriation bill was one by Senator Swanson granting 30 days' leave of absence annual to the rural free delivery letter carriers. The codification bill, providing for the abolition of circuit courts of the United States and containing an amendment put on by Representative Bartlett of Georgia, which revives about eight million dollars of South ern war claims, finally passed all the stages of legislation OVER 30,000 PLAGUE VICTIMS Famine Follows Disease in China's Starving Thousands. Peking, China. Famine and the plague are sweeping over China. The known deaths from tne plague num ber 30,000, and, according to the offi cial statistics, the death rate aver ages 200 daily. But the officials have little knowledge of the conditions in the interior, or, if they have, they are not permitting the facts to be known. It is impossible even to estimate the number of deaths that have re sulted from lack of food. Dr. Samuel Cochran, an American, who is engag ed in the work of relief, writes: "One million people will die before the first crop is harvested. This will be scanty, because the people have not the strength to till the soil, and no animals remain for plowing." So far Japan and America are the only foreign countries that have con tributed to aid the sufferer? Myers, Montana's Senator. Helena, Mont. Henry L. Myers (Dem.) of Ravali county was elected United States senator to succeed Sen ator Carter on the seventy-ninth joint legislative ballot. Princess Slain by Her Lover. Rome, Italy. Princess Dl Trigona, a lady-in-waiting to Queen Helena, niece of Marquis Di Sangiuliano, the Italian minister of foreign affairs, and cousin of Princa Di Scalea, secretary cf state in the foreign office, was murdered, in a small hotel in thi- city by Lieutenant Baron Paterno, a cavalry officer, who then killed him self, rrincess Di Trisona was ouo of the moKt beautiful ladies-in-waiting to thfrjiueen, and'waen Queen Helena was informed of the tragedy sh fainicd. CONGRESS MIS IN ' ' EXTRA SESSION APRIL 4 PRESIDENT CALLED NEW . CON GRESS IN THE FACE OF MOST, TREMENDOUS PRESSURE, A TARIFF MAY BE REVISED Democratic Leaders Realize Thaf There Can Be No Sudden Re- j duction of Tariff Duties, ( tf .. j Washington. Within the hour foV lowing the close of the Sixty-flrstj congress President Taft issued a proc lamatlon calling the new congress to meet in extraordinary session Tues day, April 4. At that time he will submit for rati iflcation to a house overwhelminsty, Democratic and to a senate barely, Republican the reciprocity agreement with Canada. The McCall bill, carry ing that agreement Into effect and! passed by the house, met death at the hands of the old senate, which1 had been freely predicted for it. The president, well warned if not entirely reconciled to the fate in store; for the measure was at the capital to witness the obsequies. The bill was not allowed at any time to comei up In the senate for a moment's coaj sideratlon. The permanent tariff board bill rorcea to us passage tnrougn a re luctant senate was hurried over ttf the house, there to be strangled by. a Democratic filibuster. The presi dent, in the room reserved for him in the senate lobby, heard the news with resignation. Congress provided funds to continue the work of taa temporary tariff board for another, year. i It was at the requ.est of the Demo crats of the house and senate that President Taft fixed the date of the extra session as April 4. " . There is little doubt now that the Democrats of the house will under take to revise at least two or three of the schedules of the Payne-Aid-' rich tariff act, and there Is every rea son -to believe that these bills will be favorably received in the new sen ate the increased Democratic and; Inaurgent strength in that body giv ing a majority to the principle of a further revision of the tariff down ward. It is supposed also that so lung a. a iuu new btueuuia uuea uuh flagrantly violate the policy of protec tion, President Taft will not withholds his approval of it. He has announc ed, however, that if a general revis ion, in violation of the protective poW icy, should be inaugurated, he would not hesitate to use the power of the, veto. How long the extra session will last is problematical. While the new con gress may promptly ratify the reci- are in favor of withholding confirma tion until two or three new tariff scedules are ready. If tariff differ ences should arise between the nevr house and the senate, the" session ud ..I 1. 1 u i i . . ijuesuuuiiui; wuuiu u a luug one. In this connection, however, the In teresting fact wa,s developed that the president has a constitutional right to bring the session to an end in case the two houses of congress cannot agree upon a time for adjournment. Such action, it is admitted, would be revolutionary, and there Is thought to be little likelihood that any president would care to invoke the power vest ed In him by Section 3, Article 2, ol the Constitution. Flew 125 Miles Over Ocean. ' Nice, France. Lieutenant Baguf accomplished a sensational and dan ing feat by flying over the Mediterra nean from Antibea to the little island of Gorgona, off the Italian coast. H covered a distance of more than 20C kilometers (124.5 miles), establishing a new record for over-sea flight. This he did without the assistance of tugs, torpedo boats or any other craft to guide him or add to his confidence bj their presence. $1,000,000 Fire in Minneapolis. Minneapolis, Minn. One of th most disastrous fires this city hai ever known destroyed the Syndicate block' on Nicolette avenue, between Fifth and Sixth streets, at a loss es timated at $1,000,000. Flower sncwer for Lorimer. Chicago. Admirers of Senator WIl liam Lorimer to the number of sev eral thousand greeted him here upos his return from Washington. Twc hundred and fifty automobiles, form Ing a parade, escorted the senatoi from the station, to his residence Senator Lorimer was accompanied bj fcrmer Judge Elbridge Hanecy and five detectives, who met him at Fori Wayne, Ind. When he passed through the station it required seventy police men to keep the crowd from swarm ing over his escort.