- $1JOO Year, in Advance, "FOR GOD, FOR COUNTRY AND FOR TRUTH." &agl4 Copy, f GosSa, VOL. XXIV. PLYMOUTH, N.'C, FRIDAY, JANUARY 30, 1914. NO. 31. 7 i rithiutNi m a JOB FOR GOETHALS WILSON WANTS GOETHALS TO , BUILD THE ALASKAN ' ROAD. DOES NOT WANT TO LOSE HIM Colonel to Be Made Civil Governor of . Canal Zone New York Move Opposed. Washington. CoL' George W. Goe thals will be made civil governor of the canal ' zone, and when he gets through with his work there an effort will be made to have him construct the proposed Alaskan railway. This was the opinion expressesd by several persons close to the administration, COL GEORGE W. GOETHALS wmmkmmmm 1 S J .As a reward for hist service in Panama V it is reported Colonel Goethals will be placed in charge of the construc tion of the Alaskan railway. commenting on reports that the. chief engineer eventually would become the commissioner of police of New York City. Mayor- Mitchell of New York Is ex pected here to speak at a banquet of the University Club, and it is likely that he will talk with President Wil son on the same day about the status of Colonel Goethals. It is believed the president will tell Mayor Mitchell that he is desiri of keeping Colonel Goethals, that 1ns Engineering ability may not be lost to the United States URGES SCHOOLS IN SUMMER Commissioner Claxton So Urges Prac tice of Closing Termed Primitive. Washington. , Characterizing the practice of closing public scnoois m summer as ."primitive and preposter ous" and declaring the most "import ant problem of today was to keep city "boys from three months' contam ination in the streets," P. P. Claxton, cpmmissloner of the United States bu reau of education, approved a plan which' would mean continuous school sessions and through which two mil lion children might be enlisted in voca tional work. , : A program for summer vocational work of public: school children was - submitt.ft SVW-the commissioner .by CTytrA Mann, secretary , of the American Society for Thrift. .; " "The teachers jshould teach nature study and the principles of horticul ture," said Mr. Claxton, "Public schools of the country rep rpsentan investment in buildings, grounds and equipment of nearly two billion dollars, and this investment stands Idle about one-quarter of the time for no other . reason than that in primitive days both teachers and pupils were needed on the farms three or four months in the summer. Duehay Will Inspect Federal Prison. Washington. Francis H. Duehay, the newly appointed superintendent of prisons, will shortly visit Atlanta, Ga., to inspect the United States peniten tiary there. His appointment is a per sonal one of Attorney General McRey nolds, and he does not have to be confirmed by the senate, so he will cntpr nnon his new duties at once. Mr. Duehay declined to make an comment imnn thft charges of Julian llawtnorne and others affecting the conduct of Warden Mover. . GEN. LOUIS BOTHA General Botha, premier of the Union of South Africa, seems to be standing firm against the labor agitators and has proclaimed martial law In reply to the order for a general strike. JAPANESE HAKE PROTEST i "' 1 " JAPAN IS STILL GROWLING AT THE UNITED STATES ABOUT ' CALIFORNIA. Japanese Foreign Minister Says Amer ican Attitude on Alien Land Laws Is Unsatisfactory. Washington. An address by Baron Nobuaki Makino, the Japanese for eign . minister, to the parliament of Japan, outlining the status of negotia tions over. the California alien land legislation and declaring that the Jap anese government "had come to see the necessity of considering some oth. er ways for solution of the question," because the replies of the United States had not been found satisfactory, was cabled in full from Tokio to the Japanese embassy here. The address, which was not com mented upon in official circles, an nounced that the third note of protest presented to Secretary Bryan by An bassador Chinda on August 18 remain ed unanswered. It also revealed the fact that the ambassador, under in structions from Tokio, saw President Wilson on March 5, the day after the president's inauguration, and asked that he make an effort to stop the threatened legislation in California, which since has been enacted. In part he said : , "In the state legislature of Califor nia the bills of anti-Japanese charac ter regularly have been introduced at its sessions for more than ten years past. Thanks to the good offices earnestly exercised by the United States government and thanks also to proper steps opportunely taken by the people and government of Japan, noth ing of serious moment did fortunately occur, but at the fortieth session of the legislature which assembled last year a bill known as the Webb bill, aiming at prohibition of ownership of real property by Japanese was passed by an overwhelming majority; HITS "PURER DEMOCRACY" Former President Attacks "Impractical Reformers" and "Demagogues." - , Philadelphia. - Former President Taft called a halt in the movement toward "purer democracy" and greater social and individual freedom. In a speech at the. commencement exercis es of a local business college he ar raigned "impractical reformers" and "demagogues" who seek to, arouse class consciousness. He took issue with the tendency to inject more democ racy into educational methods, and de clarde the spread of "lubricity" in lit erature and on the stage, and indi rectly in education, was a danger to young men and women of the coun try. - Mr. Taft admitted the benefits of many modern crusades, but added : "The people are sufficiently aroused Now let common sense prevail to dJ' tinguish between what is practical a' d what is luring but deceitful in its prf ja Ise." " Job Landed for Roberts. . Washington. Judge W. T. Roberts of Douglas, Ga., former solicitor gener al of Tallapoosa circuit, has been nam ed by Secretary of Commerce Itedfleld as special attorney for the bureau of corporations. This important position was landed for Judge Roberts through the influence of William J. Harris, di rector of the census, who is very close to the secretary of commerce. Mr. Harris and Judge Roberts served in the state senate together and occupied adjoining seats. Judge Roberts was chairman of the judiciary committee. GINNING REPORT SHOWS INCREASE 13,589,171 BALES GINNED PRIOR TO JANUARY 16 INCLUDED WERE 97,034 ROUND BALES. NINTH REPORT IS ISSUED Half Million Bales Increase Over This Time Last Year Ginnings by States and Comparisons. Washington. The ninth "cotton gln- nnig report of the census bureau for the season" announced that 13,539,171 bales .of cotton counting round as half bales, of the growth of 1913 had beSn einnned prior to January 16, to which date during the past seven years the ginning average 97.5 pr cent, of the entire crop. Ginnings prior to January 16 by states wmi comparisons for last year and other big crop years ginned prior to the date in those years, follows: States. Year, j Gunnings. Alabama... ..1913 1,475,642 - 1912 1,307,738 1911 " 1,633,699 Arkansas . . . .1913 967,729 1912 : 741,282 1911 797,597 Florida . . . . .1913 65,754 1912 57,324 ' 1911 ' 88,177 Georgia . . . . .1913 , . 2,316,304 1912 ' 1,781,232 1911 2,657,984 Louisiana . . . .1913 t 420,094 1912 369,076 1911 357,758 MississiippI . . .1913 1,176,626 1912 952,520 1911 . 1,061,859 North Carolina. .1913 , 784,402 1912" 876,593 1911 ' 696,988 Oklahoma . . . .1913 825,112 f - 1912 965,752 1911 ' 915,563 South Carolina. ".1913 ' 1,369,434 1912 . ' 1,192,574 1911 1,536,085 Tennessee . . . .1913 358,297 1912 . 252,890 1911 386,293 Texas . . . . . .1913 3,718,725 1912 4,509,220 1911 3,964,620 Other States . .1913 11,052 1912 . 83,831 1911 114,176 The ginnings of sea island cotton, prior to January 16, by states, fol lows : Years. Florida. Georgia. S. Car. 1913 . .'. .25,356 42,650 8,176 1912 . . . .21,085 39,543 ' 6,629 1911 . . . .39,340 65,577 4,950 1909 ... .27,883 51,072 . 13,231 BANDITS ROB MAIL TRAINS Three Amateurs Believed to Be Re sponsible for Train Robbery. Chattanooga, Tenn. Three men, be lieved to have been rank amateurs, held up Southern railway train No. 41, local to Tuscumbia, at Facklers, Ala., at about 8:20 at night. Ascord ing to the best authority in this city, there was nothing of value in either express or baggage car, which were; looted, the robbers finding only per ishable articles of food, a lot of trunks and a pile of sacks containing second class mall. - The train arrived at Facklers at 8:20 and while standing at the station was boarded by three masked men. Two miles west of that place two of the men entered the express car and took possession of the pouches and safe. At a given signal, or in consequence of an understanding, he compelled the engineer to stop the train while the others uncoupled the two cars in the front, one of which was a baggage car containing federal pouch mail, mostly newspapers, and then forced the engineer to run- twelve miles into the country. Chicago. With the assistance of two reluctant but badly scared porters, a lone bandit held up four passengers on the rear sleeper of the Michigan Central passenger train duei here from Detroit. , The robber entered the train at Jackson, Mich.,, and left it about fifteen, minutes later, when Lewis Thombs, one of the porters, signaled for the emergency brakes. Mrs. Wilson Gives $1,000 to School. Rome, Ga. A feature of unusual In terest at the celebration of the twelfth anniversary of the famous Martha Berry school here was the announce ment of the endowment by Mrs. Wood row Wilson of the Edward W. Ax son scholarchlp of $1,000 from money obtained from the sale of her pictures. The scholarship was in honor of her brother, who was drowned near Rome, the old family home. Many alumni from Georgia and Alabama attended the exercises and most of . them made interesting talks praising the school. BARONESS DE PALLANDT -.TV mf-t Baroness May de Pallandt, once of Chicago, is being sued in -London for $20,000 by Dr. Ernest VIIHers Appleby, formerly connected with the Univer sity of Minnesota, .because she de faulted In payment of notes given for the purchase of pearls and Indorsed by him. The baroness was May Du gus when she .was married in 1893. She was separated from her husband in 1901, and two years later John D. Kllpatrick, a wealthy New Yorker, committed suicide because she refused to get a divorce and marry him. WILSON'S MESSAGE LAUDED REPUBLICANS AND PROGRES SIVES JOIN DEMOCRATS IN ENDORSING WILSON. G. O. P. Leader Mann and Senators Kenyon and Gallinger Endorse the Message. Washington.- President Wilson's suggestion to congress in his trust address that the government and busi ness men are ready to meet each other half way "in a common effort to square business methods with both public opinion and the law," fell on atten tive ears and struck a , responsive chord in representatives of differing political parties. The atmosphere of co-operation and "accommodation" in the message; the reforms proposed, expressed in terms of conservatism; and the spirit of friendliness to supersede antagonism in dealing with big business, which dominated the president's thoughts, aroused expressions of approval from all sides. Few discordant notes were sounded in comments from members of the congress who are to pass upon legislation urged to prohibit monopoly and hold men of business within the law. LORD STRATHCONA IS DEAD One of the Most Noted of the Build ers of Canada Dies in London. London, England. Lord Strathcona and Mount Royal, high commissioner Tor Canada, died here. Deatli was due ' to prostration, the result of a severe attack of catarrh. He had been ailing, however, since the death of his wife last November, which proved a great shock. Lord Strathcona's life spanned near ly a century and his active career a full three-quarters. "The best way to live to an old age,"he explained, when found at his desk in London on his ninety-third birthday anniver sary on August 6, last, "is by not thinking about -age at, all, but just going on doing your work." ' From his eighteenth year, when, as Donald Smith, a sturdy Scot, he sailed for Canada,, to hijj;inety-fourth year, which "would have been completed in next August, he lived up to his maxim of work. For the past six years he had been periodically reported as "about to resign" the post of high commissioner for Canada, but it was death and not his resignation that ter minated his work.'. Eugenic Law Declared Void. Milwaukee, Wis, The Wisconsin eugenic law, which provides for the is suance of marriage licenses only upon a certificate of a clean bill of health, was declared unconstitutional by Judge F. C. Eschweiler of the circuit court. The case will go to the supreme court. Judge Eschweiler held that the eu genics law has unreasonable statutory limitatiens so far as physicians , fees are concerned, and that it Is an un reasonable and material impairment of the right of persons to enter into mat- 4 "J 1 fr II - I - ; ' 1 PACIFIC COAST SWEPT BY STORM SNOW AND RAIN ARE ACCOMPA NIED IN SOME PLACES BY . ' HIGH WINDS,. . GREAT DAMAGE IS DONE Five Deaths Are Recorded by Flood From' Mountains Caused by Cloud :7burst. Much Damage Done and All Communication Crippled. Seattle, Wash. A" severe storm swept the Pacific Northwest, snow and rain being accompanied by a high wind which at some places attained' a velocity of 60 miles an hour. The storm on Puget Sound was the most severe recorded since the establish ment of the weather bureau here. The wind blew 60 miles an hour "at Cape Flattery and 54 miles here. - - A portion of Eugene, Oregon, was flooded by the overflow from "Amazon Creek. Telephone and telegraph lines between Portland and Salem were crippled. At Salem the storm un rofed a portion of the State Insane" Asylum and at Baker, Ore., the court house was damaged and many houses wereu nroofed. At Junction City, Ore., the water tower supplying the city, was blown down. Sante Barbara, Cal. Louis Jones' a wealthy retired banker and his wife, whose home was in the millionaire col ony of Montecite, were drowned in a flood from the mountains caused by a cloudburst. Half a dozen houses in tfiis city were wrecked and nearly every bridge in the county was washed away. , Telephone wires were completely out of commission and a single tele graph wire badly crippled, was the city's only communication with - the outside world.. Estimates of damage ranged be tween $250,000 and $750,0000. San Francisco. A rain and wind storm which swept the Pacific coast from Southern California to the Brit ish Columbian border, caused much damage to sniping though no serious mislnps at sea have been reported. Warm rains have melted the snow in the mountains causing rivers to rise Los Angeles. Three men were drowned, a boy was reported to have lost his life, many persons were driv en from their homes; buildings wer damaged, and steam and electric rail way traffic was either tied up or se riously interrupted in Southern Cali fornia as a result of the rain which deluged this section in 24 hours. Damage to highways in Los Angeles county alone is estimated at $500,000. Organize "Boys' Pig Clubs." Washington Organization of "Boys' Pig Clubs" in the Southern States is the latest step taken by the depart ment of agriculture as a means of re ducing the high cost of living. The department is trying to interest the young Southern farmer in t,he breed ing of good hogs. It is' asserted that pork can. be produced so as to sell much cheaper than beef. "A shortage of beef" says a statement issued re cently, "means an increased demand for pork and it seems reasonable that there should be , a' steady demand for ,11 the available supply. Express Profit. Chicago. Charles M. Secrist, man ager of the Pacific Fruit Express, tes tified at the interstate commerce com mission investigation of private car lines that his company had made a profit of $1,500,000. . The Pacific Com pany, owned by Union and Southern Pacific railroads, is the first private car company to report any consider able profit to the examiners. Asked if a pool of the railroads would be better than private service, the witness testified that some profit which now goes to the private lines vould go to the railroads. Union Station Burns. Raleigh. The union passenger sta tion and. Seaboard Air Line freight warehouse was burned at Apex, 14 niles south of Raleigh. Loss, $5,000. .Shooting Still a Mystery. Savannah, Ga. The condition of Neal Palmer, who was mysteriously mounded at Thunderbolt recently, re mained serious, while Mrs. E. J. An dreau is still, in custody. No specific rharge had been entered against her Palmer was said to have added a new version to various stories of the shooting. This was to the effect that he accidentally received the wound while scuffling with Mrs. Andrenu for possession of a pistol. Previous narra tives of the shooting which Mrs. An dreau and Palmer told, conflicted. rRAIN WRECKED BY CHILD Rufus Hall Placed Iron Spike on Track Causing Wreck at Davidson . . Killing Two Men. y Davidson, N. - C That 9-year-old Rufus Hall, son of Mr. John Q. Hall of Davidson, placed an iron sp.'ke on the "-rail that' threw the engine, ten der and combination coach of South ern passenger train No. 15 lrom trie track near Davidson a few nights ago hurling 'Engineer J. E. Curlee and Fireman A. H. Wilson to their death, was the sensational development of the distressing wreck that has been, the talk of this section for the-past several days. .No malice is alleged by the officials for the deed, those who investigated, the circumstances agreeing that the little fellow acted in a spirit of boyish mischief without any regard at the time for the awful consequences of his act. It is there fore hardly thought probably that any, prosecution will follow, although, much trouble of this kind has been experienced at several points along this, line within the past few years, due . to children placing minor ob structions on the rails. . A sister of the boy. Myrtle Hall, aged 8 years, was seen by the offi cials of the Southern at her home and asked about the affair. She frankly admitted that she and her older sister, Sadie, and her brother, Rufus, had walked along the track at this point the afternoon before and that Rufus had placed a number of pieces of coal and other minor articles on the rails. She also ad mitted that she had seen her brother pick up the iron spike and place it on the rail. Of course she stated that they all thought that no harm would result. Sadie Hall, who work in a nearby cotton mill, age 11 years, was also questioned. She also state! that of coal and other articles on thi rail but did not observe any iron spike. She stated to the officials, nowever, that she was in front of her bi other for the greater part of the wy and therefore would hardly have seen him if he did place the spike on the rail Road Working Plan. Asheville. The special committee recently appointed by the board of commissioners of Buncombe county to outline a better plan of road working in the county has compiled its report and submitted it to Chairman N. A. Reynolds. The report recommends the appointments of a committee on, roads and bridges to be composed of the county engineer and -two members of the board. One of the commission ers is to be known as the road super visor while the other .will, be the as sistant supervisor. The committee will have charge of all road and bridge work subject to the approval c the full board. The Question has been agitated for some time past by the commissioners and the tcenera! public, feeling that the present methods of working the roada are antiquated. Want Law Changed. Lynchburg, Va. In order to .cir cumvent a North Carolina statute, which prevents the shipment of liquor, into the counties of Mitchell, Avery, Rutherford, Cherokee, Macon and Jackson and the towns of High Point, Morehead City, Trinity, Jamestown, Guilford County, Friendship and Chapel Hill, an effort was made ia chambers here recently ot secure from Judge H. C. McDowell of the Federal District Court a mandatory injunction requiring the Southern Ex press Company to receive at Bristol, Va., liquors intended for personal use in these communities.. Judge McDow ell, however, held that his ourt lack ed jurisdiction, and the application was denied. Organize Health Board. Heridersonville. Plans for the or ganization of a health board for this city are rapidly materializing. The board will be composed of the follow ing members' of the Board of City Commissioners: Mayor M. M. Shep herd, T. L. Durham, W. A.' Keith, A. B'icker and the city's business manag er, George W. Justice. The Hender-sonville-Polk Medical Society has ap pointed the following to serve on the health board: Drs. W. B. W. Howe, Buy , E. Dixon, W. R. Kirk and L. B. Morse. . The organization will be perfected on the selection of an health officer. The board will be patterned . some what after that of Asheville. ' Cotton King of Rowan. Spencer. It is not generally known that Rowan county has one . of the largest cotton growers in North Caro lina, this being Charles -H. Kluttz. He has just finished ginning his crop for 1D18 which amounts to 400 bales, all of which is still on hand. Mr. Kluttz has a farm of 4,500 acres, the larger portion of which is in cultivation. He is partial to cotton; and, while he raises a lafge amount of corn, and other grain, he might well be termed the cotton king of Rowan and possibly of the staie. I. i I