1 J -iTHinTi i Him ii Hum n-niiinMMtw,Wl,rtr,lr,ir )ljr-
i','i,4sr--il'r. .wwnnn i . i mi j0!pk- ifa0ftmwtf
- VJ-RV-- . .., 5 --
pert. r'i-. L :rr$ kr-e; L "7 8 L t " . '"'.". : tiV-wt-.; ' i
M At ' k
r -FOR, GO4, FOR COUl-W
fU3d
a Year, In ' Advanct.
t-itt.
I
VOL. XXIV.
PLYMOUTH, Nt C, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY &, 1914.
- f
,N032.,
OREAT SHORTAGE
IN HI S
DECREASE OF 19,000,000 IN- THE
MEAT ANIMALS IN THB
UNITED STATES.
C0MPARASI0NS ARE MADE
.Amazing Drop Since 1910 Reported
by the Department of
Agriculture.
. Washington. Shortage of meat ani
mals In the United States was strik-
ingly demonstrated by comparative
figures made public, by the department
of agriculture-.; . The report showed
that there; are" nine "less beef cattle,
seven les$." sheep and three less hogs
now for eicfi 100 persons in the country-
than, there were in 1910. This
. means that it would take 18,259,000
more cattle, sheep and swine to give
the present population the same sup
ply that the census of 1910 showed to
.exist - , . ;
. -.While the population' of "the country
Is '-estimated to have increased from
31,197290 ito .; 98j4i,000 . . in,.: the . past
three years, the number of beef cattle
has- -decreased 12.9 per. cent., and of
sheep5v2 "percent.7Tfre number of
swine increased slightly, 13 per cent,
Tiut it did not keep up with the propor
tional growth of population.
"This increase in value, however,"
the department pointed out, "does not
necessarily mean that farmer or Btock
raisers are making more, if any, profit.
On the contrary, the cost of produc
tion has probably increased ino're .rap
idly than; the increase'Ih the" selling
price of livestock. Producers of farm
products are the last to receive any
benefit from higher prices paid by con
sumers, yet they are among the first
to ' increase ..production if "$iere is ;a
prospect ;of realizing better returns. " '
' "The very fact that there is a pres-
' ient shortage of nearly 19,000,000" meat
iihimals In the United States since the
-"cetosus of, 1910, Indicates clearly that
the business is not profitable to. .pro
ducers. . . "The scarcity of meat animals is at-
, tributed by department experts to . the
'itibncroachment of farms' upon range ter?
ritcry, lack of a proper, range leasing
laws, shortage in the'corn and forage
crop in Kansas, Nebraska and Okla
homa, increase in the- value of land
and ' higher cost of labor and stock
feed; decline In stock raising on farms
In the East and South because of poor
marketing facilities, the temptation to
sell livestock at prevailing high prices
and enormous losses from hog chol--era."
' - ' "
FREE SILVER EDICT ISSUED
Rebel Leader Decrees Free Coinage
of Silver.
Chihuahua, Mexico. Currency ,ls
.sued by the Bank of Sonora, the Ba'ri&
of Minero and other banks establish
d under ; the Diaz regime twill-be
treated as counterfait -faoney Matter
February iO, under a 'decree dssuedbjr
the rebel government. The free and
unlimited coinage of silver will be
"JSered as a means of providing ample
money. J.:t
The ' embargo against the old bank
mrre8by;filch is "f rOneadn as "a
survivar Ot'the cientiflcp days, .when
the Creels rtd 'Terrazases were" ' in
ipower, wHl . render worthless io : the
rebel territory; -millions' 6ft dollars in
paper moine., :- , .' '-y, '. -.The.
off er.tof free coinage will -be. ex
:tieS8e5THWulllion owners,-but-it has
. iieir'lHaRiSted to-Vhat extent the
offer will .b&jyptpd,'I'Bi'e JrebeV gov.-:
rnment . already - is- In ppssession of
much bul ion-'yich. will vbe coined -to
drieh tlieP treasury. It also 1 was an
nouncedthat a large American-.smelt-r
Ing intereV.whlch .qontrols industries
' In Colb&do.andi ether tarts of . the
UPPLY
i United Sjtates, has entered Into "an ar-
tram an
of a smelter in Chihuahua, which' has
been closed for many weeks.
. H. H. .Rogers "Left $40,000,000. . t ,
,.:JJew, i'ork. A , detailed ; apprisal of
..the .estate, of, the late",Henry H. Rog
ers,' Standard , Oil magnate, , who .idled
nearly four -years-ago, shows that the
etete is ..worth about '$40,000,000 net,
or "some' ,00,000 taOre than the, varus
originally estimatpd'it- y&a ' learned.
v -19. Sailors Are Lost. , . .
; laTtttDttth,,. England. Captain- Lor
'senewjhe fyst.oflpcer, and-. seventeen of
trewVof t1jerman;bark Hera,
?Wgu'a, ;il.!io.ajmout:fl, lost their
lives.; wifen. tSe. yess.e-siriick a rock
as sn'e had almost concldtiied' her yoyr
age. The remaining''' five men were
pred r-The Ilera encountered a gale
vjjt . je,,etraje.Vtpt Wfe-'jliiglis'h ; chan
j tiet" . She Ipjst h'er . cgutse and struck
on Ihe' rocks near Port Halla- Bight.
The vessel immediately filled and the
men took to the boats, which capsized.
Eight succeeded in getting back.
MRS. C. BRACKETT BISHOP
I
Mrs. C Brackett Bishop of Chicago
has theory that If children are given
the same opportunities their minds
will develop alike. To prove this, she
will start In February on a trip around
the world to gather babies of all races
and place them on a farm In America.
TiGK QUARANTINE RAISED
MORE TERRITORY IS FREED FROM
CATTLE TICKS THROUGOUT
. THE SOUTH.
Over 17,000 Additional Square Miles
in ight Southern States to Be
Released From Quarantine;
- Washington. The territory in the
South freed from cattle ticks and re
leased from quarantine has been in
creased by 17,106 square miles by an
order Issued by the acting secretary
of agriculture;' effective 'February 16,
1914. releasing addlfabjter-portions of
Virginia, North Carolina, Tennessee,
Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, Okla
homa and Texas. This action has' been
taken as a result of further progress
made in the extermination of the ticks,
which spread splenetic or Texas fe
ver of cattle. The total area released
since the beginning of the work in
1906" now aggregates 215,908 square
' , I A i. 1 A OA Si
nines, ana amounis iw uuuut o yey
, cent, of the territory infected at the
time the work was undertaken.
- .Tennessee is the first of the states
extensively Infested by the ticks, to
be entirely freed from this pest and
released from quarantine.
The portions of the several states
to be released from quarantine oh
February 16 under the. order mentioned
are as follows: ,
In. Virginia: The county of Sussex
and the-balance of., the county of
Greenesville. . .. ;r
In North Carolina: The counties of
kvioore, Hpke, Scotland, Robeson and
iew. iianover.
"'in' Georgia; The -counties of !Mbr-4,
gan and Franklin. .
In Tennessee: The remainder of
Marion county.
In Alabama: Portions of the coun
ties of Jackson and Sumter.
. Il '-"Mississippi: "; The .' counties Tow
Clay, Jasper, Smith, Scott and Le-
'flore, the remainder...of the' counties
of . Lowndes, Holmes, Madison, 'Attala,
Rankin, Noxubee, Chickasaw, and 'por
tions" of the countiesqf JClaiborne, War
ren, TYazpo Sharkey;:Bolivar, . Newton,
Grenada, Leake, Monroe, Jones. :.ahd
LaFayette.-
,"4hf 0klahpma't,.;The county . of Cot
ton and the remainder of the counties
of Tillman, Grady, Craig and Ottawa,
and portions of' the counties oft Mc
clain, Osage and Delaware.
Condemned; Foodstuffs Fill Warehouses
Washington. Foodstuffs.- seiae py
the federal authorities and held. as. erjl
dence of adulteration or misbranding
in violation of the pure food and drugs
acts are rapidly accumulating pending
court action, the department of agri
culture announces. Several warehous
es, scattered throughout the country at
various shipping ports are practically
filled with condemned products. Re
lief, however is promised, the depart
ment states, as -.the- trials are shortly
to be held. . ' :
: Taft Warns Against Plutocracy.
Toronto, Canada. "I sincerely hope
our experience may give you warning
and cause you to take prompter meas
ures to prevent plutocracy reaching
the danger point" said former Presi
dent William H. Taft here in an ad
dress, before the Literary and Scien
tific Society of the University of To
ronto. The former president had
dwelt on the industrial expansion of
Canada and the probability that its
people would come face to face with
conditions of corporate control exist
ing in the United States.
43 PERSONS MEET
DEATH ON OCEAN
- y P-J. : ! ''V; ;
NINETY-ONE, ARE BROUCHT BACK
:' TO "LAND BY THE rMT SL M.
STEAMSHIP NANTUCKET.
VESSEL IS RAMMED AT SEA
Many Unable to Leave the Staterooms.
No Time Was Given to Adjust
. . . Life Preservers.
, .
' '
Department of Commerce ,
Orders Probe of Wreck. -
Washington. A thorough
investigation, of the .,-ciriiiium- -
stances resulting in . the -colli-' ' 4
sion between the Nantucket f
and -Monroe was OFdered -by
the department of commerce.'
Assistant Secretary Sweet
instructed the steamboat in-
spection service to make an
exhaustive inquiry. '
I
- ' -
Norfolk, Va, The story of how 43
souls went'wnUo death , in the chill
waters of the Atlantic when the liner
Nantucket rammed and sank the
steamer Monroe, was brought to port
by 91 survivors of the sunken ship's
passengers, rescued and ' brought to
shore by the Nantucket
It was a . story of awful and sud
den death, sweeping out of the dark
and fog,-: and taking unawares the
doomed half hundred with the heavi
ness of sleep still upon them. It told
how the stricken Monroe, with her side
gored deep by the knife-like steel prow
of the Nantucket, filled rapidly, rolled
over on hetVside, and in a few min
utes turned completely over and then
plunged to the bottom, carrying with
her the ill-fated passengers and mem
bers of the crew who had failed to get
clear of the-wreck.
Thrilling .are the stories told i,by
those rescued from the jaws of deah
when the Old Dominion Steamship
company's 'steamer Monroe, bound
from Norfolk to New York, turned
turtle at sea within ten minutes after
she had been in collision with the
Merchants'and Miners' transportation
company's steamer Nantucket in a
dense foer off the Virginia coast. Re-
Iviseti lists put the loss of life at forty-
three, of which number nieteen were
; passengers and. twenty-four members
"of the Monroe's crew. It was as if
they had come from the dead when
eight of the Monroe's passengers,
whom wireless reports had put in the
list of the lost, walked or were borne
from the steamer Nantucket when the
latter landed the rescued at Norfolk.
There were notable deeds of heroism
by Assisting 'Engineer Oscar Perkins
.and FirstWireless Operator Ferdinand
J. Kuehn. z . Perkins when the inrush
of water put on the main dynamo and
,left the Monroe in complete darkness,
.rushed - below and put to work an
"emergency, dynamo. He is among the
rescued.
Wireless Operator Kuehn gave the
first S. O. S. call and after adjusting
a life preserver which would doubt
less have saved his own life, removed
'jth'is ffroHtf ihis body and put Jt - onia
girl. Kuehn was lo3t His assistant,
RT'lfc Etlteridge,-" was savedand -walfcr
ed into the arms of his wif ewho tood
to greet him as the Nantucket docked
with , the rescued. - ;
. C. W. Poole, en route from Gray, .Va.,
with'hlsffe-ani- two nd fc-;half-year-old
b6 ytvfsft in MasscKusetts,: had
his wu&"aa cr 'child wa$h'f from his
arms cer the. rail o'f the sinking "Mon
roe. Poele.conpiejely; crashed,' told
the story .of his.- great lqps and sor
row". He will . return'itq Ji3 Virginia
home. ' " -V;
Ed Gormait of New 'York .told of
harrowing .sjcjbnes o'f ".fyQiVa scream
ing for hel ln..the cabi5pf 'i'JM6nroe.
Walking -upc-tb,e sido'f tlis careen
ed sinking, ship, . Gorman met a. girl
whom he begged to jump with him into
the sea. The girl refused and perish
ed. Gorman was at the place picked
up by a passing lifeboat
J. Gattfey seefcad bfffer. of. the
Monroe, gave his life preserver up to
a lady who had none, and after-being
washed into,.the water .saved himself
by grabbmg a. . floating gadder. . .. ;
; v v . :t --
$10,000 -ln BHH Left on. Car: Seat
- . Macon, 'Ga.Gonaueto-( Walter Lit
tle picked up; a package lriv'a seat of
a Central of Georgia", raft way ;car -at
Columbia, 'Ala., -w'hlchlater''was' found
to contain $10,000 in bills: ''The name
of J. C Kountz- appeared..on the pack
ase aad it was found .'that 4the, money
beloBgd to a-Dothan Jiaak:.'Ith, which
Mr! Kbiintz iscohnectea;-' The:money
.was In po'ssessfon of a'messenger, who
left the- train at Ooiumbia. It was re
turned the feank. The money, along
withgpyeral otjier packages, had -been
placed ia a hand grip."
SENATOR ASHURST
.Senator Ashurst of. Arizona ls au
thor, of the resolution calling for a
senatorial investigation of the Michi
gan copper mine war.
FREE CAN
PRESIDENT HOLDS EXEMPTION
TO" AMERICAN COASTWISE VES
SELS VIOLATES TREATY.
Question of Panama Canal Tolls Is
Subject Discussed About Capl--tol
i lit Washington., - . '
Washington5: How to dispose of the
Panama canal tolls question was the
subject uppermost In discussion about
the capital when the attitude of Pres
ident Wilson, outlined to the senate
foreign relations committee, became
public. The president's position was
asserted to be that the provision of
the Panama canal act granting toll
trt AmprlPfln VGSSels is In
violation of the Hay-Pauncefote trea
ty, which proclaims that the canal
shall be free and open to all nations
"on terms of entire equality," ahd
that "chargesTof traffic should be Just
and equitable."
Three courses are open to congress.
Great Britain, which persistently has
opposed the toll exemption for Ameri
can ships, has offered to arbitrate the
question as to its being a violation of
the Hay-Pauhcefote treaty. The ma
jority in congress, it is believed, oppos
es this, maintaining that the United,
States should settle the issue for itself.
Another course is to carry into effect a
resolution submitted by Representative
Adamson, which would suspend, for
two vears. the operation of the pro
vision exemntine American ships froml
the payment of tolls. Should this' bel
adopted,. diplomatic negotiations could
pnntinnft'in the meantime. The third
proposal is that congress repeal the :
free toll provision.
WHITE TEACHERS BARRED
By" Measure Passed by South Carolina
House of Representatives .
Columbia, S. C. The lower house
of the South Carolina general assem
bly passed to third reading a bill pro
hibiting white people from teaching
in negro schools or negroes in white
schools under penalty of a fine of' not
more than $500 or imprisonment for
notr exceeding twelve months. The
passage .of .the measure was recom
mended. ly Governor Bleasa ' .
The bill was amended to include the
"intimacy ! of the races ;ih houses"
111 rpniitpi."1 - 1
Another j amendment provides that
thA filir'shall no't be regarded as pro
hibiting the teaching of the Bible to
negroes. ; - ,
scinsattonal 'soeeches were madhe.?
and at times the discussion "(became
most bitter. '
In urging the passage of the bill Mr.J
Fortner '.of Spartanburg declared:
"The fa'egroes have their Booker T.
Washington. Let the ' ne'groes run
their own. business and their schools."
Earthquake Shocks Cause Panic.
'Buenos Aires.. Argentina. Earth.
quake shocks at Mendoza caused a
panic Mendbza-'is the capital of the
province of Mendoza. lying about six
ty miles, distant from the volcano of
Aconcagua., in lstu- xvienaoza was
overthrown by an earthquake.
. ,
Probe of Strides. Ordered.
.Washington". A sWeepIng investiga
tion of strike conditions in the coal
fields of Colorado and the copper dis
trict of Michigan was authorized by
the house.- By a vote of ,151 .to .15
the house, adopted the resolution of
Representative Keating of Colorado,
empowering the mines and mining
committee' to make inquiry as to con
ditions in Colorado and. Michigan In
which the federal government might
be concerned. Hearings will be con
dtfeteti in the-trike regions ,bX;a;-Auhr
committee, or sub-committee?,. , . t .
NAVAL YEAR BOOK
FIGURES JUGGLED
CHARGES BROUGHT AGAINST
EXPERTS OF THE NAVY DE
PARTMENT.
SEC'TY DANIELS IS GRILLED
Congressmen Say Statistics Show Ou
Navy Below Germany's ' Standing
, aui That This is Not True Accord.
-J Ofl .iSL 1 n ve?U0. Lan
, Washington Representatives With
erspoon of 'Mississippi ' and Hensley,
of Missouri,, "charged that experts oi
the' navy department juggled the sta
tistics of the, 1913 navy year book to
make the American navy appear infe
rior to the- German navy ..This action,
they, declared, set .the United States
down-from second' to thlrd place as a
naval .power. Both congressmen- are
members' of. the' house " navalT'aff airs
committee. v
. With Secretary. Daniels before the
committee to explain the naval,: pro
gram for the coming year, the." two
congressmen, who are strongly oppos
ed to a ''big navy,'; questioned him at
length on what they declared wer
omissfons and faulty comparisons in
the yearv book. The ex-secretary ex:
plained that he was not an expert in
comparing navies, and said he had
relied on . what experts in the navy
had advised him about the facts.: - .
In their questioning the Congress
men brought out-; that three ; Ameri
can battleships the Oregon, ' Massa
chusetts and "Indiana,1 which are of
the same tonnage and of heavier ar
miment than 10' listed German battle
ships, are left out of the United
States list altogether; and that the
year book'in'stead 'of giving the United
State 36 battleships built and build
ing, compared with Germany's 3JJ,
-should - have 'credited the - United
-States with 39 battleships of 'heavier
total tonnage and . armament than
Germany.
They also developed that the Navy
statisticians this"' year, for. the
first time have taken1 cut of the
dreadnought class the battleships
South' Carolina and Michigan; which
have dreadnought armament, and
have ,put into the . German dread
nought - class- four 'ships of 11-inch
gun armament. The year book's com
parison gives Germany . 13. dread
noughts and the United States seven,'
while the Congressmen insisted that
the . correct . figures hould give Ger
many and -' th United States 'nine
idreadno'uglits each. .'
' - ' Slow to Respond. .
Washington. President Wilson is
surprised at the lack of responses
'from business men 1 to the invitation
for suggestions on pending trust .leg
islation, ; "
The, president does not know wheth
er business men approve the tenta
tive measures or whether they have
hot yet taken notice of the hearings.
It was suggested that business men
might fear being branded as "lobby
ists" if they came : to Washington in
that connection.
Opposes Increased Rates.
Washington. Opposing the 5-per
cent Increase in freight rates sought
by eastern railroads, J. ,C. Forester,,
kr.epreseMi Jtb$ : J-FreighJ.. Rate
t Association of'North Carolinaj:rtold
examiners of the interstate commerce
commission that to grant the advance
wduld be to burden the public for
.you nd'abouf 4m.. Jlliglcal-. routes of
'ierlytmaiiced and, , inefficiently
managed properties."
Judge Ventress Burned to Death.
Gadsden, Ala. Judge Thomas Ven
tress; prominent in Alabama politics,
was burned to death- io. a fire which
destroyed two buildings in Atalla, Ala.
' ' Women Disappointed.
Washington President Wilson gave
no encouragement to a delegation pf
300 working women who marched oa
the white house with a brass band -.to
ask his suDDort for a constitutional
"amendment enfranchising women.";
Develop Southern Water Power.
Washington. . Remarkable devel
opment in the. South's water power
resources is related in a statement by
the federal geological survej. At any
reasonable valuation per horsepower,
it is stated, the undeveloped power of
important streams in. the . Southern
states is' an important industrial, as
set In Georgia and. the Carolinas
more than 100,000 horsepower has
been" developed and it is being used by
the cotton mills alone and public Ser
vice corporations. are devejonlngpp.
(W)":'to'-"46';-0W
DOCTORS IETII
TENTATIVE PROGRAM IS. . AN
NOUNCED FOR ' TRI-STATE,
' MEDICAL CONVENTION. -
BE HELD JIL.'WILMINGTOH
Many Prominent Physicians With-
National Fame Will Read ' Papers
at the. Meeting In VVIIminqton on
'February 18th and 19th., ,.'..,. t
... Wilmington. A gre deal of inte"r . '
est throughout this section centers -ira
the sixteenth annual session of. the.
Tri-State Medical Association of the ."
Carolinas-and Virgihii which is to ba
held In Wilmington, Wednesday and
Thursday, February 18 and 19. The
preliminary announcement of the pro-
gram has been made which is intend
ed only for information. It-is statec. '
that eight or 10 prominent' surgeons ;:
will read papers at this meeting and ;
that two or three from New York' and n
several from Chicago will also attend. ;
The tentative sketch of the program
indicates that the meeting will be one
of the most Interesting in years. The
Tri-State Association, embracmgtlhree --.
states, always attracts a number of y
the. leading physicians and specialists -in
the country. Chariqtte will send a.,
large deelgation to this convention :
and several will read papers, ihcliid-,
Ing Drs. A. J. Crowell, j. P. Monroe,
John Hill Tiirlrprr William Allan' AA "
dison G.' Brenizer, A." N. Whisnant and '-$
others. . ". '
: The officers of the Tri-State Medl-
cal Association are: : Dr. 'Sputhgate" J5
Leigh, ' Norfolk, ' Va., president; " Doc-Jii; ti
tors Augustus BKnowlton L Colum-7 a"?
bit, S. C., Alfred L. Gray and Andrev
J. Crowell of Charlotte,, vice . pres"lvifc;
dents, and Dr. Rolfe'E. Hughes, ; QtC
Laurens, S. C., secretary and treasTlr;!
er. On the Executive Council Bfref-'"-' ,
tJrs. J. Slielton Horsley of Richn-tomir
R. B. Epting of Grfeenwood, D. A
Stanton of High Point, James H. Cul- -pepper
of Norfolk, Samuel '. Lile 13
t .vn linger A T71 Toli-ai- f Vl Q 1-1 .
ton, Charles T. Harper of Wilming- r ..
ton, W. W. Fennell of Rock Hill and ;? .
J. Howell Way of Waynesvllle. ri,S--"S-9
North Carolina chairman of sections
are: Dr. E. C. Register, medTcijqe'-
Dr. D. T. Tayloe, surgery; Dr. Joseph
Graham, gynecology;. Dr. D. A. Sjtan
ton, obstetrics, and Dr.'H. W. CaiteWi
Reorganize Toxaway Kower co.
Asheville. Developments ofaA
reaching" importance to western1 Nbttte'l-"!
:Carolina- are presagejd by the jeoraia-t4 tot
tzatloni.of the Toxaway Poweii jCJoptt 4ri.t4
pany, a, corporation, chartered acfi ts.
year ago with an authorized caHajrtQaalj!
$1,500,000. When the company wa.9
cha.ctered the incorporators vrerfi-Jit: A.
Mitchell: and., W JiL -Ioofe off ilii
burg and George H, "Wright of., A'ahej
ville. At that thne the cpmpanvi.5
tended toflo e-rtfnsivR elprtrial rlvfil.
.... 7- - i ' - TTr-Ti, flPr 4
iect huhcr .fire ' for a ilme;: aiid flftaTfvJ'
opmen-f aiong tne various rivers o
this section of the' state," bu"fcn"epro'
was apparently abandoned. ""-.ii
The new company owns' or con- i,':fc'.;t
trols extensive water rights, and proa- .
ertv in Western' "North Carbliria. ana. '
it intends to develop"-' power project?
along the Toxaway Yi"ver id TTansy '5"''
vania county, the Green ; -rlyer aid. , ,
other streams on the:southern iffd'ol ' -
. . .... . . - .t . s -vy
tne Jiue mage, au ngnts; properuesr "
options and agreements held 4by :th . y
former incorporators havebeh trails wt
ferred to 'the new company. ' !r.;'""-r;. -S ".'?'
-.Sanders Negro Submits', if ""' i
; Raleigh. Worth :Sanders,; the negro '".1 "1 1
who so-, narrowly escaped 3Bng"lynch tii
ed and took refuge" in ;Wak& icotmty ' t " I
jail and. was subsequently. transferred "-vi'-'
to the State's Prison, has maije "admiai ii'i
sions or gum mat maKe. ni j;pnvic.tion
much more certain, accorcljng t sjate; vJ
ment made by Sheriff Sears." 'He says . Q
that Sanders told Jailor Jordan "thatne"'"
fwas out at the Lynch.ijlace. wbf p; Mrs -: i "
Lynch was killed by wilsen -and- that , a
he helped him put the "body .4a th-- 4I
brush, but that he was too "druisi Jio j
have any clear , recollection o"f 'fust ""'"
what did happen. Sheriff Sears v.fiasj "
another prisoner in jail,.-wrhor.qccujie- . .
the cell with Sandersflha.'sayi'lhat
Sanders made much' the Sfae' state- " "1
ment to him. ' " ' ; !7 V
; "i . I-...-. ?.'. Ail
'J F.tahll.h Tpilnlnn'. RkiAl t L '.
-..v
, Greensboro. A movement is' on.-fdot'"
here to get the County Commission"!,' .4,
ers to establish a training school for ;
boys who get into thefity ' courts of ?
Greensboro and HlfthiiSJt't for 'mffior-'' ''..
infractions of the la'. L'llJiast Lf"ds- i - :
lature authorized the ,cq if sioners ;
to make an appropriation tf'-ich,a
a reformatory, but a real s'chocfr.i.5oys
snt there will.be educated anrtay'i:h,t
liseful occupations. It is believed that
the commissioners will undertake'.th'e ,,
school.
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