flJOCt a Year, fa Advance. 1 . "FOR GOD, FOR COUNTRY AND FOR TRUTH." Single Copy; 5 Cents. VOL. XXIV. PLYMOUTH, N. C, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1914. NOV 35. COLD VIE OVER THE UrilTCO STATES STORM SWEEPS ACROSS . CONTI NENT, CAUSING MUCH DAM AGE AND SUFFERING. NUMBER OF STATES SUFFER Rain in South and a Blizzard for the Valley of Ohio and Mississippi. ' ' Washington, - A ; violent , storm wept across th continent from Col x -orado, causing: rain fa the Southern states and snow in the Mississippi and Ohio valleys, the lake regions and the north Atlantic states. St. Louis. Hail began to fall throughout Missouri and by night had coated the ground in many places with more than an inch of ice.. The storm was accompanied by a'3Qdegre drop . in temperature. Sioux City, Iowa. Northwest Iowa, eastern South. Dakota and northeast ern Nebraska are in the grip of a storm. In Sioux City and vicinity the heaviest snow of the season fell, ham pering streets. and railroad traffic' Re ports from. Snth Dakota indicate a -inchJfaIL y t . , ' Chicago. A "Jfi-mlle an hour wind piled snow in great 'drifts delayed traf fic in Illinois): Several inches of snow felL The thermometer ranged from 22 to 16 degrees above aero. Frank Kach -hotter, 75 years old, and his wife, aged TO. were found dead' by neighbors in & two-room shack , near the river. Death was said to have been caused by lack, of food and coal Kansas City. A storm of sleet' and snow swept over western Missouri and most o Kansas. ' Telegraph and tele phone service was badly demoralized, few wires working out of, Kansas -City. The wire situation waa worse tO west and north and but meager reports are coming in as to the extent of the storm. ' Los Angeles, CsL So far as rail road communication was -concerned, Los Angeles and southern California remained cut off from the world. as a result of the record-breaking storm of rain and wind, which swept this re gion for three days. Reports from the six counties most affected did not rca teriaiy change the estimate of the to tal damage amounting to about four and a half raMicm dollars. . The great est anxiety concerns the situation of the three hundred passengers maroon ed aboard the California limited and the Phoenix express of the Santa Fe train. DAMAGE BY FIRE IN ATLANTA McKenzie Building, One of City Land marks, Gutted by Flames. Atlanta. Fully twenty-five, thou .sand spectators in the vicinity of the Candler building throughout Sunday afternoon watched neariy. every fire man In the city battle with one of the most dangerous downtown fires in years, which ', almost' completely wrecked the McKenzie building at James and Pcarirtrre streets, a city landmark.' , ' Damage is estimated at being be tween one hundred thousand and one Five firemen weTe injured. A num ber were sunocatea oy smoxe ana fumes. One ladderman, E. A. Davis, of engine house, Na 1, fell from the top of a 32-foot. ladder in front of the Johnson-Gewinser firm, when it slip ped and crashed to the sidewalk. lie was carried in a semi-conscious condi tion to the Ansley hotel, where he re ceived medical attention. ; The other injured firemen were hurt by flying glass and falling timbers. None of them were wounded seriously. TVmv ttpm Tfosciiiaii I1, HI Oilhert nf headquarters; James Dooley, engine house No. 2; J. C. JVIedlin, an engineer, '.engine house No. 4, and Bill Cody of headquarters. The firms tnac snnered irom the flames were the Johnson-Gewinner company, the Stoddard company, the Stephen A. Ryan real estate office, the Pickard-Dcana Draff company, the John Chalman Tailoring shop, , the Georgia Realty and Trust company, the Woodmen of the World lodge, the John D. Babbage real estate offices and the W. It. Jeter contracting con cern. . - '" ' Father of Nation Honored. Washington. President Wilson was the central figure at a mass meeting in a downtown theater here under the auspices of the Sons of the. Revolu tion in coHuraemoration of Washing ton's birthday-. Joseph W. Folk, solic itor, of the state department, in an address; paid tribute to the founder of the republic as a- man "imperfect enoughs to be intensely human and near enough perfect to be an inspira tion to all who'hoflor justice and wor ship liberty." President Wilson dul not speak. i y CONGRESSMAN MANAHAN I A 7 ItaL, t J Congressional inquiry into the or ganization and operations of the Chi' cago and Duluth . boards of trade and the Minneapolis chamber of commerce to determine ' their Influence over wheat and flour prices in the country was proposed in a resolution intro duced by Representative Manahan of Minnesota. ARE WAITCHING DIAZ M1R0N FIRE-EATING EDITOR IS BEING CLOSELY WATCHED BY POLICE. He Threatened American Charge O'Shaughness, Which Has Been Reported to Washington. ... V Mexico City. Salvador Diaj Miron, editor of El Imparcial, has been placed under police surveillance because of the report that he had threatened to kill ; Mr. O'Shaughnessy, who recent ly protested to President Huerta con cerning the character of anti-Wilson editorials appearing in El Imparcial. It appears, however, that the most se rious threat made by Miron was that tie "would repeat to Mr. O'Shaughnes sy's face what he had written in edi torials. The charge has reported the incident to Washington. The state department has assured him that it approves of his' protest and that the American gov ernment intends to give him and his family protection. Indicative of the slightly increased anti-American spirit, there appeared the first issue of a weekly magazine, the purpose of which, it is announced, is to attack Washington's Mexican pol icy. Most of the cartoons are direct ed again John Llnd. Hachita, N. M. Maximo Castillo, the bandit, has been brought here by American troops. With him were his brother, his- trumpeter, and the tet ter's wife and two Indian women. The bandit apparently was not at all averse to placing himself under the protection of the United States. His band, which for months has har assed settlers, held prisoners for ran som, burned, sacked and stolen In a career which culminated in the Cum bre tunnel disaster, is scattered and believed to be broken. Since the Cumbre tragedy . Castillo has known no rest and seemed on the verge of a breakdown when brought here. Villa's rebels have been hot on his trail . Ball of Fire Near Lapland. New York. Among the remarkable storm stories told by 'the passenger of the steamship Columbia, 'of the An chor line, and the Red Star liner Lap land, both of which came into port in New York three days late, was the account of a large and brilliant me teor which burned, its way through the snow and hail and plunged hissing Into the sea within a short distance of the Lapland. Passengers " said that at night , they were startled by the ap pearance in the northern sky of a bril liant ball of fire. Shooting in a para bola toward the liner, it seemed to them almost certain ' to fall on the Laplan's deck. Instead it burst into pieces with the report of a cannon and sank into the sea. Sherman Got Columbia 49 Years "Ago. Columbia, S. C The forty-ninth an niversary of the entrance of the North ern soldiers into Columbia under Gen. William Tecumseh Sherman, was mark ed by the unveiling of a granite boul der erected by . the Wade Hampton chapter, United Daughters of the Con federacy, upon the spot where T. J. Goodwyn, the mayor ojf Columbia, un der a flag of truce, met General Sher man and surrendered to him the city. The occasion was given a peculiar In terest by the only living witness to the event, Norton W. Urooker. PEOPLE AROUSED ON MEXIG BORDER MEETING IN EL PASO CHARGES GOVERNMENT IS CONCEAL ING TH E TACTS. WASHINGTON INVESTIGATES Resolutions Declare Mexicans Have Killed Americans Because They Were Americans. Washington. A . slumbering Mexi can situation was brought quickly to a point of intense international inter est, by the flash of a message saying William 'S Benton, a British subject, had been killed in Juarez by order of Gen. Francisco Villa, the Constitution alist commander. 'Sir Cecil -Spring-Rice, British am bassador, conferred ' with Secretary Bryan about it; President Wilson and hia cabinet discussed it - briefly and the state department ordered a thor ough investigation by consular repre sentatives on the border. . El Paso Texas. Two more English men are reported as having "disappear ed" in Juarez. The report came from Samuel Stew art, who says the men, John Lawrence and a companion named Curtis, went to Juarez to search for William S. Benton. Stewart expressed the fear that they, like Benton, had been shot. . Gustav Bauch, who was on trial for being a spy, also disappeared in Jua rez. Thomas "D. Edwards, American consul at Juarfez, said that when the friends of Bauch went to visit him with bedding and- food he was not in the cell where. he had been held in communicado while his trial was be ing held. A storm of indignation broke out along the border when it became known that William S. Benton, a Brit ish subject and wealthy landholder in Mexico, had been executed by rebels in Juarez, after he had made a pro test to Gen. Francisco Villa about al leged depredations of the Constitution alists. A mass meeting was held, and reso lutions were adopted censuring the state department at Washington for its alleged suppression of the consular re port of the Benton case and calling on congress to demand from the de partment of state a full record of al leged crimes and outrages against for eigners in Mexico. SUPERVISION FOR STATES Administration Contemplates No Sur render of Power, However. . Washington. Conservation partic ularly as it affects the building of wa ter power projects jin the navigable streams of the 'country was added to the chief administration policies un der discussion. Conservationists have learned in a preliminary way the an swer which the Wilson administration has prepared to the question 'of wheth er the federal government of the states shall be supreme in the matter of wa ter rights of navigable, rivers. Secretary Gark'son, has addressed a letter on the subject to Chairman Ad amson of the house'committee on in terstate and foreign' commerce which he will submit, when .the latter returns to' Washington, ' . . The general principles "of the ad ministration's plan.,,, contemplate no surrender of theojconstitutional power cMhe federal government to -regulate what shall or 'shall not be done- in the navigable streams' of the country, but to the states is given entire supervis ion of the actual operation of the plan. , Briefly the plan's general outline is as follows: . Federal permits for water power projects would be given only to indi viduals or concerns duly incorporat ed as public utilities. Public utility eommimssions of the various states would be expected to regulate .operation of the. plan by such supervision as would prevent practices of discrimination or monopoly. Water power rights would be given only to those states which had good public utility laws so that an incen tive for careful supervision through new laws would be provided in states having inadequate laws. Robbers Get $40,000. Birmingham, Ala. Queen and Cres cent passenger train No. 1, New York to New Orleans, running forty minutes late, about twelve miles north of Bir mingham, was held up by three maei. ed robbers, who secured four sacks of registered mail, said to have contained over $40,000. At Attalla three men boarded the engine and one and a half miles south of Attalla held up the engine crew at the point of revolvers. They then ran the train to within five miles of Irondale. where they robbed It, GOVERNOR E. F. DUNNE Governor Dunne, it is rumored, may enter the Illinois senatorshlp fight by announcing himself as a candidate for the Democratic nomination In opposi tion to Roger Sullivan. This, it is be lieved, would please Secretary Bryan'. U. S. IS MOSTPROSPEROUS ORGANIZATION COMMITTEE HAS FOUND PROSPERITY ALL OVER COUNTRY. Federal Reserve Bank Organizers Jubi lant About Business Conditions Disclosed on the Trip. Washington. The federal reserve bank organization committee, back in Washington after a five weeks' trip through the country, in a statement, announce that its selection of federal reserve cities and definition of reserve districts would not be made until it had carefully considered information acccumulated on the trip The state ment said the committee found the country prosperous and learned that bankers and business men are confi dent of the success of the banking system. In a supplemental statement, Sec retary McAdoo declared he hoped the new system would be established in .time to take care of crop-moving con tingencies next year, , but that if it were not the treasury department would stand ready to place its funds again at the disposal of business men. The committee's statement, in part, is as follows: "We have spent practically from the 4th of January to the present time in hearing the views of business men and bankers on the problems of dividing the country into not less than eight nor more than twelve districts and of locating in each district the main office of a federal reserve bank. Of the two questions, the division of the country into districts is the more important and difficult. The committee asked those who apepared before it to direct their attention to these two problems. A great many able and impartial busi ness men and bankers have submitted their , best information and opinions and always in a spirit of great fair ness. LAST TRIBUTE PAID BACON Funeral Services Conducted at Chris Church in Macon. Macon, Ga. The body of United States Senator A. O. Bacon reached Macon on a special funeral train from Atlanta. Hundreds of Macon people were in waiting at the station and stood with bared heads as the casket was taken from the car and placed in the hearse and transported to the city hall. The line of carriages on the trip to the city hall was headed by the Macon drum and bugle corps, with muffled drum, and the three local military companies. . With a sergeant of one of the local military companies and a Confederate veteran in gray uniform at either end of the casket, thousands filed by to view the body. r It was a tribute such as Macon neVer f'aid to any other man.' The body lay in state at the city hall' until 10:45 o'clock Thursday, when it was taken to Christ Episcopal church, where the funeral services were conducted at eleven o'clock bv Rev. John II. Bunting, the rector. Food Fish Opposed for Fertilizer. Washington. State fisheries offl. cials, Eastern fish dealers and repre sentatives of fish and game organiza tions were before the house inter state commerce committee to discuss the Linthicum bill to prohibit the use of food fish in the manufacture of fer tilizer for Interstate commerce. Sec retary Redfield of the department ot commerce called back to his office bp fore he could testify - telephoned Lis approval of the measure. Most of. the witnesses favored the passage the bill. WILL SEEK SAFETY FOR FOREIGNERS THE ADMINISTRATION REALIZES THAT STEPS OF SOME SORT .. ARE WANTING. SOON BEFORE THE SENATE The Mexican Situation Continues a Perplexing Tangle With Extreme Tension. Uncle Sam Is Consider ing the Situation Gravely. Washington. Regardless of wheth er or not the execution of William S. Benton by General Villa was justi fied, developments emphasized clearly that protection of foreigners in Mex ico had become a commanding prob lem of increased international im portance, appreciated no less by Pres ident Wilson than by leaders in Con gress. Briefly these were the day's developments: t After a conference with President Wilson, Acting Chairman Shively of the Senate Foreign Relations Com mittee and members of the committee reached an understanding that the Mexican question, if taken up in the Senate should be ' discussed behind closed doors. Pending resolutions looking to bet ter protection for foreigners soon will be taken up the senate. Discussion in the British Parlia ment of the Benton incident was read with much interest by officials who observed particularly that the United States was not held responsible by Sir Edward Brey for the death of Benton. The British Embassy announced that the British Consul at Galveston, Texas, has been ordered to El Paso to assist in the inquiry concerning Benton, but in no way to interfere with the American investigation. Intimations were received through semi-official channels that marines would be landed by Japan and France to act as Legation guards in Mexico City along with those of Great Britain and Germany. The Huerta government is not averse to the sending of Foreign Lo cation eruards to Mexico City is known here officially but the United States for the present at least will not fol low the course of other Nations. The whole tenor of the Mexican situation, while revealing no unusual aetlvity, reflected the same anxiety and perplexing tangles which have caracterized it dur'ng days of ex treme tension. Attention was chiefly focused on the investigation as to the manner In which William S. Benton, met death at Juarez but details of the affair still are lacking. The report which has been mailed By American Consul ar representatives has not reached here yet. Its contents have been an ticipated by telegraphic dispatches giving Villa's version of the affair and additional details are being sought from Gen. Villa at Chihuahua by Con sul Letcher. The attempt to exhume Benton's body, as yet though unavail ing is expected to bring further evi dence. Reserve System Starts Business. WashingtonThen ew Federal re serve svstem will begin business with a membership of at least 7,500 banks. This was apparent when at the close of the last day on which national bnaks could signify their" intention of accepting terms of the currency law, less htanJSO of the . 7,493 national banks of the country had failed to re spond favorably. More than enough state institutions have applied tor membership to bring the total to 7,500. Troop Train Blown Up. Vera Cruz, Mexico. A government troop train carrying a company of in fantry for Jalapa was blown up by rebels. The wreck ocurred on the Inter-Oceanic Railway, 140 miles from Vera Cruz. All on board, including 55 officers and men, and the English engineer, were killed. A passenger tTaln was firl'don by the rebels, bute escaped by backing rapidly. Conley Placed on Trial. A tlanta, Ga. Interest in the murder of Mary Phagan, fourten-year-cld fac tory girl for which Leo M. Frank is under death sentence was revived by the prospect that James Conley wuold e placed on trial here on charge of being an accessory to the erime. Con ley, a negro sweeper at the factory where the girl was murdered, and of which Frank was superintendent, tes tified at the latter's trial that he had help dispose of Mary Phagan's body after Ffcink had kilel her. Conley de nies the charge. PHYSICIANS T TRI-STATE DOCTORS HAVE IN TERESTING MEETING AT WILMINGTON. MEET NEXT iN GREEENVII4.E Delegates Vote to Go to Greenville, S. C, Despite Rumors of Local ' Divi sions.. New Officers are Elected and New Members Enrolled. . Wilmington. The sixteenth annual convention of the Tri-state Medical As sociation adjourned recently after se lecting Greenville, S. C, as the next place of meeting and electing officers for next year. A large number of valuable papers were read at the ses sions. Officers elected for the ensu ing year wer: President, Dr. E. C. Register, Char lotte; vice president for Virginia, Dr. J. Allison Hodges, Richmond; North Carolina, Dr. Chas. T. Harper, WI1 liston; South Carolina, Dr. ;F. H. McLeod, Florence; secretary-treasurer, Dr. Rolee Hughes, Laurens, S. C. (re-elected); Dr. Southgate Leigh, of ' Norfolk, the retiring president, was elected a member of executive council in place of Dr. J. Shelton Horsley, of Richmond. Dr. D. T. Tayloe, of Wash ington, was elected a member in, place of Dr. Chas. T. Harper, of this city, who was elected vice-president, and Dr.'W. W. Fennell, of Rock Hill, S. C, was elected to succeed himself. There were only three vacancies oc curring on the council. Columbia also extended invitations through the exec utive council for convention to meet in that city next year, but owing to the fact that the last" meeting held in South Carolina was in Columbia it was decided to meet in GTeenville. The recommendation of. the;',;council " was unanimously ddpteaV by the conven tion. . " .', - After GreenvilTehad been chosen there was a report that the selection -. was not pleasing to South .Carolina physicians, particularly those of ' Grelnville. It was said .that., there ; was friction among Greenville; physi- , clans. For this reason, it was rumor- ed Grenville did not want the cpnyan- -. tion. . The executive council was called into special session three hours after Greenville had been chosen and the -question was discussed. It wasT.de-" elded not to take the matter to the floor of the convention, but to let it ' rest for the time being, in hope that some settlement will be affected. It was reported that South Carolina' had threatened to withdraw from the as- sociation, but this was denied by. members of the executive council. Wake Forest Trustees Meet. Wake Forest. The. board of trus tees of Wake Forest College met here during the aniversary season and dis cussed many matters of importance to the college. The proposition of the town of Sylva to move the summer law school there was declined by the board. This town, situated on the Southern Rail way, 40 miles from Asheville,- made the college an attractive offer some time ago if the law school would hold forth in their town. . The matter was referred to a committee and this committee made their report at this meeting. Pastor Ellington, of the Sylva Baptist church, was present and urged the board to move the school to Sylva. The board, after a statement from President Poteat of the financial ne'eds' of the college felt that a camnaiirn tn increase the present endowment can not be deferred more than a year or two. The present endnwmpnt "a wnn. more than $600,000. Road About Completed. Newton. The Hickory-to-Maiden sand-clay road has been completed to the city limits of Maiden. Only two tenths of a mile still remains to be built to the Lincoln county line. Thl3 now gives a stretch of 25 miles of as good as is to be found anywhere in this section of the state. The Lincoln , commissioners have agreed to build a road to intersect with the Catawba road at the county line. Asheville Quits "Trash Farm." Asheville. Ash'eville's municipal in cinerator, which has been in the course of erection for the past several weeks, has been finished and was tested recently in the presence of the members of the board of aldermen and heads of the various city departments. The plant was found to be in fine con dition, and doubtless wll be accepted by the city at an early date. With a modern crematory at her lisposal Asheville will abandon tha use of the eld "trash farm" that has been used by the city.