Oastonia Daily Gazette GASTONIA COTTON -ZS CENTS TODAY t LAST EDITION XXXBXS Or THX ASSOCIATED .PUSS VOL.XL1. NO. 39. GASTONIA, N. C., SATURDAY AFTERNOON, FEB. 14, 1920 SINGLE COPY 3 CENTS A! WILSON ON POLICIES BATE FUNDAMENTAL ONLY INCIDENT BACK BEFORE WAR -CABINET MEETINGS BREAK WAS EXPECTED In PARIS DING SUN'S VKIT Tfl FIIRHPF IIU11 1U L.U1IU1 L. "WASHINGTON, Feb. 14 Rebuked by President Wilson for calling cabinet meetings during his illness, Secretary Lan ding has resigned. -4.U - ' The President has accepted the resignation with ap preciation" and Mr. Lansing becomes the second secretary of state to leave the administration over a disagreement with his hieAlthough the correspondence between Mr. Lansing and the president makes the calling of the cabinet meetings the in cident which leads directly to the secretary's resignation, per sons "on the inside" of the administration who know what has keen going on say that was only an incident and that the real xeasons for the break go back over a period of many months And come from fundamental differences of opinion in policy. The disagreements between the President and the head of the state department even ante-date the entry of the United I States into the war. The relations between the two men almost ! reached the breaking point early in 1917 when Mr. Lansing issued his celebrated statement saying the United States was daily being drawn nearer and nearer the war. By some, it was taken to forecast phe entry of the United States. The President made every effort to overtake the statement after it had been given out at the state department, but it was im possible. ' When Mr. Lansing went as a member of the American peace . delegation to Paris more differences developed. With other members of the American mission he was not in accord with the President's idea of making th& treaty of peace and the covenant of the league of nations one and the same inseparable document. " ' It was Mr. Lansing's idea that-such apian would de lay the ratification of a peace treaty and in this he was sup ported by Henry White and E. M.' House. It may be said with a great decree of authority that while the President and Mr. Lansing were together in Paris other dif ferences of more than minor nature developed and this is con firmed by the reference which the President makes to it in one of his letters. When President Wilson went back to Paris last March and found that durin his brief absence in the United States Mr. - ... . m . 1 1 1 Lansing and the others ot tne American mission naa agreed, tenatively, at least, to have the peace" terms and the league of nations covenant separated, the situation came very near a breaking point and probably was avoided only because the President thought it more important not to let European statesmen see a split in the American peace delegation. While Mr. Lansing probably saw and conferred with the President in Paris as much as any other members of the American mis sion, it was a matter of remark that he saw him very little: However, the incident which came nearer causing a break than any other was the sensational testimony of William C. Bullitt, one of the experts attached to the American peace mis sion, before the senate foreign relations committee. Bullitt as will be recalled, reading from a diary, quoted Secretary Lan sing as having told him he was out of sympathy with the league of nations covenant and as predicting that the treaty would fail if the, American people ever learned of its full import. Mr. Lansing, obviously in a very difficult position, did not repudiate Bullitt's statements, although it was momentarily ex pected in Washington that he would repudiate them or resign his office. President Wilson was at the time on his speaking tour in the west. To say. that he was upset by Bullitt's story and his quotations oi the secretary of state puts it mildly. Of-! ficials in the Presidential party who knew the workings of the President's mind expected the secretary's resignation asked for when tne f resident returned to Washington, rnese same of ficials believe now that the breakdown which sent the Pres ident home a very sick man was the only thing which pre vented it. Mr. Lansing, however, never saw the President again, and did all his business with the chief executive in writing. The relations between the men remained very much strained, and then Mr. Lansing's action In calling the cabinet together brougt them to the breaking point. Those , who were present at the first cabinet meeting de scribe a rather tense and dramatic scene. Congress was full ' of rumors that the President was so disabled as to be con stitutionally unable to discharge the functions of his office. There was talk of what might be done to place Vice-President Marshall a the head of the government and how congress slight go about doing it. Nobody knew $he full extent of the President's illness. It had not then become known that he had partally lost the use of his left arm and leg through an ac cumulation of blood in one of the arteries of his brain. There were even ugly rumors that the President might not be in pos session of all his faculties. Some senators were even contem plating action to "find out whether we have a president or ot," as one of their number put it. These ugly stories were, of course, all disposed of and shown to be pure and unfounded gossip by the later developments, but they were being circu- lated and widely credited last November when the cabinet as sembled for its first conference at the call of Secretary Lansing. The secretary of state, it should be I bad a long illness and ultimately "was said, believed be was supported by pre- ueeeeded by Vice President Fillmore. esdent in eaUing the cabinet together. I --.The Wilson eabinet assembled that day Looking op the historical record be found I wi - feeling of apprehension, for. none . u v. TmAat rim. I of the members knew th v fteld lay HI for weeks after baring been j President's illness, but expected to be ot by aa assassin and that it had been j informed of it before that when President Taylor I secretary Tumulty had informed the TWO MODIFIED DRAFTS OF TREATY GOME IIP , WASHINGTON, Feb. 14. Republi can senators had before them today two modified drafts of, the article ten reser vation of the peace treaty with a reques from Senator Hitchcock, the acting demo- i cratie leader, to accept either one they choose. He promised that about 40 democrats would support either. Both of the reservations previously have- been rejected by the republican leaders. One was that draftedby former President Taft and rejected by Senator Lodge, the republican leader, in the bi partisan conference, when it Was offered by the democrats. The 6ther was drawn up in the bi-partisan conference, but was not accepted. Although the republicans withheld a formal reply pending consideration of new out tnat either reservation would be acceptable to the majority party now. A declaration of the republicans' stand on the democrats' proposition' was ex pected today. President that Mr. Lansing had called the cabinet together, and the President, somewhat disturbed, gave his personal physician a message to deliver to the secretaries. The secretaries assembled at their usual places and Mr. Lansing sent for Dr. Grayson. The president's chair at the head of the table was left vacant until the physician arrived and he was asked to occupy it ' ' Dr. Grayson, ' ' Secretary Lansing la reported to have said, "we wish to know the nature and extent of the- president's illness, and whether ho is able to per- form the duties of his office, so that we may determine what shall be done to carry on the business of' the govern ment. ' ' The president's physician is quoted by some of the other secretaries as having replied in substance: "The president is doing as well as could be expected. He is in full posses sion of all. his faculties and he has di rected mo to inquire of you by what authority this meeting of the cabinet was called, what business is before it, and what business it is expected might be transacted at a Cabinet meeting without his participation." According to the story told at that time Secretary Lansing had no oppor tunity to reply, because some of the other members stepped into the breach and asked Dr. Grayson to say to the presi dent that the only purpose of the meet ing was to inquire the state of his healtn and to send him a message of loyalty and encouragement 'At that point the meeting broke up without having trans acted any business, but it did not end the so called cabinet conferences. Jt has not been made plain whether President Wilson knew since then that the cabinet members had been assembling and talking over inter-departmental af fairs, but the meetings have been held in the cabinet room in the executive of fices and if the president did not know it probably was because those surround ing him did not wish to tell him. The best opinion of those ' ' on the In side " is that the president did not know until last week of the regularity at which the cabinet was meeting at the call of the secretary of state, because at about the time at which the presi dent's first letter to Mr. Lansing is dated, the white house offices "let it be known" that the President had ended the cabinet conferences and there was an interference that he might preside at the next one himself. There was, how ever, no hint that the ending of the meetings marked a separation between Mr. Wilson and Mr. Lansing. Now that the. break has come and Mr, Lansing has left the cabinet, much may be revealed of the extent to which the secretary of state and the President dif fered in matters of policy. Quite a side from the differences at the peace conference, there were other differences In foreign policy, and some of Mr. Lan sing's friends say he would have left his office some time ago but for the fact that he wished to spare the president an upheaval in his official family at a time when Europe was watching the fight over the treaty in America and especially when the president was ill and unable to look after the affairs of the state de partment himself. Mr. Lansing became head of the state department when William J. Bryan and the ' president had their differences over the Lusitania . notes. Mr. Lansing was counsellor, an office in which be had suc ceeded John Bassett Moore. It has been common knowledge, that whilst Mr, Lan sing's name was signed to the succeed ing notes to Germany and the notes which preceded the armistice, Mr. Wil son wrote them himself, in fact, he practically acted as secretary of state in all 'important business.' It wa the presl- S. M. ROBINSON BUYS MILL AT BISGOE THERE WILL BE NO Together With Jno. C. Rankin and A. Q. Kale, Lowell Men Acquire Valuable Mill Prop erty at Biscoe Will Als6 Head Mill at Monroe. Messrs. Sloan Mf Robinson and Jno. C. Rankin of Lowell, have bought the Francis Cotton mills at Biscoe, accord ing to the following announcement in to day 's Charlotte Observer: The Francis cotton mills at Biscoe, N. C. have been sold through, Hill, Clark &, Co., of Charlotte, to John C. Rankin and Sloan M. Robinson, of Lowell, N. C, and their associates, it was officially announced last night. The mill will be reorganized as the Aileen mills, incorporated, with John C. Bankin, president; 8. M. Robinson, vice president arid A. Q. Kale, of High Shoals, N. '., as general superintendent. The Francis cotton mills have 7,680 spinning spindles and 4,000 twister spin dles and have been operated upon Id 2 yarns. The mill is about eight years old and has been very successful. It is equipped with- Whitin machinery through out with the exceptiorr of roving ma chinery, which was manufactured,, by the Woonsoeket Machine and Press company, and all the machinery is said to le in splendid condition. The mill also has a large dyehouse, as it was originally intended to manu facture colored yarns, and it will prob ably be operated upon cither colored yarns or 30 's two-ply' white yarns. It is an electric driven mill and al though it now secures its power from the i outside, it has a Westinghouse turbine generator that it uses in any (emergency . In this connection the following from The Monroe Journal will be of interest in Gaston county where Mr. Robinson has such extensive holdings: "A $150,000 cotton mill,, headed by S. M. Robinson, millionaire , cotton mill magnate of Lowell, is in process of or ganization here. $118,000 worth of the stock has already been pledged, leaving only $.'!2,000 worth more to be disposed of in Monroe. Promoters of the mill be lieve the entire issue will have been sub scribed before the week is out. The mill is to be under the manage ment of Mr. Robinson, who operates ten mills in this state and Georgia. He has two mills at Charlotte, one at Dal, las, three at Lowell, two at Gastonia, one at Spencer Mountain, and ' one in Georgia. Mr. Robinson is reputed to be worth over a million dollars, all of which he made out of the mill business. Mr. J. . Stack was instrumental in interesting Mr. Robinson in the -proposition here. It is understood that he agreed to take stock to the amount of $50,000 if Monroe business men would subscribe $100,000 worth. Citizens here had subscribed for $68,000 worth by lute yesterday afternoon, making a total including Mr. Robinson's $50,000, of $118,000. MORE RESIGNATIONS ROM Featured by three carbon plae elec trodes an electric heater has been invent ed foT warming the water in a bath tub. new method of producing dyes from in organic matter. dent's conception of his relation to the foreign policy of the nation. How much Mr. Lansing and the presi dent -differed on the Mexican policy never has been fully revealed, but officials who sympathize with Mr. Lansing's views say that they differed a great deal. It has generally been -believed in offi cial circles here that the sharp notes which Mr. Lansing sent to Carranza in connection with the Jenkins case are what the president referred to in his let ter to the secretary when he spoke of the secretary of state having taken action to forestall his judgment. It is known, however, that Henry Prather Fletcher, former ambassador to Mexico, who recent ly resigned, wrote a letter to the Presi dent in which he excoriated the admin istration's policy and the general belief in the state department is that Mr. Lan sing and Mr. Fletcher agreed pretty gen erally. Mr. Fletcher's letter of resigna tion never, has been given out at tne white house. But aside from his difficn ties with the president it has been com mon knowledge in Washington that Mr. Lansing has not been on good terms with Secretary Tumulty and from time to time there have been apparently well grounded reports of friction with Secre taries Baker and Daniels. . In the senate foreign relations commit tee, where Mr. Lansing was in frequent touch with senators, be is regarded as a trained diplomat Senators remarked when Bullitt gave his sensational testi mony that they regretted it very mnen on Lansing's account. . F EABINET SAYS TUMULTY Frank L. Polk Becomes Secretary of State Ad Interim Today - Davis and Polk Discussed as Successors to Lansing - Porter, jof House For eign Affairs Committee Talks. WASHINGTON, Feb. 14 Frank L. Polk, under-secretary of state, became secretary of state ad interim today and will serve until Mr. Lansing's successor has been appointed by the President. - While the names of several men were being mentioned in' connection with the office, officials conceded that their sug crestions were mere guess work. Mr. Polk was regarded as the logical selection, but his friends said he would not consider it ' because of the condition of his health. There will be no more resignations from the cabinet as a ... result of the Lansing incident, it was said at the white house today. "I am not going to discuss the Lansing-Wilson controversy the letters speak for themselves," Secretary Tumulty said. There was no information available at the white house as to a probable successor to Mr. Lansing, but the appointment is k expected to be made soon. John W. Davis, ambassador at London, and Under Secretary Polk are being discussed. Cabinet meetings will be resumed "very soon" and as an- nounced a few days ago President Wilson will preside. White house officials reiterated today that he was making rapid, strides toward regaining his health. Chairman Porter, of the house foreign affairs committee, commenting today on Secretary Lansing's resignation, said: ."I am not inclined to accept this new and novel interpre tation of organic law." "There is nothing in the constitution which prohibits mem-' bers of the President's cabinet from meeting and discussing any departmental matter," he said. "If we accept the Pres ident's construction of the constitution, it would be a viola tion thereof for two of the secretaries to hold a Conference in the absence of the President. . . "Mr. Lansing has fajthfully served Mr. Wilson during both of his terms as President, and in due consideration' for his rights, I think the President should have asked for his resigna tion on the ground that they did not agree on the policies to be pursued by the state department and not to have dismissed him in this harsh way." LONDON PAPERS GIVE MUCH PROMINENCE 1 LANSING'S RESIGNATION (By The Associated Press.) LONDON, Feb. 14. This after noon's London newspapers print the news of Secretary Lansing's resignation under a variety of prominent captions, such as "United States political bomb shell, " " Washington sensation ", " Great United States sensation." The Pall Mall Garette says: "President Wilson's return to politi cal activity has been announced by a sensational stroke." During his illness, the newspaper adds, all kinds of reports were current as to where the real seat of authority lay in the conduct of the Amer ican administration. "The curtain now has been thrust aside," the article con tinues, "and we have the lively spectacle of the president not only using his prero gative but employing it to discharge his chief legal adviser." The newspaper considers the president 's self assertion "emerges all the stronger for his en force"! rest, and he is evidently going to take up the reins of government a gain in a spirit that will not parley with opposition. ' ' The Wesminster Gazette says: "The dismissal of Secretary Lansing by the president is a dramatic illustra tion of the peculiar power assigned to the head df the government by the Amer ican constitution. What it is, exactly, that Secretary Lansing has done is not very clear, but he would appear to have applied on his own account what has been described as the American principle of one-man management, while President Wilson, insists on a monopoly of the idea." Tests are being conducted in England of what is claimed to be a noiseless and fireproof airplane engine. . STILL PUN TO ... . SELL GERMAN LINERS (By The Associated Press.) WASHINGTON, Feb. 14. Despite efforts in various quarters to prevent tne shipping board from offering for sale Monday the thirty former German liners, Chairman Payne" was proceeding today with the original plans to receive bids for the vessels. He explained, however, " that bids only would be .received and that before acceptance the results would be laid before the senate. ' The sharp opposition that developed ra the senate yesterday over the proposed sale subsided after .Chairman Payne bad appeared before the senate eommsree committee and outlined the policy of tne board for the disposal of the vessels. Je aetion was taken in the senate to x. strain the shipping board from carrying out its program. The only remaining visible opposition to the auction of the liners Monday waa an application for an injunction tlai 2a the District of Columbia supreme ' Mart by William Randolph Hearst, of Ifew York, in the capacity of a tax payer. The court issued an order for the board to show cause why a temporary iajase tioa should not be issued. An Englishman is the inventor of a nameless, fireproof tamping plug to pro Tent blown out shots in mines. ;. A motor driven machine to split 'apart eakes of ice that have f rosea together la storage has been invented. "...