111 : J e -J ' . . VCL. LUILNo. 102 FIVE CE.VTS PER COPY ; I ", " "" i" ' j; 5 ' ,.. I...., iiu 1.,- R- -!.:' ''T 1iH'i',-A'i rT"';;- BRITISH ARMY IN TURMOIL OVER ULSTER 'lM I. Pi H M ii'-.XS--.' I t!:l Yesterday st Gelisbira Iii The Office b! J. L CirtL Ccn:n:iUecmcn Dill, Darham, fefe J, Armstrcng end Taylor Voted For u.i District frinnyft IVclb, 6il!)3 end toivery Opposed the Pri nscryi Desiring tlmt a Convention 1; be Held Sub-dommittee To; Meet In ; :; New Bern On April 8, To Frame Rules and Set .the '0 Date of the Primary. "Gen eral Satisfaction Over the Result. . v l' ' ' . (Special to the Journal) -Goldsboro, April i.-i-That the mi jbrity oft the members of the Demo cratic Executive Committee of tbe Third ConSrewlonal District have . , -i mra uonitrewiviui mi",m' at heart the IntereeM of the Demo cmtlc votera of the district and are v4eairouof allowing them to aelect ''i ' they a candidate fof theimoney will be made in a few - , for Congress, 1 i?a ..- demonstrated days. "Where will ihey get the money ; t ::-pDyond doubt here today whep the fr6m;tiiat State?"., feenator Simmons ir- 1 committee, which met at the of- Wa, s.f: - . " 3- L Barham, ordered a Dj "That : does not interest me at all, trict Primary.: v:;?-:vSi;;.We!witt.,get-ihe- $20,p00," said he. t , ; -No daje was set for this primaryMr. Simmons said today that; after , . .. .wiitoaprn.saulMwmtiiljiad i;.SetarcAdoo,.AJiat '' r " ' composed Of Hlir 0f Ouplltt county . - . Mairmani Barham of Wayne, Gibbs , ' : ? of Pamlico, Webb of Carteret and . r ? -. 1 nomas ot craven, win . meet at r; ..j ; am satisfied said - he Senator ' V-VNew Berntand .formulate rules f9r,im'ons:-Wghitfhat the:' tolls- re- this. and also set a date.. This will then' be referred back to .the re- gular committee for ratification and ;fi , tS'tif found satisfactory will be allowed r 1 to tmfcgg. ' I ' - MUCH ; INTEREST', MANIFESTED ' . 'For days' much. interest, has. been - -manifested ipj, this meeting of the ..Executive Committee , and . when mi- r8 arrive In .Tthe .city 'X'-'i'-h la't..nJiht' tfait was increaseVi:by the '" -'i X 'factithat U was known that .several ".' - of the members.: woui4!pit up a iAaNlBfth.t to kilt, the:.prlmaryhd :-rvS.'i; -J io 'secure, a conveation, However, y-Jp ;" was known' that, the maority of , , -voters in the .'district, had tasked o,:a primary and. if was not; be- lleved that in the face of all this, v:vi ;;4i.;that "a convention' would- be called. HOW THEY VOTED ' , B -1 ' After the committee met and had f i been called to order, the: business . of the day was taken up. 4; There was a fight niade by the members .who were against the primary, but f they.were overwhelmingly defeated. ' 'A: count'bf; thevotestshowed the -followjngi ' ; . FOR THE PRIMARY f Hill,' of Duplin County. . ; Barham of Wayne County.; Armstrong of Pender County: Taylor of Onslow County. Vhitfleld of Sampson county. "AGAINST THE PRIMARY i J. C; Thomas of Craven County. Webb of Carteret County. '" ) -VT Gilts. 'of Pamlico County. ' : ''I ' -Lowery "of Jon.es Cdunty. - Ti e result of the" meeting of the ' cc -;ttee' caused general . satis if??C::i. l t '3 city. ' Hon.: George e. r . n. i. ...Crf ' . r i ' cf V,'2yi e; lion. Charles s, tf Craven; Hon. E. M. 3 ',1 C j t f c. i, La I -y. f ' v County; B. G. tJ'-Kon. J. M. f a district : ' 1 t" i f cntl- ; i ) t' ' " J. ' TO 1 U1ML SENATOR SIMMONS SAYS TJIE TOLLS REPEAL BILL WILL . PASS THE SENATE f . Washingtoh, April 2. After , a con ierence with - Postmaster General Bur leson and Fourth Assistant Postmaster General, Biakslee: this afternoon Sen- ator Simmons announced that 20,- fffift nltliHnuin fnm" thi Federal road )infi fr . North Carolin two" weeks ieo wju be restored at onte; An order the collectorship at Wilmington would wttled-'soott;;:-M.:thinks Col.- Wal- jcer 'payor wjj wjn ; : peal bill will pass the Senate by a majority of eight or. ten. . George S. Powell of Aihville is here to confer with the' Interior, Department officials : about - converting Applachian Park , lands info 'pleasure, parks. ' ; J.'. C. Thomas, Jr., returned home j yesterday: from Goldsboro. '' i'ki' STEAMER DISABLE.D Steamer Frash Off Diamond Shoals - : : With Broken. Rudder -I Wilmington April 2. The revenue cutter Seminole, . CaptainJ Garden, is uhde "steani -.tonight J to respond . to any . further -Call for . assistance from the steamer "Frash, 2,381 . tons,.' Cap tain -McGray, Portland March" IS' to Sabine.' Pass, reported night .. with her rudder disabled 18 m.ieg : southeast' .of . Diamond' Shoals. The -cutter rOnondaga i has gone from ' j, Norfolk Under full steam, to the Frash i and iii the event v'i theVSeminole "is', needed,' she will's :immediafey called, ', Caotain i"U. isMvadviseL'?;' t ges they see fit and also to change the date setr if it not found to be satisfactory: GENERAL ? SATISFACTION 1 . . NEW, BERN' ' IN The result' of the; meeting 'was received by the Journal a few min utes after It had became ffnown at Goldsboro. . All along the Journal, had predicted that a District Prim ary would be called and, while the committee's " action was not unci- RO IliJEi RESTORED III: N IKIH I AH 1 NA I U IIUII I II WJIIIWb.11111 pected, it caused general grati-t Panama, .April 2.- Col. ' Geo-. W. ficatlon here.:'"" ;'::.-' - k ;1'."-. "'..:'' Goethals today became Governor of the The Democratic: voters of New Canal Zone. - In conformity with.- his Bern and Craven County are pro- wishes, no cenremony marked the ioc biibly more Interested ins the:'8elec-..casion..j:-i'iii.;:'v.iv?;; tlon 6t a congressman than any I other city or county in the district, and news of the meeting was anx iously awaited here in a long distance telephone mes wage to the Journal last night, Hon. C: r! s R Tl.omas,. who was at ..oro ye" n'.sy,salJ ti it he I ? wcii r t ' r -.ei with the resi!t'bva scoreof 3 to 2. y of" tl. i Executive 1 1 ' ! ' '. CC - - " ---ry a . i r- t t .- - ".t- cf rHlflaiPffil ii ViO'CKllliLlCillUU PIlUlIPRlBill r ESCAPES HOHRIBLE FTE WAS LOCikED IN ROOM B Y MAN ,7, 5 BELIEVED TO B E.WHITE j :!-:X:J-:7'.';:r: SLAVER' ,i i Philadelphia April" - 3.-Cathtrine Davis, ' a stenographer, after ptfing locked in aToom in. a hotel at fight and Chestnut streets . by a man who had engaged "her to take some dicta- tions, managed to attract the atten tion of servants in the hotel and caused the arrest'Of the man who is alleged to have attempted 'to detain her ; against her wishes. ?r ' fv .. "; The accuse. ftian Clifford R. Clfne, who gave an address in New yoik, was given a hearing in the Central police station late today and held len der . $1,000 bail for a further hearing on-the- charge of forcibly detaining tne young woman. t The girl, who is 22, testified hat she went to Cline's room Off tile 'ec ond floor of the hotel. He was in the room when she arrived and present ly told her to take a seat. ' She came there from the 6ffic of lypewritmg, concern in reponsej to inquiries oy enne tor a girl who could taice frencn and bpamsh dictation While she prepared to tafce dictation Chne locked the door. Miss Davis testified. "You are in here now;4' he is alleged to have said, "'And' you'll have to' stay." ' Miss Davis testified that she scream 'j i . . . . i eu anu attractea tne attention ol a, housekeeper who opened . the door A house detective placed the man un der arrest. Coh Goelhals BASEBALL YESTERDAY AFTER- NOON AT GHENT PARK " In . an exciting game of baseball at Ghent ' Parle yesterday . afternoon the teim of the New Bern High School defeated : the Norfolk Southern team The battery for the victorious team was r -m posed jol McSorley, Scales and- Is. Hardison and Bdnds did ing and , receiving '.for - the r o 1 'poy. Tr. and Mrs. W. R'. Sauls of Fort nwell are visiting in the city. Wholesale resignations among officers of the British army, who refuse to flght in the event of civil war In Ulster 'threatens to throw the army into an upheaval as great as that which threatens the cabinet. Col. J. E. B. Seely, secretary oj war (left), resigned when the government repudiated his guaranty that torce would not be used against the Ulster men. Lieut. Col. Arthur P. Bailey; (center), commander of the "Queen's Own Hussars," re signed rather than fight against Ulster. Field Marshal Sir John French (right) commanderof the army In Ulster, has resigned because of the repu diation of the guaranty. MANY CHANGES TO BE MADE AT CAMP OLBNN Adjutant General . Laurence W. Young Now On"Scene Mak ing Preparations For These Takes Cruise! With Captain C. D. Bradham. . - . . e " Adjutant General Laurence VV. Young, Captain W. D. Morrow and Major George Craig, son of Governor Craig, all of Raleigh, ' returned yes terday afternoom'.'from a cruise on the Naval Reserves ship,' the Elfrida, down as far as Sw.nquarter. In charge of the. Vessel was Captain C. , D. Bradham, t commander cf the Navalk Militia of North Carolina, and the visitors were 1 profuse in their praise of the excellent manner in Which Captain Bradham ' handled the vessel a.nd t. of his entertainment. ,sfiIpon ; arrival 1 at .VSqwanuarter the I party took a smalF'Jboaf and went ashore where . they were joined:,, by Col. . J. T. Kerr and Col. J. S. Mann who are in chagre of the State drainage work in that dis trict and : both of these gentlemen re turned to this citjr Vith the other mem bers of tine part. V 'Upon arrival in1 New Bern yesterday' Col. Kerr and Cot Mann proceeded on to Raleigh to attend tD important business matters ..while Adjutant Gen eral. Young,. Major- Craig and Captain Morrow ', went ddwn to Camp Glenn where 'they will spend a day or' two PRESIDENT C.H. HIX SPENDS DAY AT THE SEASHORE IN NEW BERN YESTERDAY AFTERNOON . C. H. Hix, President, and General Manager 1 of ' thev Norfolk,-''.Southern Railroad '. Company; . passed -through this city , yesterday' . afternoon in his private, car, No,. 100; enroute from Morehead City - to Raleigh, JHe was joined Tier by Coi,-E.Carl Duncan, who went 'to Raleigh with him. President Hix, has been' down to MOrehead City, for the . purpose ' of making an inspection of the road ly ing' between New Bern and that point and also to look at the bridge connec tion Beaufort j with". Morehead -City, While in conversation .with. a'Jou.-nal- reporter ',: yesterday afternoon,; , Presi dent Hicks -..'stated "l( that the Norfolk Southern was payings a great deal of attention to this section and that they were endeavoring" to. give- the people the besi service possible t . - .In speaking of the bridges along the road he, stated,, that; several, of them were pretty lightly constructed for the ivy trains which .the -company-, is planning to run and" it is probable that mapping out some changes to be mad preparatory to the encampment there this summer of the State troops. Among the changes to be mad at Camp Glenn will he the removs of the.old mess hall to a location, which is now located further down Hi railroad track and this will be used as a wagon house in which will be plac ed the .seventeen wae.ins allotted to each regiment. A new mess hall, which will be (ar ger and better equipped than the 'one previously used, is to be erected. In this each company will have a separate compartment and it is believed that this will prove more satisfactory in every way. The dates set for the 6n campment ol the diherent division of the- State troops have been announ ced and are. as follows: Third Regiment at Camp Glenn July 5 to 15; First Regiment, at Camp Glenn, July 20 to 30, the Third Regiment also goes ta Charlston S. C, in August. The Coast Artillery goes to Fort Caswell on Aug 5 and the Field Hospiti! Corps and the Ambulance Company No. 1. rocs to Asheville. The Calvary will go to Cha rleston. WHAT DR. WILEY THINKS OF ALCOHOL (Contributeed.) Dr. Harvey W. AViley, writing to the Sunday School Times, says that by consulting large numbers of acting practitioner it u ascertained that brandy and whiskey are rarely found at the present time in the prescrip tions of the most progressive physiT cians. Aside from the general prac tice of medicine and as to the general trend of scientific thought on this question, Dr. Wiley says: "In my op inion -the great weight of scientific evi dence and the force of scientific opin ion at "the present time lead to the" con clusion that alcohol in its various forms is 4 an unmitigated evil. Personally I -would be glad to see nation-wide and .-world-wide - prohibition. While I a'm not a teetotaler,' I am a probition ist,. I am firmly convinced that the evils produced by alcohol so far out weigh any , of its supposed advantages as. to" lead logically to but one conclur sloa,' namely, the absolute prohibition of Tthe Use' of alcohol for any but in dustrial purposes." these will be rebuilt. . ' ' ' ' " " ' A few days ago S. H. Leard, General Passenger Agent and E. D. Kyle, Traf fic Manager of the Norfolk Southern, spent' the day in New Bern 'looking over- the local office.- ' ' BY THESE FRAUDS X Alabama Concern Said Fake.' To Be A ADVERTISED EXTENSIVELY Norfolk Southern Conductor Was Among Those Who Were "Stung" Raleigh, April 2. Indictments have be?n returned by the Federal Grand Jury in a Birmingham Court against men said to be officials in a concern known as the Standard Home Company an organization whifh is alL-ged to do a fraudulent business. Advertise ments of the company have appeared in it least one North Carolina daily paper that leing the Washington Daily News, and at least one man in this State is said to have been swindled out of a comfortable sum as a result of the activities of this concern. Agents Arrested This man is Captain R. I.. Snyder a conductor on the Norfolk Southern Railroad, and he says that he can fur nish the names of scores of people who have shared a fat ? similiar to his. Agents of the Birmingham concern have been doing business in this State it is said, and Insurance Commissioner James R. Young states that two of these have been arrested. One man was a.rested at High Point and ano ther at Roanoke Rapids, and one of these was sentenced to the roads, while the other gave bond and disap peared. Did Big Business From information at hand it sterns that the majority of the people said to have been caught by the Standard Home Company live in and about Washington N C, it being supposed that they were inhYcnct-d ly an adver tisement which the Washington Daily News, in all good faith, published through its columns through a short period of time. Upon learning of the doubtful nature of the advertisement which they were carrying, the pub lication started an invensligation and found that the business was open to question. - The paper forewith re turned the check sent by the com pat JT to pay, for the advertisement, i ' How The Plan Works s Insurance Commissioner Young is authority for the statement that his sffice is frequently in receipt of letters lirom people .in various parts of the Sate asking about the Standard Hume Company, and that he is trying to prevent the organization from doing business in this State. He sys that the concern operates on i bais simil iar, in some respects, to a building and loan association. Alter a certain a mount of money has been paid in the ! organization, the shareholder is ele- gible to receive n loan of 81,000 from th.; company. By some hook or crook, the innocent shareholder is never al lowed to get this loan, but, unless he becomes aware of the scheme, is con stantly urged to continue his payments with the hope of securing s methinj; in the future. The indictment is brought by the Federal grand jury ift the Alabama courts is lor using the mails to de- friud," and fo- "running i lottery." The Searchlight, a paper published in ' Birmingham, is, according to the Was hington Daily News, responsible for the turning on of the light in the case, and that pubjication carries a lengthy articel on the methods employed by the concern in transacting business. HASKETT GARNER, WEDDING, Newport April 1 ' , ?t ?. At the home of the brides . sister, ' Mrs. J. C. Garner, on Wednesday 'hf tenoon, Miss Ruth Garner, of Mia ma Fla., forire.ly of this town-) tc- I came the bride of Mr. Ivah Winfield Haskett. Rev.. Fulcher,' pastor M.rE. x Church South of this place, officiating, v. Only the close friends and relative v- of the couple attended. Miss Garner is the charming daughter of Mr. and" Mrs.' Alexander .Garner, and Mr. Jas kett is-the son of Mr.- and Mrs. Win- v field Haskett of this place. He is a young business matt . who has num- erous. .friends throughout this county - who wish him well... .-j . ; ' rGuy rope.of Pine Grove was bust tsess visitor to the city yesterday.