J Y J (fc' ? Y T " - " . . . " " " ' - - .2fs- Y y " " -Y ; . :. :'V' - ..T' ; r f.- ..ji .;,, ' '.j,,, , i 1 '. THE POLK COUNTY NEWS IS READ IN MORE POLKOUNTYiHOlIES-EVERY .WEEK THAN ANY OTHER WEEKLY NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED. VOL. XIX. NO. 42. TRYON, POLK C OUNT Y,: N. C , FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1914, ESTABLISHED MAY, 1&4. r - V- --.- --..4 t. . .... . ..- . . , -wr-.- v. - r " II 500 BANKS ENTER RESERVE SYSTEM TITUTIONS THAT HAVE NOT COME IN NEW SYSTEM ARE SMALL. 3IN FIGURING RESOURCES s Than Fifty National Banks Failed to Respond Some State . Banks. Washington. The new federal re ve sj'stem will begin business with nembership of at least seven thou id five hundred banks. vThis was )arent when, the close , of the t day on w hich national banks could nify their intention of accepting the ms of the currency law, less than :y of the 7,493 national banks of country had failed to respond fa rably. More than' enough state In tutions had applied for membership bring the total to 7,500. -Official count of the banks and tab ation of their resources and liabil es will begin at the treasury depart ent - '. ; ' Most of the institutions that have )t come into the . new system are mparatively small," and' it is esti ated that 97 per cent, of all the capi- and resources in the present na onal bank system is represented : by lose Whose applications are in; ILLA'S STORY OF KILLING ebe! Leader Says Englishman Tried to Take His Life. Chihuahua, Mexico. General Villa's Itory of the killing of William S. Ben- on, told to reporters liere, differs but ttle from the official statement given iut at Juarez. The Juarez statement declared that hen Benton reached for his hip pock it Villa 'knocked nlni nadwh :with a jlow rof the fist Villa said that when Benton made this move he poked his )wn pistol into Ben tons stomach and ien turned him over to " the guards. Villa insisted that Benton came to take his life, and referred to Benton's mission concerning the welfare of his ranch as a pretext to gain admittance. According to Villa, Benton! after the verdict of the courtmartial,, confessed lib guilt and declined to ask for mer- y. He merely requested that his prop erty be turned over to his widow. Villa contradicted his official report to the American consul at Juarez that Gustav Bauch, a German-American, accused of being a spy, had been brought' to Chihuahua. Villa said he knew nothing of him. The rebel general marked another milestone in his political and military progress from the rustic outlaw of three years ago to the dictatorship of northern Mexico, jwhen . he received the homage of his 'officers and promi nent citizens at the gubernatorial pal ace. College Course for Winners. Washington. Substitution, of a year's course in practical training at some agricultural qollege instead of annual' trips to Washington for the young prize winners of the corn, can ning, poultry and other agricultural clubs, is the recommendation of the de partment of agriculture. :In the event the young champion's academic train ing would not enable him to enter the. state agricultural college, the rdepart- ment suggests elementary courses n instructions, teaching Jess advanced instruction work- Officials of .the -de partment express " belief that such courses would be valuable. Ex-Senator Teller Dead. Denver, Colo. Henry Moore Teller, secretary of the interior "in President .Arthur's cabinet, and for more than thirty years United States v senator from Colorado, died here at the home of his daughter, Mrs. G. E. Tyler. Sen ator Teller was' 84 years old; had been ill two years during , which he had many sinking spells, but from which he rallied. In the late seventies, Sen ator Teller became a person of wide repute because of his activities in the United States senate. His most ar dent work was his opposition to the standardization of gold in the mone tary system of the nation. Mississippi Race Riot. Robinsville,, Miss. There were no Indications here of further -trouble be tween' whites and negroes after the race riot, in which Morris Love,' white, and two negroes were killed. White en, said to have been incensed lay noise a score or more negroes tnade, formed a posse to arrest them. The negroes, it was claimed began shoot lns and Love fell dead. In the ex change of shots two negroes were kill-(1- The white men retreated when their ammunition was exhausted and tte negroes fled. v CONGRESSMAN MAN AHAN 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. , BORDER PEOPLE AROUSED MEETING IN EL PASO CHARGES GOVERNMENT IS CONCEAL ING THE FACTS.. Resolutions Declare Mexicans Have , Killed Americans Because They . Were Americans. Washington. A slumbering Mexi can situation was brought quickly to a point ofilntease international-inters 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-Rico, British am bassador, conferred with Secretary Bryan about it; President Wilson and his 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. " -, , 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 f6od he was not in the cell where he had been held in communicado ' 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, 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 in 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- owr whlr.h the Wilson administration has prepared to the question f wheth er the federal government of the states shall be supreme in the matter of wa ter rights of navigable rivers. 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 commimsslons of the various states would be expected to reeulate 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 nublic utility Jaws so tnat an incen tive ' for careful supervision through new laws would be provided in states having inadequate laws. , - - - i Robbers Get $40,000. V' Birmingham, Ala. Queen and Cres cent passenger train No, 1, New. York to New Orleans, running, forty minutes late, about twelve miles norm or uir miTiffham. was held up by three mask ed robbers, who secured four sacks of registered mail, said to nave conuneu r $40,000. At Attalla' three men boarded the engine and : one v and a half miles south of Attalla held up the nine crew at the point oi revolvers Tin w then ran the train to within five miles' Irondalc, where they robbed it. GOLD WAVE OVER THE UNITED STATES STORM SWEEPS' ACROSS CONTI NENT, CAUSING MUCH DAM AGE AND SUFFERING. ; ' NUMBER OF STATES SUFFER Rain in South and a Blizzard for the Valleys - of Ohio and " " ' Mississippi. Washington. A violent . storin swept across the continent from Col orado, causing rain" in 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 30-degree drop in, temperature. Sioux City, Iowa. Northwest Iowa, eastern South Dakota and northeast ern Nebraska are in the grip of . a stprm. In Sioux City and vicinity the heaviest snow of the, season fell, ham pering streets and' railroad traffic. Re ports from South Dakota indicate a 6-inch fall.. ChicaSo.-A 36-mile an hour wind piled snow in great drifts delayed traf fic in IllInols Several inches of snow fell. , The thermometer ranged from 22 to 16 degrees above zero. Frank Kachelhoffer, 75 . years old, and his wife, aged 70, were- found dead by neighbors in a 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 J snow swept over western Missouri and most , of Kansas. ; Telegraph and tele phone service was badly demoralized, I few wires working out of Kansas City, j The wire situation was; worse to west I and north and but meager reports are J coming in as to the extent of the storm. : i ' - ?: v s.:.. v: ':V a :l.cMx:pmDerQnaliuidl-learped . that Los Angeles Cal. So far as rail-1 road communication was concerned, 1 Los Angeles and southern California j remained cut off from the world as aj' rsult of the record-breaking, stornr of rain and wind, which swept this re- gion for three days. Reports from the j six counties most affected did notrma teriaiy change the estimate of the to- tal damage amounting to about four and a half million dollars. The great- j est anxiety concerns the situation of j the three hundred passengers maroon- ed-aboard the California -limited and tha Phoenix express of the Santa Fe train. : I DAM AG E 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 nearly every lire- man la the city battle with one of the most dangerous downtown fires in years, which , almost completely wrecked the McKenzie . building at James and .feachtree streets, . a city landmark. Damage is estimated at - being be tween one hundred thousand and one hundred and fifty thousand dollars. " Five firemen were Injured. A numr ber were suffocated' by smoke and fumes. One ladderman, E. A. Davis, of engine house, No. 1, fell from the top of a 32-foot . ladder, in front of the Johhson-Gewinner , flrm,ywhen it slip- ped and crashed to the sidewalk v He was carried In a semi-conscious condl- tion to the Ansley hotel, where he re- ceived medical attention v : Y The other injured firemen were hurt by flying glass and falling .timbers. None of them were wounded seriously, They were Hoseman Bill Gilbert of headquarters; -James Dooley, engine house No.2; J. G. Medlin,. an engineer, engine house No. 4, and Bill Cody of headquarters. Y v; . The firms that suffered from the flames were the " Johnson-Gewinner company, the Stoddard company, the Stephen A, Ryan real estate office, the Pickard J)eans Drug company, the John Chalman Tailoring . shop, the Georgia Realty and Trust company, the Woodmen of the World lodge, the Jbhn D.: Babbage real .'estate offices and the W. R. Jeter contracting, con- cern. Father of Nation Honored. Washington. President Wilson was ine central figure at a mass meeting, In a downtown theater here under the auspices' of -the Sons of the Revolu- tion " In"' commemoration of Washing- ton's- birthday. Joseph W. Folk, solic- Itor of the state department. In &n address, paid tribute to the founder ofjtilizer for interstate commerce. t See the T republic as a man "imperfect, enough , to be Intensely ; human and near enougn periept to oe an mspira- tion to all1 who honor justice and wor - ship liberty." 'President -Wilson did not speak. MISS ELEANOR CONNOLLY w -1 Miss Connolly, daughter f Con- preKsman and Mrs. Maurice Connolly of Dubuque, la., ,ls one of the belies or Washington society this season. MS. IS M08I PROSPEROUS PANIZATION COMMITTEE HAS 1 FOUND PROSPERITY ALL OVER COUNTRY. Federal Reserve Bank Organizers Jubi- lant About Business Conditions lp Disclosed on, the Trip. Washington. The federal reserve bank organization1, 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- mentr said the t committee - found; the bankers and business men are confl dent4 of the success of the" banking system. ' . In a supplemental statement, Sec- retaryr McAdoo declared he, hoped the new system would be established in time' to take care of crop-moving con tlngencies .next year, Y 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 frem the 4th of January to the present time in hearing the views of business men and bankers on the problems of dividing ?! JJl uui uiuio wau iwckc wsuivib auu ui 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 andj 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 vbest information and opinions ani always in a spirit of great fair- nesg LAST TRIBUTE PAID BACON Funeral Services Conducted at Christ - . 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. h Y Y Y 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 tc J view the body.' It was 'a tribute such as Macon never pid tp any other man. ' The body lay in state at the city hall until"10r45 o'clock Thursday, when it was taken to ; Christ 7 Episcopal church, where the funeral, services were conducted at eleven o'clock by Rev. John H. Bunting, the rector. Food Fish Opposed for" Fertilizer. Washington. State : fisheries offl I cials, Eastern fish dealers and repre- sentatives of fish and game organiza-J tions were before the house interi state commerce committee to . discuss, the Linthicum bill to prohibit the use, 0f food fish in the manufacture of fern retary Redfield of - the department of; commerce called tack to his office be- fore he : could testily teiepnonea nis 1 approval of the measureA Most of the I witnesses favored the passage of the bi"- CHARLES BECKER S GASE IS REVERSED SUPREME COURT GIVES ' FORMER NEW YORK POLICEMAN A - NEW TRIAL." JUSTICE GOFF IS CRITICIZED Accused of, Prejudice Cases Against Gunman Stands-Date of. Execution of Gunman Will Soon Be . Fixed by The - Court. ;- vy,Y'-" '2Y Albany, N.IY. The conviction of Charles Becker, a former New York police lieutenant, of the murder. ; of Herman Rosenthal, "was reversed and the convictions of the four gummen for the .same crime was affirmed by the court of appeals. V Justice Goff , the court held, erred in many of his rulings in Becker's trial, and appeared to be prejudicial In his attitude toward the defendant. The reversal was based solely On these grounds. No attempt , was made by the court to say" whether Becker was sufficient to warrant his convic tion. It was pointed out, however, that the testimony against him was given by witnesses of . low class,' and as much' of it was .open to doubt, he therefore, was entitled to a fairer trial than he received. All of the seven members of the court, except Judge Werner, who act ed as presiding judge when the appeal was argued, concurred in the prevail ing Becker opinion, which , was written by Judge Hiscock. . In a dissentirfg opinion Judge t Werner said that the main contentions of the state had been amply proven to warrant conviction The much-moored question as to the status of San Schepps, who, the jury in the Becker case decided was notn an accomplice to the crime ..jaiHl toSrely samMelre minds of some of the court as to the property of. excluding Schepps as an accomplice. The decision in the case of the four gunmen, "Gyp the Blood," "Whit ey Lewis' "Dago Frank" and 'Lefty Louie" was unanimous. t They had averred that the evi dence against Jiem was insufficient to warrant , conviction and also that the court had erred in handling their cases, but these contentions were held to be groundless. The date for the execution- of th Lgunmen soon will be fixed by the court. . . - " . ; Chicago Women Vote. ' Chicago. Thousands Of Chicago women had their first real experience, with the ballot box and took part in the actual nomination of candidates for the city council. In wards In which women candidates were running in op position to men for places in the city council, the women candidates toufed the wards and hustled for votes in ap proved political fashion. A snow storm early in the day de layed5 many voters and a '' movement fostered by many suffrage leaders, who believed ' that women should not formally ally thmeslves with any spe cific party, kept hundreds from voting at the primaries. Y ' Burned in Store. Barber's . Junction. The charred body of Preston Lyerly, a clerk, and the testimony of citizens who say that they saw the safe door open and a lamp , turned low and burning feebly on.the flor near the safe 'when, they were atracted to H. T. Smithdeal's store at this place by a pistol shot at So clock, go, to indicate that a safe was , cracked and ' murder probably committed 'before the guilty person or persons fired the store and, fled with tre spoils. . .. Suspends Considering Freight Rate. Washington. An increases ,of two cents a hundred pounds in the freight rate on cement from Indiana points to, Memphis, ,Tenn., New Orleans, and other destinations in the South, pro posed by the Southern and ; South western Railroads was suspended by the Interstate Commerce Commission until June 26. An" inquiry Into the advance already has been instituted. Two Steamers in Plight. .Norfolk Va. -With a severe snow and wind storm raging on the coast the British steamship Sachem, ashore near Hog Island, north of Cane Char- les, and the, Ruyersdale, standed near Little Island,, south of Cape Henry, were In more danger than at any time since they struck recently, when It struck, one on Saturday and the other on Sunday. The wind at the Virginia Capes was blowing between ' 35 and 40 miles an hour from the northeast and, the seas were '( running high - and the" weather cold. eUSIHESSlOGALS ARBUTUS SAniTARIOr.1 Tryon, Polk County,- North Carolina V FOR PULMONARY TROUBLES Booklet mailed free upon request John P. Lockhari & Co. CONTRACTORS and BUILDERS New Work or .Repairs Phone No. 74. ; .: Tryon, N. C. John G. Monroe PAINTING,. PAPER HANGING, DECORATING! A SPECIALTY. Estimates by Request. Tryon North Carolina Finger Lumber Co. Dealers" In - Building Material Everything necessary to build a home Phone 1. Landrum, S. C. Swann's Livery At Fisher's Barn. tryon, North Carolina1 ' Saddle, and Driving Horses. ' C Hacks" meet all trains. Baggage and Express looked after with Special Care ' Phones Stable, 106; Residence, 36B D , J. E. IIAUTHORIIE DENTIST ; of Asheville, North Carolina will be at his office over Orr's . Store, LTryjsn, -Friday and- Saturday of ach r week All workrguaranteed. ' J. R. RICH COMPANY 21 N. Main St. Phone '364 ASHEVILLE, N. G; . Plumbing Hoofing Tinning We have the oldest plumbing and heating house in the State, and are prepared to give prompt,' satisfactory service. Call on us when in need of anything in our line. We give free es timates on new or old work.1 "The Famous Ford Now that good road buildlng-ls go ing on all over the county, every up-to-date farmer and business - man' needs an automobile. .. The Ford car can go anywhere that any other, car can go and. a good many places that the other cars cannot go. They cost about half as much to keep as a horse and buggy. They get you around about three times as fast, and do not get tired or too hot to travel. They cost less .to buy,: cost less to keep, and cost less to run vthan any other good. car on the market. : 600.00 for Touring Car.1. $550.00 for the Roadster . . t , DR. E. M. SALLEY " V Y' . . -Saluda, N. C. -Agent for -Polk County: FOR SALE PINE HILL COTTAGES iA choice hotel property, with modern ; conveniences. " - Y f,Teh:t acres of land, splendid view. . No 'fetter location for a tourist hos- 1 elry in this vicinity. - , Y JJ Dr .Sal ley's Property. ' One of the .very few nice homes with , choice-location that' can be bought In the heart of Tryon; A quiet' retired v situation, and yet la 5 minutes' walk of the postofflce. Very reasonable ' terms can be - had on both7 of thes properties. Apply to , DR. E. M. S ALLEY, Saluda, N. C. RUSTIC TABLES ROCKERS and SETTEES Hand-made in the mountains. . Strong, durable' and - cheap. Price from $2.00 each, up. Serviceable souveniers from the "Land of the Sky.",? ; ' - - Mid woocl Rustic Worfest' See them in News office, Tryon, N. Cv