" ' , ' ' ' ' ... . - "' : " ' " ' ' '' AT ' I. State Library:. X ' Wonderful Polk County, "In The Land of The .Sky, Of fers U no sua I Opportunities for Home Seek era. Mountain Spring Water. Magnificent v. Scenery. VOL. XXI NO. 20. TRYON, POLK COUNTY, N. C. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1915; ESTABLISHED MAY, 18S4f E m factious REC0GNITION OF A MEXICAN GOVERNMENT IS NEXT STEP SAY DIPLOMATS. CHANCES FAVOR CARRANZA j Any Provisional President With Noc-! essary Material and Moral Capa city to Maintain Civil Laws. Xew York. Secretary Lansing, rep resenting the United States Govern ment, and the diplomatic represen tatives of Brazil, Chile, Argentine, Bolivia! Uruguay and Guatemala, re eved at their meeting here that the time had come for the extension of formal recognition to a government in Mexico. ., v In three weeks another meeting ot the conference will be held In Wash ington, at which a decision is to be reached as to the elements upon which the recognition should be con ferred. A formal statement issued by the conference declared that inas much as the factions themselves had failed to come to an agreement, rec ognition would be accorded to the de facta authorities possessing the "ma terial and moral capacity necessary to protect the lives and property of Nationals and foreigners." Each of the several governments, it was an nounced, would itself- "judge such capacity, and recognition will likewise be extended by each government sepa rately at such time as it. may deem proper." ' ' "' Unless the military situation in lleiico takes a decided turn within lie next three weeks in' favor of General Villa who has concentrated to forces for battle with General Ob M, at Torreon, 'most of the .jCon were -of the -ijpinlaa -that lb Cwraaa government would -logically wiSSd to recognition. -'. '-. Th several governments will en deavor to learn, however, not only flat territory each, faction controls to what promise of stability the fac- tioas live that aspire to recognition To determine exactly what is the status of the different factions the wveral governments will examine the iitoation each m its own way. The United States will seek to form ats Judgment through log and exhaustive reports from its consuls supplemented Ja Personal conferences in Washing ton between Secretary Lansing and representatives of all groups and ele ments. UNDERWRITE BIG LOAN. syndicate Will Receive Commission Also Securities. N'ew York. The proposed mammoth crdit loan to Great Britain . and France it was .reported is to be under Written by a large syndicate of Amerl- financiers and bankers' who are to receive a commission for their ser ies. The securities offered, it was fctt. will be British and French five r cent government Donds, and the 5nce to the investor Is to be par The amount of the loan it was .'re Prted is as yet undetermined but be between $600,000,000 and $800,- ooo.ooo. . " - The underwriting syndicate, ltwa8 ported, will be the largest of its lilid ever pstnhH,f1 In the: United States and probably will be open to learly all national banks, trust com bes and state banks that may care 10 Participate. " - ' El5mination . of the reported differ nce in opinion between American fanciers and members of the Anglo- rench Commission over the manner " Placing the loan apparently has re- Uted in a victory for the American Meiers. Previous reports were to effect that the commission's views ,6re that the loan should be placed 'subscription and that there should ao underwriting syndicate. Confederate Naval Monument . Washington. A Confederate naval 171 n... -ument to cost not more .than -o ooo is proposed in the annual re- n Of thft VJfVoKMT-w MoHr.no! M!H. tary Pa ik Commission Just submitted lQe Secretary of War y Decisive Battle. Near Vilna. ondon.The Germans bav nfwA K vnna z .rzr.r-:z::- MUST REGQGNIZ ovem ' Bweeyiue explosion ana , me iaci uiv- ed lnnt t0 the north' nae succeed- well forward. , Almost if not entirely surround- Although dispatches from London JrtnDOiUon of the US8ian army and Queenstown at the time started twen v.? the ra-ay triangle be- that the Hesperian had ben torpedoed, HussL Jna LIda and Vileika. The tae explosion occurred when the ves ust fi es in this district either sei was about a hundred miles out retire itheIr way out eastward or side of the zone in which German fft a southwesterlv direction. ...wo.inAi .nsnaiiv onerate. and , so inf ai. .. . . ' . their h rauway left entirely in only . .. ... . I Van. 7 , 13 tftat yfalch runs from which runs from hanitA iA Dsiiovirt. I thchi ' ttaa wwce-to-Baraao- MRS. G. H. MATHIS 1 ; jo:-:. x-: x- -: : : :- s Mrs. G. H. Mathls Is a wealthy planter of Gadsden, Ala., who is de voting most of her time to educating southern farmers in the matter of di versification of crops. In this she acts as the field agent of the Alabama Bankers' association. ENGLAND GETS CARGOES PRIZE COURT DECIDES AGAINST AMERICAN OWNERS OF SI EZ ' ED PRODUCTS. American Owners Will Carry Case to Navy Council and Expect to Win They Say. London. Virtually all of. the Ameri can meat aboard the seized Norwegian steamers Kim, Alfred Nobel, Bjernst jorne Bjornsen and Pridland was con demned by the British prize court and declared forfeited to the Crown. The cargoes were valued at about $15,000,- 000. A small part was released to claimants. The case has been pending for sev eral months. The steamships were seized last November, and efforts ' by the American owners to obtain an errly trail failed. The hearing began in June and closed last month. :. The court said it was plain these ships were carrying towards Copen hagen, when seized, more than 13 times the amount of goods which under normal circumstances would huve ben taken to that port. The fact that gave practical and over whelming assurance that the goods were intended!" to and their way to Germany. One circumstance throw ing light on-the real destination of the goods, the court said, was thai the exportation of lard by ono Am erican company alone to Copenhager in three weeks after the outbreak of the war was 20 times more than in periods of peace. The decision r roused intense In terest among all the representatives of American packing firms here as well as those immediately involved, as no American m it products have been shipped to European neutrals since last May. and the unfavorable result of the packers' case is likely to cause further stoppage of this trade. , . HESPERIAN NOTE RECEIVED. State Department -Contemplates No Action at Present Time. Washington. Germany's note In forming the United tSates that there is no reason to believe the liner Hes perian was sunk by a submarine has reached the state department. - Secretary Lansing said no action In the case ' was contemplated at this time. There is no evidence before the department to prove whether the liner was attacked or struck by a mine. . ' The German note declares all. re ports received from submarine com manders indicate that there was no submarine in the vicinity when the explosion which wrecxea - me xxe rerian occurred,' and expresses be lief that the vessel was blown up by i f the nature of the a m,ue' 1 . rt,:r: w. BUUiuauuv. . . . , - II l J far aa is known here noDoay ou uum naB claimed to baye seen a submarine . ortoroeflo. SHIPS TO VISIT CHARLESTON Secretary Daniels Promises Great At traction For the Southern Com mercial Congress. Washington. Secretary . Josephus Daniels promised a - delegation . Of Charleston business ; men that he would have a division of the Atlantic fleet stop at Charleston during the annual, convention . of the Southern Commercial congress which meets at Charleston December 13 to IS. - The delegation was headed by Sen ator Smith. Other : members of the party were: Mayor John P. Grace, Julius D. Koster, P. H. Gadsden, D. u. Sinkler, B. F. McLeod and R. G. Khett, all of Charleston. i The delegation also paid a visit to Secretary McAdoo and invited him to the congress. ;r. Secretary Daniels was the guest of honor at a luncheon given the dele gation at' the University club by the Commercial congress.. . Columbia Car Strike Ends. Columbia After one week's idle ness - the full service of Columbia's street cars was started up again, the strike of the employees having ended when carmen and officials reached a complete and satisfactory agreement. The agreement closes the second strike on the street railway system since its organization. Leaders of both sides say that the agreement would prevent trikes in the future, as diffi culties will be submitted to arbitra tion. ' ' ' The dismissal of J. W. Brunswick and C. H. McKlssick, conductors, sev eral days ago precipitated the strike. The Union contended that evidence furnished by inspectors was not suffi cient to cause the discharge of the board of directors, and the action of the general manager in discharging the men was there sustained, although the directors reinstated two men who had been suspended because of - dif ferences with an inspector. Honor Kings Mountain Hero. . vvGaffney, The Daughters of the Rev olutiorrdf Gaff ney have for some timt been thinking of erecting a monument (o the memory of Col. James Williams, who commanded the South Carolina troops at the battle of King's Moun tain, and to this end the regent of the chapter, Mrs. M. P. Pierson, has ap pointed a committee to confer with the city authorities and select a site ior the monument. Col. Williams was mortally wounded at the battle ol King's Mountain and died on a plan tation in the Buffalo section of'Chero kee county. Death Claims Coker President. Hartsville. The Rev. Howard Le Jones, D. D., president of Coker col lege, died in a hospital at Florence The well known educator had been ir ill health for several months and had sought rest and treatment away frotr home, hoping to recover before the beginning of the new college sessior on September 23. Following & de cline a few days ago he was taker to a hospital in Florence, but his frai! constitution could not respond. Engineer Baer Hurt. Abbeville. Engineer C. D. Baer oi the Seaboard was seriously Injured recently at Berkeley, Ga., being struct on the head by a mail crane. Mr Baer was carried to the Athens hos pital. He has been with the Seaboard for a number of years, making Abbe ville his home for the past 10 years. Dates For Chester Fair.1 Chester. The Chester County Fail association has selected October 20 21 and 22 as the dates for the annua county fair, and the indications al ready point to the. biggest and bes1 In the history of the county. WEATHER FORECAST. South Atlantic and Bast States Generally fair .weather Gul and moderate temperatures throughou1 the week MARKET REPORT. Prices paid for cotton, cotton seed corn, wheat, oats, peas, etc., on the different markets in South Carolina during the past week: Abbeville Cotton, 10Hc;- corn, $1 bu; wheat, $1.25 bu; oats. Oc bu;.rye, bu; butter, 25c lb; effgs, 20c doz. I1.5G AUenaaie cotton, xoc; corn, sac bu; oats, 80c bu; rye, $1.25 bu; peas, $1.25 bu; butter, ?oc ; eggs, zoc Belton Cotton. 10c:-. corn,, SI bu; wheat "l.25 bu; oats, 65c bu; rye, $1.40 bu; peas, 1.25 bu; butter, 25c lb; eggs, 20c dos. Bamberg- corn, i du; wneat, i.zu du; oats, 65cvbu;. butter, z&c id; eggrs, zoc dos. - - - - Camden Cotton, 8c. Clinton Butter, 30c lb; i eggs, , 30c dos. Charleston Cotton, 10c; corn, 1.10 bu; wheat. $1.10 bu; oats, 46c bu; rye, $1.25 bu; butter, 20c lb; eggs, 21c doz. Cheraw Cotton, 9c. ConwayButter, 35c lb; eggs, ISc dos. Chester Cotton. 10Uc. - , . hujats, t5c bu; rje, M bu. f.,v..:.'' COTTON PROBLEM IS UP TO BANKERS PRESIDENT WILSON PLACES SIT- UATIONU SQUARELY UP TO 'SOUTHERN BANKERS. TUMULTY ANSWERS LETTER McLaurin Charges That Banks Are Making Financing of the Crop as Difficult as Possible. Columbia "The president feels that the whole .maintenance of the' cotton situation depends directly and imme diately upon the southern bankers and they have themselves to blame" If it i-O'es not. come out satisfactorily," says J:; P. Tumulty, secretary, to President Wilson, in a' letter to John L. Mc Laurin, state warehouse commission- - -The president." says the letter, ?has received your letter of Septem ber 15 and has been greatly interested in reading it. He asks me to suggest that you emphasize the letter that he wrote to Mr. Harding, and which Mr Harding read in his speech at Binning ham, Ala." - v .: v':: ' ' ' - - -; A On , September IS Mr. McLaurin tent the following letter in part to president. Wilson: "You were so generous in the letter read ' by Mr, Harding in his Birming nam speecn tnat i ieei tnat you Should be promptly advised of a sit uation now: pending. 1 "The quick advance in cotton Is due primarily more to that letter and the statements, of Messrs. McAdoo and Harding than to the admitted short Crop. This will later sustain prices. It there is no combination of moneyed Interests to force cotton "on the , mar ket. ' : "Last spring the New York banka fteeiy loaned T cents er pound when the market price was .much lower than now. . The same banks are refusing to loan over 6 cents. This is a very short crop, and at 10 cents a pound will not bring what the last crop did to the producers. "The banks of the south are, as a rule, opposed to lowering the interest rate. They are afraid since your let ter to come out openly and are work ing through the New York banks. "You will observe that the basis ol the trouble is with the Southern, not the New York, banks. I do not wish 10 stir strife and incite hatred among out people by letting it be known what some of our large banks1 are doing. I am to address a mass meeting oi the farmers of Georgia on the 21st in Atlanta, where this matter will be un- aer aiscussion ana . aesire to be as conservative as possible. v "To some extendi have the ear ol the cotton planters and feel the re- sponsinnity. ii you wm advise me, marking your letter,, 'personal,' promise not to use what you say ex cept for my personal guidance. . . , While we made this crop at less cost than the 1914 crop, it is so short that at 12 cents we will barely break even. "It is a shortsighted policy, because this crop will be about 5,500,000 bales under 1914, and if it does, not show a profit to the producers, the 1916 crop will be curtailed to where manu facturers will not have the raw ma terial to supply their spindles. You can see the far-reaching effect on finances as well as labor. Sell Cotton Mill Again. ;. Spartanburg. The Enoree Manufac turing company will be offered for sale again on October 4, according to offi cial notice published here. The prop erty was bought two months ago at public sale by J. I; Westervelt and Lewis W. Parker of Greenville for 200,001.' The notice says the prop erty is being sold "at the risk of for mer defaulting purchasers." It was announced recently that Mr. Wester velt would relinquish his interest in the property to . E. Graham of Green ville and onlyfa few days ago a charter was issued., to the Melville Manufac turing company which, it was stated would take over the Enoree property It is said that those parties may yet Lexington Plans Big Fair. ' . Lexington. "We expect to have the largest' and best- county fair in the history of the county," said Heber R Dreher of Selwood, president of the Lexington County Fair association who was In Lexington for a short while a few days ago. "With cotton selling around 10 cents, which will enable the farmers or most of them to pay up, their obligations and have a little spare change left there should be large attendance. The exhibits, I am sure, .will be up to . the usual high fta&dara for Lexington. - . , v REAR ADMIRAL WINSLOV ILL- . Rear Admiral C. M. Winslow. has been transferred from the Naval War college at Newport to .the: command of the Pacific fleeC FEW BATTLES ON BORDER F1GHTING ACROSS RIO GRANDE BETWEEN MEXTCAN AND U. S. TROOPERS. Americans Suffer No Casualties.--Re- ported That Seventeen Mexican. r . were nil. Brownsville, Tex. American cav- alrymen had two fights with Mexicans were aD0Ut and there was not Jhd -across the Rio Grande, one here and 8Ughtest suggestion of secrecy. Of one near ionna aooui ou mues up ui river. In both clashes theAmerican soldiers were fired-upon and returned uie nre wunoui memseiTe, "uutriuj anuatje Then American cavalrymen In the Donna fight, wfcich fasted two hours using me or my passport as a shield and a half, reported they were fired for the transmission of-any Improper upon by about 200 Mexicans and be- letters. , lieved that they had hit 17 Mexicans. Twenty American cavalrymen fought on the outskirts of Brownsville for half an hour with Mexicans on tne op- posite bank of the river. After the fight one Carranza soldier was taken to Matamoros, probably fatally wounded, but Carranza officers denied emphatically that any of their men joined in the battle. - Col. A. P. BlocKsom, American commander at Fort Brown here, re- ported to Major General Funston at San Antonio that the Mexicans started the firing near Brownsville. Immediately after the battle a small mob formed in Matamoros, about the headquarters of Gen, E. P. Nafarrete, Carranza commander, shouting: "Give us guns." They had heard the rifle shots and were angered by reports that their people had been fired upon. General Nafarrete refused their demands. He sent his chief of staff, Col. P. A. Chapa, to investigate and Colonel took United States Consul Jesse H. Johnson with him to the Mexican side of the battleground. Mr. Johnson found some evidence to . support the Mexican sold ers claim that they .were not -implicated in the fight, but after coming to Brownsville to learn the American . version, Mr. Johnson said he was convinced ; that Colonel Chapa had not yet been put in possession of all the facts. The trouble at Brownsville began WJ t m' J r t ,j..f oi crownayiue, . reyoiLcu w vuwuci Blocksom that for two or three days snipers on tne Mexican side had been shooting into his ranch on the river front FINDS LAND HE, SOUGHT. Stefansson, Thought Possibly to Have Been Lost, Heard From. Nome, Alaska, Villijalmur Stefans son, cMef of the. Canadian Govern- ment Artie exulorine and surveying expedition that left Victoria, B. C, in June, 1913, and who set out afoot over the ice with two companies from the shores of northeastern Alaska in March, 1914, to seek new land in un- chartered seas, did not go to his death, as the world had begun to fear, but found the new land and the only hard ships endured were those of shortl rations. r The power schooner Ruby arrived from Herschel Island with dispatches from Stefansson to the Canadian Gov- ernment in which he omits reference to the perils of the. journey on the ice and' gives space to the scientific re- suits achieved. ' v Stefansson is wintering at Banks Land, where he has a large power schooner an da small one. He plans and making suggestions for, improve to explore the new territory during ments. tFor luncheon Mr. Rockefeller the winter and nexjT summer stopped, at the mlnera1 boaxdlm houtt i ... J. F.J. ARGH BALD SE SAYS HE DID NOT CONTRIVE TO ; BREAK NEUTRALITY LAWS OF COUNTRY. SEES LAWYER AS FIRST STEP The Letter Was Given Him at the Pier. Knew Nothing' of Its Con i tents. Matter of Friendship. - . New York.r-James F. J. Archibald, the American correspondent, who car ried a message from Dr. Constantin T. Ihimba, AustroHungarian Ambassa dor at Washington, addressed to Baron von Burian, Austrian Foreign Minister, which led to a request from the Unit ed States for the Ambassador's recall, issued a statement here. In which he denied that he had connived in any way to break the neutrality laws of the United States or was an Official dispatch-bearer. The request for Doctor Dumba's re call was made after the Ambassador's letter was seized by British authori- ties when Archibald was intercepted . at Falmouth. ,r - On his return here, . aboard the steamship Rotterdam, Archibald con sulted his lawyer, acquainted him self, as he explained, "with what had . Meen said in this cauntry," and thea f totejnjn "Doctor Dumba's letter," said Ar- chibald. "was eiven to me most onen- lv at the steamer's srane nlank iuat before ..ninir: Hundreds of nersons. its contents, I had absolutely no knoedge. r supposed of course that, lt Blmpiy refered to my work. I feel . DENES CR th t the verv ooen manner in. which : Doctor Dumba had bo x intention of "I did not consciously break either the spirit or the letter of my' passport or 0f any iaw, but merely did what every traveler crossing the ocean does, Dy carrying notes or small packages ; I as an accommodation to friends, just' j aa t did when I returned from Ger- many last year, when I carried several letters and official dispatches to our state department for Ambassador Gerard and packages for Mrs.T Gerard and others. Of course, in doing this for Ambassador and Mrs. Gerard I did it simply at a matter of friendship, precisely as I carried the letters In this case' : VILLA PROMISES PROTECTION. Considerable Fighting is Reported Around Mexico City. - . Wnshinertmi- frAnftrnl Villa nnthAr. ,zed n,g Washington agent Enrlaue C. Llorente to issue a statement, promts- in ir nrntontinn tn Americana ond nthar foreigners in Mexican territory con troned by hinu There have been r ,ports foreigners would suffer as a result of the outcome of the Pan-Amer- 7-. -nnf-rbnn. t Kow.Vnrv fnrA..a. ing recognition of Carranza and the recent rene1red warning, Americans to leave the fl hti zone8 of northern, jjexico J ' . . ..m - that the evacatlon of Torreon by the ' Villa forces ': completed eSpL 19. & atsto danartmanf ototamant sum. marizing dispatches said: vm. Momm- -ti am,,nd th nit- of Mexico The Carranzista garrison at Chalco, a subub of Mexico City, is reported to have been almost wiped out." . ':, 'v' ; Dead of the F-4. San Francisco. The United States Naval station sblp Supply arrived from Honolulu, T. H., with the bodies of 13 men from the submarine F-4 on board. v- " Four of the bodies which had been identified were brought in separate caskets. The dismembered bodies of nine others' were brought In four caskets. - Rockefeller Visits Mines. Trinidad. John D. Rockefeller, Jr.,. yted the scene of the Ludlow battle ftnd the mining comp'anies of.Berwind , m a . - , and Tabasco on his first day's inspec- tion tour of the properties of the Colo- rado Fuel & Iron Co.: ''After talking freely' with the .miners, he went Into their homes, questioning their wivee about" working and living conditions i at uerwma. f