The intelligencer. (Anderson, S.C.) 1915-1917, November 14, 1915, Image 1
VOLUME IL
ANDERSON, 5. C., SUNDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 14, 1915.
NUMBER 262.
EFFORTS MADE TO GET!
AMICABLE SETTLEMENT
OF TROUBLE
TRYING TO FIND
COMMON GROUND
Managing Officer* Have Conced
ed the Right of Employes
to Organize.
Columbia, Nov, 13.-Governor Man
nbig gave out the following statement
tonight:
"From tho beginning of tho strike
at Brogon mills, 1 havo been making
an effort lo got tho two sides to an
amicable settlement. I have been es
pecially active along these lines dur
ing the. Inst' week, but oipptrfently
tho situation is no nearer a settle
ment than j before. Neverthc less, I
am not discouraged! but am etill try
ing to find a o'j miu'on ground on which
they can meet.
"At the Judson mills in Greenville
prospects for a settlement are mon
favorable.
"In both mills the managing offi
cer.-, have conceded the right 9t thu
employees to organize.
"Thus ono of lae fundamental
sources of disagreement has boca
removed.
"There is one thing which both
sides should understand clearly. No
violence will be tolerated. Thb sheriffs
. of Anderson and Greenville' counties
will be held sternly to. their, duty to
' maintain order, I do not anticipate'
that they wJU forco me to take, the
.preservation bf order out of their
hands, but if I am convinced that
either of tho sheriffs is not fulfilling
.his duty, I am prepared to act. 1
.... "Ithere is right and wrong on,".both
aides, and tho bitterness le increasing.
As good cltlienB of South Carolina, 1
feel that both ehfra should egree bp
on some plan that will terminate tho
trouble
"Arbitration in such disagreements
has been universally recognised as a
safe business. The public is every
where mucb inclined to believe that
the -peepl*. .Wiho avoid arbitration put
themselves in tho jvrong.
"The communities in which these
mills are situated and the state of
South Carolina are deeply Interes ed
in a just settlement being leached.
Private differences of this sort -will not
?o?g bo .tolerated' by the people of the
state, . Some is?ans must bc devis
ed to bring all parties to an amicable
.frame of mind;
"At present I am gravely consider
in & rcwmmpiiilliip 4r\ tho legislature
a compulsory arbitration, law in Lue
form of a. board bf conciliation.. I
. am not committed to this, proposition,
but'em,'studying ?t*s wo vingn in .oth
er places.
"All eltteens will 'ecognize that
our people have : the ri r ht io organize j
4f they wish t? do so. It will also bo
generally, reeogrilaed that the lives and
.property of our people must bo pro
tooted.
"I will stand to both propositions."
~_JJ__ ? ' 1
\vashlngb?J, Nov. 13.- Navy offi-1
cials.are ao stirred at the escape of]
, seanien from tho - interned ' G?* -.. 'an |
cruisers at Norfolk, followtog.c^vbly,|
on the' recent escapo .of. a party of !
non-comm?H;.ioncd officers . that they]
asked the state department to what
lengths tho marine guards would bb
justified In going to stop the unau
thorized departure. ' ''t&Q&fiS&BlB^
'; Th\3 possibility of placing the Ger
mans in a ?am rded camp WSB being
dlsnb-jccd The ?ato depart
ment will Idb?r^p precedents to learn
.whether marine guarda have the. righi
jo shoot if rieobflt?ry.
" K?80; Sank.
London, NoV^lS .-An . oOciaJ ad-1
miraliyv!statement says the British]
submarine 13-20 wes -aohk l nthb Dar-1
daneJlea .^djJblne.bt. the crew m*do.
-prisoners. Tfco vessel has not been
heard ttatii fclaee October 30. -,
*'
J Wi'^aKtife T^? IONBON J j
* Wa|btagi& . " Nov^: .?' 15.~' ?
* Kobort FV Sfe?nn?.?- American 4>
* co4i*u^ general ^t 'l^hdon, re- *
4> cent?f roCAtlfed to discuss - the ?
* trade sltjuatlon w?t?i the elate *
* depaHmentr .m\ return to his *
* post November tf?fc. There ?
* have been. rtuitors that thc re- *
* . call Was -lav: tb the . fllsbleas- *
*< ore ?f the British authorities..
* ;v ??V:iv--v *
WILL REVIEW WAR OPERA
TION^ IN HOUSE OF
COMMONS
IS MUCH BLAMED
BY THE BRITISH
His Boastful Method of Public |
Address Has Been Much
Ridiculed.
London, Nov. 13.-.Winston Spencer
Churchill, 'who intends to explain his
resignation from the cabinet to tho
house ot commons on Monday and
who, lt is said, will reviow the war
operations of the admiralty during hi?
term as first lord of tho admiralty,
has been tho greatest target for cri
ticism of any of Britain's public men
since the rf ar began.
? Right y or wrongly Churchill is !
blamed for the inadequacy of thc
British relief of Antwerp, ending in j
the internment of a large part of the
Britl?'a-marine expedition and for the
atempt to force the Dardanelles
[without the help of the army, which
produced a British casualty Hst of a
hundred thousand. '
Hp has. been termed the duke of 1
Antwerp''and< Gallipoli.
..HIs^. boastful method of public ad
dress sddtt as prophesying* that the
British -navy "would dig the - German
chip;; oat of their holesi.like rats'r
and "the Zeppelins would be sur
rounded by a swarm ot hornets li
they attacked England"* ts being ridi
culed here.
FOOTBALL GAME HAS
21
Half Back of Colombia Coiiege
Possibly Fatally Injured at
Vel?osla, Ga.
Valdosta, Ga.. Nov. 13.-Half-back
Bl i toll, of tlie Columbia Col-lego Joc-t-'
boil: team, was possibly rataiiy. in
jured and Coach Sams of'the same
organization received a broken-leg abd.
his ankle dislocated-in th S game won
by Mercer HZ to 0 here today.
Blitcli'ls suffering tonight from!
concussion of tho brain, the result br
a blow eb his head, ?nd the doctors
are doubtful of his recovery.
; Coach Sajns and, Coatit Zellers o?,
Mercer^ both played nuder an agree-.
?bent made by the teams. -
___-- . I
il
A .Washington, Nov. 12 -Tho captain j
of tho American -steamer.' Zeatandia
forcibly seordned by a British cruiser
at Progreso. Meslco, denied that the
ship. Tras, outside the three mlle limit
therefore she was,In a neutral port.'
Th? British commander claims - th?
Zealandla,-was not inside the terri
tor ! a i ' limits of TViMiivo : \
. Efforts. will ' be '\$ed? '-by the , sit
department to .determin? Jdst where j
??he' vessel wa';'. ; &li? ''American' ebh
?ul*? at .> TrbgrcsoUiaij^ beeb'/i?Btr?et?d |
to take affidavits of witnesses.
M
m
FOB C?TI?H BRBiE
Waahlagtbn; Nov. 13.--Tba cottob
used during October%.r'rjas v 500.035
.bates compared' with -451,805 during
October of last y?iw the eensui? bu
reau annouaced'. ..Cotton on howl o?,
October 31 tn consuming establish
ments was 1.345.749. bales compared
with 716^3 a year ago. In the pub
lic w*y^bbuBeb'"and compresses 4,171, .
474 oofnr<?re<*}, .with 3.077,469 against
j 4M?$2\ imports 18,fi08. agaiast. l*,r
150. |Y
Sproules active; numbered . 81,378,
983 against 30,461,320.
LEFT TO RIGHT -M
Account Given o? Actions of the1
* Submarine-Fifty Shots .
Fired.
Paris, Nov. 13.-A connected.stOry
ot" tho alni:inn; of the Ancona from For
riavllle, dated Novomb?r 12, follows*.
"Tho Ancona left... Messina : at Vi
o'clock the morning of November vd. j
Almut ? in. the momias cf the. next |
day slie picked up a wireless message
from tho steamer France reading i
"S. O. S. We aro being shelled." ;
- "Tho message ended-, abruptly v.-ttii
?Ut ibo irositiou of clio France being,
given. Tho Ancona continued on her'
route about an hour afterwords the
sea hoing calm and the weather misty.
. "Wifjinnf any sert of warning: re
port of a gun being heard, shells si*
multanebusly struck, the Ancona for-*
-ward caU3ing considerable damage.
Tho 'frireless operator without'an iv~
staht . : delay sent '.? ont the distress
signal with tho name of the ship and
her-position. The first wireless tele
graphy apparatus was demolished.
Then . tho lifo boats were shot . to
pieces and a number ot passengers'
were-killed and.wounded: Fifty shota
at least were fired until the Ancona,
stopped. .The submarine then hoisted,
the Abstrian colors aui the com?lnn
der.? ?jinouhced he. "would allow ; ten
minutesfor air to quit the shlp.jThu
unmnehod hosts -were lowbred abd af
ter the'wounded'had been placed lu
them the passengers and crew follow
ed!. This was going on for half ? bu
hour when the submarine fired', a tor
itedb .which e?ruck. tho Ancona on.
Se bow. The ship sank gradually
n dlBappc?red. at?2:St?Vp. rn". The
pubiharlnb 'then . steamed - ?way. To
ward 0 .e..m. the mine layer Finion
- picked tip survivors near the scene."
: Rom?, Nor.. 13.-Tho, conference be -
twocit Minister (Sonnlno abd Awbftft^
?ador Pago today in b>?leve^>tq-h?v?"
s?w$t about a full exchange - Of
views.concerning the Blaklng of the
Ancona.
' While the nature bf the'conversa*,
lion was .not. rovealed, it ts believed
that the Italian view-point is. that
tho attack on tho ibier is a breach bf
International law and neutrals should
jU^v^^?r^etic measures ; tb secure full
repararon. '." ".
Arabs'isador' Pago i/as advised to
day o? .tho slinking of tho Firanse, a
iuraiir/ dollar ship su?k by subma- i
?lu* gunrire.
A&erf?ans Foi? in Doubt. .,
Rome, Nov. 13.-Thomas Nelson
P?fte, tho American ambassador re
caf Vis? a report from th o-Italian for^.
etgn ?ince statingthat fate of sev
rai native or naturalised Americans
aboard the Ancona was still in doubt.
Ten Captains of Coll
erON-0UA8t?R<* ANDREWS
QATItSn?tt'Q nCCIIITC.
* * * v ?:. #
*
*
*
4
*
4
4
*
4.
*
*
4
*
*
*
*
*
I*
i '*
4
4
?
4
<9>
4-.
At Atlanta, ?a., Tech 0;
Georgia 0.
At Columbia, South Carolina
0; Virginia 13...
At Chattanooga 0; Sowance
0.
At Austin, Texas 20; Alar
bama 0* 1
.At Winston Salem, North
..--.i.-?.-.- **
" At Gaineavillo, Florida 0;
Citadol 0.
At Valdoata, Mercer 32; Co
lumbia uoiiego 0.
At V/?k? Forest .- 21; . Gsl
laudet C..
'At. New Haven, Yalo IS;
Princeton 7. .
At Ithaca, Cornell 40; Wash
ington and Lee 21.
At "Syracuse 31; Colgate 0.
$ At Cambridge, Harvard 16 ;
Brown 7.
- At New York, Army 24;
vMaine:0.
At Annapolis, Navy 28;
Colby 14.
At Washington, Georgetown
28; North Carolina Aggies 0.
At. -Minneapolis, Minnesota
20 r Chicago T.
? At Champaign, Illinois 17;
wlocdnBln 3.
''At Knoxville, Tenness?o 0 ;
Mississippi Ageles .14.
At Rlfchmbnd, V. M. I.' 0;
Clemson .3.
At .Morgantown, West Vir
ginia 19; V. P. I. 8.
At Lexington, Kentucky
State ;7?'"'Purdue 0.
At Pittsburgh 28; Carnet
Tech 0.
' .At C?aVkfe?iui'?, Washington
ahoyjeffer?on 7; Weat Virginia
.Wesleyan 3.
Ai Greenville, Fundan 7;
Newberry 0.
At Jackson,. M!s3ls2l> pl; 6; '
Mississippi Coll?ge",7*> ;' .
? At Now Orleans; Tulane 32;
Howard 3,
+
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?rn
.*.
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4
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>4.
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.'4
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4.444444444444444444444
iiiii
ff???M
Now- York, Nov. 13,~SIxt?en hua{
dred Italian reservists .sailed for
T?aples today on the Italian linijr
Tabrralna?rslster ship of the1 Ancona,
p?vid H. McCullough was one of the
1?G .passengers. Tho sailing of i
Italian Hn^, etearaera America end
Palermo foi' Italian ports from Ne j?
York have been .cancelled. Jt w?vi
said the vessels wanld bo 'a?ed as
transports.
lege Football Teams.
-?ftovm'-ten'Mt.F-- UAR*
-Aft4lfUFFB'PAfn?M0l/rtf-TACKi
Wm
AH WA
Fake Wedding Invitations in So- j
ciety Columns of Atlanta
Newspapers.
Atlanta, Nov. 12.-That "Dr. Al
lyne Hensley" announced In formal
wedding invitations and tho . society
columns of local newspapers us the
fiancee of MIRR Julia Chcato Crum
ley, tine music teacher, existed only in
her imagination became definitely
known today. Prienda and relatives
did r-<>t suspect anything unusual
when she went to Chicago and identi
fied the body of an unknown maa
kllled in a railroad accident -and
Bhlppcd it here as Dr.. Hensley. She
is being attended at the home of her
father, Fay. Howard1 Lee Crumley,
formerly a prominent Method lat min
ister. Controversial statements after
the:body arrived led the family to call
a physlclan'to observe her. It ls said
sho told him Hensley was. the creature
of her mind and aho did not .know
whose body 'ijfas at the undertaking
establishment. The funeral was.set
for Thursday and an announcement
in tho. newspapers yesterdav merely
elated it bad-been pjostponbd. Friohds.
stated teat they wanted time to In
vestigate. Those who: caw the body,
said it was not'a man accustomed to
the life of, a surgeon.. TWo. years ago
the woman was-operated on at Johns
Hopkins and returning ' telling
fitends she waa en gaged/to Hensley
who lived in Quebec, Ca?ada. She re
ceived letters she said ho wrd*>
a?
AUTHORITIES ARE
m
HOLDING
Chicu'go, Nov. 13.-Tho ?unidentified
body taken by Miss Julia Chaste Crum
leyto Atlanta to *fco burled as her
flane?.will bo left thore, so for.as-tho
Chicago autlioritles are- concerned.
.OiTlciala here will not pay to - return
tho corpse.
Deputy Coroner Jones, who sahl
Miss Crumley wept Incessantly dur
ing: the interview. lttrwhich'.- she gain
ed permission to send the .body to
Atlanta, ealdiiie never suspected any
thing but a bona-fldo identification.
. Miss Crumley's statement,-given to
ttoe coroner her?, declared that she
fe??krr?ed Alleyne. Hensley in
pa, January 101-1, and that ho left
..ediatply after the marriage. Sho
aa**, ?he saw-him in New *York ia
JW ISIS. .
. :Word from Atlanta tonight mdlcattfj
that authorUiea- there are waltiag p;
disposition of the body.
' German ? Gain s.
Berlin, -Nov. : 13.--Continuing. Gie
|fcurauH ot the Serbian army io the
district southeast ot Krn?*vao, -the
'Germen .forces.have crossed the .Pas-*
.trobac mouatam ; range* according to
a Germai? official statement* More
than eleven hundred Serbians .were
[ made prta?ners yesterday atfd . one
.cannon, was captured. - \ 1?M igjte
BARRETT- C?ffMELL * m
mS-O??*-ffl0#TTA<CKt?<
m
1
un cn i y tr
mi. silica
In Regard to Instructions Given
to Austrian Consuls About
Strikes.
Washington, Nov, 13\-Baroh Erich
Z wlcd In ck, Austrian charge, called , at
tho state - department today ' and de
nied for his government the charges
Dr. Gerawuy ?ormer?y. or the
Austrian consular service, that Aus
trian consuls in the United States vero
fomenting strikes In munition plants.
Kite Austrian cmbassay later gave
out a statement'- declaring" Dr. fieri
car offered to discontinue hm - utter
ances against Austria-Hungary for a
money consideration.
S&wledlnek was told that the United
State:-, was investigating.
CHARLESTON MAY GET
Charleston, Nov. 13.-The exenu
j tive cpinmiuteo of tho Atlantic Deeper
.Waterways association and members
of the association, looked with appar
ent favor upon Charleston's invitation
that the 1917 convention of tho UB
? eociatton .be held in this city, accord
ing .to Secretary. Snell, of the cham
ber of'commerce, who extended the
I invitation. . In accordance with a
['custom of the association, the 101G
meeting will he hold In a northern
oliy? ?nd tho following' year, lu o
southern city. Mr. Snell and niuo oth
er ChSrleBtonlans nilnnrt.-wt the CO;K
j veutlon. which closed at . Savannah
! yesterday.
! Grain Laden Vessel Not Heard
From Since Last Wed
nesday.
'ii - Duluth', Nov. 13.~Tho steamer
Charles A. Luck, w?th a' crew of
MOBS^thaa .twenty, waa reported lost
lp- a; storm which ?w?pt L&fce Super
l?MhL? week;
The steamer , pas&ad through Sault
st. ..v.irlc last Wednesday -ana hagj?h
been reported si^co. C. A. .Tomlin?
eeai'i who bad the vessel,underiebar
|er,td take grain from here tb Buffalo,
M?U^onlght. t?:at" ho feared the re
Sflrifc-wore tfue. ?'?;>
Tho Luck ia a wooden ship 298 feet
long and i? commanded by poDj^
Ste**, one of the i oldest of tho Kike
navigators.
REPORTS OF HIS TRIP HAVE
RECEIVED NO CON
FIRMATION
DISSOLUTION OF
GREEK CHAMBER
Caused Great Consternation in
France But Not Felt
England. ;
London, Nov. 13.-Although, tho re
port that Lord Kltoi.encr hod bobu .
?ont on a mission .to King Constantine
to ofter proposals received no cn-,
firmation, tho coincidence ot his de
parture and the .diasolveamnt. or M>?
Greek chamber makes the supposition
plausible.
. Tho consternation -which the disco
lution qt the Greek chamber caused .
in Franco is not entertained hore, b\\t
no attempts aro being made to mitti i
nizo that tho king's action, and hopps
for Greek co-operation, at least unlit
after the Greek election months
hence.
. It ia reported -that an Austro-Gerr,
man mission Is now in. Athens , ami
that Uio Rumania king ia receiving
dep ;nat lona from both sld^s,
The Austro-G orman armies contin
ue the Serbian drive, reporting thv
capture of. the heigh tc - ? Jastrebae?,
but Serbian Teslstanco in tho-moun
tains stiffened. The French cavalry;,
it la reported, baa surrounded Velos,
but the Bulgarians etill hold tho tow?.
On the eastern front- tho lack' of
German'reports Indicate that tho Ger
man drive at Riga and' Byinsjc.;is
abandoned, temporarily, at .le&st;-'T$e
Russian offonslvo 'ds gaining momep^
tum at all poluta. It is reported that
von Hlndenberg told Em*-bror WiiUaru
that the advance waa not a-suc?e au
without reinforcements.
' Tho Te?toiiio submar?nesrar? still
activo In tho Mediterranean 'end ser
eral British ehlps UTO reported ..aa
gone down are assumocV to have bean
sunk in the Mediterranean s
Of these the steamer 'Don of Crotri
ble, 6,000- tons, ts- Ute largest^ : Six
passengers and'fifteen of meerewv^f
the Italian steamer Firenie, sunk Ott
the Egyptian) coast reported mlssuig.
No Americans aboard far as l?arh?d. :
GIOEK?TntUDE li
London,. Nov. 38.-Uneasiness , lu
being shown by tho allied powers, over
the attitude of Greece: Thia feeling
is not likely to be allayed bythe lat
est news that the i German military
mission had arrived...at Athens via
Bulgaria and Saloniki. Paris official
circles.believe there is no possibility
of Greece changing her attitude for
one" u!?tiaciiy favoring the central
powers. Ramora that auch a step was :
being considered, became So persistent '
that the Greek minister to Franco felt
called upon to visit th? foreign office
with assurance of Greece's adherehco
to her traditional friendship tor
Franco.
Progress in the 'Balkan campaign
ls alow with Serbia's.?dites begi?ntog
to make their presence felt'awbg ItW."
Maoedonlari frontier:? .-v-'Tfte ). Frori'A
troops ere reported within s mile mid
a quarter of Voiles and have occupied
several village? on the t ight baj?raSK;?
the Yarder, but the expected Sarpft^
French, Junction before Babona-PaS^t
has not yet (been affected. The Ger
mans are facing the most dirflcitlt
phase of the campaign in tho front o?
a mountain barrier ?which they must
surmount before thoy can hopa fto
completely disorganize /.' the . Serbian
army. Newe from the, eastern front
agrees " that Hindenburg's pocltlon in
the Risa district *a: iitirotnslr ; dif
ficult. The Russians ore continuing
their attacks between Olia and west
of Lake- Babut are reported to . be
forcing the Germans into ? the wooda
and marshes, which* gre?t?y hamper
the mcrementa of the Tentons. Th ?
Germano are ? exercising every energy
to complete railroads which they are
building tn Courland . Along the west
era front artillery actions again be
come the prominent reature. Ihisntry
activity is reported.
, Paris. Nov. 13.-Outside of aooi J
artillery engagements . along tho
French -, line the French;, oificial re
port this . afternoon ;-./yectyi? ??Krlted .
fighting with hand grenades at > three
other places in France. ' ; . y
* * *
:WasWnite-C5oy. .i$.--For
# mer t?ccrfiU'iry Bryan closed 4
* his Wasltlnuton heuw today *
? and lett:for.We,?Winter.nome *
? in Miami, Fla., to spend) t^p ?
next three .monta?., He Jf?i'd ?fr
*S? he would issue statejnsata ca >
??: public questions from, time to
? time from Miami. *
* <$>