The Daily Notes -- August 29, 1911 LITTLE DISORDER DURING TIME OF GREAT EXCITEMENT

Always in times of great excitement there is likely to be more or less disorder, a certain element, taking advantage of the general uproar to get drunk and act disorderly. There was, however, very little of this during Saturday night’s turbulent scenes. The police did make three arrests for drunkenness. The drunks were hurried to the lockup, and were later fined. The conductor of a street car on Sunday put a drunken negro off a car on Jefferson avenue. Patrolman Haught escorted him to the lockup. The negro, it was later found, was employed in the Griffiths tinplate mill at Washington. Three dollars secured his freedom.