-w Ilijiv iiiiiiHii I un I I If li l|||Vall| pi- M- a. MALI.ISO* RBUKJUH -post mmi WHICH HK HAH Hfil.l> FOR SOME mat. Elbert Wmum. Clerk lo Il<-Kl>ir.,r. Acrr,?? Poeltton V.c*trd .by m *>_WriH.nn - Elbert Weston ?bA> tcrebtcd th? position of Clerk of (be Recorder's Court. Mr. Westoon has been In tfie employ of Registrar Rumley for ' some time as assistant clerk. He will bold both positions In the fu ?222;?rr i'-v-~\zz K. Q. MaUison, the former clerk of the Reoorder's Court has resisted his position on acoount of the redaction made in the salary by the f* Board pf County Commissioners. The fees have been* done, away wi?bk entirely and the. monthly -ealaf^tor the. position la twenty-five dollars. p! ' . ' PRAVEB The piatdr oJtte~FIr?t Hetbodlst . church has tor several weeks been earnestly trytng,to awaken renewed interest in the mid-week prayer servJ A aeries of lessons is being taken from The Acta of the Apostles, the topic for this evening being, "Prayer by the Church Answered." K* Such hymns as are encouraging to a devoitonal spirit will be sung, and all the members of the new voluntary choir are kindly requested to be ?present.? Not only members ot the church, but also any friends, visitors, -.-''or strangers, are cordially Invited. ^ j,'% Pgr "M^e, hoqse fm ehall he called an house of prayer for r^'-' sU people."?Isa. 6?:7. BATS TO EXTBBM1XATB i MOSQUITOES. Reeent investigations indicate that, the greater portion of the diet of the k ' bat consists of mosquitoes, and adf* r-*v v v v vantage in being taken of this fact in ridding communities in Texas and otter southern states of the* mosquito peat. house of peculiar construction Is erected In a locality wfcere mosquitoes abound, and* this y* y quickly becomes a home and breeding * high above the ground, and a metal ahleld to placed around each post to prevent access by rodents. It 1s be lieved that this may furatoh-*-anik venient .means of combating yellow Qs fever and malaria, the of 5_ ? r nsum conk. y - children. Mm Caw After ? MS.OOO Inherit. V m?s I.MUl? We Family / ' Dretttete. r Hhtobinson, Kan., Jane 4.?Elmer _ Manny, fireman at a Hutchinson salt plant, -who Inherited $43,000 In the\ t will yf fif? grandfather- and who baa gone to Dee Moines, Is., to claim tbe. -estate, left a wife and two small children destitute Hutchinson. 1 I wife, desperate in the extremity of poverty, had literally pawned the two child red, Margaret, aged four, I' % and Ole, a baby, for a debt of 120. ' The-mother left the children with the landlady of a local rooming house, where she was in .debt, with f the understanding that (hey were to | keep the children as security tor the $20, plus the cost of their caro. while Finding she was unable to pay the Jeht, and tearing that the rooming V - Jioube landlady teens about to leave tcvn #lth her children, the despert ate mother appealed to the police - ^ "^o'mothta^am^awnhOTchUdMm In that manner lagallr." beld Police If'". Judge J. M. Jordan, and he ordered the landlady to return the bah lee ah M once, noturlthatandlng the ndpald A warrant wlU be leaned (or the . Q. arreet ot the hnaband, 1( he can be I - ' located. Several montha ago he war I 1 . . advised hy a Chicago attorney of Ms inheriting an estate. The latter consisted of Chicago property, and In ! the settlement. It la claimed, liaany I received M8.000. deposited I. trust I (or him lu Dee Hones, Iowa. ' prosperity proved too moeh (or . him, however, and ha promptly de^ ""dtt'noV^n "?? ""he.T ========== jeara ago wtttr JSO.OOOJn bullion on board' Tbg Yeaaffl lie. In (0 foal or aaui and ia aaallr aceeulbln. The direr arranged with the ownere and onderwrltera for a half Intereat In all treaanre recovered wl 10 mis# F' , - ? rr* WRECK OX R. C. * S. LATE YESTERDAY AFTRBXOOX. t KILLED. MY INJURED ? ? Acclilent Occurred Near Cumnock. C. Train Pluuued Through Deep River Bridge anil WlSgt Into River. Sanford. N. C.. June 4.?Train No. AIT of thu Kaii'ti:!i imn.rintt,, a , Southern Railroad'was wrecked at River bridge, near Cumnock, yesterday afternoon about .6 o'clock, the entire train going Into the river. The train is a mixed passenger and freight,, running between Mt. Gileadand Colon. The- engine;?three box cars and one coach fell Into the river killing one man and injuring a number of others. < The dead Is Mr. B^wden Stewart, of Hemp. N. C. The Injured are: White?-Fred Burns. Osgood. N. C., seriously hurt; R. C. Blalock, engl- ' neer. braised and scalded on arms J and back; George Blalock. brother of I Engineer Blalock. aeriously scalded; 1 Conductor Beach am, of Blscoe, N. . C., seriously hurt in back, legs and . |head; Gus Johnson and Milt John- 1 I son, passengers, hurt in back and 1 legs, net?serious:?Colored Arthur ^ Leak, fireman, scalded on tfead and I severe gaah on head;- Spencer Tyson, I arm broken and hart in head, not fatal; Fletcher Legrand, leg hurt, not < serious. The l?*t three are train- i As soon as information of the wreck reached here. Dr. Chas. L. i Scott left in an automobile and later 1 a special train djer the Southern < Railway carried aid. It is not known I how the wreck happened and more i complete details are not obtainable at tnia oour. ine special tram over i the Southern brought the injured to ( Central Carolina Hospital at Santord | *ber? every' attention was given. I ?: i CINCINNATI SCHOOL GIRL TO l STUDY INFANT HVClKM!. . -j Cleveland, Ohio, June 4.?Five hundred girls in their early teens, pupils of the eighth grade^f the Cleveland high schools, todij^bbgan J a practical study of infant"hygiene, ' with real live babies to experiment upon. Initiation of the course took \ place at the Sterling school, where 1 Edward Parsch, eight months old J son of Mason Parsch.^a machinist, J Uras stripped and given a perfectly hjgteue batli?before?an liiieiestwt-1 class of girls in short dresses. i "I believe this is an epoch-mak- 1 ing innovation In~jfuBBc school in- ~ traction." .said Mrs. Ada B. Wll- ; liams, city tnpervisor of .domestic science instruction, who is sponsor fo^ the course. At the Sterling school class today Florence GItt, age 14, who had obUUned_ Mas$er Parsch fftr Jhejegflgrl, meat, undressed the b^hy. After the instructor had washed his eyes, nose and ears, other pupils hathad his body. Then Lorena Booth, age 14, dried add powdered him and put him to bed. He demonstrated the valne of frffattt1 tPygtenu by getof^io sleep at once. jiiNW^a ri HiBTonrf 5 1 8O0 Pfaalnlno Sa??K1<1 % llahed by Hunitt. ltd?Genoa united to mace, not?Bonaparte formed a new eon- 1 nutation for Spain. )? 1811-?Leopold elected king of the ' Belgian*. /.'-J.-.. ' J 1816?Mex'eo declared war acalaiet the United State* on account a of the propoaed annexation of r Texa*. t 1891?Jama* O. Blaine realgned aa t Secretary of State* and naa I neceeded by John W. Foe- a ar. 1904?Jap a defeat Simian* in terrl- t hie battle north of PolenUen < 1811?Seamen la Praace threaten 1 nm: mmm fKgtt^TTKHIHV gCKPAT SCHIKH KNJOV FLRASA.NT OTTING. ??in miMMiBft im ninvy Twu ntlNuHcD lH PARTY - ? I Number Included Fa rents and Teacher* Who Accompanied Children on I Outing Down the River. r*r *i'T r? - * The children ?f the Presbyterian Sunday Sehdoi enjoyed a very pleasaht outing yesterday afternoon. There were about ^vo hundred, fncludhig parents, teachers and other guests who left hero yesterday morning at nine o'clock. They made the tri^-to Utah's farm, where the picnic was held, on-a large lumber barge. Seats had?been -arranged? on the barge for the accbmmodation of the picnicers. ?The barge was towed by the tug Nautilus. A general gdoarrme' was enjoyed at th,e farm, which Is about four miles down the river. The children went in bathing, played games, roamed through the woods and enjoyed an excellent dinner. The barge left after five o'clock and the party arrived at Washington at alx. . r- - VAbilB OF HBMB AH BAIT FOR FLOSS ESTABLISHED. Cleveland Packing House Employes Arc Instructed in the Efficiency of the Traps. Cleveland, June 4.?Now that the value of beer as a bait for flytraps has been thoroughly established, popular interest In the anti-fly campaign is expected to take a great lump. On a recent afternoon Dr. lean Dawson'explained to Cleveland packing house employes the use of Peer, and as a result of her'labors ?t*e man was detailed to keep thetraps baited in a large plant. The^ tppolntee did not objec/. The problem of garbage disposal is leclared by Dr. Dawson to be the I moat serious problem which the fly :ru8adera are facing. "If we could only impress on the ninds of tho people of Cleveland that garbage means flies, and that :overed garbage cans mean starvation for them, the rest of the task vould be easy," she says. According to a report on the Fairnount school district, conditions in the neighborhood have Improved 15 per cent since the campaign was beStun. Reports from other districts ire expected to show equal improve |ientv . BABY BROUGHT TO LIFE BY PULMOTQ^. New uses for the pulmotor, the nronderful electric apparatus f6r administering oxygen and keeping the ungs In motion after asphyxiation From gas or drowning, and so restoring the apparently dead to life, are aelug found by American physicians. A Kansas City physician recently | isfcd to resuscitate a Jbaby that iStd been- born apparently dead, and fter three hours' application of the ntlrumeht the inf?mt'B lungs*~we?e working normally and it was as livey as most new-born babies. WKW YORK'S SIX-MI I, LION-DO LLA? It)STOFH( l New York's new 16,000,000 poet>ffice bnilding, a maSBlrp-pile of pink tranite five stories in height and wo bfocka long, facing the. rear of Be yiviBi* -moon, is the ixeatest building of its kind in the rorld. From the curb to the topnost piece of granite is 101 feet, rhere are 185,000-cubic feet of grante, 18,000 tons of steel, 7,000^000 tricks, and 800,000 square feet of, 'law in the building. The main coridor, corresponding In length to (he lutslde colonnade, An a combination if.buff marble, white plaster and ;lasn, two stories high, 19 feet wide <^S80 feet long. There are 400.(00 square feet of- working spacewithin the building. RHNCH AVIATOR KHTABLIHHEH Buc. France, June 4^?The world's ittitude record for an aeroplane arrying a pilot and a passenger was iroken today by Bdmund Perryon, be French aviator, who rose to a might of * 19,948 feet, or 3 1-10 Perryon also holds the world's al? Itude record for an aeroplane car* yhag only a pilot, baring risen to a ieight of 19,430 feet at Buc ** fmrch It, tbtr year. V r ^ME J Vr'ffift Mr*. J. B. ?I*rtalB*WMHn f aftarnooB. ? A?ooc tkoo* prraen were Metdama* Laa Wtyne of Nor folk, H. C, Yaomao of Wlnaton-Sa lorn. OV T. Tayl'oa, C. P. Warran, A sr I'umay. L. L Knl?h, a ad Mia. Mary Blount. Dell gift/u I refresh menu were served and were greatly I enjoyed. niiifrl una hie I ? I A\MVKHS,1HV OK His BIRTH I ' LHGAL Hoi.iD.u , I . I". -? 105IH ANNIVERSARY WW IJPIIVI111 v- ~~~~ ??. { . ''K: ?- *" Many Southern States Held Exercises Yesterday in Memory of the President of the Confederacy. The South paid, 'tribute to the memory of Jefferson PaviB. president off the Cppfederacjr, yesterday on the 105th anniversary of his bir^h. In eight southern, states, Alabama, Florida, ^Georgia, Louisiana, 9oulh Carolina, Tennessee and' Texas, the day was observed as a'Ie-| gal ohllday andjn other states-toegal holiday and In other states meIn several of .the Southern States the day Is known a3 Confederate Memorlal Day, but in a few of the States of the old Confederacy, May 10 1h set aside as the day on which tribute Is paid to the memory of the soldiers of the gray army. In many parts of the South not only the banks*, business houses and State offices close, bat employes of postoffices and other Federal institutions were granted a holiday. Mi TWAIN ON NORFOLK SOUTHERN. _ The Norfolk. Southern Inaug uraiea extra service between WasfiP ington, New Bern, Morehead City and Beaufort,'Sunday, June 8th. The new train will leave Washington at 7:10 a. m. Returning, It will leave Beaufort at 6 p. m., Morehead City at 6:16, New Bern at 7:45 and arrives at Washington' at 9:20. BRIDGE PARTY THIS MOBXtNG. Mrs. Julia Wolfe was the hostess at an auction bridge party which waa given this morning. There were two tables. Those present were Mes| dames Geo. Hackney. John Gorham, Frank Bowert^Caleb Bell, Harry McMullan, J. Ellison, R. C. Yeoman of Winston-Salem. Refreshments were served and enjoyed. civic giub"meeting has been postponed Owing to the rain and t?e inclement weather, .the meeting of the Civic Club, which waa to have been poned and will be held Friday instead. ft -tv The Conversation of Energy. Shopping to some women, and to.some men, too, means work?real hard drudgery. With knitted brow and de* termlned look they go about their shopping with no more liking for it than a small boy who goes to hatb -his hand cut. Do you wonder that the reaulta under these conditions to say nothing1, of the distressing mental strain occasioned by such unacJebtlflo methods? Shopping drudgery U so needless, so unnecessary: It is your fault and my fault if we go at it blindly, and worry ourselves to distraction when, by the .simple method offending Intelligent, helpful ndrertising In good newspapers like T1>e Daily News we may shorten our stepf. settle perplexing I questions, and. incidentally, I if we read carefully, keep || many a dollar wttbtn onr II parses that migkt otherwise go 41 astray. ^ ^ '' -in )AIL\ rrictooN, jun ?, i?n Ilfflffll IE THE Lllll TO BK HRLO TONIGHT FOR BfiM KFIT OF NAVAL MILITIA. hrnm^rar I Man> Mimical Nunbm to lie PreI anted. Proceeds to Go Toward* I. Helping Ralae Famla for Snpport of I * Band. I Tonight's performance at the I Lvrlc Thpatr** will f?r bj?1 of the Naval Militia. A special musical program has been arranged and la sure to meet with the approval of the audience. Some of the numbers are as follows; , , Cornet S^io?Prof. Smith. ?Soh>?=3tfl*s AdsRhodes. Duet?Smith and Wade... Man; other numbers will be put on.and the spectator*-can be-sure of seeing an excellent entertainment furnished by high class artists. The Naval Militia 'deserves support and it is hoped that a large audience will be present at their benefit tonight. The proceeds are to go towards helping to secure a band for the boys. Excellent pctures\ will also be shown tonight. The admission price | will be ten and twenty cents. L . Btrwran exui. [Lucky Steamer Passenger* Win Handomsely on Rank Outsider. An exciting race between edible snails took place aboard the steamer France dulrng the foyage form Havre to this port. All the passengers when they -debarked, talked about the race and regarded It aa og greater Interest than the Grand; Prtx or the Derby. ^ the chef for the final banquet of the trip, were placed on a circular piece of pasteboard that measured 4 feet i^ diameter. In the center was a lilac bush; on the top of which hung a bunch of very green Juicy lettuce. The passengers were invited to place numbers on the shells of their favorite snails and back them for all they cared to risk. When, the contestants had been lined up, a can of cold water was poured on, their backs to arouse them, and they started for the l??f.uce. It took the snails 1 hour 2 minutes and 9 seconds to reach the lilac bush, and it tdok the winner 20 minutes longer to reach the lettuce. The winner was left at the start, but got home first by crawling over the backs of the two other leaders, t The winner was a rank outsider, odds of 40 to 1 bating been laid against him by E. C. Faroux and Mme. A. Armelle, backers of the snails that finished second and third. Samuel Mathers of Saratoga, backed the winner. THE SLOW BOY. Tortoise Often Hear* The Rabbit In the Race of Life. graduating classes, cheer up! We've seen you many a time and oft, out |tw the wwlij where fhe hlg S|h? goes on, standing on the ramparts with the colors in your fist, while the medal-*.-loners and the class leaders and the valedictorians werd" either hot full of holes or were in full retreat. The race, of a verity, is not always to the swift. Sad though it ia, It is nevertheless ipore often the case than otherwise, that the brightest boys in college are eclipsed in UTe workaday world by the boys whose Angers were not nimble with the pen. whose tongues were r.ot limber in debate and whose brainB took bold on problems with painful slowness. Tbey had to dig for what they got* end once they got it, they bed It honor to the hot who leads his class; hut here's to the boy who tails Wilmington Star. SET HOTEL ON FIRE FOR MOTION PICTURE SHOW. - j Tho "thrlll*r" of the recent Police I end Blremen'e Benefit held In Loa Angeles, nee the burning of e foufilorr hotel, erected et a ooet of $ ,000 by e motion picture company. The conflagration eerved two purpoaee. It provided the motion picture concern with a thrilling flreruncue" fllm, and ren nearly IE.000 people to the banelt. clearing ehont 10,000 for tho creation of a pennon rand for tho police and flremen of Lot Angolan. r? ? o-- ; , .... . _ . - ' ' *- ' Hg |- . r^ . .-_. /-V. CIVIL OOl-KT r- ? ? - y. 11 of contract. The case was turned oVer to the jury last night. The- case of Jaoobson vs. Bowers i & Lewis resulted in a judgment in I favor of the ni.infie mi mm IIIHDIIC I WORK OP KXt'A VATl N? FOR I WAKWlXQTtiX ?? *1 Gl'K MOXDAV. 300,000 BRICKS ORDERED Work Will II* Hurried Alun^ A* Fust ' As Possible. Woi-k oi Eviiivalini; in 1 Charge of W. MUler. > 1 The work of excavating for the c erection of the Washington Colleg- I iate College at Washington Park was < begun Monday. The work is in 8 charge of W. C. Miller. 300.000 f bricks have been ordered, but up to ^ the preaeut time,%-li?ve not arrived. 11 Jt is planned to hurry the work along 9 as fast as possible. tl , ri BR. FRIEDMAN N TO I.KAVK. ?' , . ei SajrslHlN Mission inAmerica Is Fiu\ ishctT Slew York.?Dr. Friedmann re- 'ft turned^roni Providence yesterday morning, and after a conference with * ' bis promoters hecr said that his fc "mission was ended" and that he ft would soon return to Berlin. It was ft rumored yesterday that he was about ft in slin n*tf nf town today "f A the ban laid on his "remedy' by the ft Board of Healthy This was vigorously denied by his friends. B It Is expected that Dr. Friedmann will sail for Europe next week, as soon as he can wind up his business dealings with Morltz Eisner, his <11 manager. The doctor has said for oi the last two months that he would e? leave this country just as soon as he w coma, out not Detorc nis mission n* which he said was the prorf of the 1b value of bis vaccine, was ended. "My mission in America is finish- oj ed," said Doctor Friedmann yester- f< day. "As soon as the atmosphere p has cleared and as soon as I feel w that my duty has been done. 1 shall d return to Germany. I hope the time tl will q)me Boon. It may be a matter tl of only d few weeks?perhaps much o legs. "The action of the authorities r here is of course a delicate subject. | Matters have to a large degree been taken out of my hands and my part from now on is forced to be a nioer I or less impaseive one. Dr. Rambaud understands our movement to bring the remedy before the American peo- 1 pie and what he leaves little to be V added." f Dr. Friedmann would not say whether or not he was going to re- F tUTn-nrTrig-TiBttentg-ai Proviagnef or c in Canada. He did say that his reception in Provtdence was warm inI deed compared with- that here. Dr. Frledniann's first- step cn his return yesterday was to join a con- . sultation at the Friedmann Institute on West End avenue, with the institute's doctors. This place has been closed as the result of the Board's edict. The iluctor himself was oppatients in the future at the institute, or to any other step which e, might be in violation of the spirit of t< the Board's resolution. After the tJ conference Dr. G. O. Rambaud. the g director of the insfltute, announced that he wohld 'welcome ^n investigation by the Board. T| That Dr. Friedmann's return to tl uriuu mil mi yusiyuucu Ulilll um m business complications with Mr. Els- , ner are completed was practically g, aaaored yesterday when the two men w disappeared In the afternoon to die- 0, cues at length the terms of the final settlement. According to-the con- ti trart 975,000 of the $115,000 paid 0i to the doctor for the rights here ia C] still due them. ^ They did not finish their task in time to keep an engagement at the 01 Majestic for dinner, and it was said 8i )that strong differences of opinion deToloped between them. As both men's lawyers were out of town yesterday It is not likely that an absolute settlement was reached. . Mr*, r. H. Short left today for vt Lynchburg. Va. f Jg, BM MP LIST ACTION TAKEN TO MEET V1F.YVH OF PKEMIDENT WII.SON. LIVE SJOCHtSfl FREE jj In ThJ* Enlargement of the- (Yef Uat? the President Took u i^udlnp ml Arthre hut. Didn't Like Taxed Meat*. Washington. June 4.?Reversing its former action In voting to place wheat hour, oatmeal and Trent: meats un the dutiable list, the Senate fl nance sub-committee in charge of ? the agricultural schedule voted late today lo place live,.stock, wheat and .. -J?JH 3uts on the free llat. This action, It was authoritatively stated. was taken to. meet the-views :?f President Wilson. Senator Sim:110ns, chairman of the finauce comliittee, and other administrative er-dcra who disapproved the deciaioa mncunced yesterday to tax meats 10 ier cent, compensatory to a duty on attle in the ^nderwood bill, and to issess a compensatory duty on both <^9 lour and oatmeal. The vote to reenaider was taken in the sob-comlittee on a motion made by Senator -* immons, ex-offlcio member of all he sub-committees handling the vaious tariff schedules, when he re- * tmed to the capitol from a~ confer-'""" nee with the President. , In this enlargement of the^-ee list resident Wilson is known to have then a leading part, as he did in the -?p|j9 tatter of raw wool and sugar. . Aa e still Is standing uncompromisingly >r the wool and sugar schedule*, so -_s9 la declared, he "wtTt"stand 5rmTy~ B ir free cattle, sheep and hogs and -ee wheat and oats, now that this frfif" determine^ iinnn ns th,~- r.nr-> ! ' policy. . x. ISHOP TKAVKI/KD IN STKF.IlAliK. . New York, June 4?A high church Ignitary was a steerage passenger , i the steamer Caronia, which arriv1 yesterday from Liverpool. He as the Rt. Rev. Charles R. Drent. piscopal bishop in the Philippne lands. "I came in the steerage." the blshp said, "because 1 believe the place >r a clergyman Is with the common _ eople. There I rubbed shoulders ith the immigrants, who will some ay make American citizens, and if lese are a sample of all that come le American has reason to be proud t her adopted children." ItLEGATtS TO AlTEND B. P. OJJMTIW Among the delegates who will at- ? end the D. P. O. E. Convention at Wilmington tomorrow and Friday rom this city * are D. W. Taylor, apt. Geo. T. Leach. C. M. Little. J. \ Taylor. Dr. Joshua Tayloe. J. H. I4em?Hugh?G.- H Sterlings? harles Sterling and W. H. Ellison. m 4 iti!i 4civ i.incvsrs June 3?S. G. Merrimma of Wash- v ngton and Love G. Kdwards of Edward. .*! May 29?W. G. Stephens and Ole Chandler of Bragaw. 1 ; 'I KKSOl.l T^OVS OF KKSI'fct T. Whereas, It has pleased our Heavnly Father, In His infinite wisdom > remove from our midst, by death, ?e chairman of our Board of Road upervisors, J. M. Litchfield. Therefore, lie it resolved1st. That thts Board has lost a slued and respected member and ie entire community a worthy and iffi seful cltisen. 2nd., That we extend our sincere rmpathy to the bereaved family and >mmend them to the fatherly ear*? ? f Him who tloeth all things well. 3rd. That a copy of these resoluons be spread upon oar minutes, - * ae sent to the bereaved family and e sent to the Washington Dally ewa for publication. Done by the Board of Supervisor* ' Richland Township in regular seeon May 31, 1913. . * ~t1 C. T. BROOME, iittit N. W. POTTER. f- A. HARDY. ComalttM. " . r - J P. O. Saiadaii of BMm in la rublactoo oa a trial rlalt raster- . .-v?nai " ^ - j.L