THE ENTERPRISE Published Weekly. •' WILLIAMgTON, N. C. 1 , Few pessimists are able to shave themselves, and even some optimists talL Mat to a breeze from the north or east, one from the south or west Is most acceptable. . No. Rollo, the backbone of summer has not been broken —merely a chill running up Its spine. Boae people who have never worked la a harvest field wonder at the scarcity of harvest hands. Boneheads are people who go out In launches without a sufficient supply of P"" 1 ' 1 " to bring them back. "Earthquakes," says a physician, "are good for the liver." If you have a weak liver, move to San Fran risco. Hammer throwing should be encour aged In every town, athletics or not. Throw It Into the river. Don't knock, booA. Ohio woman, ninety-one years old. boasts that she never has been kissed, but it sounds more like a confession than a boast. It la claimed that goat'* milk will prolong Ufa, but to tba goat'a milk tfri&kar, ltka the married man, Ufa only aeema longer. South American railway trains ar« reported to be stuck In anowdrlfts. Blip thla under the swoat-band of Four hat and keep cool. The society for the suppreßßlon of nnnccesßary noises calls itself the otologlcal congress. The very name la an unnecessary noise. One may hope that so many of those new style nickels will bo Issued that a nickel will always be handy when the telephone is to be used. We are informed that every time we swat a fly we kill 100,000,000 bac teria. Our notion of no Job on a hot day 1B to count 100,000,000 bacteria. A somnambulist In Pennsylvania walked to work In his Bleep. This la the first instance on record in which a sleep walker ever did anything use ful. We have not noticed the boat rock era this season particularly, but the person who smokes cigarettes In bed has begun to figure in the casualty Usts. Every time we attend a ball game we are led to wonder how the man ager holds his Job when there are BO many superior baseball generals In the bleachers. A Des Moines choir loft Is to be screened to hide the singers' ankles. Mufflers might also be provided for buntlngcase watch covers if the ser mons run long. A scientist tells us that a grass hopper can jump 200 times its own length, but it has nothing on the poli tician when the time conies to Jump on the band wagon. A New Jersey woman, to get rid of flics, got them drunk on whisky. She Bays that she went on the principle that a drunken fly was like a drunken man—easy to handle. Woman In New York was struck by lightning nnd cured of her rheumatism, but we do not expect to sec any rheu matic sufferers going around with lightning rods on their heads. The small boy, now a big one, who years ago was sternly reproved, if not mere vigorously punished, for catching flies In cliurch instead of listening to the sermon is at last vindicated. An exchange tells us that there Is a fish In the vicinity of Hawaii known as the humuhumumunukuapuaa. Compos itors and proofreaders will be glad to hear of the humuhumumunukuapuaa. As it la& said that rats cannot be kept from ports, and that they may in troduce the plague, why do not the vessels adopt the remedy of a police force ot cats or rat terriers to catch the rodents In the natural way? When the king of Sweden com ! manded the presence at the royal palace of the Indian athlete who won the all-around athletic championship at the Olympic games, the winnei t refused to go. The situation is un precedented, and the winner's basgg. fulness has thrown the ro/al entour age Into a near fit at the Idea of a man's allowing bis own inclination! to take the precedence of royal pleas ure. A Philadelphia man died while tell ing a joke. When one reflects on the" way some people do tell jokes, It seems that the Interests of society at large would be served If retribution were to follow oftener. A defaulting county treasurer In Illi nois was paroled On condition he re pay the money taken, in inatallmenta the court giving him, at the Install ment rate, over 160 years to pay the total sum. If he does not pay it in the given time probably the law wljl take jtf, MN drastic measures with him. Kfcffrlf'' •*> " ■ ''r' t '"... .«■' •i a 36 LIVES ARE LOSU 111 BIG FLOODS DEATH AND DESTRUCTION AS RESULT OF FLOODS IN PENN SYLVANIA AND W. VA. MANY WERE PANIC-STRICKEN Hundreds of Houses Toppled When Struck by the Water.—Tranpor. tatlon Stopped. Pittsburg, Pa. —As a result of tor rential rains throughout Pennsylva nia and West Virginia, thirty-six are dead and others missing. Added to the list of fatalities are the foreign ers at Colliers, W. Va., bringing the list there up to eighteen; three at Burgettstown, Pa., bringing the list there up to four, and one at Wood lawn, Pa., near'this city, in addition, others are reported missing, but It Is believed that the above will probably cover the number who met death. At all points the storm Is over. The people in the various towns are at tempting to take care of conditions caused by the flood, but are making little progress. Help Is on the way, and has arrived at some points, but the actual extent of the disaster can not be estimated. From reporta It la believed the mon etary damage will reach cloße to sl, 600,000. After twenty-four houra of exces alvely hot weather, the atorm broke. In addition to an extraordinary rain fall, the electrical features were moat spectacular. Within a ahort time the water had washed away railroad tracks In many placea and looaened tons of earth which came tumbling from Burroundlng hills, choking thor oughfares, in a number of western Pennsyl vania towns, citizens became panic stricken. At Newcastle, Pa., churches were dismissed when it was an nounced that a flood was headed for the town. At Ford City, Pa., a dozen houses were washed from their foundations. Lightning struck a Bcore ot houses, while McQrahn, a suburb 1B under from 3 to 5 feet of water. A cloudburst devastated the valley In which Colliers, W. Va., Is situated. The entire valley was deluged, hous es swept from foundations, railroad tracks torn up for long stretches and roads made impassable by landslides. Colliers seemed to suffer the brunt of the storm In West Virginia. Debris floated down the creek, piling high at Holllday's Cove, and a score of hous es were washed away by the gorge. CAUSED REIGN OF TERROR Lon Callls Wounds Three Men and Shoots at Two Women. Memphis, Tenn. —Three men were wounded, two women fired upon nar rowly escaped, and the entire com munity of Maßsey Station, near here, was kept In a Btate of terror for hours by Lon Callls, who ran amuck with a shotgun. Posses are search ing the countryside for the man. who was, some time ago, liberated on ball of $15,000 on a murder charge. Callls drew a revolver. It Is charg ed, but WHS overpowered by men In a store nnd ejected after having been disarmed. 11.s demonstration with the pistol is said to have been without apparent cause. he returned with a shotgun, and those remaining in the store barricaded themselvea. Callis then went to a residence near by, where he is sulil to have fired through the windows at two women. Firing the shotgun and reloading at Intervals, the nmn created a Btate bordering on panic among the inhab itants. keeping sharp watch mean time on the men hurdled In the store. Editor of Judge Killed. New York.—Carlton T. Garretson, editor of Judge, died here from inju ricß received when he was thrown from his horse on May 10. Although he had been paralyzed from his neck down s nee the accident, he had fre quently dictated material for his pub lication. Prior to his connection with Judge, Mr. Garretson was connected with the editorial staff of Leslie's Weekly and the New York Evening Globe and had published small news papers on the Pacific coast. Will Demand Arbitration London, England.—lt Is officially announced that the British govern ment will make a formal demand upon the Oniteil States government for arbitration of its claim that the Panama canal toll act, passed recent* ly by the United States congress, vlo lates the Hay-Pauncefote treaty. Noth ing definite Is known here beyond the brief official announcement that th« formal demand for arbitration would be made, but It U believed Instruc tion already are en route to the Brit ish embassy at Washington Shot Whlls Asleep. Norfolk, Va.—James A. White, a private in Battery C. First battalion, Virginia field artillery, Is in King's Daughters' hospital, Portsmouth, with a bullet wound In his head, received while In camp with a platoon of ar tillery- White was shot by one of the outposts accidentally, It la assert ed by the soldiers, who say that the firing was done when intruders, ap proaching , the picket line* In the darkness, refused to stop at challenge.' The sentry, who flred the shots, says | he discharged his pistol In the air. / A. J. DREXEL BIDDLE B m. " *■' A well known young citizen of Phil adelphia who combines athletics with religious work. SEEK TROUBLE WITH 11. S. ANTAGONISTIC FORCES IN CUBA CAUSED ASSAULT ON CHARGE, DECLARES RIVERO. Publication of Llbolous Astl-Amsrlcsn Artlplss Brought to Attontion of Stat* Department. Washington.—That Enrique Maza, the reporter who attacked Hugh Gib eon, American charge of the legation In Havana, wag merely a tool in the hands of Cuban plottera antagonistic to the United States, and who would like to get the Cuban government into trouble with this country, waa the opinion expressed here by Senor Mar tln-Itlvero, the Cuban minister. He was of the belief, he said, that Maza had not attacked Mr. Gibson of his own volition, but that he had been urged on by others who had mad# him think he had been insulted and that he should seek revenge. Under no circumstances, no matter what his provocation may have been, said the minister, was Maza justified in the action he took. That justice would be done In the case was tha declaration of Senor Martin Rlvero. The minister has notified hla gov ernment of the demands of the United States that the assailant be punished. Aa soon as he had learned of the at tack, the minister had "spontaneoualy sent word to Cuba," he aaid, "that the United States had laws rendering vir tually immune from attack the p«r aona of foreign representatives here, and that on account of this reciproc ity, the full vigor of the Cuban law would be applied. In case a country which doesn't protect Cuban represen tatlvea,' 1 said the minister, "no fur ther rights are extended to its diplo mats than to any other foreigners." He immediately called attention, he said, to this clause in their laws. Havana, Cuba. —In consequence of a vigorous protest by Hugh Gibson, the charge d'affaires of the American lega tion here, against the release on triv ial ball of Enrique Maza, the news paper reporter who assaulted him, Maza was arrested for the third time by order of the audlencla court and committed to Jail to await indictment. Immediately after the re-arrest of Maza, the squad of Becret service men who had been detailed to wntch the American legation and to attend Mr, Gibson wherever he went, was re lieved from duty, Mr. Gibson's vigorous Insistence that his assailant be prosecuted arous ed a fresh storm of Indignation of the press. Mother and Six Children Cremated., Rutherford, N. J.—Mrs. Smlllo De- Baro and six of her seven children, ranging from five months to 12 years of age, met death In a fire which de stroyed their home. Deßaro, the hus band and father, a'hd the seventh child, a boy of IS, escaped by Jumping from a second-story window. De- Baro and his family made their home on the second floor of a frame house. Mrs. Deßaro and the six younger children slept In a rear room and the father and the oldest boy in the front. Deßaro and the boy tried to rescue the woman and children, but a wall of Are checked them. With their night clothing ablaze, they Jumped from the window. Boy Drops 2,000 Feet. Fl'nt, Mich.—ln the presence of hundreds of people, 14-year old Ches ter Betts, son of Bart N. Betts of Flint, was accidentally caught by the guy-rope of a balloon and hurled about two thousand feet in the air before the rope untangled and hurled him to his death. He crashed against the roof of a barn, and was still alive when spectators reached him, but he soon expired. The tragedy occurred at a county fair, and, when the bal : loon and aeronaut shot upward*, many people thought he was a dummy. Robbed of $5,000 While Asleep. Washington, Ga.—Local banks were notified here that P. M. Laxton of Charlotte, N. C., had been robbed of $5,000 in cash and checks while asleep In a Pullman car between At lanta and Charlotte. Mr. Laxton is vice president of a company which is putting in a new' electric plant here and the money was in part payment by the city of Washington for that work. Four thousand dollars of the money waa in the shape of a cashier's check and the rest in currency. in MIERS GET $4,000,000 THAT SUM ADDED ANNUALLY TO THEIR BALARIES—SECOND . ADVANCE IN FOUR YEARS. 30,000 WILL BE EFFECTED Carriers on Standard Routes to Re ceive $l,lOO a Year With Ineraass for the Shorter Routes. Washington.—Under authority con ferred by the postofflce appropriation bill, Postmaster General Hitchcock increased the salaries of rural letter carriers on standard routes from sl,- 000 to $l,lOO a year, thus affecting 30,000 men, with proportionate in creases to carriers on shbrter routes. The order will become effective Sep tember 30. This will mean an increased dis bursement of $4,000,000 a year. It !b the second salary advance for ru ral carriers made in the last four years. At the close of the last fiscal year on June 30, there were 42,031 rural mail carriers, the aggregate pay being $40,66,740. When the rural de livery system was instituted 16 years ago, 83 carriers were employed at an annual cost of $14,840, the maximum individual pay being S2OO a year. The Increase provides rural car riers adequate compensation for ad ditional burdens to be imposed by the parcels post system effective o» January 1. "The parcels poat ayatem on rural niallroutes can be conducted practi cally with no extra expensea to the government, except the lncreaaed sal ary allowance to carriers," said Mr. Hitchcock. "In my Judgment thia ad dltlonal cost will be more than offset by an lncreaaed revenue, thua Insur ing the maintenance and, from time to time, the extenalon of the rural delivery syetem at a self-suppotrlng branch of the postal service." Mr. Hitchcock has directed, also, that rural mall carrlera, on the com pletion of twelve months' service, be granted fifteen days' leave with pay. This will require the additional ex penditure of fBO,OOO a year in the payment of substitute carrlera. 800 U. S. MARINES SAIL United States Hurrying Forces to tha Disturbed Central American Country, Panama. —The United States cruis er California has sailed for Nicara gua with nearly 800 marines, who were sent south from Philadelphia on the transport Prairie to reinforce the American contingent, which already have been landed In the Central American republic from the United States warships. Managua.—Americans and Europe ans in the beleaguered capital are saW, but nothing is known concern ing the situation of those at Mata galpn and other places, who have not been heard from in ten days. At that time all was reported well with them, with the exception that one German had been killed at Matagalpa. The wife of the British consul gen eral here, who Is marooned at Jlno tega, northwest of Matagalpa, got a letter through to her husband. It was written a week ago, and said she was well. Nothing has been heard from several English women at Mazaya since the trouble taarted. Cottonwood Lost by White House. Washington. —An historic Cotton wood tree that had adorned the pres- Ident's front yard—the north lawn of the white house— since it was plant ed in 1832 by President Andrew Jackson and several of his cabinet of ficers, was removed, having succumb ed from unknown causes. It was pre sented to President Jackson by the Creek Indian Chief Alpataoa just be fore signing the treaty by which the Creek nation was removed from Flor ida. An Indian prophecy connected with the tree was that as long as it should live Its shade would typify the protection and good will which the mysterious God of the Creek Indians would spread upon the white govern ment . Boys Fight to Dsath. Ch'cago.—An amazing story of a deadly feud between two boys for the love of a girl companion was told to the police as providing the motive for the murder of Solomon Qolep, 14 years of age, by Tony Bruno, 15 years of age, in the presence of 1,500 chil dren, at the McLaren playgrounds, Lowell place and West Polk street. Oolep was shot twice, one bullet en tering the left side and the other the eye. He died on the way to the hos pital. Rose Marks Is said to have been the girl for whom they fought. Six Person* Killed. Green Bay, Wis. —One passenger and five trainmen .were killed, two other persons were seriously injured and twenty-one were slightly hurt when train No. 112, on the Lake Shore division of the Chicago and Northwestern railway, running thir ty miles an hour, was derailed two miles north At Lyndhurst, Wis., as the result of a washout, caused by a cloudburst. The locomotive mall car, baggage car. smoker and coach left the track and ell hut the day coach '.urned ow. | .. • 4 . ... • . 'I 4 •» -i GEORGE W. PERKINS George W. Perkins Is trsssurer tha Progressive Nstlonsl committee. CANAL MS CO 10 HAGUE GREAT BRITAIN HAS RENEWED PROTEST AGAINST THE MEABURE. Unltod Statos la Informed That Great Britain Will Appeal Mattar to Tha Hague. Washington.—Great Britain baa re affirmed ita protest against the Pan ama canal bill. In a note filed with the atate department by A. Mitchell Innes, charge of the British embassy. It was stated that If a satisfactory agreement could not be reached Great Britain would appeal to The Hague tribunal for arbitration. The note submitted says Great Brit ain will give careful consideration to both the bill and the message Presi dent Taft sent to congress relating to discrimination in favor of American coastwise shipping in the canal. If after due consideration it Is found that no satisfactory agreement can be reached in the matter Great Britain declares that it will be necesaary to appeal to arbitration. Mr. Innes was .instructed by hla government to file the proteßt and. ha sent It to the state department. It atated merely that Great Britain atlll stands in her previously explained at titude In regard to the Panama bill. The tone of the note makea It appear that Great Britain believes It will be necessary to submit the question to arbitration. Mr. Innes, who has been acting as charge of the embassy during the ab sence of Ambassador Bryce, came to Washington recently from the Bum mer headquarters of the British em- bassy in Maine to remain during the discussion in congress of the bill One state department official de clared he did not believe Great Brit ain had a case to carry before The Hague tribunal. Ottawa, Ont. —Speaking on the Pan ama canal question at a dinner to vis itlng British officers and legislators. Sir Wilfrid Laurier said he believed British, Canadian and American di plomacy would bring about an agree ment satisfactory to all. Point'ng to the fact that for more than 100 years difference between Canad aand the United States had been settled without resort to arms, I Sir Wilfrid declared that poor arbi | tratlon was better than the most suc cessful war. Detectives Guard Rockefeller Horn*. New York.—John D. Rockefeller, Jr., in a statement regarding labor troubles on his father's estate at Tar rytown, made it that private detectives had been called to delve into the situation. A detective, with a large force of deputies, has been guarding Mr. Rockefeller's 1,000-acre place for several weeks. About 200 men are employed on the estate, near ly all foreigners. Mr. Rockefeller dls cred.ted reports that it was a black hand warfare. Commission Rule Por New Orleana. L New Orleana. —A commission form > of government. Including the right of i Initiative and referendum, waa adopt s ed at the apecial election here by a I vote of more than 10 to 1. The offl i cial returns were 28,900 for and 2,119 - against. Both regular and reformera , voted for the new ayitem of govesn . ment. At the general election In No - vember a constitutional amendment > will be voted upon, the carrying of - which will mean that the right of ro » call will alao be made a feature of . the commission form of government General Booth la Burled, r London, England.—Funeral services > of the founder of the Salvation Army, I Gen. William Booth, took place at the II Olympia. In accordance with tradl s tiona of the organisation they were ] without pomp or aymbola or mourn ■. lng, but were carried out with a mov j ing fervor and impreßatveneaa. Thir sty-four thousand persona participated i in the functions. Nearly half of them •, wore the coats and red Jersey* or bon t nets with the red ribbon so familiar \x on the streets of the cities of the world where the army Is established ■ ■ .«*■ :i*L ! REGULARS SET BARE PLURALITY , IN VERMONT ELECTION.—PRO- GRESSIVE AND DEMOCRATIC VOTE LARGE. THE LEGISLATURE ELECTS The Early Returns Indicate That the Ueual Republican Majority Has Been Swept Away.—Progressive Leaders Greatly Pleased With the Result White River Junction, Vt. —The strength of the new Progressive party in ita first line-up against the older parties and the disappearance of the Republican majority for the first time in ten years and the first time In the history of the state on a presidential year, were the eatetandlng feature* of the state election In Vermont, It was apparent early that there had been no election by the people, although a sufficient number of Re publican representatives are, success ful to seem to ensure the choice of Allen M. Fletcher of Cavandish by the Legislature. For many years political students have pointed out that any decrease In the Republican majority In Ver mont in September below normal of 26,000 has been followed almoet in variably by the party defeat in the presidential light In November. These majorities which have averaged cloae to 30,000 in all the state elections in Vermont in presidential years since 1892 were represented by a bare plu rality. The Republican loss apparently went In a great degree to the Progres sives and to a somewhat lesser ex tent to the Democrats. The falling off in the Republican vote began with the first return while the Progressives gained all along the line In some cases carrying towns which had heretofore been regarded as strongly Republican. Progressive leaders were greatly plesaed with the reeult. It was point ed out that the party had gone into the fight with an organisation that was new to politics and was forced to make up with notable orators what it lacked in party management, with Colonel Roosevelt leading the charge. The Democratic managers also deri*- ed satisfaction from the early returns showing as they did decided gains over two and four years ago. They also pointed out that these gains would be made despite the claims of the Progressive speakers that the lat ter party would recruit some of its strength from Democrats. Rebels Threaten Cananea. Csnanea, - Mexico —Rebels dashed into the Cananea district, cut all the wires between here and Naco, and burned three railroad bridges. When the news reached Cananea 200 men left to engage the rebels, reported as numbering about 125 mounted men. Later the force of volunteers to de fend Cananea In the event of an at tack by the rebels was Increased to 1,200. Two Men Shot During Election. New Orleans. —TWb men were shot, one fatally, as the result of a fight, immediately after the opening of the polls for the parochial election here. Ralph Bonee, reformer, shot in the stomach, will die. Paul Rivard, Jani tor of the new court house, a "regu lar," shot in the groin—is not badly hurt. Harry Plttingill, a foreman of the sewerage and water board, a "regular" did the shooting. 120,000,000 Disease Germs In Bottle. Binghampton, NT. Y. —A bottle con taining 120,000,000 disease germs, enough to infect an entire city is awaiting a claimant at the police star tion here. It was loßt from a train, probably an express car. The bottle was being shipped from the New' Je rsey state laboratory, probably for ex perimental purposes in some other laboratory. It was found lying near the track by Patrolman McGinnis. Convicts Try to Seale Prison Wall. Jackson, Miss. —Unruly convicts in the Michigan state prison went on a rampage and before they were cowed by Jackson militiamen, special depu ties snd guards, they had destroyed considerable, property and It is said two or three escaped. The rioting began when leaders of the unruly prisoners liberated 75 men from the bull pens. These scrambled for the walls, setting fire to buildings as they dashed for liberty. Guards broke up the mob before It hsd effected com petent organisation. The Condition of the Cotton Crop. Washington.—The condition of the growing cotton crop of the United States on August 26 was 74.8 per cent, of a normal, compared with 76.5 per cent., on July this yesr, 73.2 per cent, on August 25 last year, 72.1 per cent, in 1910, and 73.6 per cent, the aver age of the past ten years on Augnst 26 This estimate was announced by the Crop Reporting Board of the 'United States department of agricul ture from the reports of the corre spondents snd agents of the bureau of itatistlca. 'iiiiU'J.SL.: .VW'Jv- fir- ;