DISPATCH KC OP IMPORTANT HA* 1 PKNIN48 QATHKRKD PROM ? OVER THK WORLD. FOX THE BUSY RUDER m?: >. yp * I / ?X.A Hie Oooorrenoas Of Days dlvea to Ail Iplt?mlu4 Porwt Por e explosion had ? -^i'^2Sli"hi ^ life 01 ykXar per. ?? alftWrV*," wMfc 'Wk, ;iinai hl? train woufd have PMMd on, the oppo.lt* tradt^ * ?1nca Oelaalo Caetanl, Italian am WnTn ?w "*Unlue replaced In Sep from^ ^f?20^_*mb ? '? **lng announced jS^rS^SKf- u" ??"??? jJnfre^ Who " Lord iioiTt Vf I00 016 neretWla 18 ?n route to hla fanph In *nd inc/d(mtaIIy *111 attend tte poIo maiiAei on Long Island be tow? ST. : *na ' American ?J!? J leave the steamer on a ? t#* T*. New y<5rk b?y and land *?" CaMllett?,* *>tat execu ?a^^;;Prr ' JT'sr^i ,nc:nd! Rut501^ s^ck SL ?takn, and Sen *tor FV**ler, neases as far north as Cumberland Oap. President Coolldre Is expected to fill, promptly the post of ambassador Mexico, soon to be vacant by the retirement of Charles B. Warren, of Michigan. Tha federal trade commission has Y 8' 8tM' corP?r?tl?n ?-controlling 60 per cent of the In dustry?to abandon the Pittsburg plus basis for setting the price of steel. In I a sweeping decision whose effects will f?aeh not only the r??t of the steel industry but the general public, bust- 1 ness. and especially the farmers, to U>? ?*t*nt of millions of dollsra I V't Participation by 9fea(JUiat Cool Id ?e 5?as\?Br,si rag PMiaMimig 9f h'# presidential campaign The make-up of the-com^?^.^ taa been virtually determined, only i ?r 01 ?*e eleven places re mainlng to be ailed. ^ />Y~. ; . Domestic ? The passenger rtwmtr Jam.. T. . , ' ,of the Eastern Steamship ???' ?*?' "*<* wrt Si c^S-h ^ ^ n?^- ?"?* ~ Crotch taUn(1> near the mtnac. to Stontnston harbor in a thick tog. ^ ^ Richmond oomtr sunerior court, Hock Ingham, jT^ "25? that in idmjfted member of th? ??? : tta, b. I. ^ h? ? KUn-~ I* ? ?se which tap attracted wide attention, J. U Hawley, superintendent of the Rock Ingham railroad, was acquitted of a charge of perjury. " ^?e*aI *< 0" Mack hud war far which tour men paid penaltv win. ttatr Uvea at the ?ato gSZaJ?* Moundavtlle aeveral months aco waa *Z ^rltle. wh? A.X.M tady of Kocco Fiorelll, wrapped fax a eaody colored quilt, was loami to ! Clarkahur*. W- Vf_ Launching a drive to Won - drinking la Waahteitaata - r ."' denn. a equad of prohfldtlaa **cently raided the laahloeahl^rZ Pnradis cafe roof aad * i . n~~ Patrons on charges of fiw-i ?tat and drinking in ry*-n. mj **? WW out qnietty, wfthoot h. twupttoo to dance mmtc. The fh* *w released on $3f Tlalwal Ml appearance in court. . ^ rimlr b w liiflk tee. * ahot wound, her na, |M hgh Jk i*ls ta a critical condition fros* wa2 Wounds, and her as - cat oyer the f.~ ??Fl under arrest at Mol. as " result of a free-for-all fasolly fight at their hom? near ArroU, 'Ua.:' >' ?41 'least Ore river -fraaiaia an aground and lnnnmerabla famse i~it are stranded as the result of on nm. cedenbed drop of ten feet la tke Ohio **ivef within the but 24 hours. tv SWM br 4ta sudden rals ^ofwlcketa la the dans above Cfal Because his father -*u always swearing around the house,- irmi old Willard Kroger killed him with an iron bar and buried his bodr fa vh?* ??*? ?aj? ? farmal confessslon, which authorities said he made at Hudson, Wis. i Two Jewish societies are reported (to have pledged more one - tar of the 12,000,000 ? T-'rn sought by the la Follette-Wkeeler to dependent ticket. . _jn?e offer of the northwester* grate trade Interests of marketing to *** "'aaaapolla aad Do Inth trading centers waa ? without comment or recommendation, to the board of directors of the re-' oently organised grata aalea corpora tton by O. E. Bradfnte. president of the American farm Bureaa federation. T ?*??. W VS.. home town of John W Davis, Democratic presiden tial nominee. waa advised of the Wrth In Kanawha oounty of Ooolidge w?~. some and Hall- And- Maria Ran some, twin eons of Constable. T. W. n? ? some. The Mitchell gas well, located thir teen miles north of Fort Oolltas, Colo which came In recently, caught ftre' a little later, the cause being unknown. The well had been flowing' between ki ,'mUUoB and twenty-five million cubic feet of gas a day. i Mrs. Lotti Dana, 23, Rochester. N J., said that because she had become discouraged she had taken her two boys to the woods, kissed them good bye and abandoned them. The chfl dren were found after two daya, each in a serious condition. h"DJred "1 aeventy-two lives ZV A * y 8 rescne fleet that has tened to pick up lifeboats from a sink jn*. steamer during . lo?e ltUnd EoAd fog. Of those saved (92 were passengers, a few hours after the steamer Boston had been PoTn? T,M.7n, lUnker Swlft ArT*w ott irnth ^ ' four bad from the.rP 1th? awakened York * ,. ? e#P' aDd ",led for ^w ork, FsU River. Mass.. and Newport R; I. Three passengers, two men and one woman, were killed. ? 1 A posse headed by county officer* is searching the Florida lake region in ?^.S0U .er? ^ of the ?t*?" tor the bodies of two unidentified negroes, said to have been ahot to death by a ?h^ r..ot whlte following report that the nagroea had made insulting remarks to a white woman. - The fate of Richard Loeb and Na than F. Leopold. Jr.. kidnapers aad slayers of 13-ycar-old Robert Fraaks. Chicago. )ias been placed In the hands of one man? John R. Caverly, chief justice of the criminal court -of Cook oounty. The boys pleaded guilty. The receiver of the New York and Cuba Mall Steamship company, oper ating the Ward line, haa filed iuJt against the Atlantic Gulf and West Indies Steamship Line, and other, in which restoration of twenty million dol lars. a"eged to have been unlawfully obtained, Is sought. $200,000 RUE 01 LYNCHBURG roPAQCO WAREHOU8E8 AND SEV ERAL 8TORE8 ARE 8WEPT AWAY. , N Lynchburg, Va,? Flre, which start ed from the flashlight of a photograph er who wai taking pictures of the In dustrial exhibition being held In the Bookers tobacco warehouse here caus ed property damage estimated tK over 1200,000. For a'n hour and a halt the flre rag ed before It was Anally brought under control. Besides the warehouse, which was destroyed, entailing loss of over 60 exhibitors, three store building) were gutted and several other busi ness establishments were damaged. The three stores which suffered 'Iosb were the Perrow-Evana Hardware company, which had stock on hand estimated at $100,000 and which had declared a dividend to stockholder! only a tew hours before the flre broke out. The Army and Navy Sales com pany and the Woody-Evans company All three of the stores were connected with the warehouse by doorways. C. R. North and company, whole sale grocers, suffered heavy watei damage to a $40,000 stock, and Ander son-Stone and company suffered watei damage to their stock of groclerles add feed. One" hundred and fifty, pouuCe of dynamite was removed, (from the Hardware store Jusi as the flames en veloped the building but a carload ol cartridges and shells could not be got ten out and waa^ exploded by the flre. No one, however, was Injured in the explosion. ' ' Excursion Steamer Sink*. Norfolk, Va. ? The excursion steam er Gratitude with b'etween 150 ond 200 per/ion* aboard sank in the harbor. II is believed all of the passengers wer? taken oft by small boats. They were put aboard the steamer Maryland and are being brought to Nortolk, where a check will be made to determine 11 there Was loss of life. The Gratitude was returning from an excursion with employes of the Texai Oil company and their families aboard anq according to the Information re ceived here struck a sunken barge There were many women, and children aboard and In the confusion it was 1m possible to tell whether all were res cued. ? ? ? ? ' ' - Wheat and Corn Reaches Record. NeW1 York. ? Continued strength In grain prices, persistence of ease In money aijd progress of the London conference shared attention in bust ness and financial circles last ^eek. While fluctuations In wheat and corn widened with Increased specula tive activity, values were well main tained. New hlfh prices were achiev ed ' during the week; A bullish crop estimate from Alberta and reports oi black rust in Manitoba were sustain ing factors. Foreign markets were strong. ? - Cotton Jumped sharply on an unex p'ected bullish government crop re pot^. The latter set the condition on July IS at 68.5 per cent, as against expectations of about 72 per cent. The Indicated crop was placed at 11,934,000 bales, against trade expectations ot 12,600,800 bales. The rise In cotton, which amounted to nearly two cents a pound, was not. considered, ^however, a favorable de velopment, for the textile industry, 1* already embarrassed by the high cost of raw material. It was recalled that the recent census bureau figures on conaumptlon during June showed that curtailment had brought operations In the mills down close to the point reached lq the depression of 1921. Mpqey rates showed practically no change, with the call rate on the New York stock exchange remaining at two psr cent day after day. There was no appreciable change In the tone ol the market. The federal reserve bank statement showed that discounts still were tailing off and that the open mar ket purchases ot short term govern ment paper were not sufficient to keep up the reserves, chiefly of gold. In the best informed quarters, the deadlock that has developed at the London conference over the question of the security for a German loan If an occasion for regret but not for sur prise. The financial view of the mat ter Is that a German loan cannot be sold' unless ample sategards are pro vided. ? that Investors, In other words will be exacting. Woman and Boy Killed. Los Angeles. ? A woman and a boj were killed and three other person) probably fatally Injured when the new cablng monoplane Calltonrnla crashed to the ground at an air port near here shortly afte ran ehxlbltlon flight, ac cording to report to the sheriff's ottlce Gees to Jail Sober ? Out DrUr/k. Oreensboro. ? Going Ipto jail cold sober and coming out drunk Is th< precedent set here by a negro woman believed to have made a record tor the state ot North Carolina. She did It wlih a hot-water bottle Arrested on some charge of a mlno nature, she took Into ber cell a hot water bottle, to ease pains during th< night, but the rubber container wai filled with liquor, not water, and whe: she was summoned to muntclapl couri the next morning she as too tlpsjr u walk straight NORTH GUM EDUCATION SOLD , ' ? , * PUBLICATION TO BE MERGED WITH ORGAN OF STATE EDU CATION ASSOCIATION Merger of the "North Carolina Edu cation" a monthly publication which has been In the educational field In this State for the pa?t 17 years with the "North Carolina Teacher," the or gan of the North Carolina Education Association which will make Its first appearance In September, was announ ced by Jule B. Warren, secretary ot the association and business manager of the new monthly. Uunder he tejm ot the merger, W. F. Marshall, editor and publisher of the "North Carolina Education" has sold all rights and interest in his publica tion to the North Carolina Education Association for the sum of $2,500. The Bale was negotiated yesterday by Fred Arcer, president of the association act ing under authority of his executive committee. "North Carolina Education" was es tablished by president E. C. Brooks of North Carolina State College 'while a professor of Trinity College. Later Mr. Marshall purchased an interest aB&gvbecame associated as business maWSger. Upon becoming State Su perintendent of Public Instruction sev eral years ago Dr. Brooks became contributing editor and later sold all of his Interest to Mr. Marshall, For the past year State Superintendent A. T. Allen has been a contributing editor. The "North Carolina Teacher" will be edited by a board ^of which Dr. M. R. Trabue of the University of North Carolina is chairman. , Short Terms are Opening In 8late Miss Hattle Parrott haa Just re turned from Mitchell county where she attended the annual Rural School Con ference of Mitchell county held at Bakersvllle, which marked the begin ning of,rural school conferences held before the opening ff the public schools o fthe county. So far as report ed Mitchell 1 sthe first county in the State to hold its conference for the school year of. 1924-26. The short term schools of the county opened on Mop day following the conference. The conference at Bakersvllle was a joint meeting of all they educational forces of the county. The Board of Education, the members of the Board of Commissioners, the superintendent an dthe supervisor of rural' schools niet with the teaching force of the county, together with the school com mitteemen, the farm demonstration agent, the health officer and the edi tors of the county papers. , County-wide educational policies for the year were proposed an 1 discussed and the representatives of the educa tional force present contributed; by statement the part they expect to take in the work of promoting the county . The program of the two-days m^et (hg included addresses by Judge Her^ riot _Clarkson, Miss' Hattle Parrott, and Jason Deyton. superintendent of schools in Mitchell county. There were also talks by several of the teachers and editors ot the papers. American Party Enters State Notice of intention to enter its presidential candidate in the Novem ber election in this State was served on Secretary of State W. N. Everett by the American Party, having its headquarters in Pittsburgh, Pa., and Judge Gilbert 0. Nations, Ph. D., as its candidate. The communication was referred to the Stat* Board of Elec tions' far answer. JuBt what the American party is could not be determined by the Se cretary of State. Its. letter-head was covered with names, but none of them had anything of familiarity about them and Mr. Everett was In some doubts about them. The letter Is signed byl W. M. Llnkus. as secretary to its na tional committee. The committee is made up of a score of names. No ruling has has yet been mode by the State Beard of Elections as to the entry of candidate of new or unrecog nised parties in the State elections, and no definite action will be taken until the full meeting of the board here to canvass the result of the sec ond primary. The meeting has not yet been called, lacking the count in Stan ley and Jackson counties. The Committee of Forty eight, and the Peoples' Progressive party, the latter the vehicle of Senator Robert M. LaFollett*. have inade inquiry of yiT. Everett. The .usual requirement for a new party is a petition signed by ten thousand residents and voters of the State, but this ruling can be re placed by other provisions that meet the approval of the board. New Corporations The following certificates of Incor poration were. issued from the office of the Secretary of State. W. N. Ever ett. Edgecombe Market. Inc.. Tarboro, with $10,000 authorized and $4,000 subscribed by Swlndell-Fulford Fish Co.. and A. S. Fulford of Washington %nd S. D Langley and W. C DouRlas of Tafboro. Wake Motor Company Rale'gh with ??uthorls.ed capital $25,000 preferred 'tock and 750 shares of common utick without no:ninal or par value. POINTS ON KEEPING WELL Dr. Frederick R. Green, Editor of "Health." l<0, 1**4. Wcaiern Nuwiynycr Union.) WHAT IS INSULIN? DIABETES la a disease Character ized by /(he present's of sugar In the urine. It bus been known (or thou sands of yeurs. ' ' Formerly regarded as a disease of the kidneys. It was found, uboul forty years ugo, to be due to degeueratlon of the pancreas, following some Infec tion, such as Influenza or typhoid fe ver. It may he caused by obesity. In 1890, Lungerlians found that only a part 'of the ^laud was destroyed In dlubetlcs and that the puncreas was really two glands In one. One gland secretes the pancreatic juice, which goes Into the small intes tine and aldB digestion. TJie* other gland manufactures a substance which Is taken up by the blood and which la necessary for sugar digestion. The parts of the gland which secrete this second substance are calted th? Islunds of llangerhans. ? If these Islunds degenerate, then the sugar In the food, Instead of being used by the body, Is discharged through the kidneys. , So that, no matter how much the patient eats, he Is unable to get enough nourishment, because much of his food 14 thrown away. Diabetic patients have enormous ap petites, but the more they eat the more poovly nourished they are. To malie matters worse, the changed chemistry of the body produces au acid condition of the blood called acidosis, which eventually poisons the patient. He becomes unconscious ? what is known us diabetic coma ? and usually, never awakens. In 1021, Dr. F. G. Bilntlnc. a young Canadian physician, determined to And this mysterious substance, the absence of which caused diabetes. After 'many experiments he suc ceeded In making a serum containing the secretion. of the Islands of Langer hnns, which he called Insulin. ' 1 It is now mnde from the pancreaB of the hog,' which. contains more Insulin than that of nny other animal. Before the discovery of Insulin the only tiling the doctor could do for dla-, betlcs wus to give them a starch and sugnr-free diet. ? Since Doctor Bantings discovery It is possible to restore the diabetic pa tient to practically normal condition. ? The doctor weighs the patient's food, estimates the amount of sugar eaten nnd the a amount 'of su'gnr excreted. Then he gives the putlent enough' Insulin to jllgest the sugar taken Into the body. This enables the body to absot^t It. Insulin Is not n cure for diabetes. It replace* the missing substance in the blood of the diabetic putlent and so enables'lilm to lead a normal life. ^ It Is not a substitute for other meth ods of treatment. Careful diet and ways of living are still necessary. It Is. ppsslhle that Its continued use may restore the pancreas to normal, ut least In mild cases, but this we do not know, as yet. ? GOOD FOOd SURPASSES DRUGS NEW YORK city spends thirty-flve' million dollars each year .main taining Its hospitals. Of this amriunt, ten mllllods, or nearly one-third, ar,e spent for , food. This la quite different from the. old Idea cf a hospital. People used to think they went to a hospital to take medicine. They know better now. A' hospital Is a place for making sick | people well, not for dosing them un necessarily. A hundred yen re ngo doctors didn't know what caused diseases or how they codld be prevented, so the only thing they could do was to give such medicines as they had. In the hope of restoring the pntlent to health. The wist doctor today doesn't give any medicine unless he knows that lt'n going to help the patient. Of courie, this means thnt what medicine Is given today is much more necessary and beneficial thnn the larger quantities that used to be administered. Doctors give fewer drugs today because they know more thnn their predecessors did. Hospitals spend more money for foo? or on receipt of price, 65c, if. not kept by your druggist, by addressing - , R. Schlffmann Co., 17S4 N. Main,' Los Angeles, Calif."? Adv. Taken 'Em Up 'Si). - ? mmwme W f# | Mother? pas that young man ever spoken to you of his forbearp? Daughter ? Spoken of them? You'd : think he was a drummer carrylfag a line of ancestors. .. ?f; WOMEN NEED SWAMP-ROOT Thousand* o f women have Iridndy and bladder trouble and never auspect It, ? Women's complaint* often prove to be nothing clae but kidney trouble, or the '.v; remit of kidney or bladder diaea^e. If the kidneya are not in a healthy con dition they may eauae the other organ* - to become diaeaaed. Pain in the back, headache, losa of ambition, nervousne** are oftentimes ? V symptom* of kidney trouble. Don't delay atarting treatment. Dp, Kilmer"* Swamp-Root, a phyaidan'a pre-, aeription, obtained at any drug atore, may be juat the remedy needed to overcome aueh condition*. .V "fy Get a medium or large rise bottle immei diately from any drug atore. However, if you wish first to teat thla great preparation, eend ten cent*' to Dr. > Kilmer k Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a ?ample bottle. When writing, be aura and mention thla paper. ? Advertiaement. ? I ' ? -? Of Whatever Kind "Blank's badly-told stories are a dreadful bore." ' Wit1, "Yes, poor relations generally are.'' V A Lady ?f Distinction Is recognized by the delicate, fascinate ing influence of the perfume she uses^ A bath with Cutlcura Soap and hoi water to thoroughly cleanse the pore* followed by a dusting with OuUcura Talcum powder usually means a clear, sweet, healthy skin. ? Advertisement. Lend Reclaimed From Sea More than 1,000,000 acres of land' have been reclaimed from the sea, river and lake. In the Netherlands *lnce the Sixteenth century. If y?ur ir? ?or?, *?t Remin Ey* Balaam. Apply l? ?< nl*ht and yo? art baattd by mornlnf. IT1 St.. N. T. Adv. Nearly 'JOO women carpenters, as shown hy the latest United States census. Rive the lie tc the myth that ? woman cannot drive a nalL