DUNN FAIR OCTOBER 12, 13, 14, : ( " PREPARE AN EXHIBIT S ********** Hmm <■> W W , . 'V jiTHF nl IN r^H?s?=i1 ******************** J& A II J A » , ' * T'" —■ ■ ■ —- ■ 1 ——. ■ ^ .—i ». 1 ___ _ __—______ ^ _ * t ^ ■ Volume VII__ Dunn, North tember 17. 1920. , - ,]»^Bnbe|4^p WARNS JUDGES OF U. S. COURTS THEY MUST NOT BE LAX League To Seek Im peachment All Judges Not Enforcing Law Washington, Sept. 1ft.—A commit <•* was appointed today at the Anti Saloon I.eague conference here to d.aft a resolution warning Federal Judges that unless they "aaciedly per form their sacred duties” in enforc ing prohibition laws the league will seek their impeachment. Charges ware made that some Fed eral judges had “coddled bootleggers and moonshiner.*'* and that prohibi tion laws were being made “a farce” la some sections by the light punish ment. The committee was named by the Rev. P. A. Baker, genaral superin tendent of the league, after speakers at the conference had vigorously cri ticised judges for alleged laxity in meting out punishment to thosa con victed of riolAin|t the prohibition amendment and the enforcement law. Clean Cut Waraiag Wayne B. Wheeler, general counsel of the league, declared that the warn ing to the Federal Judiciary should Ka "glaan enfM a rw4 ■ etitllitu g. > mil that official obligations mast be ob served. There were sleu stuck* on ths in terns! revennr bureau for the issu ance of wholesaler* permits The charges against Federal judges were precipitated by the statement of Atticus Webb, Tegaa league superin tendent. who told the conference that some Judges In his State had bean releasing “known bootleggers" with An* of (100 and that such sentence* had put ull such violators on notice to return to the illegal traffic. Some of thorn Judges coddled the bootleggers and moonshiner* dowa there," Webb declared. “Arrests have been followed by li^fct fines in scores of eases and the criminal* have gone back to maka more. It is a serious situation and an* that all persons be lieving in proper law administration should pay attention to.” Adeeaeto* Revolution Mr. Baker told the conference the way out of the situation eras a “revo lution in this Judge business" sod named a committee to draft tha org anisation's policy resolution. The conference was warned by Pe ter Schreiberawdiatrlct superintendent for the league at Toledo, Ohio, that their rsvrlations were “only provid ing munitions for the erets" and urg ed that such criticism he held to the ply he received was tell the truth." human of Inter __ were made by Samuel Wilson, the league’s attorney in New sersey, sw iwureo governor a.a ward* had "mad* good’ oa his pro miss to have his State "a* vat as the ocean.” He eaid that enforcement of prohibition laws was "at low tlds” in New Jersey because of a steady flow of liquor through permits to wholeselsrs issued by tbe federal gov ernment. t "You cannot dry a morasa" ho con tinued, "so long as streams flow into It. And the United States govern ment is letting liquor flow into Now Jersey through whole sals permits which we are powerless to chock." Ballance Gives Feast To Big Crowd on Farm Barbee mo Aad The Trlmmlage Served At Hie Babe sew Ft so ts t low .An elegant Barbecue was given bj J.'H. Ballance at his farm in Robeson Tuesday to the people living on hil place and to his namn-oos friends Over two hundred and fifty peopli partook of the meal which was terror Ant one o’clock. Parkton, Dunn Fayetteville, Saint Paul and Severn other places were wall represented Every arrangement had been madi to make the baibocne a success. Nlc< pigs, good cooks, and well arrange! tobies were all in evidence. Thi spread waa bountiful, the barbecui belay supplemented with bread, pic kies, lemoaada, and other deUcaeic that suited the occasion to all appe titan Thom were some good eaters pros ont but even then there was near!: two pigs loft that the crowd could no devour. Mr. and Mrs. Ballance sew the everyone had a cordial reception am a hearty welcome to all Urn. fan oanIiI viva iWam ft la a tiira nllFF tr go. No finer crop* or* to be wen any where than on this large farm whle is well cultivated and its people wel housed. Many took tha opportunity b look over the farm which is situate a#*ar Saint Paul. The entire erase was profuse in thanks to tbo hoot an hostess and wished for him and hi Ilfs companion long life and happ! aesa. REFERS TO HARDING AND COX AJ -GOLD DUST TWINS San Franelseo. Sept IS Seymos Stedman, Socialist candidate for vies president, In a speech hers last nlgi referred to the Republican sad Demi erotic parties as “the gold dui twins" and said the "paramount li sue seems to bo which has tha smalls campaign fund. Con or Harding." “J. P, Morgan and Company «uj port Cos; Cary and hit assistants i ths steal trust support Harding,” h said. “The slogan of tha poclollft can pelgn Is Dobs vsrsus Debs!" North Ctrsllm's Tehaseo Crop Washington, Sept IS—Nort^ Co alias's tohaeoo crop this yosr it for cast by the Do part meat of Africa tars at 4t4,Stb,OSO pounds or aboi It,000,000 pounds lorn than Xai tuefcy's crop, aash Stats products more than also quarter of the con try's record-breaking crop of 1,SS1 HtfiOO pounds. . I WOMANS CLUB PLANS PROGRAM FOR COMING YE^AR Members Called to Meet In The Rooms Of Chamber As s preliminary to embarking on Ilf program of community helpful noss the Woman's Club of Dunn has been called by ita president, Mra J. Lloyd Wade, to meet in the rooms of thu Ohsmber of Commerce Friday af ternoon, September 24, at 4 o'clock. A tentative program of the ensuing year's work is to be planned in this meeting. For this reason every mem ber is urged to attend. One of the first thing! to br under taken by the organization will be a drive to increase its membership. Di rectors of chi’ club believe that every woman of the community who can spire a little time from her usual du lirs should enlist with them and co operate in the club's effort to im life In thii effort they will be given ihr full lupport of the Chamber of Commrrre and Secretary T. L. Rid dli. After the club ii thoroughly organ ised with its new members it will un dertake the woman'! part In civic matter* thut cotm before tho Cham ber of Commerce. Since women have fullfledgvd cilisem it l« not propoied lo make of Uu- club an auxiliary of the chamber. Rather, It u purposed to make of it an allied organisation with equal powers and subject only to the will of its member*. Already the club haa accomplished one very fine thing for Donn. That ia th* vary fine job it haa caused to be done at the Cemetery, where until it assumed charge a few weeks ago weed* and undergrowth threatened to turn the silent city of tha dead back to the furevt. A short whilo ago club membrr* prevailed upon th* Board of Commissioner* to donate a ana of money for the'*mployracnt of a care taker for the cemetery This sum haa been supplemented by contributions from private citixens, and Pink W. Riddle haa been employed to care for the ground*. All of the weeds and undergrowth have been cleared from the cemetery the walks have been cleared and the summer house repaired. The work will cuntinoe until all of tha walk* have been hedged and the place mad* into a beauty spot Another thing to be undertaken by |J>* club ia the planting of pecan and other nut trees along tha eidewnlkj of Dunn. Them trees are excellent for shade and bora th* advantage oP lone life and shallow roots. Elm and reason that their roots burrow through the joints of aewor lioaa and clote the pipes. Mrs. McD. Holliday ia on* of th* manners wffo want tha nut tree*. She hope* to ice the days when Dean grows enough pecans to supply the. whole surrounding country. Mr. Harding Short On Coin,. Long On Advance Tails Southern Farmer* Committee to Co Bach Home tad Quit Talking Calamity Washington, 3»pl. 15.—"Go beck homo anil quit talking calamity,” was the subtentive advice given today by W. P. G. Hsrdiag. chairman of the federal reserve board, to a committee of about 60 southern farmers, merch ants and bankers representing the Amarican Colton association. The committee come to Washing ton asking the board to do something to bring aboot more liberal advances on cotton so the farmers might hold It longer; also to farther, if possible, the use of 1706,000,000 In alien pro perty fund* hrld by the alien custo dian for the financing of cotton to b« sold to central Europe. • Governor Harding told the commit I tee that their home banks should bo able to handle the cottoa situation. < Tha board could not take into ac count rise and fall in prices of cot 1 ton, tobacco, wool and other commo - ditias, sine* its duties ware clearly defined by law. He recently gava a similar ararsrtr to financially ember ' eased wool producers. 1 Governor Harding also predicted that with the coming of roll there I will bo a greater demand for high • grad* cotton, which the formers may i sell for enough anoaey to tide them > over aad enable them to hold tho ' loyrer grades. Mr. Harding suggested l that this prospect and the aid whieh 1 anight be exported from local banka, • ought to carry the farmers along a I while. I At any rate. Governor Harding did 1 not see how tho federal reserve board • undvr the law could be of aay speci - fie assistance and suggested that Om committee rmra name, wrm banker*, atop talking calamity ant high price* and weather tb* rtoim ai atber induatrie* are bavin* to do. Tbo conference apparently waa no' r very aaUafactory from tbo vlewpole - of the delegation. About tbo oall t concrete action taken waa tb# daelalor of the Committee ef tbe Amaviaac * Cotton amor lotion to nam* a commit ■ too of two member*, who or* aim r member* of Urn annate, to apoaaoi lagialatlon in th* next Congrom U ► extend tbe life and broaden tb* pow 1 ere' of tb* war Ananco corporation * Senator F. M. 8Irani cm*, of Nortl •* Carolina, and Senator looapb T. Bob Inaon, of Arkanaaa, were named a lb* congrrectonal t\*b committee. Tb* cotton committee bolievn* tb * wsr finance corporation ahonld b i- ampowomd to ■** a* a revobring f«n< i- alien property fnnda, new held fa thl it ■ country ao that each central Boro V- pehn COUntrie* aa Germany and Ana * trla may he able to place larva or i- dare for American carton. Wnetbe r' tbit arbema would h* practleol I* t be lean. / Peat In Robeson Not The Boll Weevil **•*• EalMHltflil Sherman Pm nnaacaa the Bull Fewad la Cat. tea Patches *Nwt WeertU.” Lam barton, SepL 16.—Bugs found in cotton flelde near Lumber-ton and reported to be boll weevil are nol wewvilt. which do no harm to cotton. report wat made by Franklin Sherman , atatc entoaologirt , to •bom tome of the bog* were tent Mr. Sherman laid that the bun aant to him are eu ranch like the boll weo vil that they are often mictaken foi the cotton pert, but that they are nol that no real boll wrrvil hai been •«nt to hie office from Robeeon coun ty or any other place in North Caro lina. The letter war dated September 13 and waa lent to A. H. Claud, of Lum bertun on wboee plantation boge wen found, that wore pronounced boll wcevila by none who were suppoced to know. There t» great rejoicing here and utrougu uie county over the fact that the boll weevil has not yet arrived. It had boon positively stated it had ar lived, and this positive aaauraac) from such authoritative source as tha ch:ef In entomology, division of ento mology, ruts department of agricul ture, la comfort! ny. Tho evil day Is not yet. If It ia aver to come. COp'ON GROWER MUST WORK OUT OWN SALVATION Nobody Will Help Him Until He li Organized To Help Himself Nobody l.« going to help the South ern cotton grower out of hta distrea, over tha d [socialisation of the cotton market untit ha develops oorev organi sed incllgntion to help himself doclar -d both the outstanding ^palters be fore tho Stats Branch of the Amer. ■can Cotton Grower; Association, Senator Marlon Butler and Scuatoi I. A. Biowa In Raleigh yesterday. Self help must coma through or ganised co-operation ia the building of bonded warehouses, and the saving of money in prosperous yuan to tidi the cotton growing section evor lean year*, both speakers declared. Whaa they have dona this, the Federal Re terra Banks will be mors than will ing to carry their cod of tho burden, tod tho 8outh .will at last bo free frotn financial bondage. ulatlon together next Monday to con sider tha resolutions pamed, urging the building of warehouses, the hold ing of tho pros sat crop from the mar ket until tha price la stabilised, and tha roductioa of seat year's acreagi by at least on# third. Growers Determined Four hundred cotton growers from 30 counties wars crowded iato the Ball of Representatives for 'the Beast ing. An atmosphere of determination rather than enthusiasm characterises ‘he meeting, which lasted tour and < half hours Close attention was ac .. A >t»r Butler and both kept cloae It their J^xt. Toward the ead of th< lesaion discussion oame to be general ind one or two Items that were kilt «d a* being untimely and unseemly. President L. 8. Tomlinson opene< the meeting at 10 o’clock, and tool a half an hoar for general diacrsaaioi of the problem that hea come oat •! the drop in the price of cotton tha bring* the farmer lam than it coat him to raiae It He appealed for thi united effort of the cotton grower toward the program of tha enaoetatioi declaring that in that direction la: the ori^h hope of the South for fret dom from financial alnvrry. Tha president named a reaolutloi committee which'retired to work ou tha draft of a resolution that wouli express the sentiments of the eoireen tion. They returned three hour* la Ur after Brown and Butler had tin 'shed speaking, with the resolution which waa passed without diaaant. Ml Tomllneon than called the Senate from Columbus U tha floor, U toll o what want on at the recent Montoom cry masting, and of the reeaHa of th confer*nea with tha Ooeeraor of th Federal Baaeree Board ia Waablni Ua earlier in the week. Brown Talks Sense SensUr Brown went to Raleigh 1 "Talk sense," he Uld the cotton gro* era. He .had been to Waahingto and had received the assurance Uu the Federal Reeerrc ia doing ail th« it nan do to moot the dameada f< credit expansion that are being mmi upon it, and that it wai unable to i any more than it ia doing now far I niociBK wv wiwb "The wool grower! out Wert ai howling for credit beceuaa their pr duct hoe dropped from *0 eente I 17 crate t pound." bo cootinuod. “I the Middle Wort they are rolling f< credit* to handle their grain and the Cart the speculator* era after a coanmadatian for obi cotton and t banco. The only way for u to got Is te put our cotton end tooam where the Federal Beaerra board cj got at it—pat It la warahouaea at they will dUeonnl our paper. It la tl hart la the world." The Senator like* not the prof gate spending of money that has pc •eased the people of the state aim tkalr unrWalod preeperity of the tl year* past Ha oeleuUted that tlx are ependlag fifty million for gaa lone to burn In their 140.000 outom bila*. He hollered that aoma af l) meiey aaght to ha pat in the bon to banker* could ha** * Util* ahei for financing the market!eg of are] It la tha man who know* what want* and gau out oflar H who h thing*. COX AD WORLD LEAG 8alt Lake Citgr, Plan* far an iota dar the League of a* report ed from Pari*, Deed by Governor Cox. i hla Utah campaign today argu ment for thv l*«_ , farther confound Senator and other Republican oppon « Demo cratic prendential i declared In addraeeea here ( _ the great Mormon tab*mac iriier today at Ogden. Reiterating that llean' league entice bed aay aukftitate end Had that Eli hu Root would _ new plan Governor Cox following etat-ment as the outline. Statement ei •Today wo ooamle aioa, of which Mr. a member haa made it* lahlng a world court to nation of qucfUDM, icrorair We find, however, a part of the lea Hr. Root and hia pointed by the eoi that they made council uf the la aow to be mi] mrmbeni of the it appean that court are ta be and the amenably thdr ante riei are league. I “It W court of Mr. Hard itliute for •Thle ttmb Hardin* mil confidently frantic aff< to^pt to keen both ngnmt'Tany.i nihu wot, loogua, bat kcrvicca for theparty e4 The league.' viam, ware, delivered aorwlng Ur %d4r«MI!»ltf Tsrszr-* A demonatmtire welcome waa ac corded the candidate all through Utah. Bram band* (arenadad, eutorno jile pa idea. thoUgon mluUa and Krticipotioa in an annual “Punch y" celebration at Brigham, includ ing being photographed with a bevy of young girtm Mealed 'Ptin Peaehei' were feature* at the governor’* re ception* A dinner here tonight given by local Democrat*, a ana* meeting and parade to the tabernacle and tne governors soars— no—« ms * »1— dldatr'i Utah campaign. He left late tonight to speak tomorrow at Elko, Sparks, Winneumooea. Lovelock and Reno, Nevada, on route to California. “Progress aad peace” wwre the principal Utah preachments of the Oovwnor., H# also assailed the “Senatorial 1 Oligarchy" and big business," and re peated attacks epos Republican cam . palgn cnalribotiona. "Every ounce of Mg bstjnaen ii bo lng need to defeat «»,” he told his ' Brigham audience. I Saw Crowd la Central That the "same crowd" of Rcpub r I lean leaden which former President Rooeevelt fought la 1*12 now arc in control of the Republican party Was l Stated to every Utah audience by the t Governor in stressing that bo stood I for progress rather than reecttoa, • and in characterising Senator Hard . lag at the "candidate of reaction." In urging the league, Governor , Cox asked hia audience where 8ena . tor Herding new stood upon the lea r rue and in absence of replies, the t Governor, to repeated applause, do - dared: Harding Doesn't Ksteeb i "You donf know because be don’t - know himself.” That the Senator has changed front frequently on the league issue wai reiterated by the Governor. He alec a declared that Senator Harding wm . "summoned before the Senate Olig a archy” at Chicago prior to his neml x notion and asked questions, deelarini l that these questions probably did no1 , deal with tin weather, Uw Govemoi e added that "big bueir.ee. work in do B viouk and innidiene wayi to secure i I. reserved seat In gevernneneit.’’ That a new Senator would be else a tea irom uusn, we»™ h Republican, to seeking r*-«l»cUon , mi statement af the Governor’ „ which brought (haara from aeeera ,r audiences, n “ * FORECAST LARGE SWEET It POTATO CHOP THIS YEAI a Washington, Se*t- tl.—Sweat pa d tato prod set Ion OUa year promises t ie be 011% about *,*00,000 bethels una lor than the record crop af last yeai l- according to tba Department af A| t- rieullare's for sc ait, with a total a it 10I.77S.000 bushels and Alaborn ra leading the States with a prodaetto 17 af aboat 1-7 of tbs crop. Alabama' »- output la forsaaat at 14,117.00 *• bushels. Georgia's, 11,717,000, Nort It CaroUaa'a. ll.UO.IKij Mlsatapts' is *,**0.000; Sentb Carolina, S,0««.4 Louisiana‘a, M*T,#S0: fVeeUa'a, 4 a *78.000; VlrelaJa’p, 4.1*8,000; an Tennaasaa’a, l*«MM. ** What has liisga tf tba eM faid >* k>aed man wbs Rare tartars fi steers bolder*? I New Auto Company Has Overland Agency C- A. Carbett, of Berbers. Is Pro ovotor ml tbe Eeln • Tbe Babbitt-Overland Company L a new automobile concern for Dunn It *aa established tbi* week by C. A Babbitt, lately of Bayboro, who hai just moved to Dunn. Quarters for tbe new company hove beun established in thn balldina of the Johnson Motor Company, ol Cumberland Street between Railroad aid Wilann avenues. Already six can of the Witlvs-Kmeht and Overland type* have been placed in the show rooms. This itock will bo replenished aa fast as tbe cam are sold. The no pany will also carry a full line ol Overland and Willya-Knirhl accesso ries and wilt specialise in repairs to these car*. Until last month the Oecrlnnd and her* by the Ftrrlih-Drixr Company Oa tho first of this month, however, that rompany relinquished the ageney to devote lU whole attention to the vole of muckel Instilments, phono greph oad kindred line*. The new company was foimad to take over the agunry given up by the Perrish-Dn *er Company. SCHOOLS HAVE % RECORD CROWD DAY OF OPENING Superintendent Martin la Pleased With Prog ress of Session Dunn erhaoti opened Wednesday morning with an enrollment of (70 pupils—tho largest number ever re co ded on opening day. Every teacher was la place and. see01 ding to Pro tcmor J. B .Martin, superintendent, the business of educating the corn, man ty'» youth got underway with mdvwon emoothnea*, It- O Taylor, chairman of the school board. Row. James M. Daniel, pastor Of Divine Street Methodist ehuich, and Brv. Eugene I. Olive, pastor of the Pi let Baptist efcsrch mode abort epoochoo to tho oimakM ehildnn oad teachers. All expressed deep gratification wwr the evidence of cc eperatlen apparent 'on rvory hood oad wore sure that tho pees not mmioD will be ooe ef the moot ewe eonrful Is the community's history. Every pupil hoe oa Individual daafc Uhi^Hgion^AddJtiojiWgulpimou^m fcrio|Mh^miumeiTvacoSa?a!ad7? rad ia time for the opening. This year’s enrollment exceed! lari year's by about 100. At the doer e< the first month of school last year the total enrollment waa BOO—ewen ty lea« than Um£ for the opening day of thin year. CROPS ARE GOOD OVER JHE STATE Com, Potatoes And Pea nuts Above Aver age Raleigh. N. C., Sept. It.—WhU. many ladajtrial interest* war* wot ryiag over the lobar *fluation. th« farmer* of North Carolina went »■ head with the aid of their wire* and children and worker from raa-ap na til dark. Whin the arbaa intercut were itriking aad arguing over high «r pnra* and iherter bear* the croc producer* were loyally making foodi aad fteda to aave the day. The re railing harvest* are good. The farm an hare expected fair apprariatoi aad eomprnaation. Now that lhc>JKri offering tho»* needed ware* for aali they are met with nffr-r* that an from ten te fifty per real lee* that they have coat to produce. At th< ■ante time the manufactured article made from nome of there tame rar product* are taereaalag In price* a uor* their already high man. Woaderfal Cera Crap According to the Cooperative Croi Reporting Berries, the condition o 9? per cent of a fall crop la iadica lir* of abaat th* boat corn crop w hero nv*r had. It la about 19 pur eea hotter than Un-year average. Tb Indication* are for <12,4*4,000 bu«b< crop, thi* being an increase of *1 rer cent la th* but month, aad abo* 4 per cent more than produced la. year. The average price reported i 19 19 rnninsrfft wi1b il 97 I Vrfl I age. The wheat crop is harvested an piactkally all threshed, giving an at crags yisM of toward eloven buehe per acre, which Indkateo a ere* c eomething over eight mllltoa boehel ' The tendency aeerae te have been ( ; dvprnae the price locally more the woe juetlflod. The proapoete for fs planting* ere for Icea acreage the iMt yiii'i The present sweet potato outloc ie indicated by the SB per cent of fall crop condition, which foreces I over ten million baslieU. which about two per cent more than la - roar, bat the commercial Interest > growing. Due to thr continued w - aoil condition* Lb# heaping qonllti . of the potato*! may be Inferior, ■ ■ though a dry fall will correct th f tendency. > The state has increased 1U hi » aredaction conalderably during ti • Inst twe ar three year* and this yes 9 average af 1.4 tans per aero with Ml n quality io Indicative of a gsod rotui K or aha at ant million ptaiidt forseoi «d production. Clever hay ha* yld - rd almost l.B tans or sho«t tBO.Ci d loo* pindactian for thv riata, U .being the tatso as tact year. Plan Paatarss <•' Mveetack hava done well this yd r doe te the good grata growing we ther, which baa saved the forme EXPLOSION KILLS : THIRTY IN WALL STREET DISTRICT Over $100,000 in Prop erty Damage From The Blast N*w York. Si-pt III—A myeteri o * rx - pe on in Wall Street, near E end. bc’cn-d by famed Depiut mort of J-n*'c» and police Inveatiaa tor« to hive boon »J be an infer no! 01 irirn;. w rekrd the heart of New York S-ier.cial dirt-let at nook, leaelnr d-ath and de“. notion in |u wake. At Ira* twenty p-iona worn kiln) t'im- t 0 -r re injured, the bunking houae of .T. P. yorgnu end C mpany. the aubtrtarury a d the ai tay oAce were partially wrecked •t I p oparty dar-t-gr aa'.'raatai in •=. « «• of 11,000,191. w_j caiurd by blatt TUubi it YVai An Accident lboji.a V.', Leewnl, of tho J. P. Vc . firm, •:;p.e:»i-d tho belief, bunoeer. tbit tho caploexm waa pure ly an acc.dent canned by a colliaion rc»w«*z i sn cxpiowi vr.iaotn wt^un and another vehicle. The firm receiv ed no thrrnU of any kind, ho aaid, and th»re was no real reason for thr planting of the bomb outside tho firm’s office. The noon hour had (track aad an endless stream of office workers had. just started posting into tho streets from baiMiags in the neighborhood, ••'••drl-nljr .a rload of yellowish, black •moke and a piercing Jet of flams leaped from the street ostside the ■lorran office. Then came a deafening •riant. A moment later scores of men. women and chltdren were lying pros trate on the g.oond and the streets were covered with debris from theo mr.dv of broken windows aad the torn farsdes of adjacent building*. Two minutes later the stock and curb ex 'harges. the financial pulse of tha •cot id. had closid. Panic aad eonfue o i reirmed in this heart of Now fork’* financial district. htewy Trsamlsd be Rash Thousands of clerks and stenegra phers fled la terror from adjoining structures. Scores fainted and wart trampled an in the rush. Meanwhile, tho noise of tho explosion. which wa: hoard throughout lower Msaluttan ■ «nd across tha river la Brooklyn '** •ought thssaands of tho curious to tha atone. ' • Tha few police aa duty la tho dio 'v*et woco aauhlo to sees with tha crowds, aad a hang MB Car paHgp ccaarvcs sms sent to all douatosrs pa lea stations Guard Sub-Treasury g_5ab-jrcasarx oadaXk^faanng^tha; building, all tfw window* of which were bioksa, reqacMad assistance of the military authorities at Governors Island, and a company of soldiers waa aunt to guard the Institution. Hurry calls t th rty.nine ropraoenUiroa treat the'r rtahfor aa tha loaal tract. Sor t s’, nthu.t, who wora not ia tho New Bern moot have written tun :ar- Ttddle that they wiO eater boor 110 hen.. la prepa aiiou for the catalog of thio largo naaewor at hereto the twoa ty additional etablae loft laiewfleled •«rl arc bcirg prepared to take earn of the ovorfTow. Theca win ho luraej /IVIW te tka taelaee mam w*k. Bruce Raiford Lee Dies Aged Nineteen Months Pimm After Mar* Waite Waa Tka Brace Balforf Lao, ainataaa months oM mb of Hr. uf hr* Maah B. Lao. 4iad at tha baw af Mo aa rrals bsrs Wsfssofas oaomlaa at I o'clock. Pussrsl ssrrlooo aoro oaa If Denial, pastor af Dirlaa’ Strut Methodlrt cbarek, and So*. fttwii Oliva paator of th* Vint Biptih • hurch Interment woe and* la Greenwood Cecaetary. A qaartet compoeod af Eee. Mhn Ay* Olive, R. X. Mi>* Julia Howard “Some Time Wall other rvloetionn at th* rravnaido. Little Bror* wa* a ImaMl He had beea ill for ahoot ton day*. Th* cymyathy *f th* ontiro waa» nity gee* out to hit d«*pty horoavod parrot*. How “Evangeline” Appealed To Europe One of th* meat popular pomes ever pobUahod—a poor* which mor ally circled th* world and ha* haoa taken to th* heart* af all pioplio, i* “Evangeline." Ptcullar local laWroat I* around hi thi* Immortal truth af Henry Wadeworth Longfellow at thl* tiaM by the feet that William Vo* will prefer*, it* pathnUeally dramatic atory In motion pietaraa form oa Monday, B*pt«ma*r 2U at the White Way Theatre. It ia a atriking Uhutration af th* wide populnrity of ‘'SvaMoUa*” that ovta proper aaam Introduced Hi th* rhythmical cadoaeo* of th* poem npread to Other countries and wet* tahrn up and protevYtd a* traaaura* la tfunahw For example, Charles Serna** wrote from Eariaad to Longfellow that the Hon. Mr*. Nettoa, aeruclf wall known hi literntar*. had road O* MM on Lab# AMtMm, irbtrr th* uMn'i bm paaaaa Mr 1 n • ronoo unknowingly u Aa a>**f 1 hi the earn? rtoaa by, ao haawmf baa | that rbe bad a aaal eat with th* naaM *"»rt Wag after tbia Laayald. blag af the Belgium a, repeated thl* —» ; woid to bar im tab) bar H bad ta 1 ban each a bald upo* blai that be wh ' about la hare It eat aa a nal whig . rbo Mtaaltbad blai by Wwwtag blai | here. ; •1AT*W_WEAM.T TO DtATh BY PMHHMTKW RAIOUl * TtenTBte. Vil, Beal. II—O. M. Cte-h, f ana or. af »i *■»«*, I* hi a r aerWua road Ulan la a Waal hoayfcal r today m a rasa It af h*Wg head** with r elubr white prohibit!** Bad frdjWt ’ aaynlo wry* making a raid Ndmi|. * Odlenu My CWlk WWd t* kill *7». r Croubaw aad that ha prirtawdy * threatened ta kW aay oAeaet Miaipl Ing a raid aa tha rUDa aa hi* taw