Sbatbam TOcorb- H. A. LONDON EDITCS AND PROPRIETOR. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION: gl .50 Per Year STRICTLY IN ADVANCE i VOL. XXXI.- PITTSBORO. CHATHAM COUNTY. N. 0., WEDNESDAY. AuThjsT 4. . NO. 51. (..vli R -re Mt-uro &iNrr- ( I inc. OIVILolnlrtlN or A'.IM Justin oimic ncvyo rauicoj J items of Slate Interest Gathered from Here and There and j j Told Brief ly for Busy Readers. j Gbe Cbatbam TRccorfc RATES OF ADVERTISING;; One Square, one tascrtloa.. u One Square, two Insertions.... Lf One Square, one month........ A. 09 1 , For Larger Advertise ments Li beral Con tracts will be made. Exhibits Wireless Phone.v (':arlotte, Special Mr. I. W. Lhvcory, representing the Collins Wireless Telephone System, has es i :; iislied offices in the Reality build-in:;- ami will make Charlotte his haiiliiuarters for the district of Vorth and South Carolina. Mr. Greg ory has been giving interested spec tators demonstrations in this new .' - ice Avhich has just recently reach :A such a state of perfection that it ir rapidly growing into popular favor and usage. Mr. Gregory will also take stock for the concern in addi tion to acting as sales agent for the Cure-Unas. Without any wire con nection and with doors completely closed, Mr. Gregory has been demon strating the effectiveness of his sys t i in by talkingfrom one room to a person across the hall in another room. Ever' word that he uttered io;:!;I be heard perfectly and all the advantages of the ordinary telephone :;tem can be commanded with the new device. Mr. Gregory will be glad to give demonstrations to any who are in any way interested in such a system. Rejoicing at Albemarle. Albemarle, Special. The street teemed with people here Tuesday night until near midnight celebrating the success in the bond, election. Albemarle V two excellent : cornet bands played their be'st. . The citi zens, both young and old, seemed to be elated over the victory. And the triumphant feeling was not confined to the citizens who voted for bonds only, but the leaders of the defeated uuiitio ncic uui wxi.il trie seemingly enjoying the occasion. Mr. E. M. Asbury, who owns one-half interest m the present water-works, speaking to the writer, said that he was now ready to push the town's in terest with all his might and use every effort to make the bond issue success, just as though he had voted for the bonds. With "the op posers of the bond issue taking, this stand and pulling with the same en ergy as those who were forf'bonds, unruffled by defeat, in the language of Rev. George II. Atkinson, at the recent mass meeting, "Watch Albe marle Advance. Charged With Awful Crime. Elizabeth .City, Special.- Sciplo Jennings, a prosperous farmer of this county, was Wednesday afternoon in a preliminary hearing before Jus tice N. R. Parker placed under a I on,I cf $1,750 for his appearance at the next term of Superior Court upon the charge of having carnal know ledge of a girl under fourteen years of age. The girl is Ruth Marshall, an orphan of the Streeter Home of Greensboro. She has been an inmate of Jennings' mother's home for the past four years Jennings is about '.'') years eld and is unmarried. The case is exciting the liveliest interest and much "comment. The point of contention is the age of the girl. It is claimed by the prosecution that the is under fourteen. The asylum authorities have announced that they will help to prosecute the case. So lioitcr Ward is taking considerable interest in the case. He was repre sented at the hearing by Attorney (Irises, his law partner. The Mar shall girl is now an inmate of the County Home, whcie it is said she took refuge on account of bad treat ment at Jennings' home, after her unfortunate condition was learned. Team Struck by Train. Charlotte. Special. Two sons of Mr. J. A. Berryhil! and a young ne gro driver narrowly escaping "a fctant death when a team which they were driving was struck by the Sou thern's fast northbound train No. 3G, at the Dowd crossing west cf the city. The little negro was doing the driving and when he pulled up on the track and observed that the train was bearing down upon him, an effort was made to pull the team from the track. One muie could not be taken from the path of the train and it was knocked about 30 feet, being almost instantly killed. The other mule was practically unhurt. The sons of Mr. Berryhill leaped from the rear of the wagon and the negro driver sue ceeded in escaping without injury. The railroad track passes through a deep cut just as if approaches this crossing and neither the engineer nor t ha driver of th-3 wagon could discern the extremely hazardous predica ment. - - Boys Fire Into Train. High Point, Special. Miss Alice Shaw, a High Point lady, had a nar row escape when a bullet from a pistol handled by several careless bo-s whizzed through the car window only a few inches from her head. Miss Shaw was on her way to Aberdeen and just as the train reached the water tank,-about a mile from the station, the shooting took place. Sev eral boys between the ages of 10 and 15 years were loafing about the tank and one of this number fired the re volver. As the train passed a single report was heard, accompanied by a crash of glass and several screams. The bullet struck the window just wkere Miss Shaw's head would have been had she been leaning forward a little. As it was she was reclining a little in the seat and the ball passed only a few inches from her forehead. The police were notified at once and a rush squad was sent, which arrest ed five boys and marched them back to town. The General Government of Spain in Great Straits Reports Sent Out Are Assuring While News From The Interior Indicate the Opposite. Madrid, By Cable. The govern ment annunces that despite the atti tude of the populace of Catalonia and the desertions from the army in Northern Spain, the response of the recruits and reservists to the call to the colons in other i provinces, like Andalusia and Aragon, was unani mous. ' ( The Minister of War has prohibit ed the departure from Spain of all persons subject to military duty un der the penalty of being considered deserters. The government has also placed a bah against the sale of for eign papers containing accounts ' of recent events in Catalonia and Mo rocco. Despite the official announcement that order has been restored in Cata lonia, renewed measures have been taken to prevent the Bilbao region, where the Socialists and Republicans are organizing. The garrison at Bur gos, Victoria and San Sabastian are being held in readiness to act quick ly and energetically. lhe latest news received Saturdav from Barcelona is to the effect that fighting between the troops and the revolutionaries continues fiercely. It is reported that 40 revolutionaries have been shot without trial at the Montjuich fortress, among them be ing Emilianolglesias, editor of The Progresso, the -organ of Deputy Le roux,chief of the Republicans in Bar celona. The situation in Palamas, the centre of the cork industry, is re ported to be alarming and fears are expressed for the safety of foreigners there. Tt.'o Fires in Lincoln County. Lincolnton, Special. Thi3 section was visited by two disastrous fires Saturday night. At Ore Bank, about 0 miles cast of Lincolnton, Mr. George Mullen's barn was burned, Together with three horses and a lot of machinery and a quantity of grain. Another fire the same night de stroyed the dwelling house of Mr. Hull, near Ramseur's Mill. Tf 1 Joiin Lineman Electrocuted. Durham, Special. Emmet R. Rigs hee, a lineman of the Durham Trac tion Company, was instantly killed here Monday afternoon while at work on a pole on the corner of Pea-l.-ody and Queen streets in the south eastern part of the city. Rigsbee was 23 years old and had heon married about four years. T'i- Traction Company workers an assign no reason for the seeming thoughtlessness that led Rigsbee to bring himself in contract with the wiro when it was so far above his head, Mayesville Votes Bond Issue. Sumter, Special. The town of le voted school . bonds on Wednesday to the amount of $7,000. The proceeds of this bond issue will bj used for the erection of a new school building. This is the second flection held on this question, the first election being declared illegal, ovh) to some irregularities in the petition. Both elections went in fav- of bonds by a large majority. Gold Mining. New York, Special. Maj. John F. Jones, of Blacksburg, S. C, Wednes day signed contracts with the Payne Electric Dredge Company whereby he acquires license rights for the use of their system of dredges on some 2,000 acres of gold and monazite bearing lands in Golden Valley, Rutherford County, North Carolina. The plant will be established imme diately. Major Jones has tested the new system and finds the yield $30 in gold to the cubic foot. The mona zite, garnets, and sircon yielded amounts up to several dollars 'to eah j'ard. Engineers estimate there are 20,000,000 cubic yards to be dredged, all of which will yield a like amount. The " plant to be in stated will handle 2,000 yards daily. I M Will Build Cotton Seed Oil Mill at Mount Olive. Mount Olive, Special Arrange ments have been completed for the erection of a cotton seed oil mill in Mount Olive which is expected to be in operation for this season's crush. Tt will be a modern two-press mill $40,000 and will be built by the Southern States Cotton Oil and Refining Company, Wilming ton. This is one of the chain of mills which this company expects to erect to furnish crude oil to its re finery at Wilmington and we predict success for this mill irom me sxart New industry FoxTMount Oli; v. Mount Olive, Special. The Mount m; MaYiTifflfitnrinsr Conroanv has in of hPAn nre-anized here with a capi 9n nnrt fnr the miroose of maim fW.tnrine. fruit an dtruck pack ages on an extensive scale. The stock ki,w flrfi J. R. Bell and L. A.vBird, "Rii T,nmW Comrjariv: H. C. VI. li-C 1 ' ' Hatcher and Capt. J. H. Pierce. They hevin operations about August 15. Girls-Drowned in Wilson's Creek. Lenoir, Special. One of the sad dest accidents that has occurred in this count v was the drowning ot lit tie Misses Mabel Getz d Nannie Bailey, which occurred late Thursday off orn nnn at, Mortimer. a v,niv r.f cirls were in the Gtm Iftthinz while several elderlj 1 or! me wprfl on the banks. The un fortunate girls got strangled m water about waist deep and were ned v,,r ih swift current into water over Efforts to rescue them came near adding to the fatality. Till men arrived and secured iu uu it was too late, life was extinct, Safe Robbery at Kinston. Kinston, Special. Saturday night the store of J. F. Jenkins on Chest nut street in East Kinston was enter ed and the safe robbed of over two hundred dollars in money and goods to an unknown amount were also taken from the store. Mr Jenkins is sure he locked the safe before closing at about midnight and he is sure that the robbery was perpetrated by some one familiar with the store. OSAKA'S GREAT FIRE. Lasts 25 Hours.Burning 20,000 Homes and Public Houses Much Distress Prevails. Osaka;Japan, By Cable Confusion prevails here as a result of Satur day's disastrous fire. Thousands of persons are homeless and hunger is staring many of them in the face. A system of relief has been organ ized by the municipal authorities, but it is inadequate to supply all needs. Outside cities and towns are generously sending in contributions to be used in alleviating the suffer ings of the homeless and destitute. The latest estimate is that 20,000 buildings are destroyed, these includ ing banks, the stock exchange, the museum, government edifices and fac tories. While at present it is impos sible accurately to state the losses, these are given roughly at several million yen. An area of over four miles square, containing some of the city's hand somest structures, including the Buddhist temple, the largest in the world, was entirely burned. The stock exchange, one of the niost im portant in this country, was entirely destroyed. This loss, it is believed, will tend considerably to dislocate the business of Osaka, which, with its manufacturing concerns, is one of the chief commercial cities of Japan. Many tounching.sights were to b-J seen during the fire. The women were terror-stricken and fled hither and thither with their children, some of whom later cried piteously for food that could not be obtained for them. The conflagration lasted more than 25 hours and the. burned section pre sents a deplorable sight. The streets of the city are very narrow and the houses were mostly of wood construc tion. Had not the water supply been curtailed by the drought the .fire would have been quenched without great damage. Electric Cars Collide. Spokane, Wash., Special Ten per sons were"killed and at least 60 were injured in a head-on collision of two electric cars at Caldwell, Wash., on the Spokane and Inland Railway late Saturday afternoon.'" Both trains were going at the rate of about 15 miles -an hour. They crashed together without warning. EARTHQUAKE IN MEXICO Two Towns in the State of Guer- . - rero Partially Destroyed. F8UHTE EN DEATHS BEPfl RTED Humbler Folks of Mexico City Are Ter " ribly Frightened, the Disaster Having Been Predicted in Old Aztec Legend. Mexico City, Mexico. Central Mex ico, from the Atlantic to,, the Pacific, and from Ouerato, on the north, to Oaxaca, on the south, a distanoe cov ering more than 1,000 square miles, was shaken by a series of the most severe earthquake shocks feit in this region for the past .quarter of a cen tury.. Reports telling of the loss of life are as yet incomplete, but the ofcclal figures" show that fourteen were killed outright, while more than a score were mortally injured. The towns of Acapulca and Chilpancingo, in the stats . of Guerrero, have been partially destroyed. $o far as can be laacned from the police records, six people lost their lives in Mexico City and its environs, as a result of the shock. Two were men of the lower class, the others being three women and a child. The large American colony escaped unscathed. There were some slight contusions reported among them from falling plaster, but no serious injuries were recorded. They, with, the high and low classes of the Mexicans, re mained in the plazas or squares until the light of the day gave thenr the courage to retufn to their dwellings. The peon class were teribly fright ened over the shocks. For days those humble folk have been predicting a disaster, because the snows on the peak of the volcano Popocateptl, visi ble from this city, have been melting. An old Aztec legend declares that when the snows on this volcano dis appear, soon, too, will the city at its base. The property damage in this city is slight. Some other cathedral walls were cracked, and scores of adobe wall3 were sent to the ground, but the main business part cf the capital snowed absolutely no signs of the se vere rocking which it has been Riven. Tho wailing and praying of the In dians in the Almeda Zocato and other public squares, added to the weird- ness of the scene and painted an un forgetable picture on the minds of the half-clad, shivering hordes of - fright ened men, women and children, who stood out in the drizzling rain wait ing for the coming of daylight. The Associated Press ocice in Mex' ico City received a reply to a mes sage directed to the American consul at Acapulco. That official declared that the shocks are still continuing, though with lessened intensity. Three bodies have been taken from the ru ins. The churches, customs house and all of the hotels in the place were rendered uninhabitable, while not a house in the city escaped injury of a more or le&s serious character. All of the buildings along the water front were leveled. Reports from the towns of Vera Cruz, Oaxaca, Tlacotalpam, Silacay oapam, Duzmah, Meroteon and Pach uca Indicate more or less property damage, but no loss of life. TOGHTS FULFILL CONTRACT. Accept .. G. A. Kimball Short $15,000. . . - Southern Pines, Special Satur day morning the officers of the Citi zens' Bank and Trust Company post ed the following notice on the front of the bank building, and soon after ;tlifi rlnnrs ooened to receive cleposi- . . . , i tors who brought their pass uoos fnr spttlement : "k - ; - "There appears to be a shortage JR15.000 in the accounts of George A. Kimball, cashier, and the bank examiners are here. We cannot eive accurate information or details until a complete auditing ot ti hooks is made."- Two Mangled By Train. - Newberry, S. C, Special. Charlie Williams and Ernest Bauknight, two young white men, were struck and killed by Columbia, -Newberry & Laurens passenger train No. 53, bound for Laurens to Columbia, about three hundred yards above the passenger depot in Newberry shortly after 3 o'clock Sunday afternoon, both being horribly mangled, the f or mer being killed instantly, and the latter living but a short time, : Government Will Now Aeroplane. Washington. D. C. Orvllle Wrisrht has attained the zenith of hard-earn ed success. In a ten-mile cross-coun try flight in the famous aeroplane. built by himself and his elder broth er, Wilbur, and accompanied by Lieut. Benjamin D. Fouiois, of the signal corps, he not only surpassed the epeed requirements of his contract with the United States government, but accomplished the most difficult and daring flight ever planned for a heavxer-than-alr flying machine. In cidentally, he broke all speed records over a measured course. And he es tablished, beyond dispute, the prac ticability of an aeroplane In time of peace and in time of war. His speed was over 42 miles an hour; he made the- ten-mile flight ffom Fort Myer and back in 14 min utes and 42 seconds, Including the more than twenty seconds required for the turn beyond the line at Shuter Hill, the southern end of the course He attained a height In crossing the valley or Four Mile Run of nearly 500 feet, and the average altitude of his practically level course was about 2000 feet above the ground General James Allen, chief signa: officer of the army, announced after the flight, that there will be no more fllebts at Fort Mvr. The 'official board will at once de tennine the speed made. It is said that it exceeded 41 miles an hourJ- The Wrights will, therefore, receive 530,000, including a bonus of $ 5,000 for their aeroplane. GREAT AER0ST5QTIC EXHIBITION. $10)03 in Frizes Are Offered for the Different Contests. . . 7 Paris, France. The eyes of all avi ators and of the countless thousands who have been aroused to - enthusi asm over the possibilities of heavier- than-alr flying machines by M. - Bier- lot's triumphal flight over the Eng lish channel as well as by the splen did performances of the - Wright brothers, Henry Farman, Latham, Curtits and - others, are now turned toward Rhelms, -where on August 22 there will be opened the greatest aero static competition the world has ever seen. " Every type of air craft known will be entered in the various events, and probably every aviator of conse quence in the worldj with the excep tion of the. Wright brothers, will try for the rich prizes aggregating $40,- 000 in value which will be . hung ..up for record-breaking feats. Arrangements are being made to care for one hundred thousand visi tors. France undoubtedly will - lead in the number of entrants, but Amer ica, Australia, England and Italy all will be represented by monoplane, biplane or balloon. . ' " ' Glen H. Curtiss, who recently rr-nc! . some successful tests in the,neighoj. hosd of New York, will carry Ameri ca s colors in the contest with a bi plane built on the lines of the Wright machines. Among the beet known of the French aviators, in, addition i j Bleriot, who are to compete are-LaUi- ani, DeLagrange, Farman, Lamaen, Tissandier and Santoos Dumont. ' : NOTORIOUS JOBBERS CAUGHT. Secret Service. Men Effect Capture. of Two Men and a Woman. Memphis, Tenn. After weeks ot search. United States secret service operatives, connected with the post office department arrested here Frank Warreh, alias Franklyn, alias "Hand-and-Half ' Kelly, one of the most notorious postoffice robbers in the country, along With W. T. Noakes, and a woman claiming to be Mrs. Noakes, all three of whom are alleged by the federal officers to be wanted for a series cf successful post- office burglaries throughout Kentucky, Illinois, Ohio and Indiana, The-trio were located In a residence In an eastern suburb of the city and was surrounded by the postal author ities with the aid of the police. A large quantity of stamps in sheets were found secreted in a bed room. The raid was led by Secret Service Operator C. B. Llewellyn of Chicago and Postoffice Inspecter E. H. Kline of Memphis. - EDITOR'S LONG JAUNT; Rides Hcrse Two Thousand Miles to Invite President Taft Galveston, Texas Edward O'Reil ly, editor of the San Antonio Light Gazette, has been selected as the em issary of Texas to present the invi tation to President Taft to visit this state in the fall. Typical of West Texas, he will make the long journey on horseback, using three horses, two of which will be shipped ahead aird used as relays. Mr. O'Reilly excect3 to make the journey In forfy-flve or fifty days. He will .be attired in cow-boy outfit from sombrero to shoes and the saddle and equipment will be the finest ever worn by a cowboy or ranchman. The invitation to the president is an elab orate document and bears the signa tures of Governor Campbell and other state officials and the mayors of all the large a exas cities. PLENTY OF PROSPERITY Crcp3 Are Booming and the Farmers Are Happy. . railroads Ordering cars Considerable Improvement in the Busi ness Situation Is Shown By the Government Report. NO REVOLUTION IN MEXICO. Recent Rioting Was Simply an Out break of Students. San Antonio, Taxas. F. DeJ. Vil larael, a business man of Saltillo, Mexico, who was in San Antonio on business, eaid of the recent rioting at Guadalajara that they, are merely the expression of youthful enthusiasm on the part of students of that city. "There is no danger of a revolution in Mexico," he said. "President Diaz has promised the people of Mexico that the next election is to be a fair election, and they have faith in his promise. And above everything else. they want peace, security of property and material development. They feel confident that either Corral or Reyes will win fairly in the election, which will take place next year. .These dis orderly young men will be sup pressed." ' --' - - LOSES RACE WITH STORK. Congressman Uses Three Special Trains, But Was Too Late. Dalton, Mass. After using three special trains in - a record-breaking trip from Washington to Pittsfleld, Senator W. Murray Crane lost his race with . the stork by five hours. Mrs. Crane, his wife, gaye birth to a son while the senator was rushing on a special train from Baltimore to New York, to meet another special that was awaiting him there. Ha made the first leg of the trip from Washington to Baltimore by special also. 1 "TNew York City. -Walter Scott, vice president of a large merchandise con cern, has. returned here With glowing reports cf -prosperity of the west, through which he makes a yearly trip of inspection. . . - ."Never in my life .did I see such optimism as now prevails . - every where among farmers, bankers, rail rt ad men and all others. The crops p 3 becoming, corn and wheat nota- . I think both of them will have ..ivj largest crops in history. "We sent cut one hundred mea all - or the south to look over the field, ! I report on general business and jEtrial conditions. Those reports e just ccme in. I never have met anything like this set.. On every h?nd they report prosperity." : Washington, D. C, A considerable improvement in the business- Eitua tion as compared with conditions pre vailing a year ago is noted in a re port just made public by the bureau cf statistics regarding lake traffic for the month of June last. . f -It is shown that the domestic ship ments from lake ports cf leading classes of commodities totaled 10,- 179,633 net tons, compared with 7,- 427,616 net tens-shipped during June, 1908. The domestic shipments for the current season to the end of June 18.5S9.552 show a total of . about 65 per cent in excess of the total do mestic shipments for the correspond ing period in 1908." . - The iron ore shipments for the month, 5.250.657 gross . tons, were more than double those shipped dur ing June, 1908. Lumber shipments during the month were largely in excess of June, 19u8, and Indicate improved condi tions In the building trade. New York City. Car manufactur ers all over the country are now flood ed with orders for a vast amount of equipment. The New York Central has ordered two thousand four hun dred box cars, especially designed for carrying automobiles. The Buffalo, Rochester and Pittsburg has placed an order for one thousand steel hop per cars. The Boston and Mafne has ordered tea locomotives. The Bos ican Locomotive company. The Bos ton and Maine has also placed' an or der for one thousand freight cars; the Missouri, Oklahoma and Gulf has ordered fifty freight cars and the Great Northern and Northern Pacific, one thousand each. - If is- said that the eight thousand freight cars for which the Baltimore and Ohio is In the market will be in creased to ten thousand and that a large amount of passengers equip ment will be ordered in addition. The Pennsylvania railroad is making in quiries for eight thousand freight care of different types and the Brook lyn Rapid Transit company, it is said, is about to purchase two thousand cars of both the open and closed kind New York City. "The output of Iron and steel in the United States in the year 1910 will be the largest in the history of these industries." The president of the billion dollar United States Steel Corporation, Wli liam Ellis Corey, once described by ex-Judge Elbert H. Gary, chairman of the board of directors of that great corporation, as the "greatest steel maker in the world," made this pre diction with all the assurance of ab solute conviction. Asked on what he based his belief, he said: "Present indications indicate that this year will show a high water mark in that base of all prosperity; the crops. With the prospect of a yiem oi more tnan 3,000,000,000. bush els or corn and of other cereals in proportion, nothing but the greatest catastrophe can prevent a bis boom in business. Then you have the pros perity of manufactures in general. Conditions all over the country have improved strikingly and will continue to 'improve." K0M DEALER MADE A CHEVALIER. King Leopold Honors Man Wno Has Bought Over 1,500.000, Horses. New York City. 0. W. Crawford, a hcrse dealer cf ewi.rk, Ohio, who ar rived on the Red Star liner Zeeland, vears the d2cor.ion -of a Belgian chevalier. "In the lart 1 6 years, I have pur chased fully 1,300,000 Belgian horses," said Mr. Crawford, "and In recogni tion of this, King Leopold created me a chevalier. He recognized the fact that I had been an important factor in furthering the great horso-raislng industry cf Belgium." PtLLIAM COMMITS SUICIDE. ; President of -National Baseball Leagtio . Kills. Himself. New York City. Harry C. Pulllam, president of the National League of Baseball clubs, commltteed suicide in , his rooms on the third floor of the New York Athletic Club. '. - ' Standing in the center cf the room. . ; Mr. Pulliam held a revolver to his ; right temple. He fired only one shot. -. It went in at the right temple, and came out several inches away on tho left side of his head. The tullet de stroyed- the right eye, and passed . through the upper part of the len. ; A careful search was made or tno . room. Among the many papers scat- .. tered about, however, there was noth ing to indicate that the act had been' premeditated. Friends cf Mr. Pulliam . declared it as their belief that his act was the result cf a sudden wild emo- . tion. , - Although Mr. Pulliam's act at thia time was entirelv unexpected, .some , ' of his friends said that at the tlmo of his recent - illness - it was known that he. was subject to. eevere attacks . of melancholia. . - . Mr; Pulliam had but recently taken ' up the reins of the National league, ' after he had been granted a rest; bj the league officials. He had previous ' ly been in ill health' for a number of. months and his suicide is supposed tOrj have been due to the fact that hia mind was unbalanced by his sicknes. He had much to worry' him in the , National league. He is said to have taken the criticisms of his work very, much to heart and worried over them excessively. - He had been in a high--ly nervous state for some time and; his friends declared that they had feared for some time his mind would - give way. , . 4 ; Pulliam was the third official of the National league to pass away within :" tho last few weeks, the other two .be ing Israel Durham, president of the Philadelphia club, and 'George Dovey,' president of the Boston club. SAYS HARHIMAN IS FINANCIAL PEST, i Business Men of Today-Are Flayed -f By Professor Zueblin. Chautauqua, N. Y.: "Mr. Harrimah' is a great railway administrator, but --' he is a pest financially. The govern-... ment would be wiee to pay him a million dollars a year to continue his. work of consolidating the railroads ; of the country, and to keep out Of finance." : ' . This opinion was given here by Profoscor Charles Zueblin, sociologist, of Boston and former professor in the . University of Chicago, in the course of a scathing arraignment of the mod ern business man, in which he de clared that the business man who possesses courage, character and cul ture, Is a rarity. As bad examples he made . thinly . veiled references to Marshall Field, A. J. Cassatt and Russell Sage, and then turned to Harriman, declaring that there was nothing personal In his statements, but that these men simply typify the . existing industrial system. The business man in general Mr, Zueblin attacked with equal force. ' "The decalogue has been supplanted by the business man's trlology: 'Bus iness is .business;' 'Stand pat;' 'I want what I want when I want it.1 " BURGLAR TRAP KILLS WOMAN. Merchant's Wife Forgot Trap Gun Had Been Set. Smithville, Ga. Mrs. Emmett Booker, wife of a mei-chant of Smith ville, was killed by the discharge of a trap gun which her husband had placed for burglars. As Mrs. Booker opened a door, two loads of buckshot were discharged, both entering her body, causing death four hours later. Mrs. Booker knew the trap gun was set in the store, but had forgotten of its presence for the moment - Want Taft at Convention. . New Orleans, La. In order that the dates of the lakes to the gulf deep daterway convention in this city may conform with the itinerary of Presi dent Taft's trip through the south, President Philip Werlein of the New Orleans Progressive Union has writ ten President Kavanaugh of the Deep Waterway Association, recommend ins; that the convention be held No vember 2, 3 and 4. It was. originally planned to hold the convention No vember 11, 12 and 13. PANAMA PAYS INDEMNITY. Relatives of Murdered Seamen to Get Damages. Washington, D. C The govern ment of Panama has agreed to the demands of the United States' in the United States ship Columbia and Uni ted States" steamship Buffalo cases, in which American officers and sea men were maltreated by the police of the republic. That government will pay an indemnity of $5,000 to the relatives of Boatswain's Mate Band of the Buffalo, who was killed in 1908, and $1,000 to Seaman Cies lok of the same ship, who was stab bed at the same time. TLj . govern ment also agrees to dismiss all the police officers who - were involved. Torpedo Boat Won. Portsmouth,-Va.-In a realistic war maneuver carried out in the upper part of Portsmouth harbor,- the inef ficiency cf a massive Domo witn wire entanglement to prevent the entrance of hostile torpedo craft wa3 fully demonstrated. The torpedo boat de stroyer Ferret cut through -the ob structions" with the greatest ease. Charged Witn Selling Whiskey. Wesson, Miss. W. .W. Robertson of Wesson, a member of the Mlssislppi legislature, must face the courts on a charge of violating the state prohibi tion law.v An affidavit filed against him charges with retailing! intoxicat ing liquor. t , : - ALL SHARE PROFIT?. $400,000 To Be Divided Between : Employes. Youngetown, Orfo. From 3200,000 to $400,000 will be annually distrib uted among the five thousand em ployes of the Youngstown Sheet and Tube company as the result of a prof. It-sharing plan decided on by the stockholders. The plan has not been fully developed, but in a general way it is based on the earnings of the company and will reach as high aa . ten per cent of the wagea of every man in the works from the heads ot departments down to day laborer?. ; All employes in the employ of the cor poration for one year will be entitled ' to a pro rata share of that year'a : earnings. ' WILL DISCHARGE INCOMPETENTS. Investigate Every Branch of thi United States Treasury. Washington, D. C. Secretary Mac Veash's decision to probe every of fice In the treasury department ill order to promote efficiency of service i among the employes was formed aa the result of a long preliminary in. vestigation made by the three assls- ': tant secretaries cf the treasury. Every incompetent . clerk will be dia miseed. . , . . . ; TOUCHED LIVE WIRE. Novel Plan of Employes to Catch Thief. Richmond, Va. The employes of a local electric plant have been-missing property and money left in their clothing at the power , plant lately. One of the men hit on a novel scheme to detect the thief. A high tension electric current was connect ed with a bunch of keys and fastened to a pocketbook. This was placed in the pecket of a coat that hSj on the wall. Several days passed without development, : but later the men heard a 4oud cry in the dressing room and cn : Investigation found a young man unconscious on ihe floor. He had touched the live wire. ' OBrPDT 0F"3N0BS." Ex-Prof. Zueblin Leads Attack on the Service Schccls. . Chautauqua N. Y. Snobs are the annual product of West -Point and Annapolis, according to ex-Pf cfessor Charles Zueblin, formerly thelUniver sity of Chicago sociologist, who is now in charge-of a $3,000,000 settle ment - in Boston. Professor Zueblin expressed himself on the work done by the government army and navy schools in; an address oh "Democratic Culture" at Chautauqua aaesmblj. Newsy Paragraphs. Just what the. public wants to get in its newspapers, It gets, according to Dean Shailer Mathews, of the .University- of' Chicago Divinity scuool, who answered some critics of the ' press In a lecture on modern social conditions before the Chautauqua as sembly at Chautauqua, N. Y. - "The rank and file of editors and publish ers are only too eager to prut what, their readers want to see Jn print," . eaid Dr. Mathews. Parachuting his balloon by loosen ing the appendix cord and allowing the lower part of the balloon'to rise, into the netting, Dr. S. S. Stowell of Flttsfield, Mass., on his first trip as pilot, made a. parachute drop to earth . in, the balloon Pittsfleld. it probably being the first -time such an experl- ment was ever tried in this country. A perfect landing -was effected with out the valve cord being touched. While Mrs. Anna Pillsbury waa bathing at Marine park. South Bos- ton, Mass., she stepped on - a crab which immediately ceizei her foot. The weman became hysterical and -would have drowned but for . the ' prompt work cf Captain Freitas, of , the life saving corps, who dragged ; her from the surf. John Williams was bound, over to the superior court at Columbus, Ga., ; on the charge cf attempting to wresk the Southern passenger train ' from : Columbus to Atlanta. It Is charged that Williams placed a cfosstie acrofcs , the rails because he wanted to see ' what would happen when . the train : hit It. Fortunately, it is claimed, ' the engineer caw the obstruction and stopped the tian just as the point was reached, i 7d it not been seen the train and a number of passengers would have been thrown into a creek fan a trestle.