A,c cbatbam TKecoro. Q 4 A T I .V A 1 "4 r- "II Ay u Ja. LONDON EDIIOS AND PROPRIETOR flgMS OF SUBSCRIPTION: gl.50 Per Year TRICTLY IN ADVANCE VOL. XXXII. PITTSBORO. CHATHAM COUNTY. N. C., WEDNESDAY, MARCH 30. I9i0. NO. 33. r f ti r gbe Jbatbam RecorO. RATES OF ADVERTISING: Om Square, oae Insert ton . One Square, two Insertions.... One Square, one matk.. ...... For Larger Advertise ments Liberal Contracts will be made. CANNON STILL LEADER Although Not a Member, Speaker Controls Nsw Rules Committeo. GET NOTHING Four Democrats and Six Republicans Make Up Committee on Rales and the Republicans Axe AH Political Followers of Cannon. Washington, D. C The houseelect fj the nev.- rules committee, com bed of six regular republicans and four democrats, and elected Repre sentative John Dalzell of Pennsylva nia as chairman. That Speaker Can non v,;u continue to dominate this committee without half trying is very videlv admitted. If anvthing further were needed to chow the power exerted by the speak er in the naming of the republican members of the committee, it was jr'ade abundantly plain by a story which cropped out. Representative ck Longworth of Ohio was originally put forward for a place. His name was on the list submitted to the speaker for approval b"- him Mr. Longworth's name was stricken by Speaker Cannon with the remark: 'The young man has been too free in criticising my speech of last Sat urday night." Reference was had to the speaker's address before the Illinois Republi can Association, in which he ripped the insurgents up one side and down the other! calling them cowards and spineless creatures. The insurgents are not represented nn the committee. They decided to abide by the caucus, and in tne cau cus were overwhelmingly outnumber ed. The following close friends oi Speaker Cannon and members of the regular wing of the party are the re-, publican members of the new rules committee. Walter I. Smith of Iowa, 168 votes; John Dalzell of Pennsylvania, 14fc votes; George P. Lawrence of Mas sachusetts, 123 votes; J. Sioat Fas sett of New York, 113 votes ; Syl vester C. Smith of California,, 13( votes; Henry S. Bouteell of Illinois, 10S votes. Harmony prevails in the democratic camp. The dove of pea.ee hover; over the caucus held to select the four minority members of the rules committee. The autmost good feeling characterized the session, and if any thing else were needed to proe tha the democratic organization in the house again presents a united front, it was the personnel of the committee ccosen. Following are the democratic mem bers chosen for the rules committee and the vote in caucus for each: Champ Clark of Missouri, 125; Os car Underwood of Alabama, 102; John Fitzgerald of Now York, 98; Lincon Dixon of Indiana, SI3. VOLCANO IS ACTIVE. NEW KIND OF MEAT. Jungit Animalr May Appear On Me nus of United States. Washington, D. C. The introduc tion of the hippopotamus, the rhinoc eros, the camel, the eland, the spring bok, the trekbok, the dikdik, the coo doo, the giraffe and other African an imals into America as a solution ot the problem of food supply was sug gested by speakers before the house committee on agriculture. Captain Fritz Duquesne, a Boer; Dr. V. x. Erwin of the bureau of plant industry of the department of agriculture, and Major Buruham, who has spent years in Africa, and accom panied former President Koosevelt on part of his travels, argued in. favor of the Broussard bill to import wild and domestic animals into the United States. Such animals, according to the bill, must prove useful, either as rood or as beasts of burden. All oi the witnesses declared that many oi the animals in Africa easily could be raised in this country. RUSSIA EXPELLING" JEWS. "umber of Expulsions Greater .Than Ever Before Recorded. New York Citv. The American Jewish committee announced here that it had reopivpri aAvinpa frnm trustworthy sources in Berlin stating iuu me expulsion of Jews from va nous cities in Russia ha3 reached a magnitude never heretofore attained, lormerly those thrpatpnorl with t. Pulsion at the caprice of" local govern ors were ahlp tn srtxt nmt&rtinrt through the ministry of the interior, wuereas now, it is stated, the minis try itself is issuing the ordeis for "puibion. Hundreds of families, ac- rumg to advices, that have lived foj years in Kief, Riga, Kasan and Wore Eesch, are being driven out. Mount Aetna, In Sidly, Is Belching Flood of Red-Hot Lava. Catania, Sicily; a red-hot river of lava, one thousand two hundred feet wide and twenty-four feet high, swept down the slopes of Mount Aetna, de stroying all life in its path, and turn ing the fertile country into a scene of desolation. Fully five thousand are homeless, their homes destroyed or menaced by the sweep of the lava. In twenty-four hours it advanced six miles, and half a dozen villages and settlements have been wiped out of existence or abandoned and thous ands of acres of cultivated land turn ed into a smoking waste covered with the molten mass that pours from a dozen craters. The constant rumblings which have marked the eruption since it started have increased in volume and the earthquakes become more frequent. The ground is in almost a constant tremble. More than seventy distinct shocks have been recorded. Troops are rushing to the threaten ed towns to quell the panic and aid in saving the helpless. Reports received here stated that eight soldiers had been killed at San Remo and RemazzI and that scores ot inhabitants were injured in those towns whea the lava reached them after they had been bombarded by rocks from the volcano. The village of Nidolo is burned under a mass oi lava. Borello, threatened with a similar fate a matter of a few hours, was evacuated. Casa del Bosco has been wiped off the map. Nicolisi, pro tected by hills, is felt to be safe and thousands "of refugees have - concen trated there, but Del Passo is doom ed. Grassi Is in the path of the lava river and it was seen that Aderno, another of the towns on the southern slope of the mountain, could be sav ed only by a quick stop in the flow. The devasting stream is headed straight for Catania, and this citv of one hundred and fifty thousand In habitants, now the second town of Sicily and one ' of the foremost of southern Italy, is threatened with the rate or Pompeii. A pall of smoke covers the eastern art of Sicily and extends far out to sea. In the darkness the shootine flames of the volcano, geysers of fire, were visible plainly for many miles. In SDite of the crave danerer. tour ists, many of them Americans, are nocking to the slopes of the mountain in attemrjts tn scale thp heights. 'Fho authorities, however, have established a aead line and no one is allowed to pass Del Passo. Although the observatory on the mountain has been destroyed. Prnfps. sor Ricco, its chief, is continuing his observations. He reiterated his dec laration that, m his opinion, the erup tion nao but begun. KNOW POPULATION IN JUNE- Dr. Durand Thinks He Can Make a Report by That Time. Boston, Mass. In looking over the census field Dr E. Dana Durand, the national superintendent, said that by June 1 he hoped to be able to report the number of inhabitants in the United States, probably between 88, 000,000 and 91,000,000. The great army of enumerators, consisting of seventy-live thousand men and women, will move on Aprii 15, and will cover the cities in" fifteen days and the rural sections in thirty days. It will take four months to cover the manufacturing interests and three years to tabulate and study the vast undertaking. THE PRICEOF 1GH0RAHCE Cotton Mills to Curtail. Boston, Mass. Probably seven mil lion spindles in the United States will be stopped within the - next four months, according to estimates maae by cotton authorities in this city, they say that a curtailment of pro duction amounting to 25 per cent can not be avoided unless there is a sharp drop In the price of cotton. Ten Cents Added to Every Dish. New York City. The higher cost of living has hit the pocketbook of the rich . Several of the best restau rants announced that hereafter, be cause of the higher cost of meat, 10 cents would be added to every dish on the menu so far as meats are con cerned. River Improvement Meeting Postponed Apilachicola, Fla. Owing to the fact that senators and congressmen working for the development of the Chipola, Flint, Chattahoochee and Ap alachicola rivers cannot attend the proposed meeting of the waterway as sociation, which was to have been held in Albany, Ga., during April, it has been decided to postpone the meeting until a later date. Admiral Entwlstle Dead. New York City. Rear Admiral John Entwistle, United States navy, retired, died at his home in Ptearson, N. J., 73 years old. He was in the bpjler room of the Montior during tne famous engagement wit hthe Merri mac in the civil war. Neglect oi the Health Laws Cost 600,000 Lives Annually. HOOK WORHJJHE SOUTH Bill Advocating Creation of a National Depart ment of Health Causes Warm Debate r In Upper House of Congress. Washington, D. C That six hun dred thousand lives are sacrificed an nually on the altar of this country's ignorance and neglect of sanitary ane health laws, was asserted , by Senator Owen in the course of a speech In the senate in support of his bill cre ating a department of health with a cabinet officer at its head. Mr. Owen's address was based on the theory that the various healtn agencies of the government should be consolidated. He said that while President Taft had not committee himself absolutely on the subject, he was confident he was in sympathy with the movement. He declared that with proper at tention to the prevention of contag ion and to the protection of the peo ple against the use of polluted water and impure and adulterated food, hu man lite could be greatly extended, and with all the safeguards applleo the average might be increased to the extent of twenty-seven years within the century. In addition to the six hundred thousand cases of fatal illness an nually, Mr. Owen asserted that an average of three million of people were constantly sick In this country with preventable diseases. A. statement by Mr. Owen concern ing the prevalence of the hook worm in the south aroused much interest He said he had been informed by a' expert that 90 per cent of the chil dren oi one of the southern states were afflicted with the disease. "I don't care who the expert is,' remarked Mr. Mooney of Mississippi, I don t believe a word he says." Senator Johnson of Alabama also took- exception to the statement. Mr. Owen having asserted that hook worm could be cured by two doses of thymol at a cost of 25 cents, Sen ator Helburn suggested that there was 11,000,000 "now on tap" for the eradication of the hook worm. Mr. Gallinger thought since it had Become known that there was sc much money available for chasing the mysterious hook worm there woulc be a corresponding increase in the disease. In conclusion Mr. Owen spoke o the prevalence of malaria In Oklaho ma. He declared that every school teacner should be armed with a pam phlet Instructing against the ravages of poisonous flies and mosquitoes. Replying to the Oklahoma senator, Mr. Gallinger expressed the opinioL that the government should go slow in establishing a department ol heatlh. He thought the public health and marine hospital service and the health departments of the various states were doing reasonably well. As for the contention that the period oi life could be materially lengthened, he regarded it "a dream, pure ana simple." GOVERNMENT COOK BOOK. High Cost Facts Induce Government to Issue Book.. Washington, D. C. Discussion of the increasing cost of living has brought to light quite generally that the cheaper cuts of meats are more difficult to prepare for the table than the more expensive portions of the carcass, due to a lack of knowledge of how they may be made appetizing and palatable. With' a view to providing the house keepers of the country with practical suggestions along this line, the United States Department of Agriculture has prepared a manual of economy in meat cooking that contains much valuable information which will be issued free. It is known as "Econom ic Use of Meats in the Home," and may be had by addressing a request to the secretary of agriculture, Wasn ington, D. C. i The contents cover a variety of subjects, including fifty recipes of sa vory dishes, and much general infor mation, such as: General methods of preparing meats. Utilizing cheaper cuts of meats in palatable dishes. A simple but practical method ol clarifying fats. Methods of extending the flavor of meats. The recipes have 'been selected from a wide range collected from ap proved sources, and are all simple formulas calling for such items ol food as are ' generally found in every household and requiring no technical knowledge to compound. NO EX-PRESIDENT PENSION. Senate Committee on Pensions De CIi,nes to Give Roosevelt a Pension. Washington, D. C. The senate com ciittee on pensions agreed to report wvorably bills to grant pensions of 3,000 a year to Frances Folsom Cleveland, widow of ex-President Gro wer Cleveland, and Mary Lord Hai h, widow of ex-President Benjamin "arnson. The committee declined io Place- ex-President Roosevelt on nftietired list as commander-in-chiel JinVn army and navy and give hlii 10.000 a year for the remainder of his hfe. This bill does not mention Mr. 8velt by name, but applies to "ex esidents of the United States." Gen. Bell Injured; Woman Killed. Washington, D. C. Major General J. Franklin Bell, chief of staff of the -n-oo v.aHiv hut nnssiblv not dan- erously injured, and Mrs. Herbert J. Slocum, wite oi major dwuuui, ui seventh cavalry, was almost instantly killed in an automobile accident on the Tenauytown roaa. She Had Sixteen Sons in War. Moundsville, W. Va Mrs. Sarah Brandon, aged 109, of this city, hold? the United States record as the moth er of the largest number of civil wai soldiers. No less than 16 of her boys served in the battles of that war, 14 on the Union side and two with the Confederates, while her total family was 25- KING MENELIK DYING. , Regsrt is Guardian of Heir to Abys . sinian Throne. Addis Abeba, Abyssinia King Men is said to be dying. Ras Tesama, regent, with the approval of the principal cliiefs, took over the reins 01 government. pThe regent i3 the guardian ol "Ho Lidj Jeassu, grandson of th jng and heir to the throne of. Abys Baf'6 cap5tal is tranquil and ieiy of foreigners is assured. the Gay Life Revived in Frisco. San Francisco, Cal- The lid was lifted in the upper tenderloin and the long silent orchestras in the cafe dance halls from Turk to Ofarrell streets are now playing the rythmic waltz and the merry two step each evening, bringing joy to the hearts to resort keepers. The revival of tb gay night line in the cafes was made possible by an order adopted during the week by the Jioard of police com missioners on petition of . over three hundred business men of that section of the city. 12 DEAD IN FIRE. Six Story Building in Chicago Proved Death Trap. Chicago, III. Twelve persons were burned to death in a fire which at tacked the Li. Fish Furniture Compa pany building here. Forty employes es caped. A girl who jumped irom third story window died at a hospi tal. . The dead were trapped, on the fourth, fifth and sixth floors when an explosion of benzine on the fourth floor wrapped the building m names Ladders .were raised to the sixth floor, the topmost one, In a desper ate effort to rescue any person who mieht be alive there. The fire strat ed from an explosion of benzine. $500,000 Fund Raised. New York City. The $500,000 funo which the American Bible Society has for more than a year past been seek ing to raise to get an equal amount the gift of Mrs. Russell Sage, has been completed. There are many thousands of per sons in all parts of the world contrib uted amounts-ranging from 10 cents un to $25,000. There were two sub- ! scriDtions of the latter amount and ; upward of ten thousand of II to $2 I each. ENGLAND SHIPPING COTTON. Speculators Are Making an Effort to . Break the American Market Speculators Are Making Effort to Break the Market. New York City. English specula tors in cotton who showed their dis- ike for James A. Patten, the Chicago speculator, by the recent demonstra tion on the Manchester Exchange, are shipping the product back to the country in an endeavor to break the market to the. detriment of Patten and his associates. Although E. G. Scales, who is work ing in harmony with Patten, denies the truth of the report that 10,000 bales have been put aboard ship ready to sail from Liverpool. In the meantime. Patten and his supporters are shipping cotton to the other side for the spinners' supply, at the same time keeping quotations here suffi ciently below those in Liverpool to prevent English- speculators from buying the product there and re-sell ing it here, except at a heavy loss. ROCKEFELLER'S STATEMENT. Answer to Criticisms of the Proposed Foundation. New York City. On behalf of John D. Rockefeller, a statement was giv en out replying to criticisms in con gress of the Rockefeller foundation. The statement is by Starr J. Murphy, Under this bill," says Mr. Murphy, advisor of the philanthropist. "the government has all' control. There is even a special clause in the bill which provides 'that it shall be subject to alteration or amendment or repeal at the pleasure of the con gress of the United States.V-The foun dation can never grow beyond govern- metn control. "Of course, Mr. Rockefeller has a right to leave his money as he pleas es. He could leave all this money to his children, but he pleases to leave it to the public. He asks to be allow ed to leave it for the promotion oi the well-being and advancement oi civilization." WOMEN FIGHT DUEL. Tennesese Women Carve Each Other. One Dead; Another Dying. Kingston, Tenn. Two women, Rosa Cowan and Nellie Taylor fought a duel with knives, just after a church service. Both . women had their throats cut in the duel, the Cowan woman dying instantly and the other being expected to die at any time. It seems that Felix Kimbrough de serted the Cowan woman for the oth er. They met after church and start ed the fearful duel. A brother of the Cowan woman wanted to interfere, but Kimbrough refused to allow him, and, it is said, pulled a pistol and ordered that the woman be allowed to fight it out, which they did with fearful results. WETS WIN CHICAGO. There Will Be No Election on Saloon Question in Illinois City. Chicago, III. Chicago has lost its chance to vote on the saloon question at the election of April 5, according to a decision reached by the election commissioners. The commissioners decided that the petition offered by the "drys" to have the question "shall this city become anti-saloon territory" put on the bal lots, lacked sufficient signatures. The wets" had filed a complaint assert ing that out of the 74,000 names, 26,- 128 were those of persons not regis tered. The commissioners sustained this charge after an investigation. The prohibitionists admit defeat. Bubonic Plague in Hawaii. Honolulu. Hawaii. Bubonic Dlaeue has reappeared in Hawaii, and 'wo white girls, daughters of A. B. Lin say, postmaster at Honokua , and nieces of Territorial Attorney Gener al Alexander Linsay, have died of the disease. Measures have been tak en by the authorities to stop its ADVICE TOFARMERS Spring Agricultural Work for Southern Planters Outlined. IMS TO DO THIS HOP Imong Other Important Things Farmers Are Urged to Join Corn Clubs and to Encourage Their Children to Raise Chickens, Raleigh, N. C. The Progressive Farmer and Gazette published here advises southern farmers' to do the following things this month. 1. See that the seed bed for all crops is not merely well broken but thoroughly pulverized by harrowing and disking An ounce of preparation may be worth a pound of cultivation. 2. Get ready with weeders and har rows to kill the grass before it comes up. Don't be afraid of hurting the stand. This will not happen. 3. Place orders for all improved plows, harrows, weeders, cultivators, and other labor-saving tools and ma chinery. Get ready to make your crop with cheap . horse labor instead af expensive hand labor. , 4. Don't waste time and sweat on scrub seed or scrub stock this year. Improved varieties will pay as well with field crops as with garden crops. 5. Get; ready to share with the nrestern farmer his golden flood or profits in raising hogs and cattle. Firt of all get an improved breed, and then arrange to feed economically. With proper pasture crops both pork and beef can be made, more cheaply in the south than in the west. 6. Of the over $50,000,000 spent In the south for fertilizers each year at least $10,000,000 Is wasted througn ignorance of crop needs and soil needs. Try to stop your part of this colossal loss. 7. Join in the great corn-raising revival now sweeping over the south. The biggest corn, crops the world has known have been made in the south, and we are just waking up to the fact that Dixie can teat the corn belt it self raising this king of cereals. 8. Don't forget the garden, and don't make your wife do all the work in it. Remember, vegetables are cheaper than meat and more health ful. 9. We cannot have good fruit now without spraying. A good spray pump will often pay for itself the first yeai in the orchard and potato ; patch. 10. Dray the roads after every rain. The split-log drag is the cheapest good roads maker ever invented. 11. Paint the farm house and whitewash the outbuildings that you do not care to paint. It will pay you simply in your increased sense of pride and dignity. 12. Get your boy to join the Boys Corn club movement with an acre of corn, and give your girl a flock of pure bred chickens. And be sure to let each one have the money he or she makes from this allotment BATTLESHIPS FOR JUNK PILE War Department Orders 26 War Ves sels Destroyed. Charleston, S. C -The Texas, which is now stationed at the Charleston navy yard, is one of the twenty-six vessels consigned to the junk pile by orders " of the navy department. Hav ing been built twenty-six years ago, the Texas, and all the otners, has been declared "antique from every measurement of efficiency and war." All the vessels consigned to the su perannuated class are those that were built more than twenty years ago. The twenty-six protected and unpro tected cruisers, which are placed un der ban cost the United States treas ury, more than $40,000,000; and in clude the following vessels; Battle ships,' Texas; protected cruisers, Bal LATE NEWS NOTES. Another radical move on the part of the suffrage advocates which is re ceiving much attention in the eastern part of the country is an organization of college women at Wellesley, Smith, Vassar, Bryn Mawr, Radcliffe and oth er colleges for women, the members of which promise not to get married until she shall have won over to the cause at least 500 men. Rev. J. Wesley Bill of New York, who has been waging -a pulpit war fare against socialism has been au thorized by his congregation to call a national antisocialistic convention, for the purpose of inaugurating a nation-wide campaign against socialis tic doctrines, through the churches. Dr. Hill will take personal charge of the campaign. William Ochsher in Maysvllle, Ky, while feeding cattle at a distillery, was surprised to find a fine gold watch in the center of a bale of hay, which he had broken open. The word "Willie" was engraved on the side of the time piece. Where the watch came from no one knows. The hay was part of a shipment sent from Cincinnati. Walter Dennis of Jackson county, Tennessee, a dead man, was pardoned by Governor Patterson. The object of the pardon -was to relieve the fam ily of the deceased of the necessity of baying a $50 fine which he had been sentenced to pay in July, 1905, for carrying a pistol. It was recommend ed by both the trial judge and. the at torney general. It is reported in Battle Creek, Mich., that Montgomery L. Weed of Vicks burg, Miss., before leaving for Cali fornia, stated that he would be coun sel and director with John D. Rocke feller, Jr., in the work of the recent ly announced Rockefeller foundatio: for philanthropic activities. Newman Erb and associates of New York, have acquired the Chatta nooga Southern railroad, a line now extending from Chattanooga to Gads den, Ala. It is now in the hands of receivers. The favorite speculation is that the Louisville and Nashville will ultimately reveal an interest in the transaction, and the long-prophesied line from Chattanooga to Birmingham in competition with interests of tne Southern system will materialize. A marriage in which the bride was twelve years of age and the groom twenty-seven, occurred recently at Dalton, Ga., the ceremony being per formed by Rev. Mr. Pitts, at the home of the bride. Miss May Cody. The groom is Mr. Tom England. He is a clerk in a store. The wedding was a quiet affair. There was no objec tion raised by the bride's immediate family. Washington, The penury of the weather bureau has been releived to some extent and the distribution by telegraph of the 8 p. m. observations which were re cently discontinued on its various circuits throughout the country was resumed March 24. The circulation of this data referring to the tempera ture, rainfall, wind velocity and oth er services was abolished temporarily by the bureau because of the lack of funds with which to prosecute its usual work for the rest of the fiscal year. The action brought forth pro tests from many sections of the coun try. Action taken In the house disclos- AfTERTIlEGRAfTERS Grand Jury Lays Bare Bad Conduct of Officers THE SYMPATHETIC STRIKE OFF Union Laborers of Other Organiza- tions, who Quit Work in Sympathy With the Carmen, Have Been Order ed to Return to Work Some Have : Difficulty in Getting Back Poci- , tions. i Pittsburg, Pa., Special. -The grand jury have ordered indictments ' against thirty-one present and past councilmen, and made n demand upon the directors of the city depositories to investigate their own boards and ascertain the bribe-givers in connec tion with the ordi;ance designating their institutions as city depositories. A further result of the present ments of the jury was the order of City Comptroller Morrow for the withdrawal of all city funds from the six banks, and the practical nullifi cation of the ordinance designating them 33 custodians of city funds. There is about $3,640,320 in these banks now, and this would be in greased many millions during next week by taxes that are being paid. According to the comptroller the with- drawal of funds will be gradual, how ever so that the institutions may not be embarrassed, or any undue alarm caused depositors. ; The presentments give the full de-. fails of. the plot on the part of the councilmen to obtain bribes from the six banks, the means adopted for . paying the bribes are related, and the story of the transfer of $43,000 by an unnamed man to former coun cilman Charles Stewart in the Hotel New York, is told. It is recited that John F. Klein and Joseph C. Wasson, by reason of their confession and statements, making posible the exposure of the facts, are entitled to "great consideration and a reduction of Kliiu's sentence is urged. Friday's finding of the grand jury puts a new phase on the ease of Max G. Leslie, who is now at Hot Springs. Leslie was acquitted on the charge . of perjury recently in connection with the Columbia National Bank matter, He had denied to a grand jury that he had ever received any money in the deal, and convinced a jury when placed on trial that on the day he was alleged to have received the money he was in New York. The present grand jury finds that he paid $17,500 to Brand and paid Leslie $25,000 in June, 1908. arfr A o-n A trio gk fnn9 1 CTi Q 0"Q Tl ct plague-infected rats is being pressed j timore, Chicago, MtaneapolM. Newark, vigorously. Mark Scene of Johnson's Surrender. Durham, N. C. Local Woodmen of the World decided to erect a monu ment as a marker of the surrender of General Joseph E. Johnston to Gen eral W. T." Sherman, four miles from Durham. The spot of surrender is owned by Brodie L. Duke and Is un marked, except for a negro cabin of a type which is fast disappearing. The monument is to be erected in April on the forty-fifth anniversary of the last surrender. Newsy Paragraphs. As a result of the affection won in the hearts of Minnesotans by John, A. Johnson, a fund of $22,000 has been raised in this state to provide a permanent income for his widow, the remainder of her life. The com mittee which has received subscrip tions has notified the board of re gents of the state university that it had the money in a bank. It is to be invested in such a manner that it will bring the widow as least $100 a month. . Private advices from Biarritz con tradict the reassuring reports con cerning King Edward's health. They say that when the king appeared in public recently he appeared haggard and tottering. Professor Elie Methinkoff of the Paris Pasteur institute announced be fore the Academy of Sciences that he had succeeded in overcoming the principal obstacle to the preparation of an effective anti-typhoid vaccine. This disease he said has been incom municable to the lower animals and Professor Methinkoff has now suc ceeded in infecting monkeys with the typhoid germ. By this means he has been able to obtain exact symptoms permitting accurate experiments - on the action o fhls vaccine. Figures made public in New York city through the savings bank section of the American Bankers' association show that the average . deposits in American savings banks is almost four times greater than the average deposit, per capita is six times great er in this country than abroad-JThe total savings deposits of the worl are something more than $15,000,001 and of this sum, more than $5,500,1 belongs to Americans. One American in every six of the total poulation has money in a savings' bank and the average deposit is $380. San Francisco. Atlanta, Albany, New Orleans, Boston, Cincinnati, Raleigh, and Tacoma; unprotected cruisers, Detroit, Marblehead and Montgomery; monitors, Amphrittrite, Miantonombh, Menadnock, Monterey, Puritan, Ter ror, Ozark, Tallahassee, Tonopah and Cheyenne. . Shoots Three and Kills Self. New Orleans, La. Enraged, be cause his wife had gone to the the ater with, her brother, taking the chil dren of the family with her, Alfred Mitchell, a carpenter, shot and prob ably fatally wounded her, seriously wounded - their 12-year-old son ana "i-year-old daughter, and then shot him self in the head, dying Instantly. Forced by Baldness to Quit Ministry. New York City-Tae Rev. R. A. Hafer of St. Trinity's Evangelical Lu theran Church, Jersey City, has writ ten his congregation that baldness forces him to retire from the. minis try. He cannot wear his hat in the pulpit, and he cannot preach . bare headed, he says, without catching cold. - $150,000 for Coker College, Hartsville, 8. C On the occasion of the dedication of the new admin istration building of Coker College for Women, Major J. L. Coker authorized the announcement that ne - nan do nated $150,000 for a permanent en dowment fund. During Major Coker's life the Interest on the fund at 6 per cent is to go to the college. After his death the college is to re ceive the whole sum. Hail Storm at Tampa. Tampa, Fla. An unprecedented hail storm for .this season fell near here. Fences were broken down and serious damage done to truck in some instances. This is the first hail storm here in many years. Sympathetic Strike Called Off. Philadelphia, Specials The Central . Labor Union at its meetin? on Sun- ed the fact that the secretary of com- d officially called off the svmpa merce and labor has no information,..-. . ,; , , . . " . relating to the records of Commander j ihix? strike, which has been in Peary bearing upon his discovery of effeet here for three weeks, union the north pole. Several days ago Mr. workers in most of the trades still Hughes of New Jersey offered a reso- affected by the general strike order lution calling upon the secretary for resumed work on Monday, reports of tidal observations made by At the office, of the Philadelphia Mr. Peary on the coast of Alaska. National League Baseball Club, it Mr Hughes suggested that these re- stated th t th iron workers re. ports might develop some informa- , .. " , tion bearing on the discovery of the sumed operations on the grand stand pole. In asking that the resolution j and bleachers, and it is hoped to have be laid on the table, Mr. Mann said I the work completed before the open the records referred to had been sent , ing of the season. Anti-Vaccination Society. Washington, D. C Local opponents of vaccination have organized them selves into a body to be known as the Washington Anti-Vacfiination So ciety," with Harry B. Bradford, resi dent naturalist of the British Museum, as president of the association. An efEort will be made to have a hear ing before the senate and house Dis trict of Columbia committees, urging the repeal of the law requiring that all school children in the district be vaccinated. A general agitation against vaccination will he started. to the committee on interstate and foreign commerce. They did not -contain data bearing on the discovery. Lieutenant Goethias as. president of the Panama railroad, . has informed Samuel Lewis, secretary of foreign relations, that he has received instruc tions from Secretary of War Dickin son, to arrange with the Panama gov ernment for the survey . of the rail road from Panama to David, near the Costa Rican frontier, which has been projected for some time. This will be the Panama trunk of the proposed American railroad through Central America. President. Taft has permitted to ex pire immediately the sentence of one year and one day's confinement In the Atlanta penitentiary imposed on George W. England of Huntsville, Ala., for violation of the liquor laws. When sentenced the prisoner . was given the option of a term of six months in the local jail at Huntsville, but preferred the sentence to Atlanta for the longer term because of the filthy condition said to exist at the former institution. England's term would have expired April 3. Past Assistant Surgeon C. H. Lav inger of the public health and ma rine hospital service was designated to go to Milan and other places in Italy for the purpose of making an Investigation into the origin and pre valence of pellegra and into the meas ures being taken to combat the di sease. Surgeon Lavinder also will Inspect establishments in Germany which manufacture viruses and anal ogous products for sale in America. If the house adopts, the recommen dation of its military committee the confederate cemetery at Springfield. Mo., will be taken over by the United States government ar.d will be estab lished. This is expected to cement closer than ever the north and south. The bill has the approval of Secre tary of War Dickinson. A silver baptismal basin, which was sent from Holland in 1694 to the first Dutch church on Manhattan island, tias been deposited In th9 United States national museum through the courtesy of the Colonial Dames of New York state. The basin measures aearly eleven inches in diameter and Is about three inches deep. It is . said that among those baptized from this basin, were Nicholas Roosevelt, Ab raham dePeyster, Gelyn Verplanck, Robert Livingston, and others cele brated in the colonial history of New fork. Five hundred horseshoers, who have remained idle since the strike was declared, have also returned .to work. The committee of ten, which has had charge of the general strike, met the executive committee of . the strik ing carmen and discussed plans for the continuation of the carmen 's strike. It made a full report to the Central Labor Union ion Sunday, when all the sympathetic strikers were ordered , back to work and re quired to render financial assistance to the carmen. Night Work by Children Prohibited. Providence, Mas:?., Special. Should Gov. Pothier approve the child labor bill, which has passed the senate and the house, as it is expected he will the departmfcit stores of Rhode Island will have to readjust their working forces. The new law pro vides particularly that no child un der 16 years of age shall work after 8 p. m. Nearly 1,000 children in the State are affected. Never Ratified the Amendment. Annapolis, Md., Special. In a cau cus of the Democratic members of the legislature looking to the- dis franchisement of the negroes of this State, it was decided to -adopt the Digges plan. This is based -on the fact that the State of Maryland has never ratified the 15th amendment to the federal constitution giving ne groes the right to vote. It provides that as the constitution of the States gives the ballot to white men only, negroes may be refused registration. It is not supposed under this plan to attempt to prevent negroes voting at congressional or presidential elections Etna Continues to Belch. Catania Sicily, By Cable. Etna still is angry. From the top of the old crater volumes of white smoke are issuing, while from .the new craters that have formed lava is -gushing . and large incandescent masses are exploding with loud de tonations and emissions of black smoke. ' .