t-- ....iti ivrrnrn. i j8". v : l " . m nn.n. , ; - , , . , : I - . T ' i I if Xlondon ttflCa AND ToT SUBSCRIPTION: et SO Per Year ttbiCTIY IN ADVANCE Cbe (Tbatbam ttecorb. RATES OF AO VERTIStH 6 : Om Square oao lertla......$f. One Square,' two loMrtloa.... L One Square, one aaeUi VOL,. XXXII. ISSIS FROM THE COTTON CROP OF 1909 jureaa of Plant Industry Issues Important uuueuu. PLAN TO FiGHT BOLL WEEVIL - 1 1,1 1 r x ?erBaent Agricultural Department Has Ap proved Mettod For Growing Cotton Under . Foil Weevil Infestation. Washington, D. C The season of ,Ter known for the cotton crop in all w tie Atlantic states, taught some finable lessons. t It demonstrated that a crop . ,ntton. under heavy boll weevil in flation, could be made after July 'provided the rarmers pick up the minctured squares and work the field Intensively, in fact, there were very few bolls on the cotton plants in Lou iana and Southwest Mississippi on july l 1909. The weather then be rame drv sad warm, and such as fol lowed tie instructions of the govern ment demonstration work made a fair trop of cotton, both on the al luvial bottoms and on the hill lands and tie planters who failed to fol low such instructions made very lit tle Louisiana has always had years of a short cotton crop, due to adverse weather conditions. The crop of 1905, though practically unaffected by the pvil was only 511,738 bales, which Is less than half the product of 1904. Owing to loss of labor and fear of the holl weevil, about 30 per cent less tban normal acreage woo iouicu w cotton in 1909, and when practically no cotton was made up to July 1st, tnrh was tie alarm that a large area of cotton was plowed up and planted to other crops. The amount plowea mi nr abandoned is estimated by good judges at 40 per cent. But allow that it was Fer ceui, ueuucuug lrum tie probable crop in such a season, to-wit: 511,735 bales, the 30 per cent UOt planted ailU U pci tern, iiiuncu or abandoned, and tne crop oi Louis iana, without allowing anything for weevil damage, should have - been about 2S6.574 bales. As far as ca be ascertained the crop was about 270000 bales. This clearly proves that the fright is more damaging than the weevil. The second item emphasized by the experience of 1909 is . the importance of picking up and burning the punc tured squares. There never had been any question but picking up the squares in the fore part of the sea son would check the weevils, but it fas proven in 1909 that it was effect ive after the field was fully infested 8 rapid cultivation was continued. The third item of value demonstrat ed by the season of 1909 is th im portance of having the land""well drained so the crop can be worked as soon as the rain ceases. Under boll weevil conditions the heavy black lands and the poorly drained fields should be devoted to other crops, be cause intensive working of the crop Is a necessity. There must be no weeds and no grass in the crop. Fourth The past season has added Ms conclusive testimony in favor of the plan for making cotton under boll weevil infestation, which plan, ap proved by the United States depart ment of agriculture, is as follows: j 1. Destruction of the weevils in the fall by burning all rubbish and ma terial in and about the field, which might serve for hibernating quarters of the weevils, and breaking (plow ing) the soil as deep as conditions Will allow. 2. The shallow winter cultivation of the soil if no cover crop is used. - 3. Delaying the planting till the soil tod temperature are warm enough to make it safe. 4. The planting of early maturing varieties of cotton. ! 5. The use of fertilizers. 6. Leaving more space between the tows, and on ordinary uplands having a greater distance between plants in the row than is usually allowed.-" 7. The use of the section harrow Before and after planting and on the young cotton. 8. Intensive shallow cultivations 9. Agitation of the stalks by means ef brush attached to the cultivator. 10. Picking up and burning the iquares that fall under weevil condi tions, especially during the first 30 or 40 days of infestation. 11. Controlling the , growth of the plant If excessively by deep and close cultivation while the plant is young. 12. Selecting the seed, 13. The rotation of crops and the nee of legumes. It will be noted that the system, as outlined, has a two-fold object: (1) To reduce the number of weevils and (2) w aid early maturity. The foregoing methods may require modification to Wit the soil and climate. Where there Cannon Gets Automobile. Washint3on, D. C Careful analy sis of the conference report on the legislative appropriation bill shows Speaker Cannon's automobile w be cared for at government ex pense, after all. The $2,500 appropri ation for the speakers car was trans Ted to another paragraph covering ?Penses of select committees and similar items, and was incorporated ""o a lump appropriation of $75,000. Send Cane to Patten. Montgomery, AaIn appreciation " ine Part taken by him in revival i cotton prices, a cotton factor of city purchased a cane and sent W oes A- Patten, care the New IorK Cotton Exchange. 7? ,f ett! Peru-Ecuador Trouble, disrmt. 1' En9'and. The boundary fchj.fc. between Ecuador and Peru, verl put botn nations on the wash- 0f war' win be settled at to mgtoa. by mediation, accordii" hero v official announcement made agent Henry Williams. confidential The n,l tae Ecuadorean government. EcuafeSsage from resident Alfaro of bef7r' sa7s: "Negotiations have fcent udertaken for a direct settle ' United UBh the mediation, of the Honpro ,s'lates government. Commis crs Will meet in Washington." muclr food- and a surplus oi moisture available for. cotton in any s oli common sense dictates that these conditions should not be increased by deep fal breakings. We, therefore, ad vise tne following plan under boll weevil conditions on Buch lands: Burn all the cotton tsalks, and af ter the weevils have gone into win ter quarters burn all-the rubbish in and. about the field aB early in the fall as possible. In the spring, bed on the firm ground, giving more space be tween the rows. Prepare a good seed bed before planting and maintain ridge cultivation throuhg the season. The under weevil conditions there is an excess of plant growth. Fifth The landr- must be well drained and no - larger area planted than- can be intensively worked. Sixth All the supplies of food and forage must be raised at home, and can be on the lands not planted to cotton. Seventh It is practically safe to make advances in boll weevil territo ry if the farmer follows government instructions. BighthThere should be a j-igid system of inspection to see that the government plan is followed. The great droutii and the intense heat in July and Aueust last vear throughout Texas and Oklahoma, ac centuated the . importance of deeper tillage and more thorough prepara tion of the soil. I ask every agent ;of the farmer's co-operative demonstration work and everr farmer In the southern states to his best to make a banner crop of all farm staples in 1910. From the Bureau of Plant Industry, by S. A Knapp, Special Agent in Charge. FAMOUS MEDAL FOUND. After Being Lost 50 Years Winfield Scott Medal Found. Cordele, Ga. A medal about the size of a twenty-dollar gold piece was found within the city limits of Cor dele by a negro while walking along the tracks of the Atlanta, Birmingham and Atlantic Railroad. The medal is a curiosity and its being found in this city incites considerable interest. How this curiosity found its way to this place is a mystery which will probably never be disclosed. The front of this medal bears a fac simile of General Winfield Scott, and engraved above the head of the fac simile in bold letters, were the words, Winfield Scott, U. S. A." On the oth- r side was a reproduction of a scene from the battle of Lundy's Lane. The picture shows several men about the wounded general as they bore him from the field of battle. History has it that General Scott was mortally wounded at this battle, where he dis played great bravery. It is believed by man who have seen the medal that it is one presented General Scott by congress in 1814 for heroism exhibit ed at this battle, which occurred In July of the above year. When pol ished up by a jeweler he remarked that the medal perhaps had been lost fifty years. HATS WORRY RAILROADS. Women's Hats Are So Large Rail roads nave prooiem. Washinaton. D. C. Women's hats have been . growing larger and larger every year. They have also been erowlnar lietter and lighter in weight. So that now a woman's hat weighs less and takes up more room wan ten did years ago. A freight or an ex press car will hold only a tenth of the hats it once did and the carriers raised the rates to make up the difference. That is the answer of the rauroaas nni ATnress comnanies to the com plaint of the Millinery Jobbers' as civistinTi which -was heard before the Interstate Commerce commission. The milliners say the rates are too nign and the carriers say the evolution of the headgear simply made them put on the increase. TO CENSOR BATHERS. Over Bathing Costumes "Cops" Will Be uensors. rki.9iM III Tnlio rensorshiD Of Wlliwayw, " - w-w - viv,4no- natiiTnes was established in Chicago, with the adoption of new rules for swimming beaches. Chica go's wide, sandy beaches along the shores of Lake Michigan are lined within a short distance by residences. The rules governing costumes, iswu down by Chief of Police Steward, fol low: . "Extremely bizarre costumes muni. not be worn. "Women who wear costumes that they do not care to get wet will have to have them maae oi muuem w'6"i or they will be ordered off the sands. "Men who appear on the sands merely to pose as athletes will be Or rehed away. - "Bloomers without skirts will not be tolerated. - . "A censor will stana at uicbwub room doors to pass on all costumes." BANKERS PAP GRAFT. "Men Higher Up" Arrested In the City of Pittsburg. Pittsburg, Pa The climax promis ed in the Pittsburg graft exposures came, as promised, with the present ment by the grand Jury of a report in which is recommended the indict ment of Frank N. Hoffstot, president of the Pressed Steel Car Company, and one of the most prominent busi ness men in the country. ,J''' Simultaneously, in open court, came a plea of Emil Winter, president of the Workingman's Savings and Trust Company, that he had no defense to make to the charge that he gave a $20,000 bribe to former Councilman Morris Einstein. May Cotton Jumps. s:u There -was a T6- New Torn v1- newal of speculative excitement in the cotton marneu no great activity and there was no aggressive bulK support, but May short appeared to be very nervous, and the price of May cotton was run ud to 14.88. " , " It looked as though the sharp re covery and the publication of sensa tionally bullish interviews with Mr. Patten had completely revised the ap- Y.svnatnn of May sciueeze. PITTSBQBO. CHATHAM COUNTY7N. C, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 13. 1910 IS NO. 35. For Larger Advertise ments Liberal Contracts will bo mado.. TWO WARSHIPS AUTHORIZED House Passe Bill Providing For CoastracUoa of Hew Fighting Snips. Waehinaton. D. vote of 612 to 110, fourteen being present and not voting, the house au thorized the construction of two bat tleships to cost $ 6,000,000 Sach. Thlr- ty-taree democrats voted for two bat tleships and twenty-four republicans against the proposition. This action was taken just prior to the passage of the naval appropria tion bill carrying $128,037,602. This amount is about $3,000,000 less than was recommended by the navy de partment In addition to the battle ships, the bill also provides for the construction of two fleet collierB and four submarine boats. As amended on motion of Mr. Fitz gerald of New York, the two battleships- and two fleet, colliers must be constructed by firms operating under the eight-hour law. The committee on naval affairs had reported in favor of authorizing two battleships. Mr. Tawney of Minne sota, chairman of the appropriations committee, offered an amendment pro viding "Tor only one battleship,, while Mr. Hobson proposed an amendment providing for : three. Mr. Hobson con tended that three battleships would give no. increase, but would provide only for the ordinary depreciation in the naval forces. By an almost 'unan imous vote the house rejected this proposition. U. S. WHEAT REPORT. Average Condition on April 1 Was 80.8 Per Cent of Normal. Washington, D. C. The average condition of winter wheat on April 1 was 80.8 per cent of a normal, against 82.2 April 1, 199, and 87.0, the aver age for the past ten years on April 1. The' decline in condition from De cember 1, 1909, to April 1, 1910r was 15.0 points. . The average condition of rye was 92.3 per cent of a normal April 1, against 87.2 April 1, 1909,-and 89.5 the average for the past ten years on April t Comparisons for southern winter wheat, and rye states, April 1, fol lows; Winter Ten Ten Wheat Year Rye Year 1910 Are 1910 Ave. Virginia ... .90 North Carolina. .90 West Virginia .88 Kentucky . . .84 Tennessee . . .84 Georgia 86 Alabama. . . .85 Mississippi. . .90 South Carolina .88 Arkansas . . .90 Texas. ... .89 86 91 87 89 90 88 83 90 S6 85 88 S6 87 86 87 88 88 91 89 90 89 88 88 89 88 87 87 8t 79 82 78 Exdosion on Steamer. , . Dover, England. A terrific explo sion occurred on tne Britisn steamer Cairnrona off Dungeness, which wrecked the women's quarters, killing one child and injuring a number oi women and children. The steamer caught fire and a panic ensued, in which men fought for the possession of the boats and had to be beaten back by the crew to allow the" women to be taken off first. In all twenty were seriously injured and not less than fifty were slightly injured by the explosion and in the panic. Bandits Got $5,000. Chicago, III. Five masked bandits escaping with $5,000 stolen from the bank of Coal City, at Coal City, 111., exchanged shots with a posse, three of the robbers being wounded captured. Coal City is sixty-three miles southwest of Chicago. The en tire population was aroused by the explosion in the bank, and the ent ing pursuit. Petroleum Reduced. New York City The Standard Oil Company announced a reduction of 15 points in the price of refined pe troleum. ' N. W. Wage Increase. Roanoke, Va. A five per cent wage Increase was announced by the Nor folk and Western Railway for all th employees receiving less than $155 a month and who have not had an in crease since October 1. Wage Increase on Central Railway. Savannah, Ga. -The Central of Georgia Railway announces a 5 pex cent wage increase for its engineers. Newsy Paragraphs. J. Schorley, mayor of Kenosha, Wis., introduced a new feature into Kenosha politics when he distributed five, thousand bars of toilet soap as a means of calling attention to his can didacy for re-election. The soap is ordinary toilet size, and on one side of the white bar, in raised letters, is "Purity Soap," while on the reverse side is a picture of the mayor and the inscription, "A clean administration." The mayor recently came out with a declaration for a cleaner city. Dk James G. Cumming, director of the Pasteur institute of the Univer sity of -Michigan, announced the dis covery of a new method for the treat ment of hydrophobia. The new treatment,-Dr. Cumming says, eliminates many of the dangers attending the former methods and shortens the time of treatment by one week. Dr. Cum ming uses a virus prepared from the spinal tissues of a rabid animal. This is injected into the atlent The virus is said to have been used in several cases' recently with marked success. Memories of the cooking of his "old mammy" induced J. R. Bingham of Carrollton, Miss.,to give $5,000 for founding a cooking school for ne groes, at Augusta, Ga. "The 'new negro "can't cook," says Mr. -Bingham. Millions of- ladybugs are receiving free transportation on the various railroads- in California as guests of the Wells-Fargo Express company. They will be turned loose to browse upon aphides and other insect pests that harm the melon crops. - After a fight waged since 1904 in the New Jersey legislature, the sen ate passed a-bill prohibiting the em ployment of persons under sixteen years of age. in manufacturing estab ifrht Under this law the age minimum win uo i -- fourteen and later to sixteen. j CABINET DISRUPTED Dissension Among Advisers of President Taft Serious. RESIGNATIONSARE EXPECTED Knox and Hitchcock Leaders of Factions. Eltchcock Complains That Cabal Is Formed Against Hin. "Washington, D. C The cabinet of President Taft is threatened wita dis ruptiofiT Despite the denials given out in response to persistent rumors of approaching resignation of cabi net officials, the impression is wide spread that within a short time two or three members will get out. The cabinet circle is torn with dis sension, and the widespread popular criticism of the administration ha;, not helped to smooth ruffled feelings or to harmonize differences. President Taft said he knew nothing of contemplated resignation of cabr net officials. Secretary of the Treas ury MacVeagh gave out both form and informal denials of stories pub lished in the New York papers. Secretary Knox is the head of one faction in the cabinet. He is' sup ported on the floor of the senate by Senators Aldrich, Crane, - Bourne and Penrose. This coterie of senators are at outs with Postmaster General Hitchcock over patronage matters, and believe he has exercised too mucn power in shaping the affairs of the administration and ought to be rele gated to his own department or, pos sibly, to private life.- In the cabinet Secretaries Dickinson and Meyer stand with the opposition to Hitch cock, and this has led to the postmas ter general's complaint to his friends that a cabal has been formed to drive him out of the cabinet. The postmaster general Is support ed by Secretaries MacVeagh, Ballin ger and Nagel. It is admitted that Mr. Hitchcock had much to do with these men being taken in the cabi net. - Naturally this condition of af fairs cannot long exist and there will be a breaking up of the president's official family. Secretary Dickinson may resign to enter the race for sen ator from Tennessee. The resignation of Secretary Mac Veagh is expected at an early date. That of Secretary Ballinger will -probably be handed in at the close of the present Ballinger-Plnchot investiga tion, even if he is exonerated, as his friends have all along felt he would be. Rumor has put the limit of his service at December 1. SLAUGHTER OF INNOCENT. Death Makes Awful Raids on the Ba bies of the Poor. New York City. The city-born in fant of middle-class" parents thrives as well as the heir to millions, but the children of the poor in New York, the tenement dwellers, take a shock ingly disproportionate share off of the rate of mortality.. Figures have just been compiled for the first time by the New York milk committee show ing the infant birth and death ratt for -equal number of parents in areas inhabited exclusively by the wealthy, the wellt-o-do and the very poor. The fashionable area had a popula tion of 7,561 in twenty-eight blocks; the well-to-do area, 7,696 in five blocks, and the tenement dwellers 7, 853 in three blocks on the upper east side, not the most congested part ot the city. The returns show that in the fashionable section 37 babies were born in one year; in the well-to-do section 160, and among the poor 434. To gauge the mortality rate two sum mer weeks were chosen to measure the effect of a heat wage. Among the wealthy and well-to-do there were no deaths, against 16, or K per cent, among, the poor. AWFUL THIRD DEGREE. Tortured by "Third Degree" Into Con fessing Murder. New York Citv The statement of a man on trial for his life that be had been tortured by tne police tmra de gree" into making a confession to murder, caused a sensation in the court of general sessions. Stephen Boehm, who is charged with iriiHnfi' Jacob Viez. admitted sign ing a confession presented by the prosecution, but said ne did so to es cape abuse. He said that after being iront in a cell twentv-four hours with out food, drink or sleep, he was taken before the head of tne nomiciae du reau mauled and beaten until he could hardly stand. "When I was almost exhausted,' he said, "I was told I would escape with a light sentence if I confessed. I did so, as I was only too glad to end the torture. ' THOMAS F. WALSH DEAD. Millionaire Mine Owner Dies at His Home in Washington. Washington, D. C. Thomas F. Walsh, the millionaire mine owner, died at his home here. f rtonth was due to a growth on the lungs, the result of an injury receiv- ed years ago wnen mr. wmsu wa a minister in the west. Thomas F. Walsh was born in Ire land in 1851. He .was educated la the public schools, and early in life was apprenticed to a wheelwright. When he was 19 years old he came to the United States, going almost di rectly to Colorado, where he made his fortune in the development of mines. . TEN THOUSANDSTARVING Armenians Will Die -Unless" Aid is Received. . - New York City That 10,000 per sons are starving in Armenia and will die unless outside help reaches them before the next harvest season, two months hence, is- the statement made in a cablgram Received ' here by the Armenian Relief Association. In the appeal sent out by the asso ciation, it is stated that $2,500 has been forwarded to the - afflicted dis tricts and $10,000 more is needed. NORTH STATE NEWS Items of State Interest Gathered and Told In Brlet - Internal Revenue Collections. 7 - The Winston-Salem delegation) who went to Washington to make a pull ior the' collector's office marshaled a fine array of figures. It was shown that the total internal revenue collec ted in the State last year was; $5,150, 672 and of this sum the western; dis trict paid $2,739,124 and the eastern $2,411,548. The : fifth congressional district paid at Winston-Salem . $2, 437,560 ; . Durham $1,941,065 ; . and Reidsville $310,945, making a total of $4,689,570. The collections for ; the entire State, outside of the fifth con gressional district, amounted to $461, 102. -; - . '- " : Preacher Gave Bond. i The trial of Rev. R. L. Bane and M. L. Parker of Granite v Quarry, charged with burning the ;former's store at that place in February, was held before Esquire D. M. Miller, at Salisbury, and both defendants gave bond of $l,200for their appearance at the May term of Rowan , superior court. . Cave-In Kills Two. While working in a 12-foot sewer ditch in Greensboro, two , negroes, Sam Gorrell and Dewitt Johnson, lost their lives when several tons of dirt caved in upon them. Another labor er, Tom Slade, had a narrow escape but managed to get out of the ditch after he had been partially buried by the cave-in. ' ' " I Site For Children's Home, C. G. Proctor, of East Durham, has given a site of fifteen acres for the $30,000 Children's Home to be built in that - Iplace. The. county offers to build a thirty-foot , roadway to it. Mr. Proctor, though without children, recently gave twenty-five acres for the Pythian orphanage site, lost by change from Durham to Clay ton. ' '. TAR HEEL CHRONICLES Bill of $50,000 for Monuments. Representative Morehead - has in troduced a bill providing $50,000 for monuments. Twenty-five thousand of this sum is to be put in a statue to General Nathaniel Greene, and the remainder in '.'monuments and tab lets to the memory of other partici pants in the battle of Guilford Court House." r - North Carolina's. D. A. R. Delegate. Mrs. F. .S. Spruill has been ap pointed as the North Carolina dele gate from the State associations to the meeting of the National Colonial Dames of America, which is to hold its annual session in Washington City, beginning April 27. ' Big Fire Loss at Fayetteville. A fire swept several thouasnd acres near Fayetteville, and gave the people within the fire swept .territory the fight of their life to save their houses from destruction. The : ap proximate loss is about $10,000, Drug Store Tax Increased. The license tax on drug stores for whiskey prescriptions is increased from $125 a year to $500 by Raleigh aldermen. Also license tax on near beer saloons from $250 to $500. Cotton Mill News at Rockingham. - Pee Dee mifls No. 1 and No. 2, at Rockingham, will operate but four days in each week' in order to curtail production. These mills manufacture checks and plaids. Roberdel No. 1 will also' run on short time. This mill manufactures ginghams. ; - . ; , Since the Hannah Pickett closed down work; has been commenced on the new weave room, and it is thought that it. will be finished by fall. The new Entwistle mill4s going up rapidly' and will be pushed :with all possible speed. . ' R North Carolina National Guard. The North Carolina National Guard Association closed its business ses sion at Raleigh Thursday and at night had the joys of a banquet at which there were addresses by Governor Kitchin, Commander-in-Chief of the State Guard; Capt. M, C. Kerth, pf the United States Army, and others. Durham was selcted as the next place of meeting. ; Penitentiary Guard ' 'Not Guilty." ' . Not guilty was the verdict, of the jury in the case of W. M. Dupree, at Raleigh, tried on" the charge of having caused the death of' Convict George Murphy, of Rowan .county, while as a guard in the penitentiary he attempted to carry out an order to put Murphy in the dark cell for drunkenness. . .. ! . Kinston Taxe3 "Near Boer." , At a meeting of the Kinston board of aldermen an ordinance was pass ed without a dissenting vote taxing near-beer saloons $1,000 a year and also providing a stringent f regulation." Patents Granted North Carolinians. The patent office at Washington has granted the following patents to citizens cf this State: - -Wallace B. Davis, Asbeville, window-lock; Benjamin L. Massey, Char lotte, extension car-stop; Archibald ItfcGilcbrist,- Graphiteville, brake for steam vessels; George T, Robertson, Charlotte, fountain-pen filler; Ellis E. Shore and W. L. AVi'son, Rural Hall, drying-rack for a. : "' ornas A. Wes ton, Arden, friction-clutch. f , News Notes Gathered From All " Farts of the Old North State. N. 0. Chief Dismissed in Missouri. The entire population of St. Louis is t aroused over the dismissal. State is aroused over the dismissal of this city's scholarly chief of police, Edmond P. Creecy, a native -of Eden ton, N. C, whose father, the late Robert P. Creecy, was owner and pub lisher of The Elizabeth City Observer. Many call Crsscy's dismissal-outrageous. The newspapers are demanding fair play for him. The Times says: "At the most, nothing has been proven against the suspended chief - except that he appears to have lacked judg ment and penetration." The police board spread upon its records- the statement that "Creecy had no guilty knowledge or connec tion in , any shape or form with the Police Relief Association-"shortage." Society of the Cincinnati At the annual meeting of the North Carolina Society of..' the .-Cincinnati at Raleigh, the old officers were all re-elected, a number of new members admitted and the convention brought to a close with an elaborate banquet. The officers are: President, Hon. Wilson G. Lamb, Williamston ; vice president, Hon. John C Davis, Balti more; secretary, Marshall DeLancey Haywood, Raleigh ; assistant secre tary, John Bradley Lord, Brooklyn, N. Y.;treasurer, Walter D. Carstar pen, Plymouth; assistant treasurer, Col. Benahan Cameron, Raleigh ; chaplain, Rev. Joseph Blount Ches hire, bishop of the Diocese of North Carolina. BROVSVJLLt DECISION Inquiry Board Finds That Negro Soldiers Snot Up Town. OFFICERS M CENSURED Court Says Tiat U Officers of Colored Regi ment Sad Performed Their Duty the Afiraj Would Not Bare Occurred. Sold Diseased Cow. . Mr. J.. M. Cross of Charlotte, who has taken many shipments of cattle to Fayetteville from Mecklenburg county, was tried before 'Squire Overby, charged with false represen tations in the sale of a cow. Mr. J. W. Johnson testified that lie pur chased a cow from Mr. Cross, which the latter guaranteed to be sound, and free from disease; that two weeks latter the cow died from dis ease. Mr. Cross was bound over to court in the sum of $50 which he gave. North Carolina Postmasters. The - following North Carolina Presidential postmaster appointments were confirmed by the Senate: . Mary W. Yarborough to succeed Rufus R. Harris at Louisburg. O. D. Wallace, to succeed Carlos McLead at Carthage. Albert Miller, to succeed himself at La Grange. N Charter Granted. A charter is issued for the Carolina Banding Machine Company, Winston Salem, capital $125,000 authorized and $24,000 subscribed, by E. G. Hes ter, F. H. Fries, W. F. Shaffner, W. C. Briggs, William 0 'Brien and others. Washington, D. C. The military: court of inquiry, during the last year, has been investigating the shooting up of Brownsville, Texas, finds that the evidence clearly sustains the charges that the shooting was done by soldiers of the twenty-fifth infant ry, colored. - , The court is also of opinion that If the, officers of the regiment had per formed their respective duties immedi ately prior . to the shooting the af fray would not have occurred. Fur-" thermore, if the officers had perform ed their duties immediately after the shooting, some of the guilty men would have been discovered. Fourteen men belonging to the twenty-fifth In fantry are declared eligible for re enlistment. According to the act creating the board of inquiry, the findings are final and cannot be reviewed by any one. The court consists of Lieutenant General S. B. M. Young, Major Gen eral J. P. Sanger, Brigadier General Theodore Schwan, Brigadier General Butler D. .Price, Brigadier General John M. Wilson and Captain Charles . Howland, twenty-first infantry, recorder. Size of. an Editor's Fish. Editor Boylin of The Wadesboro Messenger and Intelligencer, is au thority for the capture of a German carp in the Pee Dee river by Sam Davis, and the fish is reported to weigh 27 pounds. Davis claims to have caught it with a hook and line. The Army of Census , Takers. The army of census takers will move upon the country next Friday, April 15, and for fifteen days they will be engaged in rounding up the population of the cities, 30 days to be given to other areas. Wade Coble Gets Twelve Years. Wade Coble of Julian, tried in Guilford superior court for the mur der of John M. Staley, was found guilty of manslaughter and sentenc ed to the penitentiary for 12 vears. Guilford Commissioner Found Guilty. The- attorneys in the case of John L. King, chairman of the Guilford highway commission, indicted for selling the coranty . road-building ma terial, agreed on the facts and asked the court for a verdict, dispensing with the formality of a jury trial. Judge Adams found thej defendant guilty and-imposed a fine of $5 and costs, from which verdict an appeal was taken to the Supreme Court. Deaf and Dumb School. There was a special session of the Council of State with Governor Kitchin Saturday to hear representa tives of the North Carolina State School for the Deaf Dumb, Morgan ton, on a number of matters per taining to the school, particularly its finances. The new primary building is just being completed that was pro vided for by the last Legislature. It is costing $27,000 and is pro nounced an exceptionally good build ing for the amount it is costing. There are , now 244 children in the . school and Dr. Goodwin says this session is proving one of the most satis factory, they have ever had. ; Shepherd Granted Reprieve. Governor Kitchin grants a reprieve to May 10 in the case of John Shep herd of Wilkes county, under sen tence, of one year on the roads for selling liquor. The reprieve is because counsel say that $350 has been paid in judgment ni si as a compromise on condition that the solicitor and iudgre" would recommend pardon the time being in order to press this uiukkcr uciuic me juuge to get recom mendation for pardon. - - " FIGHTING SOUTHERN LAW. Bonaparte Uses Murder Case to Test Agricultural Contract Acts. Washington, D. C. Protesting against what he terms an attempt in some southern states to reduce the negro to captivity, Charles J. Bona parte, formerly attorney general of the United States, filed a brief in the supreme court of the United State In behalf of Pink Franklin, a South Carolina colored man, who, on d charge of murder, is sentenced to be hanged. Franklin, under an "agricultural contract" to work for J. D. Thomas, in Orangeburg county, South Carolina, in 1907, quit before the contract ex pired. A statute had been passed In South Carolina making it a misde meanor for a laborer- to break such a contract if he had become Indebted to his employer. A warrant was sworn out for Franklin's arrest. The constable, H. E. Valentine, in attempt ing to arrest the negro, went to the latter's house, entered and was killed. Franklin was convicted of murder. - Mr. Bonaparte's brief attempts to show that the negro had a right to re sist arrest and -protect himself, fam ily and domicile, because the statute oh which the warrant was based had been held to be obnoxious to the state legislation, violated the federal con stitution and that any attempt to en-, force the provision by the arrest ol a nersnn in the situation of Franklin constituted a crime against the Unit ed States under the laws forbidding peonage. - . INDIANS ARE INCREASING. Statistics Indicate More Birth' Thai Deaths Among Indians. Washington,. Dr C The Indian has at least paused in his passing from the face of the earth, if the statis tics concerning births . and deaths among about one-third of the Indian population in the United States, which have Just been compiled by the bureau of Indian affairs, can be accepted as a criterion of the general condition of the red race. During the fiscal year 1909 there were 3,395 births and 3,178 deaths among 101,717 Indians. This showed a birth rate per thou sand of 33.4, as compared with 31.2 deaths. An official said that the figures poin ted to an Improvement in the general situation, A,.B It was estimated there were 300,545 Indians in the United States, exclu sive ot Alaska, during the last fiscal year. . . SCHOOL CHILDREN DRUNK. Drunken Children Stagger In tht Schools of New York. . Philadelphia, Pa That the number of school children in New York City who appeared "under the influence of beer and wine was startling" and that "almost every school in the city fur nished examples of children suffering from the-effects of alcohol," was de clared by Dr.' McNIcholl, surgeon of the Red Cross Hospital of New York, in a paper read before the American Society for the study of alcohol and other drug narcotics. CLEVELAND MONUMENT. A Simple Monument Erected to Mr. Cleveland's Memory. Princeton, N. J-With no mention in the Inscription cf tho fact that he was at one time president of the United States, but reading merely : "Grover Cleveland, born Caldwell, N. J., March 18, 183J, died Princeton, N. J , June 24, 1908," a monument to the memory of Ex-President Grover Cleve land, was completed on hi3 grave in the-Princeton cemetery. Beside it, at tlur same time, was placed a marble slab to mark the grave ot Ruth Cleve land, his daughter, it, too, bears a simple inscription. - - Both stones were erected at the di rection of Mrs. Cleveland. MURDERJNMASKED. Springfield, Mass., Man Had ted Dov hi? Life. Springfield, Mass. Laying his critie to love of excitement and a mania for stealing caused by an liijury to his head in boyhood,. Bertram Gage Spenec broke down v.iider 24 . hours of grilling 3nd confessed that he was the mas-kod tarsia-' -'-y had terror ized Spring, . ' years and had reacUcu i ins wild career Ly . . - .ntha B. Blacks toDc last weelw r