Ja. LONDON EDITCS AND PROPRIETOR. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION: Si. 50 Per Year STRICTLY IN ADVANCE Q NS, SfiJJ vAJ Ay QJ) vv- 0 O VOL. XXXII. I TTTTfVtTVUt . niiiaN-n uani twiniiii . . . NO. 38. TOe Cbatbam ttecorfc RATES OF ADVERTISING: One Square, oae laerttoa.....$t. One Square, two luertleos.... 1.1 One Square, oae moath. For Larger Adveiiiso monts Liberal Contracts will bo mado. ' " - COST OF COnON PROBE Senator Smith Says Investigation Cost People $40,000,000. BULLS BOYJOO,000 BALES jew York Ball Clique Invest $15,000,000 In Buying May Notices, and Are In Complete Control of the Cotton Market Washington, D. C. "The investiga tion into the sales of cotton, which mnrnev General Wlckersnam is con- Hurting bas cost tne American peo- :r- nearly $40,000,000." . So asserted Senator Smith of South Carolina in trie senate, tie was mak ing ft speech in the hope of persuad ing the senate to adopt the resolution dirpetins? the attorney general to as- rertain the names of the persons who cnid the cotton to the New York pool Mr Smith said that whereas only 140,000,000 worth cf manufactured goods had been exported last year, $600,000,000 worth of raw cotton had been sent abroad. This year the cot ton exportation, hesaid, would be about SSOC.WO.OOO. Tae attorney general is investigat ing the sales of spot cotton, he said. "Iwant him to investigate the sellers, in find out who were engagea m try ine to put down the price. I want him to inquire as to the gentlemen who eat together and sold tne cotton with out having it to sell. His investigation so far as it has gene has depressed the price to the extent of a cent a pound, a total cost to the people at .li .l lrt AA T 1 T ! i. . large 01 ?4U,uuu,vuv. 11 mm extend the inquiry so as to show the reai facts." "I believe, and the south believes, that this interference at this time Is for the specific purpose of relieving certain bears on the cotton market.'' He said on account of the scarcity of seed it would be impossible to plant more than 65 per cent of the average cotton crop for the present year. The resolution was adopted. It di rects the attorney general to inquire as to the names of the "party or parties, or corporations that sold the cotton alleged to have been bought by a pool cf purchasers, who are now under investigation by the de partment of justice;" also, as to the prices, "whether or not they owned the cotton at the time of the sale thereof, and the price of spot cotton in the south on the date of the con tracts." v Senator Clay introduced a bill pro hibiting the transmission by telephone or telegraph of all information con cerning future sales of cotton. New! York City. Two hundred thousand bales of cotton were swal lowed by the bull clique on the New York exchange, on the first day of May notices, without as much as a tremor. Fifteen million dollars, it is estimated, went from bull pockets in the course of transactions, bui so easy was the cotton absorbed that, after a preliminary flurry, there was no great excitement. At the end of the operations, the bull leaders, Patten, Scales, Hayne and Brown, were apparently more strongly entrenched than ever. Trans actions were twice as large as any previous - day's business in the his tory of the exchange. Eugene M. Scales, one of the "big lour," as the leaders in the bull move ment are called, said that the bulls would turn over to the spinners ev ery bale of cotton delivered. Not a bale will co to sDeeulators " he said, "the gamblers will have to lookout for themselves." INCREASED COTTON ACREAGE. 8ven-Tenths of One Per Cent More Cotton Planted. Memphis, Term. In a statement is sued by the National Ginners' Asso ciation, it is estimated that the acre age planted to cotton in the southern states on April 26 had been increased 7 seven-tenths of one per cent as compared with the same date last year. In the eastern states a small in crease is reported, while the valley states show a slight decrease because of the spread cf boll weevil. Texas snows a slight increase and Oklaho ma about 10 per cent, not as much s indicated in March in either state, lnls is explained by the scarcity of reedstuffs, increasing the acreage in co. oats acd alfalfa. reports to the association show that '1 Per cent rf t'ho svvn hoc Wn nlan. tor The greater part of the plants Wca were up before the recent cold weather were killed except in central soutnern Texas, and it is esti mated that 14,000,000 acres should be panted. With average weather a Feted P6r ent iU yi6ld 13 Pre" GIRL ''FIREBUG." 16-Year-Old Massachusetts Girl Likes OHef Executive of New York Nominated Jus tice of Supreme Court of U. S. Washington, D. C-President Taft received from Governor Charles B Hughes of New York a letter accept ing a tendered appointment as asso ciate justice of the supreme court of the United States. Five minutes af ter the letter was handed to the pres ident, the nomination of Governor Hughes was on its way to the sen ate. While it is expected that Governor Hughes will be confirmed with little or no delay, it is understood here that he will remain as the chief executive of the sttae of New York until next October, and will not take the oath of office until the fall term of the su preme, court opens the second Monday in that month. President Taft has been anxious to tip WILL AID PROHIBITION Government to Assist States in Tracinglind Tigers," REVENUE UCQISE PUBLICITY Full Information of tne Business of Ail Who Get Revenue License to Be Spread on Record for Inspection of Public. GOVERNOR HUGHES, Of New York, secure the best man he could for, the supreme court vacancy, and he feels that he has done so. He was much elated over the success of his tender to Governor Hughes and said: "I am very much delighted to se cure Governor Hughes for the bench. He is a man of wide experience and marked ability, and it is a mighty valuable thing to have on the great bench of the supreme court a man of affairs. Governor Hughes is 48 years of age, and even if he should retire at 70 he will have had 22 years of solid usefulness on the bench." The appointment of Governor Hughes was received throughout all Washington with the greatest satis faction. The announcement, however, came as something of a surprise de spite the fact that it had been gen erally understood for days that tht position was to be tendered him. The news of the acceptance of Gov ernor Hughes reached the justices just as they were adjourning for the day. They were all surprised and an pleased. About the first question heard af ter the announcement of the selec tion was concerning the attitude of the new member of the court on the trust problems, as involved in the dissolution suits against the Standard Oil and tobacco corporations. The general conclusions were that the rec ord of the New York man showed he came to the court without" preju dices, having fought corporations where he thought them guilty of any wrong doing, and protected their rights where he considered them per secuted. Steamer and 187 Men Probably Lost. St. Johns. N. F. Tne probable loss of the British sealing steamer Auro ra with her crew of one hundred and eighty-seven men was reported here by the sealing steamer ueouue. xne Aurora has been missing since April 1 Vn mnra definite news is expected until the next arrival from the fisning grounds. - Four Children Born to Virginia Family Stauntcn, Va. When the stork vis ited Mrs. William Rife. here, it left four children in the Rife - home, but to the distress of the parents, one of the little visitors died almost on ar rival. The remaining three, two boys and a eirl. are doing well, as is the mother, who is thirty years old. Hettie Green to Retire. New York City. Hettie Green is planning, it is reported, to retire from active business. ' She is now 73 years old, and feels she does not care to take an active part in the business world any longer. Her daughter, Mrs. Matthew- Astor Wilkes, will probably assume direction of Mrs. Green's af fairs. Electric Chair for Wolter. New York Citv. Albert W. Wolter. convicted of the murder of Ruth Whaeler. was sentenced by Judge Foster, in general sessions court, to die in the electric chair at Sing Sing nriRon durine the week beginning June 6. The condemned man display ed only a languid interest. . 'wpcrt, R. .An abnormal twist pov Penological process of Anna dioat vpretty Eixteen-year-old is in ffifk y parts of a confession which corti made to tbe local Police. Ac ehe i the Police, she admits tabt three fi ."firebuS" w". by setting ed ttm v in as many days, terroriz le v?useaola of George W. Ritch- ttDU)yed8,Citr- girl,-who was WRa as a mail in the Ritchie wat sh so tne ponce say, ohh ? was subject to violent ner- nenro ' uurmg wnicn sne expe- "a an irrr,oir,t:v,T j 1 i waethlne nK U1W u w to Use Torch. f Every ay Mothers' Day. JoSi!ort' Ky Declaring that in Mth Sftv -very day ls mother's day ifl t,fr rinlcmS men and women, iakw i,ose who are not rint" iesiJll-wul not be affected by the such rft of one day in tne year as inter to Xf w"ison has written a O UA f 10 UL JL AAA - 8ttcha H ling her request to set lare l apart in the state- He de" fonnrt communication that he fm. ? general demand in Ken w tao mother's day observance. Find Gold in Louisiana. Merrwille. La Reports 'of discov eries of gold in this section of Lou isiana have caused great excitement and a company has been formed with the purpose cf looking Into the finds and ascertaining the extent of the deposits, with a view to development, if feasible. Cotton Mills Curtail. Chicopee, Mass. In order to meet unfavorable market conditions by cur tailing production the cotton mills of the Dwight Manufacturing Company of Chicopee and the Chicopee Manu facturing Company of Chicopee Falls have gone on a schedule of five days a -week. The two corporations to gether employ 3,000. operatives. Big Brewery Burns. St. Louis, Mo. Fire caused a loss estimated at $530,000 at the mamoth plant of the" Anheuser-Busch associa tion. Five hundred thousand bottles of beer were destroyed. The streets about , the plant flowed with been for more than", an hour and smoking corks bobbing up and down in the stream gave the streets a unique ap pearance. The bottling and storage houses were completely destroyed,' en tailing a loss of $500,000. Valuable paintings and furniture : stored were destroyed iwth a loss of $30,000. r Washington, D. C. The Kovern ment, through the Internal revenue department, ls going, to help prohibi tion states to enforce prohibition. Directions from the department at Washington have been sent internal revenue collectors that furl informa tion must be given by every one who pays revenue license. This informa tion will be put where, any state of Seer can see it. The result will be that every one wno gets a revenue license can be known to the state officers. There are a good many "blind ti gers" now that pay revenue license to tne government and dodge the state They are afraid of the government officials and willing to take a chance with the state officers. Hereafter the man who gets a rev enue license must, within a month, nil outsQ. government blank, known as form 2, in which he will give his name and his business. This information will then be put on a record, known as Record 10, wnicnis open to every one. An order was issued by the reve nue department in November, which said: "For failure to make the return within the time prescribed the com missioner of internal revenue is re quired by law to assess a penalty of 50 per cent of the amount of the tax; and for making a false return 100 per cent Of tne amount of the tax." Directions have just been Issued to revenue collectors throughout the United States that this order must be enforced. Payment of government license does not end a man's responsibility to the government if he is selling whiskies He must fill out form 11, saying what business he is in, and then spread this on form 10, where every one can see it. ELEPHANTS ON RAMPAGE. Nine Bull Elepehants Destroy Much Property in Danville, til. Danville, HI. Several-persons were iniiired. otia or mnr Beriouslv. and much property was damaged by nine elephants that stampeded just after they had been unloaded from a car after several hours ride from Chicago. A large elephant made a break for liberty, bowling over the keeper ana escaping, xne ammai was ioiiowea by seven other bulls, which ran bel lowing through the streets and across fields. For several hours the elephants were at large hunted by all attaches of the circus, the city Dolicemen and the more venturesome citizens. The elephants at first moved in a bunch, then separated. They stopped for nothing except brick and stone build ings. Such small frame structures, coal sheds; fences and trees, as came in their path were pushed over, trod den down, uprooted and thrown to one side. More than 100 homes were damaged to some extent by the ele phants. Danville, 111. The big bull elephar' which started the herd on a rampage and which resulted in thousands of dollars' worth of damage, besides se rious injuries to several persons, was executed in the presence of a number of physicians. The pachyderm was strangled to death with chains pulled from each end by two other elephants. Dr. Steely, who superintended the ex ecution, said that the elephant was practically insane, and if allowed to live would endanger every other mem ber of the herd. It was valued at $15,000. CIVIL WAR ROMANCES. Blue and Gray Soldiers Celebrate the 88th Anniversary of Grant's Birth. Chloago, III. Romances of the civ il war were renewed at Galena, 111., in one of the most remarkable gath erings of former Confederate and Un ion soldiers held since the close of the civil war. Hundreds of former associates and opponents of Ulysses S. Grant from every part of the Unit ed States gathered at the . former home of the dead warrior and states man to celebrate the eighty-eight an niversary of his birth. Orator of the Day Colonel James Hamilton Lewis is the son of one of the Confederate generals who sur rendered to General Grant. DISTRESSED STEAMER FOUND Steamer El Alba Picked Up at Mouth of the Mississippi River. New Orleans, LaFive men were killed April 23 by , the explosion on the Southern Pacific steamer El Alba, which was picked up in distress off the mouth of the Mississippi. This announcement was made when the steamer reached New Orleans: - The El Alba left Galveston for New York April 22 with a cargo of onions. When twenty-three hours out a steam pipe in the boiler room burst, sprad ing death and destruction in that section of the vessel's hold. Several men were killed outright and others were , scalded so severely that they died of their injuries. STATUE TO NEGRO MAMMY. Galveston Is Raising Half Million Dollars for Monument. Galveston, Texas Galveston citi zens have started x a fund to erect a marble monument to the old negro "mammy" to cost $500,000, of which $200,000 is pledged. They desire to nav tribute to one of the grandest ' characters wnicn me.uioiuijr i world records, and the resolution reads "It should be of marble, as pure as her good old soul, and of gran- ite as sound as her devotion, KERN NAMED FOR SENATE. Thomas Taggart and Els Machine Defeated By Indiana Democrats. Indianapolis, Ind Opening in ri otous discord and closing in enthusi astic. harmony, the Indiana democrat, ic convention adopted Governor Mar snail's proposal that it should indorse to next year's legislature a candidate for the United Staates senate, and named John W '.Kern, who was thq party's candidate for vice president in 1908. The opposition made a grim, figh i under the leadership of Thomas Tag. gart, former . chairman of the demo- 4 lO.Y,',. John W. Kern, cratic national committee,, and him self a candidate for the nomination for senator, but, in defeat, it joined heartily with the element headed by Governor Marshall and John E. Lamb, or lerre Haute vice chairman of the. national committee and another as pirant for the senatorship In a shout ed acclamation of Kern as the party's candidate. The greater issue overshadowed the routine of adopting a platform ana naming a state ticket, and it was speedily concluded. CROP DAMAGE DISCUSSED. Southern Railway President Says First Reports Were Exagerated. Washington, D. C Damage to crops in the southern states east of the Mississippi river is not as great as some of the first reports seemed to indicate, according to President Fin ley of the Southern railway. He said that, reports show cotton and corn have suffered in the northern two- thirds of the states of Mississippi. Alabama and Georgia, but that furth er south these crops were not injur ed and that further north they were not far enough advanced to be seri ously hurt. "There is still ample time to re plant both cotton and cam," he said. and if this i3 done extensively the final yield may not be greatly reduc ed. Reports indicate a general sus pension of cotton seed crushing by oil mills, "with a view to conserving the seed for planting. The peach crop does not seem to have been materi ally damaged. Melons and cantaloupes in southern Georgia may have to be replanted to- some extent. Strawber ries suffered little. No damage was done to fruits, vegetables or other crops in Virginia." General Alexander Called By Death. savannah, Ga. General E. P. Alex ander, Longstreet's famous artillery officer and the arbitrator appointed by Grover Cleveland to fix the boundary line between Costa Rica and Nicar agua, died at his residence here aged seventy-five years. His remains were sent to Augusta where the funeral took place. -A wife and several children survive him. Governor Comer Kicked by Horse. Montgomery, Ala. Governor B. B. Comer is laid up here as a result of heing kicked on the left leg by a horse. The shin bone is injured, and the doctor says he must stay in bed a couple of weeks. The horse ran away with him at his country home at Comer- - Newsy Paragraphs. A monkey escaped from a circus at Evansville, Ind., and became home sick after wandering about several days. It-finally found a chain tied to a rafter in a factory and hanged itself. Although seventeen-year-old Violet Locke was completely scalped when her hair became caught in the ma chinery of a factory in St. Louis, Mo., the scalp .not reaching the hos pital . for some time after she did, surgeons believe it will reunite itself to her head, f Though Mrs. Mark Ware has lived in Woodberry, N. J., far . fifty-nine years, she says she does not yet know where the postoffice is. The last time she went for mail, she says, was thirty-seven years ago. Mra Ware is not an invalid. That our American colleges and uiversities are tending to make their appeal to class rather -than to-mass was part of the startling Indictment made by President Wilson of Prince ton before a group of Princeton alum ni at Pittsburg. He made the state ment -that Lincoln would not have been as serviceable to his country if he had been bred In a college. He also charged that the churches- still have more regard for the pew rents than for men's souls. He pointed out that the state universities were win ning popular favor because they were not dependent on the support of rich patrons to the same extent as the private universities. He declared that the colleges of this country must be reconstructed from top to bottom. From an immigrant girl who did not understand one word of English to class poet of the graduating class of her schQol, all accomplished in nine months, is the record of Ingeborg M. Patterson, a girl of fifteen,-who has . broken all records for the Bos ton, Mass., evening school classes. The little girl landed in this country about nine months ago. She entered the lowest grade of the school, pass ed 'through the grades, almost at the rate of one a week and found herself in the graduating class before her first season was over. LITTLEROCKGETSU.CV. Gray Veterans to Gather in 1911 in Arkansas City, GEfJ. GORDON IN COMMATJD Honorary Title of Past Commander-in-Chief Conferred Upon Generals Evans and CabelL Proceedings of Convention. Mobile, Ala With Little Rock, Ar kansas, chosen as the reunion city for.' 1911 and New Orleans endorsed for the honor in 1915 and with ah election of officers, the United Con federate Veterans' Association closea its business session. The selection of Little Rock had been freely predicted and though the Arkansas city lacked a majority on the first ballot, she was so far in the lead that a vote to make the se lection unanimous carried with a roar. The vote stood: Little Rock, 1,470; Chattanooga, 640; Oklahoma City, 17; Houston none. When Texas was- reached the veterans saw, how things were going and threw their strength to Arkansas. The indorsement of New Orleans as the meeting place for 1915 was con tained in a resolution favorably re ported and adopted. It recites that New Orleans proposes to hold a Pan ama canal exposition in 1915; that the Crescent City had asked the veterans to indorse the exposition and attend It in April, 1915. It was resolved, therefore, that each ' reunion until 1914 take this same action and that the reunion of 1914 follow the idea and meet in New Orleans. It was almost dark when the reso lution was made and the resolution committee reported. The resolutions were simple and few, announcing the Panama exposition in New Orleans In 1915, endorsing the monument to the women of the Confederacy designed by Miss Belle Kinney of Nashville and making a few changes in the by-laws. 4 ' General Clement A. Evans. Mobile was thanked as was every one who attended the reunion and then came the election of officers. It had", been persistently rumored that General Evans would not stand for re-election and that ' General Ca bel of Texas would not be a candi date, but that both men would be made past commanders-in-chief and the command thrown on General Gor don. The rumors were well founded. Gen eral Gordon was raised to the su preme command. Then the honorary title of past commander-in-chief was conferred upon Generals Evans and Cabell and the convention adjourned. The new commander, General Gor don, has the distinction of being one of the four living Confederates who were actually major generals before the war ended. He also has a , record of being captured by the federal forc es three times. General Gordon will not announce his staff for several weeks, but it is understood that General William E. Mickle will remain adjutant general and chief of staff to General 1 Gor don. . .'- ' " - EARTHQUAKE DAMAGE. Great Flesures Opened in the Ground in Costa Rica by Tremors of Earth. New Orleans, La. Passengers ar riving here from Port Limon declare that the earthquake shocks that re cently destroyed portions of scores, of cities and towns in Costa Rica were the worst in. the history of the western continent. Many - persons were killed in the settlements of northwest San Jose. Thousands of persons are homeless, while great damage was done to the city of San Jose. 500 ALBANIANS SLAIN. Turkish Troops in Fight With' Rebel Albanians. Salonika. Five hundred Albanians, mostly women and - children, have been killed in the Turkish bombard ment of Godantz. r : Constantinople. Five thousand men on both sides fell in the three days' battle that waged on' the plains of Kossovo between the Turkish and the Albanian rebels. . "Kill and spare no one!" is the or der that has been given to the Turks.' Albania is in the western part of the Balkan peninsula, and covers an area of 22,000 square miles. - The Al banians are only partly civilized ..and very warlike. ; . - OLDEST PERSON IN U. S. , Oldest Person in Nation Lives at Bos ton Georgia. Thomasville, Ga. Boston, in this county, is claiming to have in' that district the oldest person in the Unit ed States. "', Mariah Williams is the name of the old colored woman, who is said to be 120 years old. - ;..- . Boston also has a negro woman who is the mother of thirteen children ana who has a daughter who has given birth to thirteen children, LATE NEWS NOTES. General. Families of Chicago in greater num bers than ever, before are storing their furniture and going to live in boarding houses or in the country, according to managers of storage and van companies. They , assign this con dition of affairs to the increased cost of living. The ability to read French or Ger man will be required of Harvard stu dents in order to secure an A. D. de gree after this year. All such candi dates by a rule recently announced will have to pass an oral examination in the reading of French or Gernan before being admitted to the junior class. Dr. William S. Bainhridge describ ed before a meeting of physicians in the New York Skin and Cancer hos pital the success of his treatment of cancer by what he terms ligation. It consists in shutting off the supply of blood from the seat of trouble by tieing up the vessels with ligatures. He finds that cancer must have blood to nourish its growth. At a meeting of the members of the Selma, Ala., Cotton exchange resolu tions were adopted asking Alabama congressmen , to take a hand in pros ecuting those who sold future cotton and did not have cotton "to deliver. Senator Johnson replied that a reso lution to inquire into these contracts would be made. . Willard Smith, sixty-five years old, a wealthy wall paper manufacturer of Waterbury, Conn., was instantly kill ed and his wife, Mrs. Anna Smith, aged sixty, was held, a prisoner from 10:30 at night until 2:30 in the morn ing, when a folding bed. in which they were sleeping in a fashionable board ing house closed up on them. The state of New Jersey and the Standard Oil company have gone Into partnership. They are to act together in ridding the city-of Boyonne of a menace- to the public health in the shape of an extensive tract of marsh land which has heretofore been a prolific breeding place for mosquitoes. Each is to bear half the expense of draining the land. Hanford B Warner,, for more than fifty years a manager of the well known wild men of Borneo, died at his home in Waltham, - Mass., aged eighty-two. He brought the wild men, Wailo and Pautano, from Bor neo and traveled all over the world with them. . After retiring from the show business he took them to his home, and one of them lives now, aged over ninety. The campaign against billboards which the Civic League of Stt Louis has been carrying on for. some years passed has been Indorsed by a recent decision of the Missiouri supreme court, which sustains a city ordinance passed in 1905, but against which an advertising agency secured a perma nent injunction. It is to the effect that billboards may not stand mors than fifteen feet above the ground, nor closer than fifteen feet to the sidewalk; must provide two feet of clear space at the bottom; must not run more than fifty feet in length, and must not rest on the tops of roofs or over the front of buildings. The objection to the prevailing board is on the ground that they are unsightly, unsanitary as bins of refuse and im moral as retreata of vice. Washington. . Four men of the Mazama expedition sailed from Seattle for Alaska to at tempt the ascent of Mount McKInley4 The cotton employers at a mass meeting in JVIanc haste r, England, de cided to insist on a 5 per cent reduc tion in wages. This action Is attrib uted to the expected shortage in the American crop. - , The senate committee on judiciary voted to conduct a thorough exami nation into what is known as "third degree" methods of extorting confes sions from persons charged with crime; also the practice of employing persons in the espionage, of jurors. That Mars is inhabited and its sur face marked by canals of human con struction, a popular theory, was dis puted before the convention of the National Academy of sciences in Washington by George E. Hale of Mount Wilson solar observatory of the Carnegie institution. Dr. Hale made mention detrimental of the dis coveries of Dr. Percy Lowell of Har vard university, who established an observatory at Flagstaff, Arizona, and spent several years telescopically exploring Mars and who asserted that canals existed on the planet. In reply to a speech by Senator Smith of South Carolina assailing the tariff as the cause of high prices, Sen ator Aldrich as the principal author of the bill, made this reply: "The sys tem of high protection has caused general and great prosperity in this country. Wages have advanced and money has been more plentiful, there by enabling people to live better and pay more for articles of food and clothing. This in a measure accounts for the gradual increase in the cost of living." . . ' The abstract of reports of condi tions of national banks in the United States on March 29 last, issued by the . comptroller of the treasury, shows that on that date the total re sources were $9,841,924,345. The in crease in total resources since April 28, 1909, was $473,040,502 and since' January-31, 1910, $111,405,710. According to statistics prepared by the agricultural department, there has been a phenomenal increase in the value of farm products since 1889. The increase in dollars from that time up to end cf last year is put at $6,300,000,000. The total value of wealth produced on United States farm's- in 18S9 was - $2,460,000,000, while the latest figures are $8,760,000, 000. The sharp criticism, of Attorney General Wickersham's prosecution of the cotton pool led the department of justice to issue the following, state ment: "The action of the government in instituting the investigation by the grand jury of New York into the al leged cotton pool should not in - any way be construed as an attack on legitimate operations on any cotton or produce exchange in the . United States, The proceedings being , before a grand jury and not yet com pleted can not with propriety be dis cussed at the present time." NORTH STATE NEWS Items of State Interest Gathered l and Told In Brief. Veteran Mail Carrier of America. Frank Day, of Jonesville, Yadkin county, is the champion mail carrier of the State. At the age of fourteen years he lost' his right arm. ' The a job as mail carrier on the route from Elkin to Huhtsville, a distance of twenty-five miles and he has been in the service ever since, traveling distance of 87,653 miles. During these forty-five years of service he never lost a mail sack, was never moie than fifteen minutes behind schedule time, and more than half of the tine the trip was made on foot. He is now ' sixty years old and still tramping the road three times each day, except Sunday, from Elkin to - Jonesville. First Regiment to Chicamauga. The First North Carolina regiment will go into encampment at Chicka mauga July 11th, and will remain until the 20th. Georgia and South Carolina companies will go in en campment at Chickamauga at the same time. In addition there will be -eleven companies of cavalry, eleven " of infantry, one signal corps and on-j hospital corps of the regular army. Sues Coast Line for $25,000. In the Superior Court at Wilming ton H. McK. Godwin, a well known young white man, , brought ' sr.it for $25,000 damages against the Atlantic Coast Line, for the death of his 1 brother, Lester Godwin, who was killed by a train at a street crossing there on April 6. A coroner 8 jury fixed the responsibilty on the railroad and the big damage suit followed. Tobacco Opening Season Changed At a meeting,' held at Wilson there were representatives from Rocky Mount, Greenville and Kinston to bacco warehouses for the purpose of changing the opening of the tobacco season in Eastern Carolina. Instead of opening the warehouses on August 1st, as heretofore they will open this season on August 18th. Meeting of Retail Druggists. The Retail Druggists' Association of North Carolina will meet in Char lotte in annual convention June 8, 9,:. 10. The program has not been ar ranged either for the convention pro per or the local end in its entirety, but the event promises to be altogeth er interesting. Hundred Thousand Dollar Orphanage. The formal announcement hf s been made of the purpose of the directors of the Thompson Orphanage of the Episcopal church, located in Char lotte, and of the- association of guilds scattered throughout the State to unite in the erection of a one hun dred thousand dollar plant to take the place of the present plant, which is deemed inadequate to the needs of the work. Passengers Overpower Convict. - Charles Snider, an escaped convict from the Buncombe ' county chain gang, in being taken in from Balsam, mhere he had been captured, was pre vented ' from overpowering the of ficer and escaping only by prompt interference of passengers on the Murphy train. Good for West Durham. The West Durham people are prom ised as soon as a suitable lot can be secured a $30,000 public school building the equal of any graded school here or anywhere in the State, nnder the county administration which is to build it. Bear Chewed Trainer's Hs-nd. Freeman Shelby and Jake Benton, employes of an animal show, were in jured at Statesville Tuesday after noon by a huge hear. Shelby's right hand was chewed to pieces. Durham Woman to Child Moteher. A woman in Durham has sent a letter to Mayor Busse of Chicago, expressing her interest in the 10-year-old girl at the County Hospital, who. recently gave birth to a 6-pound daughter. The letter is signed "A friend." In a separate package the Mayor, received two sky blue shoes, a trifle less than two inches in length, which he is-requested to send to the County Hospital for the baby. Rushing Building for Colored People.. The first building for the Negro Religious Training School and Chau tauqua for the Colored Race, is nn der way at Durham, the framework being partly up and work proceed ing as rapidly as bad weather will allow. Charlotte's Postoffice Building. Charlotte will get an appropriation of $300,000 for the postoffice building. Of this sum $100,000 will be available at once and the remainder a it is needed. The appropriation" will bo -used to reconstruct the present build ing. ' Section. Prohibition Law Fought. An important dase in which a man Charles H. Martin, representative of the Martin Distilling Company of Roanoke, Va., is charged with solicit ing orders for whiskey in North Car olina contrary to the law was taken , up Friday in superior court at Ashe- ville, and may be fought through to United States Supreme Court with a view of testinsr the validity of that section of the law whiclk some attorneys claim is in violation of the Federal constitution.