THE CHATHAM RECORD It A. LONDON, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR Terms of Subscription $1.50 Per Year Strictly In Advance THE GKATHAT.l RECdTlD Rates bf AdvcrtiDirig On Square m wm&m. . U3S V On Square, two hteerbo-M ' $U3 . OnSqvarevMM month For Larger . Ad vortUcmonts Liberal Contracts vIH bo. made. VOL. XXXVI PITTSB0R0, CHATHAM SOyNtfY, :N' C , MAfcCH 25, 1914. NO. 33. iHIEF NEWS NOTES IR THE BUSY MOST IMPORTANT EVENTS OF THE PAST WEEK TOLD IN CONDENSED FORM. WORLD'S NEWS EPITOMIZED Complete Review of Happenings of Greatest Interest From All Parte of World. Southern. j. A. Eubanks, a farmer of Oak Park, Ga., killed his wife and two young daughter as they slept and af ter setting fire to his home, barn and several tenants' houses, fired a bullet through his own forehead. Physicians say he cannot live. He went in sane as the result . of continued ill health. Harry B. Melville, the postal clerk on the Queen and Crescent southbound train No. 1, running from Cincinnati to New Orleans, which was robbed near Birmingham of $40,000 on the night of February 19, arrived tit Atlan ta. Ga., and identified A. O. Perry, one of the three alleged yeggmen, who were arrested at No. 89 Brookl?ne street, as the train bandit who stab ted him in the back, with .a knife when .he refused to tell the gang of robbers where all the money in ' the mail car was hidden. Fire in the business section of Tus caloosa, Ala:, early in the morning did damage estimated at a quarter of a million dollars. Three business hous es and their stocks were destroyed. The cause of the fire had not been de termined when the news was sent out. Rosenau company, department store owners, were the heaviest los ers, their building and its contents be in valued at $150,000. A jewelry .stare, a bakery, a general merchan dise store and a millinery establish ment occupied the buildings burned. After bundling the messenger, "Reb" M&rtin, in a gunnysack, a masked man robbed the express car attached to northbound Gulf, Colorado and Santa Fe passenger train No. 202 of several packages of currency, estimated to ag-, gregate about $i.4y0.00, and . escaped from the train at the village. of Hel big, Texas, 12 miles north of jBeau nont. Posses, which went to Helbig from Beaumont in automobiles," have not found any trace of the bandit, who. is believed to be hiding in the dense forest about the village. The money was part of a shipment of a lumber concern to be used as a payroll. Schools in general, were discussed and suggestions,pffered as to how they might" be improved, at the concluding session- of the tenth annual National Child liabor conference at New Or leans. On several, occasions during the conference' f efef ences to what was. termen' inffje'fen'cy .'of. schools system or inadequacy 'of school laws have met with' applause of delegates. Dr. E. N. Chopper of New York, secretary of the Northern child labor commit tee, saidj children were leaving school s,s soon as the law allowed, .and for that reason the schools were assailed as being too academic. JTohn Nolan, accused of the daring single-handed robbery of a Nashville, Chattanooga and St. Louis passenger train on the outskirts bf Atlanta, Ga.. on January 17 and of afterwards en gaging in a pistol battle with the por ter and a county policeman was found guilty in the Cobb county superior court at Marietta, Gai and sentenced to twenty years in the penitentiary. F. W. Hadley of Atlanta positively iden tified Nolan as the bandit who reliev ed him of $17 on the train. Two negro porters also identified him. The . de nial of the accused was the only testi mony given by the defense. General. General Villa and his army of 12,000 rebels has invested the federal strong hold of Torreon, Mexico. Villa's prog ress has been slow, because it was necessary to repair railroad tracks and bridges. However, the road was open from Yermo, where the troops have been mobilizing, to Mapimi and Ber mejiiio, which are only a few miles north of Torreon, and virtually are suburbs of that city. The federal J arnjy, under General Velasco, is es timated to number n:ne thousand men. At least two persons were killed, fitVen buried under debris and ten injured when the west wall of the' li.curi Athletic club building, which was destroyed by fire in Which thirty !'' ' ' lost their lives a week ago, ?om;p;.;ed tinder a high wind at St. , U':. Mo., and crashed through a four :?" building occupied by the -St. ' ' Seed company. The wall of the !; : ; ari Athletic chib building, which ' ' seven stories high, crumbled ' ' i' a 35-mile wind veered to the r-( ru .west. The four-story building oc t!!l i l by the St. Louis Seed company weakened.. A dispatch from Nashville, Tenn., "tatta that harmony in the Demo atifj party in Tennessee is impossi ,J and the party in convention as sembled endorsed the administration oi the Republican governor, B. W. Hooper, and then the Independent pate Democratic executive commit ite adjourned after Calling two state ynventioue, both to meet on April 22. first convention is to 'meet at Jn'-n April 22 to nominate a candi ' for judge of the supreme court, second will meet at 3 p. m. the same day. President Wilson had sug sted harmony. J - MAN Plans for Joint maneuvers by the United States regular army and the National Guard, to include attacks upon Washington . and San Francisco by invading forces,, together with the establishment of numerous training camps throughout the country, have been announced by the war depart ment. Guests of the Windsor hotel, Mil waukee, Wis., numbering nearly two score, were compelled to flee for their lives when a fire which destroyed the hotel and the Western Newspaper Union plant, in the southern' portion of the building, destroyed the four story structure. T6e barking of a dog sounded the alarm in time for escape. The lessee of the, hotel de clared that every guest of the hotel got out safely. . The property dam age is $200,000. . "Kansas expects to harvest more than one hundred thousand . bushels of wheat this year, and the crop may run to 150,000,000 bushels," said Henry Lassen, a miller of Wichita, Kan., at the opening of the annual meeting of the Southwestern Millers' league. Millers from six states attend ed the me'eting. One of the topics dis cussed is " a proposed protest against the 5 per cent, increase in freight rates east of the Mississippi river. The millers say that if this increase goes through there will be a similar raise west of the Mississippi next year or the year following. Forced by the increasing serious ness of the financial situation in Mex ico, President Huerta at last appears ready to resume negotiations with Mr. John Lind, President Wilson's personal representative, which were broken off last August, if reports current at the capital city of Mexico are true. Where Huerta's representative will meet- Mr. Lind is not known. Every effort has been made to keep the meeting a se cret, and should it fail to take place, the government could repeat the ex planation that the minister is taking the trip to celebrate a saint's anni versary. One hundred and fifty men the remnant of "General" Kelley's army bf. the unemployed laughed at Sheriff Ahern of Sacramento? county. When the sheriff received word that the scattered members were reassembling on a ranch four miles north of Sacra mento, Cal., he hurriedly collected a force of deputies and went to the scene. When he attempted to driv out the tenters, he was halted at tb boundary of a camp by a man with a legal paper, which proved a contract fpr the purchase of one acre, on which $70 had been paid. He retired amid the jeers and hoots of the unemployed. Submission to the nine-type system of cotton grading favored by tjie Unit ed States government was acknowledg ed by the board of-"managers of the New York cotton exchange in the adoption of a resolution ' making the government standard types of cotton the basis for trading on and after April 1, 1915. The twenty-three cot ton grades heretofore maintained by the New York cotton exchange have been criticised severely in the South, and it was said by some of those- in f touch with the situation that this ac tion was taken to forestall possible antagonistic legislation by congress. Perfect discipline, coolness and bravery on the part of students and faculty members prevented loss of life or injury, when college hall, oldest of the Wellesley, Mass., college buildings, was burned at Wellesley. Two hundred and fifty young women students, fifty instructors and fifty maids, were in bed when the fire was discovered. Ev ery one was saved. Washington. Robert Lansing of Watertown, N. Y has been nominated by the president to be counselor for the department of state to succeed John Basset Moore. President Wilson nominated Cone Johnson bf Texas to be solicitor for the department of state to. succeed Joseph W. Folk. One of the largest cotton crops ever grown, amounting to 14,127,356- equiv alent 500-pound bales of linters, was produced by the farmers of the United States during 1913, the census bureau announced in its preliminary report of" cotton ginned as reported by sin ners and delinters to February 28. With this report the bureau of cen-i sus departed from its previous method of reporting the cotton crop by not including the quantity of linters in the total production. Included in the production for 1913 are 29,267 bales, which ginners estimated would be turned out after, the time of canvass. Woodrow Wilson unbosomed him self to members of the1 National Press Club of Washington, telling them in a frank, conversational way, how he felt' as president of the United States, how difficult it was for him to. imagine himself as the chief ex ecutive with the formal amenities of the position and how he had struggled to be as free as the ordinary individ ual without the restraints of his of fice. It was an intimate picture . of Woodrow Wilson, the man, drawn by himself on the occasion of the "house warming" at the Press club's new quarters. ' A Washington dispatch says that a material decrease in the, number of train accidents and in the. number of people killed and injured, in such acci dents was shown by- an , interstate commerce commission bulletin issued for the quarter ended September 30, 1913. During the quarter 211 were killed and 4,011 Injured in 'train acci dents, a' decrease as compared with the corresponding quarter of 1S12; Of 77 killed and 587 injured., An in crease of 123 killed and of 1,904 injur ed was shown in "other than train ac cidents." ' Improved appliances have contributed to the good showing. WILL IfflliTE TEN NEW JUDGES DEMOCRATIC CONVENTION WILL NOMINATE ONE CORPORATION COMMISSIONER. LATE STATE CAPITOL NEWS Review of the Latest News Gathered Around the State Capitol That Will Be of Interest to Our Readers Over North Carolina. Raleigh, . When the State Democratic Conven tion meets here next June it will have to nominate only one state officer, a candidate for Corporation Commis sioner, and confirm the nominations of 10 candidates for Superior Court judgeships. There is no doubt about the nomination of E. L. Travis as Corporation Commissioner. He is the present chairman of the Commission and will have no opposition for the nomination to succeed himself. So far as is known all the Superior Court Judges whose terms expire with this election will stand for renoiin nation and as yet no accountments. are made in any of the districts of candidates in opposition. - The candi dates for judge are' selected in : the several judicial district conventions and these nominations are' confirmed by the state convention and included in the regular state ticket. The dis tricts in which there are to be nomi nations for the coming election follow : First District Judge W. M. Bond. Fifth District Judge H." W. Whlfc' bee. -- Sixth District Judge C. C. Lyon. Tenth District Judge W. A. Devin. Thirteenth District Judge W. J. Adams. Fourteenth District Judge W. F. Harding. Sixteenth District Judge . J. L, Webb. Eighteenth District Judge M. H. Justice. Twentieth District Judge O. S Ferguson. Hamlet Has Best Kept Grocefiss. State Food Chemist Allen says there has been cohsiderable'decrease in the number of violations of the state pure food laws during the past year and that the most trouble that Ills Inspectors find now. is .the sale in bulk by- North Carolina dealers of substitutes for the pure articles in a number of lines of groceries, especially lard, vinegar and syrups. These are shipped 'into the state, . labeled ac cording to the law as substitutes with ingredients specified, but are sold by some unscrupulous msrehants as the real articles of the retail trade, and there is no law to reach these viola tions effectively. Mr. Allen says there is much im provement .in numbers of the Impor tant towns of the state in the cleanli ness of the grocery stores, but that in his " judgment Raleigh has the most poorly kept grocery stores of any town he knows. He says Hamlet has about the best kept frocery stores to be found in the state. Bryan and Daniels Will Attend. A letter received recently by Editor Clarence Poe of The Progressive Far mer, who with Collector J. W. Bailey and President Alexander of the Far mers' Union is leading the movement within the party for a progressive Democratic convention to be called to meet here soon! from Josephus Daniels,- Secretary of the Navy, states that he and Secretary of State Bryan will be here for the convention on what ever date is agreed upon. Governor Grants Requisition. A requisition from the governor of Florida was honored by Governor Craig recently, for William L.' Wig gins, who is now in Winston-Salem under arrest awaiting the arrival of the Florida officer to take him back. He is charged with the embezzlement of $100 from the Lyric Moving Pic ture Show in Orange county, Fla. He was a partner in the management of the theater. Raleigh Entertains Road Scout Party. Raleigh entertained the scout party of the United States Office of Public Roads and the American Highway As sociation for a brief time, the party stopping long enough to address a goodly crowd of good, road enhusiasts in the chamber of commerce rooms before resuming their run to Smith field and Pinenurst in their tour of in spection from -Richmond to Atlanta over the Capital-to-Capital Highway. They report great improvement in the condition of the roads from Rich mond to Raleigh via Petersburg. - Chairman T. D. Warren Issues Call. s Chairman Thomas D. Warren of the State Democratic Executive Commit tee has issued a call for -the commit tee to meet in special session ere bn"S the night of March 25 for the purpose of considering a change in the date for the state - convention so that, it will not conflict with other conven tions, the June 17 'date conflicting with the convention of the State Med ical Society. June 19 is most discuss ed as the prf bable new date for state convention. Secretary Maxwell on Inheritance Tax Secretary A. J. Maxwell, of the cor poration commission, calls attention, to the fact that had the North Caro lina estate' of the late George W. Van derbilt been subject ' to inheritance taxation under the New York instead of the North Carolina inheritance tax law it would have paid into the state treasury not less than a half million dollars instead of the $100,000 in tax that it is estimated that the North 1 Carolina state treasury will receive from the estate as inheritance tax. Under the New York inheritance tax law the Vanderbilt estate in that state will pay four, per cent under.' the in heritance act into -the state treasury while in North Carolina -it will only pay one per cent into state treasury. Mr. Maxwell explains that the North Carolina inheritance tax act provides a flat one per cent tax on all inheritances above exemptions ex cept to collateral relatives, making the North Carolina rate as high as the New York rate on small estate, but the New York act has graduate increase in rate for the larger estates. He says 1 this graduated system that New York has is approved by 'nearly all states and by the national associ ation on state and local taxation, which is' endeavoring to promote uni formity of such taxation methods. He points out that had th$ North Caro lina Inheritance law been, the same as the. New York ast State . Treasu rer Lacy would have at least a haJLf .million dollars, mere from the, Vander bilt estate alone. And this would have taken car of the present deficit in state finaries and been felt by no one. Mr. Maxwell does not call atten tion to ihis In any criticism of the legislature, which really provided the siate at the last session 'with' de cidedly -the best revenue act .the state has ever had and the best inher itance tax law the state has yet had, and that about half the inheritance tax the Vanderbilt estate will pay will be due to improvements which the last legislature made in that statute. Still -Mr. Maxwell believes that there is room for improvement In- this inheritance tax act in getting it in line with the New York and -most of .the other state statutes so that the state will fare better In the future. He insists that the principle of graduated inheritance tax is too well recognized by the other states to be longer neg lected by North 'Carolina,. He. believes that if the . graduated principle in taxation is justifiable anywhere it is, in his opinion and the opinion of the times, justifiable inheritance taxes on the large estates. Postmasters Recently Appointed. Shoals, Surry county, John A. Mar tin, Floral College, Robeson county, Alexander H. White; Dunlap,. Iredell county, Mrs. Belle M. Howard; Okisko, Pasquotank county, John L. Ludford; Dystersville, McDowell county;, "Addie J. Satterfield; ' Sunburst, Haywood county, John H. Peebles; Ha'nriers ville, Davidson county; Lacy ,E. Help er; Rex, Robeson county; Joseph F. Pittman; Brummett,Mitchell county, Mrs. Bessie Tipbn; Onyil, Montgom ery county, Mrs. Diza- A. McAuley; Vander, Cumberland county, Daniel N. Carter; Eunice, Allegneny.'-; county, Monroe Jordan; Round Peak, Surry county, Benjamin F. Jarrell; McLeod, Richmond county, Ernest L Pegram Supreme Court Decisions. ? The Supreme Court delivered opin ions in only seven appeals this week ly delivery day. The list follows: White vs. American Peanut Com pany, Bertie County, reversed; Holton vs. Norfolk Southern Railway, Craven, new trial; Pate vs. Lumber. Company, Sampson, affirmed; Tyler vs. union Djumber Company, Duplin,, affirmed; Brock vs. Wells, Duplin, affirmed; Taylor vs. Brown, Duplin, affirmed; .Massie and Pierce vs. Hainey, Samp son, error. " Hall of History Open Sundays. An arrangement has been mads whereby the new Hall of History will be open to the public each Sunday af ternoon during hours that will not conflict with 1 church services. An other new departure, now that th6 Hall of History is opened -up in the. splendid new quarters in the state building .will be evening lectures from time to time, the purpose being to make the fine collection of historic ex hibits of the most value possible to the general public. Government Watchman Dies. William E. Cooper, who was strick en with paralysis recently .while on duty as night watchman at the tem porary postoffice and government building, died a few days ago. He was 45 years "old and had been in the gov ernment service several years, as ele vator man in the' old; government building now being remodeled, a po sition that he was to fill again when the '.remodeled building , is occupied again by the local departments of the government. Mr. Cooper was a widower' and leases two children. Some New State Charters. . The White Coal Power Company of Asheville, capital ?125,000 author ized, and $3,000 subscribed by Daniel W. Adams ancj. .others -with special authority to build and operate elec tric cars for Old Fort and surround ing, country, and devetop water and othr power for commercial purposes. The James Knitting Mills Company of Mount Pleasant, files notice of dis Olutioh, the purpose being for A. N. Jaines and others to conduct the busi ness as a co-partnernip for the fu ture. . . . ' STATE ITEMS OF INTEREST TO ALL NORTH CAROLINA PEOPLE. Laymen's Convention Closes. Under the spell of "Christ's Chal lenge," presented in a masterful man ner by President E. M. Poteat of Fur man University, the Baptist laymen brought to a close at Durham one of the greatest Baptist meetings ever held in North Carolina, a convention great in its accomplishments, great in attendance, great in the addresses, and one that will have a vast effect on the missionary work of the Baptists in North Carolina, according to the leaders. President J. D. Bruner of Chowan College presided; and, following a praise service, Dr. William Smith de livered, a stereopticon lecture on mis sions. He was followed by. Doctor Bruner in a few remarks. Dr. William Louis Poteat of Wake Forest then presented 14 student vol unteers for mission work. These were conducted to the platform and presented in person to the audience. There were x eight young women, two of whom came from the State Normal and six from Meredith. The six men presented come from Wake Forest College. Western N. C. for "Movie" Scenery. .Barry. O 'Neil, familiar on motion uicture screens in every city of any size in the country, accompanied by a case of 12 players, was an 'Ashe ville visitors recently, en route to Bat Cave, where ! the players of the Lubin Company will enact "The, Wolf" for the benefit of the lovers of the "movies" throughout the country. The Lubin players were, Bent to western North Carolina for the picture be cause of the ruggea scenery of this section bf the state', the scenic effects of. the picture to be produced demand ing mountainous land. Settle . For $82,Q0. The insurance companies have practically' completed the adjustment of the loss occasioned by the fire .that destroyed the' 'cbhtents of the leading ladies' ready-to-wear and millinery es tablishment df J. W. Ballard & Co., Charlotte. According to the best authenticated. 'reports, the companies settled for $82,500 which represented almost a complete loss. . . Molasses Warehouse For Wilmington. For the use of C. C. Covington, the molasses Importer of Wilmington, the Hilton Lumber Company is preparing to erect a . mammoth -metal-sheathed warehouse, as a distributing point in the northern part of Wilmington. It will cost approximately $20,000 and is to be completed .by the middle of June. Mr. Covington's warehouse on the river front was burned last July and Since that time he has had tempor ary quarters. NORTH CAROLINA BRIEFS. ' The Southern Newspapers Publish ers Asociation"unani!"iQusiv endorsed and. Commended the administration of President Wilson at the annual meet ing in Atlanta. ' Asheville was selectt ed as the place for 1915 convention. The " population of Wilmington, ex clusive of Carolina Heights, Carolina Place and other residential suburban sections, is 31,316, representing an in crease of 1418 the past year, accord ing to the figures of the annual cen sus ' of the health department, "which has just been completed. The new' showcase factory and the invalid bed factory at Lincolnton, are turning out the finished product naw, and find a ready sale for output ' of their plants. The business men of Forest City have organized a board of trade. The office of .this organization. will be in the -First National Bank building . for the present. W. W. 'Hicks was chosen president, J. F. Alexander vice presi dent arid Walter 'S. CrOker " secretary treasurer. - ). . '. .The Atlantic 'Coast, Line recently awarded the" contract for. 15 all-steel passenger and combination mail, bag gage .and express coaches to the American Car & Foundary Co., deliver ies to be made as early as possible. The equipment Is for use on the main lines of the company.. t " Governor Craig, who spent one day recently in Durham arid attended the laymen's meeting, went! from' Durham to Greensboro to attend the inaugura tion of Dr. S.B. Turrentine, the new president of the Greensboro College for Women. . . .' . At a meetmg held in. Shearers Hall recently the Davidson . .student body voted in favor of a college newspaper, which will begin very shortly and will give a detailed account of all the nappenings of the college and the sur rounding community. '; With appropriate exercises, includ ing addresses by the Governor of North Carolina, President Bruce R. Payne 'of George Peabody School, for Teachers, Mfsl Lucy H. Robertson and others, Rev. Samuel' Bryant Tur rentine, A. M., D. D., was recently . in- augurated as, the ninth president of Greensboro College for Woman. ' The Mecklenburg Declaration So ciety a few days ago gave the contract for the decoration of .Trade and Tryon street during the 20tli of. May celebra tion to Harry W.'Lewisi' official decor ator, for the Confederate reunion at Jacksonville and Atlanta. Jamie Whlsnant, Fulton ' Whisnant, Hugh Davis and Zeb Bell of Blacks burg, S. C, are held without bail . in connection with the- murder -of' Sol Williams," an 18-year-old negro' who was. shot through the head and killed a few nights ago at 10:20 o'clock at an overhead bridge,, two blocks north of Kings Mountain passenger station. KING GEORGE FEARS A CIVIL CONFLICT HIS MAJESTY EXPRESSLY RE QUESTS HIS OFFICERS NOT TO RESIGN VHEIR POSTS. "MIGHT STARK A MEETING" One Hundred Officers Resigned, Win Not Reconsider. Ulster Army Is Busy Moving About the Hill Around Belfast Belfast The defection of Army officers is the cause of great jubilation in Ulster and among the officials of the provisional Government, who are keeping in close touch with events at Currah and other military depots in Ireland, through secret correspond ence. The Associated Press was shown a letter which the provisional authori ties have received from an officer at Currah station, saying that more than x00 officers had resigned, including all the calvary officers. General Arthur Pagel, commanding the troops in Ireland, had them paraded and told . them, according to the letter that he had "an express or der and request from the King him-" self to ask every officer to go as or dered; that ney might never be call ed on to fight arid that if ;they re fused there' might be a mutiny in the Army which would mean a revolution in England and in six months there would be no King and no Army.". . Despite this appeal all-the officers refused to reconsider .their resigna tions. A general "officer of high stand ing in the regular Army" was offered the post of commander-in-chief of the force which is to -operate against the Ulster volunteers. When he declined the offer tne war office informed hiin that his refusal meant the severence of his connection: with the Army. He persisted, ,and the authorities offered the post- to another officer, said to be a friend of the general now in command at Belfast, who accepted. A denial was issued of the reported mutiny of the ' Dorsetshire regiment There has been no diminution in the activity of the Ulster Army. Of ficers of the so-called headquarters staff, on duty at Craigavon, now the center of the Ulster movement, were busy taking the ranges of the various hills and other strategic points of Belfast, which the estate overlooks. U. S. AWAITS TORREON SEIGE Mexican Policy Will Remain the Same For the Present. Washington. Although full reports of the conference at Vera Cruz, be tween John Lind and Senor Portilloy Rojas, Minister of Foreign Affairs in the Huerta Cabinet, have been re ceived here, the disposition of tne American Government Is to make no change in its Hexican policy or ex press itself on any of the new pro posals reported to have been made until after the battle fit Torreon is fought . This became known authoritatively, though officials declined to say what new proposals had been made by the Mexican Cabinet officers. . . Reports that a mere friendly feel ing prevails between the Washington Government and those of the Huerta Administration seeking a peaceful set tlement of the difficulty are borne out by dispat!ches received here by Charge Algara, of the Mexican Embassy, who said President Wilson's attitude in welcoming a resumption of peace negotiations had made a faydrahle. impression in the Mexican Capital. Well Known Banker Dead. Chicago.0 Byron Lafllin Smith, president arid founder of the North ern Trust Company, died of .heart failure. He was one of .the best known bankers in Chicago " and was a director of many railway . compa nies, v ' Wires Cut Near Torreon. Mexico City. Telegrapni'j com munication with . ToTreon, iiterrupt ed recently is still cut-off. New Haven Will Dissolve. ' Washington. With; the danger of an anti-trust suit out 'of the way, the next, steps in the"' untangling of the. New Haven Railroad system must be 'taken . by'vthe ' New Haven- direc tors, its' thousands of stookholders throughout New England and by the Massachusetts legislature. Depart-; ment ' of justice off cials have agreed to a dissolution and ..the feeling here is that the salvation" of the road is in ..the hands eff -its directors; arid stock-' holders. The- New' Haven board will meet soon:' ' " ' ' : . , Must Die For--Crime.'--' . Boston. His appeal for-execrutHe cle"mency hans.. failed ..WilJIam-." A. Dorr? 'of Stockton, Cal. awaits . at Charleto. itate. .prison . fulfillment: of a sentence pf.ieath. , He may be eleot trocuted' any night this' week': In ac cordance witfi' the law, providing for Secrecy j' ""the date has :net" been an-; 'ipuncedv. --' ' '; Dprr's crime -was- the 'killing- April 1, 1912," of George E. Marsh, 'a wealthy retired soap manufacturer of '-ynn. Marsh was trustee of a .fund tt $100,000 for" Miss Orphia Marsh. MTOOIONAL1 smsoiool Lesson (By E. O. SELLERS, Director of Evening- ' Department, The Moody Bible Institute, Chicago.) LESSON FOR lAARCH 29 JESUS THE GREAT TEACHER. (Review;) READING LESSON Matt. 7:21-29. GOLDEN - TEXT "Ha bath showed thee, O man, what is good; and what doth the Lord require of thee, but to do justly, and to love mercy, and to walk humbly with thy God."Mlcah 6:8. - There is no chronological order to the lessontu for the past quarter, though they have all been selected from the period of the Perean ministry of our Lord. The thought of tho Gold en Text, rather than the reading les son, will serve to give us a connected review. : The lesbons liave chiefly, concerned Jesus as the great Teacher, thus we notice the inclusive note of the first clause of the - Golden Text; "He hath, showed thee, O man, what is .good." As an exposition bf that note we have presented God's plan of action, out ward, "to do Jnstly, aid to love mercy," and inwardly, "to . walk humbly with thy God." With this thought .In mind let us divide lessons of the quarters into two sections:- (1) -The -first seven lessons which have to do with man's . relation to the kingdom in its' outward manifestation, and (2), the, remaining five that have to do with "walking humbly with thy'God.,', As -Children. ; I. The first section. In order to keep this two-fold thought before us, we must observe carefully the, several . golden texts. In-the first lesson we have set before us the manner where by we are to enter into this new kingdom. We must enter as' chil dren and the Golden Text, "Likewise, ye younger, fte: subject : unto the elder . . . for God resisteth the proud, "but glveth' grace to the hum pie," illustrates the humility of chil dren and the necessity of our right relationship to them. The second les son deals with, the possibility of co operation with him in service, as when the 70. went before his face. Great privileges, however, when abused, bring condemnation and deg radation. "It is not you that speak, but the . Spirit of your Father that speaketh in you.' The third lesson "The Good Samaritan" is another ex pression of the outward walk of life, that of loving mercy. True love never asks who it may, but rather who it can, serve. It always manifests It self in sacrifice and in service "Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself." The story of service actually ren dered to our Lord in the days of his flesh is the subject of the fourth, 'leu-: son. ' All other Interests and ties muBt be secondary to our allegiance and obedience to him "Inasmuch as ye did it unto one of these, my brethren, even these least, ye did it. unto me." The fifth lesson concerns prayer: The parable of the unfriendly neighbor and the effect of prayer to bring about just relations ' is revealed in the . Golden Text which is the heart of that les son. "Ask, and it shall be given you;;' seek, and ye shall find; knock, and It shall be opened unto you." The sixth lesson still continues to treat this out ward aspect' and reveals to us the fact that great as Satan is, cfur Lord Jesus has far greater power. Must Walk Humbly. II. The second section. We now come to a group of lessons that? seem to emphasize the-second part of God's requirements, . as expressed in the Golden Text foj' today, viz., "and to: walk humbly with thy . God." This Is the inward;, personal,- relation with, God, as against our outward, right eous relations with men. These re maining lessons deal with the abiding principles " of ; ' discipleship which. Jesus gave - to his followers. The eighth lesson, reveals the principle of a true confession of "Christ to be that of the faith which'. makes, fear impos sible.. We are 'to fear God alone. In the ninth lesson we see' that the true fulfillment of life is- that of having the heart set upon the true treasure, which is spiritual, rather than upon the false treasure whichris material, for, "Where' your treasure .is, there will be your heart also." In lesson ten we have set before us the prin ciple of faithful service which is that of watchfulness for the returning King, and which expresses itself in per petual service in his interest and on behalf of his household. "Blessed are those servants 'whom the -Lord, when he cometh,. shall find watching." The principle of the religion of Christ is . that of compassion (lesson 11), and the true sanction of the Sabbath is fulfilled in such service as make's the Sabbath possible to those who are In need. ' it is, therefore, lawful to do good on the; Sabbath". -. Lesson. 42 deals with the vital Issue of -this second section, Viz.,' that it is of far more'iinportance that we be in the kingdom than any other issue.. We must put.fortlj strenuous efforts that we may enter the narrow door. The kingdom of -God is doing the will of ' God, rather '-.than calling him Lord! Lord! "Not everyone that saith unto me,; Lor4, Lord., shall 'enter., into the kingdom1 of heaven," ' ' Thus as'- we1 hastily look over these; 1 lessons from these two "viewpoints, we are led to 'conclude with the first declaration of the Golden Text for the day. Pi 1 ; V '6 i i if