THE ROyAN RECORD Published Weekly CHINA GROVE, NORTH. CAROLINA A CONDENSED RECORD OF EVENTS OF THE WEEK. SEVEN DAYS NEWS AT A GLANCE Important Happenings In All Part off the World Summarized for the Busy Reader. Southern. With practically ali " the prepara tions brought to completion, the Fifth National Corn Exposition opened its gates to the public at Columbia, S. C Embracing exhibits from two states, the Federal department of agriculture and prominent sources dealing with practically every phase of agriculture, the exposition is,, by all odds, the greatest agricultural exposition that has ever been held In this country. The present event is the result of two years of planning and preparation, and it is expected that it will be visited by thousands of farmers from all parts of the country. The crevasse in the Beulah levee, near Greenville, Miss., is widening very slowly, after having reached a width of 125 feet. It is pouring out ta a depth of six feet of water. It is not believed any lives have been lost, as the water is spreading very slowly, filling up the depressions and the natural streams. The planters in the Bogue Phelia basin have been preparing for the emergency and lit tle loss of stock and cattle is antici pated. Efforts will be made to tie the ends of the levee at the break, and as the levee is constructed of stiff buckshot, the belief is expressed that the crevasse will not widen to any great extent. It costs $205.54 a year for the main tenance of each prisoner, according to the eleventh annual report of the United States penitnentiary near At lanta, Ga., completed for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1912. General. n. x j . i " . --- .1 x-resiuem-eiect wiison received greetings from the king of Spain through- the Marquis de la Vega In clan, the. royal commissioner delegat ed to select a site for the Spanish exhibit at the Manama exposition at San Francisco, at was the first mes sage Mr. Wilsorf has received from a European ruler. The envoy, besides conveying to 'the president-elect the king's personal1 message of good will, expressed in behalf of the king a deep interest in the; exposition at San Fran cisco. He toM. the governor that Spain had been i plhaning a similar exposition for- the same year, but now .intended to postpone her world's fair Until 1318. Charles R. Ftdcke, former secretary of the America!). Sugar Refining com pany, must servje the sentence impos ed upon him for participation in the sugar weighing frauds, according to a decision by tne Supreme court of the United States. The court rejected his immunity plea. State supervision and regulation of the New York stock exchange and other stock exchanges are advocated by Governor Stolzer in a message sent by him to the legislature of New York. The time is ripe, in the gov ernor's opinion, for the state to step in and end "flagrant abuses, shift schemees and clever combinations to catch the unwary and to mislead the public.' Brig. Gen. John J. Pershing, com manding the department at Minda nao, has sent the wart departments details of an engagement on the morning of January 23 at Taglitsi be tween Moros and detachments of a Philippine scout and constabulary force. Seven Americans were killed and two officers seriously wounded. It is stated that King Alfonso of Spain will visit the United Statese,. and the Spanish government is now considering plans toward that end. W. R. Webb of Bellbuckle, Tenn., has been elected United States sena tor to succeed Senator Robert L. Taylor. Plenipotentiaries of the Balkan kingdoms are immensely pleased over the decision of the grand council at Constantinople to accept the advice df the powers. While it had become increasingly certain that the Turkish elder statesmen were prepared to face the bitter fate that ends the em pire's history as an European nation, it was hardly expected that they would register their decision so quick ly and so definitely. But one crucial point of difference remains to be set tled. The allies want $200,000,000 as an indemnity. Their minimum is an amount equal to the Turkish debts attached to the territories which they will annex under the treaty. Miss Genevieve Clark, eighteen-year-old daughter of Speaker Clark, is the youngest author whose writings are indexed in the Pan-American Un ion library. She is preparing a series of articlese on life in the capital. President Taft has received a pres ent of a silver box from a number of Southern admirers. A gigantic international radium combine, which will control the ra dium market of the world, is nearing completion1 in London. The company has been formed by . English bankers for the purpose of consolidating the richest radium ore mines in Austria Near Butte, Mont., for fifteen hours Frank Engstrom, aged eleven, was treed by a mountain lion, with the thermometer at 35 below zero. The extreme cold finally drove the animal back to its lair, and the boy escaped. Statistics just gathered show there are more than seven violent deaths a day in New York City. "This city in its continuance of congestion of population, is more cru el than the Tvrk in his most barbar ous hours," 'declared Benjamin C. Marsh, executive secretary of- the New York Congress committee, in ad dressing, Physicians and Sugeons. HEWS BRIEFLY TOLD The special committe" appointed by the Balkan plenipotentiaries drafted al ndte notifying the TurKisn pienipoten j tiariesthat they propose to break oft the peace negotiations. - The note is vrey brief. It reminds the Turks that since January 6 sittings of the peace conference have been suspend ed; without Turkey making any move toward their resumptions while events in Constantinople are the best proof that Turkey's answer to the demands of the allies concerning Adrianople and the Aegean Islands will be nega tive. The federal board of food and drug inspection has issued an order for bidding the sale in interstate com merce of fruits which have been dam aged in the recent freeze in Califor nia. A series of disturbances occurred in the hotel and restaurant districts of New York City when thousands of striking waiters and sympathizers overran some of the' principal streets and engaged in serious rioting.- Nazlm Pasha, the former war min ister and commander of the Turkish armyjj has been shot dead. Nazim Pasha, war minister and generalissi mo of the Turkish armies, wts a man of great physical and mental strength. He was 60 years of age. . O A London cablegram says some time must elapse before the situation arising from the revolution in Con stantinople becomes clear. As far as may he judged, there is no intention on the part of the new Turiish gov ernment to force matters or to re sume hostilities if any reasonable compromise with the Balkan allies is possible. Charles W. Morse, who has been reported recently as seriously ill in Europe, has. admitted in testimony that he is not financially responsible and has suggested to his attorneys that his creditors put him through bankruptcy. The former banker made these admissions ',to A. Levinge What telly, a London lawyer, who was ap pointed by the New York courts to examine Morse. Miss Helen Miller Gould was mar ried at Lyndhurst, her country es tate in New York state, to Finley Johnson Shepard,- an American rail road man, who has risen from the ranks. Less than 100 persons . were bidden to the ceremony. They includ ed close relatives of the bride and bridegroom and friends of long stand ing. Washington. Following the recipt of official con firmation of the massacre of Capt Patrick McNally and six native enlist ed men of the Philippine scouts by the Moros of the island of Jolo, war de partment officials planned a campaign, to rid the entire island of the head hunters, who have proved so destruc tive to United States soldiers since the American occupation. Secretary of War Stimson ordered that a cam paign to the death be waged against the natives. The engagement in which Captain McNally and his men were killed has convinced the department that only a sanguinary campaign can pacify this portion of the Philippines. Affirmative declaration of the pur pose of 'the United States to give the fcFilipinos their independense as soon as a stable government pan be set up in the island will probably be made at the next regular session of congreses. Next to the tariff it will be one of the first big accomplish ments of the new administration Representative Jones of Virginia has introduced a bill setting 1921 as the date of Philippine independence, and Portugal. To provide adequate space for han dling. parcel post busineess, it will be necessary to revise plans of many public buildings ' in which postoffices are located ,and negotiations to this end already have been instituted by Postmaster General Hitchcock. The postmaster general has invited the supervising architect of the treasury and his assistants to co-operate in the matter with the building committee of the postoffice department and spe cial parcel post committee. Secretary of Agriculture Wilson says a considerable portion of the fu ture meat supply of the country mut come from the South, and this situ ation is becoming better understood and more appreciated every V day. There are millions of acres of idle land in the Southern states that are especially adapted to the production of cattle, and there is no reason why not only the beef supply, but the sup ply of pork for American markets should not be produced on the soils of the South. Secretary of State Knox's reply to the British protest against the exemp tion of American coastwise shipping from Panama canal tolls assured the British government that domestic coastwise trade will not be permit ted to, extend operation into foreign competitive . fields and that increased tolls will not be laid on foreign ship ping to balance the remission to the American ships. -If Great Britain is xiot satisfied on these points America proposes a special . commission of ad justment. Not only has the parceFpost saved the people of the United States in the first fifteen days of its existence more than a half million dollars, according to Senator Bourne, author of the law, but it has not proved a hardship to the overworked letter carrier. Senator Bourne announced that reports from forty-five leading cities of the coun try which produced almost half of the postal revenues showed that during the twelve working days between January 1 and 15, a total of 5,094,027 outgoing parcels were dispatched, at a cost of $395,286, or about 7.7 cents a parcel. The proposal by Senator Clapp to extend the investigation into cam paign expenditures to cover the gen eral election expenses of 1912, was ap proved by the senate committee on contingent expenses. . The senate in vestigating committee has covered the campaigns of 1904 and 1908, and the primary, campaign of 1912, but had no authority to look into expendi tures for the presidential fighting end ing November. 5. Senator Clapp will make anothre effort to secure - the adoption of the resolution In the sen GENERALASSEMBLY STEWART DIVORCE BILL AND ANTI-TRUST BILL PASSES THE HOUSE. BILLS PASS FINAL READING Five-Years Separation Ground For Action and Right to Remarry. Jus tice's Measure Goes Through With out Discussion. Other Work Done. Senate Wednesday. Petitions were presented for a six months school term from citizens of Forsyth county, other counties and several Farmers' Unions; for a better child law and a compulsory school law from various Junior Order-councils; for a censorship of moving pic ture films from the Ministerial Union of 'Statesville; to increase the num ber of Superior Court judges to 24 from the bar of Goldsboro. The following bills were passed on final reading: House bill to build a bridge oyer South River, between Cumberland and Sampson counties. Senate bill to repeal the act for a bridge across Pee Dee River. Senate bill to repeal the Anson county road bond act of 1911. Senate resolution for relief of Jo seph S. Royster, sheriff of Vance A number of new bills were intro duced in the Senate. House Wednesday. Mr. Murphy for the Committee on Rules recommended the apointment of a Committee on Forestry, Drainage and Conservation. Among bills receiving favorable committee report were: Providing bail for fugitives ; foreclosure of cer tain conditional sales; bill relating to venue of action; bill amending the law as to making false statements to secure goods on credit; bill prohibit ing tipping. The Committee on Health reported unfavorably the bill by Williams of Cabarrus to restrict the right of medical colleges to use bodies of paupers for dissecting. There was favorable report for the bill allowing the Virginia, Carolina Railroad company to build a road in Ashe county. Senate Thursday. ' The following final readings: ' Senate bill to provide additional support for the graded schools of Newbern. House bill to enable Kinston to vote on bonds for the Feeble-Minded. Senate bill to repeal the act re quiring thhe sheriff of Anson county to purchase and keep bleoTJhounds. Senate bill to repeal the act of 1911 relative to stock law in portion of Pitt county. Senate bill ta amend the charter of the Watauga Railway Company, so as to allow it to take right-of-way before condemnation proceedings. House bill to amend the charter of Elon College, as amended by the Committee on Judiciary No. 1, to strike out the provision making it a misdemeanor to sell on credit to a minor student without consent of the college authorities. House Thursday. Among bills receiving favorable re ports from committees were: Justice's legalized primary law, with minority report from Elections Committee by Mr. Bowie and five others, urging that it do not pass. To authorize Dunn to issue sewerage -bonds; Stewart's bill as to divorce for , abandonment amended so divorce is available after five instead of two years; exemption of National Guardsmen from jury and road duty. The House made a special order for the Justice primary election bill for the evening of January 31. Senate Friday. Petitions were received from citi zens of Richmond, Craven, Halifax, Madison, and Rockingham counties for a six-months school term, and from Junior Order Councils in Guilford, Da vidson and Mecklenburg for a better child labor law and for compulsory school law. The building and loan bill was laid before the Senate as unfinished busi ness. The, bills as amended by the Commit tee, were then passed on final reading without division and ordered engross ed and sent to the house. The joint resolution providing for a Standing Committee on Private and Public Local Bills was called up by Senator Hobgood, and adopted, after a little discussion, by a decisive vote. House Friday. Numerous petitions for sive-months school terms and for compulsory at tendance were sent forward. Taxation Plan to Remedy Problem. The General Assembly is consider ing the taxation problem with the view , of equalizing the burdens inci dent to government. The fact is well known, and has been the subject of much complaint that those who are able to pay and who derive the great est benefits by reason of established government do not bear taxation bur dens in proportion to the "benefits de rived but that on the contrary, the poorer people, those not so w.ell able to bear the burdens, are forced to sustain the extra servitude. To Visit Onslow County. . Some time during the month of March, Senator Simmons and Repres entatives Faison and Small will pay a visit to Onslow county for the pur pose of looking over New River and going through the new inland water way. In the party will be several very prominent men who . are Inter ested in deeper waterways for North Carolina. - The party will go to Jack sonville and board a launch at that place for the trip down the iver. They will stop at several points along the river to make observations. There was also a petition for' the repeal of the license tax on ;photpg raphers. - ' 'ZS?'ti?t-F$'-s Among the bills favoraDMieirted from . committees" were: jjfc r?, ' To allow jurors to be dr from counties other than that of trial in certain cases;- the Williams of Bun combe vital statistics bill; to allow counties to establish hospitals; em ployer's liability biU makih too Fed: erai law apply in state' cases ; to pre vent tipping; and to prevent children from using firearms. Senate Saturday. The Senate suspended rules for Senator Stub be and passed' an em ployers' liability bill he only intro duced toay, which embraced all cor porations. It extends to them the provisions of the act of Congress rela tive o common carriers' liability to employees, the bill applying this act to North Carolina. The Senate passed the Council act to prevent a multiplicity of indict ments below the grade of felony. The Senate referred the joint reso lution from the House asking for the passage of the Webb-Keriyon liquor bill by Congress the Committee on Federal Relations. Among' bills which' passed final reading were: To consolidate Winston and Salem; to authorize the construc tion of Watauga Railroad through Watauga and Ashe counties as part of the Carolina-Virginia road. " HouseSaturday. Just before adjournment Saturday the House found itself confronted with the condition that, there being no private or local public bills on the calendar, there was nothing that could be dene further Saturday or Monday, owing to a motion by Justice of Guil ford adopted tha- no public bills be considered during his absence. Mem bers of the House insisted that they had not intended, to vote any such motion, their understanding being that merely none of the bills Intro diiced by Justice, or 'in which he was specially interested, should be con sidered. Mr. Stewart's bill against tipping passed second reading in the House. A number of bills were introduced in the House. Senate Monday. Senator Watts, chairman of ' the Committee on Appropriations, moved for the appointment of a clerk to his committee. The following? bills passed final readings: House bill to amend the charter ol .Town of Salem. Senate bill to authorize Waynes ville to issue bonds. and complete the graded school building. Senate bill to amend the chartei of East Spencer, Rowan county. Senate bill to authorize an election for graded scheol bonds in Scotland Neck. Senate bill authorizing Forsytt county to issue refunding bonds oi notes to pay fer part of the construo tion of Roanoke & Southern Railway Senate bilKtalidate electric lighl bond election in Asheboro. Senate bill td. incorporate Town ol Grandin, Caldwell county. - House Monday. There was the usual flood of petitions from all sections of the state, for six months school terms and a number foi compulsory attendance and for chile labor legislation. There was favorable report for the KefTum bill to restore local self-gov ernment to New Hanover . county, e bill that only provides for change lu the number of justices of the peace for Wilmington township. Senate Tuesday. Petitions were received from Gas ton, Cabarrus, Cumberland, Rocking ham, Rowan and Watauga counties for six-months 'school terms. The following bills passed finaJ reading: . ' Senate bill to amend section 3505 oi the RevisaL so. as to make the mini mum punishment for .horsestealing four months instead of five years This was opposed by Wakefield anc Watts. House bill to amend the Revisal section 93, so as to require notice ol refusal to pay an account by an ad ministrator to be in writing, the Sen ate amendment not to apply to tran -sactions prior to enactment. Senator Studdert was added to the Committee on Penal Institutions. Houte Tuesday. Raleigh. Thi Stewart bill amend ing the divorce laws passed the House. Tuesday afternoon. It origi nally' provided that separation for twe years be ground for divorce. The com mittee had amended this, making the time five years, the party abandoned without cause having the right to re marry. The House passed the Justice anti trust bill, which applies the Federal anti-trust law to the state, enacts the provisions of the old Reid anti-trust bill of the 1907 session and provides machinery for the Attorney General to enforce the law.. A number of bills passed final read ing in the house. For Six Months Public Schools. Public demand and the attitude of those in charge of legislation, for longer terms In the public schools in dicate that a bill providing for six month's school terms in all public schools of the state will be enacted by the Legislature. The favorite pro visions are contained inthe bills in troduced in the Senate by 'Senator T. T. Thorne and in the House by Rep resentative Mark Majette, the two bills being identical and having the endorsement of the educational com mittees of department' of education. Counties That Will Know. As it passed the House, the Page bill requiring county, officers on fees to report annually" to the county com missioners the amount of their re ceipts and their disbursements for clerical help, it will apply to the fol lowing counties.: Moore, Union Scotland, Pitt, Mecklenburg, Anson, Randolph, Johnston, Caswell, -WHson, Carteret, Davidson, Harnett, Jones, Chowan, Wayne, Bertie, Vance, Wasfc Ington, Pender, Warren, Richmond, Rowan, Haywood, Currituck, Perqui mans, Halifax and Hertford. BEING STUDIED EXPLANATION OF WORK BUREAU OF SOCIAL HYGIENE HOPES TO ACCOMPLISH. ABOLISH WHITE SLAVE TRADE -John D. Rockefeller, Jr., Tells of the Plans for the Investigation of Vice Conditions. New York. in order that the pub lic, might better understand the Bu reau of Social Hygiene, John D. Rockefeller, Jr., gave out a statement explaining the origin, work and the plans of that institution. The bureau, he said, came- into existence about two years ago as a result of the work of a special grand jury appointed to Investigate the white slave traffic in New York City. This jury recom mended that a public commission be appointed to study the social evil. Mr. Rockefeller was foreman of -that grand jury and he thereafter gave the subject deep thought and conferred with a large number of the leading men and women. "These con ferencese," says Mr. Rockefeller, "de veloped the feeling that a public com mission would labor under a number of disadvantages such as the fact that it would be short lived; that its work .would be done publicly; that at best it could hardly do more than pre sent recommendations. So the con viction grew that in order to make a real and lasting improvement in conditions,- a permanent organization should be created, the continuation of which would not be dependent upon a temporary wave of reform, nor upon the life of any man or group of men, but which would go on, generation after generation, continuously making warfare against the forces of evil. It also appeared that a private organiza tion would have, among other advan tages, a certain freedom from public ity and from political bias, which a public appointed commission could not so easily avoid. "Therefore, as the initial step, in the winter of 1911. the Bureau of So cial Hygiene was formed. Its pres ent members are Miss Katharine Bement Davis, superintendent of the New York state reformatory for wom en at Bedford Hills, N. Y.; Paul M. Warburg of the firm of Kuhn, Loeb & Co.; Starr J. Murphy of the New York bar, and John D. Rockefeller, Jr. "One of the first things undertaken by the bureau was the establishment at Bedford Hills, adjacent to the re formatory, of a labratory of social hygiene, undejv Miss Davis direction, m this laboratory it is proposed to study from the physical, mental, so cial and moralside each person com mitted to the "reformatory. This study will be carried on by experts and each case will be kept under obser vation for from three weeks to three months, as may be required. When the diagnosis is completed, it is hoped that the laboratory will be in position to .recommend the treatment most likely to reform the individual, or, if reformation IS impossible to recom mend permanent custodial care. Fur thermore, reaching out beyond the in dividuals involved, it is believed that thus important contributions may be made to a fuller knowledge of the conditions ultimately responsible for vice. If this experiment is success ful the principle may prove applica ble to all olasses of criminals and the conditions precedent to crime and lead to lines of action not only more scientific and humane, but also less wasteful than those at present follow ed." That its. work might be done intel ligently the;5 bureau employed George J. Kneeland to make a comprehensive survey of vice . conditions In New York, and Abraham Flexner to. study the .social evil in Europe, and their reports are now being prepared. In conclusion Mr.' Rockefeller's statement says: "It cannot be too strongly emphasized that .the spirit which dominates the work of the bu reau is not sensational or sentimen tal or hysterical; that it is not a spirit of criticism of public officials; but that It is essentially a spirit of con- Lstructive suggestion and of deep sci- W I m X 1 entlfic as well as humane interest in i great world problem." Ryan's Bond Refused.' Chicago. For the second time the United States circuit court of appeals declined ' to approve bonds submitted for the release of Frank ' M. Ryan, president of the International Iron workers' union; R. H. Houlihan and William Shupe of Chicago, convicted of conspiracy in connection with ille gal transportation of dynamite. Dis trict Attorney Miller advised the court he had inspected the sureties and found them insufficient Bonds of William . Bernhardt of Cincinnati for $10,006 were accepted. 1 Speedy Justice Meted Negro. , Gulfport, . Miss. Within seven hours after he had shot and killed Chief of Police Charles Dickey, Per cy Newkirk, a negro, who had been trapped by the officer while in the act of burglarizing a store, was in dicted by the county grand jury, tried on a charge, of murder, convicted, and sentenced to be hanged just one month from date. Notwithstanding the quick justice meted out to the ne gre, a large and excited crowd throng ed the streets near the court house nd threats of lynching made. "Dixie Flyer" Wrecked. Atlanta. The. "'Dixie Flyer," a fam ous tourist train, Chicago to Jackson ville, was derailed' and partly wreck ed eight miles from Atlanta, on the edge of the Western and Atlantic rail road yards, when it "sideswiped" a freight engine. C. O. Wright of Hop kinsville, Ind., was the most serious ly .injured. He was thrown against the' end; of his berth in the collision. Many oil the passengers were bruised and badly 'shaken in ' the collision. How the 'engine crews escaped death Is a miracle. " v ; THE FLYING AGE. "How old is De Swift's youngest child?" v .. . ".? VA" ' "It can't be more than a year old. It's just learning to fly." 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