l I. . I IIS iihiiilaaij ASSOCIATED PRESS DISPATCHES VOLUME XXVI Kehabihation Efforts And CheckUpOf DeadFollowln Wake Os Florida’s Disaster MANY DEAD BODIES FOUND IN DEBRIS • CAUSED BY STORM ] In Miami Area Check of| Dead and Relief Work Among Injured Claim J Attention of Workers. ! PENSACOLAAND MOBILE ESCAPED Despite Wind That Moved 126 Miles an Hour No Loss of Life Was Re ported in Two Cities. UP) —The hurricane that cost the lower Florida cast coast upward of 400 lives, 4,000 or more injured and property damage of $50,1X10,000 or more, having passed, all sections hit today centered their efforts on trying to ascertain the exact casualty list, restoring interrupted communications and repairing the property damage. The Miami nrea, hardest hit of all. was going about the work of rehabili tation, caring for the injured, and seeking out the dead in systematic manner. The American Red Cross and other relief agencies were on hand in full force with troops on guard and martial law existing in many places. The injured in Hollywood. Miami suburb, have been ordered removed to points north of the city, and persons unable to secure aid in the relief and. rehabilitation work have been In structed by the military authorities to evacuate the city, according to in formation brought to West Palm Beach by Dr. William K. Redden, national director of the American Red Cross medical service. Dr. liedden yesterday, made a fiemopabaurvey -ot fi^dlngsfo^Vashington! Dr. Redden* estimated the seriously injured at 1.400. He found 1,8150 pa tieiits in Miami hospitals, and esti mated that the 'total Injured there was 3,500, of whom 1.000 snlfehed se rious hurts. About 500 of these had fractured limbs and skulls. Pensacola and Mobile, hit by thr hurricane just before it passed inland and expired, made kuown to the world that there was no loss of life in either city. Mobile again was connect ed with the outside world by a tele graph. wire, but Pensacola still was cut off early today,' while the only means of' communication being over a shaky telephone w're to Mobile. Ov er this wire, and through a wireless dispatch to the Associated Press from its Pensacola correspondent it was learned that Pensacola came through a 120-mile blow without loss of life, but with considerable property dam age. Several ships went ashore. There were throe deaths in that section due to drowning, but none in Pensacola. At Moorehaven. an agricultural on the western bank of I-ake Okeecho bee, martial tew went Into effect early today nnd efforts were being made to check up the death list, already known to be around 100. Approximately 7C? bodies had beeu recovered up to last, night, and it was said that 40 others had been found or would be recovered today. Estimates still put the deaths here at 150 or more, most of the vic tims 'white. j In some places final surveys have brought down the original death list, ‘ some persons previously reported dead having been found alie. Th ! s was the case of "Oete” (McAllister, carried for two days as being among the dead, who has wired relftives under date of Sunday that he is alive and well. At Fort Lauderdale the death list earn? down to 11, but at Hollywood it is expected that the total will be around 70. Miami Beach, it was re vealed, as deaths were checked up, and Biseayne Bay gave up the bodies wash ed out to sea, had a list of 22 known dead. The property loss at Coral Gables, was conservatively estimated at sl,- 500,000, in an official statement. This suburb suffered probably less than any of the Miami suburbs. Okedant. an Everglades village, was wrecked, only the post office and the store building remaining, it was re vealed. The population of 21 persons sleeps in this building since the storm. The first hospital train came out of the storm d strict last night car rying 46 pat'ents and 113 refugees to West Palm Beach and Fort Pierce. Relief Work Goes Forward. With rescue and relief work syste matized under state and national Red Cross authorities. Florida’s stricken cities w«te emerging slowly today from the chaos caused by the tropical hur ricane which killed more than 400 persons and injured 5,000 others, many seriously, as it roared its why from the Bahamas almost to the Mis sissippi River. Belated reports from the more re mote sections of the storm-torn area added to the death toll, as well as damage wl.ieh prob , ably will aggregate nearly $100.00,000 I when final Purveys In the cities and' t A 1 v Pfa JljfkjhiU&itejK The Concord Daily Tribune - North Carolina's Leading Small City Daily I * * 1 Red Cross Takes Charge Os All Relief Work in Stricken Florida j Jacksonville, Fla., Sept. 22.— UP)‘ — ' T'.ie American Red Cross today offi oia'.’.v took over the direction of the work of relieving the suffering nnd re , hnhi.Bating the storm wrecked sec j lions of Florida with an announce I men* from Washington last night that the relief funds being raised by the | Red Cross aggregated nearly SBOO.- 000. j Henry M. Baker, national Bed i Cross disaster director, was person- I ally on the'scene on the lower east coast, having hurried into the region from similar work in t'.ie floods nd the northwest. Mr. Marker passed through Jacksonville last night after speeding into that state by airplane and fast railroad trains. Five Relief Ships Reach Miami. Miami, Sept. 22—C4>)—Five relief ships came into Miami today and their cargoes of food and medical sup plies were being quickly unloaded and distributed among various relief agen cies and hospitals. 500 Refugees Reach Jacksonville. JneksouvU'e, Sept. 22.—(^) —Five hundred refugees from the stony swept area of southern Florida ar rived ’acre today on the special refugee towns as well ns in the trucking and farming sections are completed. Official reports to the national Red Cross from its agent nlong the Florida east coast, place the number of in jured in that section at 4.000, of whom 1,000 were described os serious ly hurt. In Hollywood (lie dead was placed at 70. and the injured at 000. The agents nlso listed 135 dead in Miami, and 75 dead and 300 injured at Fort Lauderdale, which was practically de stroyed first by the wind and then the overflowing waters of Lake Okeecho bee. All of the Injured at Hollywood are being sent either to West I’alm Beach og Jacksonville, while nl women nnd children are being moved from the possible ep denries npd fp permit reconstruction of the' city. Nine first aid stations have been established In Miami. Latest advices said the number of doctors and nurses in that area was sufficient to meet the situation and that plenty of food, water and milk were available. A somewhat different picture of the situation was given in dispatches sent to the Navy Department by the officer in charge of the naval relief work in Miami. He declared the bread supply too low for the demand, and receipts from all sources of supply were about hnlf the demand. This officer also reported that there was considerable worry about the waser supply and its contamination, and suggested that the navy furnish relief from the north by us'ng tanks to transport water. He also urged that experts in sanitation be sent to Miami. Bluejackets from Key West, who had been patrolling the Miami water front. were reported to have removed 16 bodies from vessels sunk in the harbor. Divers are being sent to Key West to continue this search. \ Latest advices from the Gulf Coast told of 3 deaths from drownings while the hurricane lashed that section, but official announcements from both Pen sacola and Mobile said there bad beeu no toll of life in either of the cities. , A message from Mayor Beyliff sent to the Navy radio station at New Orleans said small shipping had. suffered and the light structures near thg wnter front were badly damaged. The des patch added that the Santa Rosa Is land had protected the city, as usual, nnd that the people generally were busy cleaning up. Reports from Mo bile were that it was rapidly clean ! ng up with the expectation that all traces of the storm would be removed within 24 hours. Business was going on as usual, but street car service was still paralyzed and a number of telephones were out of commission. New York Gives *IOO,OOO. New York, Sept. 22. — UP)—Contri butions of New Yorkers for the re lief sufferers in the storm area of Florida today reached approximately SIOO,OOO. Diphtheria Increasing Rapidly. Tribune Bureau. > Sir Walter Hotel. Raleigh, Sept. 22.—Although Sep tember is rather early for diphtheria, it is Increasing rapidly, despite warning which have been sent out, according to the State Board of Health. There were 102 cases last week, with 27 new cases reported Tuesday and 11 Monday, indicating that the number of liew cases this week will materially exceed 100. All of these eases could have been pre vented. according to the Board of Health, had these children been given the Schick teat or the Toxin- Antitoxin treatment, which is ad ministered free to any who desire it by county and city Boards of Health. Typhoid is on the decline, but ten new cases having been reported yes terday. In fact, all the communicable diseases with the exception of dip theria and whooping cough are rap idly declining. i - . Large ocean Rteamahips ascend the 1 HSZSr *° r * °* ° v,r •A-, 11 CONCORD, N. C., WEDNESDAY, SEPT EMBER 22, 1926 ~ ■ ' '■<*■*» i ■ ssesgtoaaaaaassa . , viT.-i- 1 m train operated into Jacksonville. Leased Wire Service Restored. Afl-pin, Sept. 22.—(A*)—Leased wire communication with Miami was (stored at 7 :40 o’clock this morning ! when the Miami News office was cut into the Associated I’ress Florida cir cut. This was the first direct com munication by wire with Miami since ! last Saturday. j Seek Yacht Lost in Storm. ) Miami, Sept. 22.—(A*)—Const guard j officers have been asked to search for 1 the yacht of Stanley Comstock, Mi-] ami real estate operator, on which! Air. nnd Mrs. Comstock and two] friends left Miami Bench at noon last! Friday. The yacht has not been | heard from since the hurricane. Air. Comstock, who last spring was reported engaged to Peggy Hopkins Joyce, the ae,tress, and Airs. Comstock had sc: out on a reunion trip. Death List Grows. Asuncion. Paraguay, Sept. 22.— UP) —T'.ie death list in the hurricane which struck the city of Encarnncion Monday night continues to grow. With exact figures lacking, official reports estimate the dead at 200, while qther sources say it will reach 500. SHARPE WILL REMAIN AT CHARLOTTE POST Differences Between Sharp; and Gtrv ernment Have Been Straightened Out. Washington. Sept. 22.— UP) —At a conference today with Assistant Secre tary Andrews in charge of prohibition enforcement, Ben Slrarpe, dry admin istrator for North Carolina, South Carolina and Georgia, announced the differences between h’mself und Washington headquarters had been straightened out. t Sharpe said that while he was com plaining that his area was being flood ed with liquor from Florida, that sit uation had been remedied. -■ While Gen. Andrews stated that he w*» *9tM«l with the- repofC g? Xfr. Shavpe there were indications that tic objected to the administrator making public statements about the adminis tration without first forwarding such complaint to headquarter!*. Dunning Supervisor. AVnshington. Sept. 22.—04>)—0. D. Jackson and AI. O. Dunning were ap pointed today prohibition zone su pervisors, with jurisdiction in f£ie southern and middle western terri tory. Jackson, who will continue to be ad ministrator at New Orleans, was giv en supervision over Texas. Oklahoma, Alississippi, Alabama. Louisiana, Ar kansas, Missouri, Kansas, Kentucky and Tennessee. Dunning, who is collector of cus toms at Savannah, will have juris diction in the South Atlantic states from Florida northward to Maryland. His district may be made to include Maryland. DEFENSE STRIKES BACK IN DALGHERTY-MILLER CASE Societe Suisse Company’s Claim Not Settled in Record-Breaking Time. New York. Sept. 22.—W)—Striking swiftly through a government witness, the defense in the Daugherty-Milier conspiracy trial today offered proof thnt the claims of the Societe Suisse for $7,006,000 of American Metal Companyshares which were paid in three days, did not “break the all time speed record for the alien proper ty custodian’s office” as alleged by the government. Reaching Mrs. Edna Earle, registry clerk in the alien property custodian’s office, William E. Rand, counsel for Thomas W. Miller, who is on trial with Harry M. Daugherty, revealed the government’s exhibits that a claim made- by Chandler and Company, of Philadelphia, for $2,500,000 of notes of the Imperial German government, was paid the day before it was filed. Bryan’s Brother Tries Come-Back. Omaha. Neb., Sept. 22—14>)— Chares W. Bryan, brother of the late William J. Bryan, and former democratic vice presidential candi date, is attempting'to come back in Nebraska politics with a campaign for a presidential nomination believ ed to be his ultimate goal Mr. Bryan seeks to regain ths governor’s chair which he occupied in 1923 and 1924, and is waging a bitter campaign against Governor Adam McMullen, the republican in cumbent. The gubernatorial opponents are filling speaking dates nearly every day of the week, Mr. Bryan fre quently going into Gage county. Governor McMullen’ home territory, to speak. • Each predict they will be elected by u majority of 50,000 votes. Headk Mortgage Banker's Associa tion. Richmond, Va„ Sept. 22. — UP) —E. D. Schumaker, President of the South ern Bond & Mortgage Co., of Rich mond, was elected President of the Mortgage Bankers Associate of Am erica today, the second day of its thirteenth annual convention. A new laundry machine with padded • rollers is guaranteed not to injure or tear off buttons. — I,U I STORM HAS LOST GREAT INTENSITY Washington, Sept. 22. — (fii— The tropical disturbance Wss ] placed by the weather bureau to- ] j | !>>• ike State Board of Health. , j Tribune Bureau. j j Sir Walter HA*. I Raleigh, Sept. 22. — Jhaps the most dangerous decani ot j childhood, is continuing to etpopug ill : i the stale, despite the -campaign! (being waged throughout the State; aud the United States to educate j I parents to its perils, particularly J where children are between the ages | lof 18 months and six years old, and j Ito inform them that modern scimioe j has discovered a method of con»ol. which if adopted, make! a child nil - j Itualiy immune from the disease. This! 1 treatment is administered free by the j j State Board of Health, through she (county and city health offices' I throughout the State, and can be ad-. I ministered by any physician. Yet the! application for this treatment are aiarming'y few*, and the increase in the number of cases alarmingly heavy. Last week there were 102 new cases of diptheria reported in the State, with slightly more than 100 cases for the ween preceeding. and indiiations are that the number will increase each week as eold weather approaches, unless parents; act at once to immunize their chil dren. j The modern method of diptheria I control consists in the employment lof the Schick test and the Toxin antitoxin treatment. The Schick test reveals whether or not the child is' already immune or not—about 50 , per cent are found already to be ini- 1 mune—and where such is not the j case, the Toxin-antitoxin treatment i is used, requiring from three to five inoculations, deiicnding upon >the physical condition of the subject. This treatment effectively immunizes the subject against contracting dip theria. "Records show thnt about eight per cent of all those who develop diptheria die especially if they are from one to five years of age,” said Dr. O. M. Cooper, acting State Health Officer, in discussing the situation. In 1024 diptheria attack ed 4.005 in North Carolina, ana of this number 323 died. The percentage for other yours remains about- the saffrA' 'fhe State Board of Healtlg'te dding its utmost to reduce these figures, but cannot do so unless it can get parents to co-operate better. Dr. Cooper said The number of cases of whooping cough in the State still remains high, though there are not ns many cases now as there were several | weeks ago, as only 101 cases were reported from over the State the past week Indications are that there will be a marked decrease in this whoop ing epidemic within a few more weeks. Typhoid has dropped down to but 80 cases for the past week, and smallpox to only five. This is to be expected, as they are primarily hot weather diseases, which do not flourish in cooler weather. On’y 13 cases of scarlet fever were reported for the week just ended, and but 20 cases of measles. The number of cases of infantile paralysis have dropped to almost nothing, with no new cases having been reported for nearly a week. The Board of Health also calls at tention to the fact that a new serum for the prevention 6f whooping cough and the reduction of its severity has been developed, and this is administered without charge by the various health officers, county and city, over the State. John Alexander Flowe Dies at Ad vanced Age In Spencer. Sept. 21.—John Alexan der Flowe, aged 70 years, died at the home of his son-in-law, \V. D Dorton, in Spencer, shortly before midnight Monday night following a lingering illness due mostly to old age. He had .been confined to his bed, however, for only a week, and the end was not unexpected. Mr. Flowe was a native of Aleck- 1 lenbnrg county and when 18 years old was married to Alias Lorinu Lit tle, ako of that county. The young couple settled In Cabarrus county and lived near Concord until 1908 when the. family came to SJpenccr to rc- de. Mrs- Flowe died here 14 .years ago and since that time Mr. Flowe has made his home with the fauury of Mr. Dorton. Surviving are two brothers, Robert and Henry Flowe, of Cabarrus coun ty, while the children living include Airs. J. S. McCurdy and Miss ida Flowe, of Spencer; J. S. Flowe. of Greensboro, Edward and Sam Flowe, of Cbbarrus county. There are two children dead. He is also survived by a number of grandchildren, these in cluding Mrs. T. J. Auten, of Wil son ; Misses Helen, Margaret and Oene Dorton of Spdncer, with whom he bad made his home. Frank P. Mllburn, Noted Washing ton Architect. Dies. Asheville, Sept 21.—'Frank P. Mllburn, 58, architect, of the firm of Mitburn and Heister, Washington. ' D. C., died auddenly at a local hotel this morning. He had been in failing health for several months, but death - came unexpectedly. His firm was one ■ of the leading architectural concerns > iu America, taring planned many ■ federal buildings In Washington and i foreign countries. The so-called Iran Crown of the i King of Italy ia made of gold and ■ precious stones, set in a thin ring of iran. Glimpse of What Florida Hurricane Did ! jtijS JjL- This picture, taken during the storm in July, illustrates, on a small scale, the hurrican ! that battered the coast of Florida. It shows waves beating against the causewav conned ing the city of Miami and Miami Beach. • S WOMAN PORTRAYS MIAMI HURRICANE “We Are Alive and That Is All,” Says Mrs. Skinner. In Letter to Her Husband. Burlington, Sept. 22. —Burlington j got its first report out of Miami, the devastated Florida city, in a letter ! written by Mrs. H. B. Skinner Sun | day to her husband, secretary of the t'haraber of Commerce, immediately | after the W,est Indian hurricane had ‘ delivered its two assaults and swept ; on. I "We are aiive and that is all," Mrs. Skinner said in beginning her letter to herself and two eliildren. "I lost everything. Tile roof went off of our house and I found shelter in a friend's house nearby. "Everything is wrecked. The whole city is paralyzed today. No water j gas, lights or anything. Food is a ; a premium. Many lives 'aave been 1 lost and the whole eity is crippled i There isn't a house in the city that ' is not wrecked. A Night of Terror. “The papers warned us that a storm was headed this way on Friday,” Sirs Skinner wrote, "but no one realized that it would be a cyclone.”, She then recited what took plaqt during the night that to Minmiand, and to thousands of others along the cos' cosat, "a night of terror,” as the mighty breath of nature blew out of its bed the Ocean and spread it over the land, and bent on vengeance, crashed the steel and timbers of great buildings uud homes and snuffed out live*, of men, women »udi children, j “About 10 o'clock Saturday nigh: | it began and by 1 o'clock it was some | thing terrible. I '.lad put the chil- I dreu to bed so I got them up and | dressed them and got ready to move out if the house started to go. | "We stood by the door all night. | Six o'clock in the morning it began to get quiet and nt 7 we thought it was over and Rtarted to clean up the wreck. Every dish, window glass, mirrors and furniture smashed; ev crything soaked.” Second Attack Worse. There was a lull in the storm be tween 7 and 7:30 Sunday morning and out of pje "night of horror” the citizens began to emerge, to look upon the devastation and to hope that none had perished. Then the wind rose again and the second nssualt came with more' force than it had in the night. It seemed that the gate of doom had opened wide with the tide of the ocean roiling up to sweep all in to its keeping. “When the roof went off, I grabbed the children and went out in the storm to a neighbor’s,” Mrs. Skinner said. There she was in refuge un til, with the city sprawled at its feet, the hurricane rolled on. Archie Shelton, member of an en gineering firm at Fort Lauderdale, got a wire t’iirough to his wife here today advising her that lie came through the storm safe but lost, everything he had Hundreds of dollars worth of instru ment and tools for engineering and blue print work “went out with the storm.” Mr. Shelton advised his wife that he was coming out of t'ae sec tion as soon as he could arrange to do so. T. R. Cole. Burlington man, who is engaged in the restaurant usiness in ! Miami, is reported to have lost his automobile in the storm, and so far has been unable to find it. That doesn’t seem strange when it hap pened that boats floated out of the bay into the city, trash- cans passed in t'ae street in flight in opposite directions, and even a giant steel sky scraper was stripped to its bare frame by the wrath of the elementa. Expects to See Germany Lending Money to France. Spartanburg, 8. C., Sept. 21. — “It wouldn’t surprise me to hear of Germany offering to lend France money,” former Governor John Gary Evans declared today. The former governor and Mrs. Evans have just returned from a tour of Europe. One of the things that impressed Mr. Evans was the waning of the long cherished animosity between France and Germany. “The Germans do not hold their hatred long like other people of Europe,”- said the former governor. “Everywhere in Europe are German agents in search of trade that had been loot by the world war. The German people seem to have forgot ten their animosities and are work ing hard and enthusiastically to re cover what they have lost. “If I were a creditor I had rather have Germany for my debtor than any other European nation.” Philadelphia and Paris have con cluded arrangements for the ex change of idea - and working data be tween the Public Works departments of the two cities. .Uvr- V , . • r’t . 7 -< ; i THE TRIBUNE TO GET FIGHT NEWS BY RADIO 1 Through the courtesy of the Charlotte News and the Ritchie Hardware Co. The Tribune wll give by radio tin* news of the 1 Dempspy-Tuniiey tight in I’ailadel- 1 phia Thursday night at 8:80 1 o'clock. A loud speaker will be 1 hooked up in front of The Tribune 1 offiee so that all may hear. Come to The Tribune office ( | Thursday night and get the news. ( THE COTTON MARKET Showed Steadier Tone at Opening With Advance of 5 to 13 Points. New York. Sept. 22.— UP) —The cotton market showed a steadier tone at the opening today with steady Liv erpool cables, rumors of better pros pects for a settlement of the British eoal strike, and expectations of cover- . ing ; n advance of tomorrow's govern- t inent crop report. First prices were firm nt an ndvnnce , of 5 to 13 points, and the market , showed net gains of about 14 to 10 , points by the end of the first hour. | December contracts selling at 16.12. , There was continued Southern hedg- , iug, but it seemed less active, while , there was a good deal of covering to- , gether with trade buying and possibly , local buying for a rally. , Two more private crop rei>orts were tamed, one pointing to.a yield of 15,- ( 500.000 tales, and the other to a crop , of 15.045,000 bales. , Cotton futures opened firm. Oct. j 15.80; Dec, 16.04; Jail. 16.14; March , 16.40; Alay 16.63. , j COTTON GROWERS IN SEVEN STATES PROTEST l Want Orange in Freight Rote on Cot- I ton to Principal Marketing and Ex- i porting Outers. i Washington. Sept. 22.—(A’)—Cotton I growers co-operative organizations in ] 7 Southern states, Georgia. Louisiana, i Alobile, Okla., Arizona, Tennessee and I South Catalina filed today with the I Interstate Commerce Commission : den- ! tical complaints against railroad rates on cotton to principal marketing and 1 exporting centers. The rates describ ed were all attacked as excessive, un just and unreasonable, but no state ment was made as to the degree of re duction demanded. The commission was asked- to consider the general cot ton rate structure and to make such changes as their judgment might de termine to be desirable. With Our Advertisers. Don't throw away your tires—get the Concord Vulcanizing Company to fix them for you. See the new ad. today of Fetzer & Yorke Insurance Agents. Your laces nnd tapestries can be made like new by AVrenn at Kannap olis. Phone 128. Late styles and colors in fall suits for men nnd young men at Efird's. Richard Barthelmess in “Soul Fire.” at the Concord Theatre today. More of those smart English tailor ed felt lints at Fisher's. $2.05 to sls. Stylish autumn frocks of silk at 1 $29.75 at J. C. Penny Co.'s. For the woman, miss nnd junior miss. ' Forsyth Man is Convicted of Selling j Diseased Hogs. 1 Winston-Salem, Sept. 2l.—H. M. | ' Wiles, Forsyth county farmer, was I • convicted in magistrate's court here ■ today on a charge of selling diseased hogs nnd was sentenced to serve 30 day in jail. , The slate charged that Wiles sold ' two hogs here suffering with cholera . and at the time they were sold/be f knew* they were afflicted with the , disease. I Red Cross Relief Fund For the Florida Sufferers 11 A call has been sent out by John Barton Payne, of the Ameri- Ij can Red Cross for funds for extending relief to the sufferers from the l hurricanes in Florida. Howard Collie, President of the local Red ‘ Cross, asks that The Tribune make an appeal to the public of this sec- | tion for this purpose. The Red Cross is expecting Concord and Ca- 3 barrus County to contribute liberally. It is important that the work j ! be done within the next few days as the time of greatest suffering is | I | now. Later, funds that are raised, will be acceptable, of course, but all j i * that can be procured now is needed badly for immediate use. Hand yonr contributions to L. D. Ooltrane, treasurer of the local ’ ’ Red Cross, at the Concord National Bank. """j-'V I J : . ... > ’ik. ‘ ,S' ■' V-:-.. 7: : . t . *1 1 rail ■- i-jl, ~ -=s “PROFIT FOR SERVICE” i Dr. Poieat Makes Unique Address to < the Raleigh Civitans. i Tribune Bureau i Sir Walter Hotel lialeigh. Sept. 22.—" The Sermon on the Mount is practical on the plain of daily life: business and religion arc the markers of our civilization and l*jp controlling factors in human af fairs, and it is only the business man who realize this, who is willing to go the sec-ond miles and render a real service, who can hope to really suc ceed in the biggest sense of the word,” said Dr. W. It. Poteat. president of Wake Forest College and nationally known educator and champion of in tellectual liberty, in ail address here before the Civitan Club. He an nouiiced his subject ns "The Restraint of Trade.” but not in the generally understood interpretation of the p’-irase. , “The kind cf restraint in trade we need today is not the kind which has sprvice fm profit' as its standard but rather 'profit for service.’ when the aim of each is the good of all. Then the profit of each will be the good of all,” Dr. Potent told his hearers. "If we do not get around to this way of thinking, and forsake the 'bizness iz bizness’ attitude which some of our alleged 'bizness men' adopt, then this will become a world of vultures in stead of a world of brothers. . Hence relegion must exert an ennobling re straint not only on individuals and classes, but on states and nations,' Dr. Poteat called attention to the fact that the aim of the civic? club was to bring men of different lines < of business and different professions into a brotherhood with common in terests and aspirations, and to pro duce unity in diversity, which was the higest kind of fellowship. "And this can bring about the kind so restraint of trade which I have in 1 mind, and which is best expressed in 1 the terms of these words, found paint- j ed on the wall of the oldest Chris- ; tian church iu Venies: 'Around this 1 temple let the merchants’ law be just, his weights true and his dealings guileless.’ This kind of restraint of 1 trade will make a better city, a better ' State and a better nation. Let us ! strive to that end.” HOSPITAL PROJECT IN ROWAN IS DEFEATED Majority Against It is Overwhelm ing— Negro Brakeinan Killed ' Mrs. Geo. L. Kluttz Dead. Salisbury. Sept. 21.—Rowan coun ty today voted on a hospital proposi tion. or, more truly speaking, failed to vote on it. The vote was against the registration books and the de feat of the proposition was over whelming. Salisbury went against it by 313 and the county increased the adverse majority. The proposition was to issue $200,- 000 in bonds for a general and a tubercular hospital. -Charles Kimball, Southern rail way fireman, of this city, is in the Salisbury suffering from severe in juries received this afternoon on the Silencer yards when struck by an engine. Owen Smyre, negro brakeman on the Asheville division, was thrown from a train while applying hand brakc-s at Barbers Junction and re ceived injuries from which he died soon after being brought to the Salis bury hospital. j Mr. George Lee Kluttz of East ] Spencer, died at the Salisbury hos- I pitai this evening at six o’clock. She I leaves a husband, who is a Southern railway tireman.and two children. Flier Killed When Parachute Sticks Mitehel Field, N. Y-, Sept. 21- Private Charles (’. Turner, of Au burn. N. Y., was killed today when his parachute failed to open after making a practice jump from an air plane at a height of 1,500 feet. THE TRIBUNE PRINTS TODAY’S NEWS TQOM| NO. dp STORM DID BMHGE j • REACHING FLORIDA ] jP* Several Islands in BahajfMpl Suffered Great With Loss of Life §£*-1 ported in Some. 1 PARAGUAY CITY j 3 SUFFERED MUCjli It Is Reported 150 Persotjrfji Were Killed and 500 1 Hurt.—Many Buildup 1 Completely Destroyed. . j Asuncion, Paraguay, Sept. 22.—14$ I —Almost at the same time the inhabit 1 taut* of the city of Encarnacion wMEafl commenting on tin- disaster in da, a hurricane struck the town. Mo nday night with virtually About 150 persons were killed ftnv j* 500 injured. The material damagelljH estimated at a million dollars.' !ImW town which has a popidatiojK'tjjyi . about 35.000. and is the second iatjjpjS est in Paraguay, is virtually A majority of the houses were built of 1 wood. 1 Tlte lower part of the city was iunit pietely razed. A number of boats mt-f* the Pareinu River were sunk. Special tiains carrying proyjsiqjßH and nurses have been sent to, jSlwfflf 1 nation. All amusements in Asuncion ■'j have teen suspended no a sign b! j Bahamas Struck by S(orik"4^9] Nassau. Bahamas, Sept. The hurricane which swept theJnHH mas Friday night was of etmaflKSß||Sjj itb but of less duration than storm. la'ss damage was done but the Augros and Bimini LlawJKsß suffered severely, with hundreds of I small houses leveled. Tite most se*£ i ous reports come from Ixing Island, a where there are said to have Jbeen | some fatalities. 1 No loss of life Iras been reported 'I* here, but it is feared thnt vessels have gone down at sea with 15 da men. Several buildings were er; roads and wharves were daroaffujjSM and one vessel was wrecked , iil tbjr-|l harbor. / j CHARLOTTE DEMANDS ' LOWERING OF TRACKS Asking Too Much. Declares Krpre- 1 tentative of the Southern Raff- 1 Charlotte, Sept. 21.—1 tis out precedent that a city shouldM make such demands upon tr railwdjklS as Charlotte is making upon tMpvfl Southern in eliminating grade, ings in the opinion of officials of tfefvfl railroad's engineering depart 1 The department, seeing the pro- J posed alteration of the railway jj tracts on West Trade and on otkaraS streets contend that they are being 1 asked to undertake too great *. 1 transformation while the city mnkd|fc| no concessions. "The Southern is asked to lower , its tracks 25 feet nt least at the West Trade street crossing- and of course lowerings will have to he , made at other crossings so as to coin cide with the loitered tracks there, it was said. I "As an offset to this the city of* , fers nothing, but proposes ft)’ rtdwifijl its streets at their present ieveijM; flic spokesman added. The project for eliminating til* grade crossings from 1 the neighbo|ji(s hood of the Dowd road on the south to the neighborhood of the Seabopjq§j Air Line tracks north of West Trade street will cost considerably in ex cess of $3,000,000. the engineeritlc * department estimates. "I am not to be quoted,” said h engineer, "for the duty of an engi neer is only to do the and not to talk about, policies.” \ The differences of opinion aiMtij£ the matter are expected to Up'thrtSK ed out when the representatives of i the Southern and the city meet...up confer further about the elimination ’ of grade crossings Robbers Employ Unique Methods. - Columbus. Wis., Sept. 21. —By scattering flat headed roofing nails j on the road, five bandits who held up | the First National bank here* es- jf raped by automobile with more than J $500,000 in currency and securities., J Pursuers following in other auto- i mobiles after the robbery late terday were halted by punOkufnH tires. Trails of the bandits wereS, strewn with the nails for. several miles. Midnight Closing Hoars for DniteMiff (By International News Servit!*i*4|| Charlotte, Sept. 22.—With a mjtlßji night closing hour for dances attendflffSj I here by young people of high sdiodV " ttge set by the parent-teachers nsnocijltjJ tion, Lie probation and welfare 4HH I part is planning a curfew for youjjijjfa boys who have been loitering ok tfedj that the curfew will only a boys under twelve years of age WH they must be nt home before 0 p. M^B In Germany the man must alWaMl walk on the right side of the not on the outside of the puvem«j|H as here. day. to