r. r 1 n xt JLJK SUBSCRIPTION $1.00 A YEAR. WILSON, N. C, TUESDAY, MARCH 23, 1911. 5. Times ANOTHER BONUS OFFER 150 GIRLS BAD WRECK MADE IN THE TIMES' DIE AT FIRE ON A. C. FOR EVERY CLUB OF FIVE YEAR LY DAILY TIMES SUBSCRIP TIONS TURNED IN BEFORE APRIL 1ST AN EXTRA BALLOT OF 75,000 VOTES WILL BE GIVEN IN ADDITION TO THE REGULAR VOTES EVERY CLUB OF FIVE YEARLY SEMI-WEEKLY TIMES SUBSCRIPTIONS WILL BRING THE CONTESTANT 15,000 EXTRA VOTES. By C B. MARSHALL. 4c "OPPORTUNITY OFFER. r 75,000 Bonus Votes. 75,000 Bonus Votes over and above the regular schedule will b given each candidate for every club of five yearly subscribers to khe Daily Times and 15,000 Bonus Votes will be given for every five Semi-Weekly Wilson Times sub- scripnions, turned in before Sat- urday night, April 1st, at 9 p. m. - 75.000 Bonus Votes over and above the regsilaiumber ofvoteithatyou " are, entitled to will create great en thusiasm in The Times' Great Prize Contest right from the start, and will include all yearly subscriptions turn ed in during the coming six days.' This is absolutely trie largest bonus Tote offer for this number of sub scriptions that will be given at any time during thecontest, and, is done to show that Th Times appreciates the activity of those who entef- early and do their work from the start. "Opportunity Offer." This special vote offer is an attrac tive inducement for new entries in The Times' Grand Prize Contest. If you have noT yet entered your name you should send it at once on a post card or telephonethe Contest Department and a representative will call and explain fully any details th are not clearly understood. ' - This is the beginning of "Opportu nity "pme," and every candidate anxious to win should do their best before April 1st, at 9 p. m., to secure a number of thdse Bonus Vo'e Bal lots. Those who 'are a little behind in the race can easily acquire first place during the time if a little extra effort is put forth. Read th conditions ' of this offer and try to get every avail able subscription. You will be sur prised to see. how rapidly your vote total will roll into the thousands.. Do Not Hold Back Subscriptions. Candidates who. have subscriptions in view, but who have been holding back awaiting developments,' should do their best during "Opportunity Time." .' w . ' - ' " .. ' Thos offer is for six days only and will close at 9 p. m. April 1st. ;,.y Bo not hold :back your subscrip tions, but bring them in as soon as secured. , On each suubscription the regular number of votes will be is sued and if you turn in five yearly N subscriber's to The Daily Times dur ing the next six days, you will be given a bonus ballot good for 75,000 votes, and if you turn in five yearly subscriptions to the Semi-Weekly Wil son Times you will be given 15,000 extra votes. There is no limit to the number of these bonus ballots. ; Each candidate will be givena bonus bal lot for every club of five yearly sub scriptions turned in on subscription. This Is absolutely the best offer to be made during the contest. The Times pledges its word to the public that there will be no better offer made. ' MJ I UMUDllX lUD I td 1 .Friends Should Help Now. The bonus votes are issued in addi tion to the regular number of votes issued on each subscription. Many of your friends say, I will help you the last week of the con test. You need their help NOW when it counts most. There will be AB SOLUTELY NO OFFER OF ANY KIND BETTER DURING THE CON TEST THAN THIS 6NE. Nothing Gained! By Delay. Nothing can possibly, be gained by delay in entering. Just now the field is fresh'. Candidates naturally go to their own immediate circle of friends first, but your friends are probably also the friends of several other can didates and. the first one to them will receive the support. -That is why it is well to get into the field early in the race; clinch the support of your friends before sorne' competitors reaches them. " There is nothing difficult or compli cated about entering the contest. Simply fill out the nomination blank, good for 1,000 votes, found in The Times, and send the blank to the Con test Department. A representative will call on you, if you' desire, and. explain the contest fully. It costs nothing to enter. It costs nothing to .have your friends voe for you. ASE ..-Y5 ALL Philadelphia Nationals Lose to The Farmer Boys. Raleigh, N. C, March 27. The Philadelphia Nationals were defeated here Saturday afternoon by the Agri cultural and Mechanical College, of tb.is city, by a scoire of 6 to. 4. Bax ter, in the box for four innings for the visitcirs, was weak and was re placed by Yates, whoyielded only one hit. - Fayette 5 Elon, 3. Elon College, N. C, March . 27.- Hedgepeth twirled great ball for Elon, but lost to. Lafayette on errors of his team, the filial score being 5 to 3. Trinity Defeats Amherst. Durham, Nl C, March 27. In the fastest and most interesting game of the season Trinity won from Am herst here Saturday by the score of 4 toO. Bob Gantt was ,on the mound for Trinity, and he pitched superb ball, allowing two scattered hits and striking' out six. He received perfect suport with the exception of a fumble '.y, Henderson, which counted for nothing. . -.' - Carolina, 2; Davidson, 1. Charlotte, N. C., March 27 The University of North Carolina triumph ed over Davidson College here Satur day afternoon by the narrow margin of one run. The contest was ' re splendent with errors, but also re plete with interest, the final count be ing 2 to 1, with the slant toward :ne University lads. Both teams snowed a lack of training, but the future will remove this disadvantage and either team will then be a formidable rival to any college team. The playing of Carolina was somewhat surprising, while" Davidson did not quite come up to the expectations of its sup porters. . .. ' Oak Ridge, 4;Whitsett, 1. Oak Ridge, N. cf, March ,27. Oak Ridge defeated Whitsett - Institute here Saturday by the score of 4 to 1. Ray, I of Whitsett, was .well-nigh .in vincible, striking out; 11 men. and al-, lowing but five hits. Lewellyn, for Oak Ridge, pitched a" great vgarae of ball, allowing two bits and striking out - seven men His support was. gijlt-edged. - 50 SHIRTWAIST FACTORY IN NEW YORK SCENE 8F TERRIBLE DISASTER MANY, DIE IN SEATS : . - ' -s New York, March 27. District At torney , Whitman announced . today that he would demand from, the New York county grand jury an indictment charging manslaughter and criminal negligence as a result of the holacust in the Triangle Waist factory The evidence has been presented to At torney Whitman that the doors were locked, this preventing many or the victims from escaping. Negliegence is also charsed to, the Bureau of Buildings, and t Rudolph T. Miller, su perintendent, will be called upon "to explain the lack of protection for the workers, v ' There was only one fire escape and it was in au out of the way place ano in. an air shaft itself, a death trap and in bad condition. One hundred and forty-five bodies had been recovered up to seven o'clock this morning and search Was still coins on. Of those recovered, ninety had been identified. Probably two score will - never be identified, many- bodies being charred beyond recognition. Of the ninety bodies iltteMHlfM-, ; only sixtten'were ; nreftf Despite the rain storm, thousand;: had gathered at the morgue at eight i o'clock this'orning searching for the bodies cf relatives. -. New York, March 27; One hundrec and fifty souls nine-tenths of thev girls from the East Side were crushed to death on the pavements, smothered by smoke, or - shriveled crips Saturday afternoonjn the worsi fire New York has known since the steamship General Slocum was burn ed to the water's edge off North Brothers Island in 1904. - Nearly all, if not all, of the vie tims were employed by the Triangle Shirtwaist Company bn the eighth, ninth and tenth floors of a ten-story loft building at 23 '"Washington Place, on the western fringe of the down town wholesale clothing, fur and mil linery district. The partners of the firm, Isaae" Harris and Max Blanck. escaped -unscathed from the office on the. tenth floor, carrying with them over an adjoining roof Blanck's two young daughters and a governess. There was not an outside fire escape od th'e building. Origin Is Not Known. How the' fire started will perhaps never be known. A corner on t the eighth , floor was its point of origin and the three upper floors only were swept. On the ninth floor 50 bodies were found; 63 or more persons were crushed to death byv jumping and more than 30 clogged the elevator shafts. The loss to propertyvwill not exceed $100,000. " Four alarms were rung within f15 minutes. Before the engines could respond, before the: nets could be stretched or the ladders raised, five girls had fallen from the eigth and ninth floors so heavily that they broke through the glass and : iron roofs of the subcellars and crashed through the very streets into the vaults beiow. Tn an hour' the fire was out; in half an hour it had done its worst; probably the death list was full in 20 minutes.' ,. Seven hundred hands, 500 of them women, were employed by the shirt waist company. They sat in their whirring machines, , the , tables before them piled with flimsy cloth the floors littered with, lirt, the, air itself full of flying, inflammable dit The first rush of flame was s Imost aii explosion. Operations died in their chairs, their lungs seared by inhaline flame. Others crowded Into theei" Vw-icr shafes, after"the cars had mad' 1. EIGHT PEOPLE KILLED WHEN "DIXIE FLYER" PLUNGED THROUGH TRESTLE MANY WERE INJURED Tifton, Ga-, March 27. One of the worst railroad disasters ever known in the . South Atlantic States, eight persons were killed and more than a dozen" injured, when train No. 93, known as the "Dixie Flyer," on, the Atlantic Coast Line and running be tween Chicago and Jacksonville, Fla., went through a trestlo over the Ala paha river, 18 miles east of here, early Saturday. John T. Watson, of -Lander, Wyoming, was to have been a bridegroom on that day had it not been for the wreck. His sweetheart, Miss Elsie Shippey, of Pasadena, Cal., who was on the train with him, and to whom he was to have been mar ried, in Jacksonville, remained at the wreck throughout the day" and night watching the efforts of the rescuers to recover . Watson's body. The cars plunged into the river without a moment's warning to the sleeping passengers, when an axle on the engine suddenly snapped when midway of the trestle. The locomo tive never left the track, but thf ender was derailed and the tank tumbled"" tojthe- bank, of the" stream The trestle is ' about:' ar jnWTo'ii'g' but ttie river was low and at th point .of the accident not more than 50 yards across. The express anc baggage, cars, two day coaches " one Pullman were , piled in an inde scribable mass in the center of the stream, but ". fortunately few of the passengers were carried beneath water. , . V senger, wTas killed; and baggagemas- senger, was killed, and Baggagemas ter J. E. Powell was probably fatall: injured by bridge timber being drive": through- their car. Conductor C. J Parnell, of Savannah, and a negro porfer named Simmons, were instant ly 'killed in the second-class day coach when it was telescoped by the baggage car. The first-class coach a new steel-car, was driven through the sleeper. In this car O. F. Bonm wart, of Henderson, Ky., was instant ly killed, while his wife beside him escaped with slight injuuries. Bonm wart's body was recovered late in the afternoon. Italian Exposition Opens. Rome, March 27. The Italian Na tional Exposition wras opened today by King Victor Emanuel inauguraIng the celebration of the fiftieth anniver sary of Italy's freedom. Among the Americans present was i. jr. muigau Attempt Made To Wreck $1000,000 Court House. ' Omaha, Neb., March 27. Two ex plosions in the basement -of the new million dollar court house at 18th and Farnum. streets Friday shook build ings and broke windows for two blocks and did considerable other damage. ; Two. cement floors in the basment of the building were torn loose . and an interior retaining wall was dam aged, but the stone walls of the un completed building were not injured. The police are unable to account for the explosions. The contractor who is constructing the court house has had some trouble with organized labor, but this trouble had been set tled. -'-V- : , . . .. A man who thinks he's smart enough, to do somebody else thinV he's smart enough not to be done by anybody else, but he isn't. their last trip. Still others were oushed off the inadequate interior ire-escape.. . -"' Officers Witness Maneuvers. - Washington, March 27. Mingling with the usual audience of a small moving picture theatre, Secretary of War Dickinson and several of the highest officials of the army Saturday witnessed a reproduction of the in itial movements and exercises of "The Maneuver division" in Texas. Be sides the Secretary, the party includ ed Major General Leonard Wood, chief of the staff of the army; Major General Ainsworth, Adjutant General of the army; Major General Arthur Murray, of the general staff, and sev eral other officers. These men were the directors of the great movement which stirred the country. This was the first opportunity to "witness the consummation of their orders." Town Politics Quiet At Goldsboro. Goldsboro, N. C, March 27. While other cities are warming up over their municipal elections and placing op posing candidates in the field, Golds boro for once in its history, seems very little concerned over the coming election to be held early, in May. So far only one candidate has an nounced himself, namely, the presen4: efficient incumbent, Mr. John R. Hig gins, and it is generallyelieved that Mayor Higgins will have no opposk tion and he has a record as head of the city government that can hardly be attacked, and with the aid of the present boavd of aldermen, his admin istration has been conducted sttictlu upon business principles. In" regard to the board of aldermen, no authen tic information has been given out by each man, but it is generally un derstood that they 'will all e candi dates and re-ellected, for their admin istration has been .wise and aggres -skvev '.V - - Eoy Stabbed To Death. Wilmington, N. C, March 27.-Bry ml Kennedy, fourteen years old, die' in the hospital here at 10:30 o'clock Saturday night as the result of a kife wound in the breast, inflicted by Clarence Summerlin, about the V same age, a half hour earlier, in the sre at the Delgado village, east o the city. The stabbing followed p quarrel between the two boys. The county authorities were notified of the tragedy. Strike Declared Off. Cincinnati, Ohio, March 27. The strike of the white firemen on - the Cincinnati, New Orleans and Texas Pacific Railroad was declared off Sat urday night, after an agreement had been signed by representatives of th Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and Enginemen and Horace Baker, general manager of the road. U. S. Imports And Exports. Washington, D. C, March 27. Ac 'cording to a buletin issued by the Department of Commerce and Labor today, the total imports in the United States for the eight- months ending February first was valued at $1,015, 831,541, while the exports reached the sum of $1,433,838,855. Nine" Burned To Death In Kentucky Louisville. Ky., March 27. Nine. persons have been - killed by fires in tlte past 24 "hours in Kentucky. At Harredsburg, ' a residence was burned and a woman and 3 children perished At Mount Vernon a woman and four children were burned to ; death in their home. .The first was the family of J. M. Bridges,, the second that of Robert Gentry. New York Stocks. iNew York, Mareh 27. Trading wa sluggish at the opening of the stocl market today, although the tone waf quite steady Many of the issuer wer unchanged. Union Pacific, Read Ing, TJ.S. Steel, Chesapeake & Ohio and Southern Pacific were all tin chanced. Consolidated Gas anr Atchison were tip 1-4, Northern Pa cific off 1-8 Canadian Pacific mad by far the best--showing, opening 5-' tbove close. . ,:. . URGING EX- V. AYCOCK REPORTED MOVEMENTCOF CER TAIN DEMOCRATS TOURING HIM OUT FOR SENATE THREE-CORNERED FIGHT Raleigh, N. C, March 27. Judging from the talk one hears all about the city and through the State offices there is a steady development in the reported' movement of certain "pro gressive Democrats" to bring out a candidate for the United States Sen ate to oppose both Senator Simmons and his present avowed opposing candidate, Governor W. W. Kitchin. The most strenuous political contest within party lines that has probably ever been known in the State has been assured for some time in the , Simmons-Kitchin race for the Senate two years hence and now the indica-. tions of a three-cornered fight still further complicates the situation. The latest estimate of the situa tion is that certain influential Demo crats terming themselves "progres sives are making a determined search for a third candidate, who they believe could walk away with the nomination for the United States Senate in a three-cornered fight. Ex Governor Charles B. Aycock is said to have received hundreds of letters the past few days from all parts of the State fronr 'Democrats urging him -to become a candidate and assuring him that they believe he could win and in doing so avert what they be lieve v.'ill be a Kitchin-Simmons con test within the party that micht roal- ly destroy Democracy as a dominant political factor for the time In this S ate. Ex-Governor Aycock is an out. spoken advocate of the re-election of F. M. Simmons to succeed! himselt in the Senate and not a great while ago declared in newspaper inter views that he could in no way be in duced .to become a candidate for the United States Senate, especially if his personal and political friend, Senator Simmons, asked to be returned, which he "is doing quite aggressively at this time. It is said that whether Governor Aycock decides to get in the race af ter' all or not the "progressives" re sponsible for the pressure being brought to bear cn him are determin ed to get an opponent for Simmons and Kitchin. E. J. Justice, of Greensboro, former Speaker of the House of Representa tives, is being mentioned with spe cial frequence's a possible candi date. Chief Justice Walter Clark 13 also much in the limelight in this re spect and there are numerous sur mises as to whether he could be in duced to give up the Chief Justiceship and try for the Senatorshlp. There is much speculation as to just who is behind this "progressive" movement, a frequent expression of opinion be ing that National Committeeman and Editor Josephus Daniels is . particu larly interested in the movement. COTTON MARKET New York, March 27. Cotton open- ' ed steady with prices unchanged to three points up. ' March contracts opened three .points higher. May two points higher, and July unchanged. Liverpool futures steady and spot active on good demand. Opening: January, 12.40; March, 14.43 J May, 14.45; July, 14.26; Au gust, 136; October,: 12,54; Decem ber, 12.43. At twelve "o'clock the market stood C March, . 14.31; -May, 14.42; October, 12.74; December, 12.56. Spots In Wilson, 14.50. A pessimist says that for every man willing to believe the truth a dozen me eager, to believe a lie. GO j; M its ! I Hi !' ' l?S 1. 1 li IN l H f 3 1 f'i li nr n I'? ill H f f Ml t r hi hi n h . J I i X !1 r 1 5 J.