t VOL 30 SMITHFIELD, N. C., FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1911 Number 27 ONE DOLLAR PER YEAR. EDUCATION OOOD ROADS GOOD HEALTH PROGRESS FIVE CENTS PEE COPY, bad WORK OF MAD DOG HE bites wife and two chil dren OF MR. CHARLEY LEE. He Attacked Child and Mrs. Lee Went to Her Assistance With Baby in Her Arms. The Dog Then Caught Hold of Baby and Had to Be Prized Away. Last week a dog belonging to Mr. joe Parker, of Four Oaks, went mad &nd did considerable damage before he could be subdued. He bit sever al hogs and a cow, worth seventy five dollars, belonging to Mr. Char ley Wellons, all of which have since , died. The dog went to the home of Mr. Charley Lee, a mail carrier, and atttacked a little girl by getting hold of the calf of one of her legs. He held on and tried to tear her flesh all he could. Mrs. Lee, with baby in her arms, ran to the dog to beat him away from her daughter. He th&n turned loose the girl and caught the baby by one of its feet. Mrs. Lee and another woman tried to get the dog away from the baby, but it seemed they were about to fail. Fin ally one of them took the dog’s tongue and twisted it while the oth er prized open his mouth from the foot of the child. Mrs. Lee is now in Italeigh with the two children for treatment. PARISIAN JOURNALIST BEATS PHINEAS FOGG. Paris, Aug. 26.—Andre Jaeger Schmidt, the Parisian journalist, drove an automobile to The Daily Excelsior office at 9:02 a. m., official ly completing his circuit of the world in 39 days, 19 hours, 43 min utes and 37 4-5 seconds. Jaeger-Schmidt started from Paris at 1:45 p. m., July 17, to beat the 63 day record of M. Stiegler of the Paris Matin. Jaeger-Schmidt could have arrived at his goal in Paris two hours earlier if he had not stay ed at Cherbourg after midnight for a supper given in his honor by a number of journalists. MORE COSTLY TO KEEP SWEET. Price of Sugar Soaring Again and Grocers Tear Their Hair and Gasp. New York, Aug. 30.—Grocery cir cles here showed concern today over the high prices now prevailing in the sugar market. There was another ad vance in granulated during the day to 6.25 cents, representing a full cent rise in the last few weeks and the highest level in many years. Qoming at the height of the canning season, this advance is of vital interest to consumers all over the country. It is attributed primarily to a poor sugar beet crop in Europe, following pro longed drouth this summer. To make matters worse, the Cuban crop, which furnishes the bulk of raw material for American refiners, also proved short, and prices began to soar. Far-sighted dealers bought large supplies some months ago, leaving the market almost bare of stock, and raw sugars in consequence have made new high records, while many opera tors in the street predict that the end is not yet in sight. Two Young Men Rob Store. Two young men were before Jus tice M. G. Gulley, at Clayton last Monday for robbing a store Saturday night near Liberty Cotton Mill. The store was run by Pinkney Glover. The entrance was made about mid night. The young men raised a ■window and pulled apart the iron bars which were placet? in front of the windows for fenders. One of them went in between the bars which they had bent apart. It is said they helped themselves freely ° soft drinks and cigars. The ar rests were made Sunday afternoon. Clair Ferrell and Jim Hill were the two young men. Each gave a hun dred dollar bond for appearance here at September court. Another report says these young rhen w'ere drunk and went to the Store hoping to find more intoxi cants and probably knew but little df W’hat they were doing. trerman scientists, who are excava ting in Babylon, believe that they have discovered the ruins of the Tower of Babel. GOVERNMENT WEEKLY WEATHER REPORT. Washington, Aug. 29.—In the East ern States of the cotton belt the weather during the week ending yes terday was mostly favorable although the rainfall was generally light and it was still dry in some sections, ac croding to the National Weekly Wea ther Bulletin, issued to-day. The weather continued partly cloudy, with frequent showers in Louisiana, Ark ansas and Mississippi. Dry weath er prevailed in Texas and Oklahoma the first of the week while good showers and cooler weather came the latter part over most of these states. Conditions by States follow: Virginia—Precipitation about nor mal in north and above normal in all other sections, except extreme south eastern. Sunshine above average. North Carolina—Scattered show ers, some good local rains in south ern and central portions. The tem perature above normal. Sunshine above normal. South Carolina—Temperature and precipitation about normal, most of rainfall occurring at close of week, accompanied by gales on coast. Sun shine about normal. Happenings at “Wildwood." Wildwood (near Clayton), Aug. 30., —Misses Julia and Lovie Austin have been entertaining a party of friends at "Wildwood,” their lovely coun try home, near Clayton, during the past week. The guests of honor being Misses Virginia Kendall, of Goldsboro; Allie Bailey, of . Kenly; Mabel Brannam, of Clayton; and Messrs. Hugh Page and Elmo Gattis, of Clayton and Dr. Floyd G. Gower, of Gowersville. The week has been very pleasant ly spent in picnics, parties, hay rides and fishing excursions. On Monday evening a large party of friends were delightfully enter ui;i.;d by the hostess. Games and conventional discourses were enjoyed oy a.i present. At 11 o’clock the guests were in vited into the dining hall, where a most delicious four-course luncheon was served on tables decorated only as the delicate, artistic hand of wo ma.» can do such things. The following-named young people, in couples, were in attendance: Miss Virginia Kendall with Mr. Elmo Gat tis, Miss Allie Bailey with Dr. F. G. Gower, Miss Mildred Barbour with Mr. Hugh Page, Miss Gladys Bar bour and Mr. Saxe Barnes, Miss Lil lian Baucom and Mr. Jesse Austin, Miss Mabel Brannam with Mr. Guy Penny, Miss Elsie Penny and Mr. Roy Baucom, Miss Carmen Gattis and Dr. J. H. Austin, Miss Meta Baucom with Mr. Parker Rand, Miss Julia Austin with Mr. Devan Barbour, Miss Lovie Austin with Mr. Ronnie Ellis. Most exquisite music, vocal and in strumental, was rendered during the evening, and all who were present on that glad, delightful occasion are yet fond in ther praises of their hos tesses, Misses Austin.—News and Ob server. PRESIDENT WILL VISIT 24 STATES ON NEXT TOUR. Beverly, Mass., Aug. 28.—Twenty four of the United States will be visited by President Taft on the swing around the circel, according to a partially completed schedule an nounced to-day. The President will start on September 15, and with the exception of five States and Arizona and New Mexico, he will pass through every Commonwealth west of the Mississippi. Included in the 24 are Massachusetts, New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Michigan, Illi nois, Indiana, Missouri, Iowa, Kan sas, Nebraska, Colorado, Wyoming, Utah, Nevada, California, Oregon, Washington, Idaho, Montana, South Dakota, Minnesota, Wisconsin and Maryland. Among the big towns and cities the President will visit are Syracuse, Erie, Detroit, Chicago, St. Louis, Omaha, Kansas, Denver, Cheyenne, Salt Lake City, Los Angeles, Seattle, Spokane, Wallace, Idaho; Butte and Billings, Mont.; Deadwood, Aberdeen and Pierre, S. D.; St. Paul and Min neapolis, Milwaukee and Pittsburg. The Charlotte Observer says that prohibition prohibits just like a sif ter holds sand. And the police court demonstrates that regulation regu lates just like a sieve holds water. —Richmond Virginian. * HARRY ATWOOD HOLDS RECORD. His Flight From St. Louis to New York the Longest Distance Ever Traveled by Man in Heavier than-air Machine. New York, August 25.—Sailing se renely over. New York’s myriad wa ter craft, its ferryboats and ocean liners, Harry N. Atwood, the Boston aviator, arrived in New York in his aeroplane to-day, the first man in history to travel as far as from St. Louis to New York by way of Chica go, in a heavier-than-air machine. Atwood’s safe landing on Gover nor’s Island, after flying from Ny ack, N. Y., above the Hudson Ri ver, through a fog which made him dimly visible to the million eyes that watched him, was a notable in cident in the annals of aeronautics. He not only broke the world’s re cord, covering 1,265 miles in an air line, or perhaps 100 more miles with his- detours, but he flew all the way in the same biplane, and with no important mishaps. Atwood’s flight is comparable only to that made by fast trains, for he covered the distance in an actual flying time of twenty-eight hours and thirty-one minutes. Distance covered in air line, 1, 265 miles. Total distance including detours around New York and otther places, 1,365 miles. Started from St. Louis 8:05 A. M. August 14. Finished Governor’s Island 2:38 P. M., August 26. Flying time for entire trip, 28 hours 31 minutes. Number of flights en route, 20. Average distance of each flight, 63 1-4 miles. rseais previous worm s record Dy 101 nPles, not crediting him with the extra 100 miles which he claims for detours. 'io-day’s trip begun at Nyack, N*. Y. twenty-five miles north of For ty-second Street, New York, at 1:52 P. M.; finished at Governor’s Island at 2-38 P. M. Flying time for to-day’s trip, 46 minutes. x WILL RECOMMEND A RURAL PARCELS POST. Washington, Aug. 28.—In his annu al report to congress in December, Postmaster General Hitchcock will re commend the establishment of a par cel post service on the rural mail routes, a crystalization into law of the proposed increase in second class mail rates, the enactment of a pro posed law providing for a radical change in the system of compensat ing railways for transporting mails. SUIT OVER OX COST LITIGANTS OVER $1,000. Whiteshurg, Ky., Aug 24.—The celebrated ox suit that has been fought for years in the County Court here between the Mason boys and Jesse Cook, Rockhouse citizens, has been settled, the Mason boys winning the suit. Though the ox was worth less than $40 the case has cost each party more than $500. SUDDEN DEATH OF A GOOD WOMAN AT DUNN. Last Sunday evening Mr. H. N. Bizzell and bis wife started to church and on the way Mrs. Bizzell stop ped to see a sick lady. There Mrs. Bizzell died suddenly in a chair where only five minutes before she was apparently in good health. Her unexpected death was a shock to the whole community. The funeral was preached Tuesday afternoon at Dunn Baptist church by her pastor, Dr. W. P... Cullom, who was assisted by Rev. T. H. King, of Smithfield. The remains were interred in the town cemetery about 5 o’clock in the presence of a large number of friends and relatives. She leaves a husband and two sons and two daughters. Mr. James A. Bizzell, professor in Cornell University, Itha ca, N. Y., and Mr. Lawrence Bizzell, who has charge of the Dunn elec tric plant, are her sons. One of her daughters is the wife of Mr. Claude Grantham, of Goldsboro, and the other lives at Falcon and is the wife of Mr. Julius Culbreth. She was reared In Johnston county, her maiden name being Katie Underwood. She was a sister of Mr. J. D. Un derwood of Smithfield. STORM DOES DAMAGE SEVEN LOSE LIVES IN GREAT STORM AT CHARLESTON. Furious Wind Blew Nearly One Hun dred Miles An Hour.—Tide of 8 Feet Inundated Low Quarter of City.—The Damage $1,000,GOO. Charleston, S. C., via Summerville, S. C., Aug. 28.—As the result of a freak storm which struck this city and Savannah last night and which reached hurricane proportions, Char lesion virtually has been isolated for 24 hours. Seven persons are known to have been killed near here and property losses, it is estimated, •will leach $1,000,000. The storm reached the proportions of a gale about 1 o’clock yesterday afternoon. The wind velocity increas ed from 48 miles an hour at 1:25 P. M. to 94 miles at 10:20 P. M„ when the wind guage was put out of adjustment. At noon to-day the wind was only brisk and the sun was trying to shine. The rainfall was more than two inches. The disturbance was re ported to be west of Charleston and working away. The tide was something over eight feet during the storm, three feet short of the record of 1893. Consid erable damage was done by the wa ter in the low sections of the city, necessitating the removal of many persons from their homes. The wa ters have caused washouts on the approaches to the union station, pre venting the operation of trains. Alonzo Coburn, an engineer on the Charleston division of the Southern nanway, was instantly Kiueu oy ny ing timbers. A Mr. Smith, of Colum bia, and Motorman Cutter, of the local street railway system, were kill ed and L. D. Kintworthy, of St. Stephen’s, and E. B. Hill were se riously injured when a trestle col lapsed. Two unidentified women ''ere drowned when their home was Hooded and several negroes are re ported among the storm victims. Great damage is feared for the rice and sea island cotton industries by the rise of the tide. Not since the cyclone of 1885 has the water front here suffered so severely. NAME GORMAN FOR GOVERNOR. Primary Returns Indicate That Dem ocrats of Maryland Have Nomi nated Late Senator's Son. Baltimore, Md., Aug. 29.—Returns from to-day’s Democratic primary el ection in Maryland indicate that State Senator Arthur Pue Gorman, son of the late United States Sen ator Gorman, will be the nominee of the democratic party for governoi at the November election. Mr. Gor man’s opponent in the primary was State Senator Blair Lee, who had ’.e support of Congressman Tal bot and Gov. Crothers and the so called progressive element. To-day’s primary also determined the nomina tion for attorney general, comptrol ler, memoers of the Maryland sen ate and house of delegates and the State central committee. Our Oldest States. Admitting New Mexico and Arizona to Statehood is somewhat like intro ducing one’s great grand aunt to the family. How old civilization in this part of the new world is nobody can even guess intelligently but compar ed to Santa Fe and other settlements of the desert our one-time oldest city, St. Augustine, is only of to-day. Before the Spaniards came in the 16th century there were the Pueb los, whose arts and culture may have been 1,000 years old and they liv ed on the ruins of other peoples whose potteries and buried cities may have been coeval with the pyr amid builders or older yet. Irriga tion works are going to deliver val uable finds to the archeologist and the history of mankind will be changed.— Knoxville Sentinel. “Wasn’t that elopement story a highly colored one?’’ “I should say it was. The father was purple with rage, the girl red with apprehension, her chum green with envy, the minister white with fear the fellow showed a distinct yellow streak, while the whole wed ding party were blue at the out come.”—Baltimore American. POSTAL SAVINGS BANK TO BE IN GREENSBORO. Washington, Aug. 28.—Postmaster General Hitchcock to-day designated Greensboro as a depositary for pos tal savings bank funds. This is the second first class office to be es tablishro in North Carolina, Wilming ton having been designated a few days ago. It was announced at the postoffice department that the large offices are proving such a success that it is expected that, all of the 426 first class postoffices will have been de signated by the end of September and that the 5,000-odd thirdclass of fices will be well under way. Pou’8 Good Speech. The Washington correspondents and the papers are still talking about the great speech made by Ed. Pou or. the president's veto of the wool en schedule. His speech was short but many people regard it as a masterly effort. Soon after the pres ident’s veto was read Mr. Pou ask ed permission to address the house for five minutes. He began his speech by saying it was significant that no one had dared to speak in defense of the present rates on schedule K of the woolen schedule. He said that the democrats had been attempting to revise the tariff, sched ule by schedule, a plan which Pres ident Taft had said would prevent log-rolling. "It cannot therefore be urged that the veto of this bill should be sustained because the bill has any relation whatever to anoth er schedule,' said Mr. Pou. "No rnena or the administration can of fer such objection to revision of the wool schedule, for we have been revising the tariff in exact accordance with the wishes of Mr. Taft.” Then Mr. Pou pointed out that the constitution of the United States provides that whenever the president shall fail to sign a bill he shall return it to congress, to gether with his “objections” to the measure. Then Mr. Pou pointed out that this veto message contain ed no “objections” to the bill which had just been returned to the house. “In substance the president admits that it may be a good bill. He does not say the import duties are too low; he does not say that the rates fail to cover the difference in cost here and abroad. The only objec tion offered by the president con sists of his own lack of information. This is not a veto message, it is a plea in confession and avoid ance.” Continuing, the speaker said: I here is one schedule in the Payne-Aldrich lav* which has no defender on this floor so far as we have heard up to this time. It : has often been charged that sched ! ale K in the Dingley law was writ i ten by an agent of the woolen man i ufacturers. One thing is certain, i these rates are indefensible, and an ; other thing is also certain, and that is the influence of the woolen manufacturers was strong enough tc have schedule K in the Dingley bill brought forward and incorporated in the Payne bill with little change. In this very measure the president him self condemns the unjust rates in the Payne law. He shares the be lief that many rates in the present schedule are too high and in excess of any needed protection for wool grower or manufacturer.’ ’’ Mr. Pou said the people had suf fered and struggled to have the out rage corrected. He said that when the president made his famous Wi nona speech that there was not a man in the United States who be lieved that Mr. Taft would veto a bill which levies a duty of forty-nine per cent on woolen goods and cloth ing and a duty of twenty-nine per cent on raw wool. “The president expresses great so licitude for ‘more than a million oi our countrymen engaged in the pro duction of wood and the manufacture of woolens.’ ” Mr. Pou was warmly congratulat ed when he closed his speech bj members of the democratic side ant by a few republicans.—RaleigI Times. The clock in the tower of Trinity church, New York, is 100 years old Rust and age have played havoc witl it. It is to be replaced by one o modern make, having four dials each six feet in diameter, with num erals inscribed in stone. SMALL BOY CRIED FIRE STARTED PANIC iN CANONSF-URG MOTION PICTURE SHOW. Twenty-Six Dead, More Hurt.—Twen ty-Five Were Seriously Injured And Thirty Sustained Minor Wounds—Terrible Scene. Canonsburg, Pa., Aug. 27 —Twenty six dead from suffocation; 25 serious ly hurt, and 30 suffering from mi nor injuries. That is the amount of human toll exacted by an inexcusable panic at a moving picture show in the Can onsburg opera house Saturday night. The moving picture machine develop ed a sligh1- defect. It sputtered a bit. A small boy shouted “Fire!” at the same time starting for the narrow exit. Botus Dubrowski, a foreign miner, a giant in proportions, jumped from his seat and ran wild ly for the same exit. In a moment there was a fighting, struggling mass after him. At the head of a nar row stairway which led to the street the foreigner tripped. As he rolled down the stairs he swept others from their feet who were awaiting their turn to enter the theatre, and soon there was an indescribable mass of human beings at the foot of the steps battling like madmen. The bodies clogged the way. The men walked over them and fought for positions of safety until, over whelmed by the height of the mov ing mass behind, they too were crushed down to death. It was all ended in a few min utes. Firemen, policemen and cool headed citizens untangled the human j mass. The unhurt and those slight ly injured were pulled Irom the top of the pile. Next came the more seriously hurt. Then the rescuers came to the silent forms of those who had reached the fata, stairway first. One after another the vic tims, many of them women and small children, were carried to the side walk. All had been suffocated. Manager Ferguson endeavored to stop the panic. Accompanied by his wife he went to the stage. Calling loudly to the frightened people to follow, he lead fully 300 to safety. Of the 26 dead, 13 were children, seven of them pupils in the public schools. To-day it was decided to postpone for a week the opening of the schools. Arthur McPeake was passing the building when the bodies began to pile up at the door. The young man rushed to the rescue and was in the act of dragging a body from the pile when a man came shouting down the stairs. He struck McPeake on the back and the young man’s neck was broken. Sydney Rittiger was at the performance with his fi ance, Miss Lulu Fisher. Before en tering the building they had stop ped at a jewelry store nearby and Rittiger had bought the ring that was to have been used at their wedding. Both were killed. Will Lane, an employe of the Canonsburg pottery and a member of the volunteer firemen’s organiza tion, hastened to assist firemen working at the pile of bodies at the entrance, when he came upon the lifeless forms of his two children lying beside his unconscious wife. Many other heartrending tragedies were enacted during and following the awful panic. It developed to-day that there was no flash in the operating room of the theatre. Manager Ferguson of the opera house explained that when the film broke a bright light was thrown on the screen. The frightened boy imagined it was fire and unconscious ly shouted out the death knell of more than a score of people. FIFTEEN KILLED IN GREAT STORM. Charleston, Aug. 10.—Additional re ports from the country surrounding Charleston received last night brings the list of dead as a result of ,the terrific storm of Sunday night up to fifteen. This list is expected to be enlarged wrhen reports are received from the more remote sea islands. Conservative estimate places th» property damage in the neighborhood of $1,000,000. ! The Madrid telephone company* , though the principal one in Spain, - with stations in nineteen leading cities, has only 3,795 subscribers.