"POR flOO, FOK COUNTRY AND FOR TRUTH." fiito Ctip'f Cs;a VOL. XXII. PL Yftf dUTBy N, C. FRIDAY; AUGUST 1 8 , 1911 NO.-S). Yr, la AtfTnca. TEXT-BOOKS ARE AT UST ADOPTED MANY CHANGES HAVE BEEN t.t MADE FROM LIST PREVIOUS LY USED IN STATE. MR. JOYNER READ" REPORT The Text-Book Commission Which Began on Eighth of June Made Its Report Except as to-United States Histories and Arithmetics.' Raleigh. It was an . anxious and expectant crowd of book men 'that ac cepted the invitation tQ enter the Hall of this House to hearVthe awards in the adoption of booksfor use in the public schools of Noifth Carolina for the next five years. -;jn the "previous half hour of waiting "after a notice that the award woula soon pe made the book men, some'; forty or more being present, had left the cool shade in Capitol Square and;' in the rotunda of the Capitol let f off the nervous strain by singing a Vumber of songs. There had been a; revival of the talk as to the proposition made by W. C. Warfield, representative of the World Book Company, as to getting the influence of some friend to se cure the adoption of certain books. A number of the book men were calleu in by the Commission and tesimony was given by some of 'these that Mr. Warfield had said 'he had stock in, or was a member, of the World Book Company. ,.v The report of -.the "books adopted was read by state superintendent of public instruction ir.- Y. Joyner, who prefaced his remarks by saying that he extended sympathy to the men who had not won, V. but that there jhad been a close study of the" books and the decision was made after much deliberation. The list of books which hVread showed that there were many changes from the books now in use, these being replaced by new ones. The outside report is that in the main the vote of the Sub-Commission on the books was four for and two against some of the books . se cured. The list of the books adopted does not include United States histories, which are to be recommended by a sub-committee and later adopted by the full committee. The present United States histories are White's Beginners and Chambers Higher His tory, published by the American Book Company. Neither does the list include arithmetics, though the talk Is that a question as to price, thi3 to be later arranged, was the only thing that kept back the announce ment that the award would go to the American Book Company, for Milne's Arithmetic. The books now in use are Colaw and Ellwood's Primary and Advanced, and Colaw & Duke's Intermediate, published by the B. F. Johnson Publishing Company. ' Matters Should be Given Attention president: H. E. .Litchford, of" the Raleigh chamber of commerce has presented to the business men of Raleigh a striking list of things that the members of the chamber and citizens generally should give their special attention and effort ' to the accomplishment of in the immediate future. They Include: Co-operation between the aldermen nad .county commissioners; widening Hillsboro street, fine roadway to the state fair grounds;, belt line of railway-, great boulevard; improvement of sanitary conditions, including at least two places of public comfort; lower city and county tax rates; sale of the pres ent market; stoppage of any move ment on the part of the Seaboard Air Line to cut Raleigh . from the main line; induce Atlantic Coast Line to build here from Rocky Mount and Spring Hope; aid the city bond issue and farm-life school for Wake; aid Wake Water Company in..' securing ample supply of water ' ' Carthage. The cost to the county of Moore for the listing of taxes and assessment of property for this year amounts to about $20,000.. Must ' Answer to Murder Charge. Zack Marks, who Is under arrest in Florida, is to be brought back , to Harnett county, this state, where he formerly lived, to answer the charge of murder. He is charged with kill ing Charles Ellen in Black River township. The killing was October 22, 1902. Governor Kitchin has is sued the requisition on the Governor of Florida for the prisoner and the Florida authorities are willing to rt turn the prisoner to this state to r' swer to the graver charge which been placed asuvinst hirn- FOR THE GOOD OF RALEIGH A Meeting of Committees of Chamber of Commerce A Particular Sub ject is Assigned to Each. . Raleigh. The committee of the Chamber of Commerce held their first meeting. Directly after the reorganiz ation of the chamber, President Henry E. Litchford named the directors and called on each of these to name two associates, the three constitute a com raittee. Then each director is the chairman of a committee, to which a particular subject is assigned. The committee appointments are ; all com plete except as to the one on trans portation, and the two names on this will be announced in a few days. The chairman of v one important commit tee. Dr. Wade,R. Brown, is in Kan sas, but will return in a few days, The following is the list of the com mittees: . 1. Adevrtising and Publicity: George C. Hall, chairman; J. L. Mof- ford, M. W. Tyree. 2. Streets and Highways: J. H Seara, chairman; John C. Drewry, W, A. Cooper. 3. Industries; John A. Mills, chair man; J. C. Little, W. G. Womble.. 4. Cotton and Produce Markets: Clarence Poe, chairman; Charles E Johnson," W. A. Simpkins. s 5. Membership: Virgil J. Lee, chairman; Charles B. Park, William H. Sawyer. . 6. Improvement - of Relations Be tween County and City: Herman He! ier, chairman; George Little, J. P, Wray. 7. Meetings and Hospitality: C. T, McClenaghan, chairman; Josephus Daniels, C. W. Gold. 8. Conventions: W. B. Drake, chairman; Dr. W. S. Rankin, B. H. Griffin. , . Legal Matters: W. H. Pace, chairman; James H. Pou, R. N. Slmms. 10. Freight Rates: N. B. Brough ton, chairman; N. A. Dunn, E. L, Harris. 11. Entertainments: Wade R. Brown, chairman; Joseph E. Pogue, W. H. Bagley. 12. School Questions: B. F. Mon tague, chairman; J. Y. Joyner, A. B, Hunter. 13. Trade Extension: W. G. Briggs, chairman; F. B. Arendell, John 'F, Sprague. 1 14. Transportation: Maj. J. J. Ber nard, chairman. 15. Civic Betterment: Dr. H. A. Royster, chairman; H. P. S. Keller, N. L. Walker. , 16. Public Health: Thomas M. Jordan, chairman; George W. Lay, Charles J. Parker. At the meeting President Litch ford was in the chair and Fred A. Olds at the secretary's desk. Presi dent Litchford called on the various committeemen for suggestions. . Should Drain Beaver Dam Swamp. Suggestions for draining Beaver Dam swamp in Harnett county, N. C, which were requested by Represents tive Godwin from '.he drainage engl neers of the Department of Agricul ture, were submitted in a report re ceived by him. C. W. Mengal, the de partment engineer, after a survey of the tract of 7,000 acres lying across the Cape Fear river from Dunn,' re ports that to secure good drainage a system of ditches should be cut from the midst of the swamp to the river at intervals of one mile, and that the present ditches should be enlarged and deepened. He suggests also the most practical plan to guide the local engi neers in locating the proper and nat ural location for the ditches. Land in the section affected by the swamp is now worth from $15 to $20 an acre, and it is estimated that the same land would be worth $50 to $75 an acre when the Beaver Dam swamp Is drain ed. . Farmers' Institute Meeting Closed. The most successful and largely attended institute of farmers of For syth county has ended, the sessions being held in the court house. A particularly interesting and instruc tive address was made by Mr. F. Sherman, of the state department of agriculture, on the best- methods of growing tobacco; a topic peculiarly attractive to farmers in this nreat to bacco belt. Mr. I. C. Ross of Stokes county made a fine talk stressing the importanceof improving fram lands by rotation of crops. , ' Sale of Tobacco For Month of July. The sales of tobacco from the five North Carolina markets reporting for July amounted to 163,929 pounds. The first-hand sales were 116,440; the dealers' sales 20,808 and the resales were 26,681. By markets, sales were: Towns. First-Hand. Resales. Fairmont .. ..- .. 52,545 65,82 Fair Bluff .. .. .. Ci.Sn Risville fj, 722 f.,543 ,:!on?Salem .. 2,714 20.496 am 2.210 2,216 PENNSYLVANIA IB CREMATES NEGRO VICTIM OF NORTHERN LYNCHERS HAD KILLED A SPECIAL POLICEMAN. WAS TAKEN FROM HOSPITAL Wounded Black, jSrtapped to a Hospi . tal Cot, Was Placed on a . Fire. Coatesville,- Pa. -Zachariah . Walker, a negro desperado, was carried on a cot, from the hospital here and burn ed to a crisp , by a frenzied mob of men and boys, on a fire which they ignited about a half mile from town The negro, who had shot and killed Edgar Rice, a special policeman of the Worth Iron Mills, was first dragged .to the scene of the shooting begging plteously for mercy. He had .been arrested by a posse after a search which had- stirred the countryside When the posse finally located him, he was found hiding in a cherry tree, and, with the last bullet in his revolv er, shot himself in the mouth, falling from the tree. He was removed to the hospital and placed under police guard. A crowd, numbering almost a thou sand persons, appeared at the hospi tal. The leaders were unable to gain admission, but quickly smashed the window frames and Crawled through the corridor. When Walker was taken to the hos pital he was strapped down in order to prevent his escape. The mob, see ing this, gathered up the bed, and placing 't on the shoulders of four men, started for the country. They left the town by way of the Tower ville road, and, when half a mile from the hospital, stopped at a farm house. Here they entered a field,, and, quickly gathering up a pile of dry grass, and weeds, placed the bed con taining their victim upon it. The ne gro ws begging plteously to be re leased, but his pleadings fell upon deaf ears. A match was placed to the pile of grass, and the flames shot up quickly, entirely enshrouding the screaming victim.. That not a vestige of the taurderer be left, the mob tore down the fence along the road and piled the rails upon the burning ne gro. After waiting for half an hour, the mob dispersed as quickly as it had come. A-curious feature of the burning was the fact that, there were almost as many women in the crowd as men. BIG STRIKE CAUSES RIOTING Troops Called Out to Assist the, Police in Liverpool. Liverpool, England. Serious rioting growing out of the strike in progress has occurred. One policeman was kille dby being struck on the head with a brick and many persons were injured. An altercation between a policeman and a striker during a transport work ers' demonstration at St .George's hall started the trouble, which culmi nated in a general melee. - One hundred thousand men were gathered in groups about St. George's hall listening to speeches by fabor agitators and the scenes of violence fololwing the attack upon the pdlice men necessitated the calling out of police reserves. When they arrived one party of fifteen policemen were surrounded and disarmed,, the rioters attacking them with their own batons. In the fight the commanding officer of the police was dangerously wounded. So great was the disorder that the riot act was read and troops were call ed out to assist the police. Oklahoma Mob Lynches a Negro. Durant, Oklahoma. A mob of 500 whites captured and shot to death an 'unidentified negro who attacked and shot Mrs. Redden Campbell, near here, and afterward burned the negro's body. ' The negro was killed after a running fight in which he exhausted his ammunition. When he fell, volley after volley of bullets were poured into his body by the mob. . It was then taken to the home of his victim and identified. N ew York-Chicago Limited Wrecked. Fort Wayne, Ind. Four persons ere killed and 30 injured when the Pennsylvania 18-hour train en route from Chicago to New York, jumped the track on the western outskirts oi the city while going fifty 'miles an hour. In leaving the rails the two gines pulling the passenger train eswlned a freihsrt engine and the t-ee piled up in a mass of bent and twiMod iron. The baggage car, smok er, bi;f;'et and two s 'copers turned over in' the ditch. HAY FEVER SEASON icw ' ' - " ' " GENERAL GORDON IS DEAD Heat Hastened End of Chief Officer of the United Confederate Veteran. Memphis, Tenn. George W. Gor don, soldier, lawyer and statesman, is dead. Worn by an illness dating from his last political campaign, when he was re-elected to the national house of representatives, the last general of the Confederacy to serve in that body, answered the summons to join the in visible majority here. George Washington Gordon was born in Giles county, Tennessee, Oc tober 5, 1836. In his early boyhood, his parents removed to Texas, and later to Mississippi, but as a youth, he returned to Tennessee and entered the Western Military academy, from which he was graduated in 1859. His first activity was as a civil engineer. At the outbreak of the Civil war, General Gordon enlisted as drill mas ter of the Eleventh Tennessee infant ry, C. S. A. Within a few weeks he was made a captain, and was later promoted to a lieutenant-colonel's rank, and in about a year was com missioned colonel. In 1864 he was named brigadier general. He partici pated with distinction in a number of engagements, and at one time was taken prisoner, but was exchanged in ten days. At the close of the war General Gor don studied and practiced law. He was elected a member of the Sixtieth congress from the Tenth Ten nessee district, and re-elected to the Sixty-first and Sixty-second congress es. He was the only Confederate gen eral numbered in the present con gress. General Gordon was chosen com mander-in-chief of the United Confed erate Veterans at the reunion of 1910, at Mobile, Ala. He wa3 re-elected to that position at the 1311 reunion at Little Rock, Ark., last May. New Orleans. As the next senior officer of the late Gen. George W. Gor don, Lieut. Gen. C. Irvine Walker as sumes command of the United Confed erate Veterans in orders Issued through the office of William E. Mlc kle adjutant general and chief of staff.' ... OCEAN STEAMSHIP SINKS 93 Lives Lost When French Steamer Sinks. Gibraltar. The French steamer Emir foundered five miles east of Ta- rifa, Spain, in the Straits of Gibraltar. Ninety-three persons were drowned. An hour later in a dense fog she collided with the British steamer Sil- verton bound from Newport, England, for Turanto, itaiy. The crew of the latter rescued 27 the Emir's crew and passengers. Th a Silverton later nut in here with her starboard bow stove in and her re peak full of water. The Emir sunk a few minutes after he collision. Sixty-nine passengers of the crew went down with the ip. Twelve of the crew and 15 pas sengers were saved. All the passen gers were French . : Canadian . Burns Our Flag. London, Ontario. Thomas Midge- ley who prides himself . in the title aakc-e hater," publicly burned the Stars and Stripes In the streets of the town of Woodstock. A few hours be fore seme one In a spirit of mis- chk ef had nailed an American flag above the door of his shop. When Midgcley saw the flag he called his ghbois around him and walking to the middle of t.ie street liplitol a ir.-o and Burned the flag. Tfcen ho scat '.trod the as-l.es about th. strt TWO NEW STATES ADMITTED NEW MEXICO AND ARIZONA ARE GRANTED STATEHOOD BY THE SENATE. v It Is Said the President Will Allow the Bill to Become a Law With out His Signature. - Washington. The bill granting statehood to New Mexico and Arizo na, legislation that has been for many years the dream of the people of these territories, was passed by the senate 53 to 18 after rejection of the Nelson amendment, which proposed striking out of the Arizona constitution its ju diciary recall . provision. ' The bill as passed by the senate dif fers only slightly from the house measure, and it is said may be unsat isfactory to President Taft. He has contended all along that he would be glad to sign the statehood bill if the Nelson amendment prevailed, but that it was a grave question whether he would be willing to sign it if the amndment were defeated, as it was, by 43 to 26. The indications are that the bill will become a law with out his signature. The bill as passed compels Arizona as a condition precedent to entry into the. Union to submit the recall propo sition to the voters f cr final decision as to whether it shall remain in their constitution. New Mexico must vote on a proposition embodied in the bill which would make the constitution of the state easier of amendment. Lower Prices Paid Farmers. Washington. The problem of the high cost of living apparently is be ing solved, at least so far as farm products are concerned, for the farm ers are getting lower prices for their products this year than they received a year ago. According to official fig ures issued by the department of ag riculture. Potatoes were the notable exception, their price having more than doubled. Potatoes averaged 109;6 per cent, higher and hay 29.9 per cent. higher. ,t Washington to Mississippi Road. Bristol, Tenn. With a view to con structing a national highway between Washington, D.. C, and the Mississip pi, there was organized here the Bris-tol-to-Washington Highway association in a meeting attended by many prom inent Virginians. ' The purpose of this organization is to take up here on the Tennessee-Virginia border the mat ter of extending the Mempals-to-Bris- tol automobile and tourist stone , high way to the national capital. Earthquakes In California. San Bernardino, Cal. The most se bere earthquake shock felt in this vi cinity in years shook the business buildings with such severity that the occupants fled into the streets. The damage was trivial. A previous shock had been felt. Los Angeles, Cal. A slight earth quake shock was felt here. Agree on Wool Revision. Washington. Doffing their coats and for the first time in history in viting the press to be present, the con ferees on the wool tariff revision and farmers' free list bills sat down in con ference to compromise their differenc es. Finally they effected a complete agreement on wool and bot:an consid eration cf tV.'1 fi'i,,; i'i bid. President Taft Is cxiiected to veto the bill as it now stands. liTe committee wiii cow ti'c vp '' free list "bill. SPIES NUMEROUS IN UNITED SITES ARMY SECURES STARTLING EVI DENCE OF ACTIVITY OF FOREIGN SPIES. STEPS TAKEN TO PUNISH Many Foreigners Are Carefully Study ing Fortifications of United r States. Washington. Startling evidence of the pernicious activity of foreign epie3 is In the possession of the army gen eral staff, which accounts for the' se rious consideration that is noW being given to the most trifling report at attempts to discover the military se crets of the country. Some of these incidents are of comparatively recent date, and it was upon the submission of such information to a secret ses sion of the judicial "committee of the house that legislation was secured at the last session of congress providing fnr fho coirDra nnnlehmant rsf enia in tlmfl Clf Tl. An Englishman in Calcutta picked up in the streets a small package of blue-prints showing every detail 'of' the defenses of Corregidor island, the main stronghold of the United States in the Philippines. The prints were not copies of any drawing or charts iyepared for use of the United States, buti were evidently, the result of a careful and deliberate investigation of the official and confidential records of the United State3. hTe existence of the blueprints made it evident that there were otner copies m existence. The Englishman sent the papers ' to war department here, but the most . careful investigation failed to discover the means by which the Information- had been obtained. A waiter In a Seattle hotel was found to be a foreign officer in dis guise, possessing many drawings and notes he had made of the Pacific coast defenses. ' An' American ambassador' notified the state department .that a f certain captain belonging to the army of the country here he was stationed had been detailed to spend , three years secretly investigating the American countries and studying their military onditions. , ' Even the Panama canal has not Vs caped; one of the engineers found a foreign officer, an attache to one of the American countries, secretly study ing the canal from a stretegic stand point, and he understood that there were six or seven other officers of the same nationality in the United States gathering military information. A New York policeman arrested an American for a trivial offense and found in his trunk military maps and information in which convinced the officials that he was in the .employ-of a foreign government, but the inci dent that convinced the judiciary com mittee of the necessity for the pro tective law occurred less than a year ago in the Philippines. An enlisted man in the engineers was offered $25,000 by two foreign of ficers for the plans, of the defenses of the Corregidor island. "Being the official photographer, he had ample opportunity to get all the necessary pictures, having first informed his su perior officer of the attempt. A trap was laid and the two foreign, spies were captured. But habeas corpus proceedings were obtained and they were released, as there was then no law in the Philippines or United States under which they could be prosecuted. Washington. For the first time in many years the war department is perturbed over the case of an alleged spy in the army. Capt. James, Wilson,, the army re- curitlng officer at Indianapolis, has ad vised the department that he holds affidavits accusing Private George Pe ters of being an Austrian secret agent, and the department is working on the charges to determine a course of action. It is not believed the chargeB, if well founded, indicate that the Aus trian government, even remotely, con templates future hostilities with Amer ica. The probable object of the al leged spy was to discover for his gov ernment the composition of the re markable high explosive "dunnite," political War Divides Mexico, Mexico City. Dr: Francisco Jom anr.nounccs his willingness to toco: no a candidate fur the presidency cf t he republic. . It becamo known tb'U t old fi:-ht bet'.M-on t'.iureii tin 1 t'. would Le re.-;iM(M i'i ?' .ico, N' withstanding th? separation effect by Benito Juarez, almost half a tury ago, the Catholic elwci, r-c5 throitva the- National CathoJIO; 'r has ILHcd a-caii tor i convv