tpje cSmitl)fielii Herald price one dom.ar in year. "TRUE TO OURSELVES, OUR COUNTRY AND OUR GOD.'' single copies three cento VOL. 20. SMITIIFIELD, N. C., FRIDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1901. NO. 40. ROANOKE ISLAND. The Classic Land of all English America, Which will Live as the Mother-Earth ot American Liberty. Extract from the "Picturesque History of North Carolina" by Joseph Sea well Jones, re-printed at this time by request of the State Literary and Historical Association: I ha ve never wandered over the island ot Roanoke without a feel ing of melancholy, as intense as that of Byron whilst contem plating the fallen greatness of Greece. The days of her glory are over, and gone with those be yond the flood; but still she is to me an island of the heart, for her shores are the graves of the war like and the wise. The native In dian built his Maclucomack on her hills; and there, too. stood the city of Raleigh, the birth-place of the Anglo-American; and thus was Roanoke known long before the beach of Jamestown was set tled or the rock of Plymouth con secrated. She is the classic land of all English America, and will live in the future story of our re public as the mother-earth of American liberty. The illustrious names of Raleigh, of Cavendish, of Greenville and of Drake?the heroes of the reign of Elizabeth are a part and portion of her his tory. Hariot, the mathematician . 1 t,i , 11.i .i ir,, fnr anu piuiunupuci ui uuv up,\., >v/> the spac e of a whole year studied its natural resources and Indian history; and nearly two hundred and fifty years since gave to the world a hook unequalled for the accuracy and the interest of its details. It would seem, indeed, as if the chivalry and learning of that age had contributed this splendid representation, to give a dazzling brilliancy to the early history of that State on whose shores the Hag of England was first unfurled, and in whose val leys, and over whose hills, the mountain goddess Liberty first shouted the cry of American In dependence. Hear witness, Meck lenburg, on the 20th of .May, 177"). Hut it is not historic associa tion alone which makes sacred the shores and the vine-clad for ests of Roanoke. Nature seems to have exerted herself to adorn it as the Eden of the New World. The richest garniture of flowers, the sweetest minstrelsy of birds, are there. In traversing the northern section of the island, in the spring time of the year, dow ers and sweet-scented herbs, in the wildest luxuriance, are strewn along your winding way, wel coming you with their fragrance to their cherished isle. The wild rose bush, which at times springs up into nurseries of one hundred yards in extent, '"bloom blush ing" to the song of the thousand birds that are basking in ligr bowers. The mocking-bird, too, whatever ornithologists may say of its "chimney habits, ' makes this liis favorite haunt: anil 1 myself have seen him pillowed on the highest cluster of roses, and swinging with his weight to the slender tree, as lie warbled out his most, exquisite song. It may be, however, that Roanoke is the very spot where, in the imitation of the Eastern queen of song, the mockingbird feh in love with the rose. There are stately pine forests extending along the centre of the island; but, the most beautiful of its trees are what are commonly called dogwood, the laurel, and a delicate species of the white oak. 1 have seen a forest com posed of these trees, the branches and limbs of which were literally intertwisted and knitted together by the embraces of the Roanoke vine, which here, in its native garden,grows with extraordinary exuberance. Within the deep shadesof these reclining vintages, the spirit of solitude at times reigns in undis turbed majesty. At midday, when the,heat of the summer's sun is too glowing for exertion, there is not the chirp of a bird to break the solemnity of the snot. The long and slender vine snake, which at other hours is seen in dustriously threading his way through the mazes o! the vintage, has now suspended himself on a twig, an l hangs as idle and as still as a black silk cord. If you hear the tread of footsteps, it is not of man, hut the stealthy re treat of an unsuspecting fawn, which hath slept too long, and which now, like a woodland nymph, hies away on the ap proach of man. But in t he morn ing and in the evening this scene of quiet and of repose is all changed. It is then the granary of the island, and the birds have all assembled and are warbling in bacchanal confusion their morning or evening hymn. The scenery of Roanoke is neither grand nor sublime. There are 110 Alpine summits to mingle with clouds, but a series of gentle un dulations, and a few abrupt hills. In the valleys of which the richly dressed scenery I have described may be found. If it should ever be the lot of the reader to stroll under the vintage shades of Roanoke?made impervious to the rays of the sun by the rich foliage and clustering grapes above him?he will not venture to discredit the highly wrought sketches of Hariot, nor mock the humbler enthusiasm of the vol ume now before liiin 1 remember once to have stood upon the loftiest eminence of the island, and to have watched t he progress of a sunset It was on a sum mer's eve which had been made peculiarly clear by a violent tnunaer squall tne preceding night, and not a film of a cloud or a vapor was to be seen about the horizon or in the blue vault of heaven. There was not a breath of air to stir the slender leaf of the few lofty pines that straggled around nie, and even the mocking bird seemed to have huslied his capricious song, to en joy the intense feeling of the mo ment. To the westward qf the island, the waters of the Albe marle crept sluggishly along; and in the winding current of the swash several vessels stood, with outspread but motionless wings. Away down to the south, the Pamlico spread itself out, like an ocean of molten gold, gleaming along the banks of the Chika maeomico and llatteras; and, contrasted with tiiis, were the dark waters which separate Roan oke from the sea-beach, and which were now shaded from the tints of the sunset by the whole entent of the island. A sea of glory streamed along the narrow ridge?dividing the island waters from the ocean; and beyond this the boundless Atlantic heaved her chafed bosom of sapphire and of gold against the base of yon stormy cape. I enjoyed and lived in that sunset and twilight hour. I thought of the glorious destiny of the land on which 1 trod?as glorious as the waters and the earth then around me. 1 thought of the genius and thedeathof Raleigh? of the heroic devotedness of Greenville?of the gallantry of Cavendish and Drake?of the 1 . V I i .i id, ?t' ? lio iinlJo 1 *'?I IIIIII^ *u tun nu?\/i lur m/wn ness of Manteo, the Lord of Roanoke?of the adventurous expedition of Sir Ralph Lane up tin- river Moratook?of the snv nge array of the bloodthirsty Wingina?of the melancholy fate of the last of the Raleigh colo nies?and 1 then thought of those exquisite lines of Byron, "Shrine of the mig-hty. ran it he That this is all remains of thee?" Disappointment. Intimate Friend?flow did you enjoy your visit to Japan? Congressman I'hresh?Oh. there's no special distinction in a public man traveling through that country. The blamed heath ens are so polite that they call everything "honorable" from a shoe peg to a mountain.?Chicago Tribune. Foils A Deadly Attack. "My wife was so ill that good physicians were unable to help her," writes M. M Austin,of Win chester. Ind., "but was complete ly cured by Br. King's New Life Bills." They work wonders in stomach and liver troubles. Cure constipntion, sick headache. 2.">c. at Hood Bros, drug store. STATE NEWS. Sbort Items ol Interest Clipped and Culled From Our State Exchanges. A number of norihern capital ists arc prospecting for oil near Asheville. President Roosevelt has ap pointed VV. W. Rollins to be postmaster at Asheville. (iov. Ay cock has changed "North Carolina Week" at the Charleston exposition from Jan uary 20th to April 7th. Governor Aycock has appoin ted .Judge Thomas It. 1'urnell chairman of the McKinley fund committee for this State. W. M. Mitchell, of Guilford county, has been appointed a clerk in the war department at Washington at a salary of $1, 000 per year. For this season up to Decem ber 1st, 11,218,958 pounds ot leaf tobacco have been sold on the Wilson market against 11, 281,R30 pounds for same period last year. State Auditor Dixon says the pension warrants will be sent out December loth. State Treasurer Lacy says he is accumulating funds so as to be able to meet them promptly. The total this year is almost exactly $200,000. Senators Prichard anu Sim mons and Congressman Kiteiiin have asked the librarian ol Congress to appoint Mrs. Bo.ykin, widow of the late Judge B oykin to a place in the library, and it is believed that the appointment will be made as soon as there is a vacancy. James McNeill, a white farmer of Wake county, in a fit of jeal ousy about a neighbor, attacked his wife like a madman, beat her to the floor, brusing her seriously, then shot her. She threw her arm up and the bullet struck it, and this saved her life. She is in the hospital at Raleigh. McNeill is in jail. The grand jury of Durham \ Superior Court last week reported that they found a disgraceful condition of affairs at the Dur ham county home. They recom mended that houses and bedding be cleaned and kept clean and that charges of gross immorality he investigated. Judge Shaw ordered an investigation. Fred L. Merritt, so long with the Raleigh News and Observer, and now managing editor of the Norfolk Virginian and Pilot, will, about January 1st. becomeeditor of the AshevilleCitizen,now owned by Mr. Havland, who is a mil lionaire, a well known newspaper developer und editor of the Pro vidence (R. I.) Journal. A. I. Britt, the keeper of Robe son county's chain gang, was accidentally killed Sunday after noon, near Red Springs. He was ..i ... i: :*.u t.: . i. . .i. . 1.1... . si niciiug w 11 11 iiis unviv id i lie m e resting on hiss gun and the fire heated the gun, causing it to discharge. The shot took effect in the back and ranged upward, lie lived four hours after the accident. Yard Helms, aged about 4~> years, was burned to death near Cherryville Monday. He was drunk and asked a passingfriend to build him a tire in his house (he being in bed). The man built the fire and left. About an hour afterwards lie returned and found Helms about 200 yards from his house dead?burned beyond recognition. All his clothing was burned off except a thread or two around the waist. Business enterprises in North Carolina are continually being established despite the hard times. Monday the Secretary of State chartered four corporations as follows: The Hose Mercantile Company, of Henderson, with an authorized capital of #1(5.000; the Carolina Sizing Company, of Charlotte, capital, #10,000; the Bostick & Cole Company, of Mt. Olive, capital, #8,000; The Peo ples Investment Company, of Ttaleigh, capital. #100,000. The last-named company is a negro concern. The State superintendent of public instruction has made up the figures showing the year's receipts foreducationul purposes. They are as follows: From poll tax $.'{47,404, general property tax $">21,(558, special local tax on property $15,544, and on polls $4 44, tines, etc., $2.4,411; liquor licenses $79,270; from State out of general fund $101, 401; total $1, 101,740. The State Hoard of Agriculture has decideti to build two new buildings at the A. and M. Col lege in place of Watauga hall, the one recently burneu. One budding will be used for a dornu tory and the other for a dinning room and assembly hall. For this purpose $20,000 will be borrowed and this with the $(>, 000 insurance on the burned building will be used to erect 4 he new buildings, which will be con structed as rapidly as possible Wake Forest won the cup from Trinity in the debate Friday night. This is the fifth annual debate between representatives of Trinity and Wake Forest, tip* prize beitiga handsome silver cup donated bv the lialeigh Chamber of Com nerce. The cup was won in 1897 by Wake Forest;in 1898 Trinity was successful; in 1899 Wake Forest again won the trophy, and in 1900 it went over to Trinity. The query for debate in the contest. Friday night was "Resolved, That North Carolina should adopt the principle of compulsory education." Wake Forest hal the affirmative side of the question. In the M. E. conference Friday, in session at Fayetteville, the vote whereby the name of T.J. Gattis was not referred to the committee on conference rela tions, on motion of W. S. Roan, was reconsidered. Mr. Roan then moved the reference of the name to the superannuated relations. Mess Roan, Cole and Nash made earnest speeches, tilled with the spirit ot brotherly kindness, in support of the mo tion. Dr. t'ates also made one of the best of talks, saying that, although M r. Gattis had declaired he could not get justice, we will show him that he is mistaken. The name ofT. J. Gattis was then referred. About Children's Reading. What should children between six and twelve years of age read? Answers to this question have lately been given by Kate Douglas Wiggin, Mary Ma pes Dodge, Ed Ward Everett Male, Horace E. S udder, Agnes Repplier, Tudor .leaks and others, together with some extremely sensible and in teresting suggestions as to the principles underlying the choice of children's books. Here is a single typical list from the ten included in the article which The Outlook publishes in its Annual Rook Number. The list is that furnished by Mrs. Marv Mapes Dodge, editor of Saint Nicholas. i. "wiice in wonoerianu. n. Hans Andersen's Fairy Tales. ?'!. Hawthorne's "Wonder Book" (or the "Tanglewood Tales'"), ?i. "Gulliver's Travels." o. Kip ling's "Junele Books" (orSeton Thoinpson's "Wild Animals I Have Known," or Harris's "Fa de |{.'inns") 6. Dana's "Two Years Before the Mast" (or Nau sea s "Farthest North," or Ken nan's "Tent Life in Siberia"). 7. Scott's "Ivanhoe" (or Howard Pvle's "Robin Hood,"or Lanier's " The Boy's King Arthur"). 8 Gibson's "Lye-Spy," or some other good nature-book. !). Cooper's " Leather Stocking Tales" (or Stevenson's "Kid napped"). 10 Scndder's "Child ren's Book" (or Miss Repplier's "Book of Famous Verse"). The White House Baby. The December "National's" frontispiece is a full-page half tone engraving from a portrait of Mrs Theodore Roosevelt and the White House baby. The picture is wholly charming. The babe, bright-eyed and alert, seems ready to leap from the mother's arms?presumably to see what the photographer is doing with that funny black box. GENERAL NEWS. A Partial List of the * Week's Hap penings Throughout the tountrv. Thirty-nine prisoners escaped fro in jail at Birmingham, Ala., Sunday, by digging through a back wall with pocket knives. Booker T. Washington was re fused rooms at three hotels in Springfield, Mass., Saturday. The hotel men claim it was lack of room. Berry Howell, under indictment for complicity in the assassina tion of the late Governor Widiatn (ioebell was arrested at l'ineville, Ky., Saturday. Carrie Nation, the Kansas joint smasher, announces the suspen sion of her paper, the Smashers' Mail. The paper was started about a year ago. She says it did not pay. Representative Taylor, of Ohio, lias introduced in the House a bill to pension Mrs. Mckinley at the rate of $5,000 a year, begin ning Sept. 14, 15)01, the date of i the death of the late President. Senators McLaurin and Till man hud a heated argument iu the Senate Monday, which follow ed McLaurin's attempt to explain his political position. Tillman backed McLaurin down by offer ing to again resign. Throa trcro biHarl rtttrl 38 injured as the result of ahead end collision between two passen ger trains on the St. Louis Iron Mountain and Southern railroad one and one-half miles south of Malvern, Ark., Thursday. The transport Sheridan arrived in port at San Francisco Monday and reports that 1,555 soldiers whose time of enlistment expired during the voyage from Manilla, practically took charge of the boat and ran things to suit them selves. The town of Wayne, the county sea* of Wayne county, W. Va , was almost wiped out by a tire, which broke out shortly after midnight Monday and raged until after daylight in the morn ing. The losses will aggregate #40,000, with little insurance. President Roosevelt Saturday signed the first bill sent to him by Congress. It was the act to admit free of duty and to permit the transfer of foreign exhibits from the Pan-American Exposi tion to the South Carolina Inter State and West Indian Exposi tion at Charleston, S. C. Miss Maude Wilcutt stood in a telegraph office at Rio wing (ireen, Ivy., Saturday and became the bride of I)r. J. W. Simmons, of Piaster, Texas. They were married by wire. The questions were asked from the Texas end by a justice of the peaceand were answered by Miss Willcutt. ! he tobacco storage warehouses of John E. Hughes &. Co., and the American Tobacco Company at Danville, were burned Friday morning. The fire started in the engine room of the Hughes fac tory. The buildings were packed with loose leaf. The loss is es timated at $200,000; insurance $150,000. Saul I'oydras, a negro, who cut Chief Deputy Richard and wife seriously Thursday night, was lynched at LakejCharles, La , Sat urday. I'oydras was|arrested at Welsh and the officers were about to lodge him in the parish prison when the mob overpowered the guard, and took charge of I'oy dras and hanged him to au electric light pole. Andrew M. Lawrence, managing editor of Hearst'sChicago Ameri can and H .S.Canfield, a reporter, who were sentenced recently by .fudge Haucoy to 40 and30 days days respectively for contempt of court, were discharged from custody by Judge Dunne, Satur day. In granting a writ of ' habeas corpus to the relators the court said that the case hinged on whether the case on which theCnicago Ameiican commented i had iieen disposed of by Judge Hanecy or was still pending. Judge Dunne held that the case had been disposed of. THE HOUSE COMMIT TEES. North Carolina Members Considered in the Distribution.?Black burn t-avored. A Washington special to the Raleigh I'ost says: The North Carolina members as a rule fared well in committee assignments. They are on these committees: Bellamy?Manufacturers, Irri gation of Arid Lands, Education. Blackburn? District of Colum bia, Elections No. Kitchin (Claude)?Expenditures State Department, Claims. Kitchin? (W. \V.)?Naval Af fairs. Kluttz-Manufaeturers, Census. \Ioodv ? Agricultare. Election of President and Vice-President. Pou?Reform in the Civil Ser vice, Expenditures in the Treas ury Department. Small?Merchant Marine and Fisheries, Expenditures on Public Buildings. Thomas?Public Buildings and Grounds. In the assignments W. W. Kitchin, Klutfz. Small, Thomas and Blackburn fared best. Sena tor 1 Tit chard put in an oar for Blackburn, and as he was poten tial in Henderson's first election as Speaker, his woi d had weight. The Census Committee will be one of the most important in this Congress, while Naval Affairs and Public Buildings too will figure largely in the public eye. The Merchant Marine will have the shib-subsidy bill before it. For new members Claude Kitchin, Pou and Moody did quite well. Where the Preachers are Stationed. Raleigh District. J. T. Gibbs, Presiding Elder. Raleigh, Edenton Street.?G. F. Smith. Raleigh, Central? G?. T. Adams and .1. O. Guthrie. Raleigh, Epworth?J. M. Cul breth. Cary Circuit?A. L. Ormond. Clayton?G. VV Fisher. Smithtield?K. D. Holmes. Kenly?G. B. Starling. Millbrook?N. L. Seabolt. Youngsville?G. R. Rood. Franklinton?J. H. Shore. Louisburg? M. T. Plyler. Tar Itiver?R. H. Broom. Granville?W. H. Puckett. Oxford Station?A M. McCul len Oxford Circuit?J. I>. Pegram. Editor R. C. Advocate?T. N. Ivev. Brooklyn and Macedonia?M. M. McFarland. Supt. Methodis; Orphanage? .1. W. Jenkins. Chaplain U. S. Navy?W. E. Ed mundson. Agent Methodist Orphanage? J. B. Hurley. The Money Pledged. Last Friday at Winston Gov ernor Aycock made an address before the baptist State Conven tion. His subject was education. He made an appeal for money to pay the debt of $42,000on the Baptist Female Fniversity. At the close of his address a collec tion was taken and the money raised, or pledged. It is said that it wasoneof the greatest speeches the Governor ever made. Senator Martin Tuesday intro duced a bill for a memorial bridge across the Potomac river at Washington at a cost of five million dollars. At a session of the privy coun cil King Edward definitely fixed June 20, 15)02, as the date for his coronation. It was also decided that Parliament will meet January Kith. The U. S. Treasury officials have decided to anticipate the interest due on January 1st and next Saturday Fnited States Treasurer Roberts will mail checks covering interest amount ing to |4,000,742. The three-masted schooner Joel Cook, with lumber from Savannah, Ga., arrived at Balti more Tuesday morning,after tea days of the worst weather at sea that Captain Ft azier has experi enced in fortv-seven rears, i J