2f)r j&roitljfietb JlcfaliJ, price one dollar per vear. "TRUE TO OURSELVES, OUR COUNTRY AND OUR GOD.'' single copies three cents. VOL. 20. SMITHFIELD, N. C., FRIDAY, JANUARY 3, 1902. NO. 43. NELL CROPSEY FOUND. Her Body Was Floating in the River Near Her Home. JURY SAYS SHE WAS MURDERED. Wilcox Arrested and Lodged in Jail?Story ot the Dead Girls' Disappearance. The body of Miss NellieCropsey was found floating in the Pas quotank river opposite her father's home at Elizabeth City last Friday morning. The body was discovered bv J. 1>. Stillman, a fisherman. Upon discovering that the floating ob ject was the body of a young girl ne gave notice, anil Coroner Fear ing had it brought to the shore When found it was floating face downward. The spot where the body was found had been dragged several times since her disappearance, but with no previous result. VEKD1CT CHARGES ill'It UK II. Coroner hearing summoned a jury of prominent men from among the crowd that had as sembled and call"d in lbs. ,1. E. Wood and <>. .McMullen to make a thorough autopsy so as to learn if there was any signs of violence on the body. The ver dict of the jury was as follows: "v\e report mm irum me in vestigation made by physicians of Elizabeth City, and from their opinion, and also from our per sonal observation, that HI la Cropsey came to her death bv being struck a blow on the left temple and by being drowned in the Pasquotank river. We have not yet investigated nor heard any testimony as to who inflicted the blow and did the drowning. We are informed that one James Wilcox is -harged with the crime and is now in custody. We recom mend that investigation as to his or anyone else's probable guilt be had by one or more magis trates in Elizabeth City town ship), and that Wilcox be held to await such investigation." Wilcox was arrested and lodged in jail. Fearing violence the Naval Reserves were called out to guard the jail. The following stoiy of thedei)d girl was published iu the Balti more Sun last Saturday: Ella Cropsey was 17 years ohl and was one of nine children?six daughters and three sons?of W. H. Cropsey. Most of th- children are younger. There were two other grown daughters, Louise and Olive. Their home is a (15-; acre farm about half a mile from the center of Elizabeth City. The family went there from New York about four years ago. The house site back 100 feet from the road. About 100 feet tne other side of the road is the Pasquotank river, a stream at that point about half a mile wide. One can walk from the veranda of the house to the river bank in half a minute. Half a mile back of the house is a swamp. James W ilcox. whorunsa small engine ia a shipyard, had been paying court to Ella Cropsey for two years Leroy Crawford bad been paying Miss Olive Cropsey attentions for about the same time. The two young men were visitors at thehouseon tin night of November 20. Miss Carrie Cropsey, of New York, a cousin, was in the parlor. Wilcox rose to go about 11 o'clock. He asked Ella to st* p to the door with him. At that hour all the others had retired except Miss Olive, who, with Leroy Crawford, was sitting in the parlor. At 11:30 Miss Olive, thinking her sister had retired after bid ding Wilcox good night, told Crawford it was time for him to go home. Crawford left and Miss olive, who occupied the same room with Ella, went to bed Noticing that Ella had not come in, she supposed her sister and Wilcox had stepped into the sitting room across the hall to have a privute chat. At midnight a pointer dog owned by Mr. Cropsey began to bark. Mr. Cropsey's brother, Henry X. Cropsey, took up a gun and wentout. thinkiugtkat some body was trying to steal the turkeys or young pigs. The whole family was aroused bv the noise. Seeing her uncle with the gun, and fearing her sister and Wilcox were on the lawn, Miss Olive screamed out warning him not to shoot. Then she asked her father if Ella wasnotdownstairs. It was after midnight and nearly an hour since the girl had been seen by any member of the family. Soon the fact was known that Ella had disappeared. Here is a statement recently made by Mr. Cropsey, fa her of the girl: "1 went to bed at 8:2." o'clock that night, after sitiing for a time with the children. Olive tells me that all that evening Jim Wilcox did not speak a word to Ella. He told the others that he was to be home at II o'clock. He kept looking at his watch every few nuriutes. In view of what has happened 1 regard this as important. "At 11 :<>?"? o'clock he rose to go and then spoke to Ella, asking her to go to the door. That was the last we saw of her. When we found that she was gone after midnight and my wife began to weep I tried to cheer her by sav ing that Ella and young Wilcox had eloped. Hut my wife became so worried that, with my brother, I decided to go to the Wilcox house to see if we could learn something there. "It was after 2 a. ni. when we got there and told them what had happened. They said they would ask Jim. He never gotup to see me or to volunteer any help in the search. "From the Wilcox home I went to Chief of Police Dawson. I did not want the young fellow arrest ed even then. Wilcox was taken to my home and questioned for hours by my family. My wife begged him for her sake and for the sake of his own mother, whom we all respect, to speak frankly and tell everything he knew "All he would say was that he left Ella crying on the porch; that they were there about ten min- ; utes, and that she cried and was still crying when he passed out of; the gate and started home. "The girl never committed sui cide. She was bright, happy and healthy minded. She was looking forward with thegreatest delight to a visit to New York withner cousin. Nor did she elope. Not one of her things was missing,} except the light clothing she wore.' She had had a lot of trouble with a corn 011 her right foot and that night wore a large, loose rubber instead of a shoe". ()n the other she wore a low shoe. "No, my girl was carried off that stoop. I had the best train ed bloodhound in Virginia down here with 'Hurricane' branch to direct its work. Thehound could not find a fresh trail." James Wile>x is about24years old. He is short, standingabout 5 feet 1 or 2 inches, is stocky built and wears a brown mails tach. His lather, cx-Mierin Wil cox, is one of the best-known and best-liked men in the town. He and ,M r. Cropsey are warm friends, and the unfortunate happening has not severed their friendship. Young James hasa frank, open face and does not look the part that munycredithim with having played. "How do you account for Klla's disappearance?" he was asked. "1 cannot account for it," he replied. "You can account for it as well as I." "Would not the fact that you returned her gifts and had a dis agreement with her cause her to drown herself?" "No. It is true I gave her back her photograph and a parasol and some other things belonging to her, and that we had a disa greement some time before. Hut that would not cause her to end her life." "Who could have taken lier away, then? You know that a great many people think you are responsible for her disappear ance." "Yes, you can hear a lot about ? I me if you listen to these people. But I don't know who took her away or where she is." "What happened between you while you were on the piazza?" "I gave her back her things and she began to cry. She was cry ing all the time wewereout then?. 1 said very little." Did you ever declare that Ella would never go to New York?" "No; not even in a joke." "Did you say that you would; suffer tortures before you would tell all you knew about the mat ter?" "No; that is one of the lies put up against me." "W hy did you not get out of | the bed the first night Dr. Crop sey came to your house and help him in the search for the girl?" "I am a sound sleeper. My | mother has to awaken me several times every morning. I answer every time and tell her that I'll get up, and the next second I'm asleep again. When they came up that night and awoke me and ; said Mr. Cropsey wanted to know where 1 left Ella, 1 said, 'On the front porch,' and fell asleep again. "Were you and Ellaengaged to marry?" "No; that had never been men tioned by either of us." A fortnight after EllaCropsey's disappearance Wilcox was ar rested, and at a hearing given in Elizabeth City on December 3 he was held in $1,000 bail to await the action of the grand jury on the charge of abduction. On the e .11 . ? .1 _ . _ iouowmg uay a young woman was detained at Wilson, N. C., on suspicion of being Ella Crop sev, but she was soon released. Nearly $.'100 has been raised by private subscription, bringing the total reward offered for the Had ing of the girl and the conviction of those implicated up to $900, without counting a special re ward of $500 offered by A. G. Cropsey, of New York, the girl's u cle. Search for the missing girl was kept up unremittingly. Mrs. Eveline Mecom Dead. In Kenly, N. C., on December 29, 1901, in her fifty-sixth year. Mrs. Eveline Mecom, wife of James Mecom, departed this life in perfect peace, saying to those about her, "1 am ready to go and have no fear." She was greatly beloved by the people of her community, and was, when able, going about doing good. Surely in the home she will be greatly missed, while we know she has gone beyond our mortal grasp, we are thankful for the conviction that there is a better and brighter world beyond the shining stars. ? She was a kind mother, a good wife, and a devout Christian. Let us not think that a life can not be splendid unless it has the glamour of publicity around it. That woman lives the most and best, gives most that helps so ciety, who gathers into her life the immediate forces of moral strength and beauty, and thus concretely embodies them forth for her age to observe. This alone seems a test of how much one lives, and what the loss of the community sustuiu's at death. \l..o vt?,-.,,, ' I .hio. jirxum ?? n n a t"l simple habits, and a pure life. 1 never heard hersay aught against any one, neither have I heard any one speak evil of her. Wonderful testimony! We tender our heartfelt sym pathy to the bereaved family in this, to them,so dark and trying hour of attiiction. asking (lod to comfort them, and to so direct their faith that husband and children may see Him as a tender careful Father, in wlios^ near presence the departed wife and mother is now eternally happy. The funeral services were con ducted by the writer and her re mains were laid to rest in Fleas ant Grove cemetery. Geo. H. 8tahli.no. Last Monday .'12 applications for divorce were tiled in the Washington City Courts. Four persons were killed and 18 injured in the wreck of a Northwestern passenger train at Malta, 111 , Sunday. STATE NEWS. Short Items ot Interest Clipped and Culled From Our State Exchanges. i Ex-Congressman W. H. H. Cowles died at his home near ] Wilkesboro Monday of pneu- ] inonia. Col. Cowles was born in ] Yadkin county 01 years ago. The machinery is now being , installed in the newly completed textile school building at the Agricultural and Mechanical College at Raleigh. The building cost the State $25,000, and the machinery, which is estimated to be worth as much, is the gift of many makers. Mr. and Mrs. George Vander bilt are entertaining some dis- 1 tinguished guests at Jliltmore, near Asheviile. in the party are our British Ambassador Joseph 11. Choate, Prince llelgracio Talleyrand Perigord, and naval Commander \\". J. Cowles, brother in-law of President Roosevelt. "Peg Leg" Williams, well known as tiie promoter of the great negro exodus in 1890 and 1891, was arrested Monday at Maxton for conducting his business with out a license, and was made to pay a line of $50. He is not securing many negroes now, not over 250 having been sent away so far, it is learned. The Baptist State mission board, which has appropriated $25,000 to missions, had appli cations for $30,000. It sets apart $3,000 for schools in the mountains, and the other appro priations are for eastern mission work in factories and co-opera tive work among negroes. One hundred missionaries are em ployed. John Morgan Green, a well known tobacco dealer, formerly of Durham was killed at Mount Airy a few days ago, by falling on a red hot stove. Hewasathome standing near the stove, when he had an epileptic fit. He fell across the stove and seized the pipe in his arms. The door was locked and had to be forced by his mother end brother, who found the flesh nearly burned off much of his body. A trophy gun has been received ; at the State museum in Ilaleigh. It was part of the second battery of the Cristobal Colon at Santi ago. The Spaniards, during the hot pursuit, threw overboard the i breech blocks of most of theguus. This gun is about 1J feet in length. It will be placed beside the gun captured from the Span ish fleet at Manila, which was presented to Raleigh by the cruiser Raleigh. The fact is not generally known, but the Agricultural and Mechan ical College is open to women in j all departments. The board of agriculture has established 120 agricultural scholarships which are open to all young men in the State, and young women too, desiring to pursue agricultural studies. Several young women have applied for admission to the wintercourses in dairying and agriculture. It is expected that tlie course in cotton manufact uring will he very popular with women. The supreme court has upheld the verdict awarding #12,000 damages against the Southern Railway to Capt. S. (I. Coley, of Raleigh. The opinion is one of the most important that has been rendered bytheeourt. estab lishing the broad principle that the fellow servant act, passed by the legislature of 1S07. deprives all railroad companies operating in this Stale of the defense of the assumption of risk. The Coley lease is one of the most famous le gal contests that has figured in tlie State courts in years. Rack in 181)8 .Mr. Coley was yard master for the Southern Railway in Coldsboro and he fell from an engine because defective piping gave way. Suit was instituted in| Wake for #.'50,000 damages and he received a verdict for #12, .">00. Since then there have been three hearings of the casein the supreme court.. NORTH CAROLINA IN l'HE LITER ARY WORLD. In almost everything North; Carolina has been slow and con-; servative. In nothing is this truer than in the writing and publishing of books. Our popu lation is a rural one and as in all rural communities the growth of books and literature has been slow. But the past year has witnessed a great awakening in matters educational and our people are turning their atten tion more and more to literature. We are beginning to make a good start us book producers, as the following list from the Progres sive Farmer will show: Since January 1st, 1901, two volumes of our Confederate Regi mental Histories have been issued. Dr. J. Battle Avirett's "The Old Plantation" has appeared. Col. 1). Worthington has pub lished a novel of reconstruction days, "The Broken Sword." Miss Sallie W. Stockard has sent forth her "Lily of the Val leys." Col. II. B. Creecy's "Grand father Tales of North Carolina History" is just from the press. "Cotton and Cotton Oil' sub jects have been exhaustively dis cussed in a volume by D. A. Thompkins. Prof. W. F. Massey has given us "Crop Crowing and Crop Feeding." Emerson admirers have wel comed Mrs. Margaret B. Shipp's "Beautiful Thoughts from Ralph Waldo Emerson." "Among Flowers and Trees with the Poets" has been com piled chiefly by Miss Minnie Curtis Wait. Prof. W. C. Allen has published his admirable collection of "North Carolina History Sto ries." Doubleday, Page & Company's sumptuous two-volume edition of the "Memiors of Sir William Byrd" is edited by Dr. Jno. S. Bassett. Prof. B. F. Sledd has issued a new volume of poems. "Stories of Bird Life," by Prof. T. Gilbert Pearson, has appeared and won golden opinions. Moreover, one of the best sell ing novels of the year, "Joscelyn Cheshire," is a story of North Carolina life written by a lady who formerly lived in this State. But the end is not yet, though the prospective output is con firmed to history and biography. Judge Walter Clark and Mr. Samuel A. Ashe are said to be writing histories of the State, while Prof Allen is at work on another volume of the " History Stories." Mr. Marshall I)e Lancy Hay wood is preparing a life of Gov ernor Tryon. A life of Nathaniel Macon may be expected fro n Dr. Win. E. Dodd. Mr. W. .1. Peele will bring out a second volume of tlie "Lives of Distinguished North Caro linians." i The life of Gen. Joseph Graham is being written by Maj. W. A. Graham. Ilenllvythi8 is not a bad show ing for a beginner. Lynching: in Northampton. Raleigh, N. C., Dec. 2S.?Gover nor Aycock this morning issued an order and com missioned J udge Justice to hold a special term of criminal court for Northampton county, to try Jeter Mitchell, a negro, for criminal assault on Mrs. Lucinda Hall, n^ar (larys burg, but before the documents left the city a telegram was received to the effect that a crowd of infuriated citizens gave "Judge Lynch" jurisdiction early this morning, and Mitchell was hung on the limb of a tree by the jail The order for a special term of court of course was revoked. Six men wer killed in the Mc Allister coal mine, Hartshorn, Indian Teritoiy, by the cape jumping from its guidings while descending a shaft, Monday. GENERAL NEWS. A Partial List of the Week's Hap penings Throughout the country. Frank Hutchinson Peavey, the Minneapolis millionaire, who ilied Monday in Chicago, carried $1,876,000 insurance on his life. -Chief Geronimo and his band of 21)8 Arizona Apaches, who have been held at Fort Sill, Okla., as prisoners of war, are to be re leased. A disastrous fire occurred at Calvert, Texas, Saturday, in which two lives were lost and propertv destroyed to the extent of $1000,000. On Monday evening at Wash ington City the Junior Order of United American Mechanics pres ented Admiral Schley a beautiful jeweled silver medal. During the year 1001 it is esti mated that 53,i?U(>,000 tons of anthracite coal were mined and marketed in the United States, breaking previous records. Another effort will be made by the Panama Canal company to sell the Panama canal to the United States. It is said the price asked will be $40,000. it is saiu tnat uov. I,. M. Stoaw, of Iowa, selected for secretary of the treasury by the president, has made #800,000 out of specu lating in the Texas oil fields. Rear-Admiral Francis A. Itoe, United StatesNavy, (retired) died at Washington Saturday night. He entered the navy in 1841 and was retired in 188a. The Attorney-General of South Carolina has brought suit against the Yirgima-CarolinaiC h e in i c a 1 Company to revoke its charter, on the ground that it is a trust. Seven negroes were drowned Saturday while attempting to cross the M ississippi river between the Hermitage plantation and Riverside, two miles below Donaldsonville, La. The battleship Missouri was launched at Newport News Satur day. Fully la,000 people, it is estimated, saw the big defender go overboard. The launching passed off without a hitch. Suits have been brought to revoke the charters of theColum bus, Hocking Valley and Toledo and other Morgan lines in the Ohio coal region, on the ground that they constitute a trust. Rev. James Heath, who is alleged to have -illegally secured a divorce from his wife in New York to marry a Kansas City woman, was deposed from the ministry and expelled from the Calvary baptist Church at a meeting of the congregation at Kansas City Sunday. United States Senator William .1. Sewell died at his home at Camden, N. J.. Friday. He suf fered from diabetes complicated with stomach and'heart trouble. Senator Sewell's illness had ex tended over a period of five years, but his condition was not con sidered serious until a year ago. .uiss siary liouistne Henncr. i cripple about 28 years old, com mitted suicide Saturday night in ('base's Theatre, Washington, after frantically waving a note at David Lozelle, an acrobat with whom she was infatuated. The performer, it is said, had ignored Miss (tenner's ail ? s for several months. Her motner was in the theatre when the girl swallowed the poison. Death was almost instantaneous. Mr. and Mrs. I-'ran is A. Kinsev, pioneer residents of Kosciusko county, Indiana, now living at Warsaw. Ind., completed the last day of the sixty-eighth year of their married life Sunday and celebrated their sixty-ninth an niversary. Mr. Kinsev is O.'l years old and his wife is 87. Doth are in excellent health. They were married in Knox county, Ohio, December 20, 18.'t;t, and were natives of Delaware and Mary land, respectively. They are the parents of 10 children, all living excent one, the oldest of whom is nearly 70 years old.