The Smithfield Herald Published Every Tuesday and Friday. WATCH YOUR LA^EL. No receipt will be for subscrip tion. Each subscriber is asked to watch the little yellow label on his paper. If the label is not changed within three weeks after remittance is mado, the subscriber should notify as. Watch your label. NOTE. ? All correspondents should remember that we pay no attention to communications without the writ er's name. If you write every day be aure to enclose your name each time. Address all matters for publication to The Smithfield Herald, Smithfield, N. C. PERSONAL AM) LOCAL. Some people forget that ^every dol lar they own is of draft age. * * * Dr. R. J. Noble, of Selma, was a visitor to Smithfield Wednesday. ? ? ? Mrs. W. H. Austin and Mrs. H. D. Ellington went to Raleigh Wednes day. m m m Miss Eva Bain, of Sumter, S. C., is here on avisit to Miss Cora Bell Ives. * * * Mrs. E. S. Wade has returned front Raleigh where she has been for seme time. ' ? ' , Misses Florence Muns and Heleiie Ives spent last Saturday and Sunday in Fayetteville. mm* Mr. H. T. Garrard, of Cleveland township, was in town Wednesday and called at The Herald Office. * * * Mr. and Mrs. Henry Edgertor. s>f Kenly, spent Wednesday in the city, the guests of 'Mrs. W. S. St3/en3. Dr. and Mrs. B. A. Hoeutt and mother, of Clayton, were among the visitors here yesterday to hear Mr. Bryan. 1 ? ? * Miss Dora Beck, of Winston- Salem, arrived Monday to teach the school at the Ivanhoe Cotton Mill. She is boarding with Mrs. Ella Baker. ? * * We must prosecute the war to a finish. We must make all the food stuff we possibly can, and through it all, we must not forget the boys and girls. ? * * A vote for school tax is a vote for better schools. The little amount of 15 cents on the hundred dollars worth of property is not much to the average tax payer, but it will mean much to the schools. * * * Miss Beck, of Winston-Salem, is here to work with Mrs. Zachary at the Ivanhoe Cotton Mill School. Miss Beck has been a student at Salem College and is a Normal graduate of Brevard Institute. She has taught for some time at the Haynes Graded School in Winston-Salem and is fa miliar with cotton mill work. The Ivanhoe school will open about May first and any parents outside of the mill village, who wish their children to attend, will please make applica tion to Mrs. Zachary at the Ivanhoe Cotton Mill office in the Smithfield National Bank building before the opening of school. The Base-ball Team arid The Red Cross. The Smithfield Chapter desires to thank the members of the Base-ball team of Turlington Graded School, for their generosity in giving us all of their portion of the money re ceived from the game, on Thursday afternoon. The young gentlemen bore all the necessary expenses them selves, and turned a nice sum into the Chapter's treasury. MATTIE T. POU, Secretary. What Should We Mix With Flour? The Government has asked every family to conserve wheat in order that our soldiers and the soldiers of the other countries who are fighting with us may be fed. How can we best do this? After eating all the corn bread we can the next b^st thing to do is to mix other cereals with our flour to make it go further. Corn meal and flour make good muffins and a little corn meal in flour will make good biscuit, but very much meal seems to take away most of the flour taste in the biscuits. If biscuits are wanted the best thing of which we know to mix with the flour is rye flour. It makes the biscuits dark but they are good. Put about one-fourth to one third rye flour with the wheat flour. The rye flour costs about the same as wheat flour but it helps to conserve the wheat. Dr. Blackwell'g Sunday Program. 10:00 A. M. ? Young People's De cision Meeting. 11:00 A. M. ? Sermon ? "From the Pit to the Throne." 3:00 P. M. ? Men's Meeting ? "Jor dan a Hard Road to Travel," at Opera House. 8:"1) P. M.? "The Besetting Sin." Woman's Liberty Loan Committee. The Woman's Liberty Loan Com mittee has been very busy ancT has sold bonds to the following since our last issue : Mrs. H. D. Ellington. W. M. Grantham. R. C. Gillette. Mrs. R. C. Gillette. Mrs. F. K. Broadhurst. Mrs. E. F. Ward. T. D. Creech. Chas. Davis. E. C. Narron. J. A. Coats. N. M. Lawrence. W. H. Stegal. T. C. Jordan. R. I. Moore. J. J. Broadhurst. S. B. Jones. L. B. Jones. A. G. Rabil. Mrs. J. W. Moore. R. C. Crute. R. M. Myatt. Mrs. Mary Stevens. L. M. Stevens. Mrs. M. H. Blandy. Mrs. J. W. Good. James E. Whitehurst. Chas. Alford. John F. Sanders. S. C. Turnage. H. L. Skinner. A. A. Peedin. W. M. Sanders. Mrs. Belle Bingham. William Kirk. J. D. Spiers. Dr. Geoge Vick, Selma. Four Oaks: Ralph C. Canaday. W. J. Lassiter. Wade H. Stanley. Jasper T. Massengill. Bert Barefoot. J. E. Allen. A. R. Lee. S. W. Adams. . G. K. Massengill. Jno. L. York. Mrs. B. B. Adams. Mrs. J. H. Moore. Mrs. S. M. Boyett. Colored : H. J. Smith, Jr. Nancy Lane. Baby Liberty Loan League. C. S. Broadhurst, Jr. Edmond F. Ward, Jr. Donald Blow Ward. Jesse Draper Dickens, Jr. Joseph M. Grantham. Miss Lillian Sanders Pou. Mrs. Chilton to Be Here. Everyone who attended the Chau tauqua last Summer will hail with pleasure the news that Mrs. William Calvin Chilton is to visit our town again in the capacity of entertainer. Mrs. Chilton is a graceful reader. In her rendition of dialect and humorous selections she is incomparable. She has a variety of programs any one of which will be sure to delight. Her interpretations of southern stories by southern writers, among whom we note Thomas Nelson Page, James Lane Allen, and Joel Chandler Harris, are especially fine. The Woman's Club is exceedingly fortunate in having Mrs. Chilton in their Lyceum Course this ~pring. She will give an enter tainment at the Opera House on Thursday evening, May 2nd, at 8:30 o'clock. Clayton and Smithfield Over. Clayton was the first town in John ston County to raise its quota of the Third Liberty Loan and has raised its Service Flag. Smithfield is the second town of Johnston County to "go over the top," rasng its full quota of the Third Liberty Loan, and on next Tuesday will receive and raise its Service Flag. It was announced that Hon. James H. Pou would be present to make a patriotic address on the ?occasion, but it turned out that it will be impossible for him to be present, but some prominent speaker will be" here to address the people on this oc casion. The speaking will be at 12:00 o'clock. The Service Flag will be swung out over Market street Tuesday at noon. The teachers and pupils of Turling ton Graded School will be present in a body. Smithfield's quota is $72,800. This had been already over-subscribed. One bank of the town has sold 176, 000. This work is going on and far more than the town's -quota of the Third Liberty Loan will be subscribed here. The ladios of the Woman's Committee are doing good work and have helped Smithfield to go "over the top." ft * 1 Farm and Home Problems in Johnston f * ... _ ? m . ? ? - ? CANNING CLl'B NOTES By Mamie Sue Jones County Home UemonMrator 3K 3(S 3K ^ 3K 3K ilk ? FARM NOTES. Bj. A. M. Johnson County Farm Demonstrator. CLl B NOTES. 1. Mr. W. H. Austin, of Smithfield. has ordered forty thousand cans for the club girls of Johnston County. These cans will be in the second week in May. They will be sold for forty nine dollars a thousand. 2. Help Uncle Sam by producing the food that you eat. When you do this you are rendering a patriotic ser vice. When you produce your own food more can be sent to the Allies. 3. You live in town, have a back yard garden, if that is all the space j you can get. The back-yard garden is very important because it improves | the home surroundings and produces food at the same time. The back | yard is often an unsightly place and when it is changed into a well cared for garden, the home is made more beautiful. 4. If you have not already done so, plant Pimento pepper in your garden. This vegetable is very important for canning. 5. Receipe for corn bread; 2 cups of corn meal'. 2 cups sour milk. 1 teaspoon soda. 1 teaspoon sugar. 2 tablespoons fat. 1 teaspoon salt. 1 egg. Mix dry ingredients. Add milk, well beaten egg, and melted fat. Beat well. Bake for about thirty minutes. 6. It will soon be time for the house fly. Be sure that your screen doors close, and the garbage can is well covered. FARM NOTES. Read the article in last Saturday's News and Observtr on ''The Dual Purpose Cattle for North Carolina." That applies to Johnston County now as never before. , Sheep has a place on the average farm here. They will keep down enough weeds and underbush to pay for their keep. The cash for the mutton and the wool will be profit. There is a good market for them now and will be for some time. We especi ally need the wool. See me or your township board for further informa tion. Do not forget to arrange for a patch of wheat this fall. Arrange your crops so it can be sown the last week in October. I will test the dip in your vats but you will pay for the ingredients that go into it. The government does not furnish this material in tick free ter ritory. The potatoe beetle will soon be out to sample the young plants nnd if you spray them with arsenate of lead now and then again ten days later he will retreat. Use two pounds of arsenate lead to fifty gallons of water, or Ror deau Mixture. In smaller amounts use a tablespoonfull to a gallon of water. If there is anyone growing the , Texas Wood Cotton here I will be glad to know about it for breeding ! purposes. The fruit trees that have dead or dying twigs in them now should be cut out two or three inches biffk of the effected part. In the young trees rub the sprouts off the trunk now for this will leave more food material for the upper branches. THE NEWS IN CLAYTON. Clayton, April 24. ? Mrs. Riley R. Gulley and Miss Ruby Ellis will spend tonight in Cary with friends. Mrs. Herman Whitley left last Sat urday for Newport News where she will make her home in the future. Miss Helen Rogers returned Mon day from Camp Sevier where she spent the week-end with her brother. Miss Maude Pope, of Washington, is here on a visit to relatives. Miss Bettie Stancil attended the funeral of her cousin, Miss Annie Stancil, at Selma, last Saturday. Prof. N. Y. Gulley, of Wake Forest, was in town a few hours Wednesday enroute to Smithfield. Mr. and Mrs. G. T. Smith spent a few days this week in Lillington. Miss Alma Hall is in Zebulon with friends this week. Mr. Warren McCullers has return ed to Camp Sevier after spending several days here with his parents. Dr. and Mrs. C. D. Bass, of Ral eigh, have returned to Clayton and will make their home here in the -future. Mr. Herman H. Duncan is here on a furlough of twenty days. He is stationed at' Camp Jackson and has just completed his course there. We are proud to say our boys are doing well. Dr. and Mrs. J. A. Griffin spent Wednesday afternoon in Raleigh. Mr. Woodall, who for a few years has been with G. S. Tucker & Co., has been moved to Rocky Mount. His family goes today to join him and we hope for them much happiness and success. On Wednesday of last week the Red Cross Chapter presented to Mr. J. W. Barnes of Archer Lodge a large Red Cross Flag. Mr. Barnes has done more for the cause than any man of our community and has given three sons to the noble cause. While he is very despondent on that account he has a wonderful heart and is noble and brave. Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Pope and Dr. and Mrs. T. A. Griffin returned a few days ago from Michigan. Mr. Popa and Dr. Griffin, while there, purcha sed a very handsome Buick each. TO MAGISTRATES. We try to keep a full line of blanks for magistrates and can fill orders on short notice. Send us your orders and the blanks can be sent by mail. We keep deeds, and mortgage deeds with and without insurance clause for both pen and typewriter. Quit claim deeds, mortgage deeds and commis sioners deeds, search warrant papers and peace warrants, nupeonas, com mitments, judgments, transcripts of judgments, warrants, summons, chat tels, liens, ejectments and other mag istrates blanks. Send us your orders. BEATY & LASSTTER. Smithfield, N. C, Death of J. F. Lawhon. A correspondent writes that "On Tuesday night, April 16, Mr. J. F. Lawhon died at the home of his daughter, Mrs. N. O. Allen. He had been afflicted for many years and for a few months was confined to his room with an attack of typhoid fever. He improved and recovered so that he could be out again, when on Sunday, April 14th, he was stricken with pa ralysis which ended fatally. Mr. Lawhon was about 65 years of age. He had never united with any church, but seemed to believe in the faith of the Second Advents. A short while before his death he called in his i neighbors to pray for him, and said that he had read his Bible and prayed daily and that he believed he had found the bright side of life. His peo ple will miss him. All who knew him loved him. He leaves a wife, two children, sev eral grand-children, and a host of friends and relatives to mourn his de parture. Our Joe Miller Contest. Anon clainfls that he read this one in an almanac dated 1848. A man called on a farmer and asked if the farmer had any rats. The farmer said the place was over-run with them. Thereupon the man offered to kill all the rats on the place for $2. The farmer accepted the offer. The man then requested a chopping block. This was brought. The man then re quested a sharp hatchet. And this was brought. "Now," said the man to the farmer, "bring on your rats!" And in them days this was consid ered a good joke. ? Charlotte Observ er. ? THE SMITHFIELD MARKET. Cotton 22 to 28 Cottcn Sted 1-00 to l.Oo Wool 20 to 30 Eggs 25 to '30 Fat Cattle 6 to 7 1-2 Fat Cattle dressed 14 to 15 Corn per bushel 1-75 to 2.00 C. R. Sides 30 to 32% Feed Oats 120 to 1.25 Fresh Pork 20 to 22 M Hams, per pound 33 Vfe to35 Lard 27 % to 32% Timothy Hay 2.25 to 2.35 Cheese per pound Butter, per pound 40 Meal 4.75 to 5.00 1 Flour per sack 6.25 to 6.50 Coffee per pound 18 to M Cotton Seed Meal 2.75 to 2.85 Cotton seed hnlU L00 Shipstuff 3-00 to 3.25 Molasses Feed 3.00 to 3.25 Hides, Green 10 to 12V4 Hides, Dry 17H to 20 Cow Peas per bushel . . . 3.50 to 4.00 Soy Beans per bushel . . 3.75 to 4.00 Subscriptions to the ThirdLibertyLoan i - turned in by the First Nat ional Bank and its customers aggregate more than Smith field's allotment, and alone would entitle our town to fly the Honor Flag. The patriot ism of our customers is very much appreciated. I ? Fir si National Bank v ?H +4 Smithfield, N. C. | & ii Kodak Films When Buying Candy Remem ber She prefers APOLLO at Creech's We Have a New and Complete Stock . A Kodak For Every Purpose. A Film For Every Kodak . CREECH DRUG COMPANY D. H. CREECH. Mgr. Smithfield, N. C. Send The Herald Your Job Printing BON TON | The Ladies Store z Don't Forget Our \ Spring and Summer Millinery Is the best to be found anywhere in this county. Our trimmers will make you a hat just to your own liking, and to suit your individual taste. A look at our show windows will give you only a faint idea as to what we have in our stock. Ladies Ready-to-Wear j The largest line of Ladies' Suits. Coats and J Dresses ever shown in this section of the State, * Our goods are in a class to themselves. Prices are * lower than others charge for the same goods. + Leghorn and Milan Hats BON TON The Ladies Store SMITHFIELD, NORTH CAROLINA