Selma Merchants Say Business Improving ^The Tt^CTc-Jt-Home Drive No>v Going On Is Attracting New Business To Selma. ! Since the merchants of Selma be- i?an their campaign for more busi ness by featuring the Trade-at- ricme idea, a week or two ago, • here has been a noticeable trend in business to Selma. Several Selma .'merchants have been heard to ex press the belief that the campaign js already showing worthwhile re- sr ■ ts. The attractive prizes which are being offered, including a new A.istin Automobile, have begun to t_rn new business to Selma, and .'.any foi’mer customers are cora- i'C back this way. There is no chance game conncct- /id with this campaign. Our mei- wr.'ints are selling their good- at r':iuced prices and giving tickets with each 50c purchase, 'fou pay no more for the goods than you w^uld have' to pay without the th sets, and should you hold the T ky number on December the 24th V ,1 will be given an Austin Auto- ntbile absolutely free. There are a nr liber of other valuable prizes to f-' given to the people who are present with their trade tickets 't! that date. The numbers will be rawn and should you hold the cr nber corresponding with the one :..wn you are sure of, a nice prize. -So come on and do your trading i:' Selma, keep your ticket- and I"' lie back on December 24th, when i '- prizes will be awarded. Some- J\' will be in luck for Christmas fj- year. Rev. Mr. Barclay Addresses Kiwanians Southern Passenger Train Wreck In Selma Rev. Mr. John Barclay, pastor of the Christian church of Wilson, wa- the Kiwanis speaker at the regular weekly luncheon. Br. Barclay, who was voted Wilson’s most valuable citizen, made a very interesting talk on world conditions. He discussed the tariff question, armament- and other interesting subjects, after which he opened the meeting for discussion. Rev. Mr. Barclay is recognized as a very deep, thinker and well read. A questionaire gotten up by C. P. Harper, John Wiggs, C. A. Jacobs and A. J. Holliday wa- presented to the club for its approval. This questionaire is to be mailed to a number of people which they are to answer and return to the secretary of the club. It deals with busine.ss conditions in the town. Andrew Holliday and Parson Wad dell rendered two vocal duets which were enjo^’ed very much. They were accompanied on the piano by Miss Ellen Singleton. The report on the Columbia meet ing by A. J. Holliday and the nomi nating committee by Rev. E. T. Sing leton were postponed until next Thursday night. “The Dumb Waiter,” a mu-ical comedy, will be given by the club at an early date. This is sponsored by- the dub and coached by Miss Margaret Creech. About 4:45 on la.st Sunday mSm- 17)11 the Eastbound Southex'n passen ger train No. It2, was wrecked at Main street cro sing in Selma when it split a switch. The engine re- '■■ained on the main track while the re.-nainder of the train took the si-ctrack beside the Southern freight station. The derelict cars remained or, the sidetrack for a short dis tance, then broke a rail and tore up the track for a considerable distance finally striking a box car standing- on the siding, knocking it down the track but did not detrail it. Just before the pas enger train, which' is due here at 4:45, two long frei,ght trains passed going in op posite directions. However the I'cked after the wreck. The mail car on 112 remained here' until 10:05 when it was picked up by ea.atbound train No. 18. .A wrecking crew with crane from the Atlantic Coast Line shops in Rocky Mount was. ordered to .the scene and had the main line open by noon Sunday. No one was injured, but pas en-. gers . and train crew were consider ably shaken up. ^ Mrs. Lula Sanders Turner Passes Away Prominent Smithfield Woman Who Was Gold Star Mother, Died On Armistice Day. PRESIDENT GRAHAM TO SPEAK U. N. C. BANQUET E. T. Boyette, principal of Glen dale Consolidated School, who is president of the Johnston County Alumni Association of the Univer sity of North Carolina, announces that the annual U. N. C. banquet .will be held here on Tuesday event ing, November 29. Pre.-ddent Frank Graham will be the speaker on this o'ccasion and a full attendance of the alumni and their wives is ex pected. Smithfield, Nov. 14.—Mrs. Lula Sanders Turner, 60-year-old widow of the late John Turner, died at the Johnston County Ho.-pital here last Friday night about 10 o’clock. She had undergone two serious op erations there a short time ago, and several days her condition had been I considered almost hopeless. I The deceased was a daughter of ' the late Zoe J. Lemay, of Cleveland I Township, and a sister of the late I Zoe L. LeMay of Smithfield. For I several years after her marriage ' she lived with her husband in Wake county, but after his death .-he mov ed to Smithfield, and had been liv ing here for several years. She was one of the ,Gnld Star mothers who went to France at the expense of the United States Gov ernment. Her son,. LeMay Turner, lost his life during the world war, and she crossed the ocean and vis ited hi- last resting place. Mrs. Turner is survived by two daughters and three sons, also one sister, Mrs. Eliza Williamson of Smithfield. The funeral, which -was held from the home at 2 o’clock Saturday afternoon, was conducted by her' pastor. Rev. B. T. Hurley of the Methodist church, assisted by Rev. D. H. Tuttle and Rev. J. P. Smith. Interment was at Holland’s church in Wake county. THANKSGIVING PROCLAMATION WHEREAS, we, the people of Selma and Johnston County, have lived to witness another fruitful harvest from Mother Earth, and are about to emerge from the shadows of one of the world’s greatest depressions which has held the peoples of the earth in its devastating grip for many months past, and WHEREAS, in the light of the history of all previous de pressions, it would seem that we are now about due to wit ness the dawning of a new day through a better understand ing among our Sister Nations looking to the settlement of foreign war debts through a definite program, and WHEREAS, our own people have been ever responsive to the call to deviate the distress at home and abroad, so far as our ability would permit in a financial way, and thereby have kept the home fires burning by caring for the less fortunate of the community in such a manner that there has been no great amount of suffering from financial distress or from the ravages of disease which have been met remarkably well; NOW. THEREFORE, as we enter upon our voyage into Winter’s grim shadows just ahead, let us join with the Gov- ornor of our great State and the President of these United States in voicing our praise and tendering our Thanks to Him from whom all blessings flow, as we set aside and de clare THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 19.32, as THANKSGIV ING DAY. May we look to Him for strength and wisdom to pilot us through the tempest as we ride the crest of the waves toward the shores of an unexplored future. W. W. HARE. Mayor of the Town of Selma. Graham Woman Kills Two of Her Children Mrs. Elsie Witherspoon Dollar Tells Calmly of Shooting Her Children As They Slept Because She Didn’t Want “To Leave Them to Mercy of This W’orld”. Tremendous Task For Democratic Party (C. P. Stewart in Greensboro News) W'ashington, Nov. 14.—A few wild whoop.s of Democratic triumph no doubt are pardonable. Soon after this first bur-t of en thusiasm, however, the country cer tainly will expect the party of Jef- fersonianism to begm showing an exceedingly sober sense of the enor mous responsibility it faces. Whether or not Democratic lead ership has reason to congratulate it elf in the present junction is a question no one can answer intelli gently until two, three or four years hence. It can hardly congratulate! itself upon the mere fact that it has won an election which shortly will place it in national control at a j time of perhaps the greatest difficul ty in American history. If it ac quits itself creditably, it will be en titled, indeed, to congratulate itself upon the ch’cumstance that it af forded such an opportunity'. If it i fails, it is among the possibilities I that not enough of it will “be left ^ j in 1936 to apologize. ! Miss Fulghum Crowned Queen Mr. and Mrs. C. I,. Richardson and Mrs. M. A. Biggs accompanied their sister. Miss June Fulghum, to Kinston Friday night where she was crowned queen of Ea-tern North Carolina. This honor was won Thurs day night at the Merchants and Manufacturer’s Exposition when she took honors from contestants from towns from all over eastern Caro lina. Fred I. Sutton, lawyer and veteran legislator, did the crowning. Miss Fulghum also won first prize at a bathing beauty conte t held at Holt’s Lake last summei:. Explanation Is Given For Hoover’s Defeat Sanders Says Forces Beyond “Hu man Control” Did It—Most of Vote Is Counted. j Public men quite generally agree : that there can be no' more muddling ! through. j The election result plainly implies I that the voters considered that to be i the only program the G. 0. P. had I to offer. They evidently were willing j to take another change of fundamen- , tal social, economic and political re- 1 forms under Democracy’s auspices. Some folk have faith to look for an early i-estoration of livable con ditions. Some remain skeptical. Representative Florello H. La- Guardia, a. an example of untra- ’ radicalism, ventures the gues- that Americans have just seen their la.st campaign between the two major parties of today; that a complete re- allignment will have been ecected be fore 1936’s election. The “Three Musketeers”. COTTON GINNING REPORT. Census report shows that there were 30,879 bales of cotton ginned in Johnston County from the crop of 1932 prior, to November 1, as compared with 30,670 bales g-inned to November 1, 1931. E. 'G. HOLLAND, Special Agt. Your attention is called to the ad vertisement of the - “Three Muske teers,” Put, Blackie and Whit, on another page. These gentlement in vite you to their service station, one mile north of Selma,. w-hen in need of anything in their line. You will have an opportunity to “spin the wheel,” which has thirty-one num bers. If the wheel stops on the ■number corresponding to the day of the month you get your gas and oil Free. They serve nice, fresh Pret zels free with all cold drinks, which are kept in a Kelvinator. This sta tion is one of the most up-to-date in Johnston county. In the meantime it is easier to explain why President Hoover was beaten than why - Governor Roose velt was elected. The depression, of course, was the Hoover administration’s undoing. It was due, anyway, as a war af termath. Protective tariff excesses may have hastened and accentuated it. To farm distress, industrial un employment was added. The President tried to deal -with the situation as an ordinary inteiwal of business stringency, which would pass in due course, but it did not do so—possibly because it was worse than any past stringency, just as the war^^was a greater war; possibly because it. was more deeply seated as to its causes. Washington, Nov. 13.—President Hoover was pictured Saturday by his campaign chairman as “one of our greatest chief executives,” who was “beaten only by forces of fate beyond human control.” Chairman Sanders, of the Repub lican national committee, issued a statement saying the final election figures would show “that no defeat ed candidate in hi. tory ever receiv ed as great a popular tribute as did Herbert Hoover last Tuesday.” With about 8 per cent of the na tion’s polling precincts still missing, the Associated Press tabulations showed the popular vote for Frank lin D. Roosevelt was 21,081,540 and for Hoover 14,929,660. Four years ago Hobver received a total of 21,392,190 votes to 15,016,- 443 for Alfred E. Smith, his Demo cratic opponent. His plurality was 6,375,747 as compared with Roose velt’s today of 6,151,880. No Advancement. Convict 1932—This is an old-fash ioned prison. Why don’t they get some up-to-date machinery ? Convice 1923—What do you mean ? Convict 1932—Well, it’s just like it was when I .was here 20 years ago—we >till crack rocks by hand! John J. Blaine, both the La Fol- iettes and no one con say how many tens of thousands of their supporters. P. T. A. WILL MEET MONDAY EVENING, NOV. 21ST It has been found necessary to •change the regular meeting of the ■p. T. A. from thd fourth Monday ■evening to the third Monday, which -will be November 21st, at 7:30, in the high school auditorium. An in teresting Thank.-giving program ha.s been arranged and Rev. D. F. Wad dell and Miss Elizabeth Baines will be in charge. A cordial invitation is extended to all parents and teachers and others interested. $300,000,000 TO BE. SPENT IN ADVERTISING NEXT YEAR Atlantic City, N. J., Nov. 15.— Lee H. Bi’istol, New York, president of the Association of National Ad vertisers, said today that more than Three Hundred Millions of Dollars is expected to be spent in advertis ing next year. He said.the outlay tvould be approximately 33 per cent over figures^ for this year. More than , half the companies of the association, he said, have re ported increases in total sales vol umes during the last three months. Progressive-ism gained strength ■within the G. 0. P. as the times tightened, until, by the campaign’s opening, it had attained a potency comparable to what it had in the 1912 campaign. Whereas the insur- gent.s in that instance, however, fol lowed Colonel Roosevelt in a third party movement, defeating President Taft and electing Woodrow Wilson, on this occasion they went over di rectly to the Democratic ticket-^ Senators Hiram W. Johnson, Bron son Cutting, George W. Norris and Prohibition also is now a rapidly I declining issue, and, despite his 1 party’s platform, Mr. Hoover gener ally was considered on the no-long- er-predominantly-popular dry side of it. - • - Then, too, Mr. Hoover had the burden of carrying the mistake in calling out United 'States troops to drive the B, E. F. from Washing ton. No single campaigner against him, it is safe to say, damaged his cause as it was damaged during the closing days of pre-election argu ment by the revelations of Gen'. Pel ham D. Glassford, the bonus .seek- el's’- friendly enemy, as District of Columbia police chief during their stay in the capital. Graham, Nov. 15.—Mrs. Elsie Witherspoon Dollar, 43-year-old wife of a local textile worker, this aft ernoon was formally charged with murdering two of her five children and .'hooting a third, probably fa tally, at her home on Whitsett av enue early this morning. “I killed them because I didn’t want to leave them to the mercy of this world,” Mrs. Dollar declared when she ivas interviewed in the Alamance county jail here. “I had gone through hell since I married my husband 21 years ago last Sep tember 2, and I couldn’t stand it any longer.” Warren, 12, and Daphne, five, were instantly killed when their mother, according to her own state ment, shot them through the head as they lay asleep at their home. Dara, seven, is in a critical condi tion at Rainey hospital in Burling ton with two bullet wounds through her head. She has only a slight chance to recover, according to the attending physician. Dr. G. L. Car rington. Mrs. Dollar said she had planned to kill her three younger children and herself for years. Calmly and unemotionally she told the dramatic story of the triple shooting. “I brooded all during the early hours of la-t night on the torture I was going through from my hus band,” she said. “He was working on the nigdit shift with our two oldest children. “Finally I decided that it wa.s time to end it all. I didn’t feel like God required me to leave my chil dren alive; I believed they would be better off dead. I had nowhere to escape from my husband, and I couldn’t take my babies with me even if I could get away from him. “About midnight I took my old owl-head .38 caliber pistol out of the drawer. I bought it in Durham two years ago to kill myself. “I walked into the room where all three of the children were sleep ing- together. I placed the pi.-tol against Warren’s head and pulled the trigger. He ne-ver moved after I shot him. The others stirred a little but they didn’t wake up. “I realized after I shot him that it ■was an awful, awful thing to do I would have given anything to bring him back to life. But I knew that I had better go through with it. “About 1 o’clock I gathered enough courage to go back into the room. I placed the pistol barrel against the temple of Daphne, my baby daughter as she lay there sleeping so peacefully. I shot her twice. “Again I ran into another room. It was about 2:30 when I went back and stood there looking at Dara, sleeping beside her dead brother and sister. I shot her, too, and then placed the pistol barrel against my o^wn head. In all I had eight bul lets, and I had used five of them on my children. “Three times I pulled the trigger, but all three of the remaining car tridges were no good. “I got my suitcase and started up town to give myself up.” Policemen Grover Rich and Her bert Ausley said Mrs. Dollar ■walked past their car near Court square' about 3 o’clock this morning. “We asked her where she ■was go ing, and she said she wanted to be locked up,” Patrolman Rich stated today. “She said, that we woulo find out this morning what she had done.” Mrs. Dollar said she walked the mile from her home to the court house at a brisk, pace. “It vv-as cold, and I ■wanted them to lock me up as soon as possible,!’ she declared. “I told the officers they had better carry me to jail if they wanted to get paid for making- an arrest. At first they said the jailer wouldn’t lock me up because they didn’t have any charges against me. But Mr. 1 Rich finally got out of the car and walked to the jail with me.” The officer and the woman walk ed the block from the courthouse to the county jail in silence through. Former Selma Boy Dies In Rex Hospital Adrian Powell Godwin, Son of Capt. J. E. Godwin of Selma, Died In Raleigh Tuesday Following An Operation For Appendicitis—Was Exceptional Young Man. Adrian Powell Godwin, aged 23, and the eldest son of Capt. J. E. Godwin, died in Rex Hospital at Raleigh Tuesday afternoon about 3 o’clock, following an operation for appendicitis. He had been suffering for several days from .tonsilitis at his home five miles east of Raleigh where he was stricken with acute appendicitis Monday night and tak en to the hospital at noon Tuesday. He lived about 10 minutes after the operation when his heart failed him. For the past five years he held a responsible position with E. A. Pearce & Co., stock brokers, and was held in the highest esteem by his employers. He was married in June 1931, to MLss Beulah Wall of near Garner, who survives him, to gether with one child. Mr. Godwin was the son of Capt. J. E. Godwin and the late Mrs. Godwin, . of Selma, and no young man in this town was more highly respected than he. He was indu.stri- ous, strictly sober, honest and a Christian gentleman. Besides his wife and one child are his father, Capt. J. E. God^win, and the following brothers and sis ters: Misses Glennie, Beulah, Viola and Estelle Godwin and Fred, Er nest and Erwin Godwin, The funeral services will be helvl at Ebenezer church, three mile.s from Hialeah on Route 10, Thurs day afternoon at 2 o’clock, the in terment will take place in the church graveyard. Theatre Has Ne%v Sound Equipment Those who have visited the Car olina Theatre in Selma during the past fev7 day.s have been very fa vorably impressed with the fact that they could hear so distinctly .every word of the actors in the plays be ing staged on the screen. Not only have the patrons of this theatre been favorably impressed with the sounds, being so audible, but since the theatre has been un der the present management the character of the pictures being shown are of a much higher order. Some of the pictures shown recently have been of a very highly educa tional order. The picture Tuesday night showing “How Life Begins”, was true to life and carried a les son ■which all young fathers and mothers need to know. NEW PASTOR FOR SELMA FREE WILL BAPTIST CHURCH Rev. Walter Williams, of Prince- ' ton, the new pastor for the Selma Free Will Baptist Church, will fill his’ first appointment here at 11 o’clock next Sunday morning, and at 7:30 o’clock Sunday night. The public is cordially invited, td hear him at both of these Services. the bright moonlight. Jailer - Law rence Goins was aroused. He un locked the heavy steel gate and ad mitted Mrs. Dollar. “Here it is,” she said, handing him a paper bag. He opened it and found a pistol inside. “I killed my children with it,” she calmly -stated. Little Dara was lying on the crude iron bed beside her murdergil brother and sister when the officers arrived. “She was crying and callin.g for her mother,” they said today. “Ever since we were married my husband has tortured me,” Mrs. Dollar asserted. “He has stood over me with a knife in ins hand. I left him twice, but he hunted me up and told me a pack of lies to per suade me to come back to him. “Two years ago I rented a room in Durham and spent sis hours in it ■with a gas jet turned wide open. But the gas didn't liuit me a bit.-, I..ater I went to a pa'wn shop and' bou.glit the pistol I used to kill my children last night. “I know it was an awful, awful, thing to do. I think, that in a way I’m not to blame for it. though. The children are much better off dead.”