on ivn,'/ vrirkvr FROM ST (By Joseph Hyde Pratt. State Oeol& ... ofltet.) Of jfotl importance with dm pnoteetlaa ta the foreeta of Eastern North Carolina Is thsir protection from loose hoes. The longleaf pine haa lornlshcd aherty all Use nsrsl stoma of the country and has (Iron ^'Turpentine dtateTot the supply una bean practically exhausted In this State sad reproduction of It has bees presented by hops devouring the msat and rooting out the young trees. There are many areas In' this State whlsfc were tWhTyiTmTd TmcJaBfc leaf plan and which are better'ndapt ea lO gmwing jun?i? fjk uin u*ro v.u?? to Ami ether purpose, yet they are now supporting only A growth of worthless scrub oak, because hogs have prevented the reproduction of the pine. Hundreds of thousands^ V" acres In this region are now pracIIUHIJ mpiuUuLlliL), and will nnntln . ue to he ao until they are protected from hops. Open Rang* a Survival. , The present condition of free range i. which still remains over so much of Eastern North Carolina la a survival of the time when the .State owned # most of the woodland, when timber was worth .. little Or nothing, and young growth was looked dpbh as worse thin useless, when 'settlers were scarce and only an occasional patch of land was cultivated. Conditions have now entirely changed. The land Is practically all ?crhrtfce hands of private owners; what timber there is left la worth 10 times as maeh aa twnnty.flvw yarn ago, and ,landowners are most' anxious to te~ * cure a second growth of pine on their forest land; good farms are everywhere throughout the region and the chief drawback the farmer has to contend with la the burdensome expense of fencing against otbeV people's stock,'where suitable material for posts or rails Is often hard to procure. Free Range No Ikmdt to Ldv* Stock that the tire stock indnstry Is impor t&at la the free range counties. It : Vt one time, but it certainty is not now. Vslne of Hoes: The last official figures issued by the State Tax Commission (Report for 1*11) show that In the coastal plain region (the eastera halt of the State) there are in . the stock law counties -an average of 31 hogs per square mile and In those < oanties that are partly or entirely open range there are 37 to the square mile, a difference of leea than one hog to the hundred acres. Bat the hoes in the open range counties am worth oelv fl.il per head or s total of $<1 per square mile, wnne these 1n the stock law counties are assessed st $2.81 per head or over $ >? per square mile. Vven In the mountain counties the same startling values of hogB show up In the assessment. There are about the same number of hoga per square mile In open range counties, those partly atoek law, and those whhlly stock law; but the value of ^ the hogs In the former is $2 per head, In the second $3 per head and in the full stock law counties they have an average of $4 each. There is evidently more money in hogs In the counties protected by the stock law. I Value of/Catde: Though there is KBOORDKR'B COURT NKWH. Before the "Recorder this morning <5eos J^Dwdy, colored, was fined $3 and costs for trespass. Yesterday afternoon, Alex Walker, colored, was sentenced to 30 days on the .roads for disorderly conduct TBB oepuiy son u UMmjt unit naiv Cegnell, colored, to the chain gang, .ho baring received 6CTdayeT6P dlfOT^ derly conduct. retrod for removing Jess Whitley, whije, of Pantego, and Bam Graddy. ooTored. of Waahington, to the State iaaane fnaltutfon.s Both tbooo men are eon Oped at present in the county JaH lor safe-keeping. ^ . Mlae Minnie Leary la visiting at the ' home of Mr. C. B. Bell. : * 7*n? TODAY'S RIWB ' J. U 0*Qotna. . Lyric. * ft Wo. Bragaw St Go. \ Mra. Summers. ft* Chichester Pills Petlma Cigarettes Jj g:?- * Pootum Cereal Co., v 1 jj; ' *S ?* tfti ? F FORESTS'.- O OCIt IS URGED a slightly creator nupiher of cattle per squar^ mile lifted la the free ran^e counties oi Eastern North Carolina than in the atec^ lav territory; yet the raloe of theaa cattle ahows conclusively that the stock lav la a benefit also to the cattle Industry, la the open range counties the value of nattle-avafcacae ?92 per aqnara mile In thoae counties that are mostly open range $104 per square mile; In thoae In which stock lav territory occupies the larger part, the value rises to Vl06 per square mile; while In fall stock law counties It rises tb llOt per aodhre mllsf The dltttrsaso In Talhe of these cattle is ejea more striking. In the free range counties ??l"a ft? ! tt per heed. In those with some stocks law $10, in those with a largo proportion of closed territory cattle' are worth about $11.$0 per head, while in the stock law counties their value T1 ' r - f" '"" [? much ? as In the open range counties. Texas Fewer. k The health as well as the value"of the stock la seriously menaced by the open range system. Texas fewer, which la carried by the cattle tick, cannot be stamped out of a district Until the cattle are fenced. The preeent quarantine line in Eastern North Carol I oar* leaves no ftes range territory above that line, while (?ere are only she stock law counties below it, and these have all had free range tn them unttT recent years. Whether one fa above or below this line means a profit or loss or one-half a cent per pound In the selling value of all cattle; and the removal of the quaranttne depends primarily on the elimination of the open range. Present Remedy Inadequate. It Is sand that the present local option stock law is s remedy that the pdbple have in their own hands, and that If they Want protection from loose stock they can vote tho stock law on their own district. This, however, becomes increasingly difficult to do because of the great expense of building long lines of fence . .whom timber Is scarce and high fa price, to keep put stock from surrounding districts. No one tfants to vote a tax on themselves, especially. Ulieii tt is-for the-purpose -ei ?ootrolling other people's stock. Duty of the State. The principle of the present stock law la wrong. -It is the duty of the State to protect a man ia the fraa and legitimate use of his property, unless he becomes a nuisance. The 8tate should therefore protect these large areas of timber and cut-over lands from the loose hog, by requlr IUB ???7 iubu w wiro ui uii u*u stock. If It is thought that this will work ' 1 WtBBf uu f isgluu, lot tt be al- lowable for those districts which show by a rote that they want their stock to run at large, to fence flheir own c district, and. thus prevent their stock ' trespassing on those who wish their 1 open forest land to be protected. * A 8tate-wide stock law Is In force 1 In Virginia to the north of ns and In T South Carolina to the south of us, * and it certainly should be In force 1 here In North Carolina. The farm- * era are demanding It as a measure * of justice as well as of progress and the woodland owners are demanding It because It Is the only measure that t can save the longleaf pine forests of y Eastern North Carolina from ex- ( tlnctlon. -i '' ...i | JULUQNARE WILL ' . JARE STAND. Aiken, S. C., Feb. 6.?Frederick O. Beach will lake the stand la^llls ~ own defense when his trial on the charge of assaulting his wife Is resumed hero tomorrow. This was the plan outlined by the defense at" 1hf| close of court tog ay. ?It 1? hUO proposed tO^tve?Mrsr : Beach follow the accused New Yorker Sa a witnesi. Since the assault upon her was commilted In the yard of the Bfach cottage hbre on the night of February 26 last, the story told by Beach and his wife has never varied. Both have maintained that Mrs. Beach was attacked by an unknown negro when she loft the house to give her dogs an airing. V' ' ? The Introduction of Beach's Jeweled pen-knife upon which one of the state's witnesses claimed to have found traces of blood corpuscles, wa* held by the proeecntleh until the last. It had bean anticipated by the defense and they were prepared to meet expert testimony with expert testimony, even to the extent of presenting a witness who had examined the knife and had failed as he swore, to And any. blood cells. WASHINGTON, NORTH Weather; * 7 iY CAOGHT ill MISS Richmond. Va.. Feb. 6.?-Caught placing spikes on the ralU ol -the IL_ iL-aa* P. last nigh* -Bernard Shaw. iged 6, confessed to the detectives lint he ted made jonr-attempts to rreek trains, endangering many Ives, just "to see the engines topple >ver~wi2l?fgoing fait."" v,~ Two weeks ago he wrecked a shiftng engine, the engineer and fireman laving narrow escapes from death. His attempts were made on Belvilere street, where the road passes hrough the city. The youngster/was given inlo the cstody of his parents who were rarned to keep him away from the idlroad tracks. iffRS. TAFT INTRODUCES : incur n\\rKt, Washington, D. C., Feb. 6.?One itep Is now the "regular" dance. "At he army and navy reception at the White House Tuesday night the lance was In trod need' to Washington oclety hy Mrs. Taft and Lieut Comnander Tlmmons, the naval aide to he President. *I*he reception was the >lggest during the Taft admlnlstralon. More than two thousand atended. Mrs. O. A. Spencer and Mrs. Walon Waters left yesterday for New 3ern to visit Mrs. J. M. Spencer for a lew days; from .there they will go to Wilmington for a short stay with relit Ives; and from there to Savannah, la., and Jacksonville. Fla., being iway altogether for several weeks. M.r L, C. Tripp, of Edwards, was imong yesterday's visitors. Your A] It Is the duty of every one t< the best foot forward fe not 01 bees. . Your Income and Its amount way you can dreg^, but not ever: on how you spend your money, you it fa a certainty that you w buying should be done with foi knowledge of when, where, and time each day. ' It takes no longer than that i of the merchants of this city, t Dally News. Read these adver each day, than you can be sure can buy at the lowest prise for CAROLINA. THURSDAY AFTERNOC = Fair Tonight at THROWING ANOTHERTlT. ? -J*? r DEMJII PRlMLi Raleigh, Feb. 6.?Having been in session three hours the House adjourned at 11 o'clock last night until today, without having taken action on the Justico State-wide plrmary bill. i MP'lWj Just before adjournment. Representative R. R. Williams, of Buncombe, offered a substitute in the form of a resolution declaring it the m=?.to vi mo nwutc mat a icganzca primary" for the entlre~is tafe^nd" for all 'parties, to bo held on the auno day, should be provided; that It la the aens^of the Hop?e that the pending bill should be amended so as to make It more simple and elastic and that the speaker of the House be authorized to appoint a select committee of Are to draft a new hill more simple and elastic in its provisions, but embodying as far as practicable the provisions of the pending measure. This seemed to meet with murb favor. DEATH OP REV. W. W. ftbftE OF FRANKMVTON The many friends in the city of Rev. W. W. Rose of the Methodist Episcopal church, South, will be saddoned by the pews of his death at his home in Frankllntcn, X, C. . He di4f yesteray afternoon from diabetes, 4fter an illness of two and a half d^rs. He had been a member of the Mothodist Conference 28 years, and was serving his fourth year on the Prankllnton circuit. During his long and fruitful ministry he had held "many prominent and responsible positions. ' The funeral takes placo Monday at 4 o'clock. Hev. R. H. Broom left this morning for New Bern to attend the laymen's convention. ppearance ^or_2|tsdf. 7 ~ > look their very bpat. Btlttlng sly pleasing, bat it Is^sjood busl# has a great deal to do wtth the rtblng. Almost as much depends If yon buy as the Impulse strikes 111 not always get full value. Tour rethought. You can gain full ; what^fo buy In a few moments' to go through the advertisements he best of whom advertise In The tlsements closely and constantly of getting the best that money which it can be sold* / ' >AILY N. FEBRUARY ?, Itll. id Colder ? ;^VJKr e V, <' * ?i? iB.! >/ ' ?2 1 Macauley In New Vpr* World. IIK1IC BT PICTURE V. 1SB0WS New York. Feb,. _6.?lCuepera In the Paeeaic County, N. J., Jail at Paterson were startled yesterday by shrieks from a padded cull occupied by Mrs. Albert santapz. nvo feet two inches "all gnd of frail balld. . .The woman had torn ibo-pad* from her cell and the clothes from her body. She was boating tho door with her fietB. Keeper Qulnlau and three others-entered the cell, hoping to quiet the woman. The second the door opened she hurled herself against the four. She seemed to have the strength of a dozen women and the keepers wero thrown aside. Quintan caught her by the neck, but she broke hie bold and bit his left hand. Qninlan *as powerlesH to beat the woman off and sho held to blB hand, hn? t nnlh mimm " until her jaws were pried apart. Escaping from the cell, she daBbed through the corridors, shouting. Until she had become breathlesa with running. The beepers were unable to control her. Then they placed her in a Btraitjacket and carried her back to the wrecked cell. Until 2 o'clock last Sunday morning Mrs. Santanz was a kind, gentle woman. Saturday night she and her husband went to a moving picture show. For a month Mrs. Santanz has been developing a craze for moving pictures. There was hardly a day she did not go to one of the shows. After the show Saturday night she and her husband retired. About 2 o'clock next morning she sprang .from bed and with a scream dashed from the house. No. 488 Main street, and 'n her night garments rd?ed for Police Headquarters, where she told a rambling tale. She was locked up and for a few hours appeared calm. The violent mania began Sunday before neon and Increased as time wore on. Monday morning she was placed in the padded cell. So violent was she it was next to impossible to feed her. She broke the spoons with bar Itffth ? Santanz told the police last night be could not account for his wife's Budden insanity, unless it was causedby the moving pictures she saw. ; "*i*ho erase got an entire hold on ber," he said. "She began to seek the moat sensational pictures that came to aPteraon and never was happy outside the theatres." COLD IN MIDDLE WK8T. j/chicago, Feb. ?.?With the thermometer near the sero mark over the Middle West, there Is little comfort In Forecaster Cox's prediction that the cold wave will last for at least two more days. \^One person has been fro sen to death here and there is much suffering. At Duluth, Minn., the temperature la twenty-four below aero; 'at Devils Lake. N. D., 34 helew k ' A. ? J* / > tttJiM CONVENTION 01 New Bern. Feb. 6.?The opening p ?eeeion of the New Bern Convention ^ of the Laymen s Missionary Move- C ment commenced this morning at 10 o'clock at Centenary Methodist church. The array of speakers Is one j of the bent ever offered at a Lay- ? men's Convention in North Carolina, 1 embracing one or two men of Interna- C tional reputation, all of them being \ men of extraordinary distinction as o earnest Christian workers and epos- 1 'ties of the larger and mere effective I Christian life of the laymen of the b t scvornl churchee: The program fol- t 'lows: a Thursday. Feb. O. C 10 a. m.?Pastor*' Conference. Ad- A dress by W. E. Doughty, of New I York, educational secretary of theil l Laymen's Movement _of the United t! Stgt^s and - Canada; Hev. E. C. ? jcronr, of Cclumbia, S. C., General ' iMiTtWc./y oi m<- i.a);lii !) s aiissuui- T jnry Movement of the Lutheran Synod. South. ^ t? 2:30 p. m.?Address by Hev. E. C. F Crook on "The Call of Heal Leader- t ship." Address on "Prescribing fcr J Laymen," by Llvious l.ankford, M. D., Norfolk, head of the baptist Lay- ? men's Movement in Virginia. Address by Col. Elijah W. Haiford. of b | wasniugton. L). t .. on "Men and Mm- & jnlons." 'tl I 7:30 p. m.?Mass-meeting tuldrt-HsIa by Bisbop Robert Strang.' 01 Wll-ici mignton, N. C.. on "The Duty. Up-|a LAST DANCE OF HALLYON ![ CLUBJEFORE EASTER: The Halcyon Club gave a dance | Tuesday evening in the Elks Home, cl thin being the last affair given by it this old and historical organization J before the grand Easter German af-jC< ter I^enL The following couples were?ft on the floor: h Miss Katie Bcagaw with Mr. E. H. s Harding; Miss Bess Conolcy with Mr. * J. H. Bonner; Miss Olive Ourbaitk with Mr. Herbert Bonner; Miss Olive tl Burbank with Mr. Herbert Bonner; P Miss Caddie Fowlo with Robert Small: Miss Kllznhoth farrow with tt _ No 1J1 RLAYMEN VT NEW BERN ; ort unity mod Privilege of'Missions." , tddreaa by W. E. Doughty on "The -y "hellenge of e Great Task:" Addr^a* ' i i i|9 y Rev. E. K. McLerty. / jflifl Friday. Feb. 7. " jjr V, 9:30 a xn.?Addreee by Blshtyr 'I LoherL Strange on "The flfelfltMf o JH Imphasls In Missions." Address bx ? ' jj Lov. fi. C.cVonk on "The Missionary^ X J? ommittee, Its Organisation and ,j"t 3| York." Address by W. E. Doughty J n "How to Get and keep the Church Dtelllgent About Missions." 2: 3 iljji m.?-^ddress by J. Campell White of iflew York, general sec etary of the United States andCanda. ou "Solving the Problem of Church and Missionary Finance." iddresneu by L. B. Padgett and tf. hi. Irinson, on "What Can Wo l>o in 'hi# City and County to Enlist All he Churches in a Worthy Misrioury Policy.'* 4 p. m.?Denominational confer- *> *ftcts IV(M,T idUMllllun Bpi'ilM'l.V 1 7 p. ni.?Convention Supper. Kifpen miuute addresses by Rev. H. W 'atton of Atlanta, and W. E. Doughy of New York. Closing address by . campoeii wniie or New iorK on The Decisive l)eea<|< of Christian Uotory.'*? The program will be Interspersed f liveif siDgiDR from four hundred ong books especially arranged for ti" laymen's meetings. There will lso b>- devot'onnl periods during the anventicn led by visiting ministers nd laymcu. * * * APT. STUDDERT TOJRACTICE LAW Airs. George J. Siuddirt. oj thisity, received a telegram this mornjg from her husband. Captain -Geo. . Studdert, stating that he had sucosefully passed thu examination bejre the Supreme Court admitting im to practice law in this State ince but few of h s many friends new that Captain Studdert was con m plating entering' the profession,. 10 news will come as u pleasant surrise. Captain Studdert is now'serving ft ?rm in the State Senate from this istrict, and has already fully demnstrated his aptitude for legal queaions. /* IR. KESSINGER'S OEATH SHOCKS THE CITY _ The entire city was shocked ro? e>ar of the death yesterday of Mr. PTnr~nr"Ke?tmiKiT at nupm, ma mn ome. For sometime past Mr. Kealnger baJ been ill with Bright3 Disuse: two months ago he was comelled to retire from the cares of busiess, and only recently he_went to his Id homo at Roper. He was born in Pennsylvania, but dopted Roper as his home in early ife. He was a prominent lumbeT lan of this section, having been eoneoted with the Mooro Lumber Co., nd the Georgia Carolina Lumber* !o., representing the latter concern a Norfolk until two months ago. rhen he came back to Washington, rhere he had lived sbme -years. As is disease advanced, however*, he elt a desire to be in Roper, his old ome, and his last days were spent. l~ that place, tfe was forty-two ears of age at the time of his de&t'p le leaves a widow and four children, vo girls and two boys. His daugh?r. Esther, was summoned home *p? srday by telegram from the State ormal School at GrfcenStocn, but arVM tOO late to hca^jjJe bedside of er dying father. He was a member of the Wasbing>n Lodge of Elks and was a Mason, rope ? an ga today upon thejtoor of ?e Elks Home, and in the cldb rooms-. a atmosphere of hushed Madness is ?1 pparent. The family have gone to Roper. Is riot yet decided whether the in?rment will be at Norfolk. Va.. or t Miffllnburg, Pa. Miss Lotta Bishop, of Pantego, is laiting Miss Mabel Ricks, on East econd street. ig secretaries of the South Atlantic srrltory of the Y. W. C. A., are retaining In Greenville for a few days > do city association work. .? T COTTON MARKET Lint Cotton, lie. Soon Cotton,** 1-Jc. , Cotton Soon. |II H V * ' 1 'i Mr. Sam Williams; Miss Mary Clydejd Hansel 1 with Mr. D. M. Carter, Jr.; jo Miss-Fan Lamb Haughton with Dr. tl Rhodes of WllltawMon; Miss Isabel Carter with' Mr. William Knight; B Miss Minnie Nicholson with Mr. Sam II Grlce; Miss Mary Hill with Mr. William Blount; Mias Rebecca Simmons with Mr. Herman CarnSw; Mies Mary Lillian Ellsworth with Mr. Curtis Ellsworth; Minn Cheson of Roper with Mr. W. E. F. Patrick; Miss h Leary of Elisabeth City with Mr. N.'-* H. Moore; Mrs. John Qorham with h Mr. John Qorham; Mrs. Caleb Bell H with Mr. Caleb Bell; Mrs. Rob Mc Arthur with Mr. Charles L. Morton; V Mrs. Claud Carrow with Mr. Claud h Carrow; stags. Dr. A. C. Hoyt. Mr. ? J. F. Tayloe. Mr. J. M. Hodge. Mr. D .T. Fowle, Mr. F. 8. Worthy; chap- a erones, Mrs. J. B. Moore; Mrs. A. M. Damn, Mrs. J. B. Fowle. n Y. W. U. MEETING IN GREENVILLE; w h Greenville. Feb. .?Tbf student council of the Young Women's Chris- h tian Association for Eastern North a Carolina held its annual meeting at 71 the East Carolina Teachers Training H School from January 31st to Febru- ti ary 4th. t? The council was in charge of Miss t? Anna D. Casler of Charlotte, who, ls]N J territorial secretary for this dlvlsion.Trl and?*Mlsaes Porter and Powell, trav-|b< elrag student secretaries. There were I present delegates from Meredith Col-,t< lego of Raleigh, Elon College of?C EIod and Peace Institute of Raleigh. it> The young wimen and ihe students a; and members of the Training School j ai Association met together to discuss j among themselves the needs of their jit association, and. guided by the sec- t? retarles, were able to make plans for al the meeting of these needs. Not all the time was given up to work and study, and the Training vl School gfrlto took advantage of this & hy giving their guests an afternoon . reception, teas, oyster roasts and " evening socials. ll At the closing of the council on Monday afternoon a demonstration a of the organisation of the girl's camp fire movement was made by the Training School students, under the npervision of Mlaa Porte^ In a few days It is hoped that this movement will have been organised and put In working order. Misses Porter and Powell, travel> >lii*aiaiiiiiiiii>i Minhiwaitiftini ' n