A line mark here riieaas that the sub scriber to this copy of The News is be hind on subscription Please mat a pay ment as soon as con venient. TIT 11 r$ Cm. 3 K ID tltf vol. xxxir MO UNI AIRY, NORTH CAROLINA, THURSDAY MARCH 5, 1914. NO. 3d BENTON WAS SHOT Iin villa's orncE. Washington Officials Receive Ocnchi osive Informaticn That Britisher, After Waiting Two Hours for an Interview, Died from Bullet Wounds in Stom ach. .Washington, Feb. 28. William fr?. Beuiton, the British subject slain at Juarez, "w as unarmed ami was shot, to death in Villa's of fice, pistol bullets through the stomach ended his life, accord ing! to conclusive information which has reached Washingtnn officials. While no statement to this cifti't wjw fort.honing to day, slackening of official inter cut in thu proposed post mortem of Benton's- bedy was evident, the belief being that the exami nation wouhl be useful only in that it might serve to supplement the evidenc of timid witnesses who possibly otherwise; would .withdraw thedr oral statements. Benton carritd no arms when he approached Villa's office in Juarez, according to information; he spent two hours waiting for the interview that ended in' his death, walking back and fortfli in front of the office building; lie was shot through the stomach afteir lie entered the offioe and received other wounds after ward' .although the first was mortal. General instructions 411s to the method of invesitigatioit to be pursued were issued today by tflie State and War Departments to their representatives at Kl Paso. It is realized that local conditions must determine the details and only broad lines were drawn in the directions. It was nojpjinown exactly to day when t j coiiunissioii would tart for tr.if juiua. day. authorized General Scout command of the post at Kl Paso, to select two Army surgeons to make a medical examination of the body. The exiwiiiination of Benton's lnody will be conducted by tilie United States authorities, the Britit-h view being that the re fponsilility reds on the State Department. The British Ambassador has taken frequent opportunity to show the satisfaction his Govern inenit feels at the attitude of the State Department, nddiing anoth er tribute tcday to the activity which has marked the prosecution of the inquiry. It ia believid that when the facts connected wiith the killing of Benton are developed fully, unhw the United States Govern menit fees called unon to ile- irnarul reparation, the British iGoverwncnt s'jinply will docket the ea.se ami place it on file to be Tvre.sented to the future Gov eminent 01 Mexico tor settlement when the day of reekonraig comics'. No answer has leen returned to the latest query from Governor Colouut of Texas as to whom he -onld address a requisition for tho surrender of the Federals who killed Vcrgara, the Texas ranch man. Verdict for $10,000 Smithfield. Against Hi nith field, March 1. In the BujN'rior court here last week, Judge H. B. Peebles presiding, one case which caused much in terest was the suit of Mrs. Con DoVnoii against, die town of Smithfield ftr $15,000 on account of the death of her husband, the jury returning a verdict for $10, IKX) in. favor of the plaintiff. On Tfliank.sigiivirg day, 1912, a dead nuin was found in the I 4? ditch in front, of the T. S. Ila?s dale tobacco factory. An investi gation was made and it was found that the deceased was John R. DoWm, of Tcacheys, a well to do farmer. He was on a land deal witm a .parry in Kenly, and was ip here that day to investi gate the deed. After having fifVished hi business he took the left-hand sidewalk to go to the b'pt, when upon reaching the NJKt where lie was found, h fell ir the big ditch, his death sup ""OlwtUy being caused by the fall. Mrs. Dolison fulministcred on the estate aril brought suit ftgainst the town for $1.1,000. BOLE JACK'S FAMILY HISTORY IS GIVEN, Was Husband by First Marriage of a Daughter cf One of the Siamese Twins. CStarlotte OWever, 2nd. During this week1 the petition with many signers will go from Qiarlotte ot Ilaleig-h ot be pre sented to Governor Craig asking for mercy for James Nathaniel Bolejark, who w-,us convicted in Mecklenburg Superior Court for the murder of his wife and sen tenced ot die April 21. Should thu-i petition and the representa tion of the attitude of the con victing jury toward clemency move Governor Craig to commute the sentence to life imprison ment, it is probable that the ap ipeal takim "by the counsel for Bolejaefe will not be carried to the Supreme Court. While the man now sentenced to die could not be termed a man of mystery exactly, it is never theless true that there was com paratively little of his p;ust or of his beginnings adduced m his trial. He created comment more on account of tin? peculiar ap pearance of gentleness and almost of gentility as he stood in the dock, for trial and sentence to death than even by the atrocity of the crime he was charged with. Litckinig the culture of education in books as he did. Bole jack1 fac ed hisfaite with stoicism and made a pretty fair impression of a cer tain kliiul of manhood. Bole jack was bom in Stokes County. His father owned about. ucreM of land in that count y and he received his dearth wciiuid as the result of an accidental fall from a imule's bsuk. while riding homeward from a Methodist Sun day school. The mi an who has ikvn sent to Haleigh and for 1 t'-M, 1 m 1 r-Iiimi t mmm0mmJ. unitta; qnu-fc meas ures lor mercy are iaier mm snccesijfully, took as his first wife a daughter of one of the famous Siaimcse twins. She divorced him Some interestiiiir facts a!out the Bolejack.s are included in the. following information ftirniluu by Dr. L. II. Hill, of (ieriuanton. who was well acquaint! d with the family : James Xatlum'ul Bolejack, in jail in Cjiarlotte for killing his wife, was born in Stokes County, abo'ut one mile frmn Germanton at the old Bolejack mill on Town Fork' Creek. His first wife was Victoria, a daughter of one e.f the Siamese Twins, who came from Mount Airy. She got a divorce from hum and left him. A ft r this he left home and was gone for 10 years or more. He again returned for a short while and then went to Carlohtt.e. "He is the son of William A. Bolejack, who married Susanna Banner. The sons were Jost-ph, Dphraim, Kdigar, B. J., John and James N. The daughters mere Minerva, who tuarrhd H1 Sm'jth. and Sarah, who died insane in the hosipitjil at Morganton. "William A. Bolejacki was for yeflrs a member of the M. K. Church' in ( Jei inauiton. In Sep tember 18711 he went to Palmyra IM. K. Church about six (miles north of Germanton to hold a li md a v school one Sunday. On his return about a milo from the Church it ap,pcarcd that the mule ll ik Ai'ii.i Miil'iitrw fi.ll ti'ttti liitii lilt . 1 1 . ..1. ..11 i...... was in row 11 01 1 iirju 11 is skiiii i 1 11 red by impact against a He died three davs later .k from 1 this wound, unteercd in H- . 1. ;.., ,.,1 JIis son hpriam voi- 01 v ' ll, l, I -!, Regiment and died in Vi tiri 11 nl in lMfi! following the first baltb of Manassas." Hcncr Roll. Honor Koll of Deron S"h.ool for the fourth month. 1st GGrade Bay (ihandler. Clayton Denny, lluby Denny, Sadie Slawter. 2nd Grad.- Charlie Denny, Nora (Hiarufler. :?rd Grad.' Myrtle Denny. 4th Grade Oil rl (Vex. 'Alton Denny, Oscar Denny, Alex and Joel Klinrhnm. oth Grade Kena Flinch um, Walter Flineiuim. ah Grabv Ida Cox, Lula Dennv, Mecie Deiinv, Ib'ttie Den ny. Ethel Fulk. 7th f r. Hft- Tida Deiuiy. Marjorie L. Jackson, Teacher. BOLD BURGLARY IN WILKES. Wilkes Lady Driven from Home by a Burglar, Who Then Rob bed the House. Wilkesboroj Patriot. One of the boldest burglaries that has ever occurred in this county wan coaiunitted by some unknown -person at Mr. J. M. Lowe's home, about 3 1-2 miles southVest of town, Tuesday night, about 9 o'clock. Mrs. Jwe was alone in the house and had re tired tor the night. Hearing a step on the porch she at lirst thought i twas her htnUand. who usually stays in North Wilkes lMn during the week, but when she heard some one begin to iprie the door open, she suspect ed something wrong and got up and Went into another roum. The intruder lost. no time getting in s: c of the house aiul, after get ting in.-kle, fire I four shots in to the walls and ceiling with a pistol, which was no doubt done to frighten any one who mifht 1m in the house. Mrs. Lowe right ly concluded thait discretion was the better part of valor and made her exit 011 tof the house, through a door in another part of the house froon that in which the burglar was, taking her pistol and a garment that she thought was tier apron, m the poe.Kct 01 which she had some money, but in her hurry failed to get the apron and took the wrong gar ment, (.lad only in her night clothes and without any shoes on her feet, she made her way to the home f her father. Mr. C. A. Canter, about a quarter of a mile a-wlay. Mrs. Lowe's daughter, Mrs. Kfner Duncan, also lives nearby and it was from her that the tel ephone message telling of the burglary was received by Sher iff Brown shortly after' Mrs. Lowe had reached her .fathers everything in the house in his seirchi for money. Kverythiing was turned topsy-turvy and trunks were ransacked. The apron, in the pocket of which Mrs Lvwe had lu r money, was not loverlookvd by the burglar and the money was taken. The Civil Se:-dce. V Thanks to the interposition of hhe President and the I'ostinash r Geiieral, and to the goxl S'lise and. jxilitU'id integrity of many sturdy" Democrats, a eontMiiplatel assault upon the principh' and practice of ciJil service refonn has Ifceeu nbandoiMd. The piwi- tion to be eaptund was not, cue of great iiiriirnitude., It involved only, the officis of seine twenty five huudnsl assistant postmas ters; hut siiives in one attack of the sort makes it eiLsier to suc-c-td in other campaigns. No doubt there arc jiolit'c'uns 1 wlw would velcomc a return! to the chaos tint m irked the days betwd'H the alminitrat'n.n f 3'rtsident .lacks'.in and that f President Hayes. Jisejih Sti ry, the author of the "C innient 1 r i s on the Convtitutioii," ,uul bcinig a justie' of the Suprnue Court, said that all the removals Fi in office during the forty yeaiN be fore Jack--)n b'CHime President Were less than one-third as manv I as Jack sen. made in tin' first yiar i of his term. In.e !). mal - a clean sWei'M, of Oemo'Ta's; . 1 1 Till i sou turin d ml. , 1 . .1 I'l t' t ll I ft ' 1 1 u ! 1 1 1 1 1 1 wilt III .1 I I . II II I ' ll Keipnblie in postma-tcis, Ill mx 1I.O..U.S; him 1 ine pn e s- 't i ciei.s ivemiriieu iri'lil' .i v 1 .1 ii I 'he .New 1 ork ciisteniiHiuse. meli 0 -. I 1 of political hacks aoooin.ttd to (Iieir T ices, were never I'insir thin when Grant was President and Arthur wn.s collector. Neither uirty is hlamees in tlie matter. But recent events .shew that a large majority in ever yarty now favors the merit system, and will oppo.se all ef forts to break it down. . The chance that Congre-s will refuse to make an iqvpropriatioon for tlu1 Civil Service ( -ommissioii is gone forever. The siotils swtem is evil, and tlw HvsTcm mat nits r'iia't4i u 1 nit nnfucrMM- )iir iiihsithl jiimi nt itrovernm..Mt. ( pponeiits ; Van(i(. hjil i( t,))ir nrU of it still repeat the old untruth throi-rli affection of simvliciiy tnat ahsiir, qn,t,n,w from tlwvand vnMv. staple of the cxaminjitkjns; huts a sufficient answer i the mt- Mlnda Broadening'. Honnel of the civil w-n'u'e, never j "Tlie miihjs of people here and liefore so gool as it is to-day. els where are being broadened STATES MUST TERVENE. IN Time Is Coming" When This pountry Must Step in, Says J. H. Crowley. o (liarlotttx Observer. "Kvery Mexican mother tejach es her son how to pray and ev ery Mexican father teaches him to fight," siiatj Mr. J. H. Crow ley, a casmoMlitan who enjoys hw residence in Charlotte. Mr. Crowley IiuhI a fine opportunitv to study the Mexican character .10 years ago, when MaxiuuIIvm was reaching the zenith or his career as conqueror f the. country, During tluit period Mr. Crowley !' 1 t t A spent live atxi a nail vears m Mexico, mostly at Chihuahua. ' The I'uited States will have to take part in the troubles of that country soon," is his opinion 1 1.. .i l-. .1 . ., iwni ne h.iso oeiieves inai me emigration of settlers to Mexico from this country was largely re sponsible for the revolutions, which have disturbed the tran quility of that RopuUio for sev eral decades. - "The man froJm this country tells the Mexican that he is not gettimg his just dues, when the power of the upper cla-s is ex ercised in rclibery of the mass of people and in this maimer have aided in keeping the jeople stir red up. Mr. C row-fey is a scholarly man of many travels and even yet dreams of fairer fields. Although he lwis sptut liiis years, a rich number, in all parts of the I'nit "d States while it was in its most interesting Hriol of de velopmcnt, he has the true wan derlust the vjirit of the Knight of the Holy Grail. He dreams now of the pretty, gentle hills of Maryland ail he may some day build his home then'. Mr. Crowley and his woolen mills in CltlTriwiltita. when they had to carry snpjplies by ox cart l,o(il1 miles to reach that place. His mind is rich with ex perience and broad and of the geaierallv mistrusted Mexican he says he is situ pie-hearted and s fair when trended with f iirness. Bad' Government and" mis'reat meni tof the lower order of the jx'ople he blames for the Mexican trouble. Ohangfea All Around- While Mr. Crowley bus not ix'nu in .MeX'co lor a tcriq 01 many years, he retains his Mor es! in the people of that con. .try. He H-iys his brother, who was with hhm in his long-ago experience there, lived in the country trntil he di velt pd such no affection for Mexican life that he ha.s nev er rocovend from the desire to return there to live. Until very n een tyears, eiiicnrdirir to Mr. Crowley, the further sorth the wandeiN-r would move the easier makinig a living became. The Mexican raw materials were available years ago at pric es so low that there were chamccs for wonderful profits for the American biiMiie.vs man there. He and his brother paid six cents a 5oiind for wool which they sold when made into cloth at 4.f0 a yard. Of course time has ch.inpi4i the country there wonderfully, ad midid Mr. Crowley, ami he stat eil tin. tin 'J" years he has wit nt vd marvejiius traiis.fermatit.11 I . . . . . jtl ilillus ,11111 inouyiu oncii 1 1 1 V , I ! "I. I II I ..vi...., 1 ,.ti. iv, .,, ,,hij.wl,j ; J ljv,,a j,, ,.tlun, H II! 11 I I II M 1 Ulin W(lllltl'i 1. s. :; the C." sa'd h. ' North looked My friends upon the ii'siiuth. is a I'lice of danger to I the la'W-a''idii ig nrd would al j.ntf hdw I managed to get. along aiiioru? on - iiei'.dboi-s. J t''M them I m Hinged it simply by at tendin,ir to my own busimss." ! "Ihvent v-five years ai?o," sa:d Mr. ('rowley in difcussiii'g the chamjes time effe't.s, "an edu cated man couldn't do any good preach inur in wctern North Car olina. He couldn't make the right impression because the pein ple demanded that their preach- ; i .wi n. i 1 1 UNITED wonderfully with the passing of time," is the opinion expressed by this man of Charlotte whose eyes have lookvd many plices and as a superb analyst has gleaned iiiiany correct impnws'ions. There is no pessiminsion in his heart. iSeeing much, he Is not blase and to the end of the roda he will b csettnig his ft in new pathways and feasting his mind in the romance of creation. Ollic Jmts' First Client The first client Ollie James. now a Senator from Kentucky, ever had was an old fanner who had gone up against a shell g;t;ne in a circus, says The Popular Mag:izine. Tw 4i man had sold his farm for l,"."), and had come into town to put his money in the bank. He had it sowed up in the inside jMx-ket of hw vest. But, just as he entered the town, he overtook the circus parade. That was too much for him. Tlie huUbiib of tlie auimals in their cages, the women lare back riders on the hors, tihe clowns on the elephants, and the hands, and the calliope got into his blood. He follows! thcan back to the grounds, ami one of the fimt things he saw was a smooth - looking, well - dressed yountf man, who was saying: "It's pretty easy. All you lukvc to do, gentlemen, is to .watch the little ball. J bet you $5, even money, that you can't tell me inkier which shell the lit tle ball r.ts." "That's a lie!" shouted the old farmer. "I know where that durn little hall is. Take up that thar aniddle shell." Tlie youiiig man took iijk tUie middle shell, aihl sure enough, there was the little Uill. "But I'll b,t von all the same," he said, evidently irritated by haviita his game solvcl lvv, .), Xh .$." lets.-'' cried Une fart er. "J want to let real money. I'll hft you .$"00 I can tell what shell that thar little tMng is urcler." Tlie smootJi young man waved around his shells, (manipulated the ball, and tW farmer kmrw it was under the middle shell. He saiw it go uikIct the middle .shell. Jt hal to be there. "Don't mow a finger!" hf slhouted. "Leiave it w.har it is I'll bet von $1,0)0 it's under the middle shell." He was breathinsr hard now and waivirng his wallet in the air. "Whv lon't vou bet more?" asked the smooth ojerator, who'fHHVKK) per annum wjks really astounded that the old man had so jnneh money. "By crack. I will!" shreked the farmer. "I'll N-t you $1,7."0 cash, young man, that the ball's under the middle shell." Tlie bet. was taken, the money was parsed over, and the middle ."hell was liftfd. Tlie little hall was not there. That was how Ollie J;unes got his first ease. He took it on shares, the understanding being that he was to eet a percentage of the $1,7r0 if be won. He won. Wife Tco Fend cf Ftfgs, Ccm- plains Husband. Los Angih, Feb. 2S. Judge Monroe lookl askance 1' when Mr. Dana Niedhnn, seeking a diverce on the ground of cruel ty, rem ark od that one oiuv of the difference .with her husband w s her fondness firlgirs. "Why, your honor, cue morn inn,', when I was feelinl' unusual ly hun.gry. I ate six opsrs for Jmakfast, and he raWed a rei?u lir riiiiipus." sa"l the i!aintif.f. "Vouwhat?" domaniisi the court in astonishnient. "Oh, that was 11 years ago, wb.-n t-i:n were only 1H cents a doen." exclaimesl Mrs. Necdham. "They were our own hens' egsrs, and he said I outrht to have sold tlom." "That's diffen nt," sa;l the coiut. iinlicating he thought the eggs had Im-cii iliMjxisrd f by the plaintiff at the impular price to- j day. ' "Things have char-giil sin-e j those days," was the court's fur ther nmnnnt. j Other tedimony showed Need !j.im was inelind to skimp n other itents of f o h 1 . Jud Mon roe d oied the decree, bi.t orvler U Neclham ot permit his wife to do the family buying. DESTROYING OPIUM INDUSTRY. Stringent Law in Recent Years Have Greatly Checked the Evil. from The Outlook. It might be well to revie-w rajidly a few pertinent events which ha already demonstrated the practical nature of this move ment. First of all, following on the heels of the Shanghai commission, the pium farms in Macao were declared haukrirpt. Two-thirds o the revenue of Macao was deriv ed from the smoking opium which -he prvpaml and exported into the United States. With, the passage of the anti- piunn bill lr Congress in 1!W)! the trade re'eiv ed its deathblow. Next the opium dens of Hong kong were closed by order of the home Government in England. ' In ?iina itself vast areas un der ioipy cultivation have been condemned and replreed by crops less dangerous to the common weal. More pertinent still have been the edicst issued by the Gweriwnent warning officials knmvn to be Victims of tho Inb Vt that a certain period wmihl be allotted them in which to over come their weakness-. failings which the ji"i!alty wnuld be their heads; ami th is. drastic object lesson lias been rtkpeatediy en forctxl. As for the United States, th'x. movement was responsible for the discovery of conditions which, if not chmckied. would have losl to National disaster. Tlie' unearthim of thus situation was followed by the immidiate passage of a prohibitive opium bill. -Sinep thei still more exact legislatim has been devised in the shape of teh anti-narcotic bill at pre.s-r.t wait ing action by the Senate a bill 'o'awn ii!p for the purpose d"dW urt..i.egu!atinig - itiw imre st rioted sffrs the-Vum and its Ikindrcd drugs. Jn Eurejx these investigations have bnl to a general alarm and the enactment of more stringent lawts to prevent the spread of this evil. Most pertinent of all was the formal announeemeirt made in the British Parliament in May, lill 3. that the Indo-China opium traffic had come to an end, and that India, Bad already put into ojer-ationfu-w 1i1ea.su res for tlvo pro eurini of her revenue. It is not 'to he overlooked that by this act India has sacrificed a sum of $20, The main point is that the de plorable trade of 150 years h'ls been, brought to a clos If can not he expected that normal con ditions will instantly obtain, or that a trade and vice so deeply rooted can .with tlie stroke cf a pen, be eradicated. That there will be baciksliding' is inevitable, and doubtless a periixl of con fusion, liefore the new order of things is accepted and the pro per adjustment achieved. Birt. the fact remains thnt the United States hits accomplished the tadi that she undertook, and incidentally, as concerns herself, much more than she intended. She has brought about the solu tion of the opium question, and she has once more demonstrated to China her sympathy and gixxl will. China owes many dcihts to the United States, but in the final analysis the one to ltxan largest will be the aeticn of the United States to investigate and finally rid her of the curse that for well nigh two centuries has byen working for her ilestnwtion. Also it is not to be forgotten that, as civilization advances, so intimately and intricately do the interests of one affect the inter ests of all that ills can bet no longer isolated. As in the hu man body, so in the lody K)litic. disease in one part must affect the whole. So with opium and the gnat problem of China's fu ture. As she is permitted and encouraged to advance and direct her energies along the lines of health and progress, just fo much will she add to the welfare of the whole. Coble's Croup and Pneumonia Remedy ia the new liquid ex ternal remedy for colds, croup, pneumonia and ajl inflammation, and relieves instantly. 25c, fjOe and $1.00 size. Sold on a gnar antee. All druggist have it.