Weekly Journal
-r'-1--f iwy Tiena da
day at U NKk
eUreel W
t. 4. LAND MUT1NG CO.
TtUpBMI
Bwssaw Oftee X
Mechanical '
H K LAM) Manager
Ii I CRCMPLKR BDITOR
S. B. BLEDSOK Reporter
SUBSCRIPTION BATES.
Omtmt ..!(
six Month SO
Three Months 25
The JOURNAL carries complete
press reports furnished by the Central
News of America Press Association,
aad in addition to this, fully covers
Eastern North Carolina by special
oorrespondets.
Entered at the post office in New
Bern as second-class mail matter.
Open season for overcoats.
Time to put on an additionil pair
Old Man Nervousness got all th
blame in the C arter-Abernethv case
Job, of Biblical fame, didn't hav
a tiling on the editor of today.
Over iu Raleigh this week they trie;
to convict a politician of illegal voting
Might as well try to bring the moun
tain to Mahomet.
"After the war
Raleigh Times,
it, of course.
-What?
Why.
queries th
i history of
They've started the ball rolling
It has been discovered that the Kai
ser bad a woman spy employed in
this country and she has been taken
under arrest. Who's next'.'
One of the largest theatrical book
ing agencies in the country thi
week "canned" the sketch of Mrs
Florence Carman the Freeport worn
an whose trial for murder creatci
such a sensation a few weeks ago
In doing this, the theatrical peopl
took a step which will meet with
general approval. The time ha
come when the public is tired o
seeing crime and vice commercialize)
in anv such a manner and the soon
er that all such acts are relegate
to the dim recesses of the past, j n.
that soon wHl the drama he give
a clean bill of health.
t sentence you to two years in
prison at hard labor." Such was t
sentence imposed on a Baltimore
clubman who had, by recklessly driv
ing his automobile caused the death
of a woman in that citv. Two years
does not seem a long while to the av
erage man but after that convict
for such he will be, comes from be
hind the grim prison walls, it is safe
to say that he will in the future use
care in driving his machine.
Judge Oeorge Connor has held
that, Solicitor Abernethv acted in the
usual manner of the law in eontin
uing Hie famous Maugham case over
which Judge Carter went wildl and
dedans that he set s nothing wrong
with such an action. Whether this
will be cheering news to Judge Carter
remains to be seen, but the assertion
of Judge Connor that all following rec
ords relative to the Solicitor have
no business on the records of the
court is certainly of gratifying
the part of the Solicitor's friends, who
all along have held that it did him
a great injustice.
The University of North Carolina
has conferred an honorary degree
upon Senator F. M. Simmons of this
city and every true New Berniap is
just as proud of this fact as is the
recipient of the honor. Senator Sim
mons is one of the greatest statesmen
and is due every honor accorded to
him, either at home or abroad.
Newspapers of the State who are
on the Journal's exchange list are
commenting on the gratifying amount
of advertising which this paper is
carrying and are urging the mer
chants of their towns and cities to
follow the example of those here.
The Journal appreciates the adver
tising which it is carrying; the mer
chants here have caused the paper
to increase in size to light and twelve
page editions during the week and
sixteen pages on Sundays. Of course
these advertisers find that space in
the Journal has its "pulling" power?
and they are fully repaid for their
expenditure with the paper, but,
regardless of this, their patronage
is deeply appreciated.
Judge Oeorgo Connor is of the
opinion that it fa useless to make a
law and then al ow it. to lie around
idle on the statute hooks. He be
lieves that if the law says that a cer
tain action of an individual or cor
poration is a crime, that Such should
be enfomed to the letter and it is a
notable fact that he is putting hi
belief into effect. This week he bad
before him a white man charged
with having flve gallons of liquor
in his possession at one time. Now
such a state of affair is In direct
conflict with the laws of this Mate
and, when the man was found guilty,
be was sent to the road for a Urns
of two years. Much a sentence anay
rem a little heavy but that', the
way to break up lawlessness. En
force the fawa of North Carolina for
one year and crime in thfa Bute wll
RAISING OF CATTLE
AND PROMULGATION OF
DAIRYING ADVOCATED
Noted Writer Tells of
What is Being Done
Along This Line in
North Carolina-Urges
More Co-operation
3.v BION H. BUTLER)
Sanford, June 5. Down from Cha
pel Hill a few days ago oame a ma
chine gun they call Branson. When
he first came to Chapel Hill and be
gan to get acquainted wish the folks
in this State they called him Pro
fessor E. C. Branson. Then it got
down to Prof. Branson and Dr. Bran
son, and in time down to just plain
Hnin on. and today if vou lo.ir one
man ask another about Branson you
know it i Brcn . n. of Chapel Hill, or
of all North 'srolina, for Branson
is like a lot of other big fellows who
don't need much name to distinguish
them as long as they have distinguish
ed the name.
Down from Chapel Hill came Bran
son to Sanford, and a man who hap
pened to hear him talk told me after
he had gone. "That man gave mon
information about Lee county in fif
teen minutes than we had ever found
out in all our lives before. If Prof
Branson will not blush too much a
such bouquets I want to use him for
a minute to illustrate the text: Half
a year or so ago Branson. Hamilton
Wilson. Judd, Williams and I don t
know who all, started up a publiea
lion at Chapel Hill they call the New
Letter. That thing is sent out one
a week all over the State, and like
enough over a big slice of the rest of
the country, and it carries each week
a bottle of tabasco sauce applicabl
to the ordinary things of life, especial
ly those things that pertain to th
farm, and to the material progress of
the home. The bunch at the Univer
sity does not realize the value of the
work the News Letter is doing
they cannot see the entire field they
cover, but no doubt thev hear from
it every few minutes, for it is one o
tne agencies mat are stirring ii
things in North Carolina.
Branson on Development.
I Here was a time a tew years ago
if a man wanted to know anything he
hunted up some of the statistics that
Kdward Atkinson 'had gathered
round linn up in Boston. 1 have not
heard of Atkinson in a good whil
trom which it is probably safe to
figure he may be out of the runnin
But as applied to North Carolina
Prof. Branson has Atkinson set back
in the lower classes, although At kin
son was surely a thoroughbred. Bran
son has been digging into the d v !
opment up the State, of the counties
of the towns, of the farms, the cows
the schools the railroads the f
supply, and everything mat ne can
hang any figures on. and it is the
truth that he is getting N'orth Caro
lina excited. He has the folks figur
ing in Lee about when he will come
down again, and he arrived here just
at the psychological minute
Lee has a farm demonstrator, J. C.
Henley, who has been bothering
around over the county until he has
encouraged a lot of folks to increase
their corn crop from 20 bushels to
the acre up to over 40 bushels, and
Henley has been advocating new
things in farming. He had been pilot-
ng John Arey and Reed and some
other A. and M. men around the
ounty who talked to farmer about
cream routes, and Branson came just
n time to throw another shovelful of
fuel on the fire of enthusiasm. It
looks at this writing as if Lec county
farmers would have three and may
be more cream routes to send cream
down to the new creamery at West
Raleigh, and it is rather hard to pre-
lict what will be the outcome of the
ambitions these various forces are
awakening. Henley is showing the
farmers what is required in the way
of providing the cream, and what is
gained by keeping good cows on the
farm. He has the thing so far along
that it looks like a winner now, and
h be gratifying feature of it is that the
outbreak of this movement in Lee
county is nothing more than what is
taking place all over the State.
Dtverattcatlon Cropping Out
Diversification of farming is crop
ping out on all sides. It is not ex
actly that methodical diversification
hat was figured on, but it !s a di
ersiflcation that hi diversifying it
elf. The girls' canning clubs ar.
introducing a diversification that ha
about taken possession of the State.
At the State Fair in the fall the can
ning clubs are to be given marked
recognition. Several counties will
have big exhibits of canned goods
from the girls
Over in Moore county another
phase of the cattle question has come
into observation. At Aberdeen the
Page Trust Company ban taken a
hold, and four pu-e blooded short
horn bulls have been bought to
distribute among the farms of the
Sand Hill country. One of these has
been locate! at De-hy's plantation,
one at Bensalim. one at Carthage,
and the other at another point in the
territory. Others are to follow short-'
ty. aad the farmers are to be started!
he road toward better stock. At Countries of the old world arc mark
each point an association of the far-lad bjr the number of oattfa tbay graas.
mers is
"" "' " Lnu me nun n . I
panes la the hand of a secretary.
who, is paid a nominal salary for keep-
ng him. and for keeping track of the
nt. of the affaire of the
Uoa. The farmer of the Sand Hills
were questioned as to what variety
of stock, they would prefer aad it
seemed to settled down to the Short
horn This is aaore a beef type than
a cream tyie, and this pawt of the
country will probably gravitate store
to beef than ' to milk and butter.
With the cream and butter idea oo til
ing into prominence in Lee, it looks
as though the various types of cattle
are about to be established in the
Upper Cape Fear eountry and on the
right basis.
Interest In feWf Cattle.
This same thing is going on all
over the State. Beef cattle are at
tracting attention from the moun
tains clear to the eastern counties,
and tin- cream idea is gaining ground
as fast as the beef idea. Probably
the establishment of central creamer
ies as at Hickory and elsewhere in
the west, and the Irg one that is com
ing at West Raleigh under the direc
tion of the Agricultural College will
put butter making fartbei forward
in the State in a few years than blind
drifting would have done in a long
time.
It is not very long ago that a good
many intelligent men neld to the as
sertion that good butter could not
be made in North Carolina. Fortu
nately that has been proven so fre
quently of late to absolute nonsense
that it is no longer thought worth
while to discuss whether good butter
can be made in the State. No better
butlter can be made anywhere in the
world than in North Carolina. As
one of the best markets is in North
Carolina, one that has never yet been
supplied by the butter at hand, it is
hardly worth while to worry about
a market for a long time yet to come.
As the beef supply of the State has
never yet been sufficient to meet the
demands it is right evident that this
as a cattle State is ideal as far as a
market is concerned.
Fever From Ticks.
The first marked advance in cattle
raising in North Carolina came when
it was discovered that link fever came
from cattle ticks. Prior to that time
Texas or splenic or anything else the
fever might be called was set down
like the verdict of a jury in New
Mexico where six horse thieves had
been lynched, as an accidental visita
tion of Providence, cause unknown.
Since ii was found that ticks spread a
serious, fatal and infectious disease
among cattle, the ticks have been go
ing at a rapid rate. One of the In
teresting things in North Carolina's
progress is the quick gait with which
the work of tick era diet ion swept
down from the mountain counties,
through the Piedmont and out into
'he coast land. Nearly all of the in
terior of the State is free from ticks
now, and the rest will be in a short
order. When Tate Butler left "the
State ha had brought the tick free
line down somewhere about the South
ern railroad. In the short time since
then it has continued until in places
it is almost in sight of the coast. No
doubt Dr. Butler is surprised at the
rapid action of the good work he set
on foot.
Cleaning Out Ticks Important
wiping out tne tick's made it pos
sible to have better cattle and to get
so much better results from those
that were kept that it is bard to real
ize that half a dozen to a dozen years
ago the State was overrun with ticks
and it is still harder to believe that
so simple a thing as killing out tick
was so bitterly opposed by so many
people. It is probable that cleaning
out the ticks is one of the most im
portant things in a financial way that
has happened in the State in many
years. The extent of the movement
toward cattle raising is almost in first
place in its importance and value to
the entire industrial and social fabric
of the State. It promises to estab
lish a wholly new line of industry and
of social advancement. It is not too
much to say that stock farming marks
much of the difference in the customs
and habits of the request of the South
as eonrpared with the people of the
North and of the old world.
it is a century and a hair since
the Tomkiiu family established the
Hereford cattle as a distinctive breed,
and probably as long since the De
von and Sussex were fixed on the
firm lines of the varieties. The
Shorthorn came a little later, when
the Tceswater cattle made a name
for themselves. The Bates herd
brought out the stock a century ago,
and it has become the most generally
known probably in the world. Now
at a 'jump North Carolina springs
across all these years and enters upon
the creation of herds of modern cat
tle of the various bloods, unnispeot
ing a half a d en years ago t hat such
a thing could be done in the State
The advance in cattle breeding in the
State is destined to be interesting on
this account. Where the pragmas of
the entire cattle world for a century
or more is to be compressed into a
period of half a doten years the results
are bound to he as startling as the
quick advancement is. Cattle rais
ing and dairying are among two of the
great agricultural occupations of the
globe. Thaw ana of suck vast eonse-
que noes that tbey snaps the tone of
the People who curate in thane Haas.
ne wno e western section nf nur nn
country baa bean influenced by its
bards. FariiUty of anil, ab jndaneef
food, comfort of thn people aad ma
terial progress has followed cattle
ftaaaaf wWrrsf it kal bM
CfanW taaiotaa till.
It h) alka. anting
to lawk at a law
of theJfcntae
utiaahnlj. The
are wWia la Ne
fi ajllili. Ohio,
York. Iowa.
lUtaoia. Vera. oat, one of the httl
fellows, is a big dairy Slate whoa Ue4
sins ia tgwed. The others run a Bi
lk larger in area as a ruk than JltsHh
Caralann, one or two of th
ably larger, but the difference
square aulas is not eaougk to effect
the onauanrtson Veraaoat is a
State, about a sixth of the s
North Carolina yet Varmoat makes
jO per eant more butter and e
and sells aaore than twice as at ash
milk and aream. If North Carolina
made butter and cheese like Var
mont does tkis would ha the greatest
butter Stat of the Union
Wisconsin and North Carolina are
almost the same in sue. aad almost
the same in population. Wisconsin
sells over to3.H68.000 worth of Bulk
a year, and North Carolina sells less
than 96,000,000 worth a year. W
eonsin makes 131,000.000 pounds of
butter a year and North Carolina
makes 36.000,000. Wisconsin makes
160,000,000 pounds of cheese a year
North Carolina makes 40,000. Ne
Vork and Pennsylvania are both
smaller in area than North Carolina
but New York sells thirteen times as
many dollars' worth of milk and
cream as this State and Pennsylvania
sella nearly eight times as much and
both those States make butter and
cheese in enormous quantities
Value of Milh Crop,
We congratulate ourselves on the
money our cotton crop brings, but
New IOTK s dairy crop makes oar
cotton orop look insignificant. Ver
mont's milk ciop and North Carolina
tobacco crop are about the sams value
byt Vermont is a little State and
North Carolina as big one. Penas.fl
vanias milk crop is worth mors than
all the grain of all kinds raised in
North Carolina, yet North Carolina
is a right successful grain State. And
while Pennsylvania is making a milk
crop worth more than the grain crop
of this State Pennsylvania is making
a crop just about twice as big as our
grain crop, and Pennsylvania is not
so big a State as North Carolina.
This is mentioned merely to Show
the possibilities of the Stats that
takes up dairy farming. North Caro
lina is a cotton Slate and will be a cot
ton State, for cotton is a nice crop to
plant and work. But North Carolina
is just as good for dairying as it is
for cotton, and the market for dairy
products is just as good in North
Carolina as the market ia for cotton
This dairying movement that has
started has opened a possibility that
is as big as any line of industry that
has been developed in the State, and
that being the case it is reasonable
to look forward to the results of the
budding creamery and cream routes
with unlimited confidence. New York
Wisconsin and Pennsylvania are the
three leading milk producing States
of the Union and they arc in a see
tion of the country that has to eon
tend with a rigorous climate. New
Vork is so cold that in some sect ions
even the little yellow flint corn that
matures in ninety days will not ripen
So New York makes about a third as
much corn as North Carolina. Same
way in Wisconsin, and Wisconsin
makes much leu corn than North
Carolina. Pennsylvania cannot raise
corn like North Carolina. The grow
ing season is too short in much of
those three States. But they can
harvest their eprn for silage, and
they make hay for winter.
V
Dairy Products In The Lead
The dairy products of the United
States rank among the leading crops.
Probably they rank next after the
cereal crop and the meat crop. Thi
dairy and meat orop outranks any
other single crop made. The live
stock industry of the United States
produces annually two and three-
quarter billion dollars for the farm
ers. That is three times what til
cotton crop amounts to and t wenty-
hve times ss much as the tobacco
crop is worth, from which it can
crop is worth. From which it oah
be seen that if this live stock move
ment puts North Carolina in the class
with the meat and dairy producing
States, it has opened to the State a
great new possibility nf wealth and
advancement t hat ia capable of eclips
ing anything that has yet beea under
taken
I he movement now on foot is to
encourage North Carolina farmers to
undertake cattle raising both for
dairy and meat purposes. Soma sec
tions inoline to one, and soma to tad
other. The western counties art
rapidly building np a meat industry,
the demands for feeders and beef
steers in the last few ytari crowding
the supply. The result is that th
Beef Breeders' Association is taking
the matter in hand in a systematic,
manner, and th fu ur of the beef
breeding industry n the mountain
counties ia hound to bs one af swift
and extended growth. The draft of
feeders to the farms of the Piedmont
aad lower counties will continue un
der the organisation of ths association.
and that will afford a ire wine mar
ket for the breeders of ths aniitahti
counties, which is putting the indus
try on a definite and profitable basis.
Each .new expaVfnsept that Is reported
(ires encouragement, aad ths intra.
duct inn of improved blood il realist
the grade of beef so fast that North
Carolina is attracting much attesting
by iU improving quail it of mi at
Laobiad At Feodttnd Pr.aettin
Many of the bigger far mars art
taking bold of ths feeding proposi
tion, sad hers aad than smaller far-
IM rent b
baW aaik
Tank
to beaf Sauls rather than
C 5
dairy aauls as tbrur.i-
paahfih gftteetioa every
fear, and so ate farmers da not
In have eat lie iaisrfss too i
wtok their other wash. Beef eattle
It ia beitar an farms of this character
fhwt it siahntl that the dairy type
Unt anv is proving a favorite ia many
ssetioan. aad that ths cream route
and aha- asps re tar and the aim am
naming fan tans in North r"-i1iaa
Ths animal Industry Division of
ths Depart meat of Agrieulturel at
Raleigh furnishes ansa to disown the
quest ioa of either beef ar dairy cat
tle with ths 'armors, aad the questman
has beea discussed so much that ns
is all directions centers of infection
have beea established aa a number
of forms of co-operation among farm'
art bars beea awakened until the
State is pretty well aroused to the
possibilities of lira stock farming of
ana kind or another. A noteworthy
innovation ia the interest sbown by
the town people lately in extending
the cattle industry. Every communi
ty that has a hoard of trade or chain
ber of commerce ia investigating the
question or cattle raising, and in
many places helping to provide im
proved stock for the neighborhood
use. Another thing that is notice
able is the gradual arrival at the hard-
Ware stores and the five and ten-cent
stores of dairy implements. A few
years ago a farmer would bunt over
half of North Carolina for a butter
mould that would make a pound prin l
or for a sheet of parchment paper.
Now in svery town of considerable
size those things are found, ami but
ter color at the drug stores. Here
aad there you see cream separators
in the stores, and barrel churns and
swing churns are becoming more
common than the old stone dasher
churns that not long ago were the
most prominent dairy exhibits at the
hardware store. These things show
the change that has co.umenoed, and
they say in most emphatic words that
it ia a change that has made big pro
gress almost over night.
Should Get In Touch.
Already another important step is
contemplated. So far the change to
dairy farming has been an evolution
of native farmers. But all over the
State is discussed the possibility of
attracting to North Carolina dairy
men from the dairy districts of those
other States that make a specialty of
dairy products. There are three or
four prominent centers of dairying in
the country. One is in the group of
States that corner up in the upper
Mississippi Valley where Illinois, Iowa
Minnesota and Wisconsin touch. It
is a great territory, with a surplus of
men who know how to make milk and
butter and eheese. In eastern New
W 1 J WT . .,
tort ana ver mom is another pro
minent dairy region. North eastern
Ohio is a similar territory. Pennsyl
vania has two or three dairy sections.
The ambition of some of the possible
dairy counties of North Carolina -is
lo get in touch with men from the
dairy belts of the North and attract
ths surplus people up there down this
hay rather than to the Northwest
if such a thing shall be worked out
the future of the oattle industry of
North Carolina will be an easy an
swer to the question of diversification.
With all of the influences at work
and the oonatanly growing demands
for meat and dairy products, it does
not take mueh of a prophet to fore
tell a diversification of orops in this
State, and a diversification that will
mean the establishment of one of the
most important lines of agriculture
In the world.
If North Carolina will make a play
to draw from Wisconsin, New York
and Ohio about 100,000 good dairy
ermers the low price of cotton will
cease forver to trouble the people
of this State, and diversification will
settle itself in a way that will sal if y
everybody.
HARNET CITIZEN '
II AC ACDID ATI AM
. F. Young Interested In
Congressional Race In
Sixth District
(1Y W. T. BOST)
Raleigh, June 5. Former Repre
sentative E. F. Young, of Harnett,
who is hers attending Federal court,
was not offended at the story this
morning indicating his interest in
the congressional raoe in the Sixth
Mr. Young declared that he ii
thinking seriously of trying for the
nomination to succeed Congressman
Godwin who is also a Haruet county
i ne visitor nas not made i n
pis mmci to announce himself vet.
but he is strongly of the mind to do
The race i. a year off.
The Harnel county attorney is
regarded hy his fellow county msn
as t he one to take the measure of
Hannibal U Fayette in the home
bounty aad half a dosen others gra-
i . - .
""u" ninnuiea would make a
peek of trouble.
Toting Louis O. Travis, son of
ths chairman of ths corporation com
mission and Mrs. E. L. Travis, is at
Swaaa from Heme landed down with
medals which he won there recently.
Two years ago Edwin Travis.
St.. aa as tared the aihhalsrahla ---'
A few days age Uuia Travis not oalv
look that medal, but won the debat
er's and) the athietk medals. IU
led his elasees aad in the nnawtar.
sUe atrial aad hurdle men easne off
with the god. Mrs. Travis veers
them with great pride. In adilHss
S
M alas, Iftift
tht
AsVAkll It eOMlNw BACK.
be girth s Cxiautauoua sttrac
Bber Cm whuff Adasn. by retffreJag sna
to this circuit this year. He Is tuff
on i j ardst whs sppssrtd on taas etr-
CUU
L. i tu be
ELMER CRAWFORD ADAMS.
Adams is truly a wonderful violinist
and has been since he was a mere
child He uot only plays the highest
class of music, hut he recognises the
demand for the popular and does a
number of "stunts" with the violin
that ure always appreciated.
He will tie supported by bis own
company this year MIrs Blauche Ma
gulre, dramatic soprano, and Hollo
Hudson, pianist nud accompanist.
HAflRY LONGSTREET OF THE
DUNBAR SOIREE SINGERS IM
PERSONATING HARRY LAUDER,
THE SCOTCH COMEDIAN.
VARKONY-HINES COMPANY.
A compauy of Chautauqua artists
that will ntti-act more than passing at
tention Is the Varkony-Hlnes Com
pany, consisting of Florian Varkony,
Gabriel nines and Miss Elizabeth
Oliver.
Florian Varkony, the bass-baritone.
GABRIEL HINE8.
finished his education In Berlin and
Vienna. He achieved a veritable tri
umph In "Carmen" in Kndapest. For
three years be was basM-bariiniic In
(he Budupest Royal Opera House. He
baa a voice of beautiful, resonant qual
ity, and IiIh enunciation Is distinct.
Gabriel Mines is one of the most ne
cpmpllshed pianists now licforc ilic
C"Mlc. lie Is not only an artist on the
trument, but be la also a composer
Of note, having been awarded the soc
ond prize of fl.ftoo offered by the di
rectors of the Panama-Pacific Kxposl
tion for the best American opera.
There were 482 contestants. His opera
Is called "The Voyage of the Illinims"
and traces the west ward course of na
tional development from the binding
Of the Pilgrims In 1820 to the Han
Francisco Exposition. This opera la
being produced during the great expo
sition this summer. Mr. Hlnes Is head
of the music department of the Boys'
rrepsratory Brbool nt Bwarthmore, Pa.
Miss Elisabeth Olivet, the third
memier of this company. Is a soprano
pith s splendid voice, and sbs Is also
an accomplished rente, the latter tal-
.pt adding much to th. program
Chautauqua Week
Here June 19 to 25
Vbevtvw -inn tead i Oeanval Tee.
Tako Grove's
Ths Old Standard Gror's Tasaalaat
ill Tontc It equally vslusble as I
3T
nokSml9tt, or this netie. will be pUad
id IRON It Z7,12rSll 'la bar af their rasa very. All person.
t Ushnia, Bmicbea the Blood and
Ulldito WbcVSvalem tdt
Oniiaren Cry
M FLETCHER'S
CASTOR I A
OIlLMlKDUffi
Ltnt -Dead AiffJhj Da.
was found bra tea to death
in te wsxxu ia ins rear or taw noma
oj d K Sebenek at Wyoming Are..
aad C TJ- TIC' atuionrn, ' . j.
She was is the fmnlov T?TNnd
Mrs. Horatio Oleott, neighbors of ths
Inst Tuesday night. lu-n she want
to Newark to visit recall ves gar had
expected Mary Fruehik, a servant of
the Sehencks, to accompany ber, but
at the last minute the Prnshik girl
announced she would not be able to
to
When Julia did not return boms
Tuesday night or Wednesday the
Oleott s thought she hail remained
with her relatives.
Near the body lay three blood
stained clubs. The girl's skull had
been cruahud and her. Jiody bruised.
The police learned that on Monday
night two men called on her at the
Oleott home. They are looking for
these men, believing one to be a
jealous suitor.
The Prushik girl, Knte Wroblewski,
a servant of W. J. Kisaam, and
Katefls brother Ladislaw of Newark
were arrested lost night and held
without bail as material witnesses.
SNEEZE' POWDER USED.
Pennsylvania legislators
Against Toudh Pack.
Up
Harrisburg, Pa., June 5. The fres
and continued use of "sneezing pow
ders" aud malodorou i chemicals and
the bombardment of members with
pamphlets, books, newspapers and
"spit-balls" have developed aa the
lates and most effective means of
halting the passage of legislation of
unpopular character in the Pennsyl
vania House of Representatives.
The officials of the ohamber so far
have been unable to abate such per
formances and much important legis
lation as a result bas been delayed.
On Monday night, "sneezing pow
dors" were scattered throughout the
House, and those, together with mol
odorous chemicals, made the air so
bad that it was necessary to open the
windows.
A number of persons, among them
women, were forced to leave. Speak
er Ambler repeatedly called the House
to order and asked t hat the scat tering
of the powders be stopped.
Members threw their files of legis
lative bills into the air and at each
other. Men who tried to speak on
bille .were howled down. Sho.ts,
cat calls and yells continued through
out the evening.
Yesterday conditions were even
worse. One dobator who tried to
make his voice heard on an import
ant bill was utterly disregarded.
When Representative Hess, who was
n the chair, asked the House to
'kindly be in order" he was answered
with a chorus of "Noes" from all
over the floor.
GOOD CIGARS AND GOOD
BOOKS HIS FAVORITES
Grifflth.Mutual Star Also Likes Henry
Dramatic Parts in Photoplays.
Expensive cigars, good books, and
an opportunity to play strong dra
matic or romantic parts In photo
plays, are the chief enjoyments of
Charles Clary, the Griffith-Mutual
player who recently scored one of
his big successes in motion picture
work In his characterization of ths
artist in the Mutual Masterplcture,
Jlan s Prerogative," produced at the
Majestic studio.
CLARY MAJtanr-oei .
PPgnOOATIve, MUTUAL MABTSJUMCTVM
Mr. Clary has been associated with
motion picture work for flve years,
making his bow to the camera In the
Sellg studio. Tall, well built, and
extremely handsome, ha he. hai .
brilliant screen career, baring ap
peared In hundreds of photoplays.
His big Opportunity, however cm.
wham ha was assigned to play oppo-
"h "obert BdMon 18 "' Prerog
num. r
Before entering studio work, Mr.
Clary had had many yean' OTnertanoe
a1 Ik. A . . . .
w legitimate stags, beginning
WiLULb' enBMet hi the famous
wI.iJLL Atpu' Th Seattle,
J was born In Chart.
NOTICE
Having qualified ss administra
tor of W. J. Taylor deeeaeed late or
Ona ow County, N. C. This is to
notify sll persons having claims
against ths estate of said deceased
to exhibit them to the uaderaigcsd
en or before the 17th day of Ma)
iad.bted t. said estate will please
M.b. i .
This irth day of
may 191ft,
J. R. MORRIA.
Administrator.
MaysvUle. N. C.
P. V
' t aund
eortad stand.
I N.w Vork June s Wia AnstsJk
eara.
Z SSrS 5Cu!t
KUiMn
the youacster who is 1&. aaaslvad hi.