3Tbc ^mitljfielb JWralii. ' ? ? price one dollar pkk tear. "TRUE TO OURSELVES, OUR COUNTRY AND OUR GOD.'' single copies three I pais. VOL. 20. SMITIIFIELD, N. C., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1001. NO. 35. BAPTISTS AT MORRISVILLE State Fair Management Roasted. The Association Well Attended Progress ot Work Gratifying? To Meet Next Year at Lee's Chapel. > We give the following extracts from the News and Observer's report of the Baptist, Association I held at Morrisville last week: A large crowd of Baptists, rep- j resenting thechurvhes composing the Kaleigh Association were in j ?ession at Morrisville last week. The Association is composed of fifty-four churches and em braces most of the Baptist j churches in Wake and Johnston, j with one in Nash and two in Har nett counties. The session began on Thurs day morning with a good delega tion from nearly everv church in the body. Mr. J. M. Brougliton was re-elected Moderator, Mr. J. C. Birdsong Clerk, and Mr. T. W. ( Blake Treasurer. Rev. A. A. Butler, pastor of Fayetteville Street Baptist, church, of Raleigh, preached the introductory sermon. Thursday afternoon was occu- > pied in reading the letters trom the churches and enrolling the delegates. The reports showed among other encouraging feat-! ures that many of the church houses had been improved,several new houses built and nearly1, 000 contributed to State.Missions with all other objects well cared for. Thursday night Rev. J. \\. Nobles, of Selma, preached to a large congregation. Friday morning, after devo tional exercises, conducted by Rev. Worley Creech, was occupied with considering the report of the executive board and hearing short addresses from those of the ministers who had occupied mis sion points in the association,, to-wit: Rev. J. W. Nobles, Rev. I). McLeod, Rev. C. H. Gower, Rev. A. A. I'ippin, and Rev. Wor ley Creech. These were followed by Mr. N. B. Brougliton, ('hair man of the board, in an address in behalf of the continuance of the work. At the close of the address the ?hurches pledged more liberally than ever for the support of Asso ?iational Missions. .Mr. J. S. Allen reported on Re lief of Old Ministers and raised a good collection. In the afternoon Rev. (). L. Stringfiehl with hisusualearnest ness and power, spoke in behalf of the cause of education and for the century movement to raise one hundred thousand dollars for the same. At night Rev. W. I). Hubbard,! of the Tabernacle church, Raleigh, preached a very strong sermon. Saturday morningthe Associa tion opened with religious send ees, conducted bv Rev. (' V. Brooks, of Holly Springs, after which Rev.T.Neil Johnson,State Sunday School Secretary, ad dressed the body on behalf of a more thorough study of the scriptures and a stronger type of Christian life. Following this address came the report on Periodicals and several short talks were'tnade iti behalf of the Biblical Recorder and for other periodicals. Rev A. A. Butler made the re port on Temperance and deliv ered a very stirring address 011 the subject. He was followed by several of the members who made pointed remarks, and the State Fair managers came in for very severe criticism for permitting, what were termed the "disgrace ful, indecent and vulgar side shows that appeared on the Mid way." The body, by a rising vote, declared its opposition to their conduct and declared that they would not again patronize the 'air until it was made clean. In the afternoon the report on the Baptist Orphanage was con sidered. Mr. Stephen Averitt of the orphanage, and others made remarks and liberal pledges were made for its support. ? Mr. R. N. Simms made a very able and instructive address on the growth and progress of the Baptist denomination and a strong appeal for the paymentof the debt on the Baptist Female University. At the conclusion of this address a resolution was adopted authorizing the Execu tive Board to apportion to the churches such amount as might be thought wise to undertake to raise. Pledges for the support of ministerial students at college were also taken. The subject of Home Missions was next considered and Rev. C. E. (lower delivered a strong ap peal in its behalf. The association agreed to meet next year with Lee's Chapel church in Nash county, near the Wake and Johnston line, on Thursday before the first Sunday in November, Rev. W. 1). Hub bard to preach the introductory sermon. Sunday morning at 10 o'clock Mr. J. M. Broughton spoke on the Sunday school work. At 11 o'clock Mr. J. W. Bailey, editor of the Biblical Recorder, spoke on "What the Baptists of North Carolina have to be thankful for," being an address on the century educational movement. National Capital Notes. Mr. Isador Ray nor, chief coun sel for Schley, closed his argu rm nt before the court of inquiry Wednesday, making a most mas terly effort. At its conclusion he and Admiral Schley were warmly congratulated by Admirals Dewey, Ramsay and Renham. '* * * The Navy Department has re ceived cablegrams announcing the arrival of Rear-Admiral Remy aboard his flagship, the Brook lyn, at Yokohama, Japan, and that of Rear-Admiral Kempff aboard his flagship, the Ken tucky, at Woosung, China. * * * Lord Pauncetote, the British Ambassador, called upon Secre tary Hay, Monday to announce formally to the Secretary his re turn from a vacation in England lasting all summer and his readi ness to undertake at cnce the conclusion of the H ay-Pauncefote treat}*. * * * The main report of the naval board, headed by Rear-Admiral Taylor, which has prepared plans for the proposed new naval sta tion at Olongapo. P. I., shows that the station will cost this government $l{),3f>{),500, exclu sive of the defensive works, signal station, water supplv, coaling station, magazines, hospital, en campment grounds, and a native village, under the control of the military authorities, which it is proposed to provide for the work men who will be employed regu larly at the Olongapo dock yard. * * ? A delegation from the Porto Kican Chamber of Commerce, headed by Antonio Balarquida. called upon the President this week and submitted some data in favor of a duty of o cents per pound on coffee from countries other than Porto Rico. They claim that such a protective dutv is necessary to build up the coffee industry of the island. 1'he dele gation has been touring the I nited States for the purpose of investigating the industrial con ditions here. They were accom panied by Maj. (leorge \V. Fish back, of Boston. * * * At the Schley Court of Inquiry Monday Admiral Schley and Capt. C. 1>. Sigsbee, who com manded the St. Paul during the war with Spain, were recalled to make coirections in their testi mony. Admiral Schley did not make any material additions to his previous statements on the witness stand, but devoted him self mainly to r earing up am biguous points in his evidence. An effort was made to introduce two new witnesses in Admiral S -hlev's behalf. Both were news paper correspondents who were on dutv in Cuba daring the war with Spain. The court decided that their evidence would not be admissible. All the testimony being in. argument wasl>egun on behalf of the government bv Mr. E. 1'. llanna, assistant to Judge Advocate Lemly. STATE NEWS. Short Items ot Interest Clipped and Culled From Our State Exchanges. Three divorces were granted in Wake Superior Court Monday. The handsome residence of j Judge Council at Boone was burned Sunday. Nine alleged counterfeiters are in j.iil at Raleigh to be tried at the December term of Federal J Court. The depot buildings of the Southern Railway at Gibbons ville, were burned Thursday morning. The Rocky Mount Spokesman says that the Methodist Protest ants will build a $3,500 church in that place. The census of 1900 gave Eliza beth City a population of 0,078. The publishers of the new direc tory put the population at 8, 400. Red Springs Record: Robert Moore killed 29 squirrels and' 5 ducks at 34 shots, missing only three times; killed the five ducks I at three shots, averaging a squir rel or duck at every shot. lhe Wilson I lines says that Mr. T. J. Hadley has (riven $10 for a rural library in Gardner's township. The idea is growing and is commending itself to men of public spirit everywhere. Mack Harris, a 14-year old mulatto boy, was run over by a train at Hamlet Tuesday night, while stealing a ride. He fell under the wheels and both legs were mangled, causing his death | Tuesday night. Newton Enterprise: The town is full of mountain wagons this week, loaded with cabbage, ap ples and chestnuts. We learn that the apple and cabbage crops in the mountains are very small, but that the chestnut crop is the best for several years. Chapel Hill News: We learn that i i a young white man, not many \ miles away from Chapel Hill, fell | in love with a colored lady and went to Hillsboro the other day to purchase license to marry her. The Register of Deeds refused him license on account of the girl he was to wed being a negro. The young man determined not to tie outdone, swore that he was a negro, got license, and will tie married this week. The young man's parents pass for respecta- j ble white people At r ayetteville, at 10:1.? fiat-1 urday morning, Louis Council, a negro, convicted of committing rape on a young white woman,: Mrs. James West, in Cumberland | county, was hanged. On the scaffold Council was asked if he was guilty. He replied: "Before i God and man, I am innocent," and the priest, taking the cross from Council's hand, declared him innocent. When the trap was sprung the rope broke and j the negro's body fell to the floor. Another rope was secured and the prisoner coolly walked on the scaffold and again the trap was sprun. In a few minutes he was dead. The woman he assaulted always declared he was the man. At Wilson Saturday Mr. Geo Gay, until the day before clerk in the saloon of Mr. W. A. A.vcock. shot and killed Ins employer, i There had been trouble between them over the accounts of the cash register, and because of this Gay was discharged. Reentered the saloon about noon. Mr. Aycock was on his knees getting some money from his safe for contractor Killem, who was standing near. Gay said: "You have treated me like a damned scoundrel" and Hred. instantly killing Aycock. Gaythen turned the pistol on himself and fired, the ball strikingin the left breast but made only a flesh wound. A j coroner's jury was quickly em paneled, and the verdict charged Gay with murder. Gay was taken to jail where his wound was dressed. The deceased is a son i of Jesse Aycock, of Wavneeonntv. j The feeling among his friends is said to be very intense against Gay. A tobacco stemmery at La Grange, was burned Tuesday night, including about 100,000 pounds of tobacco. The loss foots up about $10,000, partly covered by insurance. W hile a crowd of negroes were playing poter in the woods near Goldsboro, Saturday night,death entered and claimed Charlie Ben nett. The negroes were much ex ited and stopped playing cards. Assistant State Librarian Mar shal lie Lancey Haywood, will soon publish a life of Governor William Tryon, and a history of his administration in the prov ince of North Carolina, 1705 1771. Kaleigh Cor. Messenger: The sheriff of this county is a farmer, an observant one. He says that he finds that more mowing ma chines have been sold here this year than in the ten years previ vous. The buyers are using them largely to cut grass for persons in their neighborhood. In this way he says the hay crop will be a very large one here. Salisbury Sun: It may be grat ifying to the Daughters of the Confederacy of North Carolina to know that in the subscriptions and amounts paid in for the Jef ferson Davis monument, that North Carolina stands second in the list of States, the amount being nearly $1,000. The full amount held by the treasurer of the Davis monument fund is $8,700. PRESIDENT'S PROCLAMATION. November 28th Set Apart as a Day tor Thanksgiving. President Roosevelt Saturday issued his proclamation fixing Thursday, November 28, as a day of national Thanksgiving. It follows: "A PROCLAMATION. "The season is nigh when, ac cording to the time-hallo wed cus tom of our people, the President appoints a day as the especial occasion for praise and thanks giving to God. "This Thanksgiving finds the people sf ill bowed with sorrow for the death of a great and good President. We mourn President McKinley because we sol ivedand honored him; and the mariner of his death should awaken in the breasts of our people a keen anx iety for the country, and at the same time a resolute purpose not to be driven by any calamity from the path of strong, orderly, popular liberty which as anation we have thus far sa e.y trod. "Yet in spite 01 tins great dis aster, it is nevertheless true that 110 people on earth have such abundant cause for Thanksgiving as we have. We have prospered in things material and have been able to work tor our own uplift ing in things intellectual and spiritual. Let u? remember that, as much has been given us, much will be expected of us; and that t rue homage comes fro in t he hea rt as well as from the lips and shows itself in deeds. We can best show our thankfulness to the Almighty by the way in which on this earth and at this time each of us does his duty to his fellow-men. "Now, therefore, 1, Theodore Roosevelt, President of the United States, do hereby designate as a day of general thanksgiving, Thursday, the 28th of this pres ent November, and do recom mend that throughout the land the people cease from their wonted occupations, and at their several homes and places of worship reverently thank the (liver of all good for the countless blessings of our national life. "In witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand and caused thesealof the United Stattsto be affixed. "Ilone at the city ol Washing ton this 2nd day of November, in theyearof our Lo;d one thou sand nine hundred and one and of the independence of the United States the one hundred and t weu tv-sixth. "Tiieodokk Roo'skvki.t. "By the President: "John Hay, "Secretary of State." GENERAL NEWS. A Partial List of the Week's Hap penings Throughout the Country. One day last week, in Portland, Me., a marriage license was taken out by Josiah II. Tilton, aged 80, to wed Caroline (iriswold, j aged 82. The Consolidated Liquid Air; Company has been chartered by ; the 8tate of New York, with a I ! capital of $ 1,000,000. Marion j Butler isoneof the incorporators, j Fire Monday night destroyed j , two large adjoining grain eleva- [ I tors owned by the Botsford Ele-; j vator Company at Port Huron, Mich., entailing a loss of $.'100,-1 000. A negro was burned at the | stake in Perry county, Miss., j [Saturday night for criminal as-1 i sault on Mrs. Fortenberry, the; ! wife of a prominent citizen. The j | negro confessed his crime. Four men were arrested in New | Orleans Saturday, charged with j being confidence men. Monday j ! the police received information to the effect that the men are the Wagner, Mont., train robbers. The President has appointed John W. Riddle, of Minnesota, to ; be Secretary of the United Statesj embassy at St. Petersburg. Mr, I Riddle was formerly secretary of ! the United States legation at Constantinople. A fog such as Great Britain had not experienced for years enveloped London and half of the I United Kingdom Monday, block ! ading shipping, deranging rail , ways and throwing business in London, Birmingham and other provincial cities into confusion. President Roosevelt has ac cepted the invitation of the South ! Carolina inter-State and West Indian Exposition to attend the exposition on Wednesday, Feb | ruary 12th, Lincoln's birthday, 1 and preparations will be made to j celebrate the event with the most iu.posing ceremonies. Monday afternoon a man I named Lanscombe entered the1 Kennington branch of the Lon don and Southwestern Bank at I London, and shot the cashier | dead, lie then called upon the clerks to deliver the contents of! : the till. A clerk grappled with j the robber, who, finding that ' escape was impossible, shot him j self. Another clerk was wounded in the struggle. Rev. Jeremian J. Crowley has entered suit in the Superior Court at Chicago for $50,000 against the Rev. Francis J. Carry, chan cellor of the Catholic arch-diocese of Chicago. The suit is the out growth of Father Crowley's re cent excommunication and expul sion from the church following charges which he made against Father Muldoon, then about to be consecrated as a bishop. Two machinists working in the Southern Railway shops at Co lumbia, S. C.,?Walter Hinder and William Seaver?were shot m their house some time after mid night Sunday night by a party of men. Seaver was killed instantly and Hinder desperately wounded. According to the antemortem statement of Hinder, the attack ing men were former strikers, who were bent upon killing the "scabs." Harry Jones and Ar thur McCraney have been arrest ed. More arrests will follow. the Governor's Proclamation. Tuesday Governor Aycock is sued the following Thanksgiving proclamation: State of North Carolina. Executive Department. God reigns at all times and everywhere. He is our comfort 111 every hour of sorrow and our I strength in every day of weak j ness. in this year the nation was i startled by the death of its I'res ! ident at the handsof an assassin. He has given us strength to eon | tinne our form of government. , without friction or danger, and has thereby in ide it incumbent upon us to turn towards Hint iu hours of trial, ami those who turn to Him alwnys find strength. 11 is lusnlful, t herefore, and proper that we should set aside at least one day in the year in which to express our gratitude to Him for past favors and invoke His aid for the future. I, Charles 1$. Aycock, Governor of the State of North Carolina, therefore issue this my proclama tion, settiet; apart Thursday, November 28th inst., as a day of Thankspving and Prayer, upon which day I urge all people to meet in their respective places of worship and there thank God for the manifold mercies which He has shown to us individually and as a people, and to ask for His protection and guidance in the future. I earnestly recommend that on this day all our people shall give as God has prospered unto those who are needy, par ticularly the widows aud or phans. Done at our city of Raleigh, this the 5th day of November, in the year of our Lord one thou sand nine hundred aud one, and the one hundred and twenty-sixth year of oui American Independ ence. Chakl.es B. Aycock. By the Governor: P. M. Pkarhall, Private Secretary. WORK OF LIGHTHOUSE SERVILE. Wireless Telegraphy is Wanted tor Ihe Establishment. The annual report of the United States Lighthouse Board shows that at the end of the fiscal year there were under the control of the lighthouse establishment the following aids to navigation: Lighthouses and beacon lights, 1,306; light vessels in position, 4.1; light vessels for relief, 8; elec tric-lighted buoys in posit ion, 11; gas-lighted buoys in position, 01; fog signals operated by steam, caloric or oil engines, 179; fog signals operated by clockwork, 222; post lights, 1,827; day or unlignted beacons, 712; whistling buoys in position, 77; bell buoys in position, 122; other buoys in position, including pile buoys and stakes in Fifth district and buoys in Alaskan waters, 4,780. In the construction, care and maintenanceof these aids of navi gation there weie employed: Steam tenders, 34; steam launch es, 11; sailing tenders, 2; light keepers, 1,420; other employes, including crews of lightships and tenders, 1,428; laborers in charge of post lights. 1,174. The board asks for an appro priation of $90,000 to recon struct a buoyage system and man the lighthouses of Porto Rico, and $21,000 for the maintenance of the Hawaiian system. The board also asks for other appro priations as follows: rsuppnes lor ngnthouses, $oU2, i88(5; improvements at light houses, $760,000; salaries of lightkeepers, fuel, rent,etc., $888, 000; expenses of 1 i?iht vessels, $.~?2."i,()00; ex penses of fog signals, $190,000; .lighting of rivers, $880,000. Authority to con struct five new light vessels and several new light tenders also is asked. The report says that while the board does not propose either to gather or disseminate marine news, it is desirous, in the inter ests of commerce and navigation as well as of economy, to be put in early and quick communication with its outlying light vessels and lighthouses, and it is forth s purpose alone that it asks an ap propriation to enable it to install a wireless system of leleg- ? 1 y between such points in the n^ui house establishment as shall seem to be most necessary.?Washing ton Dispatch. Short $200,000. I'p to this time last year there had been paid out in lialeigh $25)0,090 for cotton sold on the streets. I'p to this tin e this year there has been paid out in Ral eigh 899,000 for cotton sold on the streets. Raleigh is therefore1 short $290,000 from the cotton sales This means of ??our**, a lack of money in circu'a ion among the farmers, mere! ;uits and all others,a d tells ttie- orv of the seven1 loss that is imo veil in the very short cotton crop.? Raleigh News aiid Observer.