pjr Jsmttljfir I b Jirralb. price one dollar per tear. "TRUE TO OURSELVES, OUR COUNTRY AND OUR GOD." single copies five cents VOL. 22. SMITH FIELD, N. C., FRIDAY, JULY 31, 1903. NO. 21. THE CROPS NEED RAIN. ! LAND I.ARD AND DRY WANTS MOISTURE. The Crops are Clean and in Good Condition Otherwese, but the Need of Rain is Imperative. The Weekly Crop .Bulletin of North Carolina Section of the Climate and Crop Service of the weather Bureau, for the week ending Monday, July 27, 1903, says: "The characteristic feature of the weather during the past week was the general deficiency in rainfall and consequent in creased tendency to drougnt over most of the State. In fact drought already prevails over a large portion of the central western section, since almost no rain has occurred in that region for two weeks. There were light rains on the 23rd in counties along the immediate coast, which were very beneficial, but the precipitation did not extend far inland. As regards the deficiency in precipitation, the week was unfavorable, crops are beginning to suffer from lack of sufficient moisture, and the land has be come.dry and hard. The tempera ture was moderately above normal and favorable, though the nights were a little cool; the mean for the week was above 80 degrees above normal. The warmest day was Sunday, 26th, when the maximum exceeded 96 degrees at some places. Farm work continued to progress well. While crops are clean and in a good state of cultivation, many of them are just at the period when drought is likely to cause considerable injury, and the need ot rain is therefore imperative. "Cotton has continued to do j well, and improvement has ex tended into the northeast section, where the crop has heretofore been most backward; laying by cotton is nearing completion in the south portion, but further north the plants are still too small to receive the last plowing; cotton is bloomiug freely and ap pears to be boiling well; on light, sandy land in the section where moisture is most deficient the Elants are small and are looming to the top. Corn con tinues m fairly good condition, but generally needs rain, espe cially on uplands where old corn is beginning to fire and turn yel low. Good rains are needed to mature the early crop. Tobacco is ripening fast, and cutting and curing continue under favorable conditions, the crop is curing well, but a short and light crop is indicated. Tobacco is also suffering for want of moisture, and in some counties the lower portion of plants are firing. Gardens are suffering from drought. Minor crops need rain, but continue in good condition, and have largely received last cultivation. The amount of cow peas seeded both for hay and for the improvement of land was very large Wheat thrashing is nearly over, and practically all the oats have now been harvested. Rice is excellent. Some irish po tatoes have been planted for the fall crop. Melons are late and poor. Apples and peaches are ripening, also concord grapes. Nififht Was Her Terror. "I would cough nearly all night long," writes Mrs. Chas. Apple gate, of Alexandria, lnd., "and could hardly get any sleep. I had consumption so bad that if I walked a block I would cough frightfully and spit blood, but, when a:l other medicines failed, three f 1.00 bottles of I)r. King's New Discovery wholly cured me and I gained 58 pounds." It's absolutely guaranteed to cure Coughs, Colas, La Grippe, bron chitis and all Throat and Lung Troubles. Price 50c and $1.00. Trial bottles free at Hood bltos , drug store. Thirty-five grave diggers, em ployed at Grerwood county, New York, went on a strike last week. Some of these had been working at the place for thirty five years. v CLAYTON. Mr. I). T. Barnes was here Tues day. Mrs. Smith is visiting her son, Mr. 0. It. Smith. Mr. O. G. Smith has been sick but is now convalescing. We had a severe elect rical storm Monday night. No damage was done. Mrs. J. L. Ellis has eight regu lar boarders already and they keep coming. Mr. Charles llrag has moved to the house recently vacated by Mr. R. H. Fussell. Mr. I. W. Dodd is getting on nicely. He was able to be at his stable Wednesday. Miss Joyce Karnes returned Saturday afternoon from a visit to relatives in Kaleigh. Mrs. T. E. Kest, of Chapel Hill, is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Stalliugs, near here. Mr. Ed Harris, of Louisburg, spent Saturday, Sunday and Monday with Mr. T. A. Griffin. Mrs. Ashlev Horne and Miss Swannanoa returned Sunday from a visit to friends in Raleigh. Mr. Ed. Coats and family, of Pleasant Grove township, were visitors here Saturday and Sun day. * Mr. Paul Duncan left Tuesday for Baltimore where he will have a eecoud operation performed on his leg. The residents cf Clayton are glad that Mr. A. J. Barbour has had the old barroom moved from Main street. Mr. John Wrenn was here Sat urday and Sunday the guest of Mrs. M. Holland. Mrs. Holland returned with him. A party of our fishermen spent Tuesday on Buffalo in search of the finny tribe. It seems as if their search was rewarded. Our young people report a pleasent evening spent at the res idence of Mr. and Mrs. J. 1). Gul lev last Friday. Event?water melon party. Mr. and Mrs. A. Creech gave a delightful lawn party Monday night in honor of their guest, Miss Annie Dodd. The partici pants report an elegant affair.J Mr. Dewey Hicks and Miss Julia Robertson, one of Clayton's most highly esteemed and charm ing young ladies, eloped Sunday morning and were married by N. R. Bool, Esq. Prof, and Mrs. R. F. Williams have returned from their former home at Louisburg, Tenn. They report a splendid time. Prof. Williams is now canvassing in the interest of The Clayton High School of which he is priucipal. Mr. Zeb B. Jones, after several days' stay in the woods, came up and surrendered to Mayor Hinton Saturday. He hail a hearing before Mayor Hinton and M. G. Gulley, Esq., and they decided his case unbailable, he was conducted to Smithfield jail Saturday evening. Y ELI a. WILSONS' MILLS ITEMS. Miss Mary Ferrell is visiting relatives in Durham. Mrs. Wall and Mrs. T. C. Davis left Monday for High Point. Mr. R. M. Nowell and Mr. Gib son, of Selma, were here Sunday. The material for the bridge to i be built between here and Selma j has come. Misses Bessie and Eula Rouse are visiting their sister, Mrs. W. ? G. Wilson. Mrs. Battle and daughter, of Tuscaloosa, Alabama, are visit ing relatives here. Mrs. Lelia Williamson and Miss Lela Johnson, of Ixniisburg, are visiting Mrs. C. M. Wilson. Mrs. John ITzzell and eon, of i Mapleville, spent a few days with Mrs. C. W. W ilson last week. A meeting will begin Tuesday night at the Disciples church. All are cordially invited. The meet ing will be conducted by Rev. Mr. Hall, of Kinston. X. l.egal Blanks of all kinds at The Heui n office. SEL.MA NEWS. Mr. M. Claiborne Tuck is.here on a visit to his mother. Mrs. I. II. Whitley is visiting relatives in Wilders this week. j Mr. A. G. Bodira, of Philadel phia, is here on business. Miss Mamie Tuck returned from the A. and M. Summer School Wednesday. Misses Hattie and Minnie Strachan were visiting friends in our town Tuesday. Mr. Hubert Scarborough, of Wake couuty, has accepted a po sitiou in the Bank of Selma. Misses Margaret and Julia Ful ler Etheredge returned Wednes day from a visit to friends iu New Bern. Messrs. George D. Tick and Clarence P. Harper have return ed from a visit to Jackson Springs. Mrs. Thomas W. Winston re turned to Oxford Monday. Mrs. Mary A. Noble and Miss AnuaS. Noble accompanied her. Mrs. S. W. Parker and family left Thursday for Spencer to visit her daughter, Mrs. Morton. They will be gone a month. Robert Millard Nowell and Ed ward W. Vick entertained their many friends with a watermelon Wednesday. It cost 20 centsl "Whew?" Messrs. James D. Jeffers and Allison G. Johnson, of Smith field, are now withM.C. Winston. Jim says he is now ready to show the ladies the fine dress goods and notions and Mr. Johnson will be pleased to see his friends when they sell their tobacco and cotton. Mr. H. F. Peedin now claims to be the champion fisherman of our town. He has been going to Holt's Pond for two weeks and claims to havecaught nearly five hundred speckled perch, and it was not good weather for fish ing either. He says this is no fish story. Misses Nannie and Rosa Rich ardson, Marian T. Preston, Mar garet and Julia Fuller Etheredge, Messrs. Charles H. Kluppleburg, EL M. Novell, Robert (iibson, A. j G. Bodim, E. W. Womack, Will Richardson and Ed W.Vic* went! to Princeton last night. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Call chaperoned the party. Mr. and Mrs. M. C. Winston, and Misses Ethel and Lizzie, Mr. and Mrs. J. I. Wood went to Morehead last Saturday. Mr. ; Winston returned Monday as he could not spare the time from his business. He is now building a brick store on Webb street 36x150 feet. It is in the rear of his store that he is now occupy ing. Senex. PINE LEVEL DOTS. Mr. Jesse Parker and Mr. I). IL Oliver made a trip to Goldsboro Friday. Mr. J. F. Kornegay and Miss Flonnie Gulley went to Selma Sunday to visit friends. The commissioners keep im proving our town. They are put ting in sewer pipe this week. Mr. J. R. Oliver and J. T. Stal lings attended Sunday School at Brown school house Sunday. Mrs. A. Pittman.of Goldsboro, spent Friday and Saturday with her daughter, Mrs. Herbert Kor negay. Mr. and Mrs. Willie Casey, of near Smithfield, spent Monday and Tuesday with their sister, Mrs. H R. Gerald. Mr. Henry Westbrooks and Mr. Fred Oliver went to Atkin son's pond fishing last week and caught 1% bushels of fish. Friday afternoon Smithfield's | Blue Birds Hew down in Pine Level's Hornet nest for a game of ball. They got stung 27 times j to 5. Y. Y. Doubtless you are progressive. Some melicines on the market are old-fashioned. Rheuraacide, the great rheumatic cure is a dis coyery, a progressive remedy. It is the spring blood purifier that I you want. At Druggists. I MR. VARNER BACK FROM SALT LAKE. Chatted Mormons on Polygamy? Great Meetlnq of Editors in Omaha. "I never met a cleverer, kinder people than the Mormons in Utah," declares Commissioner of I Labor II. It. Vurner, who has just returned from a tour of the west, after attending the Nation- i al Kditorial Association in Oma- j ha, Nebraska. "Yes, 1 talked with many of; the Mormons about their faith and practices," said the commis sioner. "One Mormon lady said that she did not believe in poly gamy, but her mother was a staunch supporter of a plurality of wives theory. Her mother had even begged her fat her to marry another woman, but in vain, for one wife was as much as he could stand. A wife No. 2 told me she was perfectly happy. However, the Gentiles in Salt Lake say that polygamy does not produce harmory, and the wives of the same man often fight like cats and dogs. Brigham j Young, a founder of Mormonism, had 20 wives. Upon one occa sion he found a boy misbehav ing in the street and whipped him. Afterwards he discovered that be had unknowingly thrash ed his owu son. Polygamy is of course now prohibited by law." The party from North Caro lina attending the National edi torial Association included H. 15. Varner of the Lexington Dis patch, J. 15, Sherrill of the Con cord Times, T. J. Lassiter of the Smithfield Herald and T. G. Cobb, of the Morganton News Herald. There were 480 editors in attendance. l he 1 ar Heels went from Oma ha to Salt Lake and were pro foundly impressed with thatcity. The great Mormon temple, which no one save a Mormon can enter, is modeled afterSolomon's temple; it co6t $4,000,000, and forty years were spent in its erection. The Mormon tabernacle will1 seat 0,000 and is one of the! greatest auditoriums of the world. The drop of a pin can be heard for 150 yard. Ex-Con gressman Kidg of Utah delivered an address before the editorial association in the tabernacle on Mormonism. Each Morman pays one-tenth of his income to the church and a perfect system of relieving the poor is maintained. There are 105 saloons in the city and there is about as rough an element in the population as will be found anywhere. The North Carolinians tried! bathing in the Salt Lake andf found it more pleasant than in the ocean because easier to float in.?Raleigh Post, July 30. BEASLEY. Mr. H. C. Williams went to Benson Monday. Rev. Mr. Ambroze filled his ap pointment at Mill Creek Sunday. Mr. Cub Britt went to Benson last Tuesday, returning Thurs day. Miss Estella Stevens is spend ing a few days with her grand mother. Mrs. Ivey and son, of the Biz zell section, spent Sunday after noon in our village. Mr. Charlie Thornton and fam ily, of the Newton Grove section, were in our midst Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. I. L. Grant, of Benson, who had been visiting parents for the past few weeks, rt turned home Monday. Mr. J. E. Rayner, formerly of this neighborhood, came in from West Virginia, where he has been for some time, a few days ago. Mr. John Underwood, of the Newton Grove section, was in i our midst Sunday, the guest of Mr. John Massey and family. Dexter. Strength and vigor come of good food, duly digested. 'Force,' a ready-to-serve wheat and bar ley food, adds no burden, but 'sustains, nourishes, invigorates. BENSON. Dr. Hood, Mayor, is in In li anna for treatment. Milton Lee now caters at the i Benson Drug Co., store. Ed. Surles, of South Carolina, , is visiting relatives here. Miss Lomie Smith, of Apex, is visiting at G. W. Caveuaugh's. August 11th is the day set for election on "licenseor no license." H. S. Dickson, formerly rail road agent here is visiting friends. Mrs. G. C. Bryan, of Clayton, is visiting her father, J. I). Par rish. Walter Cavenaugh andsisterof Duplin county are visiting rela tives here. We are informed that cider and the Virginia product biing fancy prices since J uly 1st. Since our last issue J. M. Beatv, "the hustler," of Smithfield, has bet u rushing business in our town. C. P. Lockley, attorney, who left here a few days ago under pres sure, is mourned by those who had paid him in advance. Chas. Davis and .fosephus Ily als of Emporia, Va., spent sever al days here recently, not alto gether for fun or pleasure. ' Merritt Whittenton, brother of our townsman, J. W. Whit tenton, fell from a building a few days ago, sustaining painful in juries. Wanted?One car load unbiased opinions on various subjects, on consignment, for gratuitous dis tribution. They are very much needed. Few people know it, but it is now against the law to hunt or fish on the lands of another, without permission, in Banner townsnip.. On August 4th, there will be more tobacco sold here than some people think was made in the county. The people have confidence in our warehousemen and will be here that day. Benson can boast, but not with pride, of one man, who has advocated every side of a ques tion that now engages the public mind, and has recently built a j wing to the thing and is now oc cupying that, in opposition to his former attitudes. A Clayton Man Dead. For some time Mr. John W. Hales, of Clayton, has been trou- > bled more or less with rheuma- j tism. About two months ago t he went to Hot Springs, Ark., and spent four weeks, which seemed to improve him. Wed nesday evening, July 29th, he was doing some work when he was suddenly attacked by rheu matism at his heart. A physi cian was summoned at once. Some relief was given but it was evidenc that but little could be done. He died in about thirty j minutes from the time he was | taken. He was a good business man and was in charge of Clay ton dispensary at the time of his death. He was raised in Oneals j township. "It is strage, indeed," mused: the thoughtful man. "It must be. What is it," asked theother. "That when a man is sowing wild oats he should purchase so much rye!"?Chicago Tribune. Catarrh ot the Stomach. When the stomach is over loaded; when food is taken into it that fails to digeet, it decays and inflames the mucous mem brane, exposing the nerves, and causes the glands to secret mucin, instead of natural juices of diges tion. This is called Catarrh of the Stomach, caused by indiges tion. Doctors and medicines fail ed to benefit me until I used Ko dol Dyspepsia Cure.?J. R. Rhea, Coppell, Tex. Sold by flood Bros., J. R. Ledbetter, J. W.1 Benson. "My." exclaimed the excited citizen. "Won't this awful de pressing drouth ever let up? It actually hasn't rained for eight or ten hours!"?Baltimore Amer ican. STATE MEWS NOTES. A heavy storm passed over the Newbern section Thursday after noon. Gaston county will hold an election on August Oth on the question of issuing $300,000; of 4 per ceut. bonds for road im provements. , At a meeting of the manufac turers of High 1'oint, $2,500 was subscribed for the North Caro lina exhibit at the St. Louis ex position. The Bell Telephone company is to build a handsome office in Charlotte and expend $00,000 on office, improvements and ex tensions. The National association of Dental Faculties are in session at Asheville. About 300 dele gates are attending from all parts of the country. An Elizabeth City man was "re lieved" of $300 by a confidence man at Virginia Beach Saturday, while they were in bathing to gether. Quite an innovation has been made at Raleigh in one of the churches by the pastor request ing the ladies to remove their hats during service. The third regiment of the National guard has received its orders for its encampment at Greensboro, and will go there with very full ranks. Francis I). Winston, who is making a canvass of the State, raising funds for a Masonic tem ple at Raleigh, reports $100,000 secured of the$115,000 required. Lillington, Harnett county, celebrated theopening of the new railroad to that place from Ral eigh, on the 23rd, by speech-mak ing and a general jollification. Loral business men of Wash ton will organize a company to operate a steamship line to run to Norfolk and Baltimore as a guard and protection against the exorbitant freight rates now in force there. The correspondent of the Char lotte Observer at Asheville says, that it is a fact that distillers are disregarding the Watts law and continuing operation outside of incorporated towns and that they will test the law in the courts. It is now very positively de clarer! that the Raleigh and Pam lico Sound railway will be built. The promoters are very san guine, and people along the pro posed route are very enthusias tic indeed. They will have to raise $200,000 in order to se cure the building of the road. Seventeen prisoners in the county jail at Washington for mulated a plot Saturday to es cape and were in the act of doing so, expecting the police to leave the outer door open as he opened the inner one to take a prisoner and work him on the streets. Joseph Chauncey, the policeman, held them with his hand on his gun and frustrated the attempt just as one of the inen was com ing through the door. Mrs. Emma Pitts, a young woman of Winston, was terribly burned there Saturday after noon. While starting a fire in the stove with kerosene oil, the can exploded and threw oil all over her. She was soon enrap ped in flame and before help ar rived she was rendered uncon scious. The attending physician says the soles of her feet are the only part of her person not burn ed. She was removed to the hos pital, where she lies in an uncon scious condition. The physi cians says there is no hope for her. Working: Nnrht And Day. The buisiest and mightiest little thing that ever was made is l?r. King's New Life Pills. These pills change weakness into strength, listlessness into energy, brain-fag into mental power. They're wonderful in building up the health. Only 25c per box. Sold by Hood Bros. ?