$!)c Sinit!jfir!i) Herald. Price One Dollar Per Year 1 "TRUE TO OURSELVES, OUR COUWTRY AND OUR GOD." ?? " "1 " Single Coplee Flva Cent* VOL. 28. SMITHFIELD. N. C.. FRIDAY. JULY 0. ?? ? -N Lie J y AN ENOCH ARDEN RETURNS. Comes Back After 47 Years to The Wife of His Youth and Declares He Will Spend Rest with Her. Fittsfield, Mass., July 1.?Away from his wife and home 47 years, during which time he had enlisted In the civil war, had been wounded | there and given up for dead, George Hecox returned to Lee last night, and says he will spend the rest of his life there. In the meantime Mrs. Hecox had married Raymond Tucker, who died in 1907. Some years ago, Hecox, re turning to Lee, learned that his wife was happily married, and, letting his brother only into his confidence, de rided not to return. After Tucker's death the Widow' received money and presents frequently from an unknown source. Late last night a white-haired old man, with gray whiskers, called at Mrs. Tucker's home, on Centre street In Lee. "Does Mrs. Tucker live here?" he asked of the old lady who answered the call. "Yes, sir: I am Mrs. Tucker," was the sharp reply. "Weil, Mary, I've come back home to be with you the rest of my days. Forty-seven years ago I left you to go to the war, and I suppose you thought me dead." The widow Tucker recognized her first husband, cordially welcomed him back, and announced today that she J was henceforth Mrs. Hecox, and not / Mrs. Tucker. When asked why he stayed away all these years he said: "That is a secret I can never tell." Mrs. Hecox was equally reticent and friends know, not the mystery.?Philadelphia Re cord. SIX MEET DEATH IN FLAMES. I Five Children and Old Soldier Vic tims as South Boston, Va. Danville, Va., July 5.?As the re sult of a mysterious fire which total ly destroyed the home of S. E. 11am lett at South Boston early this morn ing, five of their children and H. A. Strange, aged 74, were burned to death, and another child aged four years seriously injured. Mr. and Mrs. Hamlet escaped without injury. The victims of the frightful affair ^re: H. A. Strange, Vernie Hamlet, pge 14 years; Beatrice Hamlet, aged 7 years; Violet Hamlet, aged 6 lyears; Cecil Hamlet, aged 3 years; Henry Hamlet aged 18 months. Wilson's Mills and Dunn Play Ball. Wilson's Mills, July 8.?Wilson's Mills and Dunn played a 11 inning tie game here last Friday afternoon, game being called for visitors to patch train. Taylor and Davis pitch ed good t>all for the locals, but had poor support. Dunn scored four runs jn the seventh inning on several costly errors. R. H. E. Dunn 00000040100 543 W. Mills, 30000002000589 Batteries, Dunn, Shell, Sanders and Taylor. W. Mills, Taylor, Davis and Tomllnson. Yesterday afternoon Wilson's Mills defeated Dunn 5 to 0 on the Dunn diamond. Frank Davis pitched great ball for Wilson's Mills, letting the heavy hitting Dunn team down with out a single hit and striking out 16 men. He also got one single, one two bagger and one 3 bagger out of five times up. The Dunn boys are a clever set of ball players and a cred it to the town they represent. R. H. E. W. Mills, 000120200 591 Punn 000000000 004 Batteries, Wilson's Mills, Davis and Stevens. Dunn Lane and Taylor. Wilson's Mills goes to Kenly to morrow for two games. CYCLONE KILLS FOUR. Fifty Person* Injured and Immense I Damage Done in Canada. Winnipeg, July 3.?Reports from 1 Southern Saskatchewan show that 1 four persons were killed and more ' than fifty hurt and immense damage ' flone by the cyclone which swept 1 that district late last night and early I this morning. In the Gainsboro dis- I trlct three persons were killed and I nearly fifty injured, while a child i Ifas killed near Carlerale. CLAYTON NEWS. Mr. John T. Pulleu, of Raleigh, spent Monday afternoon here on business. Mrs. J. R. Wall returned Sunday from Raleigh where she' had been visiting her daughter, Mrs. T. A. Branham. Mr. J. I. Barnes made a business trip to Raleigh Monday afternoon. Miss Ava Wall who has been visit ing her sister, Mrs. J. S. Wall, at Archer, returned home Sunday. Prof. Bruce H. Caraway, of Kins ^on, is in town this week on busi ness. Mr. M. R. Wall, of Selma, was here for a short while Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Hamilton re turned Monday from a visit to rela tives at Dunn. Messrs. W. L. Stanc-il and Chas. j H. Ellis spent Sunday afternoon in j the Capital city. Dr. and Mrs. B. A. Hocutt arriv ! ed home last Friday from western North Carolina where they spent their honeymoon. Mrs. Chas. L. Barnes and Miss Madge and Mrs. T. L. Ferrell spent last Friday in the capital city shop ping. Mr. Eric Ellington, who recently | graduated from Anapolis Naval Acad emy, left last Friday for San Fran cisco where he will join his ship, the Louisiana. Mrs. L. D. Debnam, of Selma, spent Sunday here with her father, Dr. J. A. Griffin. Miss Maie Swindell, who taught last year in Clayton High School, is the guest of Mrs. Jno. S. Barnes this week. Misses Bessie and Lillie Hale, of Louisburg, spent last week with their aunt, Mrs. A. T. Beddingfield. The well diggers are at work on a deep well for Messrs E. L. Hinton and Jno. S. Barnes this week. Mr. and Mrs. E. B. ^Cullers and Warren McCullers left Saturday for Raleigh where they joined the speci al Pullman train on its 33 day tour of the continent. Mr. Chas. W. Home is putting in a new system of gins at the Fowle Place near hear. By the beginning of the season he will be prepared to handle cotton by the best equip ped and most modern methods, known to the ginners world. Mr. Herman Moore returned Tues day from Durham where he was called to the bedside of his brother who was confined to his room with fever. Shotwell and Liberty Cotton Mills played a 12 inning game of ball here Saturday afternoon which re sulted in a score of 4 to 2 in favor of Shotwell. The revival services at the M. E. church closed last Thursday night. Several professions and some addi tions to the church was the result of the meeting. Miss Nellie Pool, of Raleigh, spent several days in town with her pa rents this week. Mr. B. P. Williamson, Jr., of Knightsdale, was in town Tuesday on business. miss n-mei i naermu, or Kaieign, is the guest of Mrs. A. T. Bedding field this week. Archdeacon Hughes and Rev. Mil ton A. Barber, of Raleigh Episcopal church, are conducting mission meet ings at the High school Auditorium this week. Mrs. Robt. Gulley and daughter, Miss Aline of Richmond, are visiting at the home of Mr. M. G. Gulley this week. Representative J. W. Barnes and Mr. J. S. Barnes, of Archer, are in town today on business. Mr. Charlie Gulley, of Durham, spent Sunday with relatives and friends here. The tobaaco warehouses are prac tically completed and tobacco could be marketed in them this week if necessary. The "Liberty" house up town has been rented to Mr. B. Hob good of Garner, N. C., and the "Home" house down town will be run by Mr. W. I. Wilkerson, of Clarksvllle, Va. These gentlemen are both experienced tobacconists and Clayton's future in the tobacco world led by these gentlemen, supported by an able corps of buyers will shine bright with success. The Clayton to bacco warehouse company will give a barbecue and public dinner in the Bear future. Will give date later. Clayton, July 7. S. L. W. LIFTED BARREL TO DRINK. i Veteran Who Sighs for Good Old Days That Never Return. Pennsburg, Pa., July 3.?Among the octogenarians of this section of I the State there are few who can talk | so interestingly of ye oldeu times as I Charles Schmoyer, veteran of the , Army of the Potomac, iron ora miner, carpenter and farmer, of this borough j who says that "the world is going to the dogs sure, on account of the I young people disliking to work, sleep ing too little and spending too much j money." Mr. Schmoyer was a giant in his I younger days, both in stature and strength. To handle 300-pound bar I rels of sugar and shoulder a three bushel bag of grain was child's play for him, and it took only a portion of ! his prodigious strength to lift a bar- ^ rel of cider to his knees and enjoy 1 a draught out of the bunghole. Mr. Schmoyer says: "Those were J good old days. Men were healthy and strong then. We weren't bothered by style and fashion, either, for we at tended church and Sunday school barefooted, without coats, collars or ties. That was real comfort. At bat talions we boys got five cents' spend ing money, and at vendues or public sales, only three cents; but we en joyed that little more than the boys nowadays do five dollars. "No judgment notes in those days ?oh, no! The people were honest then, and a little scratch on a beam or upon the chimney was enough. Children get big too quick now, and rule their parents, whereas in my days it was nothing for a 21-year ! old son to be whipped by his father. Yes, the world is growing worse, and the trouble lies with the young people."?Philadelphia Record. SENTENCED TO STUDY BIBLE. Memorizing of Prayer, Command ments and Psalms Will Free Boy. N'owat?, Okla., July 3.?When Arlie Powell, convicted of horse stealing, was brought into Court to receive a sentence of one year in prison Judge Thomas Brown said to him: "You're too good a boy to be sent to prison. I'm going to allow Rufe Riley, the sheriff, to make a man out of you. In three months I will re- j turn to Nowata. Instead of sending [ you to prison I am going to instruct Rufe to keep you here in jail. If, 1 when I come back, you have learned '? by heart the Ten Commandments, the J I,, \i's Prayer and two Psalms and j I couie into Court and repeat them 1 j will turn you out again. If you can not do these things you must then go i to prison." "TEXAS GIANT" DEAD. L. S. Thurster Stood Seven Feet I Seven in His Stocking Feet. ' Mount Vernon, Tex., July 3.?L. S. 1 Thurster, known as the "Texas gi- I ant," and believed to be the tallest I man in the United States, died last j ' night at his home here. He was sev- l enty-seven years old and Berved through the war in the Confederate I army. He stood seven feet seven in ches in his stocking feet. He leaves < a son, who is slightly more than sev en feet tall. l Not To Be Cheated. 1 "This is a mighty dishonest world, 11 you know," said Henry Dixey, "and ! < it don't hurt to be suspicious of t some people. 1 sympathize with the i old negro who came to a watchmak- ( er with the two hands of a clock. i "I want yer fer to fix up dese i han's. Dey ain't kept no correct time t for mo' den six munfs." e "Well, where is the clock?" de- t manded the watchmaker. |1 "Out to my cabin." I "But I must have the clock." 1 "Didn't I tell yer dar's nuffin' de c matter wid the clock 'ceptin' de han's? An' here dey be. You Jess want de clock so you kin tinker It and charge me a big price. Gimme back dem han's."?Young's Magazine. t 1 Fire Sweeps 6,000 Acres of Grain, s Los Angeles, July 2.?Fire swept, 1 6,000 acres of grain on several ranch- i I es yesterday near San Fernanda, t The loss Is estimated at $125 (?H? t The fire started in the afternoon and by nightfall great fields of barley and wheat had been laid waste. 1 j HORROR ON JAPANESE SHIP. 149 Persons Perish in Fire Disaster Near Aomori. Victoria, B. C., July 4.?[Special] ?One hundred and forty-nine lives were sacrificed by the recent burning of the Japanese steamer Nihonkai Maru. Details of the disaster have just been received by the Canadian ^l'acific steamship Kmpresa. The vic tims were the entire crew of tlie Nihonkai, a coaster, lti men in all, together with 133 fisher folk, both ! men and women. The disaster occur j red on June 24, near Aouiori, and { what made the tragedy more pitiful I was the fact that the vessel was so 1 close to shore and succor that there need not have been any fatalities but for the fact that fog obscured the burning vessel. The cause of the fire will never be determined. The first intimation of danger received by those aboard, the majority of whom were fishermen returning to their homes in Japanese villages, was when the flames burst from the bunkers and drove those aboard for temporary safety to the rigging. The Cigar That Cost One Hundred Dollars. 'i'he Old Man is not a non-smoker by any means. Heavens, no! But* he does not permit my Lady Nicotine to get in her work except when he's off the job. He flirts with the little lady almost incessantly after he j has banged the roll-top into place. { While he doesn't use the five-dollar J Havana accredited to J. P. Morgan, he is some connoisseur of the deli- j cious weed, at that. He calls tobac- | co his slave. He prides himself that it isn't the other way. He told me a story the other day of a youth who smoked a cigar that cost one hun- j dred dollars. "Talking about our favorite brands," he said, as he rolled his unlighted i'anatclla to the other side of his mouth, "puts me in mind of a ' young gentleman who dropped in on me the other week. He had worked for me at one time, and I must say he rang the bell with me at the time. When he next turned up he was selling lithograph work for a big Chicago establishment. His get-1 away was great, and I knew he'd sell me at once. He had talked for some five minutes when he produced a cigar and lighted it complacently. During the operation I managed to get in two or three questions, and was astonished that he lacked his initial ginger altogether when he con- 1 tinued. 1 was puzzled, strove to ana- 1 lyze his difficulty, and wondered 1 where the sand in his gear-box was 1 trickling down from. "Before I could arrive at my solu- 1 tion he had closed me for a hundred ' iollars' worth of lithographed work. We sat talking reminiscently for a 1 few minutes, and then he rose to ' ?o, thanking me for coming through. " 'My boy,' I said, shaking hands ' with him, 'you smoke expensive ci- ' jars.' 1 " 'Three for a quarter is all,' he aughed. " "Guess again,' I answered. 'That s :igar cost a hundred dollars.' "He wanted to know what I meant. s " 'Listen,' I answered. 'You could ' lave convinced me that I needed two hundred dollars' worth of lithograph 1 *ork if you hadn't divided your at- ^ ention between your selling and your ' igar. I saw in a second that some hing was wrong when you raised the natch to your cigar. I was puzzled 'or a moment; then I realized what ' vas the matter. Listen. This sell- * ng work is no parlor's plan. A man :an't divide his attention between It ind anything else. They tell us hat Caesar diverted himself by die ating seven letters at once and slip >ing in a Job or two simultaneously n addition. But the rest of us isn't.1 "?The Business Philosopher. ^ 8 Early Not A Leper. c New York, July 5.?John S. Early, ( he North Carolina leper, is at last s n the New York hospital. But the t uperintendent of the hospital says e le has already responded to I)r. Bulk- t ey's treatment, who said he did not iave leprosy, but a skin disease, and e bat he is entirely well. He will be r ?rnet>7.971, giving a profit of $86,000. A burglar, resisting arrest at Chi cago. killed Policeman Henry Schna dle and escaped Friday. An uppartment house will be built in St. Louis, in which no family with out children will be allowed. Rice in Louisiana, Texas, Arkansas and the Carolinas is above the aver age, with a slight acreage increase. Eight more mines with 2000 men have closed because of the strike in the coal district of l'ittsburg, Kan. The Mexican flea is doing as much damage to Louisiana cotton as the boll weevil. New Orleans imported 278,394.418 pounds of coffee during the year ending June 30. Flans have been completed for the intercoast canal between New Orleans and Galveston. The Oklahoma law prohibiting the piping of natural gas from the State has been declared invalid. His wife and two childreu are dead at Cleveland as the result of Foster Shy's drunken rampage. Attorney General J. 1). McCarn, of Tennessee, prosecutor of Senator Carmack's slayers, will run for Gov ernor next time. With her husband dead, supposed ly a suicide, Mrs. John Kice, at Cin cinnati, has confessed that she killed him. ? Internal revenue losses at Milwau kee, were $322,000 for the year end ing June 30, due almost wholly to a decrease in the beer output. The body of Postmaster Daniel Cerrillo, of Santa Maria del Oro, Mex., who disappeared when his of fice was robbed of $10,000, has been found, robbers evidently huving slain hi in. Unusualy heavy rains In Northern Mexico have demoralized railroad traffic. One white man and three negroes were drowned when a skiff capsized in a squall at Hickman, Ky., Sunday. Falling down a 100-foot well at Tucson, Ariz., Saturday, W. B. Keel ing, director of a new magnetic ob servatory, sustained serious injuries. For sending threatening letters to Rudolph Spreckels, Benjamin W. Soule, of San Francisco, has been sentenced to four years in the pen itentiary. Just About Lemons. With the approach of warm weath er, when man's best friend is the :itrus fruit, these suggestions are es pecially interesting. Following are, some of the uses of a lemon. Two or three slices of lemon in a jup of strong tea will cure a nerv ous headache. A tablespoonful of juice in a small :up of black coffee will relieve a bilious bei'ache. A dash of lemon juice in plain wa ier makes a cleansing tooth wash, nol jnly removing the tartar, but. sweet ?ning the breath. A lotion of lemon juice and rose water will remove tan and whiten the skin. Lemon juice with olive oil is far superior to vinegar for a salad dress ng?equal parts used for blending. Tough meat can be made tender )y adding a teaspoonful of lemon uice to the water in which it is boil ?d. It also removes unsightly stains rom the hands. After the pulp is removed the ikins make dainty receptables for lerving salads, ices, &c.?New York Jlobe. KILLED IN COLLISION. Traction Cars Meet Head-on Near Cleveland, Ohto. Cleveland, July 3.?One man was tilled and a dozen persons injured in l head-on collision between two cars in the Chardon division of the Eas ern Ohio Traction Company near Jatos Mills late this afternoon. Pas engers were panic stricken and ratnpled on each other in efforts to iscape from the cars. Traffic was ied up for three hours. According to Robert Beatty, recelv r for the traction company. Motor nan Eggleston, in charge of the east iound car, overran his orders. His nstructions were to wait at a switch ,500 feet from where the collision iccurred. FATALITIES IN NEW YORK. Four Deaths and 337 People Injured As Result of Celebration. New York, July 5.?Four death*, 337 injured, nine of them dangerous* ly and one so seriously that death seems certain was the Fourth of July record in New York up to inld i night tonight. The list of dead up t<> 10 o'clock I tonight as follows: Edith Brown, 6 years, died from fractured skull by explosion of toy ; cannon. Dorothy Martin, 5 years old died from burns cause l by Igniting of bo* i tf mate hen George Maitredoria, a 10 ycir old boy died of tetanus after wounding , his hand with a toy pistol. Pagano Gisseuppo, 40 years old killed by random bullet supposedly fired by a celebrator, though rela ; tives maintain that he was murder j ed. Fires in city and suburbs were numbered by the score, but none in New York proper did any great dam age. : KILLED THE WHOLE, FAMILY. Therefore Railroad Company Escapes Liability for Damages. Jefferson City, July 3.?By the killing of the entire family, a railway company has escaped liability for the payment of damages for the death of Philip Ragel and wife and their minor sons. Suit was brought for $15,000 by the administrator of the estate. Ac cording to the Missouri Supreme Court, the company is left free from damages because the entire family was wiped out by the fatality, no per son who has the right to maintain the suit to .'iual judgment against the company surviving. COULD SUPPORT HARMON. V Gov. Johnson Discusses Report Re garding Nomination In 1912. Minneapolis. July ?"I am not in Presidential politics now," is the sig nificant answer which Gov. Johnson made when asked for a statement re garding the report that of the 161 Democratic members of Congress, 125 who had been polled were for Gov. Harmon, of Ohio, for President in 1912. "I know nothing of the report that the Representatives are for Har mon," added the governor, "I have the highest regard for Harmon, and if he is nominated I could very cheerfully support him." Husband and Wife Die in a Day. A correspondent of The Landmark mentioned a few days ago the death of Mr. Ernest Shaw, which occurred at his home in Turnersburg town ship soon after midnight on Sunday morning, June 20th. Mr. Shaw's re mains were buried at Mt. Bethel church at 4 o'clock on Sunday after noon, 20th, and his young wife, a bride of less than six months, who was critically ill at the time of her husband's death, died Sunday night, .fane 20th, and was buried at Mt. Bethel the following Monday after noon at 4 o'clock. Both died of ty phoid fever. Mr. and Mrs. Shaw were married last Christmas eve. They were the same age and the day of their mar riage was their 19th birthday. It is a sad coincidence that they should die of the same disease within 24 hours of each other, less than six months after their marriage.?States vllle Landmark. The Same Everywhere. This very solemn communication appeared in the New York Herald Tuesday: "The other day I went in a drug store to order a glass of soda water, but I happened to see how they washed their glasses, and the sight made me leave that place in disgust. Since then closer examination has made me acquainted with the fact that many drug stores have no other outfit for this purpose than a slop pail, which serves as much to wash the hands of the operator as to rinse the glasses, and which after a while assumes a most disgusting appear ance." Isn't it the same everywhere?