2l)f Smitljfulb Mtrali. \ Price One Dollar Per Year "TRUE TO OURSELVES, OUR COUNTRY AND OUR GOD.- SlnBl? Coplee Ply* Cento VOL. 28. SMITHPIELD. N. C.. FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER 8.1909. NO. 27 GREAT FLOODS IN MEXICO.] Death Toll 1,400 and 15,000 Are Homeless. Territory Along San Juan River and Its Tributaries Has Been Rendered Desolate?Devasta tion Complete in Inland Towns. Mexico City, Aug. 30.?Conservative estimates of the damage by the flood 1 at Monterey place the dead at 1,400 and the property loss at $12,000,000. The river has receded and the dan-' ger is over. One quarter of the city was de-1 stroyed, and 15,000 persons today are homeless. The water mains are use- j less and the place is consequently j without a drinking supply; neither is there light or street car service, as the power plant has been damaged. It will be impossible to resume train service for a week, and as a result the city is threatened with a famine. The slaughterhouses have j been destroyed. Ten thousand people are fed on bread, coffee, and soup by J the municipal authorities, and the American consul is giving food to all who apply. The work of recovering bodies of j the flood victims is still in progress, j No official report of the number re covered has yet been issued, but it j Is known that in Monterey and ad- ' jacent towns more than 1,500 corpses j had been found up to 3 o'clock to day. The villages in the Santa Catarina canyon, above Monterey, were swept away like so many straws, and the Inhabitants were drowned by the score. The loss o* life at Santa Cla rina, Garcia, Riconada, and Ojo Cal lente was especially heavy. All along the San Juan River and Its tributaries there is a broad scope of territory which is rendered deso late by the flood. Thousands of acres of irrigated lands and prosper ous towns were located in these val leys. Their devastation is complete. Ijj*-6ome places the river attained a width of twenty miles. Many daring ! feats of rescue were preformed in i the villages and rural districts. The damagee to the electric street j railway, waterworks system, and j electric light plant is estimated at} $2,000,000. The damage to the smel ters, iron and steel plants, and other Industrial concerns is not as great as j first reported; probably $1,000,000 all told will cover their losses. Slept in Fire on a Wagon. Last week Mr. Dellie Smith, of Wilson's Mills township, had a thrill ing experience while bringing a load of tobacco to Smithfield. It took place about two miles from here on the road near the home of Mr. Buck Talton. Mr. Smith was sitting on some cotton bagging which was used as a covering for the tobacco. He struck a match and lighted a cigar ette which he smoked for some time. He became sleepy and lean; Ing back dropped into a sound slum ber. The cigarette went from his mouth to the bagging and set it afire. It was some time before he knew what had taken place. The fire did not wait for him but went on with its work. When he realized what was happening he did quick work and with the help of others put out the fire after about half the to bacco had been ruined. The signs of the fire are still to be seen on the J road. As we were not present we j cannot vouch for the statement which! Is being made that the mule's tafl caught on fire but this is one of the things which is being told. The oth er part of the story we think is cer tainly true and the mule's tail part of It may be just as stated. The j thing which Mr. Smith has learned i Is that cotton bagging, dry tobacco, lighted cigarettes and sleep will not ; work well together. What Killed the Cat? Little Davey Sloan is forever ask ing questions. "You'd better keep still or some thing will happen to you," his tired i mother finally told him one night. "Curiosity once killed a cat, you know." Davey was so impressed with this that he kept silent for three minutes: "Say. Mother, what was it the cat wanted to know?"?Everybody's Mag azine. A deaf husband and a blind wife ure always a happy couple.?French. CRUSADE AGAINST PELLAGRA. Durham Physicians Have Determined To Locate Cause of The Fatal Dis ease?Corn Bread Theory Has Been Abandoned. Durham, N. C., Aug. 31.?Alarmed by the number of cases of pellastfa which have developed in this vicinity local physicians today began experi ments to locate the origin of the dis ease. Six deaths from pellagra have occurred in this section. An examination of the blood of a powerful negro, who has the disease j in a most aggravated form, revealed | a distinct organism and specimens were sent to Richmond and to Johns Hopkins University for more careful analysis. If a germ is found, as physicians here are inclined to believe, some ani-! mal will be Inoculated and a campaign; against pellagra upon the germ theo ry will be waged. The theory that the disease has its origin in corn practically has been abandoned by lo-1 cal medical men, but a fierce war j against the importation of Western corn is being conducted. CLAYTON NEWS. Mrs. John W. Massey and Miss Winona are on a tour in Virginia and Maryland. Mr. John S. Barnes left Wednes day morning for New York and Bal timore to buy fall and winter stocks for Messrs. Ashley Horne & Son. Mr. and Mrs. L. H. Champion mov ed to their new home on Barbour Heights Wednesday morning. Mr. Exum Hall left Saturday to Join his brother, Mr. B. L. Hall, in Jackson, Ga., where he has a good position awaiting hi*n. Mr. Roy Robertson, who has a splendid position with a drug con cern in Greensboro, is spending sev eral days as home. A handsome new brick store will J replace the old wooden structure us- i ed by the Clayton Fruit Co. The old store is being moved out into the ; street until the new one can be ] erected, work on which will be be- j 1 gun just as soon as the old one is i out of the way. i Tobacco prices have been consider- i ably better this week than formerly. 1 Some very good averages have been ] i made on both floors this week. 1 The Ministers' and Laymen's con-1 ] ference met with the Clayton Baptist i church Friday, Saturday and Sunday, j i August 27, 28, and 29th. There were about 100 visitors in attendance from ? other churches throughout the associ- i atlon. | The telephone exchange will soon i have a new home. Mr. C. W. Horne i is having a two-story building erect- i i ed near D. T. Smith's store. The < telephone exchange will occupy the ? upper room and Mr. D. T. Smith' the i lower. * i Messrs. J. T. Barnes and J. J. Ferrell left Monday morning for Bal- , timore where they will purchase j, stocks for their respective firms. j i Miss lone Gulley left last Friday for Castalia where she will teach in ; the Castalia High school and Busi- j, 8Mt Institute. Mr. Walter Stallings and family, of ( Raleigh, have moved here. 1 Mr. C. M. Thomas and Dr. J. J. , Young are having their houses re- i painted. i Several bales of new cotton have | been sold on our market. One bale , yesterday (Tuesday) sold for 12 1-16 | cents. We hope it will hold up at ? this good figure. 1 Mr. H. J. Wilkins, of near Wilson's j j Mills, was here on business Wednes- 1 | day. S. L. W. , Clayton, Sept. 1. Pitchblende, the mineral in which radium la found In almost infinitesl mally small quantities, has been dis- ; covered?a large bed of it?on the McCloud River in California. 'Tis pity that the tariff revision farce in i Washington ended before the discov ery was made. An appeal to protect ( the nascent radium industry by lay- i lng a tax on the raw material thereof would surely not have gone unheard. The product of the foreign pauper ra dium industry costs $5,000,000, more or less, per pound; and there Is a bout one ounce of it in all the wide world. Alas for our hindsight! the foreigners can now dump their pro duct on us and flood the market with their cheap stuff.?Philadelphia Re cord. YIELD WAS 13,825,457 BALES. Greatest Production in History of South's Great Staple. So Secreta ry Hester Reports?Southern Mills Consumed 2,559,873 Bales. New Orleans .Aug. 31.?Statistics j showing that more cotton was handl ed during the commercial year end- j lng tonight than ever before and . that all records had been broken in I the amount of cotton consumed by | Southern mills, was the features of the annual crop statement of Secre- j tary Hester of the New Orleans Cot- ( ton Exchange. The document forms the preliminary report of Secretary | Hester's annual review of the com- j mercial year. The count of the commercial crop showed it to be the largest on record : 13,825,457 bales. The previous larg- j est commercial crop was 13,565,885. ! marketed in 1904-05. Last season's total was only 11,571,966. The most important feature in the report next to the size of the crop ! itself, was the statement on the a- i mount of cotton consumed by South- ! ern mills during the season which closed today. Here are the records i which were again broken, the total | being 2,559,873 bales. This point was regarded by the bulls as being even of more importance than the size of the crop itself. It was taken as ot ficial confirmation of the many sto ries of the great expansion of cotton manufacturing in the South. The figures compared with 2,193,000 last season, and 2,439,000 two seasons ago. I In the point of port receipts another record was Woken. Net receipts at all ports for the season were put at 10?062,845 bales, against only 8,579, 842 last fear and 9,91^;533^ two ye^rs ago. } i ? I Lightning's Work Near Smithfi^l^ Last Sunday night lightning did some lively work on one of the dwell ing houses at Smithfield Cotton Mills. It first struck the chimney and de- j molished about a foot of the top of it then went down the chimney to the rafters. It loosened the shingles rrom the sheeting over about half the roof so that the place will have to be recovered. New shingles have al ready been carried there for that pur pose. It tore the weatherboarding from the front room at the south end ; 3i the front porch while at the same Lime the ceiling of the same wall >'