% na ?)r flefalk PHc? Ona Dollar P?r Yur w. ? , * "T"u* TO ou"?e?-ve?. our cooftrv AND our qod.- ? -- ..j ?7* 1 ? ? 8ingl? CoplM Five Ccnta. VOL. 29 SMITHF1ED, N. C, FRIDA*, MARCH 4, 1910 - -- - 1 Number 1 SAILING DOWN THE NILE Roosevelt and His Son Leav ing Heart of Africa RESULTS A WORLD'S RECORD.' Leave* Gondokoro for Khartoum and Scientific Expedition is Practically Ended. American Museum* Will Re ceive Greatest Collection of Afri can Fauna in Existence?Working on Speeches. ,? Gondokoro, Sound, Feb. 28.?Cql Roosevelt and the others of his im mediate party sailed today on the steamer Pal for Khartoum, where ithey expect to arrive on March 15. With their departure the African scientific expedition, under the aus pices of the Smithsonian institution of Washington and led by the former President of the United States, was, | for all practical purposes, brought to p. close. k ?ol, Roosevelt considers the killing 1 curslon along the upper reaches of the Nile a fitting ending of his hunt ing trip. The results generally, from the standpoint of the hunter and the scientist, have exceeded all expecta tions. Col. Roosevelt and his son Kermit have killed some 500 specimens of large mammals. The bag includes 17 Hone, 11 elephants, 10 buffaloes, 10 black rhinoceroses, 9 white rhinocer oses, 9 hippopotami, 9 giraffes, 3 leop ards, 7 chetahs, 3 giant elands, 3 sables, 1 sitatunga, and 2 bongos. All these were killed in the Interest Of science, and the specimens will be disposed of accordingly, the great er number going to the Smithsonian Institution. Mr. Roosevelt will retain not more than six trophies for him self. In comparative importance, the most highly prized game may be rated as follows: First, the giant ealnds, the first complete specimens of which family are now being taken from the country; second, the white rhinocer oses; third, the bongos, the first to be stalked and killed by a white man, and, fourth, the sitatunga, a species of antelope. The naturalists secured a remark able collection comprising many thou sands of other mammals and birds. The game taken and the collections made constitute a world's record for a similar period of hunting and sci entific research in Africa, and the American mnseums will receive the greatest collection of African fauna Jn existence. Col. Roosevelt will now devote his time to writing including the prepa ration of the addresses which he Is to deliver in Europe. He will do no more hunting unless during the trip j down the Nile chance throws in his way an opportunity to secure some rare specimens. Flood's Haste Saves 100. Danville, 111., Feb. 28.?Just before a hundred miners were to have en tered Gray's mine today, the swollen ' V'ni>mUlinn hfnlro thrr?lich thf> walls into the pit. There is 36 feet Of water in the mine now. The min ers would all have perished in the flood had they gone to work a few tninutes earlier. A carriage that once belonged to Lord Byron stands in the corner of the yard of a wayside inn near Port Lincoln, Australia. The name Of the London maker is engraved on the body of the vehicle, and on the t panels are Lord Byron's motto and Coat of arms. The carriage is still In fair preservation. TO REVIVE SPELLING BEES. Pennsylvania Public School Superin tendent Interested in Orthography. 1 York, Penn., Feb. 27.?In order that the pupils of the various public ?chools may become more efficient In orthography, County Superintend ent C. W. Stlne has planned to con duct spelling bees throughout the county during the next scholastic year. The County Superintendent has pre pared a book of 5,000 practical words which he will use In these spelling contests, and prizes will be awarded to the successful spellers. The study of agriculture also has been added to the curriculum la many Of the schools of this county. ADDRESS ON ROAD BUILDING. Mr. Spoon, of tha Government Road Commission, Spoke Here Wednes day Evening. Mr. Willis L. Spoon, representing the Government Road Commission in this state, addressed the Smlthfield Chamber of Commerce in the Court house Wednesday evening, his sub ject being Good Roads. During the course of his remarks he very en thusiastically commended the effici ent work which Road Supervisor J. H. B. Tomlinson is doing. He re marked that the working of the road during the present rainy season was the practical thing to do, for no mat ter when the roads are worked they will have to undergo a certain proces-a in packing, and that going through this miry process now, as soon as the fair weather came they would be in excellent condition. He said that the most economical and serviceable roads could be built with the mate rials to be found right here in our county, to-wit, clay, sand and gravel. Dies at Age of 110. Milford, N. H., Feb. 28.?Hichael Leavitt, the oldest Irish-American in New Hampshire, died today at the age 110 years. He had lived alone since the death of his wife, forty years ago. He was born in County Kerry, Ire land. He came to America seventy years ago. NEWS OF INTEREST. Announcement has been made that John D. Rockefeller, Jr., has resigned as a director of the United States Steel Corporation and is succeeded by Henry Walters, of Baltimore, chairman of the Louisville and Nash ville and the Atlantic Coast Line sys tem of railroads, and a close person al friend of J. P. Morgan. Joe Domingo de Obalida, president of Panama, died Tuesday afternoon. President Obaldia was elected on July 12, 1908. He had before acted as chief executive during the absence of President Amador. He was for merly Minister to the United States. He was born 63 years ago and was a son of former President Obaldia, of Columbia. The Central labor union of Phila delphia, representing 140 unions with a claimed membership of 125,000, has voted to begin a sympathetic strike next Saturday in aid of the striking street railway employes. The strike situation as to the street car lines is only partially under control. Cars are being run on some lines but riot ing occurs occasionally. Sir Ernest Shackleton. the English explorer who made the "farthest south" record, reaching within 111 miles of the South Pole, will soon visit this country on a lecture tour. Before he returns home he will be presented a gold medal by the Na tional Geographic Society. He is expected to give his first American lecture in Carnegie Hall at New York, on March 29. James R. Garfield, son of President Garfield, and Secretary of the Inter ior during the latter days ofthe Roos evelt Administration, is being talk ed as a candidate for Governor of Ohio. Congressman Nicholas Long worth, son-in-law of Mr. Roosevelt, is also talked of for the place. It will take the best the Republicans I have to beat Governor Harmon, who J Is one of tlje country's best known democrats. Ex-Governor James K. Vardaman has been balked once more in his am bition to occupy a seat in the United States Senate, this time by the Mis sissippi Legislature which last week elected Leroy Percy to the Senate. Vardaman is a strong, If arratic man, and Is not to be discouraged In his designs on a seat in the upper house of Congress. He has announ ced that he will again be a candi date two years hence. Leroy Percy, who was last week chosen to succeed Col. James Gordon in the United States Senate, was born November 9, 1861. He is a graduate of the law department of the University of Virginia, and took a post-graduate course in Princeton University. He is a prominent law yer and has taken an active part in politics for many years, but has never held office before. Col. Gordon, his immediate predecessor, was appoint ed to a seat in the Senate by the Governor of ? taissippi on the death of Senator A. J. McLaurin last De cember. ? ? ? ? TAFT HOLDS RECORD Travels 20,638 Miles In His First Year in Office AVERAGE FIFTY-SIX MILES DAY. Also Ha* Made 348 Speeches?Will Have Rounded Out Twelve Months On Thursday?Roosevelt Outdis tanced?Heard and Seen In Thirty States?Goes to Chicago. ???? t ? When President Taft completes his day's work on Thursday he will have been President for one year and have broken two Presidential records. Such records are not easy to break, especially when one is elected Pres ident after Theodore Roosevelt. They are for the number of miles travel ed an speeches made during the first year of an administration. Taking an average for the 365 days since Mr. Taft became President, he has traveled more than fifty-six miles a day. This includes Sundays. His total mileage for the year is 20,638 miles, to which should be added about 3,000 miles, the estimated distance which he has covered by automobile. During this first year of his admin istration, the President has made 348 speeches, of which only twenty were in the District of Columbia. The record of Theodore Roosevelt for the last year of his administration was 242 speeches, and he was considered a ready talker. President Taft's record for both speeches and travel was made during his trip through the West and South last fall, during which he discussed nlnnc J * 1 l i uu piano ? uu u uc uau IUI uicu IUI legislation with unusual freedom. His speeches have been made over a wide area, and the President has been seen and heard in thirty States and two Territories.'which hope soon to be States. They are Connecticut, New York, Pennsylvania, Virginia, Washington. North Carolina, Massachusetts, Illi nois, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Iowa, Ne braska, Kansas, Colorado, Utah, Ida ho, Montana, Oregon, Californa, Ari zona, New Mexico, Texas, Arkansas, Missouri, Tennsssee, Mississippi, Lou isiana, Alabama, Georgia, South Car olina, New Jersey, and Vermont. Speeches which the President made prior to his Inauguration fill three volumes. Plans for the second year will probably equal the present mile age, but hardly the number of speech es. H ? will begin the second year with a trip to Chicago and through New York State in March, and expects to go to Alaska and as far south as Tex as before another session of Con gress.?Washington Herald. A Lively Time at Clinton. A dispatch from Clinton to the Raleigh News and Observer says: As a result of a fight here in a! back lot Saturday aftrenoon, which l assumed the proportions of a riot and which the mayor and police were call ed out to quell, George Jones, a) white man of upper Sampson, is dead, be ing shot by a policeman, death", result ing immediately. It seems that several men had got ten hold of some blind tiger whiskey, j were imbibing rather freely, and got; into a fight. When the policemen ? came to make the arrests the fight was still going on. Some of the men in it and whom the police were start-1 ing to arrest, were kinsmen of the deceased, and he came in and was1 trying to prevent the officers from! arresting the men, or was one of the! participants. In the melee Policeman J. K. Tew was knocked down. He1 rose and the deceased advanced on j him with a large club, when Tew shot him dead. Preaching Appointments. We notice in Zion's Landmark for February 15, the following appoint ments of Elder W. l!. Williams j Four Oaks. Saturday aud first Sun day in March. Hannah's Creek, Mon day. Oak Forest Tuesday. Hickory Grove, Wednesday. Black River, Friday. Americans are the greatest peanut eaters In the world?they would be, even if there were no circuses. In 1907 and 1908 Japan exported 17, 000.000 pounds of peanuts, and the United States took nearly all of them. SNDWSLIDE KILLS MANY Avalanches Sweep Over Two Idaho Towns MULLEN ALSO SWEPT AWAY. Large Number of Persons Believed Buried Under Many Feet of Snow In the Coeur d'Alenes?Fully Fifty Houses Swept to the Bottom of the Canyon?Slides Extend Half Mile. Wallace. Idaho, Feb. 28.?Two lit tle towns., Mace and Burk, strung along the precipitous Burk Canyon, in the Coeur d'Alenes, were burled last night under enormous masses of snow rock, and earth that swept down on them from the mountain side. The known list of dead is now 19, while It Is probable that scores are lying In the avalanches. Every able bodied man in the mining district a round Wallace is at work relieving the sufferings of the homeless in habitants and searching for dead and living under the dsbrls. Shortly before midnight last night the first and largest avalanche de scended on the town of Mace. Supt. and Mrs. I. H. Pascoe, of the Stand ard mine, in which property a large majority of the male residents of Mace are employed, were sleeping when their home was crushed as an egg shell, two sons and a daughter being instantly killed. Mr. Pascoe is missing, but his wife was rescued, slightly wounded. Between fifteen and twenty homes were swept into the bottom of the canyon and covered by between 30 and 40 feet of snow and boulders. Striking at the east end pf Mace, the slide extends nearly half a mile up the canyon, averaging thirty feet in depth. Bodies are being taken out at in tervals but because of the distribution of the miners at the boarding house and cabins no exact estimate of the number of dead can be made. Another landslide at 9 o'clock this morning struck Burke a mile above Mace, burying twenty-five houses un der thirty to forty feet of snow and earth. There is fear that the number of dead might be even larger than that at Mace. A report tonight says that a slide killed several persons at Mullan, Ida ho, a mining town north of the towns first struck, but details so far are lacking. Everett, Wash., March 2.?Latest estimates tonight place the number of persons killed by the avalanche that crushed two Great Northern pas senger trains at Wellington at forty. While only twenty-three persons are known to be dead nearly a score are thought to be burled in the wreck age. Communication with Wellington is maintained only by men on snow shoes. Twelve bodies had been re moved tonight from the 150-foot gorge into which the snow slide swept the train. Death's Doings. On Thursday of last week Mrs. Lizzie Adams, widow of Mr. John Adams, of Meadow Township, died at the home of her nephew, Mr. J. H. Smith, with whom she had been living for some time. Mr. Johnnie Peedin, of Boon Hill township, died Tuesday night of ty phoid-,)neumonia. He was a son of Mr. Amos Peedin, deceased. The funeral was preached Wednesday by Elder Rom Jones, of Smithfield. Mr Jack Jones, who lived about seven miles south of Princeton, on the Hunter Hall place died Tuesday night from paralysis after a brief Ill ness. He moved to that neighbor hood from near Kenly only a short time ago. The wife of Mr. Charley Game, of Boon Hill township, died last Mon day night and was buried Wednesday. Everywhere everybody seems to be talking about high prices. Congress is supposed to investigate the cause of the tremendous cost of all things, but what good will it do? Since this , investigating talk began, prices have gone higher still, and no one knows where the end will be. Now the news comes from Chicago that live hogs are selling at $10 a hundred. It every man was a seller then the high prices would suit, but occasional ly one has to buy as well as to sell. Then is when the high price Is not desirable. It is the fellow who buys who complains of the high prices. ROOSEVELT ESCAPES FEVER. | French Missionary Who Lunched with Him at Gondokoro Oiea the Next Day. I Gondokoro, Soudan, March 1.?A fresh instance of Roosevelt luck is \ seen In the fact that the ex-President i ?nd his party left here the day before' an outbreak of African fever. They f railed for Khartoum yesterday, and i at noon today Dr. Rodorlc Prosch, a French medical missionary who lunch ed with Mr. Koosevelt yesterday, sud denly died of fever. Dr, Pro?ih h?s done missionary work in Africa for ten years, during ^ which time his health has Ujeen gradu- s ally undermined by the debilitating climate, and his collapse today Is at tributed to a weakened condition that could not resist an attack that he might have survived a few years ago. At a camp adpoining that occupied by the Americans here an English sporltman is seriously ill following a trip to Kampala, the capital of Uganda, one of the places at which the Roosevelt party stopped. I Tha niatrlrt fnni 111 Iculnnnr nf HonHrt. I * **v 4/1 v* ?V V V Vtu>?lvvivuv> WVIIUU koro, the British officials of which were most active in entertaining their American guests, has been, stricken Wi*h the ttver and today is confined to his bed. When Co! Kfc-.>"velt and the oth ers of his party left here on the steamer Dal yesterday they were all apparently In good tiQiltb and little the worse for their rough experien ces. STATE NEWS. Citizens at Nashville, Nash county, are planning a canning plant with 10,000 cans capacity per day, to cost $5,000. Senator Simmons has secured an amendment to the river and harbor bill providing for $615,000 for deep ening the Cape Fear river to Fayette ville, $100,000 to be available at once. If the river is deepened, big boats may come to Wilmington and move the coast line 100 miles west ward. Solomon Shepard, the negro who was sentenced to serve a term of 30 years in the State's Prison for the murder of Engineer Holt at Durham, and who Jumped from a moving work train at the convict camp near Laurin ' burg last Tuesday, was captured in ' the woods near Gibsonville in Gull- 1 ford county Monday morning by Mr. > John H. Shepard, a farmer of that ' section. H. F. Seawell, who failed to land 1 as a Federal judge, has met with 1 success at last and has been ap- i pointed by the President District At torney for the Eastern District of 1 North Carolina. The Senate prompt- 1 ly confirmed his appointment. Though not big enough to sit as judge, he I has been considered big enough to 1 prosecute the violators of the Fed- I eral laws in this state. I A dispatch from Rockingham to i the Kalelgn News ana uuserver says; < "Saturday was field day for the near- i beer saloon here. As mauy as thirty- I five drunken men were on our streets 1 by actual count, and the scramble for the stuff and fight Incidental thereto, i grew to such proportions that the pro prietor voluntarily closed the doors i about 9 o'clock. It Is not known | whether the liquor came from the near beer bottles, or whether there ' was a near-eyed tiger In hiding, but 1 our citizens became disgusted at the i sight of so much drunkenness." l A dispatch from Charlotte says: ; "Because of the dangerous frequen- 1 cy with which attacks upon women I and hold-ups of members of the fair sex have occurred during the past ten 1 days, taken in conjunction with many i cases of purse snatching by unldenti- i fied negroes, the women of Charlotte are looking to firearms for protec- i tion. "It is stated to-day that a revolver club will be organized by an energetic young woman of the smart set, and that women will be trained to shoot revolvers and shoot to hit and kill, too." Twins Celebrate at 75. Northampton, Mass., Feb. 28.?Mrs. Laura Clark Ludden and Mrs. Lydla Clark Hamlin, of South street, twins, have celebrated their seventy-fifth birthday, entertaining at a large re- i ceptioo in honor of the occasion. The first record of Haliey's comet wa? B. C. 240. Abandoned farms tn New England . are being used for free cultivation. | tlVERS ON A RAMPAGE :our Thousand People in Ohio Lose Their Homes -OSS ESTIMATED AT A MILLION. Numerous Plants Hava Been Forced to Close Down and Hundreds of Men and Women Are Out of Work ?City Authorities Are Feeding Hundreds, Who Are Destitute, ?* ? , ?l'\* .? Cleveland, 0., March 2.?At least 1,000 people are homeless In Ohio as i result of the flood which continues o devastate the State. Numerous >lants have been forced to close down md hundreds of men and women are >ut of work. The material damage s estimated at over 11,000,000. The Licking and Muskiugum rivers lave passed their record of 1898 at 5anesville and are still rising. If here Is no abatement of the waters >efore morning It Is stated that the waterworks and power plants will be orced to close and this will mean the shutting down of all the large com nerclal plants In that town. Over line hundred people are now being 'od by the city authorities. l Only a few of the big steel works it Youngstown are still running and hese are pxnected to Htmnanii tn. norrow. The tracks of the Pennsyl vania Hailroad are several feet un ier water and have been abandoned. The huge gorge which has blocked Main street In Warren has resisted several attempts to dynamite it and t is feared that if it breaks now the own will suffer heavily. A .iridge over the Auglaise river at * ' Defiance 1ms been swept away and ;he crops in the Mad river and Little Miami river bottoms have been com pletely destroyed. A fresh horror confronts the people if Mauinee, where a torrent laden nith Ice and debris has swept over :he cemetery and It) Is practically cer tain that when the waters subside many corpses will have been uncov ered. o WENDELL BREEZES. Mrs H. J. Hatten. a most estim ible lady, died near here a few lays ago, after a short illness of pneumonia. She leaves a husband ind a large family of children to nourn their loss. The little child of Mr. Mack Flow jrs, age two and a half years, was so jadly burned that it died next day, i few days ago. Mrs. Turner Bailey and Mrs. Berry Richardson, of Kenly, are visiting Mrs. Millard Hales this week. Mr. M. A. Giiffin has sold his lutn aer plant to Roberts Bros. They are lustllng business men, and when they :ake hold of a Job, there Is some hing doing. They have both nice new residences, one in town and jne west of town about a fnlle. They ire waking up that section where heir farm is located, as the new barns, pack-houses, etc., testify. Mr. Rice filled his regular appoint ment here on third Sunday and Mr. VVoodall on fourth Sunday. Both ire young men of ability, and give us strong gospel sermons. The Civic Club gave a George Washington entertainment on the 22nd. The program was excellent ind was well carried out. A mystery menu was served afterward, the ob |ect being to help improve our ceme tery, a worthy cause and badly need- ^ Ing help. Measles is the order of the day here and it seems that all who have ' not had it are getting their shar^ this time. ^lisses Gay, Shackleford and Atkln son have been visiting the Misses Mattox. Wendell, Mar. 1, 1910. $10 HOG ON MARKET. Highest Price Since 1870 Paid in the Chicago Stock -yards. Chicago, Feb. 28,-fThe $10 hog made his first appearaUM on the local market since 1870 at to-day's session. A load of 264-pound hogs, sixty-six in number, was bought by an Eastern shipper at that price. The was mado early, but was "under cover" till near the noon hour. B. L. Strohm. of Cushing, Iowa, owned the bogs, and they tinted him the most money of any similar weight* hogs in forty years. . ? t