f|tjt ffataUt V0L 29 SMITHFIELD, N. C., FRIDAY, AUGUST 12, 1910 Number 24 $1.00 per Year Education Good Roads Good Health Progress 5 cents per Copy attempt to kill the mayor. < Discharged City Employe Fires Bui- I let Into Back of the Head of Wil liam J. Gaynor, Mayor of Greater New York. Happened on Steam ship. The Mayor was Preparing to Leave on Vacation When Fired Upon?Wound Not Necessarily Fa tal. Mayor Exercises Remarkable ? Fortitude. j, I New York, Aug. 9.?William J. Gaynor, mayor of New York City, was shot In tlie head and seriously wounded to-day as he stood on the promenade deck of the steamship Kaiser Wilhelin der Grosse by James J. Gallagher, a discharged and dis gruntled city employe. Gallagher v i- almost instantly overpowered and arrested. Tlie shot was fired at 9:45'o'clock this morning, fifteen minutes beforo tlie amship was due to leave her pier at Hobokeu, N. J., and the may or was receiving Godspeed from a ror:> of friends preparatory to a va ition trip to Europe. The bullet .-truck him behind the right ear and ranged downward inflicting a danger ous, though not necessarily fatal wound. And unless blood poison de velops, surgeons are hopeful of the mayor's recovery, although at his age?59 years?such a wound is es sentially grave. (lallagher used a 38-calllber revol ver and an examination later disclos-, ed that the first cartridge had miss-1 od fire. This probably saved the mayor's life for Gallagher, when he first pulled the trigger, was less than two feet away. Backing away silently in his excitement he pulled the trigger a second time and sent a bullet crashing into the mayor's Beck below the ear. William H. ISUwarUb, commissioner of streets cleaning and the former'' Princeton football star, lungad for ir-1 Wits lits-SOO poum s just as Rob ert A damson, the mayors secretary, t -k Gallagher's arm. As he did . second shot pierced Edward's :,'o inflicting a slight flc*!i wound on tho commissioner's right arm,! which remained until- At red for : urs because of the excitement. Vnmindful of his wound Edwards hit t'u man a crashing blow in the. face u--ly at the trigger in an attempt to fire another shot. when completely subdued Gallagher ivus handcuffed by a special officer aboard the ship and he was rushed through a hooting and threatening crowd off the vessel into an automo bile and arraigned before Recorder , MeGovern of Hoboken. 1 >uring the struggle with the man who had attempted to take his life Mayor Gaynor, though badly wound id and bleeding from the mouth and nose, did not lose consciousness. The impact of the bullet did -iiot even throw him from his feet but he rais ed his hands to his ears and, with his face contorted with pain, he stag-: 1 re* in a daze and leaned limply i ? - ^ the ship's rail until Adamson xionus aiso to tnc raiiroaus employes and the workmen in the ports in South Russia, threatening to cripple the export movement of grain. Advices from Yekaterinoslay report that the transport of the ciops Is at a standstill. The epidemic continues to make enormous progress in the capital, : where the daily average of casc3 ! jumped last week to thirty. Yester day 1822 cases or suspected cases of cholera were taken to the hospitals and there wore thirty deaths. The hospitals now contain 962 cases of cholera. The high record reached in 198 was 412 cases per day. The outbreak of bubonic plague at ! Ode !>. however, asainst whl< a Aus tria Rournania, Bulgaria and Turkey instituted strict quarantines, is not spreading. Only opp suspe case was reported yesterday .after a two-days interval. Gen. Tolmacheff, tile prefect of Odessa, has thrown a cordon ' f troops and police around the Infected ward of the city an;l al lows no one to pass in or out except tlie doctors assigned to fight the Cl.i'Tu . It is a noteworthy fact that the ca.-'i 3 of the plague were first report ed from a bakery, In the same house in which the epidemic of bubonic plague started in 1902. Odessa has been afflicted with a scourge of rats since May, and the effective measures taken to kill off i the ? .onto by the authorities is blam. U for the present outbreak. MURDER AND ARSON CHARGED. Sensational Arrest Follows Early Morning Fire in Wilmington Wed nesday and Proprietor of Hotel Landed in Jail. Acting upon the theory that Ed ward Cromwell, 19 years old, who lost his life in the Rock Spring Ho tel fire, No. 8 Chestnut street, In this city, early yesterday morning, was murdered and the building set on fire to cov^r up the crime, a $2,500 insurance policy on the life of the youth furnishing the motive, Dr. C. D. Bell, the county coroner, yes terday afternoon swore out a war rant for J. C. Holly, proprietor of the house, who was subsequently arrest ed by Constable W. B. Savage on the grave charge and was committed to tho. county jail by Justice Geo. Ilarrlss, who istued the warrant, without bond, pending further Inves tigation, which Is being- made by a jury under the direction of Coroner Bell.?Wilmington Star, 11th. 87,000 MEN IN U. S. ARMY. Gen. Wood Will Use Appropriation For Sol.'icrs Alone. The enlisted strength of the ar my during the present fiscal year has been fixed approximately at S7.000 men under the arrangement of I t.ifc ?-etimates by Ma J. Gen. Leonard Wood, chief of staff, and approved by I'res'dent Taft. Ocn. Wood's plan Is to use the ar my r.ppropriatlon for soldiers and materials and make reductions in | other directions. The new chief of , staff warns an army of fighting men equipped lor business, and .says he Is w!!llr.? to make sacrifices In oth er v.ays to obtain It.?Washington Post. A TRAGEDY IN BENTONSVILLE. Tom Sutton On July 31 Struck Mitt Creech a Blow With a Buggy Whip Which Resulted . in the Latter's Death. Suton Arrested and Placed in Jail to Await a Hearing Next Tues day. On Sunday afternoon, July 31st, at the home of Mr. Charley Upchurch In Bentonsville township Mr. P. M. Creech, commonly known as Mitt Creech, was struck a blow by Tho mas A. Sutton which caused his death. Mr. Sutton is a tenant on the land of Mr. \V. R. Snead and has lived in the neighborhood only a few months having moved there from Wayne County. Some time rgo a Mount Olive merchant secur ed a warrant against Mr. Sutton for disposing of mortgaged property. This warrant was sent to Mr. \V. F. Crimes who turned it over to Mr. Charley Upchurch to bo served, he Jiving nearer to the man wanted for trial. For some reason Mr. Upchurch returned the warrant to Mr. Grimes. Later Mr. Sutton went to the home of Mr. Upchurch o see about the matter, v hile there he met Mr. 1 Creech who had been Jlrinking. Yearn a>:o Mr. Creech was constable of liis township and somehow in his drinky condition decided* it was his duty to arrest Mr. Sutton. He pro ceeded to do so but Mr. Sutton de manded to see the warrant. Sir. ~ ~ .1. -1 . J *1. ~ i- V. ~ 1??.l msxwxm \ i cci 11 u iuttitvL'u IUUI uu uau uu?ui failed to arrest a man he started to ; arrest. A skuffle followed in which Mr. Creech tried to put Mr. Sutton ?n his buggy. At this place Mr. Sut ton reached for the buggy whip and struck Mr. Creech across the foreh< ad with it. The leaded end made a small dent on the skull. Mr. Creech wrnt home on his buggy but in a few hours it was found ne cessary to send for a physician. On [Jujsdny . he wrs (yirrled to Wilson Sanatorium v.ith the hope of sav ing hi3 life. He dipd Friday morn ing. Mr, Creech was a man of a good family and had many good quali ties himself but strong drink had ruined him. Warran's were issued for Sutton's arrest and Wednesday morning h> was brou ht here by Mr. W. It. Snead, who had been deputized to arrest h!m, and loi ?' in jail to await the prellmii ary 1 taring next Tuesday before Squire Z. L. LeMay. A METEOR SHAKES A CITY. Falls Out of Cle-r Sky Accompanied by a Noise Like Thunder. Council Bluffs, Iowa, Auk. 7.?Ac companied by a noise as loud as thunder, a large meteor fell in the ?leighborhood of Council Bluffs, this ;i'ternoon, shaking the city and caus ing intense excitement. Searching pari leg have been attempting all the fternoon to locate the point where the meteor fell, but at a late hour have been unable to do so. It is supposed to have landed in the hills i immediately back of the city. Hundreds of people heard the ex plosion and felt the shock, but be cause the sun was shining at the time very few saw the aerolite it t elf. The meteor, which is describ ed as very large and traveling from 1 northwest to southeast, passed high in the air and disappeared behind the hills. Tomorrow another effort will be made to locate it. GEORGIA BANS ELECTION BETS. AnI-Lobfoying and White Slave (31 Ms Also Pac3 One House. Atlaj ,'a, Aug. 8.?Petting von elec tions became illegal ip Georgia to-day when Governor Brown signed the An ti-betting bill just passed by the legislature. The House pas?< 4 an Anti-lobbying bl'.l which now go<*s to the Senate. It nlso passed a drastic "White Slave" bill, the penalty for violation of which is imprisonment for from 1 to 20 years. The measure has yet to Pitss the Senate. Their Interests Will Not Suffer. Hon. Ashley Home, of Johnston, county, was nominated Wednesday for the Legislature by acclamation by the Democratic conuty convention. With General J. S. Carr and Mr. j Home in the House there will be something doing for the Confederate Veterans without a doubt.?Maxton Scottish Chief. COL. WHARTON J. GREEN DEAD. I O i? of North Carolina's Distinguish ed Sons Passed Away Saturday, | Represented His District in Con- ? gress two T?rms. "" ~ tb. m them the'u them theom theoin 1'aj rttex ilk, Aug. 0.?Colonel Whar ton J. Greeu, distinguished ex-Con-1 gressman, soldier and author, died at I 4 o'tlotk this morning at his home, fout miles from this city, after a ! brl-.f illness, which was not consid- I LM'jd serious until shortly before his d ;?:h. His taking off therefore came I as r derided shock to his friends and I, f.i ully. Of his immediate family, on- 1 ly hts wife, was at his bedside. Of ', t!.<; two surviving daughters, Mrs. Geo'gc B. Elliot, of Wilmington, ; forme rly of Richmond, reached here ', itt noon, while Mrs. Pembrok ? Jones. , of New York uud Newport, will ar ri\ e tomorrow in time to attend her t.i her' funeral, which \?ill tako Monday. Colonel Green was a man of schol itNy attainments, marked and varied ; ability and thoroughly cultured. Ho was a true type of the Southern gen- i, tlem.v:. i/uMi f, ui.i ion'; ana illustrious ea-1 rt Colonel Green came Info ln:i- ( ma'? 'lelntlfHia with many men o[ j large psould, such as Andrew Jack feor. John C. Calhoun, Jefferson Da- !, vis, Robert E. Leo, Albert Sydney Johnson, J. K. R. Stuart and William McKinley. The deceased was born February 28, 1831, near St. Marks, , Florida, (he only son of General Tho mas ,T. Green, Texan Patriot, au thcv of Legislative Enactment which ) fixed boundary between Texas and Mexico antl participated in the Mex ican War. He was educated at ' Georgetown TTnlversiljr, West Point, and University of Vlri.lnla. Afi- t r radaallon he became associated In j practice o': law with Uol ct J. Wal- . ki r. forir <*r Secretary ( ' Twa .:ry,! . < L? Ii-_; In, i:i V.'a bhse a prai - ticing before (he Supreme court. Ho , was la''r ?< ompelled to abandon the ' legut profession, owing to threatened j losi of health. At the beginning of). the Civil War, ho enlisted as a Con federate private, later he organized 1 a r.r-;i:'ient of which he became col-i (inei. Hia military record was brll liant. J?? 2S^>S Colonel Green married Mis - ; Either Ellery, of Boston. Two daughter? by this marriage as enum erated above, survive. After the iV atb of his first wife he married j Mrs. Addle Burr Davis, the widow of I acting Vice-President Davis, who succeeded Vice-President Arthur up on the death of Garfield. In 1880 he removed from Warren county to Tokay Vineyard, near Fay ettevllle, and In 1882 was elected to i Congress from this district, serving i two terms in the House of Represen tatives, where by distinguished ser vice, ho rounded out a full career. Here in 1884 he inauguratde the pure food and drug movement now of na tion-wide proportion. Colonel Green w.i- the author of "Recollections and R'-flections," an interesting autobiog raphy.?News and Observer. AWFUL TRAGEDY IN PRINCETON. A Negro and a Shotgun, Backed Up By Blind Tiger Dispensation Cliims Another Victim. John At kinson the Slayer, Arthur Williams The Slain. Princeton, August 10.?On last Sat urday nicht, Jobi? Atkinson, a ne Kro, after t.inklr.p: up on blind tiger , Koods, went to tho home of old Aunt Caroline Richardson, and ask <:d the question: "Any one here that don t like me?" There were several negroes sitting on tho porch rit tlio time, it being nearly dark. They sUw that John had ^ gun and '.hey all said: "Yes, John, wo all 11. ' i i r> pliei: "Iiore's A thur Williams, he don't like me," , and raising his gun within three feet of Arthur, fired, shooting him though tho breast, killing him in stantly. This occurred within a block of whore Frank Langley was killed not many months ago. John Atkinson had heretofore borne ?i prttly fair negro character. I did not know the victim, and have been unablt to find out what led to the klllii.g, further than to say "but for ? whiskey It would never have hap- i pened." Atkinson was committed to Jail by Mayor C. H. Holt. MOREHEAD FORCES WINNERS. Butler Alliance Proves Fruitful In Republican Convention at Green* boro. E. C. Duncan Overthrown. Harmonious End of Contest That Promised to Disrupt Party?New Leader Sounds Keynote?Local Op tion Plans. Greensboro, X. C., Aug. 10.?The Republican State convention this af ternoon named Congressman John Motley Morehead as chairman of the State Executive Committee, by unan imous acclaim, the other candidates, John E. Carl Duncan and Major J. E. Alexander, having withdrawn from the contest after their names had been placed before the convention. It was a harmgnlous ending of a contest, which at one time bore evl lenco of having in It the germ of ? oflou.s party disruption. Mr. Morchcad's speech of accept nco breathed an intensely propres Ivp find eminently fair spirit. The keynote of his campaign has been the abolition of the former referee sys ?m under which the Republican par ly has betn operated with reference to Federal appointments, and that Idea was emphasized in his specch it acceptance. The couventlon also endorsed and heartily recommended the adminis tration of tho retiring State chair man, ex-.U.d- Spencer B. Adams, a ingtng resolution of thar.ka for his faithfulness and fairness and emi nent service- being unanimously ad apted. The ronv. ntlon was organized for bn Incss ly the election of Thdmaa Setr ?, of Ail ? il'e. a- p-,Ttr.::nent .in. I re reived 73" votes to fur II. jinty. and tl f'ection was ir.ade unani i o'.is. T. J. I c-kins, of Ashe vilte wns elected per:' anent secre tary. Fully a. thou ind delafates ar1 here, and i at:orUmeous combustion, due to the larpe amount of du: t floating about tlr coi nnouse. Committee to Meet To-day. The special committee, composed of ex-Governor Tho.-. J. Jarvis, ex Governor Charles B. Aycock, ex-Con gressman Theo. F. Kluttz, ex-Judge A. C. Avery, and ex-Lieut.-Gov. R. A. Doughton, which was appointed by chairman A. H. Eller, will meet in Wrightsviile to-day to see if they the Sixth District, which has two men claiming to be the nominee for Congress?H. L. Godwin and O. L. Clark. Five persons were instantly killed when a Pennsylvania express train dashed into an automobile on a rail road crossing rear Cspe May Wed nesday.