si VOL 30 SMITHFIELD, N. C., FRIDAY, JULY 28, 1911 Number 22 cKE DOLLAR PER YEAS EDUCATION GOOD ROADS GOOD HEALTH PROGRESS FIVE CENTS PEE COPT, BIG PICNIC at HOLT’S MILL. . ,rae Crowd Attends to Hear Good Speeches On Good Roads. Fine Dinner and Everything Well Man aged. 0ne of the most successful pic , and barbecues of the season ® pulled off at Holt’s Mill, near Princeton, Wednesday. It was giv en under the auspices of the Boon rijll Township Good Roads Associa tion, and the way it was managed speaks well for those having it in charge. It is estimated that there were about five hundred people present and there was dinner for all. The dinner was served in an unique manner. Long tables were prepar ed on which the barbecue, ham, chicken, bread, cakes, pies and tnany other good things were spread in great profusion. The tables were then roped off and only those in charge were admitted inside the ropes. Butter trays and paper dish eB were used in serving the dinner, each being filled with an assort ment of the good things displayed on the tempting table. When dinner was announced the people came up end the ladies passed out to each one present one of the trays or plates, thus assuring every one a good appetizing dinner and plenty of it. This method, is a great improve ment upon the old way of announc ing dinner ready and then attacking R with a rush. Dr. Cheatham, of Durham, was present and made a good speech for good roads. Others speaking on the subject, were Mayor Wellons, Mr. W. M. Sanders and Judge F. H. Brooks. All made telling speeches for good roads and the cause in that section was strengthened by this pleasant occasion. Boon Hill is a large township and has some of the finest farming land In Johnston County. The people have caught the spirit of the times and it will not be long before Eleva tion, Cleveland, Clayton and other townships will have to move up if they are to keep ahead of Boon Hill. FIRST BALE GEORGIA COTTON SOLD FOR 25 CENTS POUND. McRae, Ga., July 25.—The first ibal© of the 1911 cotton crop to be marketed was brought here to-day by E. J. Smith, of this county. It weighed an even 500 pounds, was bought for 25 cents a pound by T. W. Booth. FOUR OAKS NOTES. Tour Oaks, July 26.—Mr. J. H. Brackett has returned from Shelby, N. C., where he took his family for the summer. Mr. Arcie Barbour, of Clayton, is visiting in and around Clayton this week. Mr. Jake Moore, of Weldon, N. C., is in town for a few days this week. Mr. and Mrs. Burt Barefoot spent Sunday at the home of Mr. Cal vin Stewart, Mrs. Barefoot’s father. Mr. A. F. Barbour visited at home of his son-in-law, Mr. R. A. Bain, recently. Messrs. I. W. and Lonnie Keen are ih Richmond, Va., this week and Messrs. William and Daniel in Nor folk, Va. We regret to note that Mrs. A. B. Adams is unable to be out yet. Mr. and Mrs. O. A. Privette have returned from a trip north, which was considerably shortened by the sarious illness of their little boy. Mr. B. B. Adams has removed his old dwelling away from his new 0Ee and will have it painted, etc., preparatory for use. Mr. S. W. Brown has accepted a Position with A. C. L. at Wilson, N. C., as operator. Messrs. L. C. and W. E. Barbour attended the annual picnic at Oak land Presbyterian church Saturday last. Among those who went to Washing t0Ib D. C., this week we note the fol lowing: and Mrs shade Las 8“'&r> George Roberts, Frank Honey CutL Chester Lassiter and Jasper Massengill. Mrs. C. W. Bandy has returned from a visit to her mother at Dillon, 3. C. July, 26, 1911. YELLOW JACKETS BLIND HIM. Farmer’s Sight Gone and His Hear ing Seriously Impaired. Millville, N. J., July 24.—With the sight of both eyes lost and his hear ing probably permanently impaired,. William Ford is in a serious condi tion as a result of striking a nest of yellow jackets on Crow’s Nest | Farm, near Pine Grove, j The yellow jackets had been both j ering cattle lately, and yesterday I Ford resolved that he would destroy the nest. With a stout club he set out to accomplish the task. He hit the nest once, and in a second the yellow jackets swarmed about him. His features are unrecogniz able. general news. Seven persons were killed in a cave-in in Oklahoma Monday. Secretary of War Stimson has sail ed from Colon for Porto Rico and Cuba. Twenty-five persons were injured by the falling of a baseball grand stand at Newark, O., Sunday. Eight firemen were injured and $325,000 worth of property was de stroyed in a fire at Toledo O., Sun day. The center of cotton production in 'the United States in 1910 was three miles south of Vaiden, Carroll coun ty, Miss. There were 239 business failures in the United States during the week lending July 20, against 196 the week previous. T. Coleman du Pont has contri buted $900 to the Kentucky Asso ciation for the Cure and Prevention of Tuberculosis. Cardinal Gibbons was 75 years | old Sunday. He spent the day i quietly at the home of friends near I Westminister, Md. The city of New V.cvlt has award ed to the Brooklyn Rapid Transit | Company the whole $225,000,000 sub i way extension contracts. Eight inches of rain is reported to have fallen at Beatrice, Neb., Sun y. Women and children were res cued from the tops of box cars. A review of the foreign trade of the United States during the last twelve months shows a steady in crease in commerce with Canada and the* Orient. One man dead, another fatally wounded, and a third shot in two places, is the result of a pitched battle in Juarez, Mexico, Saturday, between insurgents and city police. In a statement issued at Beverly President Taft has given the Demo crats in the House and Senate the credit for the passage of the Cana dian reciprocity treaty agreement bill. Postmaster General Hitchcock has issued an order looking to the establishing of an ocean mail service between the principal ports on the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans to be gin in the autumn of 1914. Mrs. Mary T. Proctor, aged HI years, a real daughter of the Ameri can Revolution, who has lived in three centuries, has just been dis i covered in an humble one-room cabin, | in Bartow county, Georgia. Paris is suffering from the great est heat wave in twenty-five years. Not a drop of rain has fallen with in a month, and there has been a part breakdown in the water supply. There were eleven deaths from the heat Saturday. Cholera has broken out in a congested Italian quarter of Boston. There has been one death. The dis ease is supposed to have been brought to a lodging house by two sailors who disappeared after they were taken ill. Pennsylvania Democrats, although so greatly in the minority in that State, have split into two factions and organized two State committees. Both factinos, however, have en i dorsed Woodrow Wilson for Presi dent. Members of Alabama’s congression al delegation have announced them selves as in favor of nominating Rep resentative Oscar W. Underwood, of Birmingham, chaLman of the Ways and Means Committee, for President on the Democratic ticket. DROWNED IN NEUSE RIVER. Elijah Stancil, An Orphan Boy 17 Or 18 Years Old, Lost His Life At Highbank, Near Sanders Cha pel, Tuesday Afternoon. > A most distressing accident occur* red on Neuse river at a place known as Highbank, about one and one half miles from Sanders Chapel, Tuesday afternoon. Several young men, among them being Messrs. Will, Hubert and Robert Smith, Eli jah Stancil, Millard Hamilton, Hen ly Talton and Vick Hill, went to the river to go in swimming. Some of them were on the sandbar and others near there when Elijah Stan cil got in deep water, and not be ing able to swim, was drowned. We have heard several conflicting stor ies of how the tragic affair occur red, and do not know which is true, but from what we can learn Elijah Stancil and Will Smith were In the water together, perhaps playing and frolicking, when they slipped in to a deep place. Stancil not be ing able to swim, clung to Smith who, to save himself, broke loose t and swam out. The Stancil boy sank and only appeared once more, juBt the top of his head. This was near six o’clock. His body was fished out with a shadnet about 20 yards from where it went down, about nine o’clock. It seems that the others who were near were so ov ercome with fear that no real ef fort was made to save the young man. Elijah Stancil was an orphan boy, about 17 cr 1 -S years old, who for merly lived at or near Fremont. For the past several months he has been living and working with Mr. John K. Sanders. He was buried Wednesday after noon at Sanders Chapel. The sad ending of the young man has cast a gl./cm over the entire community. GOES OVER NIAGARA IN BARREL AND LIVES. Niagara Falls N. Y. July 26.— Bobby Leach of Niagara Falls, Onta rio, yesterday afternoon went over the Horseshoe falls in a barrel and still lives. Though he was severely battered and bruised in the drop of 158 feet over the brink of the cata ract, he sustained only superficial in juries and is able to be about his house. This is the second time in the history of the river that the cataract has been successfully navi gated. Mrs. Anna Edson Taylor, of this city made the trip in a barrel October 24, 1901, and came out alive. TEXAS WENT WET BY ABOUT 6,000 MAJORITY. Dallas, July 25.—The anti-prohibi tion majority in the state-wide prohi bition election, held in Texas Satur day, stands at 6,104, a figui^ too large to be overcome by the unre ported vote, according to figures compiled by the Dallas News.' The total vote is: Against the amendment, 234,101; for the amendment, 227,997. The new fig ures indicate that the final count will show the majority against pro hibitiou to be in excess of 6,000. Jernigan Is Bound Over. Alex. A. Jernigan, of Wendell, ar rested some time ago for the killing of another white man, Albert Todd near Wendell, has been committed without ball by Justice of the Peace Richardson, of Johnston county. The next term of the Johnston Superioi Court begins eSptember 11. It is understood that a writ ol habeas corpus will be sworn oui this week before Chief Justice Wal ter Clark, of the North Caroline Supreme Court, on the contentior that Jernigan should have been ad mitted to bail.—News and Observer. The Southern Railway’s Gooi Roads Train will give an exhibitior at Selma next Thursday, August 3 »-t ten o’clock. The public is invit ed to be present and witness this exhibition of road building. One Editor’s Recreation. John S. Phillips, editor-in-chief o The American Magazine, is an en thusiastic sailor. He is spending s month this summer cruising on tin Maine coast in a 40-foot yacht. REV. R. W. HINES IS DEAD. Passed Away at Reidsville Friday While On a Visit to His Brother. Was At One Time Past'— of Smith field Presbyterian Church. Rev. Robert Watkins Hines, of Clear Water, Fla., died here Friday and his remains were buried at Greenview Cemetery Saturday after noon. The minister had been here for a week or more in a visit to his brother, Mr. Henry W. Hines, and although his health had not been robust for several weeks the end was unexpected. Mr. Hines, who was the pastor of the Presbyterian church at Clear Water, Fla., was voted a va cation by his congregation and came to North Carolina a few weeks ago. He had been visiting his brother, Mr. U. M. Hines, at Milton, and preached at the Presbyterian church ther& on Sunday, the 9th. The Rdv. Robert Watkins Hines was born in Granville county in 1859, and was therefore 52 years of age. His’ father was a Presby terian minister, the Rev. Edward Hines. He was ordained to preach and licensed an evangelist by Albemarle Presbytery in 1894, and he served several churches in Albeiharle and Orange Presbyteries. He also serv ed as evangelist in Mississippi. He has served the churches of Me bane, Burlington and Saxapahaw, and since August, 1906, the minis ter had been serving the church at Clear Water, Fla., where he was held in the highest steem and where his services had assisted in greatly building up the membership of that church. - He was married to Miss Fannie Thomas, of Washington, N. C., in 1S96, and she and a small son sur vive.—Reidsville Review, July 26. . Mr. Hines was for several years pastor of the Smithfield Presbyteriai church and has a host of friends here and elsewhere in this county who learn of his death with deep regret. LIVES WITH A BROKEN NECK. Case Of Youth In Minneapolis Hos pital Puzzles Doctors. Minneapolis, July 25.—Sixteen-year old Martin Gray is at a hospital in Minneapolis with a broken neck and the father, Fred L. Gray, president of the Fred L. Gray Company, is plowing through seas on a fast li ner toward the bedside of his in jured son. The boy struck a dredge heap head first while driving at Lake Calhoun. His case is proving a puzzle to sur geons. MILL CREEK ITEMS. Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Rose, of Ben son, spent Saturday and Sunday in this section. Mr. W. B. Cole, of Smithfield, spent a part of last week amongst us. We are sorry to note that Mr. Jer ry Lee is still confined to his bed with fever. Messrs. D. S. and O. B. Langs ton and Misses Lottie Barefield and Ophelia Weaver spent Saturday and Sunday in Sampson county at Con cord. Mr. G. G. Barfield, contractor and builder, of Dunn, spent the day Sun day with his mother, Mrs. Marj Barefield. Lawyers W. W. Cole, J. A. Wei Ions and Ed. Ward, of Smithfield and Jos. W. Wood, of Benson, wert in this section last week practicing their profession. Mr. R. E. Chadwick, who has beer stationed for the past three years at Providence, R. I., in the servics of the United States Army, is now visiting his foster-parents, Mr. anc 1 Mrs. J. W. Weaver. Rev. J. F. Owen filled his regu lar appointment at Mill Creek th< fourth Sunday, and announced tha i a protracted meeting will begin then the fifth Sunday to be conducted b; Rev. R. H. Massengill and Rev. Mr Arnold, of Dunn. Crops in this section are unusuall; ' forward for the time of year. Mr -, Seth W. Lassiter informs us tha . he\, will begin pulling fodder on Tues ! day of this week. ' Beasley, No. 2, July 24, 1911. LIGHTNING LUGS BED 10 FEET. Kills Dog Under It, but Women Oc cupying It Were Unhurt. Pottsville, Pa., July 24.—In a se vere electrical storm lightning struck the house of Joseph Witman at Cres sna, near here, and entered a room where three women were sleeping in one bed. The bed was picked up and carried ten feet without damag ing it or injuring the women. A dog sleeping under the bed was instant ly killed. Another freak of the lightning is reported, in which a sideboard, filled with dishes, was completely turned around without damaging the furni ture, although almost all the dishes were broken. TO BE WORLD’S LARGEST SHIP. Length Of the Aquitania Will Ex ceed 900 Feet. Ivondon, July 24.—The plans for the new steamer Aquitania, which the Cunard company is building at Clyde Bank, have been modified to make the vessel the largest in the world. Her length will exceed 900 feet and be 10 feet greater than the length of the 50,000-ton liner Imper ator, which the Hamburg-American Line will put into service in the spring of 1913. It is also stated that the Aquitania will be one knot faster than her German rival. The origi inal specifications called for a length of 8S5 feet and a speed of 23 knots an hour. She will accommodate 4,000 passengers. CROP GROWING WEATHER THIS. Accrding to National Weekly Crop Bulletin the Progress of Past Week Good. Washington, July 26.—Good crop growing weather prevailed general ly throughout the country during the past week, according to the national weekly bulletin of the weather bureau issued yesterday. In the large corn-growing states east of the Mississippi the weather continued cool and moderate rains occurred in most districts, except in portions of the lower Ohio val ley, where additional moisture is needed. In the cotton belt favorable wea ther continued over the more eastern states, although more rain is needed in North Carolina. In the central states, however, there was too much cloudy, rainy weather in portions of Mississippi and Alabama and more sunshine is needed in nearly all that section. West of the Mississippi heavy rains generally relieved the drought in Oklahoma and the northern and eastern portions of Texas, and good rains occurred in Arkansas and Louisiana. HUNDRED LIVES LOST IN TYPHOON IN TOKIO. Tokio, July 26.—A hundred peo pie are believed to have been lost in a typhoon that swept Tokio and Yokohoma last night. Forty bodies were recovered this morning in Suzaki district, including twenty three occupants of a house of ill repute which was washed away Many small crafts are missing. BANK OF KENLY IN GOOD SHAPE Shortage of Former Cashier Made Good and New Cashier Elected. Kenly, July 25.—The stockholders of the Bank of Kenly met to-day anc the shortage caused by the defalca 1 tion of R. H. Alford was made gooc 1 and the bank will continue business as before. 1 Mr. J. H. Kirby, in whom every body has implicit confidence, wa ■ unanimously elected cashier. > The people have not lost confidenc - in the bank, as certain parties offer i ed to pay book value for the stock ' and only a few shares change* • hands. Mr. Franklin McNeil, chaii man of the Corporation Commis r sion, and Assistant Bank Examine . C. V. Brown, were present to prc t tect the interests of the depositors - and they express themselves as b< ing gratified at the condition.—New and Observer. ANOTHER TUMBLE FOR COTTON Worst Smash of Season on Market Yesterday—Short Selling Caused Decline—Wen Down About 40 Points. New Orleans. July 25.—The worst smash of the season In the cotton market came to-day without any warning. The loss on the new crop months the principal object of at tack by the bear side airibunted to exactly 40 points, or $2 a bale. Au gust, in which all that is left of the old crop interest is centered, lost 30 points, or a dollar and a half a bale. The decline was caused by heavy short-selling which hardly let up for a minute during the day. Under the pressure the market gave ground steadily and on the way down stop loss orders from those traders who had gone along in anticipation of the now long delayed reaction were con stantly reached. This swelled the selling. The market had next to no support and what buying orders there were came from shorts who wanted to realize profits. The decline began in Liverpool and that market was so much under expectations on the opening here that initial prices were 8 to 10 points down. Without anything that looked like a recovery or reaction of consequences, prices fell until on the actual trading they were 30 to 40 points under yesterday’s final quotations. The close was 14 to 15 points down, bids and offers consid ered. BENSON NOTES. Henson, July 27.—Rev. E. J. Rod gers, the pastor, preached excellent sermons to large congregations at the Baptist church Sunday morning and evening. Mr. Preston Woodall and family and Mr. W. D. Boon and family and Miss Meta Holder spent Sunday at Fuquay Springs. On Sunday night a mule belong ing to Mr. Jasper Mchamb ran away upsetting the buggy and throwing Mr. and Mrs. McLamb to the ground. Both the occupants of the buggy re ceived severe cuts and bruises about the face. Dr. Utley was call ed and dressed the wounds. Neith er of the parties were dangerously hurt. Of those away from town recently we note as follows: Miss Julia Canaday, at Angler; Mr. and Mrs, Jesse McLamb, at Clayton; Mr. Le*»mon Johnson, at Goldsboro; Mr. Bushee Pope, at Peacock’s Cross Roads; Mr. C. T. Johnson, at Nor folk; Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Godwin, at Kenly; Mr. S. F. Ivey and Mr. An i drew Hodges, at Washington City; Messrs Wingate Morris, Jesse Mclamb j Sr., and Guthrie McLamb at Rich | mond and Petersburg. Of the number visiting in our , little city this week we note the fol , lowing: Mr. and Mrs. Arthur ! Smith, of Clayton; Mr. E. Lee, of | Dunn; Mr. Leon Peacock, of Bing i ham, S. C.; Mr. and Mrs. Pat Moore, 1 of Smithfield; Miss Mattie Smith, of I Peacock’s Cross Roads; Miss May Moore and sister and Miss Lillie Smith, of Smithfield; Misses Ger trude Jackson, Pauline Wade and Bessie Denning, of Dunn; and Miss Lillian Edgerton and Mayme Howell, of Kenly, and several others whose names your correspondent failed to get. MOTHER AND BABE KILLED BY LIGHTNING. Decatur, Ala., July 24.—A Mrs. Harmon and her year-old baby were killed by lightning yesterday morn ing at Pleasant Hill, a village near ■ here. J. H. Holmes was badly j snocked. Several head of stock were . i killed. RALEIGH WOMAN VICTIM. e - - Mrs. J. A. Tant Sixth to Die From , j Pellagra in Six Weeks. -1 Raleigh, N. C., July 25.—Mrs. J. A. -1 Tant died of pellagra at a local hos r | pital this morning. She is the sixth i- ; person having died of this disease in i, I Raleigh within the past six weeks. There were reported to the city phy s ' sician during the month of July 11 ! cases that were being treated.