ROAD WEEK IN THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY Less Than 100 Bills Present ed in Legislature During First Eleven Days Saturday the doings of the Senate was characterized by investigation re solutions, the office of state architect being mentioned specifically. It has been rumored that the wholesale in vetigations which the legislature will be called on to make will probably include the sanatorium for tubercu losis. Dr. McBrayer, superintendent of that institution announces that he courts an investigation and hopes it will react in favor of the institution. As to the proceedings of the Gen eral Assembly for this week and of the past week yesterday’s News and Observer gives the following sum mary: ' It appears about to be Road Week in the General Assembly. The Clark son Highway bill will likely get a new name before the middle of the week arrives, and very likely it will be styled the Varser-Doughton Bill. Wed nesday has been tentatively set for its presehtation to the Legislature, and with sentiment practically un animous in favor of some sort of road legislation, it woud appear that its early ratification may be expected. The outstanding feature of the Gen eral Assembly thus far is the fact that eleven legislative days have al ready passed and less than 100 bills have been presented. This situation is entirely without precedent in the history of the legislature. Four years ago the first half hour of the first day’s session saw 156 bills started in the House alone, and t^early half that many in the Senate. In the spec ial session, called mainly for the consideration of taxation, over 500 measures were presented and passed upon in 17 days. On no day has the number of new bills exceeded a dozen and Friday and Saturday when there is usually a flood of minor local legislation, there was barely a trickle. Most members have nothing locally to offer, and the number of Statewide bills is going to be relatively small. The passage of so many measures at the special session , and the general apathy to ward local bond issues which is the breeding place of local legislation, seems generally responsibile for the dearth of grist for the grinding. But without these things, the sess ion has lost no whit of interest. There is the Stae-wide stock law coming, moving picture censorship, the pri mary repeal, which is not yet dead, marriage laws bill, and the bill to abolish the Welfare Commission, all to be attended to, and the possible redistricting of the State Senate. All of these measures have interesting possibilities, and the General Assem bly has still 49 days to run. It is a mere infant, thus far. Resolutions of Respect Whereas the Supreme Architect of the Universe in His infinite wisdom has called our beloved brother Jesse Watson from labor to that home pre pared for him eternal in the skies, and whereas Perfection Lodge No. 628 of the Ancient Free and Accepted Masons, The Scottish Rite Club of Kenly, N. C., The Wilmington Con sistory of Scottish Rite MAsons and Sudan Temple of New Bern are deeply grieved in the loss of our beloved Brother who was a consistent and loy al member of these bodies and who will be greatly missed in the fotUV regular communications here below and wish to extend our sincere sym pathy to the bereaved family in this hour of their sorrow: Therefore be it resolved:—That Perfection Lodge No. 628 A. F. & A. M., in regular communication extend to the bereaved family of our depart ed Brother our heartfelt sympathy and commend his soul to the God who gave it and who doeth all things well. Resolved further, that a copy of these resolutions be sent to the family and a copy mailed to the Orphans Friend for publication and a copy spread on the minutes of this Lodge. J. C.-GRADY, W. T. BAILEY, RUDOLPH KIRBY, Committee. Idleness and pride tax with a heav ier hand than kings and parliments. If we can get rid of the% former we may easily bear the latter.—Franklin. HAS AN ENROLLMENT NOW OF 564 PUPILS Double Schedule in Number Of Grades Not Conducive To Best Work The following is the enrollment in the Turlington Graded School up to the end of the third month, which was December 3rd, 1920. With the open ing of school after the Christmas holidays there have been about thirty new students added to the following enrollment: First grade_ 123 Second grade_ 73 Third grade- 67 Fourth grade_ 70 Fifth grade_ 41 Sixth grade_ 39 Junior High School_103 Senior High School_ 48 Total _ 564 At present the school is operated upon a double schedule up to the fifth grade. This means that 333 pupils, or 59 pgr cent of the total enrollment are being inadequately instructed for the lack of time in school. These 333 pupils which operate on double sche dule begin work some in the morning at 9:00 o’clock and others at 1:00 o’-1 clock in the afternoon. In either case they have barely three hours of actual work1 after deducting the necessary time for recesses and change of class es. A few of the brighest children who have the advantages of getting J help at home can keep up with their! grade. The large majority, however,! do not get anything like all the in-! struction they need. It is safe to! estimate that the efficiency of the school is cut down at least from 25 to 30 per cent by this lack of space which prevents teachers from being able to have the pupils who are not doing standard work remain after re gular hours for individual help and instruction. For lack of space in the school now one-half of the teachers cannot complete their day's work in a manner that enables them to keep their grade working as a unit. The children who cannot absorb their 'work in the three hours of high pres sure work which they are forced to do now simply lag behind and in many cases fail to be promoted. If the school had sufficient room failure of promotion in these lower grades would be reduced to almost nothing in com parsion with what it is now, because a teacher would be expected to give each pupil sufficient individual in struction to enable him to make his grade. With sufficient room in school the number of teachers might be reduced slightly and yet better results ob tained because a teacher with 6 hours at her disposal can teach a few more pupils in a great deal more satisfac tory manner than she can a smaller number in three hours. Thus it is true that we are paying teachers who cannot give us a full day’s work, thereby rendering our school services less efficient and at the same time more expensive. Thrift and economy are the watch words of all public and private enter prises now and for this reason it is absolutely necessary fhat the citizens of Smithfield provide adequate school buildings for their children. Failure to do this would be a sin of the citi zens of today against the citizens of tomorrow—a sin of adults against helpless children. H. B. MARROW. Heir to Fortune lln. M WWtoker, * Asheville, manicurist in a barber shop there, was called to Concord Saturday to claim $130,000 left her by a friend. She told friends in the shop that the man who left her the money, was a friend of her mother’s, and the bequest came as a surprise to her. Remember that time is money. Benjamin Franklin. Ex-sheriff W. F. Grimes called to see us last week and renewed his subscription. As long ago as he can remember The HERALD was going to his father. When his father died he was seventeen years old. He took up his father’s subscription and has stood by The HERALD as a friend snd patron Whenever it has been 'onvenient for him to do so he has poken a good word for it. Such ’riends have done us much good. CUT IN NATIONAL EXPENSE POSSIBLE Arizona Democratic Senat or Says Government Ex pense Can Be Reduced Boston, Mass.,—Business ability and methods applied to the conduct of the United States Government could reduce the daily expenditures by $2, 000,000, declared Henry F. Ashurst, democrat Senator from Arizona, in an address to the National Shoe Whole salers Association. The reason that economy is not practiced, he asserted is because the United States has “a political government run by politi cians” who feel that radically cutting down appropriations will deprive their, of the support of their constituencies. The speaker pointed out that the politician does not do the business of government along business lines and said that under the existing system he did not see how the government could be operated on less than the $4,000, 000,000 designated by the Secretary of the Treasury. Senator Ashurst; said that he had never received a telegram asking him to vote against an appropriation but that many had come to him urging his support of financial grants. It is to this kind of pressure, he said that politicians nat urally yield in the conviction that it assures them votes. “Until the business man is willing to concentrate his ability,” Senator Ashurst declared, “as he did during the war when he went to Washington and goes into politics with a firm de sire to place the government on a sound foundation we are going to have inefficiency. If we create no new bureaux and reduce the swarm of of ficials that are harrassing the public and eating the national funds, we could reduce the expenses sc as to operate the government on $3,000, 000,000 a year, and if the members of Congress and the Senate are called strictly to account this could be re duced to $2,000,000,000. The sperker asserted that, although a Democrat he was proud to hear of the attitude of Warren G. Harding, President-elect, in opposition to large expenditures for the inaugural cere monies. He said that he looked for ward to the day when a legislator could go home without basing his hope of reelection on the amount of money he had taken, or helped to take in ap propriation from the public treasury. “The only thing that will save the country,” he declared “is economy, hard work and patriotism.”—Christian Science Monitor. An Aged Woman to Her Reward It is with a sad heart I attempt to wri*e the death of my loving mother, Mrs. Susie Jones, which occurred on December 22, 1920, just as the beauti ful sun was rising from behind the eastern clouds. Then it was that the Death Angel visited the home of Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Clifton and .bore away our darling mother to await the resurrection morning. She leaves 8 children, the oldest being Mrs. R. M. Barbour, and the others are Mrs. B. A. Coats, J. W. Coats, Mrs. James Langdon, four of her first and four of her last children, her last children being Mr. James W. Jones, Mrs. Ed win Clifton, Mr. Rom Jones, Mrs. Bill Roberts. She was married to Mr. James William Coats and lived with him twelve years, and three years after his death she was married to Mr. John Jones and lived the rest of her days with him. Mother was very humble and lore her sickness with so much patience. She was always trying to prepare for old age. She was going ir. her ninety-fifth year and was al ways truthful and honest. She was a woman past common, according to her age. Her last husband died just three weeks and four days before her death. She seemed to have viewed her death by saying she saw both her hus bands in Heaven and that they were together and that she was going to them. Mother was a member of the Primitive Baptise church at Reho both They wen noth laid to rest in 'he cemetery at Rehoboth to await 'hf.- Resurrection nr.oming. Mother is gone bu+ not forgotten; ^ Never will her memory fade; ^ver will my memory linger ’round Her grave where she was laid. A heart-broken daughter, Mrs R M BARBOUR, in Eastern rews. ASSASSIN KILLS AN ENTIRE FAMILY A Prominent Family of S. C. Wiped Out By An Unknown Murderer Pamplico, S. C., Jan. 16.—Discovery today of the bodies of two other mem mers of the Bingham family revealed that the entire family living about four miles from Pamplico, was wiped out some time Saturday afternoon, a total of five being killed. Mrs. L. S. Bingham, 60 years of age, was shot through the head and her body was found in the yard of the Bingham home, near a well; her daughter, Mrs. Marjorie Black, 35, was found lying in a pool of blood in her room on the second floor of the home with a bullet hole in her head. Mrs. Black’s adopted son, nine years of age, was found near the back of the house, his foreheda having been pierced by a bullet at close range; Mrs. Black’s other adopted son, five years of age, evidently tried to es cape from his assailant for he was found near a fence in the back yard with a bullet wound in his head. He died about five o’clock in the morn ing. The body of the other member of the family L. S. Bingham, 40 years of age, son of Mrs. L. S. Bingham, was found today about 11 o’clock in the woods about one-half mile from the house lying in an obscure spot surrounded by bushes with a wound in his right temple. His hand was holding a revolver in which there were two bullets. An inquest is being held but the report of the jury has not been re ceived. The family had long been prominent in this section of the state, the father having been a member of both branches of the South Carolina gen eral assembly and at one time was a candidate for Congress. E. D. Bingham, brother of the dead man, and his family, consisting of his wife and two children, had recenly moved to South Carolina from Georgia or Alabama and were occupying rooms in the home. They were out driving and no one seems to have witnessed the shooting. E. D. Bingham, return ing about 3 o’clock in the afternoon was the first one on the scene and with the assistance of a rural mail carrier carried the body of Mrs. Bingham in to the house.—Associated Press in Greensboro News. The Ups and Downs of Balloon-Racing Balloon racing is regarded by its devotees as the most sublime sport in the world. In no other way, they say, do human guessing and pure science blend so delightfully to pro duce thrills. Contrary to the ideas of the uninitiated, a floating balloon is not the helpldfes object it seems, driven hither and yon by irresponsible breezes. In all but the foulest weath er it is subject to the will of the operator as to both speed and direc tion. The control is managed by changing air-levels. While a gentle northerly breeze may blow at a thou sand feet, there may be a brisk west erly one at a higher altitude, and the wise balloonists throws out a little ballast and rises to take advantage of it if he wants to go faster and change his course. It is in his skill in raising and lowering his craft that the air yachtsman demonstrates both his science and his ability as a guess er. What lends excitement to the game, however, is the large and de lightful element of chance that enters into it. No amount of science or skill at guessing it seems, will overcome the obstacle of perverse luck.—Lit erary Digest M. E. Baraca Drive The Smithfield M. E. Baraca Class has on a drive no^, It is a drive for an increase of membership. The class is divided and is under the leadership of two captains—Messrs R. P. Smith and Lloyd Ranson. The appeal for membership is extended to every young man in the Smithfield who is not a member of the class or some other Sunday School. The class be lieves that its a good way to start the new year' right by enlisting under the banner of the Sunday School. The Missing Blush He told the shy maid of his love, The color left her cheeks; But on the shoulder of his coat It showed for several weeks. SMITHFIELD HIGHS PLAY BASKET BALL Win 2 Games out of Thre^; Play Benson, Clayton And Orphanage Benson High school took a 24-1S victory by defeating Smithfield Highs in Benson Tuesday. The Benson boys had things their way for the firsl part of the game. One Benson boy did practically all their shooting and they lead at the end of the period If to 7. The second half showed Smith field in better shape and gaining stead ily and making four points more than their opponents. The game ended all too soon for the visitors whose chances were growing every minute. The following is ,the line-up of the two teams and scores made by each player: Smithfield Benson. Ellington, 1, rf Parker, lg. Caudill, 4,If and rg Creech rg Stephenson, 6, c Stone 6, c Godwin, rg and If Hudson 16 If Wharton, 8, lg Johnson, 2 rf Foul goals Stone for Benson made 2; and Ellington for Smithfield 1. Referee: C. C. Wheeler. Smithfield and Benson have defeat ed each other once each, and another game will be arranged to play off the tie. The local High school basket bal team won from Clayton here Wednes day night by the score of 30-6. Only one Clayton player was able to scor< a point while every player used by Smithfield made scores from the field The game was a run-away from th« start, the locals winning the halves 1( to 2 and 20 to 4. The two teams ar€ now tied, each team having won onf game from the other. The following is a line-up of the two teams and scores made by each. Smithfield Ellington 4, rf Godwin 4, If Caudill 2, If Stephenson 8, c. Davis 4, rg. Wharton 8, lg Clayton. Bagley lg Hinnant lg Baucom, rg Stuart c Massey 6, If Gulley rf. Foul goals: Ellington (Smithfielc Referees: John White Kenneth Parrish. Ives am Smithfield High school basket bal team defeated the team from the Me thodist Orphanage at Raleigh here las Friday night by the score of 26-2( This was the first time the two team had met and the game was a livel; struggle, especially during the las half. The local boys carried thing along at first making the score 16 when the half closed. The Orphanag team made several shifts in their lin up in the last half and came close t taking the game. Their rush soo: gave them a one point lead but Smith field regained their feet and later r-y the score up with four field and tw foul goals winning by a 6 point mai gin. The following is the lineup of th two teams: Ellington 8, rf Godwin If Caudill 8, If Stephenson 10, c Davis rg Wharton lg Herman lg. Bruce lg. McLean rg. Chappell 4, c. King 6 If. McCready 2, rf. Foul goals: Ellington (Smithfiel 4; Chappell (R. M. 0.) 2, Substitution for R. M. O. McCrea (8) to center: Chappell to rf. Referee: Kenneth Parrish.__ Orchestra for Smithfield Baptist Sun day School An eleven piece orchestra was or ganized last week by members of the Baptist Sunday School, the following young men to take part: Messrs Bur lin Jones, Maurice Biggs, Norman Humphrey, Erwin Pittman, Bill Du pree, Lawrence Stancil, James Davis, William Booker, Lyndon Jordan, J. W. Phillips, and Roy Gordan. As soon as the instruments arrive and a director secured, the orchestra will begin practice, with the idea of making the music an attractive fea ture of the Sunday School. Gin Report Cotton reporter for this county, D J. Yelvington, of Clayton, announces that prior to January 1, 1921, there were 47,605 bales of cotton ginned in Johnston county, as compared with 45,090 prior to January 1, 1920. ORGAN RECITAL AT CLAYTON CHURCH Dr. Hubert Poteat of Wake Forest Gives Program to Large Congregation •The people of Clayton had an un usual opportunity Sunday evening to listen to a musical program rendered by Dr. Hubert Poteat, of Wake Forest at the Baptist church. A new pipe organ has just been installed, and the initial service after installation was the occasion of the recital. The church was packed to its utmost ca pacity, people from the surrounding country and neighboring towns being present to hear Dr. Poteat, who is famed as a musician over this state and even beyond the borders of North Carolina. His exquisite touch called forth strains which produced a wonderful effect upon his audience, that in itself being an evidence of his unusual skill. Possessing a voice of beautiful lyric quality, three selections on the pro gram were vocal. The entire program rendered was as follows: 1. Marche Triumphale_Lemmens 2. (a) Cradle Song_Spinney (b) The Answer—Wolstenholme 3. Vocal Solo—The Lord ig My Light -Allitsen 4. Grand March, from “Aida”_ - Verdi 5. (a) In the Morning, from “Peer Gyntj” -1-Grieg (b) Improvisation. 6. Hallelujah Chorus, from “The Messiah” _Handel 7. Vocal Solo—Lead, Kindly Light. - Poteat 8. (a) Largo, from “Xerxes”_ - Handel (b) Introduction to “Faust”_ - Gounod 9. War March, from "Rienzi”_ - Wagner 10. vocal solo—ice^ssrdssrrr:::1;:-. - DeKoven 11. Overture to “William TeH,” Parts 3 and 4-Rossini FOUR OAKS NEWS Four Oaks, Jan. 15.—Mrs. F. E. Oliver has moved to Benson where she will live with her daughter, Mrs. Clarence Britt. We regret very much that Mrs. Oliver has left us and her many friends here hope her stay in Benson will be pleasant. Mr. O. F. Blankenship attended the High School Teachers’ Meeting in Smithfield last Saturday. Mrs. Leslie Hudson and children spent the last weekend in Dunn with relatives and friends. Mr. W. J. Woodard returned Iasi week from a visit to Sanford and other pojnts in Florida. On last Monday evening from seven until ten Mrs. Carson Adams enter tained the Methodist Philathea class. The guests were greeted at the door by Mrs. Adams, who ushered them into the hall where little Misses Oma Adams and Alene Williams served punch. From the hall the ladies were invited in the pallor. Here the busi ness part cf the meeting was held after which several games and con tests were indulged in. One contest consisted of spelling as many new words from “January” in five min utes as p.ssible. Misses Catherine Wilson and Annie Ford t'ed for the prize having made thirteen apiece. Miss Wilson crew the lucky straw and was awarded the prize. Boiled cus tard and cake were later served. The guests soon departed declaring Mrs. Adams a charming hostess. Those en joying Mrs. Adams’ hospitality were: Mesdamcs F. B. Craven, L. A. Adams* C. H. Wellcns, G. K. Massengill, J A. Keene, W. C. Oliver, R. B. Strickland, and G, W. Massengill, Misses Mattie Pierce, Catherine Wilson, Mildred Allen, Caroline Fitzgerald, Gladys Adams, Katie Allen, Maggie Tart, Floreid Woodard, and Annie Ford. Mr. Hunter Jreech, of New York City is in town visiting his mother, Mrs. Laura Creech. Mr. Nathan Keene returned Fri day after visiting in Richmond for several days. • Dies From Loss of Arms. Grady Williams, of High Falls, near Sanford, died Tuesday night, having had the misfortune to have both his arms sawed off in a saw mill. The shock and loss of blood caused his death. His arms were severed above the elbows. ;