NUMBER 15 THIS CITY ELECTS I BEMJTY QUEEH Miss Rose Grantham Chosen At Mass Meeting Wednesday Night; Committees Appointed MR. BARTLETT SPEAKS Smithfield’s Queen in the Eastern Carolina Exposition will be Miss Rose Grantham, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. N. B. Grantham, the choice having been made at a mass meeting held at the court house Wednesday night. In terest in the contest helped to bring out a good crowd and the spirit shown at the meeting indicates that Smith field is lining up solidly to make a complete success of the Exposition v(hich will be held here April 13-18. Mayor John A. Narron presided and stated the purpose of the coming to gether. Mr, N. G. Bartlett, secreta ry of the Eastern Carolina Cham ber of Commerce, who was in the city to confer with some committees, was present and Mayor Narron called on him for a talk in regard to the Exposition. Mr. Bartlett outlined the program which has been planned and I incidentally made suggestions for ad ditional committees. When Mr. Bart lett had concluded his remarks his audience had a deeper realization of the magnitude of the event which is to be staged in Johnston County in April. “I do not want to scare you folks,” said Mr. Bartlett, ‘‘but I do want you to realize what a big thing it is.” The meeting then approved the ap pointment of a housing committee composed of Mrs. P. H. Casey, Mrs. Y. H. Brooks, Mrs. L. G. Patterson and Mrs. John O. Ellington. The fol lowing were named on a publicity: Mrs. T. J .Lassiter, Messrs. Geo. Y. Ragsdale, H. B. Marrow and E. J. Wellons. A motion was passed to form a Bureau of Information, and a chairman will be named later. Mr. as chairman of this Bureau. Mr. TV. Ransom SfJjders was made chairman of the local Float committee. The matter of closing the stores on the afternoon of the opening day of the Exposition in order to help the other nine towns in the county wel come the guests, was considered, the suggestion coming from the Selma merchants. The suggestion was fa vorably received and the stores will close on Monday, April 13, from one to four o'clock. Mr. J. A. Wellons presented the idea of having a T. I. reunion in con nection with the exposition and form er T. I. students present met after the mass meeting to formulate plans which will be published when per fected. Last but not the least feature on [ the program was the selection of a Queen to represent Smithfield in the Beauty contest. Queens from the ten towns in Johnston County will com pete for a $500 diamond ring, while a similar contest will be conducted for towns out side Johnston County. It was decided to select the Queen for Smithfield by popular vote and Mes srs. H. JP. Johnson, H. C. Woodall and Rev. A. J. Parker were named to have eharge of the election. Every one Present was asked to write their ehoise on a slip of paper, and the fol lowing young ladies were thus nom iriated: Misses Lucile Cotter, Fran ces Green, Arah Hooks, Irene Myatt, Lucile Johnson, Ethel Barbour, Car rie Young, Rose Grantham, Ila Bra-1 dy> Mary Gattis Holland, Ruth ,'"0°ks. Rhetta Martin, Jean Abell, i Mai7 Ellington, Margaret Moore, Do- j ra Barbour, Luma McLarnb and Mary ; Bateman. three receiving the highest | [dumber of votes were: Miss Fran-! ( ' Grrer© Arah Hooks and Rose, Giantham, and these young ladies |v '“ voted on again. The second vote * minuted Miss Frances Green, and |'"e final show down found Miss j ' aatham the winner though Miss! | Books ran close • ®'e Study Class To (l^eet 7h«aible St odis* m ... 'L Mir.siona? Clasaof the MetTi-^ r SocjMy will meet !j y” Monday afternoon with Mfss at three o’clock. a Crack - O’ - Doomers - • - —i i§§«KS33SS^S\J [1 AUTOC^y TEtf.j Robert Reidt, the “crack of doom’’ prophet and family, who had his name on the lips of nine million New '.'or kers, February 7th, when ne adher ed to advance Seventh Day Adven tist’s vision of world ennd, is now looking for a job as a paper-hanger. Washington’s Birthday Exercises At S. H. S. On Wednesday morning of this week Rev. A. J. Parker made a very interesting address to the Smithfield grammar grade and high school stu dents on George Washington as a boy. Mr. Parker held the interest of the pupils unusually well and made a deep impression. The chief characteristics of Wash | ington as a boy discussed by Mr. Parker were his exact and cheerful obedience to his mother’s wishes at all times, his dependability, and his habit of following rules of conduct which he made for himself when a boy of thirteen. In telling of Washington’s obedi ence to his mother’s every wish—Kis father died when he was fourteen— the story was told how Washington had an ambition to become a sailor, how he had already gone on board the ship after having secured his mo ther’s permission, how his motHer changed her mind at the last minute, and then how Washington cheerful ly gave up his ambition and went back to his mother. Smithfield Triangle Debaters Chosen Affirmative: Leo Ennis, Carrie Young. Negative: Willard Lawrence, Worth Boyette. Sanford and Dunn high schools are the other two members of the tri angle. Smithfield’s negative team will probably go to Sanford, while the affirmative team remains at home to debate Dunn’s negative team. The query for debate is the port terminals proposition. — Panford Seniors Visit Smithfield High School Misses Mary Tulluck and Elizabeth Cross, members of the senior class in ! the Sanford high school, on Tuesday of this week visited the Smithfield high school for the purpose of collect ing data for theses which they are re quired to write before graduation. These two students will compare the two high schools. Superintendent Franks says the girls were very ca pable interviewers, that they had a long list of questions of a practical sort, and that they obtained a wide range of information which will be very usefu 1 in comparing the two schools. MAD CAT BITES SEVERAL Selma, Feb. 18.—A stray cat that had tal en up at Roberts, Corbett and Woodard’s store developed ra bies Saturday morning. He scratch ed one of the clerks, Miss Lola Reel and bit Mr*^N. J. Creech and Ju lian Corbett? The head was sent to Raleigh, where hydrophobia was pronounced. The patients are al! treatment and are doing well. LEAVE REMAINS Of COLLINS IN CAVE Last Earthly Rites For Entrap ped Man Held At Cave Entrance SERVICE OF 55 MINUTES Cave City, Ky., Fe# 17.—On the hill above Sand Cave this- afternoon his family and friends held funeral services for Floyd Collins. There was no casket ;Qno corpse, no grave, and no marker. Sixty feet underground in the Sand Cave trap which closed upon him 18 days ago lay the body of Collins, dis covered a few days too late by the rescuers. Rather than risk the lives of any of the tireless volunteers, his family chose to leave him in the cave for his last sleep. Physicians, his friends and officials ! of the rescue party crept down into his narrow tomb today to gather the j legal evidence that Floyd was buried there and that he was dead. None of his family could take a last look, but jthe thought that Collins would have chosen such a spot, among his beloved caves, comforted them. Mr. and Mrs. Lee Collins were there silent in the last earthly rites for their son. The aged couple sat side by side in small chairs near the edge of the same limestone ledge under which Sand Cave disappears. Behind them, grouped on large boul ders overlooking th<f valley below, were a dozen members of a choir gathered from among residents of Cave City. Mr. and Mrs. Collins listened with bowed heads while strains of “Nearer, My God, to Thee” drifted over the hill as the services opened. The aged father looked often to ward the mouth of Sand Cave 125 feet away as the words, “Lika a wan derer, the sun gone down,” floated away in the distance. The cave, na ked in the absence of its sheltering canopy, yawned silently. The Rev. Roy H. Biser, of Glasgow, a neighboring community, climbed to a stump to open a Scriptural service and a motion picture camera started to whirr. At the outer fringe of the group stood a sentinel with his rifTe. Huges rocks were the benches of the outdoor chapel. Men who had spent days in the struggle, unshaved and muddy in ap pearance, bared their heads in the chilling breeze. The prayer was of fered. The little gathering of 150 men and women heard the Rev. Biser tell them they were “standing in fue midst of death”, and listened to him give thanks “for the brotherhood of man as manifested by those who had risked their lives on this site.” Mental comfort for the Collins fam ily was besought and then Mrs. Ira D. Weathers, of Cave City, sang a so io. Newspaper telephones, but recent ly installed all over the hillside, rang un-answered from various tree sta tions. A soft wind rustled the dried brown leaves and carried the song off j down the valley. The story of Floyd Collins, un certain in its outcome, uncertain even from day to day, Rev. Mr. Biser re-1 ferred to as paralleling the romance of mankind itself. No other incident! within memory, he said, had brought j so many prayers from the brother hood of man for one fellow man trap ped underground. “Heroic deeds have laid a perma nent monument for the whole coun try in the exhibitions of courage and stamina revealed for 18 days at Sand , Cave,” the Rev. C. K. Dickey, of Horse Cave, said. He supplemented Rev. Mr. Biser’s statement that the spot forever would be sacred to the memo- j ry of him who had called forth so much loving kindness. Fifty-five minutes had elapsed when the final “Amen” brought tne closing of®e services. Such 4r|s the 1 last hour of spiritual tribute to Floyd Collins. A few more fours and his body will have been sealed in its tomb deep in the earth ijjjjl'low. A block of concrete will be permitted to s^di fy in the lateral leading to the rescue shaft, while the shaft proper will be filled with rock and earth from the I PARADE FEATURES THE OPENING DAY Rev. Bilb Sunday Will Deliver Address and Victor’s Band Will Play SIX FILL D A Y S From the program announced for the Eastern Carolina Exposition some time ago through the press, it seems that there will be more real construc tive entertainment in six days than has ever been presented to a North Carolina audience. In fact, every day seems to have been mapped out to fill a different part of one’s general make-up. An analysis of the pro gram will reveal some interesting things. In the first place on the opening day, at 2 P. M. the gong will sound, the Chief Marshall will sound Ins command to “March” and that great line of expensive floats will proceed down Smithfield’s thoroughfares In regular army fashion. When the fa mous J.s. F. Victor strikes up the first j note of the forward march, the ten thousand folks on the streets will bend their necks to se what is coming. Leading the parade will be the Chief Exeucutive of North Carolina, who is i an Eastern Carolinian and an ardent boster of the Eastern Carolina Cham ber of Commerce, Angus Wilton Mc Lean. He will be followed by that | always attracts the human eye: the thirty or more Queens representing as many towns, on specially prepared i floats; among them somewhere will be that magnetic power who has spo ken to more people than any other living man, possibly: Rev. W. A. (Bil ly) Sunday, who will speak in the aft ! ernoon and night of the opening day. i Then the floats, floats, floats and some more beautiful floats. . Then the parade will come to a close at 2:30 i nfront of the main entranc of the mammoth Exposition biulding, and then the program will begin to move off on the inside. President John W. Holmes, of Farm ville, will turn the Third Annual Ex- I position over to Eastern North Caro lina with appropriate address. Gov- i ernor McLean will speak and local fellows will welcome the big crowd. Then Billy Sunday, the famous Evan gelist will deliver one of his stirring addresses to a packed house. The evening program Moi^ay will be a band concert, followed b ythe famous Roster Act from the Hippodrome Tn New York, and then Mr. Sunday will deliver another of his outstanding ad dresses. To be sure of getting start ed right, every body should be there the first day and night. The hatnt will be easy from then on until {Tie : end of the week. © ENROLLMENT IN SMITH FIELD SCHOOLS The enrollment in the white schools At the end of the fifth month, Feb- j rnary 6, was 1,041. The girls out- ' numbered the boys by 57. In the high school department there were 102 boys and 119 girls, a total of 221. The enrollment in the Negro school at the end of the 4th month of that school, February 13, was 252 boys-j, and 277 girls, a total of 529. In the j high school department of the Negro school there were 32 boys and 64 ( girls, a total of 96. Health Officer Has Office in Court House ; Dr. C. C. Massey, newly elected county health officer, has moved his , office from the Jones building and i may now be found in the court house, ( the north corner of the third floor. ( vicinity. The entrance to the cave ;1 will be closed with heavy timbers and Floyd Collins hencefort will rest un- 1 disturbed. © Collins, an obscure man, became a ; nationally known figure overnight by his entrapmUit in Sand Cave ;|pd < the finding of his.gbody yesterday climbed a 16 day effort at his re;jgi; cue.—^Associated Press.a? (§) --m-— farmers of Cleveland County are 1 determined to have electric lijftt- in th®b homes, .^.community light line was recently arranged for by the Earl and McErayer communities. TWO MAIL BAGS STOLEN Tuesday morning two mail bags thrown off train number 83 which passes here about six o’clock, were stolen before the official mail car rier could get them, the theives making their escape domi the rail road, On yesterday morning the two bags were found by Chief Ca ble in some bushes near Austin’s gin. The bags had been opened and letters and packages rifled and scattered around. Johnston Co. Medical Society Holds Meeting The Johnston County Medical So ciety met in regular session Tuesday night, Februray 17th, at 7:30 in the Grand Jury room of the Court House. Business proceedings of the Society were disposed of and interesting talks were made by the following members: Dr. J. B. Person, of Selma, on the best treatment for Influenza; Dr. B. A. Hocutt, of Clayton, on the best treatment for Broncho-Pneumonia; Dr. I. W. Mayerberg, of Selma, on the best treatment for Leg Ulcer. Gen eral discussion was then entered) in to by all members. A committee was appointed to formulate plans for entertaining the Society at some future date, and a mo tion was passed to hold the meetings months, next meeting to be held sec monthly rather than every two ond Tuesday night in March at 8:00 o’clock, in Selma. Meadow School Bonds Sell Well Bids for $35,000 worth of five and a half percent school bonds for the Meadow School district were opened here Tuesday morning-, twenty-one sealed bids having- been submitted to County Sueperintendent H. B. Mar row. The highest bidder was Kal man, Gates, White & Co., of St. Paul, Minn., whose bid was $36,536.50. Ev ery $100 in bonds sold brought $104. 39. Bidders besides Kalman, Gafes, White & Co. were as follows: Emery, Peck & Rockwood, Chica go, 111., $35,806.00. Seipp, Princell & Co., Chicago, 111., $36,215.00. Spitzer, Rorick & Co., Toledo, Ohio, $35,761.00. Ryan, Southerland & Co, Tole do, Ohio, $35,663.25. Braun, Bosworth & Company, Tole do, Ohio, $35,318.00. Northwestern Trust Company, St. Paul, Minn., $35,805.00. A. C. Allyn & Company, Chicago, 111.. $35,975.00. “^The Weil, Roth & Irving Co., Cin dnnatti, Ohio, S36,310.00. Campbell & Co., Toledo, Ohio, $36, [14.00. Drake, Jones Co., Greensboro, N. C., >36,405.00. Stevenson, Perry, Stacy & Co., Chi cago, 111., $35,766.50. Prudden & Co., Toledo, Ohio, $36, 157.00. C. W. McNear & Co., Trinity, N. C. ;Chicago, 111.), $36,489.91. Lewis, W. Thomson & Co. St. Louis VIo., $35,252.00. The L. R. Ballinger Co., Cincinnati, 3hio, $35,493.50. The Farmers Bank & Trust Compa iy., Smithfield, N. C., $35,885.00. R. S. Diekson & Co., Gastonia, N.C. ^ep. Stranahan, Harris & Oatis, Inc., 536.008.00. W. L. Slayton & Co., Toledo, Ohio, 535.644.00. W. K. Terry Co., Toledo, Ohio, $35, 537.00. Wells, Dickey & Company, Minneap )lis, Minn., Wachovia Bank & Ti-ust ]o., Winston-Salem, N. C., $35,105. >0. © Child Knocked Down By Truck© Yesterday ^ternoon the little four ear-old boy of Mrs. Betflfc Coafs, va knocked dc^n by a school truck gnfront of his home on Second stree®and was bruiesd about the face tr-.d head. The little fellow lived In ont of the hospital and hSHvas tak n there and his wounds treated, it >eing necessary t# take two or three Pitches in a cut. His injuries are not hought to be serious. The accident iccording to report, was unavoida ble. SELMA CITIZENS BACK EXPOSITION Mrs. A. R. Wilson Chaim .1 Better Babies Committee; Prizes Are Attractive OTHER SELMA NE' S Selma, Feb. 18.—The Selma people are talking the Eastern Carolina Ex position which is to be held in Smith field in April. The majority of them ; are standing solidly back of the move ment. The following information about the Better Babies Contest has been given out by Mr. N. G. Bartlett, of Kinston Manarger, of the Eastern Carolina Exposition, and Mrs. A .R. Wilson, of Selma, chairman of the Johnston County Baby Show, which is to be staged in Smithfield in April. One boy baby and one girl baby between the ages of 18 months and 36 months | old may be entered from each of the 117 townships in Johnston County. Two i women from each township will be 1 appointed to assist in getting the ba | bies entered. The prizes are as fol lows: $25 first; $15 second; $10 third, for the three winners in the boys’ class and for the three winners in | the girls’ class. They will be intro jduced from the platform Wednesday afternoon and will be voted on by the audience by ballot. The contestants j must be entered in time to reach us ! by April third, which will give ten ' days to prepare the ballots to have j them ready for the Exposition. The ! contest, of course, is limited to white babies. One of the most enjoyable affairs of the season was the Father and Son Banquet given by Selma troop No. 1, Boy Scouts of America, in the Iliv/a nis Club rooms, Friday evening of last week. The hall was very appro I priately decorated with flags and the national colors. The banquet was pre i pared by the Domestic Science De ! partment under the supervision of Miss Clell Branham. Prof. H. B. ' Bueck, local Scout-Master, called for the scout oath, which the boys gave standing. This was followed by the song, America. Supt. F. M. Waters gave the address of_ welcome, which was responded to by Dr. George D. Vick. Between courses short talks were made by Messrs. Geo. F. Brietz, John Lacy Deans, Dr. I. W. Mayer berg, all of Selma, and Mr. T. C. Young, Smithfield. The meeting was full of pep and enthusiasm from start to finish and much credit is due Pro fessor Bueck for the excellent train ing and fine spirit which the boys show. Music was furnished through out the evening by the local orches tra, composed of Messrs. Edgar Stan cil, Mavon Deans, Ed Creech, C. L. Griffith and H. B. Bueck. Q Mr. T. S. Cheek, of Mebane, spent last week end here with friend . Mr. and Mrs. W. I. Godwin spent the week end with relatives in the © Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Whitley, of Benson, visited Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Woodard Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Geo. T. Whitlety and Mr. and Mrs. Ray Whitley, of Dur ham, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. A. K. Eason Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. E. P. Holcombe, who moved to Selma several months ago, have returned to their home in Charleston, S. C. They have made many friends here who regret to see them leave. Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Wilson spent Monday afternoon in Dunn. Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Biggs, of Wilson, spent the last week end here with Mrs. T. R. Fulghum. © Mr. W. A. Herring and family have moved to Goldsboro this week. The besr wishes of their friends h i go with them. (J) (jjllrs. J. F. Saunders and Mrs Mon roe Brewer who have both bee . ouue (®1 are improving no|gt. Mr. N. T. Straughan, % F! nvnce, S. C., spent last week here w th his brother, Captain J. R, .^Daug . Mr. and Mrs. B. ® Polloc! :rov» Pollocksville, spent Sunday wnh Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Ray. Dr. and Mrs. J. B. Person and «on (Continued on page fou. >

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