SMITHFIELD NEEDS: —Bigger Pay Roll. —A Modern Hotel. —Renovation of Opera House. —More Paved Streets. —Chamber of Commerce. Mr. Farmer: It Will Pay You to Sell Your Tobacco in Smithfield This Season miijfijelii "We Smithfielu You Will Too SMITHFIELD, N. C., TUESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 13, 1925 Forty-third Year * * * * Number 95 W. B. Cole Acquitted of Murder Charge Wyatt Murder Trial Is Continued Fourth Time State Fair Week Consid ered By Both Defense and State Not The Time For So Notable A Case. TO BE TRIED NOV. 2 The trial of Jesse Wyatt, charged with the killing of Stephen S. Holt of this city on the second of last June, has again beela postponed. This time the Raleigh fair inter venes and {he case will not come up until the week of November 2, according to an agreement reached at a conference held Thursday by Judge Garland E. Midyette and the attorneys on both sides. Solic itor Evans and .J. Wilbur Bunn a id Jones and Horton, representing the defense, did not think that fair week would be a suitable time for a trial of the magnitude of the Wyatt case. Juduge Midyett-a had already arranged for the convert ing of the two weeks civil term beginning- October 0 into a mixed term. It was decided to use the first week for the trial of civil cases e/id the second week for the Wy att and other criminal cases. The Wake County bar voted twenty-four to five to dispense with the court entirely during fair week, but ; Judge Midyet' r held that such action would hinder too much the business of the courts and the term will bo held with the exception of Thursday, the biggest day of the fair. It was agreed at the conference held Thursday that no further contin uance will be sought by the de fense on i ry technical grounds The case, it will be recalled, was continued in June and again in July on technical grounds. The con tinuance next week will be the fourth, the case having been un avoidably continued in September because of the illness and death of Armstead Jones, of the def -nse coulnsel. Barge Indian Potato Mr. W. M. Hobbs of Smithfield, Route 1, brought to town Saturday a large Indian potato, known as a wild potato, which he found half buried in a ditch on his farm sev eral days ago. The potato weighed thirteen and a half pounds and measures seventeen inches from end to end. It is said by old people that Indians made bread from these potatoes. The inside of this pota to is .of a white mealy substance, while the outside is dark and rough, resembling the hark of a tree. Quite a number have exam ined with interest this huge potato since it was brought.- to this office. Notice to Co-op Members The regular meeting of the cot ton and Tobacco Growers Coopera tive association will he held in the commissioners room of the court, house here Wednesday, October 14, at 2:30 o’clock. Every member is urged to be present. J. A. SMITH, Chairman SELMA HAS GOLD FISHING FROLIC Selma, Oct. 12.—Several flays ago, Mr. Geo. P. Briefz, super intendent of the Selma cotton lls. announced to his opera tives and a Pew friends up in town that on Saturday they mi«rht go gold fishing. Saturday dawned cold and clear with a brisk north wind blowing, but. nothing daunted, the (ishermen wended their ways to the reservoir hard by the mill. The tackle used was the ordinary hook and line with wriggly worms, bits of fat meat and bread for bait. The extraordi nary thing about it was “how they did bite!” Hundreds were caught measuring from a few inches to more than a foot in length. Many a boy and girl was made happy, the grownups sharing the pleasure. Acquari ums were rehabilitated and new ones bought. Three years ago five gold fish were placed in this reser voir and now it is thought to contain thousands. It was deem id best to remove some of them hence the unusual fishing frol ic. New Feature of Johnston County Fair Promses To Arouse Unusual Interest. The following young ladies have consented to run as contestants in the Popularity Contest staged by the Johnston County Fair. Each girl is started with one hundred votes, the contest closes Thurs day, October 29th. at the fair grounds. Miss Sarah Adams, Smithfield, 100 votes. Miss Jeannette Holland, Smith filed, 100 votes. Miss Hilda Feeding Smithfield, 100 votes. Miss Elizabeth Creech, Smith field, 100 votes. Miss Margaret Benton, Benson, 100 votes. Miss I.eone Sanders, Pine Level, 100 votes. Miss Clara Fitzgerald, Pine Level, 100 votes. Miss Lyda Edwards, Micro, 100 votes. Miss Pearl Fleming, Micro, 100 ' votes. Miss Eloise Alford, Kenly, 100 ! votes. Miss Baez Watson, Kenly, 100 I votes. Miss Mabel Barbour, Wilson’s .Mills, 100 votes. Miss Sue TJomliilson, Wilson’s Mills, 100 votes. Miss Gedrgeanna Ashworth, Selma, 100 votes. Miss Mary Evelyn Parker, Selma, 100 votes. Miss Alma Lee, Selma, 100 votes. Miss Aldine Barnes, Selma, 100 votes. M V;s Mary Massey, Princeton, 100 votes. Miss Mac Stephenson, Prince ton, 100 votes. Miss Louise Wrenn, Clayton. 100 votes. Miss Bernice Turley, Clayton, 100 votes. Miss Ethlynd Hurley, Clayton, 100 votes. The next count will be published Thursday October 22nd. Watch the papers. For tickets and further in formation phone or see Miss Dora Barbour, Smithfield, N. C. 1 Pigs Making Hogs of Themselves—Marketing Time Is Coming PI'lil' BRED DIROC-Jersey piers belonging to Mr. J.'Lifo Lee, of Johnston County, taking advantage of she self-feeder he has provided. Mr. Lee has l>*en very successful in raising prize irinning hogs. J. B. DUKE DIES AT NEW YORK ROME Millionnaire Manufactur er and Philanthropist Passes Away After Short Illness. BURIAL IN DURHAM James B. Duke, rich tobacco manufacturer, died at his home in Now York city Sunday afternoon at six o’clock after an illness of several weeks that followed a ner vous and physical breakdown. He died in the presence of his family and Dr. Robert Z. Wylie. His d -nth is said to have come as a direct re sult of bronchial pneumonia con tracted after the breakdown. Mr. Duke had fallen in a state of coma, but at times ho showed such im provement it was thought he would recover. He is survived by his wife, a daughter. Miss Doris Duke; a brother, Benjamin Newton Duke, and a niece, Mrs. Anthony Drexel Biddle Duke. The funeral services were held at his home in New York yes tor day afternoon at four o’clock and the body brought to Durham where the family burial will take place this morning at eleven o’clock in the family mausoleum. A dispatch from the Associate'll Proas has the following to say about the wealthy manufacturer: For several years Mr. Duke had not taken an active part in the conduct of the many enterprises in which he was interested. Actual management was entrusted to men he had trained, although he fre quently went to his New York of fice and kept in close touch with business matters. Mr. Duke always maintained close relations with the farmers whose products he purchased. In his early years as a tobacco manu facturer he instructed his buyers to pay the farmers enough for their crops to assure them a liv ing, notwithstanding market condi tions. He became extensively interest ed in the development of hydro electric power and established many large plants in sections of his native state of North Carolina. Recently he spent large sums in an effort to discover a method of producing cheap fertilizer for the benefit of the farmer. Last year he established the Duke Foundation, setting aside $40,000,000. Under its harms Trini ty college at Durham, N. C., chang ed its name to Duke University, and an active program of expan sion was begun. James Buchanan Duke was born in 1856, near Durham, N. C., and received his education in the coun try schools. Ilis first connection with the tobacco industry began (Continued on page eight) COLORED MAN IS SERIOUSLY BURNED George Vinson of Wilson’s Mills Badly Burned When He Start ed Fire Wi;h Gasoline. Saturday morning about 5:30 o’clock George Vinson, a colored man of Wilson’s Mills, was ser iously burned while making a fire. In an effort to get' the fire start - . i d, according to reports received , here, he decided to pour gasoline • r :,i the wood which was slow in beginning to burn. When he began pouring the gasoline from the .two ! gallon can the flame blazed up and enveloped him from his waist up. He tore his clothing off in an f ffort to extinguish the flames but he was seriously burned about the body. At last report he was still living but was in a critical condi tion. He is about fifty years of age. LOCAL TALENT OPERETTA ON FRIDAY EVENING An Ltdinn operetta entitled “The IVast of‘the Red Corn,” under the direction of MBs Frances White, public school music teacher in the graded school, and sponsored by the Business and Professional Women's Club, promises to be an unusual production and one which will appeal to music lovers of Smithfieid. The program will be given Fri day evening in the opera house at eight o'clock. The singers will toll of the cel ebration of “The Feast of the Red Corn” held each year by the maid ens of the Wunta tribe of Indians. The one who finds first the red . car of corn has her dearest wish granted by the Sorceress, an old squaw of the tribe. This year the Queen joins the maidens hoping to find the red ear of corn, in order to wish luck to the King who is away in Wars. The old squaw tells the maidens that the Four Winds have whis pered to her that there will be no wish granted this year because [some one has committed a griev ous offense. The younger sister of the queen is suspected of being the culprit. Events intervene to i keep her front being burned at the stake. The queen finds the Red Ear, and sees a vision of her King I who is alive and on his journey home. “The Unfolding Life” Is Theme of Program Giv en at Sunday School Sunday Morning. 62 HOMES 100 PER CT. Rnlly Day at the Methodist Sun day school was responsible for the unusually large crowd Sunday mor ning and the exercises were char acterized by many as being excep tie. iahly good. “The Unfolding Life” was the theme of (he program which was participated in by every depart ment of the Sunday school from the Cradle Roll to the Home De partment. Appropriate devotional exercises opened the Sunday school at 9:30. The lesson was taught as , usual and the special program be gan at the close of the class per iod. As the choir sang, “Onward Christian Soldiers,” two Intermed iate boys bearing Christian con quest flag and the United States flag led a processional that in cluded every member of the Sun day school. A religious survey of the town had been made in prep aration for Rally Day, and a un ique feature of the program was the awarding of sixty-two hundred per cent horn ■ certificates which means that sixty-two homes rep resented in the Methodist Sunday school have every member attend ing Sunday school. A bouquet of chrysanthemums was awarded the oldest member of the school pres ent., Mr. Charlie Linsday, who is 77 years old and a regular attend ant. The youngest person present was Master John Holland, the sev en months old baby of Dr. and Mrs. N. T. Holland. The program proper began with salutes by the congregation to the Christian con quest and U. S. flags. Mr. T. C. Young, superintendent of the Sun day school was the leader in the (Continued on page eight) Twelve-Year Old Girl Picks 328 Pounds of Cotton On Birthday Floy Williams, daughter of Mr. W. M, Williams, of Smithfield, Route 1, who was twelve years old last Tuesday, said she was going to pick more cotton on her birthday than Minnie Hicks, the twelve-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Geo. W. Hicks, of Cleveland township, picked on her birthday. Mr. Williams told his daughter that it she would pick nurse than Minnie Hicks did he would give her a dollar. That night when her cotton was weighed it was found that she had 328 pounds. According to an article in a recent issue of The Herald, little Miss Hicks picked 271 pounds on her birthday. Both these young ladies are to be congratulated upon the profitable way in which they celebrated their birthdays. Five children in Mr. WfHints’ family on the same day picked 1,381 pounds of cotton. Verdict of Acquittal Returned By Jury After Three Ballot*, BIG COMMUNITY FI IS SUCCESS Variety and Arrangement of Products Made Good Showing—Old Relics On Display. With exhibits thnt would com pore with county fairs and oven some of those at the big state show, the Meadow Community Fail held last Friday exceeded all ex pectations. Secretary W. V. Black man and his co-workers have ev ery reason to be proud of the suc cess of the occasion, for to assem ble and arrange such a display of products was no little task. The exhibitors themselves deserve cred it for the selection and arrange ment of products entered to com pel*' for the prizes. The Meadow school grounds was an admirable place for the holding of a fair. There was plenty of space for the exhibit of farm ma chinery, Doleo-Lighting system, Singer sewing machines, cold drink and barbecue stand-. Fven a side show was there which helped to carry out the Fair I atmosphere. The exhibits were arranged in the old school building, each division having a separate room for the displays. The farm and field pro ducts were particularly good and the entries were so numerous that the entire space of a large room in the building was completely filled. Cotton, tobacco, all sorts of feed crops, vegetables, meat, in fact, anything you will find grown on the farm, was represented. Anoth er room was devoted to pantry supplies and canned goods. The long rows of canned fruits and vegetables upon white stands dec orated with ivy were good to look upon. Cakes, home made butter, eggs, biscuits, home made candies, and other good things were suit ably arranged in this room. Also a display of honey belonging to Mr. L. Parker of Benson, Route 2, in this room attracted quite a bit of attention. The fancy work de partment included everything from colored embroideries to quilts made in the most intricate patterns. Of particular interest was the junior department, a room devoted to ex hibit:. of children under sixteen years of age. In many instances the work shown there compared favorably with that of the grown ups. But of all the rooms that de voted to old relics was perhaps the moist popular. There the folks loved to linger and look at uten sils made in the long ago. and talk over the improvement that had been made in the last century. We say the last century because there were a number of articles on dis play over a hundred years old. A milk piggin, lit) years old; an old wooden churn, a spinning wheel, sleigh and harness, (lax tackle, an old fashioned reel, old bedquilts made of home woven materials, and a flax wheel were all on dis play. An old fashioned iron attract ed attention. It resembled a mod ern electric iron in shape, with a place to put hot colds inside. The iron had belonged to David Voa eock, grandfather of Sarah N. Hol ly, and was bought in 18i-r>. A dis play of old dishes in an old time leather bound trunk which belong ed to Mrs. Holly, was also on display. The dishes were originally owtned by Mr. J- C- Hood, grand father of our townsman, Mr. T. R. Hood- A sugar bowl, gravy bowl and laddie of unique design, bought in 1827. An indigo stand carried one back to the time when indigo was grown around here, from which (Turn to page eight, please) Cole Will Not Get His Freedom Un til Judge Has Proof of His Sanity; Hearing Will Be Held At Wilkes boro Today, I P. ML; Only A Few Person Are In Court Room When Verdict of the Jury Is Read. Rockingham, October 11.— (Special to The Her ald).—William B. Cole, charged with the murder of his daughter's former lover, William W. Ormond was acquitted of the charge of murder by a jury which has been considering his case behind locked doors since Saturday at noon when it filed into court shortly after 9 o’clock this morning. Although acquitted of the charge of murder, Cole will have to face a hearing on a charge of insanity. The hearing will be held at Wilkesboro Tuesday at 1 p. m. When the jury had been polled, the foreman of that body in a clear voice, following the question as to whether they had found a verdiot, announced that they found the defendant, William B. Cole, not guil ty on the charge of murdering William W. Ormond. Immediately after the jury had given its report, Cole was returned to jail where he will await the hearing on the insanity charge which he will hav to face. The jury which decided the fate of the rich mil owner, retired for deliberation of the ecase at 12:4 c’ciock yesterday afternoon, following the charge delivered by Judge T. B. Finley . Shortly after se en o’clock last night, the jury came into the cou room, and asked that Judge Finley read to them th 1 conclusions of his charge. Following the re-reeading of this part of the charge, the jury again retired for further delibera tions. JUDGE BROOKS 70 DELIVER SPEECH Pitt County People Will Tender Thanks For Bountiful Crops October 23. Johnston county’s idea of set ting aside a special day of thanks giving for bountiful crops has tak en a hohl upon other counties in North Carolina, and upon Friday, October 23. Pitt' county will ob serve such a celebration. Not long ago Nash county followed suit and the Pitt celebration will be the third of this kiml to be held in ihe state this year. Judge F. H. ; Brooks, who conducted the pro igram at the Johnston county cel ebration, has accepted an invita tion to deliver an address at Green ville on the 23rd. The day will be observed as a manifestation of appreciation for God’s hle.yings which have so richly been bestow ed upo.i the people of Eastern North Carolina. The event is be ' ing looked forward to by the re ligious element ot Pitt county as the greatest day in the life of its people. A minister who will preach a sermon at the opening of the service has not yet been determin ed. Messrs. II. R. Easom and W. M. Ferrell, of Selma, spent Tuesday in the city on business. Mr. Paschal Parson and son, Larman, of Sampson county, spent I Tuesday in the city. ihe jury had the ease approxi mately twenty-one hours. Immed lately after the verdict' was ren dered, Cole was remanded to jai to await a hearing at Wilkesbore Tuesday at 1 o’clock when Cole must rhow why he should not b* committed to the criminal divis io-:i of the state hospital for the ir sane at Releigh. Cole made no con meat on his acciuittal. Rev. A. L ; Ormond, father of the slain ex service man, made no comment other than, “What isn’t right now I will be right some time.” It had been agreed that the court house bell be rung when a verdict had been returned, but Judge Fin Icy ordered the sheriff not to ring the hell in order to prevent any possible violence to the defendant Only thirty-one persons including the prisoner, heard the announce meat of the verdict. Not' a single woman was present. Cole shook hands with the members of th jury, and James H. Pou, senior counsel for the defense, thanked the jury on behalf of Mr. Cole and his family. Judge Finley thanked the jurors for their patriotic serv ice, and the sacrifice which they had made to serve as jurors. On the firs’ ballot taken after the case went to the jury at 13:412 on Saturday, the vote stood eight to four for an acquittal. “Three times during the after noon and night* the jury prayed. When the jurors went to bed at ten o’clock Saturday night the vote had changed 11 to 1 for acquittal. The jurors stated that one vote changed after each prayer. This morning after breakfast the jurors again prayed for guidance and the unanimous vote for acquittal was secured. “Locked in the jury room the twelve men agreed that the name of the man who held out against (Turn to page eight, please)