SMITHFIELD NEEDS: Daily Meat anil Milk Inspection Bigger Pay Roll. A Modem Hotel Chamber of Commerce JOHNSTON COUNTY NEEDS: County Farm Agent Better Roads Feeding Highways Equal Opportunity for Every School Child Better Marketing System More Food and Feed Crops $2.00 PER YEAR Man His Deputy Sheriff With Ax John O. Ellington In Ho pital and Perdo Lucr Is In Jail Deputy Sheriff John O. Kllinf ton is in the Johnston County Ho: pitiil and Perdo Lucas, of non lioseboro, Sampson county, is i Hie Johnston county jail as the r. suit of an encounter which too tilace Saturday morning near th Frost place near this city. Early Saturday morning, Jame W. Hell, a colored man living nea tlie Frost place, had his suspic ions aroused concerning stranger a ho had parked nearby with tw '■ales of cotton on a Kurd truck He reported his suspicions, am Deputy Sheriff Ellington accom panied by Bernice Jones went t the scene to make investigation, Dpon arrival, the officer announc ed his purpose, and Lucas pro eroded to run. Lucas picked in an axe, and when pursued by th. officers, threw it at them. Th. axe failed to hit Mr. Eilingtoi on the head hut went over hi. head, striking him on the hip The force of the blow causei temporary paralysis, and he wa unable to walk. He was taken t< the Johnston County Hospital where he is now improving am expects to he out in a few days When Lucas threw the axe, Ih-r nice Jones and a colored man who was also along, made for him and arrested him. He was brought to Smithfiri.i and placed in jail. The cotton which Lucas had on the truck is thought to belong lo F. A. Smith of Sampson county. BISHOP’S CRUSADE NOW IN PROGRESS Special Music To Ik* Rendered By Raleigh Choir One Night This Week. Rev. Win. A. Lillycrop, of Ham let, who is assisting the rector, Rev. Sidney Matthew, in a Bishop’s Crusade at the Episcopal church here, arrived in the city yester day and preached his first sermon last nig-ht. Plans have been per fected for instructive and enjoy able services, which will be held every night at 7:30. The choir from St. Saviour’s church. Raleigh, will be present one night this week to give spec ial music. Definite announcement in regard to this will be made at an early date. The public is cordially invited to all services. FIRE AT PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH SUNDAY NIGHT Sunday evening* just before time for church services the fire siren sounded the alarm and the fire de partment was called into service. It was soon found that a small blaze was burning on top of the Presbyterian church near the stove flue. The fire had evidently just started and it was extinguish ed with one dash of water from the hose. The Christian Endeavor Society was holding its regular Sunday night service, and the young folks did not know about the fire until others began to arrive on the scene. Church services were held as usual. Chicken and Oyster Supper, Kenly The senior class of Kenly high school will serve a chicken and oyster supper in the vacant store next to Kirby’s drug store Friday night. The town orchestru wil furnish music during the evening*. Meet your friends there. The proceeds will go for class expense A Tantalizer There a re exactly enough let ters In th« line below to apell the name of a person In Smith field, and if the right one le cipheri his name and will pre sent It to The Herald offlee, we will present him with a com limentary ticket to the Vic tory Theatre. Ticket must be called for before the following issue. Trent Hunter recognized his name last issue. rmlolodwyaadon Cotton Farmers e Must Cut Costs ■' President Georgia State s Agricultural Colleges Urges Maximum Yield From Acreage Planted ' | XKW YORK, Mar. 20.—Dr. An .urcw M. Soule, President of the 11 I Georgia State College of Agricul •Mure, sees 1!I27 as a crucial year ‘jl'"r cotton glowers of the south eastern states. In spite of the un usually heavy production of last s | season and the large carry-over ■ I surplus, he observes that “the in ■ Mention to plant cotton does not ■ I seem to have been greatly mini •i With a repetition of last year’s 11 situation in prospect, Dr. Soule j points out that it becomes imper ' j ative for southeastern cotton far mers to use the best agricultural methods if they are to raise cot ) t*>n at a profit. They must cut down the cost of each pound of lint by getting the maximum yield j from the acreage planted to eot 1 ton. “Approximately a hale to the acre” is the goal he sets. | The cotton situation as it ap plies to states east of the Miss I it sippi was analyzed recently by the head of the Georgia Agcicul fural College in a radio talk over !Station U'SH, Atlanta. His rec ommendations to cotton farmers include: , rt'-iri'iinn umi pianung: or only I tlio.se varieties of cotton which will staple an inch or better. COM MTMTV F*RODUCTION. | “Whenever five to ten thous and or more bales of cotton of! | uniform type and strain can be I trrown in a given locality, its rep-1 1 nt at ion as a producing center will ibe quickly enhanced and certain ly the output can be sold to much j better advantage on that account," Hr. Soule said. The use of only the best soils and exercise of the greatest care I in their production. Wise and efficient use of com mercial plant food. Hr. Soule has made a careful j study of the results obtained by practical farmers in the “More} iPnd Better Cotton Per Acre Con-1 itest" held in Georgia last year. | These show unmistakably that j I farmers who did not stint their: |land on plant food made the big- , gest net profit. In fact, as the ex penditure for fertilizer per acre in creased, the profits increased in al most direct ratio. Contestants! were classified by Dr. Soule, ac- I jcording to rate of production and! the results are shown in th0 fol-! j lowing- tabulated form: i Yield Lint rer. Cost >et Prof. Per acre Per acre Per Acre Pounds ,200-300 .$4.89 $8.00 800-400 .$0.07 $12.00 400-500 _$0.98 $20.00 500-000 ..$7.50 $30.00 000-700 _$7.41 $40.00 700-800 .$8.12 $50.00 800 and more .$8.12 $70.00 The figures show, Dr. Soule com ments, “that fertilizers bear a dfe ! initc and fundamental relationship to the outturn of cotton.” i Several hundred farmers enter ed the contest but only 83 com jpleted their record books in an ■acceptable manner. Their work was 1 [under the closest surveilance. I “Forty-four of the contestants 'or approximately 50 per cent used inorganic nitrogen as a side- dress ing,” Dr. Soule commented in the jcourse of his radio talk. Forty [two of those reporting used ni jtrate of soda for this purpose and two sulphate of ammonia. Eleven used stable manure in association I with the high-grade fertilizers mentioned above. Practically all of the contestants ngr. ed that the use of quickly available carriers of ni trogen as side-applications to cot ton accounted in large measure for the heavy yield of quality-lint obtained. These findings are quite ill harmony with the recommen dations of our Southern Experi ment Stations and research work ers. It is gratifying*, therefore, to find them so well substantiated by tlie practical farmer.” Two Nuts, ^ Speed Demon: Well, Kid, I hit fill in the old boiler last night. His Weemin: Goodness, were any of them hurt badly? Electric Chairs Waits? |< Above: Mrs. Ruth Snyder. Be low: Henry Judd Gray, both con fessed murderers, within 48 hours after body of former’s husband was found with head crushed in— the most brutal murder of the yeai In Now York. Illicit love, whiskey and a $'25,000 life insuiniice is th* sordid tale. Gray i* "named and father (if child, 7. Mrs. .Snyder ban a daughter, 0. A woman h:*s not been electrocuted in New York foi Johnstonian Hurt On Western Ranch Walter Moore Noble Re ceives Cut Over Eye While Roping Wild Steer I)r. U. J. Noble, of Slema, has ! leceived a letter from his son, Mr. I Walter Moore Noble, who lives in: California, in which he tells of an injury he received in an accident while trying to rope a wild steer recently. An account of the acci dent was published in the Brar Mey (Calif.) News, and Mr. No lle wrote to assure his father that he was not seriously hurt. lie I wrote in part as follows: “I was not seriously hurt. It , was nothing but a cut over my right eye. We had a wild steer that had lost one eye and we | wanted to separate him from the j herd. We got him out of the herd ! and I went after him to rope him. J When he saw me coming he jump-, pd a fence and then three more fences and did not stop until he was a mile and a half away. I was right after him, and in a wet field at that. While I got near him he started off again. I ran up end threw the rope. Just as I threw the rope my horse stumbled but got on her fete and the steer made a lunge at her. When the ' horse stumbled one of her front shoes came loose and when the steer came at her the shoe threw ; her. By the time she got on her four feet the steer was nearly on j us. so I went off on the opposite | bide, stuck my feet in the mud and fell flat on my back. The steer i hooked the horse on the left front j leg and raised her clear of the j ground, and her front hoof, the j one she had lost the shoe from, hit me over the light eye. When the horse got on all four feet she doubled up like a jack knife and let the steer have both hind feet, and he left. “The other fellow that was with nte came up and took my rope and caught the steer and tied him to a tree. Then we went to the house and everyone was very much excited except myself. It was nearly dinner time and they want ed me to miss my dinner and go1 in town and have it sewed up. Dorothy was almost ready to di vorce me when I wanted to eat first. She said I always thought of my stomach first. It was quite a cut hut has not’ bothered me a bit.” ORTHOPAEDIC CLINIC TO HE HELD AT WILSON The orthopaedic clinic held each month in the offices of the county health department in the court house and sponsored by the Lion's club of Wilson will meet again on Friday of next week, April 1. Bad Train Wreck Below Four Oaks * Derailment of Twenty Freight Cars Blocks Traffic For 15 Hours; Another Slight Wreck Yesterday One of the worst freight train wrecks ever to occur in this sec tion took place Sunday morning about three o’clock when twenty cars of a ninety-two car north bound train were derailed on the main line of the Atlantic Coast Line about three miles below Four Oaks. No one was injured in the wreck, but both tracks were torn up for a considerable distance, and wreckage lined the tracks, block ing traffic for something like fif teen hours. It was 5:30 Sunday afternoon before trains were able to pass this way. Passenger trains detoured by way of Wilmington. Two wrecking crews worked con tinuously all day to clear the wreckage. The derailed cars were loaded with crossties, lumber and meats. One car of meat was said to have been turned upside down, but the meat was intact. Many of the cars were smashed beyond repair. A broken wheel is said to have caus ed the derailment. Quito a number in this section visited the wreck during Sunday. Yesterday morning another slight wreck took place within several hundred yards of the scene of Sunday’s wreck. One car of a freight train was derailed. It took only a short time, how over, to get tlie car back on the track, and little delay was caused in the schedule of the trains. SELMA TIES LOCALS IN OPENING GAME FRIDAY Selma tied the locals in the first ?ame of the season Friday after-, noon on the local diamond. The locals gained a lead in the first in ning and kept it until the eighth kvhen Selma overcame a one-point i ead and forged ahead. Smithfield • scored two in its half of the eighth, nutting the score 8 to 7 in Smith nold’s favor. Selma scored in the ninth and put the score at an 8 :o 8 deadlock. The features were the hitting of Stephenson and Uzzle, each get ing three. The latter got a triple nnd two doubles out of three trips it the bat. R. Parrish stretched i two-bagger into a home run due ■ Morgan pitched good ball until I :he eighth. Uzzle relieved him inj :he ninth. Woodard suffered a hurt ing-er. This may keep him out of j :he game for the rest of the sea-j >on. Score by innings: Selma_ 00200 3 02 1 Smithfield_ 2 03 0 0 1 0 2 0| His Opinion. Landlady: How do you like your loom as a whole?” Lodger: “As a hole it’s all right j 3Ut as a room it’s rotten!” | Let’s Go. Joan: “A kiss speaks volumes, ; they say.” Jack: “Don’t you think it would be fun to start a library?” 1 1 1 ! i \) What was your average last week in The Herald's Test-o’-lTen contest? Can you better it this week with this new set of ten in teresting* questions? This information testing is fast becoming the liveliest and most popular of pastimes in Smithfield. It’s in the air, and anybody who isn’t following this feature is missing out on a lot of good fun. Start now, and enjoy the thrill of matching your knowl edge against the knowledge of others. TEST O' TEN QUESTIONS 1. xlow many oceans are there.' What are they? 2. Who was the first woman to swim the English Channel? 2. Who said, ‘‘To the victors be long the spoils?” 4. What is the Latin phrase for “Whither Goest Thou?” 5. Who is the president of the United States Steel Corporation? Who is Chairman? C. Who wrote “So Big?” In what year? 7. Who is Secretary of the Treasury of thi? United States, and where is his home? 8. What famous art gallery is in Washington, D. C.? 9. What colleges are referred to as “The Big Three’' in f>otball? 10. Who was the composer of “The Unfinished Symphony?” .Answers found on page six Recalls Fight At Bentonville W. H. Honeycutt, Now 80 Years Old, Was Mem ber of Junior Reserves and Was In the Battle of Bentonville -Mr. \\ . H. Honeycutt, of Al nemurle, Stanley county, who has spending the past few months here with his son, Mr. J. T. Honeycutt, superintendent of tlu‘ cotton mill, was in the Herald otlice Saturday to make inquiry concerning an article about the battle of Bentonville published in a recent issue of this paper. Mr. Honeycutt, it developed, was in the battle of Bentonville, being a member of the Junior Reserves. He joined the army at 17 and was in the last year of the war com ing through without a scratch. He is now in his eighty-first year, and enjoys good health. Mr. Honeycutt expressed sur prise that the engagement at Ben tonville has never been given the prominence in history that the conflict warranted, and is interest 'd in the movement now on foot ■° a(hi an additional marker to 1 he battlefield. Mr. Honeycutt has been to the »attlo field since he came to John son county, but finds some of the .attleground unfamiliar. He stat 'd that his company when leav ng after the battle, crossed some reek, and while there are several learby creeks, none of them seem 'd to be the one he crossed. Ilis recollections of the war eem to be quite clear He told of ome of the every-day incidents rhich occurred, such as foraging or “eats,” or discussing with his omrades the possibility of being :illed by an enemy shot. A com •anion in battle whom he loved | eas shot down by his side, on one I occasion, and he says he still ! eels the terror of that incidnet. ] _ IOHXSTOX COl’XTV LOOP OROANIZATIOX STARTED | SELMA, Mar. 26.—A baseball eag-ne. composed of Johnston ! ounty communities, is likely to •e organized in the near future, ’ans of the county are anxious for uch a circuit, and Princeton, Pine .level, Smithfield, Four Oaks, Ben on, Clayton and Kenly are among he Johnston county communities ehich have been asked to consid r the proposal. Wendell, in Wake ounty. likewise has been inter red in the idea. Indications are that the circuit [ vill be a strictly amateur affair, is the four clubs thus far signi ying willingness to participate xpressed a wish that the playing ists be confined to residents of the j arious communities, who would eeeive no salaries. A meeting to organize the eir uit is to be held here next week, •ut in the interim the eommuni- j ies will be given further time to inswer questionnaires mailed them j oneerning plans for the league. | Satisfied. Visitor: “Your son is rather mall for his age, isn’t he?” Fond Mother: “Oh, no. Most of he boys of his age are over grown. I think.” Discoverers oi‘ Nevada’s New Gold Field] Adventure and Discovery , . UPPfr ,Fra"k . Horton. Jr-, (center) and U-onarJ Traynor (right), the.two Ne\ada youths who discovered Nevada’s newest gold field, now named Weepah, their mine assaying $7fc>,000 t. the ton In the upper picture with the boys is Frank Horton, Sr., an old-time miner, who is developing the mine for the youngsters. Lower- Crowd around boys mine as thirteen sacks of gold, valued at $13,000 wer# being brought out. M. E. Pastor Talks On Ways Of Death Rev. D. E. Earnhardt Dis cusses Capital Punish ment, Suicide, and Death Ry the Hand of God “Blessed are the merciful for -Key shall obtain n^c-rcy," could not be said in connection with cap ital punishment, declared Rev. D. h- Earnhardt, pastor of the Meth odist church here, in a sermon de livered Sunday evening upon the subject: "Death by order of the state, by suicide, and by the hand of Go.]." From twenty-one crimes punishable by death in Old Testa ment times, the number has now been reduced to four in North Carolina. The minister takes this as a sign that the world is ap proaching tilt- Christian ideal. He showed from Old Testament Scrip - '--re t aat capital punishment was sanctioned before Christ gave to :he world a new rule of living— the New Testament ideal is in keeping with the beatitude regard ing mercy. The old law required an eye for an eye, but the new commandment is to love our en emies. After making it clear that cap ital punishment is not in accord with the Christian ideal, Mr. Earn hardt was equally positive in his idea about suicide. He cited in stances of suicide in the Scrip cures, showing that in each case of the deliberate taking of one's own life, the persons had not lived good lives. "A Christian,’’ he said, "will not commit suicide un less demented." "What kind of death, then, do we want?" asked the preacher, and answered it in a single sen tence—the death of a Christian who comes >o the end of his days having lived an unselfish life. A large* congregation was pres ent to hear the sermon, the topic of which had been announced pre NO JUNIOR MEETING TO BE HELD TONIGHT On account of the Oxford Or phanage singing class at the lo cal school auditorium tonight -here will be no regular meeting of Smithfield Council, Jr. O. U A: M. Members will please tak< notice and be present the follow mg Thursday night when severa candidates will be initiated. Ain’t It the Truth? Naturalist: Something should bi done to conserve our wild life. Notaone: I think the college have had too much attention al ready. Legislative Act Amends Charter Taxpayers Who Wait Un til After April 1st To Pay Taxes In Smithfield Penalized 5 Percent Two measures touching Smith field particularly were introduced in the recent legislature, one of them being tabled and the other becoming* effective. The measure which met defeat was the bill in tended to increase the incorporate limits of the town. The bill amend ing the charter of the town of Smithfield in regard to discount ing and penalizing taxes according to when they are paid, had smooth sailing and is now in full force. The provisions of this act are as follows: “The General Assembly of North Carolina do enact: “That Section 28 of the Char ter of said town as contained in Chapter 219 of the Private Laws of North Carolina Session 1911 be amended as follows, provided, how ever, that the Board of Commis sioners of the town of Smithfield shall have the right to give dis count of one per cent on all taxes paid on or before December 1st, of each and every year, and a dis count of two per cent on all taxes paid on or before November 1st; provided further, that said Board of Commissioners shall have the right to pass an ordinance impos ing'. a penalty of two per cent on all taxes not paid on or before February 1st, and a penalty of four per cent on all taxes not paid on or before March 1st, and a penalty of five per cent on all taxes not paid on or before April 1st, and a penalty of six per cent on all taxes not paid on or be fore May 1st. “This amendment shall be in full force and effect from and after its ratification.” THIRTEEN JOIN FREE WILL BAPTIST CHURCH The revival which has been ir !progress at the Freewill Baptist church for the past two weeks closed Sunday night after a sue cessful meeting. Eight were add 1 ed to the membership by baptisn and five by letter. The baptisma service was held at Neuse rive j Sunday afternoon. j The meeting has been character ,ized by splendid sermons and goo attendance. The pastor, Rev. H. h Faircloth, was assisted by Rev. £ ‘ ,H. Styron, of Pine Level, who di the preaching. The singing wu ; led by Mr. C. J. Thomas, and spec ■, »al music was rendered by th tchoir at each service. Poultry Expert j At Next Meeting j C. F. Parrish, of State Col ; lege, To Discuss Feed ing and Care of Baby Chicks; Other Phases of Home Demonstration ! W ork By MINNIE LEE GARRISON (County Home Agent) The* meeting of the Johnston County Poultry Association next Friday will be featured by a talk by C. F. Parrish, assistant in Poul try Extension, State College, Ral eigh. Mr. Parrish will discuss the feeding, care, and management of baby chicks. He will also have some thing to say concerning the build ing of proper chicken houses, and the management of a farm flock in general. The association meets Friday at 1 noon with Mrs. D. J. Wellons near Holt Lake. Those attending are I asked to carry lunch and the bus iness meeting will be held immed iately after lunch. The members 'are requested to take their egg records for the month, and those j who were not present at the last meeting may take their February j records. The poultry work is a very prom ising feature of the county home demonstration work at present, | but is by no means all in which there is interest. Other phases of ! club work are making a splendid showing, and the county agent ap preciates the cooperation that makes the work go forward. GLENDALE SCHOOL JOINS IN BOOSTING COTTON • A - number of* county schools are expected to fall in line with the movement now spread ing in North Carolina fostering the use of more cotton goods. Glendale sets the pace by announc ing that the graduates will have a “cotton commencement,” the girls having agreed to wear pretty J cotton voile dresses. Nothing is more girlish or attractive than graduation gowns of this mater ial, and other schools would do a good thing, from the standpoint of appearance, economy and the patriotic duty of boosting a basic product, to fallow suit. FARMERS ROOM IS BEING RENOVATED The farmers room in the court | house is now being fitted up for demonstration purposes to be used for the meetings of the county council. The room will still be available for other meetings. .The room has been entirely ren ovated, the walls having been tinted a soft gray, and the floor painted a darker gray. Forty new chairs have been purchased and delivered to the room. The next job is to install a sink, and the • members of the county council will be ready to set up their new oil stove, tables and cabinets. Nothing the county commis sioners have done will have such an appeal to the women and girls . engaged in home demonstration 4 work in Johnston county as the fitting up of this room for their special use. SEVERAL CLUBS FITTING UP ROOMS FOR MEETING The idea of a demonstration place is growing in the several communities where there are or ganized clubs. Recently the Spi lona club has furnished a room at Please turn to page three AUNT ROXIE SAYS— Bj Me— • “Dry summer i z foliar fell by Wt£> congressmen." ^Jj Si