- i - ' b 8 ' i iiw4wil Three Cento the INDEPENDENCE IN ALL THINGS. Subscription Price, SLOP Per Year in Advance. VOL XIV. COLUMBUS, POLK COUNTY, N. C., THURSDAY, MARCH 18, t909. 10.45. iRIEF CULUNGS Of NORTH STATE NEWS lews of Interest Gleaned from All Sections of the State and Arranged For Busy Readers )ESTEUCTION OF TERRAPIN BUG the Pests Before They Multiply How to Do It. The following information issuing from the North Carolina Agricultural Experiment Station is of decided in terest and importance to those in the ie of its beneficience. The annual loss caused by terrapin bug? sucking the life out of collards, jcabbages, turnips and allied plants is difficult to estimate accurately, but certainly amounts to thousands of dollars in North Carolina. A large proportion of this loss may be pre vented if farmers, gardners and truckers will take the trouble to col lect or in some way destroy the bugs that first appear this spring. We have conclusive evidence that such work may be made a paying invest mrnt. We cannot, however, con 4nue to wait, as is usually done, until ne Dugs become so numerous as to ause very noticable injury in gar- tens or fields, but on the contrary they must be destroyed before they commence to lay eggs; otherwise the rnnual loss will remain the same or will increase. In November last this Station pub lished a press bulletin urging farm ers to immediately collect and kil the terrapin bugs, then in their fields to prevent their living in such num bers through the winter. Now seems advisable to urge the equally important work of destroying those individuals that escaped last fall, and which will soon commence to come ou from their winter hiding quarters. Only Adult Bugs Survive the Winter Eggs and young bugs do not live through the winter in this State hence it is only full-grown, strong adult males and females which sur vive by finding favorable hibernating quarters under rubbish around the gardens, under stones, in fence cor ners and similar places, where they are protected from the weather. As this has been a mild winter, they are liable to appear in greater numbers than usual in the spring. When Egg Laying Commences. "We could not consistently urge the task of destroying the overwintering bugs if they commenced to lay aggs upon their first appearance. Careful observation has shown that at least two weeks' time elapses after the bugs appear before the first eggs are deposited. During this period they are very actively feeding and mating, and the majority will congregate on the few old plants left from last season's wild mustard and turnips are favorite food plants, and collards, with their broad leaves, often harbor a large number of them. The prime object of this article is to emphasize the fact that the far mer or gardener who watches close ly for the first terrapin bugs to ap pear has about two weeks' time to kill them and still prevent the ma jority from laying eggs for the first generation. Rate of Increase. Have you ever considered the actual benefit that results from kill ing one female terrapin bug when she first appears in spring? Observe the following statements: The aver age number of eggs laid by each bug varies from eighty-four to ninety-six that is, seven or eight masses of twelve eggs each, deposited over a period of from four to eight weeks Ihere are three full generations each year. Suppose we kill a single terra pin hug and thus prevent ninety-six SEABOARD TRAINS COLLIDE young for the first generation, of which one-half might be females. If these forty-eight females reproduced at me same rate, the second genera tion would number 4,608 individuals. Counting only one-half as females, each capable of producing ninety-six young, the third generation would reach the enormous number of 221, 184, the progeny of one female in a single year. We can divide this num ber by one hundred and still have over 2,200 as the number of bugs pre vented by killing one individual when she first appears. : .i . Aunug tne warm summer mAVirlin at A a imnuie narasite in the form of a tinv black fly destroys a large percentage of the eggs, but as a general thing these parasites do not become abundant until the first generation is well de veloped ;so that the destruction of the bugs that produce the first gener ation is mete essential than the death of bugs later in the year. Another point in favor of early destruction! Are not the above facts sufficient to impress farmers with the imnnr- tance of spring destruction of terra pin bugs? How to Destroy Them. Hand Picking. This is probably the most valuable method of killing terrapin bugs at any season of the year. The work can be done rapidly by children. The bugs are inclined to hide on cold, windy or dark days; so that warm, sunny days should be selected for this task. We cannot expect to find all the bugs in one day, or even the majority of them. A good plan would be to collect two or three times a week, but be certain to com mence within a few days after the bugs first appear. They may be killed by crushing or by dropping in a little kerosene. Spray With Pure Kerosene. When the bugs are abundant on worthless plants they may be killed with pure kerosene. With the aid of a small spray pump a large number of bugs may be killed m a few hours. Arsenical poisons are not effective against this insect, which feeds by sucking the plant juice. Kerosene emulsion of 15 or 20 per cent concentration is used with suc cess for killing small or half-grown bugs, but this treatment will not kill many adults. By following the sug gestions made above, the young bugs will not become numerous, but when ever spraying does become necessary kerosene emulsion is the best remedy to use. R. I. SMITH. Entomologist. Colored Firemen the Only Victim oi Head-On Crash Between Freight and Passenger Trains at Colon. Sanford, Special. Seaboard pas senger train No. 32, southbound, and a northbound freight ran togethei head-on Saturday morning about 4:30 o'clock at Colon, a small station about 35 miles south of Raleigh. Hassey Lindsay, the colored fireman of the passenger train was killeM, and the engineer. Ed Robertson, of Raleigh, was badly hurt. The engineer, M. J. Eisenhart, of the freight, and his fireman jumped and neither was hurt. Cox, conductor on the passenger train, had a leg broken; Ernest Du val, baggage master, was hurt in the back and internally. W. R. Lamb, merchant of Hamlet, was badly bruised; John Newton, colored, of Hamlet, had a leg crushed; W. S. Rowe, express messenger, was badly cut; Sam Wicks, colored, of Char- otte, was badly cut. Others receiv ed minor injuries. lhe injured were taken to Raleigh for treatment. The engineer of the freight train misread the orders. He thought No. 33 was an hour and a half late, when it was No. 32 that was late. The trains were running at full speed and engines were practically demol ished. The baggage and express ears and first passenger coach of the pas senger train were splintered. HUB OF H NEWS JL: - Items of Interest Gathered By Wire and Cable GLEANINGS FROM DAY TO DAY T j live Items Covering Events of Mors or Less Intersil at Horn and Abroad. PAR If II "Darkest Africa" Will Welcome the President With Open Arms. 3y an act of Corgress on Feb. 1st he5' windows of President Harrison and President Cleveland may use the Capt. W. C.Hnails free of postage for the balance of their lives if their autographs be placed on the letters. WAR ON "BLACK HAND." Brutal Murder of Italian Detective Stirs New York Police Other Cit ies Asked to Aid in the Extermina tion of the Criminals. New York, Special. Relentless warfare will be waged against the "Black Hand" safeties by the police of this, and it is hoped, other eities as a result of the murder of Lieutenant Joseph Petrosini, the not ed detective of New York, in Paler mo, r riday night. xot years r"etro sini had been active in his work to bring to justice members of his own race who carried on blackmailing Mombasa. East Africa, By Cable. Mombasa is preparing already to wel- oome Theodore Roosevelt when he lands here the latter part of next month on his much-heralded African trip, and the coming of the former president of the United States has given a decided impetus to the inter est in the present hunting season, lhe governor of the protectorate, Lieut. Col. Sir James Sadler, is getting up entertainment for the distinguished The annex for the demented at the county home of Rockingham, N. C, visitor, but in spite of these arrange- was burned on Tuesday and two aged ments, the greeting to Mr. JKooseveit M. ' 1 I 1 l a 11. I ? 11 1 . A 1 . 1. win D more to tne great sportsman whose fame is well known to local inmates were burned to death. The State of Washington has local aption. Every incorporated town and every country district is a unit. When Mr. Fairbanks was Vice- President he had an elaborate ink stand made for his desk. On hearing complaints of extravagance he sent m his check for $200, which covered the cost and took it with him when he re tired. The federal grand jury in New Sork found a truef bill for slander against the New fork World in the Panama affair. -South Carolina makes it bad on the personality and man that drums fdr liquor orders. Diplomatic relations with Nicara gua were practically broken off Fri day by the State! Department, which ordered Secretary! of Legation Greg ory at Managua I te return home, leaving the legation in charge of the hunters than to the former president. East African sportsmen were, high ly gratified to learn that Mr. Roose had refused the offer of the authori ties to grant him a special hunting license that would have permitted him to kill game to an unlimited extent instead of confining himself to the two elephants, two rhinoceroses, two hippopotami, etc. Lions and leopards are classed as vermin and consequent ly no license to kill them is required The white population of Mombasa has heard much of Mr. Roosevelt's m a joking way frequent references to the "big stick" are being made The prospects for good hunting this season are considered excellent. Many settlers in the outlying districts, real izing the increasing interest in the prospects for good sport because of cmi wW will Via vp nn rtinlnmatie the coming of Mr. Roosevelt, are vol 7 I nnfflmhr eanninff in t nTArm orinn a hnn t UUbaillJ OL llUllli, 111 1111. VI 1UUV1V11 uuuuv capacity. Six persons were hanged in Louis iana for murder and one for criminal assault March 5th Mai. Hale, editor of the Fayette ville Observer, presented to the N. C to a dispatch received here a group of lions, numbering 32; seen oh the Nandi plateau a point about 50 miles north t I Florence. (The Hanoi piatean a the west side of the great Rift ley.) Among them were three males. Giraffes Seem Tbur families of giraffs haver seen at Makindu, 200 miles from here, on the line of the TJf railroad, and elephants have seen at Elburgon, 475 miles inland the railroad and along tne i river, not far to ,the nosth of. basa. R. J. Cunningham, the- noted lish big game hunter and nati who is to be guide te and manager of the Roosevelt party, la been here tor some time- e the reparations for the trip tat wilderness as well as the shooting-j collecting excursions along the Sue At ! 1 TV t . - S tne raiiroaa. xie is selecting ing native porters for the e3 He takes only experienced mew are known to be courageous possess great physical strength safari kit, in other words, thee equipment for the work in the is to come from London and wiH readiness when Mr. in arrives. s Jiivervthing points to a snc stay in British East Africa and da for Mr. Roosevelt; the native peaceful; game is plentiful and people of Mombasa are waiting the movements of game. According ily to extend him a welcome. operations in this country through wpeech and tho General a response At this writing Gen. Butler of South Carolina, fand Hon. Cyrus B. Watson of Norlfh Carolina, seem to be in the power of fatal sickness Mountain County Enterprises. The Watauga Turnpike Company has leased the convict force from Watauga county and the first work will be to construct turnpike roads from Edgemont to Linville, Blowing Rock and Sholes Mill. It is stated that a narrow gauge railroad is con templated from Edgemont to Boone. The idea is that the County of Watau ga and private citizens and other in terested parties will put up $100,000. If this road should be built, it will have a station very near Blowing Rock. The resources named are con sidered sufficient if they can be got ten together. It is expected to get 150 convicts from the State. Talk is also heard of extending the Lin ville River narrow gauge road which runs from Cranberry to Pinola to a junction point with the proposed Watauga road, either in the Carey Flat's neighborhood or at Edgemont. So far all these plans are simply being talked of but it is hoped that out of the talk something will come. threats of murder made in the name of the "Black Hand." It is believ ed here that his murder was the re sult of a plot that had its incepion in the United States and that the persons indirectly responsible for his death are still within the reach of the American police. If so, every ef fort will be made to bring about their arrest and conviction, and with this end in view Inspector McCafferty, head of the New York detective bu reau, sent telegrams Saturday to the authorities in the principal cities of the country asking that increased activity be exerted against all "Black Hand" suspects. Immediate orders were given to arrest at once all men in New York City who are believed to have connection with "Black Hand" operations. Petrosini 's murderer, who was a member of the "Black Hand," fired four shots from a revolver. Petro sini arrived in Sicily only a short time ago and was engaged in con ducting an investigation regarding Italian criminals. Inspector McCafferty said Satur day that he was anxious to know whether Petrosini had been robbed after being shot. He intimated that Petrosini had some papers valuable to the police here in running down Black Hand and other Italian offend ers. A cablegram from Palerma (Italy) says: The assassination of Lieuten ant Petrosino has stirred the police to unprecedented activity. Many ar rests already have been made, includ ing a number of Italians with crimi nal records, lately returned from the United States. i Chicago, Special. The Ctandard Oil Company, of Indiana, found not Supreme Court lakt week an oil paint- guilty of accepting rebates from the ing of Jno. De fRosett Toomer, who Chicago & Alton Railroad on ship made the speech? of welcome to Gen. ments cf oil from Whiting, Ind., to Lelfayette when i he visited rayette- East St. Louis, HI. The verdict was DECISION IN FAVOR OF THE OIL CMPANTT his assistant attempted to sbww advisabihty of the Illinois el tion to prove the existence of ville. Editor Hale also published the returned by a jury in the Federal Court otf instructions f Judge A.G. Anderson, who averred that he fol lowed the Circuit Court of Appeals' decision as to the verdict returned at the former trial of the same case and Preparations ire being pushed for on which verdict Judge Kennesaw the 12th conference for education m the South to be held in Atlanta, Ga., on April 14, 15 and 16. Telegrams rec&ived from Carinthia, Austria, report that a series of devas tating avealanches have occurred there and that numbers of houses have been swept away. It is already known that ten! deaths have resulted. Hirschel Hogg, a confessed member of the band of night-riders who mur dered Captain Quenten Rankin at Walnut Log in pctober, escaped from jail at Dresden .Sunday night It is said that there are 32,000 cases of land frauds for the Attorney General to see to as soon as practi cable. Mrs. Ruth Hryan Leavitt has won her divorce suit and is now free from her husband. Miss Jennie Reed and Joseph Muel Mountain Landis assessed a fine of $29,240,000. Judge Anderson's decision was not unexpected as he had Tuesday told the government prosecutors that the proof relied on in the first trial was incompetent and that it must be com plemented dr fail. It' was with some thing of an air of hopelessness that District Attorney Edwin W. Sims and rate of 18 cents, which was a point in the government's c Attorneys Threw Up Case. It was after Assistant District torney James H. Wilkerson had ghed for two hours and in the end mitted that the prosecution eould furnish the further proof deemed essary by the court for a conti of the case, that Judge Anderson nounced his decision. Mr. Wilfc said that the government could ceed no further and suggested sal of the case. Attorney Johnr Miller, chief counsel in the the oil company, immediately that there be an instructed verdict not guilty. The court so orderadv the juryt which had been during the arguments by the neys, was called in and charged. Victim of Curious Accident. Estonia, Special. Mrs. Eugene Hatchford, who lives three miles east f i;!stonia, was perhaps mortally oui)dt'd by a bullet from a stray cartridge, which she had swept into h re place. The cartridge explod ed he!(,re the woman completed her .jjfck, 1 lie bullet entering her right breast The case was said to be very serious" . Clayton Man a Suicide. Clayton, N. C, Special. David W. Avery committed suicide Monday morning about 10 o'clock. No special reasons can be given for his act. He was suffering some slight depression but no fears of such an outcome were entertained. He used his shotgun with which he went out ostensably to kill a bird for a sick father. Ashevi o hon last cm-red & Been Ma Homicides in Madison. ie. N. C, Special. News received here by telephone rshall, Madison county, of i'les occurring in that coun- One of the killings oc- Hnrvloxr viirVif ohnilf 7-QO Avi on Tt -narij. - Brooks, i Sllfj to Bailey's branch, when Tan shot and killed Zeb layer of Brooks using a e other homicide on the , Wednesdav. wheri W. , j , l"u'tWs Was bW nA IriMA frniVi , """" icu c ii n Great Floods in the South. A special from Montgomery, Ala., says the Alabama is 51 feet above normal and is slowly rising. It is expected to be 55 feet. No great casulties have yet occurred as fair warnings were given and residents from the lower districts moved to the higher parts. The Coasa at Rome is 31 1-2 feet, and 29 feet at Gads- Lden. The Tallapoosa is a raging tor rent. completed death roll of Sunday night's Arkansas tornado just com ing in, the tail end of the Arkansas storm which Tuesday night wey& across Alabama and south Georgia Wednesday set in motion a new death count for the latter two States. This count was ten, five negroes killed in Cuthbert, Ga., and three whites and two negroes drowned at Montgomery, ler were strollng in Baltimore a few Aja) the latter deaths a result of nights ago wher she was shot and kill- hjgh water following a record rain ed. Muener raised me cry mat a faU for the past 20 years, highwayman hjad held him up and Cumming. Ga.. Tuesdav got into gotten his valufables and on approach- tegraphic communication with the mg ner received .a slap in tne race, outside world and sent word that a whereupon the robber shot her. Muel- tornado ploughed through miles of ler now says he himself shot her ac- timber, farm yards and valuable cidentally. property in that vicinity besides de- Bib Springs, Texas, had a fire I Proving half a dozen farmers' homes Wednesday that destroyed a number an seriously injuring a young man GEORGIA TOWNS SUFFER FROM STORMS Atlanta. Ga.. Special. With the cajled ii Urn' in Alex- Moonshine Still Destroyed ander County. Statesville, Special Revenue Of ficer Davis, of Statesville, was in Alexander county last week looking after the moonshiners of the Brushy Mountains and during the latter part of the week he and Sheriff Adams, of J -t t i J 1 Alexander, found and aestroyeu im illicit distillery near the corner of the three counties IredeH, Alexan der and Wilkes. The 65-gallon still and other fixtures showed that the still had been in operation only a short time before the officers arrival, but no one was on the premises when South Pines Chosen. Fitzgerald, Ga., Special The Blue and Gray Association at its annual encampment here Saturday selected Southern Pines, N. C, for the next reunion. The following officers were elected: Commander in chief, Major B. F. Dixon, North Carolina; senior vice commander, Capt. William M. McCormick, Georgia; junior vice commander, Capt. Joseph Price, Florida; chaplian in chief, Rev. W. S. Harden, Georgia; judge advocate general. O. S. Deming, Warren, O.; quartermaster general, C. H. Worth, of business blocks entailing a loss of $100,000. Lewis Nixon, the shipbuilder, pre dicts a great future for aeroplanes and airships. Michael Donnelly, judge of Third District, Ohio Circuit Court, is charg ed with imbezzlement of funds be longing to the Ohio German Insur ance Co. to the extent of probably $300,000. The company has failed. A tornado struck Brinkley, Ark., lasts-Sunday night and killed 35 per sons, demolishing most of the houses and leaving few fit for habitation. Charles M. Sclnvab said the Bethle hem Steel Company would not reduce wages. The Standard Oil Company won its suit that releived it from paying the $29,240,000 fine imposed by Judge Landis. The United States District Court at Kanses City declared the 2-cent rail road rate in Missouri confiscatory and illegal. Dr. W. D. Crum has resigned as collector of the port at Charleston and it is understood that Mr. Edwin W. Durant will become his successor. The technical high school of Mu nich has conferred the honorary de gree of doctor of technical sciences on Wilbur and Orville Wright, the Am erican aeroplanists. and a young woman. Cuthbert Hard Hit. Cuthbert, Ga., reported the damage at $500,000 and Mayor D. A. Mc Pherson issued an appeal for aid. Nearly half of the main b block of Cuthbert was demo Every store on Depot street blown down, filling the street piles of brick and timbers less persons wandered through town searching for household sioos which the wind had scat for blocks in all directions. The whites dead at Montgomery are: Wiliam Dillard, 20 years old. Thomas Harper, of Atlanta, years. Unidentified white mam- Floods at Montgomery, Ala. Montgomery, Ala., Special. Heawy and continuous rams wrought damage here and the situation made serious Tuesday. home in north Montgomery abandoned and inmates carried places of safety in boats. The Grand Theatre, a handsne new structure, was flooded and thss damage will be heavy. Several SHIPS COLLIDE ON MASSACHUSETTS COAST Chatham, Mass., Special. The steamer Horatio Hall of the Maine Steamship Company, from Portland, New York and H. F. Dimock, of the Metropolitan line, from New York to Boston, collided at 7 o'clock Wednes day morning and the Hall went to the bottom in half an hour and the Dimock ran ashore six hours later Cape Cod beach, where the passea and crew of the Hall were unharmed. Wireless calls were, tat but the position of the ships was ot well stated and in the dense fog as sistance failed to reach the point f diaster. MUST NOT PLACE ON THE "UNFAIR LIST Washington, Special. The Ameri can Federation of Labor hereafter may freely refer to the boycott against the Buck Stove and Range company of St. Louis, except by in clusion in the "We don't patronize list." This in substance of wide spread importance to the labor world, to manufactures and to newspapers generally, is the sweeping decision handed down Thursday by the court of appeals of the District of Colum bia inthe noted injunction case of the Bucks Stove and Range company against the American Federation of Labor, which has been before the courts cf the District of Columbia it various phases for months. In a re cent decision by Justice Gould a tine? supreme court of the District tfce American Federation of Labor and ' the officers, Messrs. Gompers, Mitcls cll, Morrison , and others rere en joined from conspiring to boycott Bucks Stove and Range company from printing or publishing or dtt- tributing, through the mails or other- -wise, any copy of The Federationist or other publication refering to te complainant, its business or prodnetf in the "We don t patronize" "Unfair list." 1 I 3 y the officers arrived. Texas.