Hertford County Herald 1 ? HERTFORD COUNTY'S ONLY NEWSPAPER A PAPER WORTH WHILE BEST ADVERTISING MEDIUM IN EASTERN CAROUNA Volume XIIL Eight Pages Ahoskie, North Carolina, Friday, August 11, 1922 One Section No. 14 in ? - ? ? > Chamber of Commerce | to be Organized Here f f I Energetic Efforts To Be Made* To Organize A Live Civic Organization ? Meeting of Citizens Called For Friday Night, August 11th The citizens of Ahoskie are called to meet in the director's room of the Farmers-AtlafttuTBank Building, Fri day night st 8:00 o'elock, sharp, for the purpose of organising a real live Chamber of Commerce for Ahoskie. All business men are urged te be . present as well ss all public spirited citizens generally. There is every reason that we should be organized and pull together to accomplish what we should have in our town. So it to the interest of every citizen of Ahoskie to attend this meeting, and offer any suggestions that he feels might be of benefit to the people and town. It is a shame the way in which things are drifting along at the present time; and the remedy for this state of affairs is for us to get together and have some unity of purpose and in telligent action. Let's all get together and do something. This Chamber of Commerce should not be organized and then permitted to die in a few weeks or months, but it should be or ganized on a solid foundation. 'Don't let a dollar keep you away from this meeting. Come prepared to pay a dollar if necessary, and to give your whole hearted support to an organization that deserves the sup port of all good citizens. ffl O SAY PRICES HIGHEST IN HISTORY OF S. C. (Prom Newi and Obaerver) Wilson, N. C. Aug. 8.?W. T. Clark, well-known Wilson tobacconist, and ?W. J. King, president of the 'local chamber of Commerce, have returned from South Carolina, where they have witnessed salsa of leaf tobacco at "auction" on'several markets during the first week of the 1922 season. Their impressions are set forth in the following statement: "The markets in South Carolina opened on August 1 with large sales at all points. Over five million pounds were sold on the loose leaf floors by auction at an average exceeding 20 cents per lb., which was the highest average ever known in South Carolina in the opening week. All the markets are crowded and towns like Lake City and Mullins are running double sales and then unable to get through during the day. In such towns as Lamar, Manning, Johnaonville, they have built warehouses overnight, us ing garages, livery stables and cotton platforms to sell tobacco at auction. Many of the markets where they aris selling the better grades are averag ing over 25 cents per pound. All the tobacco now being sold in South Caro -lina is now being graded and tied as it is in North Carolina, this proves to the farmer that it is the proper way for him to handle his crop. "It is reported also that the Co operating Marketing Association will begin receiving tobacco on Monday. 1 o BIRTHDAY CELEBRATION Mr*. R. S. Baker was honored Fri day at a surprise party {riven by her children in celebration of her seventy third birthday anniversary at her home on Church street. The home Was prettily decorated in a color scheme of pink and white and in the dining room a large cake with seven ty-three pink candles formed the tab?* ' center-piece. . * Those present were Mr. and Mrs. L. T. Sumner, Dr. and Mrs. Paul Mit chell, Mrs. J. N. Downs, Mrs. A. S. Landergraff of Ooean View, Miss Nel lie Baker, Mrs. W. A. Hayes of Nor folk, Miss Mary Sumner, Miss Emily Sbmner, Mis* Louise Mitchell and Master Robert Sumner. 9?: NOT A PROPOSAL Doctor?You are slightly morbid, my dear lady: You should look about you and marry again. Widow?Oh, doctor, is?is this a proposal? Doctor?Allow me to remind you, madam, that a doctor prescribes med-' ielns?but he doesn't take it. I HOME DEMONSTRATION BY MISS MYBTLE SWINDELL County Home Demonstrator Schedule for the month of August. August 7th 1 Winton August 8th Holly Springs August 9th Harrellsville August 10th? Murfreesboro August 11th St. Johns August 15th Earleys August 16th Christian Horbor August 17th ..Colerain August 18th Holly Springs August 21st Winton August 22nd.. Woodrow August 28rd ....Christian Horbor August 25th Como August 28th Horton's School August 80th Mapleton August 81st Woodrow FOE DOUGHNUTS 1 cake Fleishmann's yeast 1 1-4 cups milk, scalded and cooled 1 tablespoonful sugar. 4 1-2 cups sifted flour 1-2 cup sugar 3 tablespoonfula butter 1-4 teaspoonful mace 1 egg 1-4 teaspoonful salt Dissolve yeast and one -tablespoon ful sugar in lukewarm liquid, add one and one-half cups of flour and beat well. Cover and set aside to rise in warm place for about one hour or until bubbles burst on top. Add to the butter and sugar creamed, mace, egg well beaten, the remainder of the flour to make a mod erately soft dough, and the salt. Knead lightly. Place in well-greased bpwl. Cover and allow to rise again in warm place for about one and one half-hours. When light, turn on flour ed board, roll to about one-third inch in thickness. Cut with small dough nut cutter, cover and let rise again, in wajrm place until light?about forty-five minutes. Drop into deep, hot fat with side uppermost which has been next to board. When a film of smoke begins to rise from fat, it will be found a good temperature to fry the dough nuts ; or when the fat is hot enough to brown a one-inch square of bread in 40 seconds the temperature is correct. Fry to a golden brown, drain and roll at once in powdered sugar. FOR SALLY LUNN One cake Fleishmann's yeast . 2 caps milk, scalded and cooled 1 tabletpoonful sugar 4 tablespoon fuls butter, melted 4 cups sifted flour 2 eggs 1 teas poonful salt Sally Lunn is one of the most popu lar of the fancy breads, makes a de licious acoomiianiment to tea. ' It should be broken apart with a fork; never cut with a knife. Serve hot. Dissolve yeast and sugar in luke warm milk. Add butter, then flour, eggs well beaten, and the salt. Beat until perfectly smooth. Pour into prell-greased pans. Cover and let rise in a warm place, free from draught, until double in bulk?about one and one-half hours. Sprinkle one tableepoonful granu lated sugar over top and bake twenty minutes in hot oven. This recipe will All two medium cake pana. 0 ? ROAD MEETING An enthusiastic road meeting; was was held in Aulander, Saturday, Aug held in Aulander Saturday, August 5th. A large audience was addressed by Judge F. D. Winston of Windsor, and Mr. W. A. Hart of the State High way Commission. The completion of the bridge over the Roanoke river at Willlam'ston gave stimulus to the meeting. Two branches of the Bank head National Highway and the high way from the Williamston bridge and the one from Edward's Ferry bridge join each other in the center of the town. CONGER NAMED LOCAL FUEL DISTRIBUTOR Mr. E. C. Conger of the Crystal Ice A Coal Co. of Elisabeth City and the Ahoekie Coal and Ice Co.. has been named fuel distributor for Pasquo tank, Perquimans. Camden, Currituck, Gates, Hertford, Bertie, Dare, Tyrrell, Washington and Chowan counties. CHILDREN'S HOME SOCIETY OF N. C? INC. Report for the month ending July 31st, 1922. To Our Friends: We present to you our report of the activities of this Society for the month of July, 1922. You will note by careful analysis of these statistics that we have handled an increased number of children dur ing the current month, over June, and also that we have, after careful in 1 vestigation, cancelled a large number of homes offered us for children. ^ur official personal supervisor has been out the entire month and visited 53 foster homes. On July 30th there was held a apecial meeting of the Building Com mittee and the Executive Committee and it was unanimously agreed that we take immediate steps to draw plans and start building operations on the Sunshine Memorial Cottage. This is the baby unit that we have looked forward to for so long a time and which has been greatly needed to I properly protect our work. Our matron, Miss Holt, has endured great inconvenience in meeting the demands I on her for the caring of babies and it I is certainly due her that we push to an early completion this valuable ad dition to our equipment. Reports show that we have in hand for the I purpose of financing this project 115,000.00 in cash, and building brick I representing $5,000.00. The struc ture will cost complete about $30,000. I This means that our friends must rally I to the project to the extent of $20, 000 for the building to be made avail able this year. We hope every mem ber of the Board will consider that he or she is a personal representative of I the 8ociety in securing financial gifts to this Sunshine Building Fund. W e I hope subscriptions will begin to como I in at once as it is the desire of the Building Committee to proceed at oar lliest possible date with the erection 1 of this building. We are also perfecting arrange ments to employ a competent teacher this fall and this will greatly add to the efficiency of our services rendered the children as they pass through the Receiving home. We thank every friend of this I enterprise for the splendid manner in vjhich they have supported the management and wish to state that I we are giving 100 per cent of I our time to our work and are greatly encouraged over the prospects for the balance of this year. From present indications we will relive the I distress of not less than 250 children duriiig the year 1922. This will be a great achievement and we thank our I friends for making it possible. . The steady progress of this work is mere I ly a matter of ample operating funds. i i ? STATISTICS FOR THE MONTH New cases reported.. 34 Adjustments made by superin tendents of Public Welfare? 4 Applications withdrawn 4 New homes offered for children. 33 Homes accepted 33 Homes cancelled 20 Homes under investigation 302 Homes withdrawn by applicant.. 160 Children received 2 Children placed 13 Homes supervised by Supertend eiits of Public Welfare 22 Reports received from foster par- 71 ents R. ? 71 Homes supervised by personal rep resentatives of the Society 53 Legal adoptions executed ? 15 Children in Boarding homes 4 Children in hospital 1 Children in Receiving Home July 31st, 1922 24 Children in Boarding School 1 JOHN J. PHOENIX, State Supt. ? n REVIVAL SERVICES Commencing Sunday evening, Aug ust 18th, at 8 o'clock there will be held a aeries of evangelistic services at Ahoskie M. E. Church, South. Ser vices will begin each afternoon promptly at 4 o'clock and each even ing promptly at 8 o'clock. Every Christian of every name are urged to remember these services in prayer, and also to lend their very best sup port and presence to all services. We all are agreed that Church needs re-, viving and when this is done it will be an easy matter to reach and bring the world to ChriA/' Every person in the cbmmunity is cordially invited to attend these services and take part. "Come thou with us and we will do thee good." M. F. HODGES, Pastor. A BOLL WEEVIL REMEDY THAT WORKS By the Division of Agronomy N. C. Extension Service, State College Sta. Cotton growers who now have boll weevil can use it to advantage and the grower who has no boll weevil this year will get even greater profit from it. Cotton growers and agricultural ex perts to the South of us know what it means to see one-fourth to three fourths of the cotton bolls of a field desroyed by weevil. They tell us that daring seasons favorable to the weevil very little cotton is set after the first part of August After this time thel weevil have multiplied in such large numbers that practically no squares are left. Under such conditions the amount of cotton we pick in the fall depends upon the number of bolls set now. Examine your fields and you will find stalks that have ten to twelve bolls set and others that have less than three. Seeds from the plants that have ten or more bolls set will reproduce plants of their kind. The plants that have the largest number of bolls now are not only safer from boll weevil attack but will produce the greatest amount of lint this fall. Seed from these plants will pass this quality on to the crop next and for years to come. Then, if these plants are our heaviest yielders and repro duce heavy yielders, saving seed from them will pay whether we have boll weevil or not. The results from this work last year gave an average in crease of 91 lbs. of lint acre over un selected seed. When the cotton was sqld the increase due to saving seed from the best plants amounted to $18.68 per acre. One man can make enough good plants in a day to supply six bushels of seed. This will plant five to six acres. Figure your profit. Do you know any work on the farm that will pay better than this? Begin right houi by marking the plaftti that have the largest number of bolls set. Mark them with a tag or;colored strips of cloth so the cot tort may be picked from them in the fall. Just before the general crop is picked send a careful picker in the field to save the seed plants. Store it in a dry place and when the rush of picking and ginning is over, clean out the gin thoroughly and gin the seed free from mixtures. Remember it will pay - whether you have boll weevil or not. If you have the boll weevil you cannot afford to overtook this remedy. If you haven't the weevil now is the best time to make preparation for them. I * ' n DAIRY COWS CUT FER TILIZER BILL IN HALF Fear of the relentless boll weevil combined with the departure of the cattle tick on the arsenic route in duced E. B. McCutchen of Bishopville, S. C., to establish a herd of Guernsey cattle. What the result has been was feelingly compressed into a single sen tence by this new recruit to the ranks of the dairymen. "I don't know what would have become of me since 1920 if I had not had my herd of cows to bring me in a regular income." Mr. McCutchen now has a herd of 35 cows and sells his milk in Bishop ville for 15 cents a quart or 50 cents a gallon. He can not say too much in praise of dairying, both from the standpoint of direct returns and the improvement of the soil. He now spend less than half as much for ferti lizers on his dairy farm as he did be fore he established his herd. Manure, he says, not only benefits the current crop, but the effect of one application can be noticed for several years. Big crops of silage corn are now grown on this farm with no commercial fertili zer whatever, and in the fields of small grain there is a conspicious line of de marcation between the part that was manured and the unmanured part. He is now making more corn, oats, and wheat per acre than ever before and the growth of cotton is'" greater, but the weevil cuts the yield of lint. On this 300-acre farm some mixed feed and bran are bought, but most of the ration is home-grown. Depend ence is placed in peavine hay, velvet beans, com meal, and com silage. Mr. McCutchen has two other farms, one in the same county and one in Lee county, and he intends to put cows on all of them as the tick is gone for good, The cow, he says, brings in money daily, weekly, and monthly. 0 , Send your job printing to the HERALD, Ahoskie, N. C. STATE NEWS IN DIGEST COM PILED FOR READERS OF THE HERTFORD COUNTY HERALD Armed with a warrant, a pistol and two bottles of brandy, Constable Henry Johnson of Old Fields Town ship, Wilson county, went in quest of a fugitive Tuesday. After tanking up to a high degree Constable Johnson went to the home of one of the rela tives of the fugitive where he flashed a gun in the face of the occupants without showing his warrant. Some one in the house escaped from a back door and as a result a warrant was issued for the constable and he is now under a bond of $500 for his appear ance in court. Funeral services for H. W. Hen dricks, a local man of High Point were held Sunday. Hendicks was driving a .car on the Winston-Salem road Sat urday and was instantly killed when he failed to take a curve and the car turned over. His wife and several children were in the car when the accident happened but escaped serious injury. A large gathering of colored people went out to a picnic at Warren Grove Church near Edenton Tuesday, and where just laying out a bountiful feed for all when two of the male members got into a discussion which resulted in a terrible cutting scrape. One of the darkeys had his eye cut out and the other had a lung exposed. The railroad strike condition in North Carolina remains about the same. As a general rule the railroads of the state are experiencing less trouble handling their business than roads in other states, particularly those roads operating through the north. As the time approaches for the marketing of the tobacco and other fall crops, much apprenhension is felt by growers and marketmen for the prompt handling of their product. A sharp explosion felt near Kins ton a few nights ago remained a mys tery until Tuesday when it was learn ed that Heber B. McGlohon had put too much dynamite or some other ex plosive substance in a patent boll weevil bomb wliich he is working on. According to the claims of the in ventor, a bomb is held aloft on a 25-foot pole and fired with a fuse. It is claimed that the bomb liberates enough poison to eradicate the weevils in an area of between one and two acres. William Dates, and John Murray who are wanted for robbing the post office at Oxford, N. C., 29 months ago, realising $33,000 from their hfpl were arrested in Memphis, Tenn. last week. There is no doubt as to the identity of the men. They were ar rested once before but broke jail. The men are being brought back to North Carolina and will be put in the State Prison at Raleigh for safe-keep ing. Twenty-five masked men thought by the authorities to be striking Sea board shopmei^ attacked five strike breakers and a guard working on a disabled engine on a siding two mile^ north of Southern Pines, Saturday afternoon, bound and gagged them, loaded them in automobiles, carried them several miles from the scene and beat them severely. Governor Mor rison has offered a reward of $400 each,for the arrest and conviction of each of the criminals. AIiree negive? cnar^cu wim ciimi* nal assualt on a white woman, and perhaps fatally shooting her husEind aa he lay asleep just outside of South ern Pines, narrowly escaped vengean ance at the hands of an enraged mob Friday morning. The sheriff of Moore county arrived on the scene just in time and after an exciting race managed to place his prisoners safely in the State prison at Raleigh. Officials of the Southern Railway System who have heretofore declined to suspend the seniority rights of their striking shppmen, made overtures to their men Tuesday to return to work under President Harding's offer pend ing final settlement of their griev ances. The offer of the railroad was refused on the grounds that the shop men would act only In accordance with a national agreement effecting all roads alike. The officials of the Norfolk-Southern railroad had a like experience with their late employees. Dr. W. C. Horton, of Raleigh will play the part of Governor Tryon of fJorth Carolina in the battle pegeant to be presented in Burlington on "Al amance Day," Aug. 17th and to be included later in the Aim "Romance of Alamance" to be released by the Carolina Films Corporation organized by W. C. Crosby, former director of the Bureau of School Extension of the state, Dr. Horton and others. Taxes will be somewhat lower in Pasquotank county in 1922 than in 1921 due to th^ action of the county commissioners Monday in Axing the levy for the current year at 91 cents on the hundred dollars, as compared with the 98 cent levy made in July 1921. Lightning struck a large barn locat ed on Woodside Stock Farm, eight miles south of Raleigh Tuesday. The Are which resulted desroyed the barn and another adjoining. It was only by heroic work and a heavy down pour of rain that saved other build ings in the vicinity. Bishop John C. Kilgo of the Metho dist church, South, who has been critically ill for the past six weeks, continues very low at his home in Charlotte. The Department of Commerce of the United States has issued a state ment which shows that the leading county in North Carolina in the pro duction of tobacco is Pitt' county, while on the basis of revenue collect ed on tabacco products North Caro lina leads all states in the Union. The amount being 879,607 out of a total of $364,036,000. New York stands second on the list in the amount, this being 844,199,000, a little over half the amount collected in North Caro lina. Five batteries of field artillery, Vir ginia National Guard, went into camp for two weeks at Camp Bragg, N. C. with other field artillery units on Monday. The North Carolina National Guard is represented by the 177th Field Artillery containing about 300 men and officers. A still made from a pine box lined with sheet iron with two iron pipes for a worm, was the outfit captured by officers in a raid near Oxford Satur day. The still had been in operation the night before. Two salesmen selling stock in the New York-Miami Syndicate, a realty development in Florida,- have been op erating near Greensboro. Local offi cers conducted an inquiry into their business and as a result the salesmen were bo find over under a $500 bond for trial in the Superior Court of Guilford county on the charge of sell ing unlicensed stock and being them selves unlicensed. Two thorough-bred Jersey cows of considerable money value belonging to the stock farm of the artillery post at Camp Bragg, were killed by light ning in a heavy storm at that place last week. When a short circuit developed in her automobile, Miss Minnia Harmon, of.Durham, leaped from the moving car and was painfully injured when she received a badly cut face, and a number of bruises about her neck and shoulders. Miss Harmon thought the car was on Are. Thirty-six cases of typhoid fever are reported in Wayne county so far this year with several deaths. Only one case has been reported where the patient "has been vaccinated and this case was mild. Frank Jordan, Jr., son of the late County Commissioner Frank Jordan, who recently died after an attack of fever, recently obtained 60 doses of vaccine for his neighbors and stated that he was going to see that all of his neighbors were vacci nated. His father was 57 years old and was popularly supposed to be too old to contract the fever. Indications are that the boll weevil will desroy from one-fourth to one half of the entire cotton crop in ? Robeson county this year. The princi ple damage will be in the late cotton. A man engaged in vulcanising a tire in a garage in Raleigh Saturday afternoon thought that a little blase of gasoline which dropped to the floor would soon burn itself out. Bijt the Are found other oil and gasoline on the floor, then some waste and in a few minutes the entire place was ia flames and only heroic efforts pre vented a heavy loss to adjoining prop erty. The damage dor.e w~s estimat ed at about $3,000.