DANBURY REPORTER Volume 57. GEORGIA TOBACCO MARKETS OPEN. ————— Tobacco Sells On 22 Markets 25 to 50 Per Cent Higher Than Opening Day Last Year—Prices $l2 to $;>(). Waycross. Ga... July Georgia's crop of bright leaf tobacco wont on the market in 22 towns and cities in the Sou-, thorn part of the State today. early reports from the markets indicated that prices were substantially higher than last year, strengthening pre- : dictions that the total money received this season would es-_ tablish ii new record. Scattered j reports from throughout tlvi belt gave sales prices of from $l2 to s:;o per hundred pounds with the average from 25 to 50 per cent higher than the open ing day of last year. Sales ranged from $l2 to s.'so per hundred pounds at Douglas, with warehousemen estimat ing the average at $lB. which they considered a good price for the quality of weed offered, mostly sand lugs. Douglas sales were estimated at approximate ly 500.000 pounds for the day against first day sales of near ly 1,000.000 pounds last year. At Blackshear, prices aver aged in the neighborhood of per hundred against $ll "last season, with approximate ly 750,000 pounds on the floors. This little town last year led the State in total pounds sold with more than 9,000,000 pounds of the weed changing hands. Averages at Valdosta were estimated at $l7 per hundred with more than 900,000 pounds estimated on the floors, estab lishing a record for the mar ket. Opening jn-ices were estimat ed to average $2O per hundred pounds, nearly twice the open ing day bidding of a year ago and the quality of tobacco was said to be low, growers holding their better grades of leaf un til later in the season. Claxton, with an estimated average of $23, had the highest reported price, with 200,000 pounds sold at nown. Quitman, (la., July 23. South Georgia's tobacco mar kets opened up today with reasonably heavy sales. The estimated average for the State was between $10.50 and $17.50. vvhjch is five and one-half or six cents higher than last sea son's opening. Ninety-five per cent of the offerings were prim ings and twenty or twenty-five |H'r cent better in quality than last season. This means that grade for grade Georgia prices were front twenty to twenty five per cent higher than th ; » opening last season. Farmers are well pleased. Georgia's crop is now estimat ed at seventy million as against eighty-five and one-half million last year. Georgia's average for fcfc'ir entire crop last year LAYING BRICK AT WESTFIELD; Work Started On New School! Building Electric Power . Available In August—Keviv- j al Begins Saturday Night. Westfield. July 2:s.—Lading brick for the new school build ing here was started a few days since and the building, l which will be a handsome one. will be completed in time for the opening of the school in the ! fall. j The poles for the electric, power being brought hei»e by ithe Southern Power Co. are | almost up, and it is expected | that power and lights will be available here early in August. A series of revival meetings will begin at the Baptist church here on Saturday night of this week. The pastor, Kev. O. H. Ilausei . will be assisted by Rev. Mr. Davis. Crops in this section have improved wonderfully since tfto recent rains. S. M. Walker was a visitor to Danburv Tuesday. URGES NEGROES TO FORM OWN PARTY De Priest Boasts Before Audi ence of His Own Color. Chicago, July 22.—Congress man Oscar de Priest, negro, of . the First Illinois District, yes terday exhorted an audience of his race to form their own po- I litical party. I Declaring that there were : 100 or more Congressional dis tricts in the United States with , sufficient strength to .send neg- I roes to the lower House of Con i gross, de Priest charged his . district with being "backward .and unaccomplished political ly." "I'm in Washington to serve | my race," he asserted, "and I . haven't even begun to light. , I'm the only one of 435 Con i gressmen who will appoint a . negro to Annapolis or West . Point. ; "I may go to Congress, for [ only one term, but in that term : I'll be a Congressman. The oth- I er Congressmen go to the Con . gresdjonal Barber Shop and I go there, too. They go to the Congressional Wash Room and ■ so do I." • Four Tobacco •' Barns Burn •j Goldsboro, July 20.—Four to bacco barns in Wayne county have been destroyed by fir.j within the past week. The last one reported here was that of Gurney Hollowell near Falling 1 Creek. The barn was insured but its contents of fine grade of tobacco were destroyed. Thurs day evening Mr. Nichols, of Grantham township, lost a barn of tobacco. Kohah Smith returned home i from Ohio yesterday , was |12.78 and Die year prior . 15.92. i Danbury, N. C., July 24, 1929. I PEACH CROP 11 IS FAILURE ! Stokes Man Finds Fruit Poor I j and Scarce In Sand Hills and Prices High. I Alex Mabe. of the Meadows community, has just leturned • from a trip to tie* peach orch-J ards in the sand hills around 1 I Carthage. 1 ! Mr. Mabe found the peach 1 crop almost a complete failure, 1 the fruit being scarce and l'aul- * ty. Some orchards had no ( peaches on them, the fruit hav ing all fallen off. All the fruit 1 Mr. Mabe saw was wormy, but ' the price asked for the best peaches was $2.50 per bushel, ' while the culls, which he con- 1 sidered worthless, were offered • at 75 cents per bushel. Mr. Mabe has been buying peaches in the sand hills and hauling them here for some, years, but he found the fruit so poor and so high that he did not purchase any. The continued wet weather , in the peach growing section is attributed by the growers asj the cause for the failure of the crop, which means a loss of much money to that section of the country. j Eight Tobacco Barns Burn In Sampson During: One Week Clinton, July 20. Eight barns filled with tobacco were destroyed by fire in Sampson 1 county during the past week. Five of the eight were burned 1 in a single night. The total loss is estima-ted at close to $lO,OOO with very little insurance. The eight people who have 1 lost barns during the past week are Henry Vann, Milford W'. M. Cannady, Ed Faircloth, R. E. Bradshaw, Mrs. George ' Fowler. A. B. Gilbera and Guy ' Dawson. It is estimated that Sampson 1 farmers will prtuluce at least 10,000,000 pounds oi tobacco this year. Curing is now un der way. i Lindsay Alley, here from the - Hartman community Monday, [ stated that crops were good in ; his section. Mr. Alley «aid he : I hail the best crop he had had ! for years. i A Domestic Revolution i: i Automatic heat is causing a minor domestic revolution. Oil and gas burners are replac ing old-fashoned furnaces. The. .' once-despised collar is being. | converted into a den. or a smok ing or reading room. . I The tremendous progress made in the past few years in . automatic heating is indicative of the American genius for fin.'-! t , ; t ing new and better means to 'perform o!d tasks. ) • -• ■ . Tw T.ty-two boys a,11,' gifi.s in Chatham county row hay-" • pure bred dairy calves being j cared for under Lho 4-IT plan. N. C. FARMERS ASK FOR HELP Rockingham Delegation Goes to Reidsville as Result of Storm. Reidsville, July 22.—Fifty farmers from the eastern end of Rockingham county came to the Chamber of Commerce of fice here today and asked Sec retary Calhoun to use his ef forts to secure Government fin ancial aid for them as a result I of their terrific hail storms' which have played havoc in many sections of this county during the past few days. Secretary Calhoun appealed to Senators Simmons and Over man and Congressman Sted man. Major Stedman wired j immediately that after an in vestigation lie finds that no re lief may be obtained before the next session of Congress. BOYS AND GIRLS CAMP AT MOORE'S Thirtv-Two Members Of 4-H Club Spent Four Days Of ! Recreation And Pleasure At Stokes Resort. A party of 32.boys and girls .of Forsyth county camped four, days last week at the 4-H en-j campnaent at Moore's Springs; returning to their homes on Friday. The party consisted [ mostly of girls and they enjoy-, ed swimming, various games, educational recreation and in-; structive methods in cultural i subjects. The encampment has been; under the general supervision ! of It. W. Pou. county agent, and ' Miss Alice McQueen. home agent. They were assisted by Miss Georgia Piland, of the; State Landscape Division of the Extension Service, and Mis-J Flora Wakefield of the Forsyth county Health Department. ! Tobacco Curing In The East The process of preparing more than $50,000,000 worth of leaf tobacco for the market is in full swing in the eastern section of North Carolina known as the "Bright Belt." Fires are blazing in thous ands of barns as practically all th* crop has been cut and hous ed. Conditions #f the crop im proved rapidly in recent weeks and while the yield may be off in some counties on the whole a normal crop is expected. The 1927 and 1928 crops were both ah«Kve normal. I The prospects for better prices is vury eift'ou raging to 'the growers. Authorities have expressed the opinion that thv> af will bring more than last year. Dealers stocks are not jiarg„» and the demand for the better grades of tobacco should (be good. E. L. Bryan, of Durham • ounty, has contracted to sell &is ;\OOO-bunhel apple crop for $1.50 per bushci. BAPTISTS MEFV V AT WALNU.^OVK Pilot Mt. Association Holds In teresting Session—Woman's Auxiliary Meeting—Personal Items. Walnut Cove, July 2-'!.—Th Pilot Mountain Baptist Asso ciation in session here yester day and today in the new Bap tist church has been well at tended. Meetings were hell i morning, afternoon and also ai 'night session. Picnic dinner was spread each day with :i'i j ahundanre of food in evidence, j Delegates from each church I in the association have been | present and gave reports and j an altogether pleasant and j profitable meeting was enjov- Quite a number lrom here j are enjoying a trip to New j City this week. Among | these are George Fulton, Bill Fulton, Paul Davis, Jr., Walter Neal, Ed Ray and Wesley Lin-j ; ville, who left last Saturday. I On Monday Dr. R. H. Hacklerj and Junior Flinchum left for' Philadelphia and New York to spend several days. The Woman's Auxiliary of ,the Episcopal church met Tues day evening with Mrs. J. H. ; Fulton with a g&od attendance ! president. Mrs. R. A. Hedge ; cock presided over a business j session during which different plans for church work were discussed. At the conclusion of the business tempting refresh ments were served by the hos -1 tess. ! I Miss Julia Hairston ha-s re | turned from a visit to relatives at Martinsville, Va. Musdames Paul Davis, Jacob ; Fulton, Jr., Misses Helen Ful ton and Mary Frances Davis 'returned Sunday from a ten days stay at Virginia Beach, i t Gilmer Sparger, Jacob Fulton. Virginia Fulton. Mr. and Mrv J. W. Jones went down on Fri day and spent the week-end. Miss Helen Rierson, of Char lotte. is visiting the family of S. C. Rierson. Airs. Loula Hairston Brown is quite ill at her home in South Walnut Cove. Her sister, Mrs. J. I*. IHinklee, of V i S.;- lem, is with her. Miss Minnie Cates, of Greens boro. spent last week here with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. O. J. Cak.s. Miss Willie Mae Cates ! was here t'»r the week-end. Mrs. George Fulton and chil dren are spending the week at . Klkin with Mrs. W. J Snow. Mrs. ('. J. Helsabeck has re cuperated sufficiently from her automobile wreck to leave tJie hospital and vi.>it her mother at Mountain View. Misses Eunice and Gladys Morelield and Mrs. 15. I). Gentry, who were injured at the same time ar« also very much improved. Miss Laura Crews, of Salem, visited her sister, Mrs. J. R. Woodruff, this week. Mrs. Phi! Woodward, of «Jew Port News, i Va., is the guest of her mother, No. 2,984 PELLAGRA DEATHS SHOW INCREASE State Department of Health Mystified By Disease —Ap- pears to Have Cycle Habit. Raleigh. July 20.—Amazinj increase in deaths by pellagra mystifies the state department of health and the first six months of 1920 show a jump of nearly 50 per cent over the same period last year when 847 persons died of this disease. The state department knows J the cause of the disease buf; j nobody seems to know why peo jple do not learn something eating as the years go bv. The startling rise in this | rate gives a lot of work for thii idietiticians. Pellagra appears to have a jcycle habit. Just 20 years ago I the state became greatly upset t by the numerous deaths from this cause. When Editor John M. Julian, of the Salisbury j Post, tell victim of the disease he remarked how little atten tion he had paid to the storiea of the disease. Mr. Julian's death a few weeks later agitat ed the state. In time there was a cessation. Pellagra has brok en out again. There were 114 deaths in June, 1929. Pellagra ranked fourth in | June in North Carolina among the listed causes of death. Tu berculosis killed 270, intestinal diseases of infants 214, and pneumonia, 142. Deaths from heart disease, apoplexy and cancer are not included in tha provisional figures. There were 14 deaths from typhoid fever in June, five from malaria, 4 from whooping cough: nine from diphtheria, 64 11'om influenza, seven from spine and brain infections and two from hydrophobia. Mrs. J. li. Woodruff. Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Fulton, Mesdames Paul Pulton and P. j\\. Davis. Miss Helen Fulton, C.ilmer Sparger and Mr. and Mrs. E. P. Pepper, of Danbury, attended the funeral in Martins ville. Va., Monday of Mrs. ! Davis, mother of Mrs. J. W. ! Jones. Miss Evelyn \\ hite i's spend ing some time in Washington, ID. C., visiting relatives. Miss Grace Woodruff and brother, John Woodruff, enjoy ed an automobile trip through ithe Shenandoah valley to Wash - ington last week. I Mrs. Leake l.oviti and small {son. Leake, Jr., are visiting ! relatives at Red Springs, i Miss Ruth Ilairston is spend ing some time at her home on j Dan river. She is accompanied by Miss Sal lie Taylor. t Mrs. John Lewellvn and little | daughter, Mary Vaughn, re- J turned Monday from a visit in 1 High Point. i I | England haa abolished the j. tux on Lea, but it's too late | now. Boston is.iel in her ways, ' - J -C;; AnjyUvi Timei-