I '
t • ( _ ..
S3THC DUNN DISPA
V—- • * DUNN. !*• C.,.JANUARY *•. >•“ • '' "' 'f
^71 . ‘
REPUBLICANS LOSE
GROUND IN NATION
HR GODWIN SAYS
RaprHenUthri Confidant Lm
fu* of Nations Fight Will
Eject Democrats.
SELLS HOME HERE.
TO MARVIN WADE.
WIU Build an Plantation at Edge af
Tawa aad Became Beal He raj
Haadad Farmer—Nit Worryia*
Over Situation in Owe District Ay
pareatlj.
Optimism over Democratic suc
cess in the nation, confidence in hia
ability to defeat the field that la be
ing harnessed against him for the
coming primary, and determination
to become a real "homy-handad ton
of toil" were three thing! evidenced
by Hannibal LaFaycltr Godwin,
congressional representative fur the
Sixth Didrirt, when here for hia
fortnightly visit to borne folks this
wash.
National success seemed to be the*
though uppermost in tbo Beprearn
tatlvo’i mind. Judge Stacey, Var
aor and the leaser racers who have
declared, or who oeem to be on the
verge of doelariag their Intentions to
oppose him for the nomination seem
ed to not trouble him at all. Their
cases, bo said, will be sealed at the
proper time.
Meaatiaae, be has sold hia palatial
residence here v> Marvin Wade and
will build what he terms a "farm
home" oa hit plantation at the edge
of town. This will he done next
summer. When that home is built
he will he a hoaoet-to-goodnees far
• mar.
rmymi orifni.
Prospects for Democratic national
sneccm in the coming election arc rx.
c.cdingly bright, Mr. Godwin amid.
“Three months ago I could not have
aaid this. Wc mere op against it
But there has been a great change
in all of tha doabtful slat** and
many of these which erdinarilly arc
cent ceded to be Republican.
The Treaty—that U the answer. I
American Industry and the American
farmer favor Mr. Wilson'* plan for
tha tenges of nations. The Rcpnb
liaaa party's attitude has cost K
theassrds of eotos and in all proba
biBty will cart it the next presiden
tial election. »
"I havo talked to men from Maine
■ marked change In public
opinion In tha last few weeks. Three
months ago these State* were con
cededly Republican. Now tt is
probable that both will go for the
Democratic nominees. AU over the
country there is evidence of similar
feeling. I an confident that Dem
ocracy will go through with Dying
colors nsxt November.**
Mot ml of Politico.
Bale of the big home hen- doesn't
mesa that the big fellow ia to retire
from politics at any lime in the near
futare. "No, sir," he replied to the
query, "I am not getting out of pol
itics. Really 1 am preparing to get
into it in earnest. That is why I
am tolling the town house and get
ting owl to the farm.”
The new borne la to be built with
in a abort distance of the *iu upon
which Mr. Godwin’a father rstab
tiahed his home eighty year* ago
whao ho cam* to Harnett. It ia not
to ba ao ostentatious as the on* just
sold to Mr. Wade, but win be. Urge
and comfortable—just the sort of
tkiag a successful farmer with a large
family should have, Mr. Godwin soys.
ZJ* l<rTn eold for *40.000.
will retain pot
ssasi0Bl.Btil aehoof elooes. Than 1U
■■■*■"to Waahington to
remain until the country home I* An
tibad. _,
AMERICANIZATION BILL
IS PASSED BY SENATE
land or Writ* Must Go to
School.
Washington, J«. 2». -Tb» eeaate
by a vote of 3* to 14 tedor _P»*Md
the Kan yon Amwk^i—klou bill
w«*h would regal ro nil "ald.oUof
tho United State* of »» <* JLWf!
•f age. not mentally or physically
dlmolttad, nnd all 7 alian resident*
b*4wnantie agaa of 16 and « who
««u»t (peak, rand or write English,
to attend aafeool not leM than 2C0
hoar* n Mar.
Administration of tho WU'» pro»':
' ■**"* >• tho nor rotary of
tho Intenor working through the bu
rte* The meaaure ro
qulraathat ‘J*"* appropriated bo
apporttonod *mong the ataU* In ra
ti# to tho patebar raaldaot lUkar
Jra.
U a&tTy tra^or a- odmlnlatru
Uo* of tha tho aaerotary
of labor wro 4***&b^Tu2
Anal rate waa taken.The maaeur*
hod boon before tb *«'»«te forf ,
bout a weak, and danaq debut.
•Ml sunator* aeyr—»d *P?rrhan
eiao that tho enhance of tha ag,
Itaatta flxud for Anionesn and f0,
•lion tllltaratoa would eeafllet with
•*l*Uag treaties.
No Laaa for Saab D*tetwe
Washiagton D C.—OM la eeery
•U peaawfta the United State* kept
« *eeouat la a natteaai hank, •*
ESSfcESsrjg
ffifesssri
LONG SEPARATE^ SISTER!
AGAIN FIND EACH OTHEf
New York Newspaper Carrie*
Group Picture Which Brings
Them Together.
Savannah, Ga„ Jan. 2(1.- After ■
search of sixteen years for hrv ei*
ter, from whom she became separa
led in 1901, Mrs, A. S. Inhulaon, ol
Savannah, has learned through a
girlhood friend that Her sister is a
Uve, well and married and is living
in Brooklyn. She ie Mrs. Margaret
l.shcy, of 130 Cumberland street.
The mother died in 1904. The
younger child went to live with an
aunt nnd the now Mrs| Inhulsen con
tinued to live with her step-father.
The ifUnt and little sifter disappear
ed. Tiu years ago, after almost be
coming hopcloaa of ever finding her
little sister, Mrs. Inhulsen married
and tunc to Savannah to liva. On
the trip down her trunk was lost, and
in it a group picture of her family,
through which she hoped to even
tually find hrr sister, who also had
a copy of the name group
During the last few weeks the
younger sister, who had married and
was living in Brooklyn, started a
search for her sister, and the group
picture appeared in a New York pa
per. U wan seen by a girlhood
friend of the older sister, who Im
ikrdiately sought Mrs. Lahey and
found her to hr Mrs. Inhalaen’a lout
sister.
NORTHERN TOURISTS SEE
COTTON FOR FIRST TIME
Hundred* Kfept in Dunn By
Wreck el Fruit Train nt
Black River
Cotton and other Carolina pro
duct* in their raw states wers seen
for th« first time by severs! hundred
Northern tourists here Tuesday
when a wreck on the Coast l.inr at
Black River necessitated the hold
ing of all southbound trains at this
poir.t practically all day. The vial
tors were much surprised to And the
land of the long leaf pine in the grip
of Its first real blizzard of the year,
but seemed to enjoy every minute
of their rtay.
The cotton yard, where several
hundred bales of the fleecy staple
still find their way every day in
spite of the lateness of the season,
was the most attractive point to
them. At first they did not know
what the waa The big lumber
mills, where the giant logs from sur
rounding forests war* bang sawed
into building material, was also scry
interesting to them.
Moat of the tourists were bound
■iiiiMiiiiviMi
to become effective until the flo
weather is oeer, as one Broadway
habitue expressed It.
The wreck was that of a north
bound express freight tram. Se,,en
car* of this train, laden with orange*
and grape fruit, were derailed. Both
tracks wore lorn up for several hun
dred feet. Nobody was hurt.
DID JOE CAVINESS
PLAY LEAGUE BALL?
Student at Trinity Want* To
Join Team; Raleigh Had
One Caviness
Now* and Observer.
Is Joe Cavineaa. a student at Trin
ity college, a professional baseball
player?
This is a <iu cation that is rauning
trouble at Trinity because Caviness
js a Strong pitcher and wants to
don a uniform of the Methodist col
I eg late leans again this year. He
was a member of Use tram last spring
and gave Trinity a victory on Its
South Carolina trip. But the ques
tion of professionalism is involved
in Cmviness’ plans this year.
Recently the following Item ap
peared In >n Asheville paper:
"Wanted, ono by the name of
'Due' Karris, formerly manager of
the Asheville baseball- club.
"Such ia the urgent request head
ed by Joe Cavinnas, now a student
at Trinity college at Durhaai, who
want* to play ball with the Trinity
nine but finds himself accused of
bring a professional. It ia truo that
Joe did come to Asheville in 1S17
at tho time Karri* managed the club,
hoping to play ball. Ha wa* secur
ed from Columbia In a trade, but
was not given an opportunity to
jb*w his abilities in this city or in
Colombia.
Trinity authorities wish
l° fybts vleaa baf of health Insofar
V ball is coaeornod and
L>oc Ferric alone cm nippty It”
Ifu* that Cavineaa
fn Asherlll. club
*a TNulto .*<£ “urt saw satisfy
r“ authoritiss that
u ***■* of «»•- H
l pitohor named
Qtvinca waa a wteitbtr of ik« t -ani
ul* and RMelgh 2y h.
Joe Cavineaa ' "• WJ‘
A aaAuAlnm »A adA.i.*
tSVSU
bor f)af, M fottfag* a.
gainst Durham aad silowod ai* hits
“vi in- SITUATION IN Ntgr
YORK M »T1LL SREpoo*
. New York. J*» *« —D^HU th,
decrease in influr»“ CV*» reports
Joday Health CdW»NA*hnr Cop*
‘“d »*. „hw!»n rr*r u>Tg
••tlon tonight, and predicted froo
UT*41** Inory reports tha tthers would
•d Num 1,600 »— ~ff,/r«r.d
^ip^^or,HUst X d<M«th tol
*°« ho materially iacrooaod
RIDDLE ELECTED
FAIR SECRETARY
Odum Rasigna—Six Per Cant
Dividend Declared—Will
Sell $20,000 More Stock
T. L. kiddle, secretary of ths
Dunn Chamber of Commerce, bss
bscn elected secretary of the Har
nett County Agricultural Fair Aano
ciatlon to succeed Owen Odum, who
resigned at the annual meeting of
ttoelcholders Just held here. Mr.
Odum w»» also treasurer of the a*
-ociation. Ed. B. Warren, one of
the most prominent formers of the
Dunn District, succeeds him In that
capacity.
Earnings of thr association for its
initial event last October were in
excess of H jnr cent on thr invested
capital. Of this six par renl was
order, 4 paid in dividends to stock
hold.rs. The balance was transfer
red to the surplus fund to be used
in improving the grounds this ysar.
An additional stock issue, of $20,
000 was authorlssd by the directors.
Ellis Goldstein, president of the
Chamber of Commerce end business
manager of the Fair, wa» appointed
to direct the sale of this stock. An
rffort will be made to place it in
•mall blocks among the farmers of
Sampson, Johnston, Cumberland and
Harnett Counties. Monoy derived
from the sale of this stock will be
spent in enlarging the Pair Plant
and in making of the enterprise the
Eastern Carolina.
This year the I>onn Fair s»iU be
mors than a county went. Last
roar's success has convinced the pro
moters that there Is ao oportunity
to build it into a district exposition
that will attract people from all
parte of the east. Upper Hampton
and other of the surrounding coutt
tie* plays as big a part In the first
Fair at did Harnett. Thi* year an
effort will be made to broaden tho
aisoclatnia'» usefulness.
NORTH CAROLINA REALLY
TYPICAL AMERICAN STATE
Population p only OnwHalf of
On* For Cost *xd|«
Do yon know which Is the most
really American State in the Uniont
It is North Carolina.
MUs Mary Owan Graham, who in n
la" on la only one-half of onepdr
c< .t. Miss Graham haa-been county
i. 'erintendent of achoots'and praai
d. t of the North Carolina Teachers’
A vmblv. She ha* held also many
o'!- r educational offices la th# gift
of the North Carolinians.
"Our state ia teeming with indus
try." said Mias Graham. “Every on*
i* prosperous. Tho negro popula
tion is making good uao of money
and with advances in the wage scale
the colored folk are paying attan
tion to education and there are many
evidences of race progress. All
oor industrial Interests arc develop
ing rapidly ond there la the heat
possible outlook for the coming
year.
"We arc doing much along all ed
ucational linos North Carolina haa
the best public health laws in the
United State* and their effort ia be
ing more and more apparent.”
Mias Graham ia Uio head of Peace
Institute, which was founded in
IM7. During the world war It eras
naed as a hospital It is of special
interest at this time when women
nr* so much In political prominence
[hat Mr*. Josephus Daniels and Mrs
L«* Slater Overman both attended
?*•*• which haa tent many
distinguished women into ths world
rnvwa.
THINK COUNTRY NEEDS
SECRETARY OF EDUCATION
Democratic Woman Eadorn
Sunith-Tower Bill
„,****• Georga Bare, chairman of the
Woman * Bureau of the Democratic
National Committee, has appointed
a Committee on EdacationalLtgie
atton to keen in touch with national
legislation of special Interest to wo
men and In edocational circle*. Mia*
Chari O. William*, Aafociat* Nation
al Committee woman of the Demo
cratic National Committee for the
-date of Tennessee. i* the chairman
of the Committee. Associated with
bor are Mia* Mary Owen Graham.
eommltUewoman for North Carolina
Mr*. Hickey, commlttaewoman from
Sooth Dakota and Mia* Caroline
Routi-Reea, comqdttecwoauta for
Connecticut. Min Williams aad Mr*
Hickey are county superintendents
of school* in their respective com
munities, aad Ml** Graham aad Mlm
Rauta-Rcoa arc condactlag private
rehool* >.f their own The Commit
tee wM I; nd whitt >ver aid 't can to
(he pa**rre of the Smith Tower bill,
creating an edocational department
the head of which la ta be Tjtembw
of the cabinet
BERTIE PLANNING FOB
DUO-CENTENNIAL EVENT.
Bertl* county la nrranglag far the
great Duo-Catena lal of the county
on the second day of October, IMI.
A grand pageant wflj ha given em
bracing the entire history of the
county and Sir Cecil Bertie, ascend
^td of the Admiralty *f Ragland,
i •>** accented an invitation to he pro
Sv( deliver the male address.
> Jlx scanty ef Bertie Is earned after
who waa ana of Urn
proprietor* by a «e tea mlon end
aa aaeaatar ef Sir Gaell
TWOMORECHANGES
IN CABINET MADE
SECOND NfWiTAPER MAN
given CABn^nr position
New ' Agrlanltaf Edits
Fans Periedlcal M„J Heads No
tional Organise tioo:
Peasant Head ,f AptnUsnl De
pnrtatnnt Carter GJasa.
Washington, J,n. J7.—Two more
chsngts in President WUsen’i cabi
nst ware made today and a third ia
expected in the bane faturs.
David Pranklli, hoastoa, of 8t.
Louie, Ho., who ha, bean secretary
of Agriculture since the beginning
of tb* Wilson administration, was
given the Trnamtry portfolio, and
Edwin I» Merudiu, of D*» Moines,
la., was naased ^ wvcceed him a*
head of the Department of Agricul
ture The third cabinet change eg.
parted aoon la th, appointment of a
Secretary of tha Interior te succeed
FrunkHo JC- Lana, who desires to re
tire ta private Ilf, Kr. Lsns'i auc
cessor has not yat been selected tad
uncials gererafla would not hasard
a guaaa aa to u^pm it would bo.
Aa Uaanpaetag a-„tr.
1" *r. Houston to suc
ceed Carter Glaaa as Secretary of the
Treasury the Praaidant ran counter
M all gossans of administration offi
ciala most of wbaan hod expected As
surant Secretary L^ffngwell In be
given the once. •
5 editor of •8uc
*•"£»> nnd before ee
tab|lahingthatp,p4r pnb|iAcr
Tribune" He is
Pramdretoftlw Assoc latad Advar-I
World, a director,
of the Chogo h^wi 1«serve Bank j
bi»4 mma ont offt, n^u profits ad
vlscm of th# Tg£riM_ n—wrtmant
•t Miami,
of hi*
the Da
would ba
of ffetttaf
too much
exported In
day ar two to
toy are
n De
Soerotary W11 too of the
of Labor and <*oot—a
Bnrtaaon.
Mr. Wtaon ha* bad two tacretariaa
of Stat*/ W. J. Bryan and Bobart'
Lonalac; two MCretariaa of war,
Liadley M. Oarrtaoe and Newton D.
Baker; throe attorney general*.
Jameo B. MeReyaolda, now an asso
ciate justice of th* Supreme Conn.
Thomaa W. Gregory and A. Mitchell
Palmer; two aocrwTiaa of commerce
Wa. C. Red ft eld and Joafcna W. Al
exander. and throe aceretarica of the
Treentry, William G. MeAdoo, Car
»ao m.J rtmwl A B n_1__
VIRGINIA DODGES
SUFFRAGE BALLOT
Home of DeleJ«tei Would Sub
mit Queittoe Referendum
Vote Delff* Acting
Richmond, Ve., *hn. 27.—After it
had listened patpotly f0y several
hours this efter*°°n to arguments
pro end eon a isolation celling for
defeat of the ASFbonjr suffrage a
mendment. the Virginia House of
Delegates • id strewed the proposition
by adopting by »*otu of &6 to 19
a resolution offW*d by Hr Raw, of
Aocomac, providNff that “All quse
lions relating te ratification or re
jaction of the W°Poeed amendment
to the Cons*ituti*h of the United
E^irs’SS.’ssrt®
that tbs people ROT be given an op
portunity to of*® their wishes by
referendum to £ provided by this
tMa seaman of »• General A seem
bly.”
While the e«E>*glsts seemed to in
tory for them, *»«*mueh is M was
getiarally onneeded that the House
weald have reNJ^d the proposition
had it voted directly oa the Oxl in
resolution the g*®ern| impression a
mong the wise about the CapHoi
wna that the gMjHo® weald hardly
be permitted to r*»»hre further can
the leglalatoru »* altogether hostile
te the suffrage reposition feel that
lhar* are neoee important matter!
awaiting tkier ^behtlan, schools he
Ingchief ensoag thorn.
> today1* voting
wwe Buford aa< Ran. Buford U a
delegate from *ruiuwwk and a
brother of Hm-Robert Strange, of
Wilmington, ftnherly of Raleigh.
The understanding was that Buford
to iEpo#*d b0 •S*1 **ffrage.
What tha Reante eontemplatoa do
‘Ml tn rep rd ** ‘he proposition la
y *«* Hhely boh up In
that breneh wiWia the next day m
hW®,
CHILD DIB* PROM BURNS.
Three- Yeer-Otd Ban . Les
I
■4£5sg*£s:i;a;
RftCbS? S'HZ "tZZZS
gS**.1^**- ebewt tha Bra
REPUBLICAN CONGRESSFAIl STOREDEEM |
RECLAMATION PLEDGES MADE TO WEST
Thousands of Homesteaders Threatened with Seri
ous Losses by G. O. Ps Refusal to Carry Out
Development Prgrams.
Washington, D. C_Tho Bqmh
lican leaders of Congrem am pro
rraaaing backward on irrigation pro
JJ*u_)n Hie Indian reservation. at
tdie West. Mao* of tho important
development. will hare to bo aban
doned if present plan, at House
comrn.ttoa. are carried out.
The Republican party launched
reclamation programs to catch rotas
.n the Went; It meat million, of dol
lar* in Montana, Idaho, Wyoming
ind other Stats, where land* were
originally rcarrved for Indiana
An Illustration of what ia being
done I. found In the Flathead Ia*
lien reservation of Montaaa. where
about 1800 homesteader* hare eat
tl'-d in compliance with the law with
the expectation that they would re
ceive supplies of water. The Re
publican* of the House have reduc
'd the Flathead Ultimate from 81.
000,000 to tIOt.OOo. Theodora
Roosevelt was preiident when Cob
<ra*s opened the Flathead I—a.
'"try. A Republican administra
:lon wt* first to ipend a largo sum
»f money there. About *4,600.000
ha^bran c.pcnded on the project
“One thousand eight hundred men.
undrr the law which I deem to ha
equivalent to a contract with the
Government” mid Representative
Event, Democrat, of Montana, “have
gone upon this reservation, have
taken up tracts of land, have oum
td" d with the homestead act, and
have paid on an average of from four
to five dollar* an acre far the land.
They are now waiting far tha Cov
nry out Ra contract,
motion project and I
now
end
tori without him. Thor will not
hatnrd • movo la tariff matter. an
til ho in boro to raid* thalr hand*. <
Should thla real "bo.." of tha
Sixty-Sixth Co scram fall to eaceer
V»r« tha mmlon, tha RcpubuTan
Hoaar and Sonata laadara would ho <
at a lou to know what lcgitlatioa to
peu. Lari aa.aion, wblla Mr. Fen
tom wax ia Patuaylvaai* moadinr
hU political fcaeca, ambition. poxT
sna. but ho threat arid, all tU
Plana. The acriaa of bflla brouoht
forward by the Way. and Manna
Committee under tha leadonhip of .
Kaproacnmtlva Ford nay. tha hiwb
protoctionlri of STliUlt war. 1
riwck into pcwi tola* by rfr. Pan- i
*at«% (who called them "pop-run” J
aca i
Moom of Philadelphia earn ap hit i
mnt in that branch of Concrete. I
Throuyh Mr. Moor* and other old I
aiambora, Saantar Poar.m 1
dUmiaatod the ria.rlac committee. ]
Befou the mayorality empale* rot 1
1*^,.w»y «*• rtomtait i
committee wna buy all tha time ]
oo>Bff all aorta of miaehief to the 1
plua of independent or wo aid bo In
dependent Republican*, but rineott '
h«. aubuded. I
Senator Panrpaa It n “boa*" who ’
beaeoa. Hit Influence hi tha area- 1
Coojrm. to treater dma tori j
of onj Other mas or croup of man. <
Thuoforc, hi* .bornec i. a treat 1
handicap to Senator Lode* and Bon- <
re*rt*,,r** Gillott and Mandril^ 1
. The ono record of tho Graham
lovnatifating coaualttee that trill 1
Worn# permanent, to that of tha
onoiuotu expenditure of money, in
addition bo tho baadrod* of tWaV i
and* di^mnd by tho —rnittim 1
aad it* Taxioo* (ubdlririoo* tha ox- 1
P«m bu boon treat. It to aatima
Ud by expert* that It coat the War
sss
information. It la undo retired at
too Capitol that laic* feae haw*
Nri paid to attorney* aad other.
COMPULSORY MILITARY
TRAINING IS FAVORED
Til* Sonata Committee Approv
es Training Far Boy* Bo
Iwoon Agaa of 18 and 21
Washington, Jaa. 2fl.—By a vote
of 9 to S, Um mate military com
mittee today approved pro virions
providing for cempalaory military
training for boys between It aad 21
years inclusive, aad ordered a favor
able report upon the army reorgani
sation bill.
The compulsory military training
period at foar months, was opposed
In the committee by Sens tors Len
root, ef Witconda, aad Capper, of
Kansas, HspubHcans; Senator* Mo
Krllar, of Tcaaeaeee; Sheppard, of
Texas; Kilby, of Arkansas, Demo
crats: Senators Wadsworth, ef
New York, Warren, of Wyoming,
Sutherland, of West Virginia, Mew,
of Indiana, F'relincbeysen. of New
Jersey, Knox, of Peunsptiraaia. aad
•* Mlseeari, EaptiUieane
and Chamberlain, Oregon aad Thom
as. of Colorado, Democrats support
cd it. Senator McKoUar announced
that be would eubmit a minority re
port in which a number ef the aen
atore who opposed the piaa are ax
DMrtMl to CO Dear.
At Anally agreed upon, the bill Is
virtually the am as reported by
the subcommittee, hat It radiant*
different from the reorganisation bill
submitted by the war department to
Congress. Is addition to ekablish
iny compulsory military training, the
bill provides for out army to no di
vided Into a eitinea army composed
of men who hove received the eom
and 18,000 oScrn aad a notional
guard.
NEW HEAD OF TEKASUEY
native or Norm CAROLINA
David Franklin Houston, of St
lamia. Me., who hat hem Secretary
ef Agriculture la President WUson'i
cabinet tines March, 1111. who wai
yesterday named at Secretary ef the
Treasury, was bora ia Monroe, U»
ion oeunty, N. C., February 11, IMi
He graduated from South Carol im
College in 1887, received hit A M
degree from Harvard In 1888, are
waa honored with the L L D. dagrei
by Tulaae University la 1808. H
married Him Helea Oesll, ef Anetia
Texas, la 1888
From 1881 to 1884 he was gradu
ate Muds at at Harvard Untvereitj
aad is the latter year kirtmt ad
Junet prefimis ef puStkal ecisms
fat the University of Texas; in 1ST
ho was mode-late jrifimr am
wsvtrssa? * ~
I oc ao dooa of too fatottr at Um Too
i m UiKotdg trim it** to l**t
, who* Im woo tioetod aroaidoat of Um
A ud M. Collogo of Toma, oorrlag
• la that eapmttg for throo jroari,
r whoa bo rotsraod to too UatoorAto
• of Tamo oa prwtdiat of too laotJta
i tfcm. Ho waa oiootod ohaasoltor of
i sisrs.'ssES s a.’js
i Dm oath ha baattos lootatari of
■ AgrkaMaro la ltlt. ''
DUNN DEPUTY HURT
NEGRO IN HOSPITAL
■
'
Deputy Sheriff Kyi* Matthew, fa
•offering from painful bruleee end
Williaa Morchleon, negro, fa fa •
P.yrUeville hoepttal with two bullet,
in hi. lunge es the result ef a run
ning gun fight between policemen
had two alleged negro robber*, which
culminated fa the wreckage ef the
negroes' automobile against s freight
car at the Tilghmaa Leather plant
hare early Saturday morning.
Matthews' injuries are net serious
H« w»fa the runs tag beard of the
hutomeMl* when it Mashed against
the freight ear. Marehiaon is ex
pected to die
Chelf of Police Page. Patrotman
•5* «»d Deputy Sheriff.
K. F. Jemlgaa, A. J. Qadwfa ami
Mstthewa formed the police party.
Thay had been notified that two ne
gro*. were at the plant offering ste
le" feed* for ml*. When they ar
rived at the mil the negro** attemp
ted to escape fa the ear, Pag* and
Matthew, jumped te the running
hosed andl eoe of the negroes started
***** 11 Jrrnlgaa. Then the negro
«0«ap*d from the ear. It left the
'**^.*t ***** ud struck a car
agafatt lha car and Page
WM tfaown to the ground. Both
^ EL iB
*™*vr n v R ■ o • MCI pod,
FOREIGN VESSELS DO WT
NAVE TO 1EAL LIQUORS UP.
Wafafagten, Jn fd — Orders re
quiring liquor* ea foreign -.mile te
be sealed while the ihipe are fa Uni
ted State, porta hers been (impend
ed pending a ruling by dm Attorney
General Amfateat Secretary of the
Treasury Shouae announced today.
While the Attorney General ha.
not yet rendered an opinion, the ac
tios of Aasfataat Secretery thouee
sms rip-led her* ea Indicating that
the port 'juo an liquor* ea foreign
fatpawm he lifted permanently.
CHAMBER'S FIRST
MEETING BRINGS
PEOPLE TOGETHER
haowfery IWk it
To Dmm 1m Initial Gathor*
*-T “ - "in
^OPERATION KEYNOTE *
OF THE ORGANIZATION , (
*
gsiaii5§i
ieltiday and Malar *—— frtomn.
ta apaikan. and i nil matolli m tt
irmctJcaUy twmry badmae aatoeyrfca
It ana wonderful nutlM |,«|
*■* waa aaadad to (tart Um in k
Utorian on tt* way toward that |
Jhfeh to maatn in
t wfll reach. Mr.
■« officer far the
huaiaatk aad «l(iy ... to hit ia
m» af the progrtaa aah by TTaaa
•nd of the IlcttoMa tS!t m
a (tare far i dSaahb
(erica ae *-—iirlnnfr far m
nunity'i