r ! V, U- ' - . ^ ; i THE JOHNSTONIAN- THE JOHNSTONIAN AND' JOHNSTON COUNTY SUN CONSOLIDATED VOLUME 13. SELMA, N. C., THURSDAY, MAY 8, 1930. NUMBER 19. Textile Men To Meet Here In School Auditorium, May 9 Over 100 Men From the Eastern Carolina Division to Be in Selma Meeting It is' expected that more than one hundred members of the Eastern Carolina Textile Division will attend the Spring Meeting to be held in the Selma Graded School Auditorium on Friday, May 9th at 10:00 o’clock A. M. Prof. F. M. Waters, Superintend ent of Selma Graded School, will de liver the address of welcome, and it ,is hoped to make this meeting the best that has yet been held, both from an educational and a social standpoint. Selma being a central ized location a.nd the fact that many mills are operating on curtailed schedules will, no doubt, induce a full attendance at this' meeting. Luncheon will be provided by the Selma Cotton Mills and the Eastern Manufacturing Company and this will be served in the hail of the Sel- m.a Kiwanis Club. With all this in view, it is confidently expected that the meeting will be a very pleasant and profitable one. U. S. Senate Fails To Confirm Parker For Supreme Court PLACES CHILD IN SHRINER’S HOSPITAL Washington, May 7.—The Senate today rejected John J. Parker as an Associate Justice of‘ the Supreme Court. The vote was 41 to 39. The North Carolina judge .missed confirmation by a two vote margin centering on his attitude toward or ganized labor and the negro. It is the first Supreme Courts nomi nation to be rejected since 1894. The Senate’s decision leaves va cant the seat of the late Justice San ford. Standing firmly by his nominee President Hoover has given no indi cation who will be his next choice. Senate leaders do not believe he will agiin turn to the South. Local Minister Talks To Selma Kiwanians Eider Isaac Jones Died Last ' Sunday Mr. anc! Mrs. W. H. Call returned \yednesday from Greenville, S. C., where they placed little Lucile Lamb in the Shriner’s Orphanage Hospital, which is maintained by the Shrine for the treatment of deformed chil dren who are unable to have treat ment elsewhere. Mr. Call says a won derful work is being done at this institution where 65 beds are avail able and other patients are treated who are able to go and come from their home. Every care is taken of, the little sufferers, clothing furnish ed, playthings and amusements pro vided for them while confined in the hospital, and bright-faced nurses en tertain tjiem. A generous, public- spirited citizen of Greenville built this hospital and the Shrike is re sponsible for the upkeep. Mr. Cal! thinks the little girl they took will possibly be in the hospital for 5 or 6 months. Hostess at Birthday Dinner and Family Reunion Mrs. Mamie Tuck Candler was hostess at a lovely birthday dinner and family reunion on Thursday, May 8th, in Celebration of her moth er’s, Mrs. Georgianna Winston Tuck’s 80th birthday. 'The lower floor of the spacious home on Anderson St. was en suite for the occasion and tastefully decorated with . colorful spring flowers.|''T5iatives from out TJf^own" began to arrive before noon .and were greeted at the door by Mrs. Candler and passed on to where Mrs. Tuck, comfortably seated, re ceived congratulations, felicitations and many lovely birthday remem brances. At one o’clock the guests were ushered into the dining room, and a delicious four course dinner was served. The beautifully appoint ed table had as its centerpiece a bowl of red and white roses, U. D. C. colors, Mrs. Tuck having been quite active in the work of the Daughters of Confederacy and at one time President of' the Selma Chap ter for four years. She later organ ized the Junior Chapter with 50 members. While Mrs. Tuck is prob ably Selma’s oldest woman, she is mentally alert, keeping abreast of the times and a most interesting con versationalist. She has a wide circle of admiring friends who coflgratu- late her on being '80 years ygung. Relatives present were; Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Broadfoot and children, of Wendell; Mr. and Mrs. Tom W. Winston, Miss Georgia Noble Taylor, Julia Winston Taylor and Mrs. Rich ard Taylor, of Oxford; Mr. and Mrs. Sam E. Leonard and daughter Mar garet, of Rocky Mount; Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Etheredge, Miss Margaret and Stella Etheredge, Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Etheredge, Mr. and Mrs. Roger Strickland, Mr. §.nd Mrs. F. B. Sit- ton, Mrs. R. A. Ash-worth, Misses Anne. and Amy Ashworth, Robert A-shworth, Mrs. Mamie Tuck, Mr. ^Claiborne Tuck. Great grandchildren present were: Frank Winston Sit- ton, Elizabeth Ashworth and Bobby Etheredge. Elder H. F. Hutchens returned Monday from a few days stay out of town, and found awaiting him a telegram asking that he conduct the funeral of Elder Isaac Jones at 3:30 on Monday afternoon, but of course it was then too late for him to comply with the request, greatly to the regret of the Selma minister. Elder Jones died Sunday afternoon about .6:00 o’clock. He was going into his 84th year and was one of the oldest and most prominent Prim itive Baptist preachers in the United States, having done considerable traveling in- his m.inisterial work, and was known and highly esteemed and much loved by a wide circle of ac- quaintainces and Primitive Baptist over the country. The deceased made his home near Maple Hill, in Pender County, N. C , where he was reared and where he spent the major portion of his life. FORD BEATS AMBULANCE ■ AS 8 MINUTES BABY WINS F-sv. D. F. Waddell, pastor of the local Presbyterian Church, was they speaker at the Kiw'anis luncheon las Thursday evening. Rev. Mr. Wad dell’s talk was full of humor anc wit and it _ was enjoyed very m.uch by the club. District Trustee, Fred Waters, an-| nounced to the club that Fridayl' June 13 the'nine clubs of the fourth j Carolinas district would gather at) Fayetteville for the yearly meeting.* He also read a letter from Dri Battle A. Hocutt, of Clayton, sug gesting that the luncheon clubs o; th^ county meet together at interJ vals during the year to learn one another better and to thresh ou'f some of the problems which con front the people of the county. This suggestion was voted on by the club and was..passed without a dissenting vote. It is hoped that a bus can be charteered sometime during this month for the purpose of taking a number of farmers to Dr. David R. Coker’s farm near Hartsville, S. C. Dick Massey is head of the commit tee to put this across. He said that he would be in position to tell the club something definite at the next .meeting of the club. Charles W. Scales and Linwood Sichardson were appointed to repre- ,^ent the club at the International invention to be held at Atlantic City in June. •• These gentlemen are to see that some other members of the club attends this meeting if they can’t attend. Meteorite Seen From Here as It is Passing Over Greensboro Johnston County Superior Court .The Superior Court finished trying MRS. ROY HARDEE DIES IN HOSPITAL ,A"Are in WasK'ngton, N. C., Wed nesday' burned 'up an entire city Mock and . doing damage estimated at about $200,000. • When the Hudson-Belk Co. baby sho-w drew an entry one day old last Wednesday those connected with the sho-w thought the contest for the youngest baby was over. But the race had just heg'un. On Thursday a baby weighed in 'at the tender age of two hours and thirty minutes. The contest was again conceded. But by this time the race between parents had become eclipsed by a race between hospitals and ambu lance drivel's, 1 Thursday’s entry was from Rex Hospital. Yesterday it was badly distanced by a Mary Elizabeth baby, brought in by another ambulance driver. For the third time the prize of a crib was conceded and for the third time the concession was premature. The contest closed last night at six o’clock. Twelve minutes before it closed an excited nurse from Rex Hospital rushed in with a bundle ■which was shown to contain seven pounds and 12 ounces 'of real live baby and which authenticated rec ords at the hospital showed to hkve been born at 5:40 p. m., just eight minutes before. But while the hospitals stayed in the contest until the last, '■ the am bulances were eliminated. The win ner, Leland Gould Barden, Jr., of 512 Holt Street, was brought in by the proud father in person and visit ed the store in the trusted family Ford. The -baby registering in second place was Mary Lucinda Driver, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Driver, of 511 East Jones street. In all 281 babies -were weighed during the contest. Other contest ■winners were: Joyce Lee Andrews, heaviest baby 6 to 12 mo.nths of age weight 33 pounds, age 11 months. George R. Barden, hea-viest baby 13 to 24 months, weight 38 pounds, age 21 months. Lois and Louis "Woodall heaviest set of t-wins age 8 months, -weight:- Lois 18 pounds, 2 1-2 ounces, Louis 18 pounds, 2 ounces.—Raleigh News and Observer, 4th. Mrs. Driver was formerly Miss Ruth Fulghum, of Selrria. Mrs. Bar den was Miss Jessie Gurley, also of Selma. . Tornado in Texas Tuesday took 66 lives and caused property damage' running into millions of dollars; . ' A very sad death occurred in the Johnston County Hospital on April the 30th, when Mrs. Roy Hardee, of Cleveland Township, died of child birth. Mrs. Hardee was taken to the hospital about one o’clock in the morning and died about five o’clock in the morning of the same day, on ly living about four hours after reaching the hospital. She was. afflicted with, l^tigh't’s ‘di'sease,' and this is attributed to being one of the prime causes of her untimely death. Her mother died with the same trouble when she was born. Mrs. Hardee was a member of the Methodist church at Mount Zion, but aft,er her marriage less than a year ago, she, and her husband lived near Oakland church. The funeral was conducted from Oakland church on Wednesday following her death on Tuesday, by her. pastor. Rev. Mr. Clegg, of Garner. There was a very large crowd at the funeral and burial and the floral offerings were numer ous and very beautiful. Mrs. Hardee only lacked about t-wo weeks of be ing 19 years old. . The deceasied is a daughter of Mr. J. C. Carroll, of upper Cleve land Township, who still survives her. She is also survived by her husband, her step-mother,_one sister, Mrs. M. A. Penny, of Gamer; and three brothers as follows: Messrs. J. Claude and W. L. Carroll, of McCul- lers. Route 1; Mr. H E. Carroll, of Raleigh, and one half brther, Air. Joseph Carroll, of McCullers. MR. N. H. LUCAS FOR THE LEGISLATURE Johnsto'nian-Sun, Dear Editor: This is no time to take chances. The major issue in the coming cam paign, and in the next legislature will be tax reduction. To handle that question, we need a man with a wide range of knowledge, with much thought and observation. There is a lot of we taxpayers -who think Lucas is the best qualified man in the county to handle the question. Our inefficient, unjust and notorious taxing question is an intricate and complex question. It will take a high degree of intelligence, manhood and nerve to successfully cope .with that problem. And Lucas possesses all three, in a high degree. We hope that no person or persons, will in trigue, or maneuver to defeat his norriination in the Convention, and thereby cause taxpayers to lose hope in tax relief, and might react to our disadvantage. Then, if you will remember the year 1924, you .will feel that you are duty bound to hon or that man at least one time. A. T. JOHNSON. "a few people in Selma and othe ■ parts of Johnston County have bee: heard to say that they saw a strange light in the direction of Gfeensbori last Saturday night wliich impressed them as being a “shooting star” or small meteor. Some thought it was a sky rocket sent up some-where near here, r This is said to have been a meteor ite which seemed to pass directly over Greensboro Saturday hight about 9 o’clock and kept up a dis tinct roaring and giving off gxplo- sions which shook buildings. / We ■quo'fe below from an ^icTe "appear- ing in -the Greensboro Daily Ne-ws Monday of this -week: In the absence of defini-te know ledge in regard to the disposition and destination of the meteorite which on Saturday night visited Greensboro and other North Carolina communities many of those who saw and heard it continued on Sunday to speculate in regard to the re markable visitor. It was quite evi dent that when the big transient heavenly body began this journey no forwarding address was provid ed. - It is considered quite possible that fragments *of the meteorite will be discovered somewhere in this state. Scientists say that such bodies usual ly are finally consumed by the loss of fragments from time to time, the.se portions falling to the earth and into the sea. In other words, the meteorite, it is said, does not fall as one great body, but by a sort of explosive and attritional pro cess is gradnally consumed, usually. J. P. Molen, in charge of the Unit ed States wieather station at the Greensboro airport, when questioned yesterday by a Daily News reporter expressed the confident opinion that the erratic caller was a meteorite. Attention was called to the fact that meteors do not come in contact with the earth, although meteorites, I which are much large than meteors, -(hr-.Sestabiiish very \dgorous contacts with this planet. It is known that from time to time fragments of con siderable size and weight have fallen from meteorites to the earth. Available information appears to indicate that a meteorite bearing a good deal of resemblance to the one seen in North Carolina Saturday night was the one reported at Wes ton, Conn., April 14, 1807. The di- amter of the one at Weston was esti mated at 300 feet. Three heavy ex plosions were reported then. Two feet below the earth’s surface was fo.und a 35-pound fragment from the meteori-te which visited Connecti cut. Considerable similarity between the Connecticut and North Carolina meteorites, both as a -visual and audi tory impressions, appears to have been indicated. One observer reported that the Saturday night visitor seemed to be about four inches in diameter and about 20 miles high. This would ap pear to indicate that its diameter ac tually ranged between 100 and 300 feet, it was Said. It may have weighed hundreds of tons. Years ago a certain meteorite, was estimat ed as weighing almost 60,000 tons. One seen at Windsor August 18, 1783, is said to have been at least 3,200 feet in diameter, or about | all'..the cases on the docket last Thursday. Cases that have been.dis- I pos.ed of since last Tuesday are as follows; Mrs. Mourning Jackson vs. H. D. Perkins. Motion is - made for con tinuance and this case was set for trial on the first Monday of the next civil term xif court. W. Jesse Stanley vs. E." Ward R. W. Coats. Cont. for defendant. 'Dr. Surles certificate filed in case. Mrs. Minnie T. Duncan, Adm., vs. E. R. Gulley and others. This case was ordered siet as first case for Monday of the second week of next, term of Superior Court. W. F. McLamb vs A i^,/ludson, John A. Lee, W. J. Adai& and A. P. Tart. Consent judgme^ m favor of plaintiff and defendants in the sum of $425.00 with interest' from April 5, 1929 less credit of $51.78 as of April 5, 1929.. Execution not to be issued before Nov. 1, 1930. W. Ryal Woodall vs. Ora V. Pool and Mrsj Mary Moore. Order con tinuing the action for this term and setting it at the top of the next civil calendar for trial as the first case in first Tuesday of next ci-vil term. W. H. Hayes vs. Herbert Sutton. Dismissed the action and taxed plain tiff with cost. Central Shoe Company vs. W. R. Keen and J. W. Keen, surety. Con sent judgment by which plaintiff will recover of defendant the sum of $799.66 with interest from Dec. 4, 1928 and the cost. Execution not to be issued until after Nov. 1, 1930. Zebulon Johnson vs. B. J. Benson and others. Order appointing James Raynor and C. C. Cannady receivers of the lands described in the plead ings. 'Vertie Barefoot Hugulet and oth ers vs. Atlantic Joint Stock Land Bank. Order authorizing plaintiff to file an amended complaint within 20, days from Thursday, April 30, 1930, and defe.hfianta. have- 20 d.ays after filing amended complaint to file any pleadings they may deem- proper. W. H. Wiggs vs. Mary George. Actions for damages-' sustained in an accident on highway when auto mobile of defendant ran into a wag on of the plaintiff causing damage to his mule and wagon and load of tobacco. The jury finds that the plaintiff is damaged about $75.00, the defendant is therefore ordered to pay the plaintiff $75.00 and also pay the cost of the action. Alice Grimes., and others vs. Bar bour and Denning. Consent refer- eno9 and ordered that J. C. Clifford, Esq., of Dunn; head the contention: and file findings of fact and opinion: of law. J. L. Lee vs. A. H. Morgan. Judg ment by which plyaintiff and de fendant have agreed on a route fo: the highway, restraining order le: tered in this cause is dissolved ani the plaintiff is taxed -with the cos: George Ragsdale vs. Charlie Davil Jud,gment in favor of Plaintiff v.l defendant in the sum of $287.7: with interest on same from Dec. 1928. E. J. Wellons vs. W. C. Lassiter and Rosella Lassiter. Judgment on the pleadings in favor, of the plain- Sheriff Gets Telegram From Illinois That Gar Thieves Arrested Those who read The Johnstonian- Sun will probably remember an' ac count of an automobile theft which, was published in these columns in the issue of - April 24th, rela tive to the stealing' of a man’s car in Smithfield, which we are re- printing in part, as follows: “Sunday night Mr. Paul R. Ne'W- man of Lillington, N. C., stopped at the Johnston apartment house and went inside for about five minutes. As he was coming right back out he left the keys in the car. While in the house he heard a car start off but thought that it was someone else. When he went out to get hLs car it was gone.” Since that time an un'tiring effort has been under way by Sheriff Fitz gerald and his force of deputies to locate the car and apprehend the guilty party or parties, but no trace could he had until recently when some checks began to show up at the bank where Mr. Newman did his banking. These checks bore Mr. Newman’s signature, but of course, his banker very readily saw that the signatures were not original. These checks- came from different pointe between here and some point out in Illinois, so the -wires were put into operation in an effort to head off the thieves. In response to this ef fort, the police department in Car- bondale, Illinois, telegraphed the nqws that they held two men driv ing a Ford car with a North Cart>- li'na license tag which answered the description of Mr. Newman’s car. They also found in one of the car door pockets a check book of Mr. Ne-wman’s that had been partly or entirely used up, and this no doubt accounts for -the bogus checks that have been arrmng signed in the name of Mr. Ne-wman. Sheriff Fitzgerald advises us that he has already wired the police in . Carbondale, 111., t hold the men ss^. cure until they can be brought back to this state to answer to the crime. The* names given by these men! Carbbndale are “Johnnie Doran” “Claud .Williams,” but tb?*r tru« identification may tell quite Aliffer- ent tale when they arrive in John ston County. Ransom Evans Killed When Car Overturns Mr. RaiLsom Evans, who lived -. about one m.ile east of Princeton, ; had his neck broken when his car overturned in a sandy place in the road near Richardson Bridge some time between ten and eleven o’clock Monday night. There was a Holt boy in the car with Mr. Evans at the time, and it is said that when the car struck the sandy place in the road it swerved to one side and turned over ‘catching Mr. Evans under one side of the steering-wheel and breaking his nepk, from which ') he died instantly. The Holt boy es- j caped unhurt with the exception of / one finger which was naaitfr badly V hurt.. three-fifths of a riiile. In height I tiff vs. defendants in the sum of AT THE FAIRVIEW PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Sunday School at 10 A. M. Preaching service at, 8 P. M. ' D. F. WADDELL, Pastor. they vary from 25 to 200, miles; that is; they would hardly be visible at a distance greater than 200 miles. The meteorite was about 60 miles away -when it passed over or at least seemed to pass over Greens boro, one person who viewed it con jectured. ' The angle .at which it passed ■was not definitely established, but on the basis • of . impressions formed by many persons who ob served the. strange ' light and heard the ■weird noites Mr. Molen is in clined to the opinion that the rare visitor was traveling at an altitude of 25 or 30 miles at the time of the .explosions over this- section. “It may have been going from 400 to 450 miles an hour,’* he added, “and it may have weighed hundreds of tons.” 1 One of those who viewed the strange heavenly manifestation refer red to the light as “a reddish cast before the e::(;plosion and blue after the explosion.”. The noises were something like those caused by dis tant cannon in action, it was said. Observers agree that houses were shaken in somewhat the fashion pre vailing in times of earthquakes. The brilliance of the light shed by the s'wift traveler and the awe-inspiring thunderousness of the explosive nois- $4,152.13 with interest on $88,92 from Feb. 2, 1929 and interest on $4,062.21 from Nov. 1, 1927. The Sheriff’s officie was notified of the accident and deputies were soon on the scene to make an investiga tion, and we understand- t^t'-they made their report to the effect that Mr. Evans came to his death pure^ ly as an accident. . ■ ' , The remains were taken to his home near Princeton. es evoked much excited comment in this section. Through the combination of dense atmosphere in the heavens, the in tense heat and the impressive speed as the meteorite plunges through space friction naturally develops, causing the explosions, with attend ant dislodging and failing of frag ments. ■ The inflammable character of the big - body seems to have beben rather definitely indicated. The presence of gas is generally recog nized as one of the manifestation. Malleable iron is one of the chief materials in meteorites, astronomers say. Fragments of meteorites oh display at Yale university have been found to co-ntain from 95 to 98 per cent iron and from two to five per cent nickel. Although uncertainty prevails as to the present location of the phe nomenon and its fragmentary family, thos,e who saw the lightning-like flashing and heard the peculiar roar are e'vidently hopeful that they will not have intimate contact with the COUNTY AUDITOR VISITS BIG CRUISER Mr. R. L. Fitzgerald of Smithfield and family went to Southport last Sunday to see the United States cruiser Raleigh. Mr. Fitzgerald states that it was a very interesting trip and that every citizen in North Carolina should have visited the boat. He says that there were thousands and thousands of people there, and that he had to stand in line about an hour before he could get on the boat. Mr.. Fitzgerald also says the* the marines' were very politj Build every way. He Says, that the," was very rough- Su'ifdav aj,D N and that it waS ^n excit ienoe when they went Cruiser in the httL: ^ ^ small boats bounce. ped water waves, ^ I ^ jseep it' .1,. SoldU tha mystifying meteorite. ,RD’S ,,-ggt it- iwiri