LOIISBI'RG COTTON Cotton ivas worth l? 1-2 cents a poiinii iu !,oirf>buri{ yesterday. THE COUNTY - THE STATE - THE UNION rp ? Times STOP MOXEV 1 rorn Leaving Loui-burg By Advertising In Hie TIMES VOLUMN LXIX SIBS< R1PTION ?1.50 a Yea LOU1SBURQ, N. CAROLINA t'BIDAY, APRIL 23, 1938 (EIGHT PAGES) NUMBER lO JUDGE COW PER PRESIDES JEFFREYS GUILTY SIMPLE ' ASSAULT Willie Milliard Was (jlrrn IS lo '<6 Months? (iriind Jury Makes Report ? Court Convened Tues The regular April term of Franklin Criminal Cou>>f conven ed in Louisburg on Tuesday mor-i ning ? having tak^if holiday on! Monday ? Easter Monday. Judge 0. ^Vernon Cowper, of Kinston. presided in a most effic ient ami/ business-like manner. while/Solicitor W. Y. Bickett, of Raleigh, ably represented the ate in the prosecutions. Julge Cowper's charge to the grand jury was full and interest-i ing and covered the whole situa-| tion in a very intelligent manner. He divided their duties into two] classes, one to prevent those against whom there is noD proper! evidence from going to further i expense, the other to see that the ' guilty ones are tried. There arei other duties, such as protecting! ohe County and individuals i against crime and damage to; property, and to see that officers! perform their duty, looking after; County property, particularly the' Jail, prison comps and County 1 home. He paid special attention to automobiles as crime instru-j ments. Deaths upon the high ways last year totaled 40,300. He stated that loss of self control or justi wickedness is responsible for these deaths and violating traffic laws. He thinks patriotism would help control this as well as law enforcement, which is always an aftermath. *" The charge was a strong one and enjoyed. After completing the charge t-he d jcket' was taken up and disposed oi as follows: Taz Hargrove was foiyid guilty o! reckless driving and was given 3 months on roads. Willie Williams was found guil ty of assault with deadly weapon and was given not less than 18 months nor more than 3 years in State prison. M. B. Jeffreys was found guilty of simple assault. Presley Kearney plead guilty to larceny and receiving, judgment suspended for two years upon pay ment of costs. Grand Jury Report The Grand Jury completed its work on Wednesday afternoon and after filing the following re port was discharged with the thanks of the Court: To Honorable G. Vernon Cowper. Judge Presiding: We, the Grand Jury of April Term, 1938 Franklin County Su perior Court, respectfully submit the following report: We have passed on all bills which have been submitted to us or that have been brought to our attention, to the best of our know ledge and ability. We have visited the County Jail, the Prison Camp, the Coun ty Home and find them all well kept and in good condition. We have talked with the May or of Franklinton and he reports that the City lock-up has, been re paired and put in good condition. We discussed with Mr. J. S. How ell, a member of the Board of Commissioners of the Town of Louisburg, bhe matter of the Louisburg City lock-up, and he promised to take the matter up with the Town Board immediate ly. Respectfully submitted., W. R. DEAN, Foreman I of Grand Jury. i 'lay Saturday is the lust day to file to ran for office in the June Primary. When Earl Williams of Monroe, route 1, came back from tl^ . Nary two years ago, Jobs were hard to gpt so he raised 6500 broilers last year and 5600 this season. He made a neat profit of about 15 cents a chick. Now he doesn't want a city Job. Program At The Louisburg Theatre The following Is the program at the Lonisburg Theatre, begin ning Saturday. April 23: ?8aturd"ay ? Double Feature-^ ? ^ill Boyd in "Cassidy of Bar 20" and Claire Trevor in "Walking Down Broadway." Also Chap. 2 j "The Lone Ranger." Owl Show Saturday Night 11 P. M. ? Adults Only. Sally Ellers and Ann Shirley in "Condemned Women." Sunday-Monday ? Bette Davis, 1 Henry Fonda and George Brent in "Jezebel." Tuesday ? Mickey Rooney, Ce celia Parker and Lewis Stone In , "JuHg? Hardy's Children." Wednesday ? Phil Regan and j Penny Singleton In ^O.ut*ide of Paradise", " ' " ' i Thursday-Friday ? Shirley Tem i pie In "Rebecca of Sunnybrook ' Farm." Four Billions More ? . , 'U WASHINGTON. D. C. . . . Admin istration offlelals announce that with ? speedy Congressional okay tbey will be able to pour an esti mated four billion dollars Jnto tits dry eoonomle pump betors tbe end of Hay. Plans call for relaxation of RJXJ tending restrict Ions, new poMte works, mors pensions and Insurance bsnefes. and loans to sftles and states. Most of tbe money srlll be spent by Harry Hopkins, rsllsf osar (above), who asked (or an end to "direct relief." Miss Thomas Re ceives Superior Grade Little Miss Talmadge Thomas, of the Junior Music Club of Louis burg received a superior rating in piano at the State competitive festival held at Queens-Chico Col lege in Charlotte, on Saturday. April 16. Others who won the right to attend this State festival along with Miss Thomas from Louishurg were Misses Jackie "Harkins. Eliz jbetli Martin. Sarah and May Davis, who received high rating in the District festival held at Peace College. Raleigh. Those accompanying b h e s e young ladies to Charlotte were: Mr. and? M?Sr- M. S. Davis. Miss Pinch of Louisburg College. Mrs. O. Y. Yarboro of Mills High School. Miss Kate Blanchard, of Hertford, and Mr. E. F. Thomas. '.OUISBURG METHODIST CHURCH Easter Sunday was a happy day in the Louisburg Baptist Church. The anthem by the choir and the message by l-lie pastor on the theme, "Fellowship with the Liv ing Christ." were heard apprecia tively by a large congregation at the morning service of worship. Around fifty persons attended the closing assembly of the Training Union at 7:15 p. m. At the even ing service Rev. L. F. Kenii brought to an attentive audience an informing ahd inspiring mes sage-on^ the subject of immortali ty. " This Sunday promises to be an other good day. Services of wor ship will be held at 11:00 a. m. and 7:30 p. m. The Sunday School will convene at 9:45 a. m.. and the Training Union at 6:30 p. m. The sermon topics for t'he day are. "A Good Man," and "Casting a Shadow." The public is cordially invited to attend these services. ST. PAUL'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH Early celebratiou of the Holy Communion will come at 8:00 a m. Church School sessions will begin at> 9:45 a. m. and Morning Prayer and Sermon will come at 11:00 o'clock. The Young People's Service League will meet at 6:30 p. m. in the church. Saturday evening ot this week the Servers Guild will meet in the Rectory for organization. SENIORS GIVE PLAV ?The Senior Class of Gold Band will present the play, Aunt Sa manthy Rules the Roost, a farce by Charles George on Friday even ing, April 29th, at. 8U)0 o'clock in the high school auditorium. The cut of characters is as follows: ' Aunt Samanthy Slmpkins. An old maid ? Mae Gilliam. Serena Simpkins. Her older niece ? Ruby Taylor. Sophie Simpkins, Her younger niece ? Mildred Watkins. Polly Paine, Maid ? Dorothy Guptou. Annie Ambrose. Village Dress- i maker? Nannie Leonard. Blanche Bowers. Woman ot few 1 words ? Lurlyne Woodard. Lucien Littlefield, Farmer? | Marvin Pleasants Blair Boswell, Likes Serena ? Robert Radford. , Frank Fairfield, Likes Sbphle ? Johnnie Cottrell. Lawrence Lovewell, S(ranger ? Melville Griffin. -Buddy Baskins, Grocery Boy ? Bucik Joyn^r. Co'rtie an enjoy an evening of fun. ? ? . Stttocrtto t<* ch? franklin Tim** Louisburg College News Items I.Ol ISIilIKi COLI.KOK AM) THK STY 1, 10 SHOW The annual Style Show, staged ( by the Textile Department of the State College of the University- of {North Carolina under the direc tion of Dr. Thomas Nelson, has become quite an event wit*h the [colleges of North Carolina. The 'Domestic Arts Department of these colleges encourage their students to design, tit, and make dresses from goods made by students of the TexMle Department of the Stale College, and these young la , dies exhibit the dresses made by them at this annual Style Show. Louisburg College students have been conspicuous in these shows and have carried off a number of prizes for the beautiful garments designed and made hy Miem and exhibited on the occasions of this I show. Under the direction of Mrs. j Nellie Tipton Moon, head of the i department of Domestic Arts of Louisburg College, the following ( thirteen young ladies from her de- ' partment will exhibit' dresses and costumes designed and made by , them, at the style show to be held the latter part of this week; . | Miss Alma Lee Becton. Stantou burgj Miss Lillian Brown. Klch j Square; Miss Mildred Cole. Dur-j ham; Miss Lillian Corbiot. Gates ville; Miss Lucille Daniels, Stone wall; Miss Ida Gibbs. Columbia; Miss Kathleen Goodwin, Mill brook; Miss Josephine Lamm. Wilson, Miss Reon Maltese, Hemp: Miss Lellah Pittman. Whitakers; , Miss Laura Stutts, Mount Gilead; Miss Bethany Von Canon, West | Knd; Miss Betty Young, Kittrell. This Style Show tokes place in Pullen Hall of the State College on Thursday. April 21. 1938, and! a large number of the friends of| the young ladies will witness the tWtl. ? . 1 HOAKI) OK TKISTKKS KKCENT ACTION . ! The Board of Trustees of Louis burg College met in Kaleigh this week and voted to accept an offer made to t-he Board of Trustees for certain property belonging to1 Louisburg College located on Cha pel Hill Street in Durham. N. C. I The money derived from this sale and also twelve thousand dollars collected during the campaign last , , summer for funds for the college ?is now applied to the indebtedness of the college. The pledges made last summer for Louisburg Col lege were made with the under standing that the total indebted-! ness would be raised. In view of the fact thaii the indebtedness has been so nearly raised, each person j who made a pledge to the college I has written that the pledge will | be paid in full. As a result, all old accounts against the college have been paid in full and a goodly sum has been paid on the bonded in debtedness of t'he college. Dr. Walter Patten, the Public Rela tions Secretary of the college, will continue work on this matter un til the indebtedness of the college has been paid in full. K. E. GUPTON DEAD Mr Kilmus E. Gupton. one of 'Franklin County's oldest andi most highly respected citizens died at his home near Sandy Creek Wednesday evening about 8 o'clock, in his 82nd year. He! was one of the old school of Sou-' them gentlemen, whose ideas were broad, generous and strong. He is survived by three sons, j Clyde. Gupton. Haywood C. Gup.i ton and Rompton Gupton, besides a host of relatives and friends. > Funeral services were held from the home yesterday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock, conducted by Rev. C. B. Howard, and interment was made in the family cemetery nearby. A large number of relatives and friends attended the last rites, and the floral tribute was espec ially pretty. Wins Stove Mr. $. R. Chesson won ('he Pyrofax gas stove at the close of the demonstration conducted by the Carolina Heating and Engi neering Co., of Durham, under the supervision of Mr. R. P. Kinf on Friday night. The demon stration was a success and accord ing to Mr. King was very satis factory. RETURNS FROM CUBA A party composed of Mr. and Mrs. G. B. Cooper, Miss Ethel Bartholomew, of Raleigh, Miss Katherine Teague, of Henderson, and Mr. Edward Bartholomew re turned this week from a week's tofiV including, Miami, Fla., and Havana? Cuba. , Saturday it the last day to file to run for office in the June Primary. Madison farmers have planted 101,500 seedling tree* so far this season and they say these trees will be worth $60,000 in a period of 25 years to say nothing of the soil saved and rebuilt. Before#Tlie Ballot, The^ Ballyhoo VIENNA . . . Propaganda Is IndlspensabJe In Nasi politics. Here Propa ganda Minister Paul Qoebbels arrives in Vienna to personally take charge ot the "build-up" for the plebiscite which afllrmed Hitler's an nexatfoa of Austria by a #9.75% "pure" vote. Uer Fuehrer himself spolce Immediately before the balloting liegan. shouting. "I regard Vienna a* * pearl and I will give It a setting worthy of its value!" IMPORTANT MEETING Franklin County Memorial Associa tion Tuesday, April 26th, at 3 P. M. \ A Special Gall for all officers and chairmen of all com mittees of the Franklin County Memorial Association, and members of the committees and any others interest ed in the work of the association has been made to meet in the County Commissioners rooms on Tuesday after noon, April 26th, at 3 o'clock for the purpose of electing officers for another year and to make plans and arrange ments for holding memorial services this year. Your presence is urgently needed and expected. A. F. JOHNSON, President. MRS. H. W. PERRY, Secretary. C. E. JEFFREYS. Ch. Ar. Committee. Recorder's Court 1 Franklin Recorder's Court held a recess session on Friday of last week and disposed of cases as follows: Garland Leonard was found not guilty of assault with deadly wea pon with intent to kill. James Holmes, assault with deadly weapon wi[h intent to kill, dismissed for want of probable cause. Henry Holmes, assault with deadly weapon, with intent to kill, probable cause found, bound over to Franklin Superior Court un-l der $300 bond. Clarence Allgood. Charlie All-; good, assault with deadly weapon, operating automobile intoxicated, not guilty as to Clarence Allgood. 1 Not guilty as to either defendant on all charges other than assault'. Assault charge as to Charlie All good in this warrant was amend- 1 ed and new warrant drawn. Prob able cause was found and defend- ; ant required to give $300 bond for appearance at Franklin Superior Court." J. M. Shaw was found gjiilty of operating automobile intoxicated, j prayer for judgment* continued. Four beef calves have been purchased by 4-H club boys of Pitt Count/y and will be grown out for exhibition and sale this fall. ; r A Guernsey Cattle promotion j sale will be held for Haywood County farmers on April 21. ? Britain Deals Direct , MEXICO CITY . . . r W Rlckett, British promotor who negotiated 1 an oil contract with Ethiopia be- i fore the Italian conquest. baa con ferred at length with President Cardenas and other high Mexican officials for satisfactory indemni fication tor o|l lands confiscated by the government. Britain de cided to deal directly instead of through customary Washington channels after .expresgihg" Impa tience with slowness of the Ameri can "good neighbor" policy. Grant For Schools Supt. W. R. Milts received tele grams Wie past week from Sena tors Bailey and Reynolds and Congressman Cooley, informing him that the WPA has reopened the Franklin County School buil dings application and had ap proved a grant of $29,250 for the const ruction of New School Buil dings at Justice and Bunn. The Board of Education had already advertised for bids to con s&ruct the Justice building, but the reopening of the applications and' the grant by the WPA neces sitated a change in the plans so there will be no bids received. New plans for both buldings will be made and the machinery placed ijj motion at an early date for the two new buildings at Jus tice,;and Bunn. FRANKLINTON NEWS Mrs. Walter Boyd and children, of near Oxford, spent the Easter holidays w-ith her mot'her, Mrs. Irma Kearney. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wheeler spent last week-end with friends and relatives near Conway. Mr. and Mrs. N. B. House had as their guest during the holidays their children. Mr. and Mrs. Maur ice House and children, of War renton. Mr. a"nd Mrs. Alvin House ?tid daughter, of GibsonviUe, and Miss Eunice House, of Raleigh. Mr. William Shivar, of Kinston, spent last Friday night wit.h his brother, Wesley Shivar. Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Powell and children, of Roanoke Rapids, and Mr and Mrs. J. H. Rogers and children, of Creedmoor, w.ere week-end .guests of their mother, Mrs. H. Bell. Mr. George Woodruff, of Rich mond. ind Eddie" Gibbs, of Wash ington, D. C., spent last Wednes day with their aunts, Mrs. H. Bell and Mrs. .C. G. Hight. They were accompanied by Mr. G. L. Gibbs, who has been seriously ill in Me morial Hospital, Richmond,'" Va. Mr. and Mrs. Jessie Ellis, of Roanoke Rapids, spent Monday afternoon with Mr. G. L. Gibbs. The many friends of Mr. G. L. Gibbs are glad to learn he is im proving so fas^aud hope he will soon be out a^ain. At the present he is staying with Mrs. C. G. Hight. S. Dr. H. H. Johnson will leave to-! day for Baltimore, to take a post graduate course in Mie study of the eye. He will be gone about three or dour weeks, during this time he. will return to his office in Loufsburg each' Saturday and Sunday. i. . Mr. and Mrs. F. L. Rawls and children, Pitzhugh and Eugenia, left yesteraay to make their home in Tampa, Fl?. Miss Christine Collier spent the Easter holidays visiting friends In Gfeensboro. ?? *2\/i4(mah Mr. I. P. "'wheeler visited Ral i eigli Wednesday. I t I Chief of Police C, K. PaVe sp.-nt | Easter Monday in Raleigh. n; Mr. A. W. Macon, of Amity ville, ] ' N. Y.. is on a visit to his peop^. ; ttt Mis, If. M. Sledge. Sr., is visit- j ins relatives ill Norfolk tfiis week. Z I I Mr. W. H. Perry was guest of | relatives in Norfolk the past week end. It' Mrs. T. B. Wheeler, of Scotland Neck, is visiting Mr. and Mrs. J J P. Timberlake. t t T Messrs. A. \V. and T, P. Uhol Ison, of Henderson, attended Court j I hew this week. ttt ' * 7 Mr. M. *C7 Pearce. of Hender- i son, was in attendince upon Court here this week. \ t t t \ Miss Lydia Person spent' the j Easter holidays with friends in j Washington Citv. ttt \ Mr. C. C. Abernethy, of Spring, Hope, was iu attendance upon: Court here this week. t t t | Miss Narcissa Clarke, of Balti more. Md.. is visiting relatives in and near Louisburg. ttt Miss Elizabeth Johnson, mem l.ber of the Wadesboro High School faculty, spent Easter at home, lit Miss Ann Freeman, of Pineland 'college, Sulemburg, was guest of her mother during the holidays, t t t Dr. Ernest Furgurson, of Wil liamston. was gnest of his people iu Louisburg the past week-end. ttt Mrs. W. O. Lee and children, of i I.umUjrtou, are guests of her par ents, Mr. and Mrs. It. A. Bobbitt. ttt Miss Bessie Strange, of Dur ham. was guest of relatives In and near Louisburg the past- week-end. t X t Mr. and Sijrs. Robert Barnes, of Henderson, were guests of relativ es in Louisburg the past week-end. t t t Mr. and Mrs. K. A. Englar. of I Baltimore, Md.. were guests of [friends in Louisburg the past | week-end. tf t Mr. and Mrs, W. H. Furgurson, of Durham, we're guests of rela tives in and near Louisburg the past week. Itl Miss Virginia Brigham, of Amityville, N. Y.. is visiting friends in and around Louisburg this week. t t t Mr. and Mrs. H. D. Green, of Lillington. were guests of relatives and friends in and near Louisburg the past week. t t t Dr. S. Johnson and .Miss Eliz jabeth Johnson attended a District ! meeting of Chiropractors at Ox I ford Saturday. t it i Dr. and Mrs. S. P. Burt and Miss Lucy Peri VBui t? spent tas ter in Spartanburg^tj. C\, with Mrs. A. H. Veazey." t t 1 Mrs. Ben .Crossman and little, 1 daughter, of Beverly Hills, Mass., jare guests of her parents, Mr. and I Mrs. R. H. Welch. nt Miss Sallie Pleasants, of the (Chapel Hill School faculty, was a guest of relatives in Louisburg the past week-end. i ? t Mr. and Mrs. H. IT. .Perry and sons, and Miss Camllle Swindell visited relatives in Hyde County the past week-ehd. tM Miss Christine Liles, of Wash-! ington, D. C., was guesti of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. K. L. Liles, during the holidays. ttt Miss Edna Earle Perry, of E. C.I T. C., Greenville, was a guest of her parents, Mr. and Mi;s. J. W. Perry for the holidays. ttt Miss Josephine Perry, of the Sauford School faculty, was guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. C. J Perry during the holidays. t XX j Mrs. W. T. Person and daugh ter, Betsy Blue, attended the l Dancing Master's Convention in ! Winston-Salem the past" week. m Misses Dorothy and Gertrude Foster, of Meredith College, Ral eigh, were guests of their parents, Mr. and Mrs. S. C. Foster, during' the holidays. ttt , Mr. and Mrs. R. M. Dean, Mr. and Mrs. P. E. Dean and Mrs. C.I E. Bobbitt reUirned home after, spending' several days at Asheville and other points In Western North Carolina. ttt Messrs. I. P. Wheeler, John Ra bll, James Collier, John L. Foster, J. Ed Jonet, J. L. Palmer, attend ed a meeting of the Grand Lodge of Masons in Raleigh Tuesday ntght. --.a !.-?'? - - v- \ K TODAY and CANALS for mrotiim The Federal Government is pro posing to buy the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal and turn it Into a . public recreational waterway. I can vouch for its recreational pos sibilities.- for in my adolescent youth in Washington the old "C & O" canal was one of the favorite playgrounds of the boys In their middle 'teens whom I used to go with. Originally planned by George Washington to provide a water way betweeu the navigable lower waters of the Potomac and the upper reaches of that turbulent river, the C & O canal was not finished until 1850. after railroads had begun to replace waterways for inland transportation But it carried a good deal of slow-mov ing freight for 75 years, and it was a grand place to swim, fish and paddle a canoe. I remember, the winter of 1886 87 when the Potomac River froze solid at Washington and the canal provided wonderful skating. Three other boys and myself started to skate from Washington to Cum berland, 150 miles. There is no more beautiful scenery in Ameri ca than the wooded mouutains through which the Potomac falls and up which the C & O canal climbs by a series of locks. ERIE "Clinton's Folly" Another waterway which I knew well as a young man is the Erie Canal, which runs 300 miles across New York from Lake Erie tio the Hudson River. The Erie Canal was the dream of a great and far seeing American patriot. DeWitt Clinton. Clinton was first to rea lize, after the Revolution, that the Northwest Territory was bound to fill up with settlers, whose products would have to he shipped to the seaboard. Railroads had not been invented. The only water routes to the sea were the Ohio and Mississippi valleys, lead ing to New Orleans, and the Great Lakes, blocked by Niagara Falls, and even if commerce could get by the Falls it would go through Canada and the ice-bound St. Law rence River. "Clinton's Folly." as his poli tical enemies ridiculed his canal scheme, made New York City the metropolis of America, for it con centrated of the freight or iginating in the basin of the Great Lakes at Buffalo, and carried it by water to the Hudson River and the seaport at its mouth. Phila delphia was America's largest city in 18i! a, when the Erie CanaL was opened, and Boston second. GI.AKE More fatal automobile accidents are caused by glaring headlights than by almost any other single cause. Every driver fervently wishes there were some way to krfl the glare. Such a way has been found, and a company ha< ? beeu formed to manufacture a new material which, when used in headlight lenses and applied to windshields, reduces the glare of an approaching car's lights 00 a couple of bright purple spots, while still permfttlng them to illu minate the roadway. It will probably be years before this new anti-glare system come* into general use. just as ifc took years after the invention of shat ter-proof glass before car manu facturers generally adopted it. Now many states refuse to license a car which is nsrt equipped Wltk safety glass, and I anticipate that in time every car will be required to have antiglare headlights and, windshields. I gome (lay, beyond doi^bt, driv ing on our higt^ajjB, will be a much, safer, occupation than It It today. Automobiles Jiaye already killed moi;e people In 'W'rtarj than wqre killed in all of the Tjrars this nation has been engagei iij. ? * *. v* r FLYING In proportion to the number oC passengers and (he mileage tra versed, the annual death-toll of aviation is far less than that oC motoring. News of fatal flying ac cidents gets bigger headlines than any "other kind of sudden death because, I believe, most) people* have a greater fear of falling trontf a height than of anything else. Psychologists say that new-born babies fear but two things: lou<3 noises and falling. We get morr- *>f a shock from! hearing about airplane accidents than about" tuotoring fatalities, be cause flying and all that relates) to it are so new la human experi ence Men have ridden horses, sailed ships, travelled on wheel* since the very beginnings 06 things. The haxards of travel on the ground or the sea hays been discounted ages ago. Butt np to forty years ago no man has ever .. (Centlss**, on ?age eight) ^