V 4 1 qs CCrr:o3iiiTt wimsiTca; npsTn oajionaA monday, febbuabyi 6, 1022. 70X72 72 r t if JHEROBESOJ Pabliahed By . C02ES0NIAN PUBLISHING CO. f. A. Sharp President v. TTORMtTPTlON RATjSS: TYear . W J..WJ ' envytrf a inan infinitely bigger than CUMMINS BROTHERS GO FHE& h.. marshalled Us '-forces to betray ;; "M'r,v.l' !!AW'- .... j teendine to ber home for some water au loriner service men anu an . .fter he had W who believed that the great war wasi lMalinda admitted that she had tn intimate with Williams Von Lowry and that the two had been together on a trip to Hoke county, spending one night of three at the borne ', of for something jnore than the loaves and the fishestf Never before Jn one issue, so far Cx lionths .. tTM Months as we recall, has.The Robesonian had ned - . .6 to record so many crimes and sensa tional happenings within the county j AJeuverea oy carrier ui "'""l.. nrr.,l in TWnHav'. Robe. . .IZ.4Ui"" ... Tlx months ,..... Three months ...$1.20 .60 C OSes 107 West Fourth Street Telephone New 20. Lowry back home; from Hoke counter, and alBo' spent a night with themiJt the home of the negro. Both defeqd-j ants bad been to ner nome at night when Asbbry was there, but she bad never heard of any words between them and Asbury. She denied that she had told her father that she coqldj nave wuuaro von ixiwry 10 put as bury out of the way: v Willie Chavis, 15-year-old son i Malinda, corroborated the testimony j VS. ..V- V V . n. H n A.! with Norman Cummings ' about An bury's not going to her home another" Truth about some movie actors, ob-! night without being bothered. He al- serves The Outlook, seems to be un-so told or Asbury s going to Ms nonfe TOLERATE SUCH CR! " V consciously expressed in a bit of cor-,- r" "-nony- TM.K- I C. . " Entered as second class mail matter ftt.tfce postrffice at Lumberton, N. C, 2XONDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1922. sensational local items, sonian. News broke so fast that everybody connected with the paper was kept on the jump, but every thing was duly recorded up to the moment of going to press. It is altogether cut of the ordinary for ,a paper published in a rural county to have to publish in one issue so many PUBLIC SENTIMENT WILL NOT his opinion that Asbury died as a re-j manufacturing liquor. Oxendine was suit of : the.wounds.: - a sentenced) to 2 years" and Hunt to At the request of the solicitor. Dr.l. .. rz. w Hardin exhumed the hodv of Oxendine' 10 m ae, county. toads. Asbury was looking for his moth&, who was away from home. Asbury spent about a half-hour there and he In ki. rmik to the rrand iurv respondence from Los Angeles the other day after receiving its re- 'hd in theatrical weekly, reading t..j r.., ..m w vn. as follows: "Director says the th brutal murder committed near , best way to test an actor, is to go then accompanied him back to Peij. Tiimhi.rtnn last Wednesdav nieht' camping with him. He has just re- ro .,. .. d was the crime of one bad man. such, turned from such a trip, and?uts the Th testimonv of sheriff R. E 'crime as might happen in any com-0. K. on the man who plays the lead- Lewis dealt largely with the trailing monity, the shameful crime commit- g ro'e m his new production, thus: ed t St Pnnls toppW mm last , He's a line dishwasner. ago Saturday night, a young Jew being ' 0 IcWnadv 4 tnn. rouc-hlv handled "Gardens and truck, pigs and ordered to leave town on pain of poultry",- la Governor Morrison's death, is the sort of crime that leaves slogan now, according to the Charlotte ,the impression on the outside world , Observer, which says that a superin that local sentiment will not demand J tendent of gardening is to be appoint- punishment In order to prevent such'ed soon. The Governor has caught a crimes, he said, it is the duty of law- abiding citizens to let it be known of the bloodhound to the home of Norman Cummings. He reached the scene of the "homicide about 3 a. m. an(j After daylight se saw some tracks cotton field immediately east of th place where Asbury's body lay. It appeared that the person" making the tracks stood at the point near where Asbury was killed. The tracks lead ing away indicated that the person vision of a land smiling with pea ;mk5ng hem was runnin? He ollow, and plenty by reason of intelligent that public sentiment absolutely will attention to gardening and trucking ot trtlrt th Rnrh rnmoa dn ana pig ana pounry raising, inere the county and State incalculable in jury; and in this connection Judge Connor mentioned the recent effort td -bring a negro back to -North Caro wlinawfsr atrial' frm uX3anada-nd the efffsr oiTfnat f owrnnTenrToTtow is no danger of over-training in a program like that. O r T ..It ia.. of f iciallamunced? that the f tma RepuHiaan -onalcc7imitteeCi ed the tracks around through the field and into a path that led direct to Norman Cummings' house. He also saw some tracks in a field wast of where the dead body was lying. It alT so appeared that the person making these tracks had stood there for some the negro to be brought back on the ground that he would be in danger of owes 'ffDSyiBOS" for Ithe campaign oi 1920 which resulted in the election of President Harding. Campaign fceine lynched. The fact that we know; Promises not yet fulfilled number that that does the State an injustice about as many as the dollars the does not lessen the bad impressioin ; committee still owes. that goes to the outside world. o Such a crime as that committeed at i Free Cotton Seed. St Pauls is most unusual in Robeson ihe-blood hound trailing zrdni'tne point to the west of the body to the home of .Nor man Cummings, the dog making the same trail twice. The dog went to the front door steps and would have gone inside the house, but he held him back. He considered the dog depend able in trailing the human scent James Lowry and Hursey Jacobs, both of whom live near the scene of the homicide, told of hearing the shots county. It has no public sentiment to A"i"euu"L " ty"T-w. v 'and hearing Asbury moaning and an it, so far as The Robesonian . iZrT"" w," .i ng Richard Cummings when he back can , learn b it gives the county some Mmited number of QUart packages of!eJ ? lL. ?SS bad advertising. It is to be hoped that the guilty ones will be brought to justice and severely punished. It is the duty of every good citizen, as Jndge Connor pointed out in his talk above referred to, to see to it that no thoughtless remarks shall leave the impression that such crimes are lightly regarded or will be tolerated. cotton seed that they think is an im- , i u .-.(- nm nu. hcoi ijjiii auawci. uaiuua lean- provement over the variety now m fjed that fae tfllked wift Arch Cum general use. xiiey wish uiese sceu CALLS FOR INVESTIGATION A series of crimes, culminating in a brutal murder, followed the escape last Tuesday and Tuesday night of eight convicts from the county chain ing, and Thursday the grand jury reported that it had found twenty three trusties on the chaingang of sixty-seven convicts and expressed a doubt as to the wisdom of having so large a' proportion of trusties. Of course there may be no connec tion between the escape of the con victs and the number of trusties; all the4 trusties honestly may have earned, by exemplary conduct, the 1 larger, liberty and con fidence given them; but natur ally a question is raised in the mind of -the public as to the wisdom of placed in the hands of farmers who will follow the instructions of the Department and make a report at the end of the year. They propose; if the seed meet their expectations, to arrange to furnish a half-bushel of seed to those making the report for next year's planting. I will be glad if you would call attention to this through the col umns of your paper, and I will be pleased to send a package of this seed j tw, IT "5 i-i X u"' tWp WriW fnr Rmo. As .f ould have done them like they must be sent out by the 28th of Feb ruary I suggest that those wishing them write at once. Yours very truly, H. L. LYON, House of Representatives Washington, D. C, Feb. 2, 1922. TOWNSHIP PRUNING DEMON STRATIONS THIS WEEK Pembroke Hugh Monroe, Tuesday, February 7, 10:30 a. m. Wisharts J. R. Phillips, Tuesday, February 7, 1:30 p. m. ' Sterlings Thompson Williams, Wednesday 8th, 10:30 a. m. Orrum Geo. Branch, Wednesday, 8th, 1:30 p. m. mings about his tires being cut the afternoon previous to the homicide, Arch said he didn t see how they cut his car and failed to take the double barrel shot gun, which he had in it." Lowry also talked to Arch about the car being cut the day previous to the killing. In the conversation Arch told him that the car was trimmed up in good shape and that if he could have been about the porch with the two buckshot shells in his gun, he did his car. Arch didn't call any names. Body Was Exhumed. Dr. Harding told of conducting the inquest over the remains of Asbury about 11 a. m. on the day following the killing. He reached the scene and found body lying beside the A. C. L. railroad track about one and a half miles north of Pembroke. He found a gunshot wound in each side of the deceased, both just beneath the mar gin of the ribs. The shots entering the right side made a larger hole than those entering the left. It was, on Monday of last week to determine the size of the shot An 'autopsy .was made and some buckshot 'and also some, smaller shots were ' removed from the body. The shot were shown the jury.:. '; nr Jim Oxendine, son of Asbury," told of reaching his -father some 40 or 60 minutes after be was shot He was dead when he arrived. :He saw his father's pistol lying near his head. Jim exhibited the -coat arid vest which his father wore at the time he was shot, both of which had holes in each side, apparently made by the . shot He and his father operated a store in Pembroke, and Malinda Chavis was a frequent visitor to the store. ' J. R. Maynor asked - Arche Cum mings if he had any idea who cut his tires, and he replied, "No." Bennie Sampson exhibited some gun wadding, which he testified that he found near the body of Asbury. ' Effie Jane Oxendine, sister of Ma linda Chavis, told of being at the home of Malinda on Sunday prior to the homicide and of Norman Cum mings going there that afternoon.' She testified that after he left Malinda told her of the conversation with Norman, in which he said that As bury had been going to her home at night without being bothered, but that he would not go another' night and leave unbothered. Rural Policeman A. R. Pittman testified as to the trailing of the bloodhound to the home of Norman Cummings. He admitted that a double barrel shotgun which was in Nor man's home did not appear to have been shot in some time. Here the State rested. After the jury had been asked by Judge Connor to retire, he called Richard Cummings, father of the defendants, to the stand. Richard told of what he saw and heard on the night Asbury Oxendine was killed. He was dozing when he heard the first shots. He heard four shots, after which he ran out of the house . and. ..heard a . "f urge." tnwards thA TBilxnan -wn ailed him. Norman and his wife (fame to the door. He asked Norman to go with him to where the man was complaining, but he said they might also get shot. His wife said she didn't want Norman to 'eave her. He then went near where Asbury was lying and hailed. Asbury mswered him and asked him to go "here. He asked Asbury what was the matter and he replied that he was hot and asked him to hold his head. He placed Asbury's coat under his head, but didn't ask him who fired the shot. He sent his son, Redmond Cummings, to advise Jim Oxendine, son of Asbury, that his father was shot and also sent for a doctor. This was before Asbury died. When asked the direct question, he said that Nor man was dressed in his night clothes when he first went to his .home after the shooting. Norman did not go to where Asbury was that night, though Arch arrived later in the night Rich ard denied that he called Norman and he failed to answer him, also that he called Norman's wife. Oxendine was killed beside A. C. L. railroad track, near the home of Ma linda Chavis. The defendants and their father lived in separate houses on the west side of. the railroad from the point where Oxendine was killed. There are a number of houses on each side of the railroad in the open ing where the homicide took place, Malinda Chavis living nearest the scene. Other cases disposed of after the report of the proceedings published in Thursday s Robesonian was writ ten were: Claud Oxendine and Thurman Hunt, Jesse" McRae; atore-breaKing' not guilty. ,iT- Jno. Wesley Jones, .bigamy; sen tenced to 4 months on the roads, with leave for the county commissioners to hire him out after he has served 60 days on the roads. : . Newland McDonald entered a plea of. guilty of, manslaughter and was ordered committed to the Jackson training schooL McDonald shot, and killed his brother, Carey McDonald, at the home of the parents of . the two, near, St Pauls, about a month ago. -. ; A- Valuable Layman. ""- 'Major A. J. McKinnon, of Maxton; N. C, who though widely known, will probably be known to more of our readers' as the father of our mission ary, Miss Sallie Lou 'McKinnon, has been quita ai at Spartanburg-.1 S.- Ci where he had rone to heaf, Billy-Suhr day. . We are glad, to learn that he is very much better. The prayers of the church .should ascend, for ; the j, c6m plete; r?coverx iof; this vuabIe' Is mail, 'the father of our' honored and beloved missionary. North Carolina Christian Advocate. , Mr. Nash Lamb of R. .2, Fairmont, is a Lumberton visitor today. v III . v ' ', ' . 1 I If YoujlBank Here- We consider yonr association with us as something . more than an account on our books. You are our client, with individual needs and personal problems. Your choice of this institution is an expression of con fidence, and it is our purpose to deserve this confi dence by active co-operation with your requirements. "JswiswIIiaC""! tt-WTir.tnmr j v mt I 11 iilm mm Win-i lhhiiii' ..hi m I "' nrminirMnr-rn-" I t ' 1 LUUBERTON, N.cTr Ixul j at If you have a 7 jewel Elgin watch, I want it. Will give you what you paid for it. Please come in as this offer will only be good for a few days A. J. HOLMES JEWELER AND ENGRAVER TVi nmncrkn a Cr4-f Gfn-riA TVtiiw-a making trusties of one-third of the j day, 9th, 10:30 a. m. convicts, especially since it was learn-1 Fairmont W. G. Pitman, Thurs ed recently that a negro serving a ' day 9th, 1:30 p term for murderous assault from a whiskey car on Lumberton policemen had been made a trusty and had es caped. Certainly rigid investigation of such a situation as this should be made at once. The grand jury's investigation impressed at least one of its mem bers that this is a chaingang deluxe, where too many men convicted of crime are allowed the liberty of trusties, allowed to go and come too much at will, merely putting in time during the day at not too hard tasks, with board and clothing during a time when many men are out of employment. BEFORE AND AFTER "When the devil was sick, the devil a saint would be. When the de vil got well, the devil a saint was he." Up and down the land it was pro - claimed in divers ways during the , - vrar that when the soldiers came home all they would have to do to r.v get anything in sight would be to ask, for it; but according to news . coming out of Washington former . Vrvice nen are. receiving scant con- aidefatin at the hands of the Hard ing administration in making post office appointments. The way form er service men have been sidetracked . , to make a place for party workers who failed to make as high a grade 1 !n the examinations is scandalous,, if one is to believersome of the instances : given. - But what is one to expect from a party that has for its Senate boss Y a. man who, to feed is own hate and m. i Smiths H. A. McNeill, Friday,' 10th, 10:30 a. m. Red Springs J. M. Brown, Friday, 10th, 1:30 p. m. i O. O. DUKES, j Farm Demonstrator. j Mr. N. B. McArthur, member of the lower house of the General As sembly, is a Lumberton visitor to-' day I Mr. C. M. Oliver of R. 2, Fairmont,1 was a Lumberton visitor Saturday. Mr. E. A. Baxley of R. 2, St. Pauls,1 was in town Friday. Mr. K. S. Monroe of R. 3, Maxton,, was a Lumberton visitor Frjday. j Mr: J. D. Kyle of Fairmont is among the visitors in town today. I Mr. C. W. McArthur of R. 2, Row-! land, is in town today. I Om Satisfied Customers Advertise Us. Are you one of our Cus tomers? You should be. Raleigh News & Observer. Feb. 3:i Within two and a half minutes after, the fire gong sounded, more than' three hundred pupils of the Apex' graded school were marched to safe-! ty out of a building that burned' briskly to complete loss. In figures,1 ine loss is estimated at $30,000 with insurance ol 1 17,000, Card of Thanks. We wish to express to our friends our deep appreciation of their inter est and sympathy during the recent illness and bereavment of husband and father. MRS. S. W. COBB, and - FAMILY, Rowland, North Carolina. , How'aThls? We offer flM.oe lor any cut of ctUrrtt HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE la tk. toternaUy and acta through the Blood 0US0U J?uV:e 01 th Brem! 2 drnrta for ovar forty year Prtca 76c Taatlmonlala free. F. 1. Cbeuty Co.. Toledo. Ohio. National Bank of Lumberton A. W. McLEAN, Pres. 11 r. COBB, Gather. DO YOU KNOW US? 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