ALL SUrrCT: TPTI0N3 ,aks n: cor.TiNi;. i:rv THET WATCH YOUK LALZL. I'MND C'-ND IN Youk for. r ::riic:; -J . - - . . , :' ' . ' C3TAELI31XCD 1878. GLaCOW TIVE CETrTS. - 'COUNTBT, AND TCUTlt V (2.00 A TEAB. DUE d ADVAITCl ; - LUtlBITONf IT. 0, lICITt)AY, AUGUST 7 1C22. VOLUIlE Lin 3 Ford Car Sttucii : ;By Tram'AtX)rnim . Mr: Xx; I Edwards :M 3niiTaie Unded;?tt;FetsAwyWIth Ba&y - ia rflerLAm-llTBiinyo- Floyd of Lnraberton Was IMriat Car. i - NO ONE SERIOUSLY, HURT , ; . t;-"1IrV Browm:;--'' t '-Ornna,- Ao. yA Ford ' toanng car driven by Mn Bunyan Floyd, ion at Mr. Floyd ot : Lumberton, was .hit byi th : ea?tbound : AUaBtic . Coast Line passenger, train No. 97 ' herfr thimorningat;iO:18With - Mr.: Floyd when . the accident ocenr- red s were , Mrs. Ha Edwards and 'in-. fant danghter, who live near Barnea .Tille on the IcD.VWlters farm. The front of the engine hit the "car just to the rear" of i the center' and. turned it over sideftays into " ditch. .Mr, . Floyd was knocked out of the car but Mrs. Edwards, who Twas holding , her 18-months-old baby, was knocked ser era! feet in the air and landed about, 20 feet from .where the car landed, When persons nearby reached her she was still holding her baby'- in -i her ' arms ' with firmness..-. The tittle ' one had a slight abrasion on the head and Mrs. Edwards was .hurt serious ly, the extent of which could not be determined. Immediately after the. . collision the conductor of the train ordered the engine cut loose from the coaches and aped to Boardmen, three miles dis tant, for medical assistance. Dr, Nor. man responded and gave first aid. Dr. T. C. Johnson of Lumberton " was notified by 'phone and rushed to the scene, as did J)r. J, P, Brown of Fair mont the A. C t. furgeon for the district. s-' : ' ,. v .iiSiss'j'? According to a statement ' of Mr. Floyd, he overtook Mrs. : Edwards walking down the - highway several miles south of Lumberton and offered her a ride Uponr reaching Orrum 'on the main throughfareftMr. Floyd saw the approaching train as he attempt ed to cross, slowed his car and seeing tnat tne accident couid not be avoided turned sharply, to .mak i& contact lighter, which eye witnesses declare prevented a more serious i accident, possiblx ating the livsof thrf occu pants. Another .. reason for the acci dent not being any worse was. the fact that the train was slowing for the sta tion 50 yards away, and persons in Orrum stated that the train gave the usual station blow, "but Mr.; Floyd failed to hear it. The Ford was done considerable damage; Drs.: Johnson and Norman accompanied the injured to Lumberton, where they were plac ed in a hospital for .treatment-Their condition when reaching Lumberton about noon was reported as favorable, although more thorough examination may prove, otherwise,: Mrs. Edwards was rendered unconscious - and. had Tegained consciousness when ' I they arrived -Lumberton. Mr. . Floyd -was restingwell, as .was the baby. . This accident was somewhat simir lar to the one which occurred at the crossing just one mile east of Orrum. about a year ago, when the passenger train going, west struck a car, injur ing several. -j .r--,; ' An x-ray V examination at the Thompson hospital did not how any broken . bones, though both Mrs. Ed wards and Mr. Floyd are suffering from the shock and bruises received. Mrs. . Edward's baby escaped with slight bruises.' '. Fire Caused by Lea v fat Gutter. ' The fire company Was called out Thursday at 7 p. m. on account of a blaze underneath a tin ' roof at the home of Mr. A. P. McAllister, Chest nut and Sixth streets.; The . flames mw, extinguished j by... the - use of chemicals before much, damage was done. It is -thought the fire started " from .a-spark which fell .among some Jeavea'which had lodged in a gutter. , Leaves have lodged in the gutters of many Lumberton homes, according to Fire Chief Ed J. Glover, who asked The Robesonian to urge" local ; citi zens to clean out the gutters on their roofs. ; V . ... Lumberton Tobacco . Board of Trade - Organized.;. ." . - TC . ; The. Lumberton Tobacco Board of Trade was Organized Friday with Mr. C. ,H. Taylor of the Star ware house, president, Mr. : T. ; Leonard Cheek, of the Banner warehouse, sec retary; The purpose of the organiza tion, is ;tou promote the interests of '. Lumberton , as a . tobaccor market and f all business men of i(the. . town, are Coneerf1byPjfphins Next Friday NlgluViJ:- i r- K , ? A class from the Odd Fellows , orphan's , homfr will : give-a concert next Friday night at 8:15 in the school auditorium. A full house will 'be of r great help to the Orphans at this ' time. Let everybody , encourage and lielp. ('An enjoyable-programme will . oe renaerea.; y, ? .- ' Miss, Vivian, Townsend ,-left today Jor , wendeu; wbere ; she will spend some time visiting at the home of her brother-in-law and, sister, Mr. and Mrs. O. C Spauldmg. :. '--.... . . ' Mr. Leonard Britt of Mt Elim was va Lumberton visitor Friday, r Go-6p yarchpuses Receiving Tobacco : .t. . , .V.-"-.--1- Tobacco Will b -Received at Ware t houses of Cooperatives J Days Each , Week; Beginning Today--Membets Pleased With New JlethW -of - Handling. TonArco snonr.D be kept ; ' DRY AND IN GOOD ORDER 'All the warehouses to be operated in the South Carolina belt by th Co operative . Tobacco Marketing' associa tion onened for-receivintf tobacco this morning.' While very few farmers had learned the date wnen tne warenousea Would open,: quite ; a, number of .the members, of I the association brought tobacco to the local co-operative market today and were t apparently pleased with the new method of handl ing "Jtheir ; tobacco. The V warehouses will be open for receiving tobacco;on Mondays, -Wednesdays and Fridays of each - week. "a:,'--,.- Two -large : warehouses Farmers and Big Banner will be . operated here Jjy the association. Mr.: J Si C. Lewis, an experienced warehouseman of South Boston, Va., has charge -of the warehouses.1 Messrs; R. W, Wat son and J. T.-Penn, former tobacco buyers for 'leading companies, have charge of the grading, while a compe tent office force keeps the records. , , vThe tobacco is graded as- it y is brought in and immediately, placed in hogsheads ' and prepared for shipping to re-drying plants. The tobacco' is graded by samples. Members of ; the association are given drafts for the advance to be paid on the tobacco when it is brought, and participating certificates lot tne balance to be paid when the tobacco is sold. The three local banks will cash the drafts, Mr. Lewis asks The Robesonian to urge "members of the association to keep their tobacco dry and , bring' it in in good order. ' ,- VERY MUCH WANTED MAN Former Robefion. County Man Wanted on Charges of Grande Larceny, Bigamy,.; Jail and Asylum Break ing. ; rS:".& --'i-.i-'y--' ; h vSomec time -ago a requisition was made by the authorities of Ute State of -Florida on the North Carolina, au thorities for Ernest Jackson, a Cum berland county citizen, wanted ' , In Florida "for alleged grand : larceny. The- papers were sent from Raleigh to the sheriff of Robeson county, who sent them' to this ? county. Deputy Sheriff . M. A. McLean, hearing that Jackson was working near'Elizabeth town, ; Bladen county.V went s there to arrest, him. only to find that he had been placed in Jail on a charge - of bigamy. So the matter of taking him to Florida was postponed. ; ; In a few days. Jackson "went raw ing cr;zfifthaU'Nand his condi tion apparentlywaavso serious that he was taken to the asylum at RaU eigh. - And now comes the news that he escaped from the asylum the other day.. So there is" at large,, a man wanted for; grand larceny, i bigamy, jail breaking and asylum -breaking. Fayetteville. Observer, Aug. 8. Jackson formerly. lived near Lum berton' and ' is well-known to many Robeson citizens. In Snow Storm on Mount . Mitchell August 2nd. - .' v Mr. H. E. Stacy returned Thursday night from a trip through the mount ains of the western part of the State with Mr.. T. L. Johnson, in the letter's Cadillac, Leaving hers on the night of July 28 with Mrs. : Johnson and children, they went by rail to "Char lotte, to which place the car had been sent to. be "tuned up", for . the f trip, Mrs. Johnson, and the children- going on by rail to Hickory .1 to , visit rela tives,, Messrs. Stacy and Johnson drove Saturday to -: Chimney ' Rock, spent , the night there, - and drove thence to points , of mterest : about Hendersonville and Asheville.' About the' middle of the afternoon on Au gust 2nd they were in a snow and sleet storm ; on the top . of . Mount Mitchell, the . highest point east of the Rockies. A postcard from , Mr. Johnson mailed at Asheville' August 3rd shows the dining room of. Grove Park inn and stated that he would lunch there on : that day. with the Rotary club. Mr. Johnson will 'return home by rail this week and leave the ear for the use of Mrs.' Johnson. ' 17-Year-Old Bey Found Dead in Bed. Norman .Martin. 17.vear-oki son of Mr. W. B. Martini -who lives in Howellsville township, was . found dead fa bed. Thursday, morning. Inter ment was .made -Friday at Raft Swampi Baptist church. Thfi. cause-of the. young man's, death has Hot been learned. . .J-" y..- Field Pasture Meeting Thursday. There will be a field pasture meet insr on the farm . of Mr. Spurgeon Jones, near Powersville, Thursday of this week at 10 a. m. Mr. O. o.; Dukes,' county'., farm demonstratot, will conduct the meeting and all farm ers a are invited.- to be present Mr, Jones': has 'a mixed pasture of Carpet grassana xespeaeza. , a ,Mr J. C. Barnes of Back Swamp was a Lumberton visitor Saturday. BLACK CRIME COMMITTED BT 3 NEGROES AT SOUTHERN PINES Criminally "AssaaHed White Woman -After Shootlnr Husband With Babe ; in' Ilis .Arms Negroes Rushed, t SUte Prison at, Raleigh One cf Them Angus .Murphy Who Served " a Term" In Prison from Robeson. ' r .Three negroes charged with crimin al assault on a white .woman and per haps fatally shooting her husband as he - lay asleep just outside Southern Pines, early Friday- - morning were rushed to-the State prison at Raleigh Friday.reaching there barely 20 minu tes ahead of a score or more of band hill citiajenswho had followed in hot pursuit" Rumors that . : an ..ittempt might be made to storm, the prison caused-s, Governor Morrison vtd order troops to the prison for guaTd duty.? . The crime is one 4t the blackest in the ; history of the SUte.. As told la the Raleigh News and Observer, A. U Ketchen, his wife and year-old daugh ter making their way from "Miami Fla.; to their home, in Connecticut by automobile.' camped Thursday night just outside i the corporate limits of Southern Finest r fe&"V "i ?V At 1 o'clock in the morninsf Mrs. Ketchen was awakened by a shot Her husband : had. been shot through - the left .breast as ly asleep on ' tie cot The ' baby's head - was . missed r by a fraction of an inch. The bullet pass. ed through the body and throngh, the cot on which he was lying. The wife went to assist her husband, but was dragged away and outraged, first, by on negTi Money, negJoef' ,?d th wtua. left.a-td!-the driver, who in turn used some badlfj!.! thl f oi Mb.!iaAlf?S ad?lde: Mrs. .Ketchen made hethgge and made some threats At S A. ElJiSmJ to a neighboring - house,' where sh4 found assistance. Her husband was taken to - Southern . Pines and " given emergency treatment Later he wai removed to the McConnell hospital hi Carthage;-'.:-' ...: After . considerable search the ne groes, were found in a coal car of ja passing freight at Aberdeen." A search of them disclosed all the missing pro perty i of , their - victims, 'including a monocrammed ' wrist watch striDDed from Mrs. Ketchen's wrist. Later, the negroes were identified by theVWoman. Sheriff D. A. Blue .of Moore jcounty commandeered .a Packard and arrW Mii firimr-. tftIeigJmjUTiM exact meaning, of this- is that away, .-ia considerably lless , hair' hours. ) V. , . The rnecroas nav thedr names as John Lee, 16, . Wilmington; Angus Murphy, 86,- Robeson .eounty: Joseph Thomas, 20, South Carolina. Lee con fessed to Sheriff Blue but maintained that he was not a party to the actual crimes, Murphy, said to1 be from Maxton, was tried at the July, 1911, term of Robeson Superior -court on the charge of larceny and .was sentenced to four years in the - State- prison. Hie News and Observer states that Mur phy' was recognized byWarden Bus- bee., as having served a 4-year term in. the State prison. He is regarded as a '.bad negro. , v ,. , j Home-Coining Picnic - in Honor of Rev. A. L. Davis, Correspondence of The Robesonian. , xTrmity, Ala., Aug. 1. The rela-i tiveS, pupils and friends of Rev, A. L.f Davis-wfil honor him, now. in his 90th year, ' with a home-coming picnic August 6. . A large-attendance is ex pected. '. Entertainment at Fairmont Indian School. Conesponjlence of The Robesonian. ajwre y,w v i aa enwriainmeiw the Fairmont ' Indian school, house Saturday, Aug. 12, hours 5. to 9. Proceeds for building. The public is cordially invited. Typhoid Vaccination. ' Dr. E. . Hardin, county health of-, fleer,' will be at the following places! Tuesday, August 8, to vaccinate for typhoid fever: Mt Monah 11 :30 a.i m.; Raemon 1:30 p. m.; Rowland 10:- 80' km-.:-iJ-- Mrs. N. A.. Thompson - and two children, Miss Julia and Master Neill Archie,. Jr.: will leave , tomorrow for Montreat where they will spend two weeks. - -. - Mr. H. W Ivey of R. 8,. Lumberton, is in town today. , . , Messrs. W. G. Britt and L M. row-, tell of Parkton are Lumberton visitors' today, -S v.-.' -;. j . - , Mr. N. J. McRimmon of R. 8, Max- ton, is among the visitors in town to- dyrfi';;'vv:.-.i''i-'j- '' ;tMr W .W. Lewis -of .. Fairmont is among the visitors in town today. Messrs. W.-Xennon and 1 Robert Caldwell have returned home - from Hendersonvilleaadother points in Western .NorthCatolina,' where they spent v weehvT: jr ; .'Z- -' ' Mrs. CI Cherry and small daugh ter returned home Friday Jt evening from Raleigh, where they spent sev eral day visiting relatives. Rev. Morrison Bethea. of the Ral eigh convocation of, the - Episcopal church spent Friday and Saturday in town, the guest of his cousin Mr. J A'setnea. "; - - -. . Messrs.-F. A. Faulk, 'B.: L. Page and R. M. Williams of R. 1, Fairmont are Lumberton, visitors today.' .1 Messrs. J. W. ' Andrews, W..- W. Davis, C C. Price and- AJex Davis of R. 1, Fairmont, afe among the visi tors in town today.- - - Average Price of To : ? Four Timzz: As High As Last Year Pi Average First 4 Days of Season Slt41 ; the Handred as . Compared .With $59 Same Dayr Last -.Year.".; -V The Lumberton 5 tobaccd t market sold at auction during the four sales days last week 169,450 pounds of to bacco for, $32,834.01," an average Of $19.31 the hundred for the t entire sales. The average . for the first four t sales days on this msrket last year was $5.59, the average: this, year be ing - almost four . times as - much as that, of 1921; ; v i--.r . The : amount of' tobacco - offered oft the local auction - market is expected to increase as the selling season ad vances. The fact that the J tobacco-) growers Sre grading" and tielng their tobacco Jbef ore offering it for sale will no doubt result, in slower marketing than under the bid system of selling it "in the rougn'-.v-''V-v-Vv, ' FAIRMONT NEWS ITEMS Tipsy Auto Driver Opened His Mouth and Put His Foot in It Fairmont Now; Has a Baseball Team. . By Bu V. Brown , -', . Fairmont Aug. 6. A white , man town last Friday afternoon and sup posedly lost control of his big Paige six and ran into a large :. Caddilac this nnint th nffiVov nl.M4 1,1m t,n - - der Mdlo n. tmUr - th. : Mviv mnA contents were gone but . enough was left for evidence. The trial bef pre Re corder Floyd resulted in the defend ant paying out nearly $20 for his negligence and drinking, The Caddi lac belonging to Mr. V. W. Critcher was slightly damaged and the Ford was given a fairly good lick but was not damaged. . -Fairmont Now. Has Ball. Team Fairmont is at last' in baseballdom. Fairmont now has a baseball team. how. good we can t tell you at this writing. However,; we f - have some mighty : good ; plaers . . of , a ood established reputation as diamond workers. The pitching staff has not yet been completed but several good hurlers are in view and the 'games to be played this week will tell a tale. Monday, August 7th, the local team will play the strong - Dillon aggregation here at the Beaufort park,the game starting at exactly 4 o'clock. On Wednesday, the 9th, a game has been secured . with the Boardman team. The results of these games will .decide! just , how many more real players we need. Several games are being arranged with the different elubs . of the interstate league. Results of these games will be given In Thursday's ROBESON IAN and nossiblv announcements of other eames. : r - '"' " ' ' " Creeping Paralysis. Begins, to be Felt - as the Strike Runs. . ; ; . : This Morning's Raleigh News . and Observer states that creeping paralysis of practically ever industry hi : the State that set in with : the , .beginning of the shopmen's strike. 'now - entering its sixth . Week has tflready thrown ten men out of work to one striking shopman according to wnai are oenevea ; to be very . con servative -estimates and the worst of the tie up is just beginning to be felt "State ' Highway -A. Commissioner Page declares that the strike is cost- me the : state more than $10,000 a day." " - A Washington dispatch states that leaders of the striking shopmen wait ed over Sunday in that city expect ing io resume with President - Hard ing today negotiations for strike settlement which were reopened Saturday. - . - -C : 5 Strike-Breakers Severely Beat- en. Southern Pines. Ane. 4. Tvrtmt. five masked men, thought by the au- thonties to be strikinsr Seaboard shopmen, attacked five strike-break- lers and a guard at work on a disabled freight engine on a siding at Manly, 2 miles north of here, late this after noon, bound and gaged them, loaded tnent m automobile, - carried i- them several miles from the scene and beat them severely: one of themvWha : Mr. -Oscar Mv Tsrael left - Sator. day night for New York Wty" where he will join Mr. A; Weinstein, who has been spending some time in Chicago Messrs. Weinetem and Israel wSl be in New York for a few days buying new fall goods for Mr. Weinstein's department store. v - ' . Miss Mary Gibson of Hamlet spent the week-end here visiting at the home of Mr and Mrs. E. I. Hamil ton,' Second, street Miss Gibson was accompanied from Dunn, where she has been visiting; by little Miss Sarah, small daughter of Mr. . and Mrs. Hamilton, who had been in Dunn two weeks visiting friends. riTL"..r- .y"m vir ""'.farmers were heard to kick on the bacco Nearly ? t. - A Average m Fairnumt Market ' Was v $IL22 as Cemsared with $SZ9 fee Same Time Last Year -"Coops Be gia Receiving Tobacco Teday Fairmont August 5. Fairmont sold tobacco this week at prices that were absolutely satisfactory to the farm ers.. Opening Tuesday with ' 54348 pounds selling for the sum of $796- 63, and average of $14.40, Wednesday the: market sold 44,222 , pounds for $7ov an average of 4 $1.75. Thursday 80,113 pounds of -the weed were-sold for the sum of $16944, average of $21.09. Friday the total number of pounds wss 79,022, which sold for the sum of $1442.76, aver age $18,78. The total for. the -. four days was 258,205 pounds selling for the sum of $47,042.47, an average for the week of $18.22. The first four days : sales last season brought the sum of $20,14842, ' an average of $5.69. : -"; ':- ''-"'.w:.. - -: ,- - These being certified figures there can be no doubt as to the veracity of the statement as some have express ed regarding the reports from , the markets after the opening sales. On price they had been offered but were told that it was' dn account of the offerings not being tied and graded. "T . v" " " Se ,o7.1 ToCco GrZlrTZrV loc1 Tobacco Growers ,Co-opera- presence of the association. The -Tobacco Growers association here has received final instructions to begin receiving tobacco for the pool Monday August 7th Receiving wiR be held on Monday's Wednesdays and Fridays of each week. The other days . will be given to the shipping and caring for the received tobaccos. Messrs.W. M. Worley and E. Jones. who have the business of the associa tion in charge, here, express v them selves as being highly pleased with the situation and that they expect a urge quantity of tobacco to be pool ed. this coming week.Mr. W. L Proc tor is expected on every train and will be the "official grader for the association. ; :- ,. -.:.---. "Messrs. Swahson and i Matthews, Who have been -here before with the auction system, re this year here with the co-operative association. . T Messrs. E. J. Davis and Sons. prietors of the Robeson county ware house, and Messrs. E. J. Chamber and O. A. Reeves, proprietors of the People's' tobacco " warehouse, doing business under the old "auction sys tem, express that they feel confident that this market will sell from four to six million pounds at auction this season. v r---,.-. - . THE RECORD OF DEATHS. Mrs. Sam Stone of Proctorville Sec tion. s Mrs. Sam Stone. arl SA vi f the Proctorville section died Satur day at 10 a. m. at the Baker sana torium, of internal cancer. Deceased is survived by her husband and one child, 6 Wveks old. The funeral was conducted yesterday at 4:30 p. m. by Revr L "P. Hedgpeth, pastor of Big Branch Baptist church, of which de ceased was a member, and interment was made In the- family cemetery near the home. -A - ; wMr. Jas. A. Britt sf CUrkton Mr. James Anderson - BHt. - m'tmA 48 years, of Clsrkton, died of heart trouble at 1 p. m. at the Baker sana torium. The remains were taken to the home yesterday and the funeral will take place this afternoon and in terment will be made in the family cemetery, near the home. Death of Mri Nancy C Wstson Visitors. ; -.,-y.!---!i -.-: . . Correspondence of The Robesonian. rast lAimoerton, Aug. 7 Mrs. W Benson and dauhtcra. !( atn. Lee and Johnson Louise, of Spartan burg, a C, arrived in Lumberton this morning to make a short stay at the home of Mr. Levi Perry of East Lumberton, a brother of the elder lady, after which they will "sojourn? among the t highways and ' byways north' of Rosindale in Bladen,: where a host ox reiaaves and friends wait to welcome them in ..their midst K!? o the late Francis Watson, died at Hope Mills B.2-Thursday morning, the: 3rd inst Interment was made Friday fromfog t Tenmile church. Deceased is survived by two daughters, two Bisters and five brothers. ' '; -': Lloyd Hardin- Indian ' ' Lloyd Hardin, Indian, aged 25 years, died yesterday at 2 p. m. at his home in Saddletree township, 9 miles from Lumberton, of tuberculosis. -. t t : Mr. and Mrs. A. E. White will leave tomorrow m - their . automobfle for Winston-Salem, where they will spend 10 days, making side trips from the twin city. ,. r - . . . COTTON UARSXST ' Middling eotton is Quoted on the lo cal market today at 20 1-4 eentsthe . pound. :- - . ''-. - BRIEF. ITEMS OF- LOCALS NEWS ; - 'i 'anMnnnnn: ;' "' Mr. F. I Cady, manager of that Augusta, Ga baseball , club, - spent ' Friday and Saturday hero "looking over" the local club. : v ; - Receipts at the local postoffko -for the year ending June 80, last, were) $20,310.35, as compared with $13,87&- 93 for the previous year. This was an ' increase of $1,431.42. , " , . Miss Lacy Johnson, bookkeeper in Mr A. ; Weinstein's . department ' store, has returned to work after spending 2 months . visiting f rela tives near. Hope Mills. . " -Mr. DeLeos, Britt went last week to Raleigh, where he delivered an ad dress ' on f Amateur Journalism" be t fore a meeting' of young men. ' The meeting was held Tuesday and Wed nesday. ; . . An annex to the Lorraine hotel has been opened over Efird's depart ment store, It win accommodate people. The Lorraine has been crowd' ' ed with patrons of late, necessitating the opening of the annexT . - :r ? Mr. Chalmer Boney had an opera- . Hon performed on his nose Friday by Dr. 3. G. Murphy of Wilmington. He was accompanied to Wilmington by his father, Mr. A;. E,. Boney, who re turned home 'Friday evening. Recorder D. H. Fuller and Mr. 1. Dixon McLean left . Friday in Mr. Fuller's car- for New York via the. valley of Virginia, Harper's Ferry and Gettysburg. Mr. Fuller will spend some time in the Adirondacks before returning, home. .- xk- : -I -s4 The Baraca class of the : Firsi . Baptist church will hold a social meet- ing at the home of Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Mclhtyre, East Fifth street, Fri- . . day evening of this week. Mr. Me- -Intyre is. president of the class. All members of the class are invited. ' - Dr. E. R. Hardin, eounty health ' officer, 'returned home last night from Augusta, t?a., where he spent a week with his mother, who has been seriously,, ill for some time. Her condition was somewhat , improved ' when Dr.' Hardin left her. . - Twenty-two and 8-10 acres' of farming lands, belonging to Mr. W. C Britt and located on the Wildcat highway (Creek road) seven miles south , of Lumberton,' were sold at .. suction at the court house door Sat urday, for, $5,000. Mrv E.. J. Britt of Lumberton was the purchaser. t Mr. Walter Ivey, who ie employ edby Messrs. Tucker & Lax ton, who . arr erecting the new reservoir at the local filter plant, was painfully hurt about 10 o'clock, this morning when a piece of 4 x 4 timber used in the framework of the reservoir; fell and struck him on the head. Mr. Ivey went to the Thompson hospital and it is thought he will be able to return home tonight " , ..it. trMr. F. D.. Hackett Jr.. submitted the highest bid $15,000 on the BuU - lock Brothers Auto Co., bankrupt gar age building, Chestnut and . Third streets, at noon today.. Mr. Hackett also submitted the highest bid on the ' stock, his bid being $1,300. The pro perty was bid off at auction, Mr. W. S. Britt receiver, conducting the sale. It probable that Mr. Britt will re ject the bids however. ? A.Ford coupe owned and. driven by Mr. R.- McA. Nixon and a Ford. car driven, by Arthur Lee, colored, of svrauis, were ootn somewhat dam- aged late Friday afternoon at the corner of Sixth ; and ' Pine . streets when the two ears met in head-on ' . collision Mr." Nixon wss driving on the right side of ihe street when Lee turned his .car to the left which resulted in the colision. No one . was hurt - '' ' ' . ' " ' X Mrs.'W."F.'':r!Fnner"-'reiBmed " Thursday night' from WiWiiHgton, wnere she spent a week visiting Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Moore. , Mr, and Mrs. Moore entertained at a six o'clock dinner at the Oceanic hotel, Wrights ville Beach, Friday, July 28, in Mrs Fuller's honor. Mr. Fuller spent the week-end at Wilmington -and was ac companied home by their small' son, w. Jr. who wentwith his mother to Wilmington. Considerable ' excitement was caused at the union station late "yes terday afternoon when a monkey be-, longing to Mr. Ed. J. Glover bit a small girl on the leg. The parents of the child were very much enraged and the father, who lives in Bladen county, . threatened to . brinr i suit against -tike railroad 7 eompany -f or damages. While the' child was running after the monkey when attacked, he monxey was running at large, a udnr waira iooiua not oe auoweOj. ,- ". ' - ; . . Senator Claude A. Swansoa'was nominated for United States Senator hi" a primary held last Tuesday: in Virginia over former Governor West moreland Davis. , Mayor ' J. C Walton of ' Ojclahoma City, anti-Ku Klux Elan and farmer labor, candidate fa the 3-cornered race for; the Democratic nomination for Governor of Oklahoma -'was nominated in the State-wide primary held last Tuesday. The Ku Klux Klan backed one of . Walton's , op ponents. -. " '. ;-Jx ;''---T-:' Gastonia voted $150,000 school bonds last week. At . mats, -