, nB LISHEO SEPTEMBER 19, 1878 f .TV ■ ! *% DAY; Crowd'Attends Siler ’ itv Celebration of Fourth __ Ma jor McLendon Makes: Good Speech' ' ' ( , ritv ’* celebration of the | to have equalled the f Sand the program as publish-; ' n r*kvva S carried out m| d lasi C - d p of the day was the , l( Major McLendon, of j Sam, -hich is favorably com-, ’ L upon by competent hearers. * recreation and sports events successfully executed. 1 y u< o ne of the largest crowds father in Chatham in many a ' v . ThP baseball game resulted m a | ,; f . o ry for the Siler City team j . the Greensboro team with i rhich they played. iible League Hears Speech By Richards I ;-v;th Carolina Governor Raps A1 pith's Candidacy Evolu r tionisis Attacked Charlotte. July I—Featured by in adores? by Governor RiChaius, | -• south Carolina, in which he took | evaal shots at A1 Smith’s pros- i (ective presidential candidacy, the ! forth Carolina Bible league, a | faknorua'.ist organization, met j lere today. G v rr. r Richards was elected iiinoran* m. mber of the organiza tion. The meeting consisted main ly or a series of addresses belabor ing evolutionists and modernists. After a m rning session, the dele gates had lunched and reconvened this afternoon to formulate plans for a campaign to educate North Carolinians against the theory of tvolution. Another speaker was the Rev. JlcWhit* of Raleigh, who also attacked the assertions of the so iled ev lutionists. Toe Bible league, originally the ( mini:toe of 100,” today.for the 3 - time announced the definite i'-' l ': to which it is committed, a : giam for increasing the “love • :iw Bible” and rigid opposition ai! J' d.eory or any persons who tugonistic to the Bible. * Governor Richards expressed the ; pe that ‘‘the American people will n.tr elect for President of the nite d States a man who stands tot die sale of liquor.” ST TEACH TRAFFIC LAWS T0IIIg « SCHOOL STUDENTS tthefcem rv.,-«; J - l{ courier. ' : ' Lt laws must be read explained in weekly lessons to school students, it is pointed ( > • Roberts, secretary to Car lin a -Motor Club. Not only . ' 1 ta' v with reference to jj,°° s ? es be read and explain ut ah j-tate laws relating to au yaffic. The law limits 0 01 ' of school busses i > per hour and provides e to a full stop ° a^ r 6>< y arc ar e forbidden to Either ,Hlsses xy bile they are lb < n ° ad!n - or unloading pupils, k% h il m sc hool zone -o miles per hour, 1R C HI SOx [>EUNION lhii , , L- " 1 Man had their an i.r *" ' ; R- Vernon Springs a great time for v ’ 1 ! *at good Chatham / ' iJI! - the Murchisons, ; umilies, have scat -l' winds and the vis everaj . :,n Hver al states and >lr. \ :s bv’orth Carolina. ; bosen rm ;rchlson was again President. Edison sav- Harry. ' ' m an should mari 7 young. He is ’^inventor' 1 'I! 1 increase our °rs 0 f a s ‘ *°u know—inven- -The Chatham Record Separk Reveals Huge 7 Operations in Liquor I Hakes Disclosure At Trial Os ' Himself and Stephenson For Forsythe’s Death Raleigh, July I.—Raleigh law yers, policemen and civilians gen- j erally were figuring tonight on the | magnitude of rum operations dis-ii closed at Smithfield today, where < Robert Separk ar.d Robert Stephen- ‘ son, tendering pleas of manslaugh-j ] cer in causing the death of Mighty F-masythe November last, took ( sentences of four to eight years, j; Judge Harris, who is a life longj friend of the boys who were with Forsythe the night that he was killed, opened his court to the de fendants and what Separk told was quite aplenty. Judge Harris told the defendants that he had hoped many years to be able to avoid passing judgment upon them. “I j i gave you a chance once, Robert,”' | the Raleigh jurist told Separk “I! |am going to give you another j j chance, but you must go to the pen- j ; itentiary first.” The judge did not i \ | desire to hear any character wit nesses. He knew Separk and; Stephenson, who were driving a j rum car that carried Forsythe the : night of his death. Evelyn Britt, i ! Durham girl, was also with them, j i The death of Forsythe was dra-| marie enough. After taking the dead man to the hospital they left for parts unknown, but a wreck of i the automobile gave Separk trou j ble between Raleigh and Durham. The killing of Forsy .h eoccurred in I Clayton. The evidence is strong ; that it was an accident and tliatj j the car threw drunken Forsythe i out. The court does not believe ! :he rival rum runner was murder ! od. But the liquor business appall ed. Judge Harris asked Separk what he had been doing and Separk admitted that he hauled liquor. The justice asked how often he carried a cargo and Separk said every day. ‘How much at a time? ’ Judge Harris continued, and Separk de clared from 66 to 75 gallons at a time. “How many trips did you make?” Judge Harris asked. “About 500,” Separk replied He told Judge Harris that he ran his liquor car every day for 14 months. If that is true, he transported something like 35,000 gallons in that year and a fraction. Judge Harris th ught, of course, that the community all about Ral eigh absorbed this liquor, but not so. Separk declared that he brought it all to Raleigh and distributed it 1 among negroes. “Who were they?” Judge Harris asked. “I know every ' negro in Raleigh by his first name, 1 and none by his last name,” Se- park said. He told the court that he convened his patrons by blowing a whistle. Sometimes the police got on his trail, but he threw them cff with a smoke serene. This was done in self-defense, he said. He! did not think it was unlawful, for the police were going to shoot him and he was dodging their bullets. The thing appalled. Separk was confident that he spoke conserva tively when he said he made 500 trips to New Bern and back. No body here can understand how he avoided so long the police. -They were after him always, but he said he brought his booze into Raleigh and distributed it here and here only. Separk had a great time today. The natives looked on him with un disguised envy There is nothing commercial-minded about Separk. He made no money hauling liquor. He loved to transDort it and to ride in his automobile. When he was finally taken he "had saved nothing. He went into Johnston county jail, remained there a season and bored himself out. He never appeared to seek money. He was chasing fame always. Evelyn Britt, Durham girl, who also faced trial on the murder charge, decided to fight the case and her case went over to August term of court and her bond reduc ed from SIO,OOO to $3,500. V It isn’t where you live or how you do things that makes you civil ized—but the distance you think beyond your immediate horizon. PITTSBORO, N. C., CHATHAM COUNTY, THURSDAY, JULY 7,1927 Traffic Fatalities Last Year Were 453 This Number Represents 13 Per Cent Increase in State —New York Led Country Raleigh, July 1. —Motor vehicle fatalities in North Carolina in 1926 totaled 453 as compared with 401 during 1925, it was announced to day by the state board of health. The percentage cf increase was 13 per cent. Fatalities at highway crossings claimed 54 lives last year as against 31 in 1925. New York, statistics show, had the greatest number of motor fu tilities, while Nevada had the least. A total of 2,234 lost their lives in New York, while 31 died in Ne vada. The total number of motor fa talities in the United States, ac cording to statisics furnished the board of health, was 21,111 in 1926, ! as compared to 19,977 in 1925 Fatalities at highway crossings ; in all the states in 1926 totaled 2,- j 064 compared to 1,784 in 1925. Ten per cent of the 21,111 in 1926 were killed at highway and railroad crossings, compared to nine per cent in 1925. Twelve per cent of those killed in i motor accidents last year in this ! state died at crossings, as com pared to eight per cent in 1925. Mrs. Tyler’s Sister Drowned at Badin Mrs. R. E. Lee, a sister of Mrs. ;W. H Tyler of Goldston, died last i Thursday while trying to rescue j her niece, Miss Ida Lee Rowe of i Newton who was about to drown in Badin Lake. Mrs. Lee had a heart attack while attempting the rescue. The burial took place at Badin Friday, the funeral being ecyiiducted by her pastor Rev. G. H. Rhodes of the Lutheran church. i Veteran Stedman Dead at Age of 83 i • Mr. O. W. Stedman, who former ly lived near Asbury church, but j has in recent years resided with j his daughter, Mrs. O’Connor, at Jonesboro, died Sunday, and was j L_ ' , | buried at Asbury Monday. The j funeral services were Conducted by Pastor Chafin, of the Asbury i church, and Revs. O. A. Hinson of j Jonesboro, and Rev. Mr. Stanfied, a former Jonesboro pastor. , i Mr. Stedman was a Confederate veteran. He served four years in i the armies of the sixties. Pie was a member of Asbury Methodist j church for many years, and was highly esteemed. S. S Convention At Brown’s Chapel The Hadley Township Sunday school convention meets at Brown’s Chapel Saturday, July 16. A com mittee composed of representatives of the four churches comprising the convention met and made out a full program for the occasion. Selected as speakers and leaders are Mr. J. T. Mann, Prof. H. G. Self, Rev. H. G. Dorsett, Mr. W. F. Jones, Mr. J. L. Griffin, Rev. C. M. Lance,Prof. W. R. Thompson. LINDBERG Paris Lindbergh’s visit cost France a lot of money. The lights alone, to show the way to Paris, cost a nice sum. The big gest searchlight in the world, on j Mont Valerien, west of Paris, sent its rays 200 miles all that Saturday ; evening. All the airfield lights of j northern France were kept burning long aftr Lindberg landed. The furniture bill, if it could be j calculated, also would be high. At the city hall and at the chamber and senate receptions the crowds clam bered wildly onto rare old tapes tried chairs and divans, fragile con soles and desks, and left torn fa brics and broken and marred wood work. r Besides this, the expense of pub ■ lie displays, “wine of honor” cere : monks, medals, flowers and ! flags was considerable. . Work In Full Swing At Duke University More Than 500 Men Now at Work On 5,000-Acre Campus Getting Ready For New Buildings Dqrham, July 2.—The dream cl James B. Duke, which captured the imagination of the world when it was made knewn in December,l924, through his magnificent endow ment, is now something more than a dream—it is approaching reality. Few people today realize th* great amount of work that has beer, tone toward the realization of the plans that the great benefactor hau for Duke university. Even the ole grads who returned for the 75th ; mmencement were so engrossed ver the dozen new buildings on the old campus to pay a visit to the new campus of 5,000 acres, a mile away, where hundreds of men are preparing the foundations for two score' or more beautiful buildings. For many weeks scores of three mule wagons, many tractors, and a Battery of steam shovels have been engaged in what is possibly th. greatest dirt-moving pproject ever I undertaken in the state of North ; Carolina. The entire surface of a mile-long plateau is being leveled, i graded, and prepared for (the gi ; gantic building program th:.: is to - start shortly. Visitors who have cared to ride over a newly-laid con crete highway through the Duke • mpus to the scene of the opera tions have been astonished at the r ast amount of work done in con verting a wooded plateau into a cleared, leveled area where dozens of ston'> buildings w’ll be erected a -1 a cost that may exceed 820,900.000 Here more than two dozen engi neers and surveyors, under the di rection of W. S. Lee, chief engineer J fcr cir* Duke endowment, are lo cating building sites, marking off a dozen miles ‘of roadway, and com pleting the preliminary work for ihe greatest single construction project ever attempted in the south. Surrounded by woodland of rare natural beauty and a scene of quiet peacefulness a completed university plant will rise up within a few years to prove that dreams come true, that the visions of a far sighted and generous man can be converted into useful and service able materials The realization of Ills daring dream has begun. “We are going to build as econo mically as possible,” said Mr. Lee recently. “Loss of tinfe and delay mean loss of money, therefore we are going to build as rapidly as pos sible, but build well.” It ha's been Mr. Lee, who, as chief engi neer for the Southern Power com pany, has superintended the con | struction of some of the south’s most powerful hydro-electric sta tions. He is now prepared to de vote his full time to the Duke uni versity project. COMMISSIONERS IN SESSION TUESDAY The county commissioners and the board of education met Tuesday instead of Monday. The commis sioners devoted that day to the us ual routine and set another day for the consideration of the budget, which is quite a job. Mr. Rigsbee has the various items of the budget worked out and the sum total va ries only about SIOO.OO from the expenditures of the past year. The budget and the levy will have to fit, by the requirements of the new county government law. At least, money cannot be appropriated that is not provided for in the levy. Thera are no be no more deficits. ICE CREAM SUPPER AT MOUNT PLEASANT The ladies’ of Mount Pleasant church, in Baldwin township, will serve ice cream and other refresh ments, on the church grounds Sat urday, July 9, beginning at four o’clock p. m. The proceeds will be used for repairs of the church; house'. Your presence and co operation will be genuinely appre ciated. If women’s skirts keep on get ting shorter we for one are going to quit worrying about this ever be coming a petticoat government. Compass Solely Re sponsible for Failure! Would Have Easily Reached Paris < But For the Accident l9 Hours in Crossing Ocean Ver-Sur-Mer, France, July 2. — This tiny seaside village of Nor- * mandy sprang into world wide fame * today, because it marked the end i of as romantically adventurous 1 and hazardous a trial as ever was 1 cut through the air in the history 1 of aviation. i ' Commander Richard Evelyn Byrd and his three* companions in scien-; ! tific aerial adventure were compel!- j ed to land here at three-thirty 1 o’clock this morning (French stan- 1 dard time), bringing their great! transatlantic plane “America” down j out of a pitch black rainy night j onto the shore line in water which .hoy could not see. The machine, in which they had left Roosevelt field, New York, 42 hours earlier, was badly damaged in striking the water and was quick -1 j ly flooded up to the aviator’s shoul ders. Shaken up and bruised, the four I airmen—Byrd, Lieutenant George ■ Noville, Bert Acosta and Lieutenant j Berndt Balchen —quickly pumped ; up the pneumatic air raft carried frr such an emergency, and made' their way to shore, 200 yards dis-j tant. i Tonight their three-motored plane rested on the beach lake a stormbattled bird, its landing gear torn away, its wings badly damaged a r a everything about it soaked from lying ip the water most of the day. The brave four, terribly fatigued —having had only a few hours sleep since the end of their trip— ] enjoyed the comfort of ur.tram meled rest at Caen, capital of the department of Calvados, as guests f that city, it was decided that they should not be forced tc un- dergo the rigors of the reception i awaiting them in Paris, before hav-! ing at least one good night’s sleep, j The successful landing here— successful in that the crew mira-! culously escaped serious injury— i brought an end to long hoprs of ■ circulating over France in v the blackness of a rainy night, with! compass out of order, fuel tanks draining fast, and visibility so poor that any .attempt to land was al most suicidal. The America, which was meant! to land at Le Bourget field, Paris, and then go back to the United States the first round 1 trip flight between New York and the French capital, did her part nobly, and so did her part nobly, and so did the did the men who steered her j through the long hours of fog, rain | and darkness. It was the failure of their com- ; pass to do its part after the French coast had been reached, at Cape Finisterre, that made it impossible for them to locate their goal and caused them to wander about until only a few gallons of fuel sloshed in the great tanks. There was no chance for them to get a course and keep it, nor oppor tunity in the circumstances to know 7 where they were. A dismal, blind ing rain beat down upon them, and they could see no land, no lights— nothing but a sky of inky black Except for the mechanical ac cident of the compass ceasing to function, Commander Byrd has no doubt thaf he would have achieved his goal before midnight last night, j The motors functioned perfectly j during the whole trip through i fog, rain and wind; over land and sea. The airmen were 19 hours in crossing the Atlantic, but not once did they catch a glimpse of the wa ter, so dense was the fog through which they flew; nor could they during those hours see the sky or anything except their plane, and sometimes the mist was so thick j that their eyes could pierce it no 1 further than the ends “of the wings. ' :.s A correspondent for the Asso ciated'Press who flew here from Paris as soon as the news of the landing became known asked Com mancer Byrd whether he was satis fied from his experience that com mercial transatlantic aviation was feasible. “It is possible,” the commander The Figures Must Be Made Public County Commissioners Must Pub lish Report of Budget In the Newspaper of County Raleigh, July 4 —Now that the board of county commissioners has adopted the budget estimates get ing the amount of money expected to be spent ,in the counties during the year ending next June 30, the; board must take steps to make; ihese figures public. The new law provides that a summary of the budget estimates, that is, the money the depart-. ments and subdivisions of the coun- I ty propose to spend, be published in at least one newspaper published in the county This statement must show at least the toal appro priaion recommended for each sep arate fund or function. Other figures must be made pub lic, so that the taxpayers may know what is being proposed in the way cf activities and expenditures. For example, th*e rate of taxation j for county purposes and the rate 1 for each subdivision wihch will be i necessary to levy in the current ! ! fiscal year must be worked out by ! the county accountant and , pub l'shed. I The publicity now required of all I county affairs involving money will j put a new responsibility on the 1 county commissioners and other of ficials. The people will not only have an opportunity of seeing how ' their money is being spent, but they ; will be able to make comparisons | between the efficiency of their of | ficials and those of other counties. Full and complete settlement by the sheriff or tax collectors for the j 1926 tax levy was due to be made i to the Board of County Commis sioners last Monday. Reports re j ceived at the county government i advisory commission indicate that ; rm st of the counties have had their j_ _ 1 tax sales. ! As soon as the settlement is made with the board, the tax sales certificates should be turned over ! to the county accountant or other designated officer for collection. 1 When this is done the sheriff be ! comes automatically relieved cf ; further tax collecting until the tax list for the 1927 taxes and receipt books are put in his hands on Oc tober 1, after he has properly qualified. In the few counties having injunctions against the sale of land for taxes until the early fall, the sheriff or tax collectors must con tinue to collect the 1926 taxes, so that these officials will be required to spend nearly the entire year in tax collecting and fail to get the | three months’ relief from this work ! that the sheriffs of the other eoun- I ties do. The tax certificates under the new law bear a rate of 20 percent per annum for the first year on the amount of the tax due and the sheriff’s cost. President Coolidge’s lame wrist has been attributed to a handshake with a newly appointed U. S. mar shal from North Dakota. One might say from “being in the clutch of the law.” replied. “It will surely come, but it will come more slowly, for it is all a matter of evolution. “I haven’t any doubt that we j would have reached Paris had it | not been for the behavior of the i compass, due to some local affec tion. Perhaps it was something in the plane with magnetic quali ties that threw the needle off.” The North Pole hero was dead tired from his three sleepless | nights. He accepted in modest fa shion the congratulations showed on him and seemed to feel keen dis appointment at net having achieved j his goal. But he tried his best to j hold his head high, smile and ac cept what had happened at its pro per value—in that it was merely a technical accident. When he first was congratulated by the correspondent, he said: “You congratulate me, but I feel that may-be I need kicking more than congratulations.” The other fliers also kept up • their good humor. VOLUME NO. 49 BUCK OLDHAM IN JAIL AGAIN Leads Long Chase Sunday But Was Caught Thai Night Ordered Back os Roads by Governor. Buck Oldham, a youngster wha ! eems bent and determined to spend j a goodly part of his life on the ! roads or in the penitentiary, is back i in jail after being paroled on con dition of good behavior, j The Governor having withdrawn his parole and ordered him put back in prison, Dpputy Emory Thomas of Bynum, catching sight of him and Henry Hearne and Will Brasington in a car Sunday gave chase. Oldham led the chase through Pittsboro and on to the l edge of Siler City, where the offi cer shot his tiros down. Oldham jumped out and fled, escaping in the woods on the skirts of town.* Hearne and Brasington did not at tempt to escape, and were arrested on the charge of aiding and abet ’ ting in the escape of Oldham and i lodged in jail for a few hours, j Sheriff Blair and several depu- I j ties surrounded the Oldham home ! that night and caught Buck as he j tried to escape, and lodged him in 5 j I Hearne and Brasington were giv |en a suspended sentence at the June 7 1 term of court, but the suspension, ! as well as the Record recalls, was 31 upon condition that they keep the peace as far as Mr. Thomas, whom they had assaulted, is concerned. >T However, we are informed that their case will be presented to " | Judge Harris, and if the suspended sentence does not go into effect hey will be held accountable only * tor what appeared to be the aid- L ing and abetting of the escape of 1 : Oldham. 1 Five People Drowned , In Draggy Undertow I Husband Gives Life In An Effort To Render Aid to His Young Wife Elmore’s Inlet, Topsail, July 4. j Caught in the vortex of a whirlpool | that swirled and eddied in the | rough ocean breakers a short dis tance off shore this afternoon, five (persons, members of a picnic party, I were drawn to watery graves by an i undertow that was as tenaciously i irresistible as it was deadly. Other | members of the party, including the J nine year old sen oi two of the j whirlpool’s victims, succeeded in j freeing themselves from the suc- I tion and regaining safe water but |w r ere powerless to aid their friends I who were drawn down and swept ' out to sea. Tonight no trace of the bodies had been found but sea*' soned salts who largely compose the searching party, worked grimly into the night, hopeful that the bodies would be washed ashore when the tide turned. Those drowned included Troy Woodcock, 35, of Rocky Point and his wife, Mrs Nettie Woodcock, 30, of Rocky Point Miss Susie E. Bloodworth, 22, of Charlotte, for merly of Rocky Point; Miss Annie Wake Bloodworth, 18, of Rocky Point, her sister, and Leon Barnhill, 15, of Hamstead. Mr. and Mrs. Woodcock’s son, heeding the advice of .the father only a few minutes before he sank beneath the waves, fought his way back to safety. The father gave his life in an effort to aid Mrs. Woodcock. ; The party which included several others set out from Rocky Point early yesterday for a day on the beach across from Elmore’s inlet. They carried their dinner to enjoy : picnic fashion. Harllee Crews who {operates a gas boat in Topsail wa iters was employed to take the party {across the sound to the beach. The boat was piloted by J. W. Hunt, However, engine trouble develop ed before the party had been put across the sound and it was neces sary to tie the small craft up to remedy the trouble. The party im patient to get in the surf complet ed the journey on foot, walkings (Continued on page four)