bL ,SHED SEPTEMBER 19, 1878 ■train children | I inhealth WAYS! lumber Is The Time To! I Think In Terms of School Children I I ißv Maude E. Wallace Asst. State 1* j ome Demonstration Agent, N. h College.) W that the days of September I ' her e at hand we begin to think I School and the children listen If . t | ;e bell which will call, them in I . year's work. They have spent I !£ summer months in lazy out- j of-door living and we have been I interested in watching them grow, I I rHV it is time to see that they are physically and mentally ready for I school duties. I: has been conclusively demon- ! I -rated that in otherwise normal children there is a definite rela- I tion between physical and mental j I development. In 1919 a thousand j I cen . vea r-old school children in! I Washington D. C., were studied by j I tre American Child Health Associa- | I . The conclusion was that poor \ I nutrition definitely handicapped ! I p ro gress in school. By means of | I rhe proper care of diet at home and j I her school lunches or properly pre- ; I pared cold lunches we can do i I much to correct undernourishment i backward mental development. J ’ It has been found that about one fct.rt/. of the children in.the United States are inadequately nourished j and the total number of perfectly nourished children is surprisingly I .-.n jlLt-li. Why are children improperly ft!' Why do they have too little ' s!trWhy are bad teeth and ton-j sils neglected ? Parents, we be iicrc. are largely to blame. An in teiiirent and well-trained mother can d a great deal to correct such ; tr 'tides. Many mothers are striv- i ir.g n w to put before their children J a well balanced diet—to keep tea ! and coffee from the young children, an: to see that they get their full amount of sleep from ten to 12 ; hours each night. A schedule should be outlined ' that the growing child has a definite hour each day for doing a eitain thing. If we start and train • cn. in these habits as six-year w e they will not easily depart RWm the schedule. 1 program should include regu r!Sin£T hours and regular meal Immediately upon arising • e;. should wash their faces, hands | c “ : teer h. At least one glass of i Sn aid be taken at this time, j f oreakfast. the child should be I ? • -n iruit and cereal with cream 1 top milk, bread or toast and j ; - er. A glass of water or milk "dd also be taken at recess time. It lunch is carried to school it ' ■ ! -iu be planned to meet the needs - growing body. This should a meat or meat substitute, r-.uLe or tomato or fruit sand -u ’ miiK. tresh fruit or some kind • simple dessert such as sugar ; • ! s °r raisin cup cakes. !(J vhild goes home to din- J meal should include fresh green vegetables such as cab- Let op c . . . , ° 01 spinish and a starchy p ' a> nce > grits or macaroni. . ’’ taioes ma y be substituted for the ~ art ‘hy food. ' water to drink, with ! ( ( ile hour for outdoor play | * ar *d fresh air in the i. " 1 >oms will do much toward ! j. £ , p. nLr Uie bodies and minds iUrin & the tiling school '°LDSBOro SIK MILL Vv ILL START UP SOON stS! dSb ° r °’ Sept 14 ~Work of in mii; the mac binery for the silk Air . run by the Goldsboro ha< ]l n Narrow Webb Company, ing 0 f ° complete d and the wind best„ l sli k yarn is expected to »»Cr T Week ' E ‘ A ' ZeaCha ’ shinm ! ' an * *° m ake the first ‘ fent of goods by October 1. en ameW? r ° n rUSt stains f rom an s °lution c them with a til the ° . ° Xa^c aci d- Repeat un th°rou-:n dlsappears , then rinse ihe Chatham Record Richard Lambert Dies In An Auto Wreck Driver Os Bus Which Collided With Sedan In Durham Held In SI,OOO Bond ! Durham, Sept 9—J B. Reeves is out ! j under bond of SI,OOO on a charge of manslaughter as the result of the death early this morning of Richard E. Lambert of this city, . who succumbed to injuries received when the big bus driven by Reeves, , collided with the sedan in which j Lambert and two grils were riding on the outskirts of the city Thurs ; day has been set for the preliminary ; hearing. ; The accident occurred when the car driven by Miss Maxine Wilker- j son, and occupied in addition to her self by Lambert and Miss Grace | Cox, skidded across the road into the path of the on-coming bus, fol lowing an attempt to bring the j wheels which had been driven off j the pavement onto the mud back | upon the asphalt. The bus was not brought to a stop until after it had ! traveled, according to police, a con i siderable distance from the place where' the collision occurred. The ' | sedan was bent into the shape of ! j the letter U but the bus was not j damaged except for a bent frame and a smashed fender. Both girls i were injured and physicians are fearful that Miss Ccx will not sur vive. ”S. Uckerman was the only passenger of the bus which travels between Durham and Chapel Hill, to be injured and he expected to be j discharged from the hospital within a short time. MAIL BOXES NOW BEING GROUPED; Washington September 3.—That the campaign inaugurated by the ’ postoffice department in March, ; 1926, to have boxes in suburban and - , | rural areas grouped and re-erected op stands in supersedure of the ir j regular arrangement so often ob ■ served along the highways, is show ing satisfactory results is indicated in a statement appearing in the Postal Bulletin over the signature ! of John H. Bartlett, first assistant I postmaster general, and H. H. Bill any, fourth assistant postmaster general, in which they acknowledge the cooperation in this good work of a number of rural carriers. ! Among the rural carriers in North Carolina commended for ! their cooperation in this work were . the following: Claud J. Allegood, Chauncy L. j Dupree, Burton G. Albritton, Jesse i W. Brown, Albert W. Harriss, and Guy T. Evans, carriers on routes 1,2, 3,4, 5 and 6 respectively, all of Greenville; R. L. Gray, carrier No. 1, Leaksville; Norman K. Hatch, carrier No. 1, Mount Olive; Geo. C. Lane, carrier No. 2, Mount Olive; Don C. Martin, carrier No.! 1, Mount Olive, and Willie J. Best, temporary carrier No. 6, Mount Olive. COPPER OLDEST METAL Copper might fitly be called the first of the metals, for it was the i first to be adapted by man to his ordinary uses. Probably the men of the bronze age found the metal in its native state, as it occasionally , occurs; perhaps some cave man built a fire over copper ore expos ed on the surface, and unwittingly built the first smelter. However it might have been discovered, pri mitive man after long centuries was using copper to replace his i crude stone and bone implements. Then again, by accident perhaps, 1 the alloy of copper with tin or zinc,, which makes brass and bronze, was discovered, and this was the great metal of antiquity. Mining and reduction of metals is as safe and sound a business as selling flour or running a bank. Mining develops every other indus try—farming, railroads, merchan dising; it is the great builder for any nation. Some of the capital that is go ing into ~ speculative adventures might well go into metal mining in the west. . ..aiSh, PITTSBORO, N. C., CHATHAM COUNTY, THURSDAY, SEPT. 15,1927 PRISON RECEIVES WOMAN BANKER Begin Vfeerving a 3-5 Year Sentence For Making. False Entries .-A. Raleigh, Sept. 14—Miss Lena Woodward, 30, former assistant cashier of the defunct Bank of Princeton, was brought to State’s Prison yesterday to begin serving a three to five year sentence for making false entries that led to the failure of the bank and loss to de positors of about $38,000. Miss Woodard is the first woman banker ever to be committed to the North Carolina penitentiary. The prisoner arrived by automo bile three hours after sentence had been pronounced in Johnston county Superior court by Judge Henry A. Grady. She was charged with embezzlement, accepting de posits after she knew the institu tion was insolvent, and making false entries. Through her attor neys, Abell and Shepherd, the de fendant offered a plea of nol con tendere to the false entry charge, and Solicitor Clawson Williams* who has assisted in the prosecution by I. M. Bailey, State Banking de partment Attorney, and Ed F. Ward, nol prosed the other two charges. Miss Woodward’s father, George Woodward, formerly of Princeton, but, now of Wake county, who was the cashier of the wrecked institu tion, was indicted on the same charges as his daughter, but ten dered a plea of guilty to violating the misdemeanor banking statute. He contended that he knew nothing of what was going on until the crash was upon the bank. Judge Grady let him go with a suspended sentence upon payment of the costs. The bank was closed on February 3, 1925, by W. L. Williams, State Bank Examiner, who returned yes terday as a witness in the case. It was capitalized at 870,000, and to date depositors have recovered 40 cents on the dollar. Miss Woodward kept her silence about the affairs, refused to explain : or to elaborate on allegations that she had removed the money for i the use of an unidentified man, en- I ' ; gaged in playing the cotton market and came out a heavy loser in his , speculative orgy with the bank’s | money. Although Miss Woodward is the i first banker to be sentenced to i j prison in North Carolina, prison j I rosters contain the names of sev-1 I ! oral men bankers, some of S.tate -1 wide prominence. ESCAPED MONKEY LOCATED IN CHATHAM (Chapel Hill Weekly.) Out on farm a few miles to the I south of Chapel Hill, near Fearring i ton’s, in Chatham county, resides a monkey. Temporarily his master j is Boy Goodwin, whose mother and j sister take care of him while Mr. I Goodwin is away on his travels as ■ a salesman. This is the pet that Dr. B. D. Bullock, university alumnus, lost three or four weeks ago on the way back here from a camping expedi tion to the Haw River. Jocko es caped while the automobile was , halted at Pearson’ store, at the Or ange-Chatham line, and for several hours was lost in the woods. A boy named Williams captured him and turned him over to Bob Godwin. Bud Perry, the barber, who was with Dr. Bullock on the camping trip and is the physician’s friend and turusted agent, sought blit did not accomplish the surrender of the monkey. His credentials he says, were not convincing to the present possessor. Dr. Bullock, who is stationed in the Navy Hospital in Charleston, S. C., has had his attention so dis tracted by other affairs recently that he has not taken any positive step to recover his pet. But he ex pects to equip Mr. Perry an other friend, Deputy Sheriff Las siter, of Chatham county, With pro per evidence of < that they may dbtaih the modley and | ship him to Charleston. Naval. Sec. Declares I Cannot Search For , , Any More Flyers ; Tran.-Ocean and Long Distance! Flights Should Be Under Sup ervision of Agency. Charlotte, Sept. 10—Government al regulation of trans-oceanic or other long distance flying was de clared essential tonight by Curtis D. Wilbur, secretary of the navy, j if human life is to be safeguarded j and any constructive stimulus giv en to the science of aviation. Secretary Wilbur, en route to Washington after an inspection of i the Pacific fleet was a visitor at the home of Stuart Cramer, Cramer- j ton textile manufacturer and for- j mer classmate at Annapolis. He plans to leave Monday for the cap ital. General unpreparedness and in adequate equipment' for hazardous flights, which place human life in j jeopardy can, if successful, con tribute little or nothing to aerial science, were referred to by Secre tary Wilbur as cause enough to warrant governmental supervision of details of such adventurous en-1 terprises. One procedure, he suggested, would be for a properly constituted j board to refuse both governmental ’ 1 sanction and passports to any I person deemed, after examination, i unqualified to undertake an ocean- i ic flight. “The navy cannot continue,” he ] said, “searching for victims of j 'stunt’ flights which culminate in distress at sea,’ adding that inas much as public money was involved in such searches, it was but natur al and proper that governmental j regulation should be applied to the 1 matter the same as in other activ- j -i ities. a— FIND MANGLED BODY OF A. C. L. SWITCHMAN Rocky Mount, Sept., 14.—Funeral services were conducted yesterday 1 for J. L. Darden, Atlantic Coast Lpie dtchman, whose mangled | j body vrls found beneath an engine j at; the .'fSouth Rocky Mount yards! late Saturday night. ! Services were conducted by Rev. i D. E. Hill at the Arlington street Baptist church yesterday morning at 9 o’clock with a large throng cf friends and acquaintances of the! | dead man in attendance. After the i remains were taken to Mr. Darden’s ' ! old home near Mt. Olive, where fi | nal rites and interment followed. i " j | Mr. Daden went on duty at the local yards at 11 o’clock Saturday night and fifteen minutes later his body was found entangled in the wheels of one of the monster en gines which had been brought out ’ to take a through passenger train out of the terminal. Just how the switchman} was killed is problematical. It is thought however, that he was struck by the engine while crossing the tracks in the yard. No one was aware of the accident until the lo comotive had been placed and his body discovered beneath the wheels. Mr. Darden, who lived at 1015 South Church Street, was 33 years of age and is survived by his widow and two children. His untimely death also came as a great blow I to his wide circle of friends, par ticularly in railroad circles. Roofer Seriously Hurt When He Falls From Top of Tall Building Fayetteville, Sept 10—Ed Sutton, a roofer, fell from the top of a three-story building here this after noon and tonight was in a hospital with what physicians said was a fair chance to recover. Sutton’s escape from death was considered miraculous. Only the fact that he landed feet foremost amid a pile of building material was held as the reason he was not dashed to death. Sutton is married and has one child. He came here from Dunn. Just about the time some of us got into the six-cylinder automo bile gfoup our friends took up golf 1 and again left us with nothing to talk about. BALLOONIST in AIR2SHOURS Two Pilots Tiiok! Off Along With 14 Other Balloons Saturday. Dunn, Sept. 12 — Refreshed by a long night’s rest at Dunn’s newest hotel—The Cotton Dale Maurice Biename and A. Veenstra, in charge of the French balloon, Paris-Brux elles, which landed near here late Sunday afternoon, boarded a train this morning and headed toward Detroit. Biename is the World’s champion balloonist, having traveled 1,334 miles in one of the James Gordon Esnnett International races. In the current race, he was entered under the French flag. The balloonists were in the air ; for nearly 25 hrs before Pilot Bien a:ne decided to descend three miles south of Dunn. They took off along with fourteen other balloons late Saturday from the Ford Air port, Dearborn, Mich., in the annual James Gordon Bennett Internation al Balloon Race. Hundreds of people saw the bal j ioon .as it wended its way over Er win and thence to Dunn where it j landed. | Two Erwin youths Henry C. Bost and Earl Barbour —were the first to reach the balloonists as they floundered about in a cane patch I near Dunn. The young men helped pull the big gas bag to a place neai the Dunn-Fayetteville highway. Pilot Biename rewarded the youths by giving one the big pen nant on the balloon and the other a French flag sewed onto the bal ioon. After answering innumerable questions about their flight from ! Dearborn, Michigan, to Harnett 1 ! county, North Carolina, Pilot Bien -1 ame and his aide were put to bed ! at the Cotton Dale Hotel, j Biename was ra\|tenously hungry ! and ate heartily of the choice foods j ! set before him by the chef of the : Cotton Dale. Veenstra declared i i * j that he was “too tired tq eat” and hustled off to bed. The balloonists slept for more • than twelve consecutive heurs be fore they awoke this morning and took off for Detroit by train over j the Atlantic Coast Line. Both were hungry this morning and ate heartily. In all, the Paris-Bruxelles was j 1 in the air 24 hours and 52 minutes ' and had covered several hundred miles before it landed near what 1 its residents like to call “Dunn, the , Livest Town under the Sun.” The distance from here to D£ti*oit is es- , timated at 1100 miles. The two balloonists were too j tired last night to give a full ac- j count of their hazardous trip over j Michigan, Ohio, West Virginia and most of North Carolina, but did declare that they had experienced rough weather practically all the j way. At one time Saturday night j they said they had to ascend to a height of 15,000 feet to get above a storm. i Practically All Os Mill Workers Back On Job In Henderson Henderson, Sept. 10—With the exception of a few holdouts and others who have moved away from Henderson, the 800 striking opera tives at the Harriett cotton mills here were reported practically one hundred per cent back on their jobs today. A number of additional workers returned during the day and officials announced their ap- j pearance made the regular working force practically intact. Sheriff Kearney last night had a force of special deputies on duty 1 in the mill village again and today reported everything quiet. The extra guard will probably continue for several additional nights, he said, and the situation is expected to be normal by the first of next week. Windfall and imperfect apples can be made into apple sauce and canned for winter use. Do not add any more water than is necessary to keep the apples from burniiig/ Sweeten to taste,pack hot, and pro cess in the water bath for five minutes. First National Bank I Receiver Starts Suits V 1 r Action Against The Officers Begua In Federal Court At Wilmington. Suit was begun yesterday in the office of H. H. Ford, deputy clerk of U. S. court here, by C. L. Wil liams, receiver of the First Na tional Bank of Warsaw, N. C., against J. E. Williams, Mattie E. j Williams, Annie Ross Williams, J. C. Shaw, Florence H. Shaw and, William P. Bridgers. The action is based on the alleged nonpayment of certain notes, one for $463.50 signed by J. E. Wil liams; for $250,00, signed by J. E. Williams, one for $1500.00, signed by J. E. Williams and Mattie H. Williams, one for SBOO, signed by J. E. Williams and Mattie H. Wil liams, one for $1240.46, signed by i Annie Ross Williams, one for $2,000 | signed by J. C. Shaw and Florence I H. Shaw one for S9OO, signed by W. j P. Bridgers; wherefore judgment is prayed against J. E. Williams for I the sum total of the notes he being 1 the maker or endorser of these notes. J. 0. Carr represents the receiver of the bank. The First * National t Bank was closed on February 21, ! 1927, by order of the comptroller of the currency and C. L. Williams was duly appointed the receiver thereof.—Wilmington Star, Sep i tember Bth. THINKS AIR SAF ER THAN EARTH There’s Lots More Room, Says Girl Who Intends to Flv * ■ Across the Atlantic I Wheeling, W. Va., August 27 It is safer in the air than in an automobile because the airplane j has unlimited space in which to ; maneuver, In the opinion of Miss : Rtith Elder, 22, Lakeland, Fla., aviatrix,who is preparing for non ! stop flight from New York to Paris. The young woman, backed by Wheeling business men in the transatlantic flight, will be accom i panied by George W. Haldeman as ' navigator. They plan to hop off late next month. | “It wasn’t hard to learn flying a plane,” said the young woman. “I never have felt afraid. It is' , really far safer up there in the air than it is riding in an automobile, j There’s lots more room.” : Confident that she will reach her goal on the other side of the At j lantie Miss Elder’s only worry is I competition, for, as she says, “it i I would break my heart if some other j woman got there before I did.” Auto Crash At 17th ’ I And Castle Streets Mrs. Dick Meyers of Wilmington Painfully Injured; Harrel, of Burgaw, Cited to Court . | Wilmington, Sept. 12 —Automo- | biles operated by W. R. Harrell, of Burgaw, and Dick Meyers, of this city, were in violent collision at j seventeenth and Castle street late yesterday afternoon, the Meyers car being almost demolished. Mrs. Meyers, who was riding with her husband, was painfully injured, necessitating hospital treatment al | though the other members in the j crash escaped practically unhurt. Harrell was taken into custody on a charge of operating his car in a i reckless manner but was later re i leased on his own recognizance. He was cited to be in court Tuesday of ! this week. The Harrell car was being driven i west on Castle street while the r Meyers machine was proceeding north on Seventeenth. Police infor mation was that Harrell entered Seventeenth on Castle, a stop inter section, without bringing his ma chine to a halt. Many L a motorist has discovered that owning a hammer doesn’t make a man a mechanic—Exchange VOLUME NO. 49 {WOMAN KILLED IN WRECK Liquor and Women Is Tte Cause of Walter Grady's* Downfall Rocky Mount, Sept. 13 —A hear ing at Halifax tomorrow morning will endeavor to lift the veil of 1 mystery surrounding the death of Mrs. A. T. Taylor, Wilson woman, whose body was found beside a wrecked car near Halifax early tßii morning and to determine the part which Walter Grady, local man, companion of the woman on a drinking party throughout the night, who was found, in what of ficers termed a drunken stupor, on the porch of a farm house near the ; wreck, played in the woman’s death. Mrs. Taylor, Grady, L. R. Sapp, i employed by the contracting firm which is completing the work of the new school house here, and Conway Felton, of this city, according to de tails given to police here this morn ing, left the city early last night for Wilson. They were driving Sapp’s car, and headed directly for Wilson. However, they lost their way and arrived instead in Pine tops. They stopped along the road to Pinetops, it was pointed-out and Grady, being held now by Halifax authorities, bought whiskey from a car. All members of the party took drinks of the liquor, evi dence showed. I | Additional whiskey was bought in Wilson, the party arrived there, and both Grady and the woman are said to have taken sev eral other drinks. Grady got out, leaving Sapp and Felton and the woman in-the car. Sapp provided her with money for a room, he said, but she refused to get out, saying that she wanted to see Grady. Felton left the party, and ! after Grady returned, Sapp left them near the station and went home, investigation showed. ! This morning Sapp found that his car was gone and reported to the police that the car had been stolen. It is believed that . after ! Sapp left the party, Grady took Sapp’s car and the woman nearly to Halifax thinking he was taking her to Wilson. i* # . Sapp denies having made any ar rangements with Grady to take the car to Wilson. He said that Grady and the woman were both drunk when he left them on the streets and that Grady could not have been ) in condition to drive a car. ! Both Sapp and Felton, who were : questioned by police here today, ad imit having taken drinks, but both claim that they were not drunk. They said that Grady procured whiskey in Wilson and that he ; and the woman took several drinks while they were returning from Wilson to Rocky Mount. The body of Mrs. Taylor was found on the highway this morning and taken to Halifax. Grady was placed in jail to await the hearing scheduled for 10 o’clock tomorrow morning at Halifax courthouse. The car had turned completely over, it was said by Halifax offi cers and the woman is believed to have been instantly killed. There were no marks on her body to show the exact cause of her death, al though officers think that she suf fered internal injuries. It has not been decided whether an autopsy will be held over the body. When Grady was found he was asleep on the porch of a nearby farm house, and apparently did not realize the exte;nt of the acci dent. The car was considerably dam aged. The top was torn off, the ; windshield shattered, but it was able to run under its own power, i It is being held in storage now at i Halifax. : Sapp and Felton have been or • dered to appear tomorrow morning [ at Halifax at 10 o’clock for the pre ■ liminary hearing. Now is the time to cull out those “boarder” hens and keep only the I best layers for winter eggs and ; breeding, advise poultry specialist* s at State College.