3 Start the New Year RIGHT I X hj becoming Post-Dispatch tab- J i -ALL THE NEWS 8 Most of the Time; g Most of th Newt 1 ALL THE TIME" f ' , ... W C JVfU a subscription paid op. in MSMijkAAia Vol. 2. No. 6 ROCKINGHAM, N. O, THURSDAY Afternoon, JANUARY 9, 1919. $1.50 PER YEAR is 5 fe - I ; ; i m m Richmond County j Soldiers J ' In Flanders Fields. V (Written by Lt-CoL Dr. John McCrae. a Canadian, who was killed in second battle of Ypres and who lies buried in Flanders fields. We do -not know the ' .name of the author of 'The Answer.") In Handera fields the poppies grow Between the crosses, row on row, ; s That mark our place; and in the sky The larks, still bravely singing, fly . Scarce heard amid the guns below. We are the dead.-- Short days ago i We lived, felt dawn, saw sunsets glow, Loved and were loved; and now we lie ' In Flanders fields. Take up our quarrel with the fe 1 s To you, from failing hands, we throw The torch. Be yours to lift it high! If ye break faith with us who die : We shall not sleep, though poppies blow I ' In Flanders fields. The Answer In Flanders fields the cannon boom And fitful flashes light the gloom, While up above, like eagles fty The fierce destroyers of the sky. Wjth stains the earth wherein you lie Is redder than the poppy bloom , , o y,.. Fiander9 fields. Sleep on, ye brave. The shrieking shell, The quaking trench, the startled yell The fury of the battle hell .. ' - Shall wajtaj hwpS P ! Your flaming torch aloft we bear, ;. J With burning heart an oath we swear To keep th'9 faith, to fight it through, To crush the foe, or steep with you ' . ,. In Flanders fields. FrankS. Morse's address is "Co. L, 27th infantry, Amer. E. F., Siberia, Care of Depot Quartermaster, ban francisco, Cal, Ben Stubbs returned home last Friday from the Electrical School at Hampton roads: he has been in training exactly year, and .now has his honorable dis charge. ; Frank Luther. Rt 4. received a wire from Adjutant General Harriss Jan. 8th stating that his son, Carl Luther, field artillery, was wounded severely in action Nov. 1st. . Th niitnhor nf snlriiffra released from the camps in the United States so far is mx IWI nf fHi. numW 7 WW havn hwn f.U,VW. V . ,wvw ' released from Camp Greene and 13,400 from tamp Jackson. Mrs. H. J. Rogers heard last Friday for the first time since the Armistice from her mil Col. Thos. E. Rogers. He has been transferred to the Intelligence Dept. Battalion x, a. r. u. nu. - Willie Lee Dawkins, of Supply ComJ pany, aioia r. a, n a iciier iu his bio received Jan. 4th, stated that he was well, and then encamped at St. Blin, France. He was sent to camp Sept 20, . 1917, and left Camp Jackson July 26, 1918, ArnKsrlratinn fWAreAAa Ha fiAVA he .Ut Giuuoinauvw w.fc.w.w. ww j failed to .get in battle, but it was not his Mrs. S. F. Gibson, RoberdeL received lottpra Saturday from her two boys in irron....Inhn r. nf C. H. 324th. A. P. 791, and Starling S, Battery D, 316th Field Artillery, A. P. O. 704; the latter civ, ho had received oiiite a number copies of the Post-Dispatch, and they made him feel almost as if he had visited home. John C. was in the fight Nov. 9th but came out without a scratcn. v "nf Nathan W. Tjifirand has received l,ia , hnnnrahle discharge ' from CarrlD Travis. Texas, and arrived at Hamlet Tuesday. He entered the second officers' kHtinlnn imr at Pt " ncrlethnrn aiYteen months ago and came out with the rank of first lieutenant, and several months ' no m""ntl to a Cantaincv. ' He was in the 18th, of Cactus Division, 85th regiment, and has gained 18 pounds aance entering the service. ; William G. Head, who has been in the United -States Naval Reserves for the past 7. months, arrived Tuesday night from the Charleston Naval Base. Hi will be here for ssven days. While in the service William has made splendid progress. W May 20th he enlisted as nernnd class Hospital apprentice. 1 was soon nromoted to 1st class. : Just be fore coming home this last time he was ore of the tour out ot a ciass ei a to naa the examination for 3rd class Phr macist mate, v He hopes to keep up this record. , ' lh i . Julian P. Maner received his honora ble discharge from , Camp Jackson Dec. nth. Percy C Coley came from Aberdeen Proving Grounds, Md., Co. G, Barracks 313, last Sunday; he will return next Tuesday,:,' ,, ' .. . The 30th division, composed of the national guard troops of North and South Carolina and Tennessee, has been ordered home and will arrive in tins country within the next three weeks. .... The city of Raleigh has asked the war department to send the North Carolina troops to that city so that a big celebra tion can be had in their honor, before demobilization. " . ' A troop train passed Rockingham last Sunday having on board 280 wounded men of this 30th division, iney were being carried to the army hospital at Fort McPherson, Ga where they will be kept until well. . ' COMMISSIONERS MEET Routine Business. SupL For County Home. The county commisioners held their regular monthly meeting last Monday; present were Chair man B. F. Reynolds, H. D. Hatch, W. Capel, J.' A. McNeill; Com missioner Jas. L. Baldwin was detained. V W. TV Baldwin, the present in cumbent, was chosen as superin tendent of the County Home for 919, at the same, salary, $400, here was but one other appli cant, and he submitted no bid, The Board set aside m) as a budget with which to run the Home during 1919. D. D. Grant, white, of Mineral Springs, was released from pay ment of poll tax; physical disa- bilitvJv' jr. , '' : &z e. w. btutts, wrute, was piacea on outsiae pauper use awing winter months at $5 a quarter. Also, Mrs. Bill Riley Covington was placed on outside pauper 1st at $5 a quarter. 10 pieces of drain pipe were ordered bought for the roads from Carolina Metal Products Co., of Wilmington. Mrs. John Sandy Covington was appointed manager oi tne Tomato Club of the county for 1919 and the sum of $450 was appropriated from the general county fund to supplement the amount appropriated by the fed eral government for this Home Demonstration work. All men in military service are exempted from paying the 1918 poll tax. Flu Continues Unabated. There appears to be more cases of flu in the county at the present time than at any time since the epidemic began, though the cases appear milder in form. The conditions in Anson county are as bad as they have ever been. The Anson Board of Health last Monday closed the Wadesboro schools and put the ban on all public gatherings. Whiskey for "Flews." The following letter appeared in Sunday's . News & Observer. It was addressed to the Governor and sent by C T. McKay, of the Norman section. McKay very clearly differs with opinions of the high medical authorities as regards using whiskey for flu. Hi3 letter reads: 1; . "Mr. guvenor Bickett send me 10 gallons whiskey for the sick flews is all over the county, 6 and 7 dien in a family an nobody to tend to them. I is 68 years old, bin nussen for 25 years raor or less in the naberhood. out all' the time, i find where they have whiskey they gets along better. rs ;;v'V---.-s ; J : ' .". . ' ' send the prise and I will send the money.: pore people can't get hit now. our mane doctor is got the flews, '"have to send 8 and miles, rite me right away whether you send hit or not. i has got over 100 cases to bathe them and to put in raw egg in sickness. ; be sure and send hit" - SUPERIOR COURT i'-'i , 1'. " Many Criminal Cases Tried, Next Cvil Term March 17th, Criminal Term April 7th. Court Adjourned Wednesday Night The January term of criminei court convened Monday morning at 9:30, with Judge Thomas J. Shaw presiding and Solicitor W. E. Brock prosecuting. Of the 36 men summoned as jurors, two, R. H. Dean and C A. Hailey, were reported as not be ing found in the county. The court excused seven others, they rendering sufficient, reason there for: A. M. McDonald, R. D. Smith, J. A. Black, J. W. Currie, Alfred Baldwin, C. M. Brady and D. S. Stafford. The following were then drawn and empannelled as the Grand Jury the Judge appointing C. H. Teague, of Hoffman, as foreman. E. S. Steene BX. Ussery J. W. Jenkins J. F. Crouch B. H. Fry . W. P. Wilkes B. F. Covington B. H. Shankle P. W. West A. F. Dockery J. J. Stegall B. F. Steene C. H. Teague E. B. Liles H. C. Parsons D. F. Lampley Geo. P. Entwistle R. M. Newton The Judge's charge was practical and clear. A. P. Frye was offi cer to Grand Jury. The body at once got to work, and with such speed that they disposed of all matters before them before night, and were able to make their re port to the Court and be dis- chargeoVaUxin J the, Mmgday. The urand Jury appeared m Court in mid-afternoon Monday with true bills for murder against Earl Landon and Sol Brigman. The docket was begun upon the retirement of the Grandjury, The following cases were mark ed "nol pros with leave": State vs F. O. Landis; State vs John W Gulledge and W. P. Ledbetter; State vs Floyd McLure; State vs John Williams. State vs John W. Beck: charged with malicious injuryto property; after State's evidence was heard, rhotion for non-suit was allowed and verdict of not guilty directed by the Court. Cases continued: State vs Frank Cameron; State vs W. F. Wright; State vs Will Long; State vs A. R. Stoney; State vs Harlee Terry: State vs Daniel W. Nicholson; Stat vs George McRae (defendant in this case was in the court-room but upon intimation to the Court that the negro had the flu, the case was quickly continued, the Judge telling him to hit the trai for home); State vs,Nan Belle Townsend. State vs Albert Nixon; pleads guilty to larceny of $5000 in cash from Southern Express Co. This money was in transit irom Nor folk to a bank at Laurinburg, but was stolen by Nixon; he was ar rested, and practically all the money recovered. Nixon de clined to make a statement to the Court when asked if he had any thing to say, and the Judge sen tenced him to the pen at hard la bor for tea years. State vs Carl Crouch and Fred Morgan; plead guilty to gambling; Crouch fined $1'? and half the costs, and Morgan fined $7.50 and half the costs. - -, J State vs Ida Chavis and Helen McLee; two negro girls from iiamiet; tney plead guilty to an affray; Ida fined $10 and all the costs; judgment suspended upon Helen. - State vs , William Douglss, pleads guilty to retailing, fined $50 and costs. ' State vs Henry Smith; charged with distilling; i jury finds him guilty. Jury composed of F. B, McLcster, John McDonald, Robt, Dobbins, J. T. Sears, John Cov ington, J. A. Wilson, Tohn Hines, B. F. , Thomas, Barney Criscoe, R. B. Hutchinson, M. M. Cope- and, D. T Covington. Sentenced to the . pen for 3 years. , Files notice of appeal; appeal bond fixed at $1200, which will hardly be given. Dave Reynolds appeared and showed good behavior. ? State vs Olin Rainwater, charg ed with distilling; juryjinds him not guilty. When . he was dis charged from custody Tuesday morning, the Judge had him ap pear before him in open Court and soundly lectured him upon the evils of blockading and ad vised him to mend his ways. "The jury has found you not guilty, but it looks to me like you are," said the Judge. How ever they , have so decided, so that is the end. But I want to warn you to right-about-face; next time you may not get off so easily." The jury was composed of Barney Criscoe, Joe Howell, ohn McDonald, D. T. Covington, Ben Swink, M. M.Copeland,John Covington, J. A. Wilson, J. T. Sears. S. B. Smith, A. D. Dumas and R. B. Hutchinson. State vs Marvin Grant, charged with retailing; jury finds him not guilty. Jury composed of Henry McDuffie,W. A. Mcintosh, John Cockman, George Smith, B. F. Thomas, S. B. Smith. A. D Dumas, F. B. McLester, Duncan McKay, J. H. Huggins, John Hihes, J. A. Wilson. State vs Arch 'White; pleads utto orrating,autp for; hireiectfrom $350 td325a in town of Rockingham without license? fined $10 and costs. I State vs Lee, uauoe and win Diggs, and Clarence Burnett; four white youths; they plead guilty to stealing Ford car on Dec. 30th. Judge sentenced Lee Diggs and Burnett to 3 years each in the pen. Will Diggs be ing only 14 years old, the Judge suspends judgment. Motion for judgment in Claude Diggs' case continued for two years on con dition that he show good behav ior and pay all the costs in the entire case. State vs Willie Morrison; col ored child; pleads guilty to tem porary larceny of a mule. Sen tenced to four months in jail, with leave to be hired out to some responsible party. State vs Ned Jeter; pleads guil ty to c. c. w., gambling and lar ceny; sentenced to four months on roads on the larceny charge; motion for judgment continued for two years in other two cases, conditioned that he show good behavior. State vs Walter Thomas; pleads guilty to gambling; judgment continued to April term; pays costs and gives $200 bond to show good behavior between now and April term. Judge directs that he report once week to Chief Braswell, Hamlet, and show him that he is regular ly employed and of good behav ior. ' " : State ' vs Jim Smith; pleads guilty to gambling; it appearing to the court that Jim was con ducting a gambling house, , he was sentenced to roads for four months. ' State vs W. R. Davis; a junk dealer at Hamlet; charged ' with buying railroad brass. : This case was tried last year, result ing ' in a mistrial. After the State's evidence was in, the de fendant's attorneys moved for a non-suit, which the Judge allowed. State vs Will Reddick; pleads guilty to attempting distilling; fined $50 and costs in one case; in "other case judgment continu ed on condition of good behav ior for 2 years, and required to give bond for such of $300; bond given by R. L. Nichols, Jr. State vs Tom McEachern; con tinued to April term by consent. Charged with causing death , of Woman by poisoned whiskey. v State vs Sol Brigman; pleads guilty to felonious slaying ; of Tobe C. McKay. Motion for judgment continued for three years, defendant to appear at each criminal term to show good behavior and tnat he has abstained from using intoxicants in any form, and to receive such punishment as the Court may see fit to impose. He is required to pay into the Clerk's office $600 cash at once, $600 cash Jan. 1, 1920, $600 Jan 1,1921, $600 Jan. 1, 1922 all said moneys to be held by the Clerk for benefit of Mrs. McKay and her children. No part of this can be paid her except upon order , of Court. The Court further directed that the Clerk pay to Mrs. Mc Kay $30 cash, and $30 the first of each month until the April term. Defendant was required to pay costs of this action. He dead guilty to c. c. w. in another ac tion, and was fined $50 and costs. State vs Charles Nivens; pleads guilty to gambling, keep ing whiskey for sale and retail ing. Sent, to roads for six months for keeping for sale; motion for judgment continued for 2 years showing good behav ior, in gambling case; and judg ment suspended in retailing case. State vs Peter Tulston, charged with retailing; case continued to April term: Cash bond reduc- i State vs Enoch Luthen Grand Jury failed to find a true bill on charge of retailing. , , State vs Mat Wall; jury finds her guilty of retailing. Judge sentenced her to jail for six months and required her to pay a fine of $100 and costs. She plied her trade at Hamlet. State vs Dan Nicholson; prayer for judgment continued until April term. State vs Earl Landon. Landon shot and killed C. C. Ingle Dec. 27th in front of the Entwistle store, and plead the "unwritten" law. The committing magis trate had him sent to jail with out bond to await trial. The court-room was filled Wednes day afternoon when his attor neys submitted to a plea of man slaughter. Thereupon, testi mony was offered for the infor mation of the judge. The State, through attorney W. R. Jones,re- tamed by the brothers of Ingle, introduced evidence as to the killing. The defense was repre sented by Bynum & Thomas, H S. Boggan, Caudle of Wadesboro, and D. J.Cashwell. The defense introduced testimony relative to a dance held at Mrs. Dawkins on Christmas night, during which the 16-year-old sister of Earl Landon, Miss Sallie Landon, dis appeared for half an hour or; so. Mrs. Landon testified to state ments made her by her daughter, and then the girl herself was placed cnthe stand. She testified that she went to the back door of the house shortly after 8 o'clock to rinse snuff from her mouth, when two men, Ingle and Arch Whir, crahlwl her and forced her across the street into the Entwistle store, in which Ingle clerked. And that in the store she was criminally assault ed by Arch White, aided bv Ingle.; Upon the conclusion of her testimony the defense placed tne aeienaant, taxi Landon, on the stand; but before he was al lowed to 'testify, 'the Judge inter rupted proceedings to ; announce to the attorneys that unless evir Qence could be adduced by the prosecution to controvert . the evidence of the girl, and wit nesses, he would not punish the defendant. Arch White, who up to that time had been a specta tor, was offered the opportunity of making. statement should he so desire, and this he did; he denied most emphatically that he had had anything to do with the girl; that he had not carried her into the store; that he had not been in the store; and that he was not connected in anyway with the matter in question. He introduced several character wit nesses to show his good charac ter. At the conclusion of this, the Judge directed that Landon be allowed to give bond in the sum of $1000, with judgment continued until the April term. He directed that Arch White be held till the April term under bond of ,$400 to answer at the April term to what charges the Solicitor make bring against him. Both men gave the required bonds. ; Supt Baldwin this (Thursday) morning carried to cne cnain gang three prisoners Ned Jeter, Jim Smith and Chas. Nivens. Court adjourned Wednesday night about seven o'clock for the term. " The next term of civil court begins March 17th, and criminal term April 7th. , Sheriff McDonald will Friday morning carry the following to Raleigh to the pen : Clarence Burnett and Lee Diggs, white, 3 years each; Albert Nixon, color ed, 10 years; Henry Smith, 3 yrs Grand Jury Report. . January Term, 1919, To Judge Thos. J. Shaw: We the Grand Jury respectfully submit the following as our re port: We have passed on all bills brought before us and returned true bill or not a true bill as the evidence in each case warranted same. We, by committee visited all the offices in the Court House and found ; them as clean and as well kept as the conditions of the old Court House would permit. We want to recommend right here that the County Commission ers build a new court house, just as soon as conditions will permit and in our opinion conditions will permit this to be done this fall. We, also by committee, visited the county home, chain gang and jail. We find all well kept and in first-class condition, the inmates well fed and well cared for, with the exception of the chain gang, which should have a mattress and comfort for each of the convicts, and we ask that the county commissioners see that same is furnished at once, for the convicts, in our opinion, are not warm enough, though there was no complaint made by any of the convicts. We found at the chain gang 12 good mules in good condition. We also recommend that the furnace at the jail be re paired so that more heat can be gotten from it. CH. Teague, Foreman. We extend you Greetings for the New Year and trust that , - 1919 will bring you happi ness and succes. ' ,v . ...... .... ' It GARNER &IIINSON - Phone 214