VOLUME XXXIV. MERIMAN YOUNG SHOT TO DEATH IN THE HURRICANE Justice Glaude Allen Records the Statement of the Dying Alan, Who Charges Ben Teasley With the Crime. A crowd of negroes last Monday night assembled at the home of 6dy Jenkins, one mile below Wilton, a bout the same distance from Brass field church, and proceeded to make things lively. All of the gentlemen present had guns or wore side arms, and there was just enongh moon shine liquor in the crowd to insure the death of one negro, and that man was Meriman Young. Sheriff Dee Hunt, put Deputy A. E. Lyon, of Brassfield, on the job, and in less than a day he had the gang rounded up. On the death of Young Tuesday evening, the deputy arrested Ben Teasley and Will Hurt charged with the murderv of one Meriman Young. . Coroner's Investigation. Dr. Nelson Thomas, coroner of Granville county, conducted an inves tigation in the Court House Wednes day afternoon. The six men occu pying the jury box were: Messrs. E. M. Bragg, C. M. Lawrence, John Whitfield, Joe Gooch, J. M. Turner, and Ben Thorpe. Largo Number of Witnesses. There were more than a dozen 'witnesses summoned and Dr. Thom as took the precaution to send them to a back room and call them as needed. . All of the witnesses testified that they gathered at Ody yJenkins' for the purpose of picking cotton and having a little dance. Those who had guns stated that they took them along so that they could hunt on their way back home. ' Beginning of the Row. From the testimony of several witnesses it would seem that they took up a collection to defray the expense of the dance. Two or three witnesses testified that Meriman Young accused Ben Teasley of drop ping only one cent in the contribu tion box; . Ben ""called Young a liar. At this juncture Will ,Hurt, a small black negro was accused of firing a pistol in the direction of the- fire place. Pandemonium ensued and the crowd scattered. One girl, the belle of the evening stood her ground, and she testified that she saw Ben Teasley squat down and fire a double barreled shot gun, the contents of which entered the left side of Meriman Young. Dying Man's Statement. Justice Allen reached the bedside of the dying man in time to secure the following statement: "I, Meriman Young, do make this my dying statement and I swear to the same, that I and Ben Teasley had some words over a one cent piece put in a guitar and that the lie was passed between us and that Ben Teasley shot me with a short gun. He was only a few steps from me when he shot." The above was signed by Meriman Young and was subscribed and sworn . to before Justice Allen on Tuesday, a few hours before Young died in full possession of his facul ties. ' -: Teasley and Hurt In Jail. Dr. Thomas is a shrewd investiga tor, and he had a sharp crowd of ne groes to deal with. He is in posses sion of an empty shell that was sup posed to have contained the powder and shot that killed Meriman Young. He asked each and every witness what became of the gun that was in the hands of Ben Teasley. All of them testified that they saw him with a gun, but no one seemed to know what became of it. The Verdict. The coroner's jury recommended that Ben Teasley and Will Hurt be held for the February term of court. They were turned over to Deputy Conrad Walters for safekeeping. PROF M. H. STACY DEAD One of State's Gif ted Scholars and Teachers. Prof. Marvin Hendrix Stacy, dean cf the College of Liberal Arts at the University of North Carolina for the past five years and chairman of the University, faculty, with full powers and duties' of president' since4 the death of the late President Edward K. Graham last October, died at his home in Chapel Hill Tulesday from influenza and complications. i Keep History Straight. In the announcement of the high averages at the Farmers' warehouse published in the last issue of the pa per, the name of Comer Burchett should have been Cannady & Bur chett, who received $1,117.39,' and A. L. Clayton, one load $1,625.00. PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY TOWN AND COUNTY OFFERED BILLIANT OPPORTUNITIES-AIL HOME PRINT. FAREWELL TO THE ' GRANVDLLE COUNTY FAIR Holders of Bonds Authorized to Sell Grounds and Buildings. In pursuant to a call, a number of stockholders of- the Granvill? county fair association met m Prof. J. F. Webb's office Wednesday. Mr. B. F. Taylor was called to the chair and stated- the object of .the meet ing., It was stated that there is an in debtedness of $2,200. There are three thousand shares at $1.00 each, which isrput down as the original' cost. The proceeds of the fair to the amount of $2,000 has been spent upon improvements of grounds and buildings. There was only about one-half of the shares represented at this meet ing, and the proposition to sell the grounds and buildings and wipe out the indebtedness was unanimous. The bond-holders were empowered to advertise the property and sell to the highest bidder. Commissioner Wyatt Cannady was present at the meeting ; and stated that the bounty would bid uponthe property when it was exposed for sale. 7 It was estimated that the total cost of, the fair to date is $5,200. The stockholders have a claim of $3,000 and there is an indebtedness of $2,200. It is thought that the property will sell for more than thS& cost and the indebtedness. THE IN FLUENZ A EPIDEMIC IS STEADILY FADING OUT The Quarantine Is a Deterrent, But Not a Cure, (Charlotte 'Observer.) The current report by the State board of health brings the encourag ing news thatthe influenza is stead ily but' surely on the decrease in North Carolina, this in , spite of ; the recurrence of the disease in certain-'sections.- One must come to the con elusion, from an investigation of the facts submitted by the board, that while 'outbreaks continue in differ ent localities, the disease is wearing itself out in the State and that some communities have perhaps seen the lastTt)fiitnJ:anyoTt?.of a serious way. The board "flnrtnattfuTn the month of November there were many deaths fewer in the State than were of record in October, which ap pears to have been a particularly deadly month, scoring 6,056 fatali ties among the North Carolina popu lation. The exact nature of- the de crease is -indicated in the record of 2,133 deaths in November, against the more than 6,000 in October The board accounts for the improved and improving condition largely on the fact that the people are educating themselves to the ways and means through which the disease is spread and have been exercising personal precautions. : . .. FIFTH VICTORY LOAN TO BE THE LAST ONE To Be Floated Probably Last Three Weeks in April; Amount Not Over Six Billions. (Washington Special.) Only one more big war loan is planned by the treasury department. This will be the Victory loan to be floated probably the last three weeks in April. The amount will not be more than $6,000,000,000 and may be $5,000,000,000. "I expect the Victory Liberty loan to be the last intensive campaign for the sale of government bonds," said Mr. Glass. "Reports that there would be two more bond issues this -year aggregating, $12,000,000,000, ae entirely without foundation not only as to amount, but also as re gards the number of campaigns." KRUPP PLANT WORKING FO RU. S. GOVERNMENT Making Parts For 72 Incomplete Cannon Rejected By. Ameri cans. r.ohlenz. Jan. 23. The Krupp t Tycoon 'hpsra.n working for the United States government Tues rijiv The task undertaken by) the Krupp consists of making parts, for wvpntv-two incomplete cannon, re jected by the Americans as part of the war material offered by the Ger mans under the terms ol tne armis tice. ' -' . V;-;.- nBRMAN MINE SWEEPERS WANT HIGHER WAGES Will Not Work For Less Thaw $23 Per Day. The crews of the German mine sweepers, according to the .Cologne Volokszeitung, are refusing to ; serve unless they receive increased pay and a new schedule calling for sums as high as 100 marks (nominally $23) daily, exclusive of the insu rance guarantee. The increase would amount to $92,000,000. OXFORD, NORTH CAROLINA LITTLETON COLLEGE j IS SWEPT BY FDRE Every Wooden'Sulmlng Burned and! Walls of Brick Buildings I Left Standing. (Special to The Public Ledger) Only the brick walls of two or j three buildings are left standing atj hv w J UT ' .wasK fwepl homeward flow of American fighting by fire Wednesday morning between . , . cuvau ugmias 2 and 3 o'clock, and the lives of be- uuxXf r hich had . the opportunity to 'tween two and three hundred young distinguish themselves in action will ladies were saved only by heroic soon begin. , The 27th, 30th and work, many of them having narrow 37th divisions, including all attached escapes. organizations, have been instructed The fire was of unknown origin, j to prepare for embarkation for home and is believed to have caught in! May-Be Some Weeks Yet. the dining room as the blaze bursted i There wa? ir,fr., ' - out from that building first. Being wheXiSon"S?Srrom aMearJfln thenornin when Pr-.French ports, but heretofore it bS ably all those who were in the build- required several weeks for unUsto ing were asleep, the blaze was not embark after being assigned to early discovered until it had made such convoy lo eany alarming headway that ther was no , jpiviions having a distinguished T6 TinS' 'filing record aim nthers Savg a rescuing the liv- distinctively local identity in the es of the young women who were United gtates wm be ke together sleen tip in tho hnmin TM,4inrC . .. .. . Wi" ue epi logetner j VJ. ' and this even was first believed to be hnnpis - j peie . " M . Many of them escaped from their windows with none of their belong- ings except the sheer clothing which! i they had on. I The roll was called twice to see if a southern camp where it can be re every pupil had been gotten out of viwed by the people of North and the burning buildings before any at- i Suth Carolina and Tennessee, from tention could be given to fighting the j .which States came its original per fire. sonnel. Tt is understood that the insurance ! V The Twenty-seventh and the Thir was a little less than ten thousand tieth Divisions were commended by dollars, and probably a thbusand dol- Field Marshal Sir Douglas Haig, the lars was carried on the furniture, British commander-in-chief, whose the loss is by no means covered. 'official report at the close of the war The loss is estimated' at some- Save to these American troops, then thing like $150,000 arid 'Rev. J. M. reserving with the British fourth ar Rhodes, president of the college, is my. credit for breaking the Hinden- the principal owner. Two of the buildines were just completed, and the entire college property was. the reward of some thirty-five or more years' work. SENATE DEBATES SUFFRAGE Question Is "Will Women Vote at Primaries?" - ThebilLto give Jhe women of the state the right to vote iri the legal- iied pf lmai leWi the state-wide primary law, as a- ereed uuon bv the conference of North Carolina: suffragist leaders in "conference two weeks ago, went to j the senate Tuesday, oemg mwoajic-j ed by Senator Scales of Guilford. It ! provides for an amendment to chap ter 101, laws of 1915, to confer this 'voting privilege in selecting party nominees on the women. The suffra gists agreed at the recent conference that this was all that would be ask ed of this legislature. ' HENRY A GRADY IS QRAND MASTER OF MASONS OF STATE Is a Prominent Iiawyer In the Eastern Part of the State. Hon. Henry A. Grady, of Clinton, was elected Grand Master , of the North Carolina Grand Lodge of Ma sons at the closing session of the 132nd Communication in Raleigh this week. The new Grand Master, who suc ceeds Past Grand Master George S. Norfleet, is a prominent lawyer in thesastern part of the State and has long been active in Masonic circles, having held every elective office in the Grand Lodge. ARRIVAL; AND DEPARTURE OF , S. A. L. TRAINS AT OXFORD Schedules Effective On and After Sunday, January 19, 1919. Main Line Trains. On the main line the shoo-fly is extended on to Weldon, as announc ed several weeks ago, and will ar rive at Henderson ,in the morning on its way south two hours later than at the present time. In the evening it will return, passing Henderson a bout ten minutes later than at the present time. Oxford Trains. - - s For Henderson 7:55 a. m.; 12:20 p. m.; 5:15 .p. m. Fro mHenderson 10:10 a. xn.; 3:40 pm.; 8:15 p. m. For Durham--7:55 a. m. change at.Dickerson; 3:00 p. m. From Durham -1 p.. m.; 8:15 p. m. change at Dickerson. FEPTY THOUSAND, DOLLAR BOND ISSUE FOR OXFORD Bill To Be Introduced In the Legis ; lature.-f The proposition to float bonds to the amount of $50,000 to equip a modern school building in Oxford is heartily endorsed by a numberof our leading citizens. A bill asking the privilege of voting bonds ' to the a- mount of $50,000 has been drawn and it 'will be introduced in the leg FRIDAY, JANUARY 24, 1919. THE TtHRTDSTH DIVISION INSTRUCTED TO PREPARE FOR ' ARCATION OR03IE Mayor Mitchell Is Preparing to Re- ceive the "Wild Cats" In Good I Style. (Washington , Special. ) The war department says that the arter tneir retnurn from France un- til thev Mn ho n?Z llv tney can .be paraded at home antf receive the welcome that the people are anxious tQ begtow e peome v - 0 ' - sotn To Southern Camp. . ne xnirtieth Division will go to ; urg line in Flanders. Mayor Mitchell has taken the pro per steps to receive the home com pany in good style. He has appoint ed a strong committee to map out a program and get',, everything in readiensss to entertain the boys on their arrival. . .TheMoyar.names : for this work the following, gentlemen:. Messrs. J.' Rob Chairman ; A. A. Hicks, A. vH.. ToVelfc2ff!$ is. lhis committee will name other i committees to assist in the work. i GET RID OF RATS AND MICE They Destroy All That Man Has And Mutilate His Mortal Remains. The rat is the apostle of pestilence the creator of famine, the messeng er of death. It fattens off the health and wealth and labor of the human race. With silent .and venemous persistence It follows mankind from the cradle to the grave attacking the infant in its sleep, the helpless sick on the bed of pain, . the aged and infirm. , . ' It devours with ravenous greed every nature of" food for . man or beast. It destroys our poultry, an noys and injures our domestic ani mals, devastates our growing grain destroys our harvest. It infests our ships, sets fire to our homes, car ries fatal disease broadcast through the land. And not content to menace man's prosperity, health and welfare all the days of Ids life, it follows him into the grave to desecrate and mu- 'tilate his mortal remain. They injure buildings by underr "mining foundations or causing the early decay of sills and timbers. They kill trees and shrubbery by gnawing, off the roots ; set fire to buildings by gnawing matches or stripping the insulation from elec tric wires; flood buildings with wat er or gas by gnawing through lead pipes; weaken dams and dikes, caus ing heavy losses. - In the United "States rats and mice each year destroy crops and other property valued at over $200, 000,000. . According to the Department of r Agriculture, Government off icials de clare it costs $1.82 to keep a rat a year.' ' ' ; . v - NEW RATES FOR TpLL AND LONG DISTANCE TELEPHONE The New Rate Is Slightly Higher Than the. Old Rate. New toll arid long distance tele phone rates approved by Postmaster General Burleson, went into effect here Sunday. " " ' , Under the new rates as announced by Mr. Burleson there will he basic charge of six and) one-quarter mills a "mile, air line mileage, . with half the day rate for night service up to midnight and one-fourtn of the day rate between that hour and 4:30 o' clock in the morning. - This does not change the rates or handling of calls within the local ser vice area. : BHiLY SUNDAY HITS ' THE . NAIL ON THE HEAD Tells the People of Richmond. To " " Clemi Outthe HeU Holes. What Billy Sun(iay, tbe great re vivalist, is telling tb people' of Rich mond about .their sins and troubles is applicable to the people of other communities. Here is some of the hot-shot that he is bombarding, the Virginia capital with: Get Rid of Hell-Holes. "Train up a child in the way that it should go andVhen.it is nld it will not depart from it, " and if they are properly trained they will riot often go astray. "The normal way to get rid drunkards is to get rid of the dirty, rotten, stinking, hell-holes that .are making them drunkards. I don't know, it always makes") my blood boil to see a cop walk up and pinch a drunkard and. take him off to the police station, while they throw the protecting arm of the law around the dirty, stinking hell-hole that sold him the liquor. It gets my goat. It makes my blood boil, don't you know it. I can hardly wait to get at that dirty, stinking gang. "So the normal way to get rid of thieves is to stop raising them and when I tell you that three-fourths of all the girls ruined in this country fell because .of the influence of the dance then you know why I hit that so hard, as hard as I know how and I will give that institution all that is coming to it-before I am thorugh. "I wtnt you to know I am not a crank about anything, but I am the eternal, sworn, uncompromising, ir revocable enemy of anything and everything that is driving men and women ip wreckage and making them a band of derelicts out upon the high seas of lust and passion. I am against it. I don't believe' that is the way to be decent. That is all there is to it, I don't give three whoops how popular it may be with you. So, that is the way to win out get rid of the things that are producing it all in the world, and when the child leaves home t will be morally and socially and religi ously according to the Influence that surrounded it when in the formative period." fUSIUXSR M, LANIER DD3S : AFTER A" LONG HiLNESS Remains" Will Reach Oxford Today ' Interment . At Elmwood. . Herder M. Lanier, a well known and highly esteemed citizen of Char lotte, diedWednesday night at 8:30 o'clock at Ijis home ori Park drive after a long iliness. The remains will reach Oxford at 1. o'clock today and will . be conveyed to the resi dence of Mr. T. Lanier, brother of the deceased. . Mr. Lanier was born at Oxford and was about 70 years of age. For a long number of years he resided at Baltimore, traveling out from that city. He was a traveling man for the greater part of his life, and was widely known throughout the south and east by the traveling fraternity. He attended Horner Military insti tute when a youth, the institute then being located at Oxford. He served in the Conferedate- army. Mr. Lanier was a man of wide reading and he possessed an unusu ally bright intellect. He was a cousin of the late Sidney Lanier, the south ern poet. He' was a man of deep re ligious convictions and was a mem ber of the Presbyterian church. The hour of the funeral has not been announced, but it will be held this afternoon. from the residence of Mr. T. Lanier and the Interment will be at Elmwood. AN EYE FOR THE BEAUTIFUL A Laay Admires Government Horses and Mules. A well known lady who is fond of horses, stopped, in front of the Public Ledger office today and watch ed with interest the unloading of fifty horses and mules from cars in the Seaboard freight yards. As the large fine animals were being led to Horner Bros. Company's stables the lady remarked that they we're the fine'st 'lot"bf horses and mules she evr er saw in the Southern states. ; " "Of course, the f annex, will be in terested in this fine lot of stock," said the lady, '.'but I feel that the ladies and the children would also enjoy a visit to the stalls and caress the noble animals." These horses and mules were the property of the Gpvernment. No won der the lady admired the noble Crea tures; they are , big and strong and full of life and would not harm a hair of your head. -Two dollars is the limit at Ros e's store,' but you should, look at the announcement of Mr. Rose in this paer and see what all you caa get for 5-10 and 25 centspay nothing about the two dollars. NUMBER 7 THE BIG SNOW STORM SIXTY-TWO YEARS AGO Does Any One In Oxford or Granville County Remember It? Perhaps It Col. R. .0. Gregory was at" our. elbow he could tell us something about the bfg snow storm here, in 1857. Sixty-two yeirs ago is a,, ong r time, but doubtless several - people now living were youngsters in that day, and ifc there is anything in the world calculated to make. an. impression on the mind of a healthy boy it is a heavy snow storm. - The following from the Charlotte News will bring to mind the big snow storm sixty-two years ' ago. It says:. . Once upon a time January 18, 1857 there was memorable snow storm in North Carolina.X . It was such a storm that it has passed into history and been recorTiedin "the cli matic and atmQspheric annats of the . State. : The storm blockaded what little "railroad travel there was; mak ing progress by private conveyance. an.impossibility, and adding much to suffering amongst man and beast. Of that day arid storm but . one man is living; in Charlotte, and but. few in the State who live" to tell the tale. . Col. Charles Bradshaw is the Charlotte man.' On that "date a train left Charlotte for aRleigh oyer the North Carolina Railroad, which" had only beeri completed a year. Col. Bradshaw was the conductor and the late Frank Snider baggage J master. The late Wm. J. Yates, father of Mrs. I. W. Faison, Mrs. E. L. Kess les and Mr. David Yates, was a pas senger. He had been called to Fay etteville by the critical illness of his first wife the mother of the late Mrs. T. S. Clarkson. "It was Sun day morning' said Col. Bradshaw, "the snow was blinding, but we man aged to push along. One passenger got on at Thomasville Mr. J. L. Scott of Graham, who had been to Thoriiasville on a visit and was go ing home. He was the last passen ger we took ,up.? - The ' rury of the storm increased so that we could not move. There we stayed without fire or wood for a couple of days, We nearly froze. We were fpur days in gettingHo Raleigh. Mr. v Yates left Raleigh for Fayettevllle Just as soon as he could get a driver to consent to carry him, but worse luck befell him. He was - nine days in getting to Fayettevllle. His wife had died and had been buried. Her remains had been kept awaiting his arrival. Nothing could be heard from him as there were no trains and no tele graph." "The North Carolina Railroad, Col. Bradshaw, recalls, was finished in F1856. The two ends, met between Jamestown and Greensboro., work on the road, having begun at Char lotte and Geldsboro, the two term!-' nals. The riieeting of the two ends of the road marked the epoch in the ihstory of North Carolina. j Mr. Scott, the passenger .who got on at Thomasville, is still living. DR. MOREHEAD EMMITT AR 1 RIVES FROM WAR ZONE Was In Stone-Throw of Thirtieth Division But Did Not See The Home Boys. Dr. Morehead Emmitt, a native of Oxford, but more recently a success- , f ul practicing physician in Richmond who has been with the McGuire unit in France, is spending a few days In J Oxford with his mother, Mrs. Can- dace Brown: . . . Dr. Emmitt landed in France last September immediately after one of the big drives. After aret of only two hours in a base hospital he was pressetd intof servicd and began to administer to " the dying, an4 wound ed boys. This was Jeep t up for sev eral days, until ifwas Necessary for. him to, go to the south of France for a ,brief resti , v . Dr .Emmitt - traveled i practically all over France and only saw one of the Oxford men Cap t. R. M. Col vert, formerly of . the Oxford Water Company. S.e spent' one night al most' in speaking distance of the Thirtieth division, but was not aware Ujf the fact until he returned to Par is on the following morning. Dr. , Emmitt is - not favorably im pressed with the sanitary conditions which have existed in the farming sections; towns .'and cities of France ' for, many Veas, but he Is of the o- pinion thar the natives will' adopt better methods , after seeing how the Americans 'purified their surroundings.:-' r:"' :,; '' '. . Dr. Emmitt will' return to New York today. He hopes to be muster ed out at an early date. Possibly he will locate permanently in New York. . , r X U ! i! v 1 1 i: i ! 1. 1 V J 1 ' 7.;