VOLUME 42 SMITHFIELD, N. C., TUESDAY, JUNE 12, 1923 NUMBER 47 OFFICERS SEIZE BLOCKADE LIQUOR Thirty-two Pints Taken and Negro Arrested—Negro Given Bond Yesterday morning officers of the law, J. D. Stephenson, deputy sheriff, C. R. Cable, chief of police of this city, and J. T. Griffin, chief of police at Selma, made quite a haul of block ade whiskey and secured the arrest of one—a negro, Henry Boyett, when they searched a house and premises at the brick yard just across the river. The place has been under sus picion for some time and officers have been watching the place. It has been an exceedingly popular place on the highway and especially on Sun days. Officers gained information yesterday morning which led them to believe that the stuff was there and a search warrant was taken out. How ever, for fear confederates would give notice of the intended raid so that the whiskey would be moved before the officers arrived, one officer hastened to the spot to watch while the search warrant was being obtained. As h* had suspected, warning was given and the negro was seen to hasten to his house and disappear in the woods with a turn under each arm. He later came back and sauntered carelessly around. When the search warrant ar rived, the house was searched, but only a half pint was found in a trunk. Two empty bottles were dis covered on the negro, and numerous other empty bottles were found lying around. The negro was arrested and in searching the woods near by, So 1-2 pints were discovered. Boyett was brought to town, to be locked up, but he gave bond and was released. He was placed under $1,000 bond which was stood by C. W. Beasley. The case will be tried in to day’s Recorder’s Court. MR. LOUIS W. MANGUM DIES AT HOME IN BENSON Had Been In Poor Health For Several Months. Funeral and Burial at Hodges Chapel Mr. Lewis W. Mangum died at the home of his son here last Sunday night about 8 o’clock. He had been in poor health for several months and for several weeks prior to his death it was realized that he was nearing the end of his earthly journey. He was troubled with weak heart for some time before he died and many times those who watched over him thought that the last moment had ar rived. He was conscious most of the time right up until the very last. Mr. Mangum was about 63 years of age and up until recently had a very strong constitution. He posses sed one of the brightest minds of any man we have ever known. He was humorous and exceedingly witty. He was a man of high Christian char aeter, having been an active minister in the Christian church at one time and was one of the best Bible stud ents in this section. In his early training he was deprived of the ad vantages qf schooling, which had he had, he would have been an exceed ingly useful man. At one time Mr. Mangum was Deputy Marshall in this county and was a daring officer. The funeral services were conduct ed at Hodges Chapel about two miles west of Benson, Monday afternoon by Rev. E. M. Hall, assisted by Revs. C. S. Johnson and A. T. Lassiter, after which his body was laid to rest in the cemetery at that place. He leaves a wife and several chil dren to mourn their loss.—Eastern News. PIERRE LOTI DIES IN HIS HOME IN FRANCE Hendaye, France, June 10.—Pierre Loti, the novelist, died at his home here today. The end came peacefully, with his bedside surrounded by his children and a few of his friends. M. Loti had been in frail health for a long time. He returned to his be loved Basque country last Tuesday and sank rapidly until death inter vened. He will be buried in a tomb he built on the Island of Oleron, in the Atlantic off the coast of Charente Inferieure.—Associated Press. JUDGE JNO. H. HERE IS ACTIVELY IN THE RACE He Wants To Go To Congress From The Second And Is Lining Up His Campaign Ahoskie, June 9.—That Judge John > H. Kerr meant what he was talking , about when he said he would be out j in the running' for Congress from the ( second district when ’the very first move was made by any other aspirant is generally conceded down in Wind- ' sor, the county seat of big Bertie. Judge Kerr sojourned in the Bertie j capital for 24 hours Thursday and Friday, and he left the town like he ! found it—agog with political talk. There’s not one out of many down I in Windsor who does not believe John | Kerr will be the next regular nominee ! for Claude Kitchin’s place. Two j hours of interviewing Friday after noon brought out only one emphatic j opponent to his candidacy. ‘‘I am a j Kerr man,” is the popular slogan in ; Windsor, and throughout the county ! Kerr adherents are cattle ticks the county is now trying 1 so hard and with much opposition to | obliterate. Judge Kerr spent busy hours m Windsor. Thursday night he was iti j conference with some of the county ! political leaders, and for a large 1 art j of the day Friday he was circulating i in and out among his friends and supporters. According to a lawyer | at Windsor who is close to every- i thing political, “Judge Kerr was here j to let the hoys know he is running, j not to mend any political fences; \ for, he keeps them mended,” There ; is not a man in the whole district.” he said, “who has kept, his harness in better shape than John Kerr. While no one is kicking against the proposed appointment of Mills Kitchin, not a person can be found who believes the appointment would best subserve the interest of the party. The belief is general that a primary should be held and a capable man elected to fill the unexpired term. The reaction is beginning to be felt, and every sign points to pro tests against an appointment. I However, Judge Francis Windsor says he does not believe the common ' people care enough about it either way to make any howl. “In my ; opinion,” he said, “if a primary were ' called within the next two or three ! months not 35 per cent of the now ' • registered voters would go to the j polls.” His law partner, Represen- i tative Hiliary Matthews, believes the | ; best interest of the district and party would have been advanced if the . candidates should have come out at j the very beginning and announced j : that they wanted the office for the • good they could have done the dis . trict and the Nation. i _ FUTURE TIMBER SUPPLY IN FARMER S WOODLOTS Atlanta, Ga., June 11— For its fu ^ ture supply of timber the South must look to the farmer’s woodlots, says Roland Turner, general agricultural agent of the Southern Railway Sys : tern, calling attention to the prob lem and the opportunity which “our | vanishing forests” present to the j Southern farmer. ! The farmer’s woodlot can be made to yield a steady cash income as well as to furnish the lumber needed for ! the farm, says Mr. Turner, in urging ! careful management of woodlands ! which are on soil too rough or infer , tile for tillage but which can be made i to pay a profitable dividend by cut ting out the mature timber and pro tecting the young growth from injury by fire and other causes, j What can be done to make the woodlot pay is shown by the fact that in 1921 the farm woodlots of Mary land, where advanced forestry meth ods have been adapted, showed an average income of $2.75 per acre and each tract was cut over in such a manner that a new crop will follow the old. ‘ As the South’s largest consumer of wood as well as the owners of a large part of its present timber supply, far mers have a vital interest in forest preservation on their own farms and can make their wooded lands pay an income as well as to keep down their lumber bill, Mr. Turner concludes. . Timber is the one best bet to make poor land pay a profit. It is slow but sure and should receive more at tention, suggests H. M. Curran, farm forestry specialist for the Agricultu ral Extension Service. PROCEEDINGS OF RECORDER S COURT Fines and Forfeitures Amt. to $485; Several Cases Of Interest _ i Fines and forfeitures in cases tried in the Recorder’s Court last Tuesday amounted to $485, which amount goes to swell the public school fund. The i following cases were disposed of by Judge Noble. State vs. W. E. Strickland and J. T. Baker charged with the violation of the prohibition law. A pint bottle j of liquor was found in their posses- 1 sion and each one was fined $50 and i one half costs. State vs. Joshua Watson, Hezekiah 1 Watson and Dempsey Watson—a | hearing on sei fa. Josh Watson was j indicted for having whiskey in his possession for the purpose of sale He was placed under a $500 bond i for his appearance in Recorder’s Court Hezekiah and Dempsey Watson went ' on his bond. He ran away and for- j feited his bond. It appeared to the court that the bondsmen had gone to j certain expense in endeavoring to ap- j prehend Johsua Watson, so the bond j was made absolute for the sum of , $300 and costs. Mato vs. George Sasser charged : with disposing of mortgaged proper ty. George Sasser, formerly in ; charge of the convict camp, bought \ an automobile from “Cap” Hodges, ! one of the convicts, and executed a j mortgage to secure the balance of ; the purchase price. Before paying for it, he disposed of it to W. J. ' Stanley of Four Oaks. Th$ defend- i ant was fined $50 and costs. It will j be recalled that George Sasser was : convicted in Superior court last year , for assault upon prisoners in the , convict camp and was later dischaig- ■ ed from his position as overseer. State vs. Ruffin Wimbley and Joel j Green Hudson charged with disturb ing a schol entertainment. They were | found guilty but judgment was sue- ; pended upon payment of costs. State vs. Roscoe Parker and James ; Thompson charged with assault with deadly weapon. Defendants were ; found not guilty. It appearing to j the court that a prosecution was not required for the public interest, the prosecuting witness, Dewey was taxed with the costs. State vs. Adam Wilkins, Robert Webb and Bud JHwards, charged j with an assault with deadly weapon upon one Sam Worley. Guilty. Wil- j kins was adjudged to pay fine of $25 ! together with $75 for medical ser- j vice and drug store account incurred j by prosecuting witness, Worley, as a result of the assault. Robert Webb j and Bud Edwards were each fined $5 and taxed with half the costs. FLORIDA’S NEW PROHBITION LAW IS MOST DRASTIC EVER Tallahassee, Fla., June 10.—The most drastic law on prohibition that Florida has ever had will become ef fective July 1, when a measure pass ed by the recent legislature and signed by the governor becomes ef fective. Violations of the prohibi tion law after that date will meet with compulsory jail sentences, com paratively light for the first offense, but severe for the second. The measure as passed and now awaiting the effective date to be come a law prevides that the first offense of liquor law violation shall be punishable by a fine of not less than $25 or not more than $500 and by imprisonment of not less than six days and not more than six months. Second offenses will be punishable by fines of not less than $1,000 nor more than $5,000, and imprisonment in the state penitentiary of not mqfce than three years. CRISIS AT LAUSANNE REACHES ACUTE STAGE Lausanne, June . 9.—The crisis in the Near East Peace Conference over ! the question of the Ottoman debt has reached an acute stage, the Al lied delegations receiving instruc tions to rmeair. firm in their posi tion while similar instructions to : the Turks came from Angora last | night. The task of American Min ister Grew, who was invited to ten j der hsi good offices, thus becomes more difficult, and in many quarters j it is declared the conference must either adjourn or collapse. —Associat ed Press. CURB MARKET HAS i MADE GOOD START, Practically AH the Produce Brought Here Sold At Satisfactory Prices The first curb market for Smiht field had a good beginning Friday,! both producers and consumers being satisfied with the start made. The advisability of having such a mar- , ket here has been discussed for some time but it was rather with fear and | trembling as to its success that it ! was undertaken. After a thorough | discussion both in the Woman's club j of this city and the County Council j of Home Demonstration it was de- ; cided to try it on a small scale. Three communities, the Lakeside club, Pisgah and Johnson’s school, brought produce Friday. Six women 1 were present to conduct the selling I some of these ladies epresenting their neighbors who could not come. The produce consisted of fresh vegetables, I chickens, eggs, butter, fruit hams and nut bread. Practically all of the produce was disposed of, which put about thirty dollars into the pockets of those who had things to sell. The market opened at nine o'clock and by ten the sales were about over. The Farmers room in the court house was used for the market and proved to be a delightful place. Cen trally located, it is convenient to the ladies of the town, numbers of whom attended the market Friday. Others who had not heard of it will doubt less be on hand next Friday. Miss Garrison, the county home agent, who has been instrumental in getting the market started together with the committees are well pleased at the start made. THINGS YOU CAN EAT AND KEEP COOL Time!} Remarks On Hot Summer Diet By .4n Emminent Physici an In December, we shovel fuel into the furnace three times a day. What would our neighbors think of us if we kept up the habit in summer? Yet many persons make no difference in the amount of fuel they stoke in to their bodies, summer and winter. We can escape the heat of our houses, but we cannot run form the over-heat of our bodies. Instead we suffer the penalty of discom fort, dullness, inefficiency, if not dangerous illness. The body fires must burn all hum mer, it is true, and we need fuel for warmth in summer and we exercise then less vigorously. The sensible thing to do is cut down the amount of food eaten by one fourth, and to substitute cooloing foods for fuel foods. Fuel foods are fats, sugar and starch. Starch turns to sugar in the process of digestion. Calling these foods by name, they are: butter cream, lard, fat meat, oils, oily nuts, fried foods, rich pastries, pies pud dings and cakes, sugar, syrup, honey, white bread, potato, macaroni, and all cereals. Cooling foods are succulent vege tables and acid fruits. These are cooling because they are nine-tenths water and entourage perspiraJtfcn; because their mineral salts and acids tone the system and aid digestion and elimination; because they neutra lize body poisons and purifies the blood; and because their woody fibre acts as a broom to sweep the digest ive tract. Besides their cooling quali - ties they contain valuable food ele ments which help to keep us fit. Summer happiness can be best maintained by following Mother Nature and gathering her offerings in season—greens, asparagus,'lettuce, spinach, chard, green beans and peas and corn, cabbage, celery, k> endive, squash, and an;. *’ ties you can chink in. Then there is the long list of fruits, beginning with berries and pineapples, and continu ing with melons, peaches, apples, grapes; but not forgetting our old stand-bys, the lemon, orange and ! grape-fruit. The banana is a sugary , starchy food, very nourishing, but not cooling. Besides the vegetables and fruits we need small amounts of such pro tein, cheese, celery and nuts. | Iced dishes are not cooling. They , retard digestion and the syrup they contain is a fuel food. If eaten they should be sipped slowly.—Oxford Public Ledger. NATIONAL BANKS ARK TAX EXEMPT Official Interpretation Of Banking Act Is Given By Commissioner Daughton Raleigh, June 9.—Inability of the state of North Carolina to collect revenue from national banks within its borders was admitted today in a ruling given by R. A. Doughton, commissioner of revenue, to Willis Smith, of Raleigh, general counsel for the North Carolina Bangers as sociation, who requested an official interpretation of the national bank ing act approved by the President on March 4, 1923. Heretofore, the counties and sub divisions of the state have taxed the capital stock of national and state banks alike, while the state has lev ied upon the incomes of the banks, taxing the income of state banks directly and collecting on national bank stock from the shareholders. Under the ruling announced today state banks will continue to pay to the state three per cent of their net earnings in the form of income tax, while the national banks and their shareholders will be exempt from any tax to the state. The ruling also applies to joint stock land banks, of which there are only three in the state. “The ruling is rankly discrimina tory against state banks, but is made necessary by the law, which our rep esentatives should be asked to have repealed at the next session of con gress, if possible,” declared Commis sioner Broughton today. Heretofore, the national bank act has forbidden the taxation of income from stock in national banks, through the banks, as the income from stocks of state banks has been taxed, but permitted the taxation of such income through the sharehold ers, and the latter practice has been followed.—Associated Press. THREE WORE RANKS IN ROWAN COUNTY CLOSED First National,"' Spencer; Merchants And Farmers, Granite Guarrv, And Rank of Rockwell Salisbury, June 9.—Throe banks in Rowan county closed their doors yes terday evening and this morning af ter a national bank examiner took over the affairs of the People’s Na tional bank, of Salisbury, it became known here today. The other banks that closed are the Merchants and Farmers bank, of Granite Quarry, the First National bank at Spencer, and the Bank of Rockwell. The People’s National bank was closed voluntarily by its officers _be cause of withdrawals of deposits af ter the Mecklenburg mills were thrown into receivership, it was an nounced when that institution was closed yesterday, and the reasons for the other three < losings were under stood to be identical. The People’s National bank was said to have been interested in the financing of the Mecklenburg mills.—Associated Press NEW BERN VISITED BY ANOTHER SERIOUS FIRE New Bern, June 9.—Fire, of un determined origin, destroyed the building occupied by the Scott Reg ister Co., near foot of Queen street entailing an estimated loss of approx imately $20,000 partially, coverec by insurance. The building, whicl was formerly used by the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad as a passengei station and which is owned by thal company, was a frame building anc was totally destroyed. The loss of the Scott Register Co. is estimated at between eight anc nine thousand dollars with approxi mately 40 per cent insurance. C. O Griffin, who operated the wood work ing plant for the company and con ducted a private business in the manu facture of ice boxes, suffered the loss of about $5,000 with only $1,000 of in surance. His loss principally was ir machinery. We Lead the World in Chickens. It is interesting to note that there were 428,000,000 chickens, and 13, 000. 000 other kinds of poultry on the farms of the United States January 1, 1923. This gives an average oi I approximately four for each man, wo man and child. No country even ap proaches the United States in this re spect except China. A MILLION DOLLAR DAMAGE IN MACON Cloudburst Causes 6 Inches Rainfall in Georgia In Hour and a Half Macon, Ga„ June 10.—Damage estimated at $1,000,000 was caus ed to Macon property by a storm that broke over this city at 12:30 o'clock this afternoon. More than six inches of water fell in less than an hour and a half, accord ing to the local weather bureau. While the storm was at its height, Curry’s Hall on Gilest street was undermined and fire men had to be called to rescue nine persons from the second floor. E. E. Horne, head of the family rescued, said that he looked across the street and saw water rising above the floor of the porches. Then he felt the hall begin to give way. His wife and three grown daughters and four grandchildren became panic stricken, he said, and he called for help. Firemen found all exits wash ed away and the building ready to collapse. They carried all of the persons from the building. George S. Woodruff and a com panion drove an automobile into the underpass of the Central of Georgia Railway near the Terminal Station when the storm broke to put up the side curtains. Before the task was completed the water was up to the bottom of the car. They tried to start the engine and could not. In a few minutes the water was up to the top of the car. Woodruff car ried his companion out of the flood though water was up to his neck. Basements Flooded. All of the storm sewers of the j city were overloaded and many of | them pave way. Basements of seores of business houses are flooded and there is where the greatest damage has been done. Tonight every available red light in Macon is being used to warn peo ple of washed out places. The city has advertised for 100 laborers to report tomorrow morning to join reg ular forces in making repairs. Rice’s mill dam, near here, broke during the storm. C. A. Harris, who operates a poul try farm near the mill, had 1,600 | hens and chickens drowned. Fire Engines Stick. Two fire engines responding to an alarm of fire during the storm be came stuck in the mud under the Ash Street crossing of the Central of Georgia Railway where three feet of mud and sand had washed in. The storm was local, extending no more than 20 miles from this city in any direction. The outer rim of the storm toward the peach belt was at Eacheconee. There is a 65-foot washout on one division of the Central of Georgia Railway and a similar washout on the Macon,. Dublin and Savannah ! Railroad. The baseball park is still flooded tonight. Lightning struck four buildings in the city during the storm, but no one was injured. John W. Ramsey, chairman of the street committee of the City Coun cil made a tour of the city late this afternoon and said that it will cost the city $3,000 to fill in only the wash ' out places. He found three houses ! collapsed after being undermined and scores of others undermined and bad ly damaged. “The heaviest loss will be in the i wholesale district,” said Mr. Ram sey. “All told, it will run high in the thousands, probably to a million ; dollars.” 19 MULES AND FARM HOUSES WORTH $15,000 ARE BURNED ! Scotland Neck, June 9.—There was I a $15,000 fire loss at Halifaxs Farm, i Inc., near Norfleet., early last night. i Most of the outbuildings, including the mule stable, hay barn filled with i alfalfa, implement shed, all farm im ! plements, 19 mules and horses and storage barn burned. All were splend id buildings partly covered by insur j ance. The family was in Scotland j Neck where the oldest daughter of , Manage’- T. D. Temple was graduat I ing at the high school. There is no clue as to the origin of the fire. Sev en of the mules that were burned were owned by Charles Van Landingham.