DOCTORS OF FOURTH DISTRICT ASSEMBLE Physicians From 8 Counties Gather in Selma and Hold Good Session The quarterly meeting of the Fourth District Medical Society was held Tuesday afternoon from 3:30 to 6:30 o’clock with the Johnston Coun ty Medical Society. The session was held in the Graded school building at Selma. Membership in the Fourth District Medical Society include all members in good standing in the counties of Edgecombe, Halifax, Green, Johnston, Nash, Northampton, Wayne and Wil son. The officers of the Society are: Dr. C. A. Woodard, of Wilson, presi dent; Dr. E. S. Boice of Rocky Mount, vice president; and Dr. W. H! House of Goldsboro, secretary-treasurer. The president called the meeting to order. Papers were read before the meeting by the following: Dr. A. G. Woodard of Goldsboro on, “The Evolution of the Healing Art,” Dr. A. S. Roat, of Raleigh on “Some Phases of The Artificial Feeding of Infants”; Dr. C. T. Smith of Rocky Mount on “Glenard's Disease.” After a discus sion of these papers, a report of clinical cases and other business was attended to. A pleasing feature of the doctors' stay in Selma came after the busi ness session when barbecue and watermelons were served. SAVANNAH HIGH-UPS ACCUSED OF WHISKEY VIOLATIONS Savannah, Aug. 15.—More than 30 arrests for alleged liquor violations were made in Savannah late today by federal authorities, one banker, a number of merchants and others gen erally reputed to be engaged in liquor trafficking. The more prominent of those taken into custody are: John J. Powers, vice president and cashier of the Exchange bank of Sa vannah. Joseph B. Berner, merchant. Samuel Berner, former sergeant of police. A. Carlson, merchant. C. Graham Baughn, lawyer. Frank Balcon, grocer. Willie Haar, Fred Harr, Jr., Carl Haar, Roy G. Ryan, Wolf Silver, Reuben Tenenbaum, J. H. Thomas, Jacob Williams, Mrs. Jacob Williams, and Robert Williams, all well known in Savannah. Other arrests are to be made dur ing the night. The arrests are the resut of the work under cover of 30 or more men during several weeks. Early in the campaign one of the federal agents was recognized by a likuor seller, and the whole force was quickly withdrawn and supplanted by men unknown in this section of the coun try. They bought liquor from deal ers and when it was delivered suc ceeded in getting the information to ! identify automobiles used in trans- j porting the contrabrasd. Tonight au- ; tomobiles valued at §15,000 had been | confiscated by federal agents. The ; federal agents are said to have come i to Savannah with alleged letters of introduction to whiskey dealers and had little trouble in getting liquor I from them. With every purchase evidence was secured and when the ; arrests started tonight the city was ; thrown into great excitement. John J. Powers, vice president and cashier of the Exchange bank is charged with conspiracy to violate the prohibition law. No details of charges against him could be procur- | ed. He is one of the best known bankers in Savannah. United States court is now in ses sion in Savannah with Judge William I. Grubb, of Birmingham presiding.— Associated Press. REV. MR. WOODS TO SPEAK ON CHINA Rev. J. R. Woods, in filling his | regular appointment at Spence Chap- ! cl Sunday afternoon will speak on China. Mr. Woods was born and raised in China and all are cordially invited to hear him toll of what he has seen and experienced. Mr. Woods will also speak at the Pr >vi d^rce church Sunday night on the subject of China. STATE TEACHERS WILL MEET IN SIX DISTRICTS THIS FALL J. B. Warren, of Raleigh, secretary of the State Teachers’ association, will be in Charlotte and the surround ing district for the next 10 days en gaged in work in connection with the meeting of the teachers of the south piedmont district of North Carolina, to be held here on October 19 and 20. Mr. Warren arrived in this city Mon day night, and started immediately working out plans for the coming districts teachers’ meeting, to be held in connection with five similar meetings in various other districts through out the state. Those six meetings will be held at different times during the coming fall, the first to take place on September 21 and 22, and the last to be held on November 30 and December 1. The meetings of the teachers’ as sociation by districts is a new plan of that body. Heretofore, the as sociation has held one meeting each year, about Thanksgiving lime. Many of the teachers were unable to attend and the new plan of holding district meetings, to be inaugurated this fall, was worked out. The meeting of the south piedmont district, to be held in Charlotte on October 19 and 20, will be the third district meeting of the year, the first taking place at Asheville on September 21 and 22, when the teachers of the western dis trict meet. The complete schedule of meetings in the various districts, the dates and the places follow: ihe western district meet at Asne ville on September 21 and 22. The meeting in the northwestern district will be held at Greensboro on October 5 and 6. Charlotte will be the meeting pace of the teachers of the south piedmont on October 19 and 20. The north central district will meet at Raleigh on November 2 and 3. The teachers of the Northwestern district meet at Greenville on Novem ber 16 and 17. The sixth and final meeting will be held in the southeastern d’strict at Wilmington on November 20 and December 1. In addition to the district meetings, the annual convention of the State Teachers’ association will be held next spring in Winston-Salem. This meeting will last for three days March 12, 13, and 14. Mr. Warren stated yesterday that there are more than 16#000 white teachers in the state and upward of 12,000 are ex pected to attend the state meeting next March in Winston-Salem. It is expected that several thousand teachers will be in attendance at each of the district meetings. Miss Elizabeth Kelly, of Raleigh, is president of the State Teachers’ association, and probably will pre side at the meeting in Winston-Sa lem. Miss Kelly also is expected to attend the south piedmont district meeting ni Charlotte in October. More than 2,000 teachers are ex pected to be in attendance at the dis trict meeting in Charlotte. H. P. Harding superintendent of schools of Charlotte, has been offered the chair manship of the south piedmont dis trict, and has given notice of his acceptance. The meeting m each district will take place on Friday and Saturday, at the above mentioned dates. The State Teachers’ association has affiliated with it 10 subdivisions, or associations made up of teachers in separate fields. The first meeting in ; each of the two-day district sessions j will be devoted to the district asso- j ciation as a whole, after which the j meeting will break up into smaller j gatherings of the various affiliated ! organizations. The 10 affiliated organizations are as follows: Primary Teachers’ asso- • ciation; Grammar Grade Teachers’ j association; High School Principals and Teachers’ association; City Su-j perintendents’ association; County* Superintendents' asociaVon; Higer: Education association; Music Teach- ! ers’ association; Department of Voca tional and Extension Education, | which includes farm demonstration , agents, who work in cooperation v.’ith j the schools home demonstration I agents; Art Teachers’ association,! and the Physicial Education associa- ’ tion. The work to he accomplished at ; the district meetings will be prir.ei- j pally along the lines of teaching THE COOP TOBACCO WAREHOUSE TO OPEN Report From South Carolina Expresses Satisfaction Over Deliveries The Tcbacco Cooperative ware house here will open for the reception of tobacco on Aug. 21, the date set for opening the Coop markets in east ern North 'Carolina. The following official announcement has been hand ed us for publication: “We will open our warehouse Tues day, August 21, 1923. Our first ad vance grade cards will be posted in warehouse for the inspection of every body. Owing to general satisfaction the • ssociation has given in the South Carolina belt this season as indicat ed by new members secured every day, a successful season is anticipated here. A. G. JOHNSON, Warehouse Manager Smithfield, N. C. The following report of cooperative marketing of tobacco in South Caro lina has been sent out from the Ra leigh office of the assocatin. “All of the Eastern North Catolina markets of the Tobaco Grogers Co operative Association will open for deliveries on Tuesday, Aug. 21. The Association last week doubled its re ceipts in South Carolina with deliver ies which amounted to 1,484,242 lbs., and even heavier deliveries are look ed for on the cooperative floors throughout the South Carolina Belt this week. The Association has already receiv ed close to 3,000,000,000 pounds of the South Carolina crop. Members of the Tobacco Coopera tive are highly pleased with the large increase in first cash advances with which the markets opened this year and from present indications it ap pears as though the organized grow ers of South Carolina will double the amount of their 1922 deliveries with the present crop. The most important legal victory yet won by the Association in South Carolina was gained last Saturday, when Judge Shipp, in the Florence County Court, upheld the Association in oil points and continued the in junction against V. M. Venters, a member of the Association, and his adult son, who is a non-member, re- j straining them both from delivering their tobacco outside of the Coopera tive Association. Vente'-s who is a large tobacco planter of Florence Cvunty. claimed that he bad icn.ed hi-' iar.rf to hi- son ior fp. e 11 •• > red della s east m1 anil the dim- on restra ring their de liveries uii or strengthens iho con tention if the co-ops that •> tobacco grown upon the lands of landloid members T.cst be deli/or id to H eir own Assoc', fen. TOBACCO AT FAIRMONT BRINGING GOOD PRICES Fairmont, Aug. 14—A report of the j auction sales of tobacco at this point, since the opening, August 1, shows total sales to date of 950,162 pounds. ! sold for $201,875.85; an average of $21.25. These figures are official, having been furnished by the secre tary of the board of trade. Last Fri day’s sale contained many of the better grades and the average was | $25.78. Farmers are delighted with the prices. No figures available as j to the co-op receipts at their house here, but they still continue to be : very light, hardly in all of 4 to 5 per ; cent of what has been marketed up to date, although their house has been opened since July 17. But in i justice to them it should be said that they opened at least two weeks earl ier than they should, the crop being , that much late. demonstrations, methods, etc., :t is stated. Much more good is expo-tied to be accomplished through the dis trict meeting plan than through tb single, state-wide meeting of th teachers of North Carolina, as in form er years. The state meeting in Winston-: lem next March will be along fiimi- j lar lines, it is stated, but the district meetings will, of course, be mere lo calized.—Charlotte Observer HALLET S. WARD ON COOP MARKETING Speaks to Local Unit of the Tobacco and Cotton Grow ers in Kenly Wednesday About two hundred fifty farmers and business men heard Congressman Hallet S. Ward, of Washington, when he addressed the local unit of the cotton and tobacco growers associa tion at Kenly Wednesday afternoon. This was the regular meeting of the local unit and County Chairman A. M. Johnson jmcsidcd over the meet ing, (Several men connected fcvjth the cooperative system were present among whom were L. E. Regers of Goldsboro, District Field Service Rep resentative of the Gotten Association; J. G. Lawton, Cotton Field Represen tative of Johnston County, and A. G. Johnson, manager of the Coop ware house here. According to the reports, Congress man Ward • quite an enthusiast ic speech on copoerative marketing. He stated that his position in the National Capitol gave him a chance to get a line on public opinion all over the United States, and it had been impressed upon him that senti ment generally was in favor of this system of marketing. It is his be lief that business men, politicians in both parties, the press and people generally consider cooperative mark eting the hope of the farmer. He mentioned the fact that President Harding was in favor of it, and even made a speech on his trip to farmers in the west setting forth the advan tages of cooperative marketing. On ly a few, including speculative in terests and middlemen he said, are fighting it. In conclusion Congressman Ward urged the cooperative members to make their deliveries according to contract. The contract has been up held in the courts and it will save trouble in the end for the farmers to deliver the tobacco to the coop ware houses. Congressman Ward will speak at Goldsboro on Aug. 21, at the Coop erative warehouse there. The pro moters of cooperative marketing are anjious that as many as can attend this meeting in Wayne and hear the congressman speak on this subject. 97 DEAD IN MINE EXPLOSION IN WYOMING Kemmer, Wyoming, Aug. 15— Kem mer tonight was in mourning for the miners—97 of them—who are known to have lost their lives in the explo sion at eKmmerer Coal company mine No. 1 at Frontier near here yes terday. Throughout the day and the night hundreds of relatives and friends thronged to the I. 0. 0. F. hall which has been tuFrned into a temporary morgue and also to a local undertak ing establishment where about half of the bodies are being kept. Tonight however, there were but few people congested at the portal of the mine where last evening hun dreds crowded for news of those trapped in the workings. The latest official report is 97 miners dead; one missing and 37 rescued alive and unhurt. What caused the explosion has not yet been determined, but officials of the company announced that the pumps were not damaged and that work will be resumed as soon as pos sible. The mine is considered one of the deepest in this section—if not in the United States. The main shaft goes down at an angle of 16 degrees to a depth of about 6,000 feet and it was on the under ground that most of the bodies wrere found. Smallest Matured Man The smallest matured man in the v.’orld is Peppino Magro. In the big circus the barker points him out as Baron Paucci, his show business name. Magro is 29 years old, but he is only 27 inches tall and we:- ’ - only 36 pounds. Born in Sicily, at the age of 15 he wer.t through the great Messina earthquake. They dug him out from under a pile of bricks and plaster that would have killed any normal man. His small s:ze saved him.—Lenoir News Topic. HARDING LEFT BULK OF ESTATE TO WIDOW — WASHINGTON, Aug. 12—Presi i dent Harding was worth about three quarters of a million dollars at the | time of his death, and most of this will go to Mrs. Florence Kling Hard ing, his widow. Mr. Harding made a new will not | long before he left Washington for Alaska last June, and placed all his ! personal affairs in such shape that in the event of his failure to return alive they would give his widocv the least concern and worry. The Harding will is not to be filed in Washington for the reason that he owns no property hei-e except ■ personal effects at the White House and funds in bank. It was learned tonight that the will i is to be filed at Marion, Ohio, probably during the coming week'and that it will be probated in the old court house in that city. It makes Mrs. Harding the chief beneficiary. She will not receive the entire estate, as there are some minor bequests to per sons Mr. Harding wished to remember in this way. Mrs. Harding is not a rich woman but she has a considerable estate of her own. The principal item in the estate of ; the late president is his share in the proceeds of the recent sale of the Marion Star, in which he owned a controlling interest until he disposed of it before his departure for Alaska. The making of his new will, the sale of his control in the Marion Star, the deeding away of his recently pur ! chased farm near Blooming Grove, om puu itoq b sb paAii aq ‘oiqo j reorganization of his financial invest ments were all undertaken by Mr. Harding just before he started for , Alaska, as part of his plan for put ting his house in order in anticipation of the possibility that he might never ; return alive. MR. COOLIDGE IS NOW IN THE WHITE HOUSE Washington, Aug- 13.—President | Coolidge, occupying the White House offices today for the first time, devot ed himself throughout the day to conferences with cabinet members and other officials and to an accumulation | of correspondence and documents. Outstanding in the day’s activities were conferences on the anthracite situation with George Otis Smith, J member of the coal commission and Secretary Hoover. The latter was in j conference with the President both be fore and after announcement was ; made that the operators and miners’ representatives had been summoned to renew wage contract negotiations. Although Mr. Coolidge forsake the temporary executive offices establish ed at the New Millard hotel, he and Mrs. Coolidge retained their suite nad will continue to live there until Mrs. Harding vacates the White House. Arriving at his office before nine o’clock, the new President immediate ly began to receive friends and offi I c-ials, including cabinet members and the heads of various government agencies. Callers during the day in cluded Secretary Weeks, Director Lord of the budget; Assistant Secre tary Finney of the interior depart ment; Comptroller General McCarl, former Senator Pomerene of Ohio, and i Surgeon General Cumming of the pub lic health service. Routine matters, as a rule, were under discussion.— Associated Press. TOBACCO SALES IN MARION, S. C With two independent warehouses and a big co-op house the Marion tobacco market is booming along in splendid form. All of last week heavy sales were enjoyed, both by ' warehousemen and by the farmers who received the high prices now be i ing paid for their crops. No statement has been made by the co-operative association as to the pounds received to date, but every day there have been good, heavy deliveries made by members and the advances have been most pleasing.—The Marion Star. They AH Do He told his bride he was quite sure For him to be the boss was better, But she declared she’d take that job, And so, of course, he had to lct’er. —Wallace’s Farmer CRIMINAL DOCKET IS GREATLY CONGESTED Grand Jury Recommends Special Term; Number of Cases Disposed Of The criminal docket of Superior Court in session here this week moves slowly and up until yesterday, only minor cases were disposed of. The case of most interest prior to yester day was prehaps that of the State vse. J. W. Johnson in which the de fendant was indicted for fishing in wraters imporded by the dam at Holt Lake between the A. C. L. bridge anJ : Lassiter’s bridge. The dam was erected in October 1918, and the water reached the top of the dam and overflowed druing the month of No vember 1918. The Legislative in March 1919 enacted (a pub(c law prohibiting the fishing with nets in the waters of Holt Lake between the A. C. L. bridge and Lassiter’s bridge. The defendant was indicted in Eec | order’s Court and w-hile not denying the fishing with nets in the waters imponded through the erection of : the Holt Lake dam, he contended j that the place at which the nets were set was upon property owned by Judge F. H. Brooks which had been | overflowed by the erection of the i dam. Upon the undisputed facts pre sented in the Recorder’s Court, Judge Noble held that it was the legislative I intent to protect the fish in that body I of water known as Holt Lake and ly I ing between A. C. L. bridge and Las ' siter’s bridge, and found the defend i ant guilty. From this construction | of the law, the defendant appealed ; to the Superior Court. The opinion ; sustained by Judge Daniels and the case now goes to the Superior Court for a final decision. Other cases disposed of prior to yesterday were: j State vs. Irving Tart charged with violating the school law. Appeal by defendant having been withdrawn the case went off the docket. State vs. Wm. Chester Stancil charged with assault with deadly weapon. Appeal by defendant hav ing been withdrawn the case goes off the docket. State vs. E. D. Eudy assault with j deadly weapon. Defendant’s appeal | having been withdrawn the case goes | off the docket. State vs. Daniel Boone Narron | charged with seduction. Defendant ! plead guilty which is accepted by the solicitor for the state. Judgment is suspended upon payment of costs. State vs. Pharoah Jenkins larceny ; and receiving stolen goods. Defend ant pleads guilty. Judgment not yet pronounced. State vs. Joe Carroll charged with larceny and receiving stolen goods. Defendant pleads guilty. Judgment: rayer for judgment continued. Capias to issue at any time at request of solicitor. , State vs. Robert Stanly. Violating attendance act school law. Not guil ty. State vs. Albert Parker. Carrying concealed weapon and assault with deadlf weapon. Defendant pleads guilty. Judgment: $ 50 fine and costs State vs. John Whaley, larceny and rereiving stolen goods. Defendant pleads guity. lJudgment not yet pre nounled. State vs. Kelly Rose. Store brea'c I ing. Defendant pleads guilty. Judg ' ment suspended upon payment of costs. Capias to issue at any time at request of solicitor. State vs. D. G. Allen. Assault upon a female. Defendant pleads guilty Judgment: Upon payment of costs that defendant be confined in the county jail for twelve months to b; assigned to work on the county roads, the execution of the sentence to be suspended until a caifas shall be issued at the instance of the solici tor. State vs. Lee Smith and Bernice Narron. Larceny . Defendant plead guilty. Prayer for judgment continu ed upon payment of costs, arid de fendants are required to appear at every criminal term for a period of two years and show good behavior. Capias issued at any time at request cf solicitor. State vs. P. L. Hayes. Assar't with deadly weapon. Not guilty. (Continued on page four)