WEDNESDAY MAY 31 THE LAST DAY TO LIST YOUR TAXES WEATHER Showers tonight and Thursday. Little change in temperature. Moderate to fresh winds. CIRCULATION Tuesday 1,735 Copies VOL. XII. FINAL EDITION ELIZABETH CITY, NORTH CAROLINA, WEDNESDAY EVENING, MAY 31, 1922 FOUR PAGES 129 Bootlegging No Longer AT -C'i-ll T ,ithe North Pole" i9 the tltle of thei tat. May 31 (By The Aasoci- J; rOIlL9, Die JDllSineSSisP,1Kht,' cantata' to be presented by'ated Press) Sir James Craig. Ulster the seventh grades of the Grammar Premier, and the Marquis of Lon ' School at the High School auditorium i donderry, Ulster minister of educa- Former Retailer of Moonshine Whiskey Gives Views On the Subject, . . . . . rr-i fy, ne is Leaving ine uame up 10 me wmer Fellow "Yes, I quit selling liquor a month ago because the business Isn't prof itable any more. I made enough mon ey in two years at It to buy a nice little farm, and now I'm done. Next year, I'm going out on my farm to live, and I never expect to handle another pint of the stuff." The foregoing statement was made by a man who says that he sees the doom of the bootlegging business a ; business, he declares, in which small fortunes have been made here, while bigger ones were accumulated In Nor-, folk and other cities In all parts of the United States. "Why is the bootlegging business no longer a lucrative one?" this boot legger was asked. He answered quickly, "Because there are too many people now who make liquor in this section and sell direct to the con-, sumer. When a man can take his, car, and go a mile or less from Ell-j zabeth City, and there buy whiskey j for $6 to $8 a gallon, he won't buy the same grade of whiskey from usj at $2 to $3 a pint or at Hie ratej of $16 to $24 a gallon. "In the early days of moonshine, liquor making In this part of the! country, the makers, as a rule, were! afraid to deal directly with the pub-! lie. They didn't know how effec-j tively the law would be enforced, and they were afraid that they'd be In-! formed on and that the officers! would get them. And, besides, they j were making a handsome profit as! it was. The stuff sold for $7.00 to j $10 a quart retail, and the bootlegger j was willing to pay half that much for j it. The cost of making a gallon of j corn whiskey is considerably under j fifty cents, varying, of course, withj the fluctuations in the price of corn and sugar. They couldn't kick on that. "Those were the days of real prof it to the bootlegger. He controlled tlio hiiainnoa lTnr mAFO than a vpflr ... ... . . .. . he had easy sailing; but as the out-, . , . . . . - , put lncreaseu, me unco icii. i uc bootlegger didn't realize what smooth sailing he had. As a class, he be came greedy. He tried to force the "wniie 1 whiskey maker's price down he held his own price to the buyer as high as he possibly could. "This drove the moonshiner to approach the buying public direct ly. By cutting under the bootlegger's prices, he was able to make a bet ter, profit for himself than he could by wholesaling his output. He be-! came less apprehensive of comlngiated Press) Winston Churchill, sec- into uncomfortable contact with the retary of the colonies, asserted in the ! law; and now he has practically put ' House of Commons today that the; the bootlegger out of business. AUBre' ment reached between political the bootlegger's fault, of course More Moonshiners Than Ever. "I do not hesitate to Bay that to day there are more makers of moon shine corn liquor in these North eastern North Carolina counties than there ever have been before. The leniency of the courts toward convicted offenders is, of course is one reason; but the big reason that the demand is Increasing all the time. I believe that there are! more people in Northeastern North , Carolina today who drink liquor than . there ever have been before.' From observation, I know that more young boys drink whiskey Individ- nti anA in nnintitio. r,r. .. ... .... . ------- - than was the case twenty years ago. ; when I grew up. "As I said a while ago, there are: more makers of liquor In this sec-' tion than there used to be; but on the other hand, the quality of the' stuff they manufacture apparently j grews worse instead of better from! month to month. There's a reason: for that, too. In the beginning, the fellows who made the liquor were Continued on Page 4 Euel Inn CIhhs Meets The Enzellan Class of Blackwell Memorial Sunday school was enter- talned by Mrs. C. S. Swain and Mrs. W. T. Harrison at the home of Mr Swain on Greenleaf street Monday j evening. A committee was appoint- ed to purchase Bibles for use In the class room and after other business matters had been taken up, delicious refreshments were served by the hos-! tpHBa. Those present were: Mrs. Lem Jackson. Mrs. C. E. Richardson, Mrs. C. E. Ward, Mrs, A. B. Combs. Mrs. W. M. Blount. Mrs. Brantley McCoy, Mrs. L. B. Prltchard. Jtfrs. D, C. Martin, Mrs. Robert Sawyer, Mrs. Nell Lister. Mrs. Bertha Simpson, Mrs. S. C. Newbold, teacher; Dr. and Mrs. J. h. Thayer and James Henry Thayer, Jr. And Tells Reason Why t T1 TL AlL Gets 30 Days for Contempt Of Court Bob Elliott, Originally Fined A Dol lar And Costs, Receives Jail Sen tence Before Court Clones ; "Everybody's guilty in this court," j remarked Bob Elliott, young white, man of this city, after he had been fined a dollar and costs in recorder's court here Wednesday morning on a charge of riding a bicycle after! nightfall without a light, as re quired by a city ordinance. "You can Just take thirty days in Jail for that remark, for contempt of court," Trial Justice S pence im perturbably remarked, "He's in your custody, Chief." Elliott had previously admitted on the witness stand that he had had a drink of whiskey that morning, which he said he had bought in Bal timore in 1912. He showed great astonishment when the thirty-day I sentence for contempt of court was federate veteran, died here today af imposed upon him. 'ter a long illness. Elliott was released from jail at i 5:30 o'clock. ; Alken- s- c- Mav 31 Bv Tne As" George Gordon, charged with soclated Press) James C. Garvin, speeding, was fined ten dollars andiknown as "Uncle Jimmie," an eccen costg trie, Is dead. He left $40,000. Lucian Morrisette, who had been j Wa8hinKton, May 31 (By The As- Buinuiuueu 10 appeal on a inaige operating his automobile without a munier, uui wno lauea to snow up, was placed under a bond of ten dol lars for his appearance in Thursday morning court. Probable cause was found in the case of John Henry Heckstall, ai negro charged with housebreaking, j and he was held over for Superior held up three men at Long Island court under a bond of $300. Heck- City today and robbed them of stall was accused of breaking into a $15,000 payroll belonging to cer the home of. Lizzie Price, Green tain silk dealers. 'street, and stealing a second-hand . . . ! graphophone, two records and a , , clock Charles Bailey and Henry Daniels, colored boys, were found guilty of cutting flowers in the Episcopal Cem etery on Lawrence street ana were fined five dollars and costs each. ' STRIKES DIRECTLY AT ANGLO-IRISH TREATY London, May 31 (By The Assocl- tactions ot boutnern ireiana striKes directly at the provisions of theweek you w;n receve thousands of Anglo-Irish treaty. It seemed prob- vote8 le8s for your subscriptions than able he said that the Irish people !yo(1 wlI1 this week It ls vitally ne would not be able to give free ex- ,. that vou make a eood reiort pression to their views as a conse quence of the agreement. Member English Oar Executed For Murder a.i (By The Assoc!-1, London, May 31 ated Press) Maior Herbert Rowse Armstrong, leading Welsh solicitor, Convicted of Doisoninr his wife was .. ' . " ' i.vvaj. Ilc was ine nisi member ot the English Bar to be ' executed for murder. Favorable Report On McCober Plan Washington, May 31 (By The As sociated Press) The bill commonly known as the McCumber soldier bonus plan was ordered favorably re-1 ported by the Senate Finance Com-jtion, for you can win. and will win,lMra jtettle Lamb, Helvldere 66,700 'mlttee today by a vote of nine to ! If you work. Without work, you 'Mrs. W. E. Bogue, Chapan four. The effective date of the bill cannot win. , 0ie ftoute i 172.900 was changed, however, from next Oc-I tober one to January one, 1923, .after Senator Walsh, Democrat, of j week, there will come a big decrease, 'u.G.Di.hitiu.it li! tnM the mntnritvland if you have not worked this that it would take fIx months to get! week, you will find yourself doing the bonus machinery In operation. twice as much work to get the same The Smoot plan providing for paid .number of votes as If you had up life Insurance Instead of all other! worked only a little this week, forms of compensation was defeated ! t'P to Saturday night at nine today by a vote of elKht to five. o'clock, a club . of five yearly snb- scrlptlons, or the equivalent, will earn a bonus of 400,000 votes, In ad WINS DERBY RACE idltlon to those regularly earned on j subscriptions, as jhown by the vote Epsom Downs, Eng.. May 31 (By!lle, Never nfter 'that time will The Associated Press) Captain Cutle won the Derby Race here to-' day. Viscount Astor's Tamar was second, and O. Walker's Cralgan-j Rower, third. Thirty horstjs a. GRAMMAR SCHOOL CANTATA AT HIGH SCHOOL TONIGHT j "Arctieanla. or Columbia's Tiin to! tonight. Admission Is 20 and 35 cents. Choruses by the Nymphs of Boreaiis, snownakea of Boreaiis Train, Amazon Guards, Maids from .School, and Columbian Guards will jadd measurably to the harmonious j melodies '' the cantata. The ac Icompanylng instrumental music will ibe rendered by the High School Or chestra and Miss Ethel Jones. A treat is promised those who attend. School and Columbian L. C. WEST DEAD After an illness of two weeks, L. C. West died Wednesday morning at five minutes to one o'clock at his home. 3 1 5 Parsonage street, v He was 73 years of age, and is survived by one son, H. C. West, of Hertford; one daughter, Mrs. T. E. Morgan, of this city, and nine grandchildren, The funeral will be lield at the home Thursday afternoon at three o'clock. Rev. H. K. Williams officiat ing, and Interment will be made In Hollywood. LATE BULLETINS Savannah, May 31 (By The Asso ciated Press) L. Gourdin Young, a native of South Carolina and a Con- soclated Press) Chief Justice Tafti , , ghort, f England to leave shortly study the Judicial system with a view to determining Its characteristics for the expeditious settlement of legal trials and Issues. New York, May 31 (By The Asso- elated Press) Seven auto bandits Few Subscriptions Will Decide The Prize Winners Diff erence Between Success and Failure Will Be Represented By Difference Between Votes Given Now And Those Given After Another Decrease Takes Place ' ( Thig l8 tne time to plan upon win ning thp For(1 8e,ian. Tomorrow o next Ve(,k is not as good, For ntxt this week. If you don't, someone else will, and you will find yourself down In the race. It is easy to keep In the race, but once you get to the bottom, It is good night. You can't stand still and expect to win. Others will replace you If you are imable to secure votes. The t do is to work, and work , ... k . vnl. n PBRiv fep .1 l!' v7J inn i.ic .-..u. .... "-'. .'"tneres nomine mat succeeds line "thnrA'd nnth no that ai1POOria 1 1 U o success" was never more true than! it is in this race. If you will work hard this week, and take a command ing lead In the contest, you will find it much easier to Recure subscrip tions. While your competitors are slow- lng up, speed up yourself, and be in front at the fln'sh. To say "Oh. what's the use? I can't win," will weaken you, and weaken the confi dence of your friends. And what's more It Is certainly without founda- This ls your last chance to get big 'votes for your subscriptions. Next, subscriptions earn so many votes by thousands and thousands, so do your big work this week. iHstrlct XiunlK-r One .Miss Gladys Adams .' . . 28,400 TO LONDON TO CONFER QN IRISH SITUATION ! tlon. are going to London tonight at 'the British government's Invitation to confer regarding the Irish situa- tlon. Belfast, May 31 (By The Associ ated Press) Tension along parts of the Ulster Free State border still ran high today, although little addi tional lighting had been reported up till noon. Each side was apparently occupied with taking measures for protection against possible attacks. Asks Court Prevent Mathilde's Marriage Chicago, May 31 (By The Associ ated Press) Mrs. Edith Rockefeller McCormick will ask court action to prevent the marriage of her daugh ter. Mathllde, to Max O.ser, Swiss horseman. No objection will be made to the appointment of Harold F. McCormick, her divorced husband, as Mathilde's legal guardian. INTRODUCES BILL TO MEET NEW REGULATIONS Washington, May 31 (By The As sociated Press) A new bill for regu lation of the future trading on grain exchanges, designed to meet the re cent decision of the Supreme Court holding the present trading act in op eration in part was Introduced in the Senate by Senator Capper, Repub lican, of Kansas, today. RECEIVE HONOR CARDS AND CERTIFICATES On Thursday morning at the High School the seventh grade will receive their certificates and honor cards. There will be an Interesting program and the public is cordially invited. On Thursday evening Dr. N. W. Walker from Chapel Hill will deliver the commencement address and the High School Seniors will receive their diplomas. It is hoped that the auditorium will be tilled for this event. Miss Goldie Sanderlln ..... 38,800 Miss Estelle Silverthorne '. . 41,600 Miss Aurllla Strahl 179,450 Miss Edna. Sanders 180,200 Miss Pauline Skinner 179,600 Miss Anna H. Bobbin 71,200 Miss Sallle Bright 178,800 Mrs. Edwin Ferebee 169,600 Miss Mattie Spruill 172,800 Miss Dora Manchard 109,600 Miss Bessie Mae Twlford ..178,800 Mrs. C. H. Sanderlln 167.900 Mrs. Lloyd Brothers. R. 4 . . 59,400 District u in her Two Mrs. Julian HUt.iJ, Weeks- vllle, Route 1 112,600 M' C" StanU'y' R ' ' ' ' 18M" Airs. L,ioya iiaisieaa, weens- : ,,, . n . - t vine 121.0UU iMrs. Calvin Halstead, Weeks ville 120,400 Miss M. 'Stetson, Collngton .. 1 10,950 Mrs. J. J. Morris, Weeks ville, Route 1 180.200 Mrs. J. Jennings, Weeksville 19,400 Miss Luclle Jennings, R. 2.. 64,900 Miss M. Baum, Poplar Branch 79,600 District Number Three Mrs. C. C. Bright, Chapun- oke i 181,600 Miss Sallle Miller, Hertford, Route 3 179,800 tiHS Marv r Stvpns. Tniliiin- town fiR.400 ! Miss Mollle Jordan. Shiloh .. 1 19.600 .Miss Edith Cowell, Rhlloh Miss Lucile Pugh. Belcross ,120,400 , 62,800 .164,300 . 64,550 Miss A. Ferebee, Camden Miss M. Cutrell, Camden . District NiiiiiImt Four Miss Emma Forbes, Bertha. . 32,950 Miss Bettle Stanton, Nixonton 31,000 Miss N. Midgett. K. Hawk .. 152,650 Miss India Ilsrtlett, S. Mills 29,700 Mrs. J. P, Barnard, Shawboro 181,600 Miss Lucetta Grlgg", Har binger 29,S0O rR, m, Hathaway, Moyock. Mrs Dnllv C.rnv Colnlock 74.600 79.800 31,600 18,100 34,600 -'Miss H. Sykes, Columbia . Miss Maude Perry, Tyner (MIss Atmo Poyne, Mamie FULTON LOWRY ESCAPES AGAIN Fulton Lowry, the nio.-t pic turesque denperado that Eliza beth City has produced in a half century, has escaped rrom the State penitentiary again. This information is contained in a telegram received Tuesday af ternoon by Chief of Police Holmes from George Ross Pou, superintendent of the State penal institution at Raleigh, who Is offering a reward of one hundred dollars Tor his recap ture. Details of Lowry's es cape are lacking. Captured, convicted and sen tenced to twenty-live years in State prison in the spring of 1918, after a scries of daring robberies here. Fulton Lowry escaped a few months after he was taken to .prison. Nothing more tangible than rumors was heard of him until Janu ary of this year, when he was arrested In Hamlet as one John Fulton, and was taken to Tarboro for trial for the theft of an automobile at that city. The Tarboro authorities sus pected that the man under ar rest was Fulton Lowry, and they sent for Chief Holmes, of this city, who immediately Identified him.' Fulton Lowry was Sentenced to ten additional year In State's prison. John Lowry, who was arrested In 1918 at the time his brother Fulton was, then received a fifteen-year sentence. He escaped from the city Jail here, and has not since been apprehended. There has been a rumor current to the effect that he died of the flu in 1919. Forty Persons Killed 111 Macao righting Hong Kong, May 31 (By 'The A! j soclated Press) Forty persons were 'killed and over a hundred wounded i , . In recent fighting on Macao Island j resulting in the declaration of mar- ; tlal law. Macao Is a Portuguese con - Icesslon. The trouble is said to have ! arisen when Chinese women were in- suited by African police employed by the Portuguese. WILL TAKE STATE COl IWE Miss Marcle Albertson, Home Demonstrator for Pasquotank Coun ty, will leave Friday with her sister, Miss Catherine S. Albertson, for a week-end visit to friends and rela tives at Portsmouth. Afterward, Miss Marcle Albertson will leave for Raleigh, where she will attend the State Home Demonstration Course. She expects to be away about two weeks. First Potatoes Shipped From Weeksville Section j The first shipment of early Irish I potatoes from the Weeksville section j passed through this city Tuesday, jenroute for Northern markets. The shipment comprised 112 barrels, j which were dug Monday by D. B. jWalston, a leading farmer of that ! section, from eight barrels planted. Mr. WaLstou stated Tueiulay after noon that he expects to dig again Thursday. Why Do They Do It? What makes people fill one theatre night after night for 443 nights for one play and stay away from another theatre with another play, as though it were a plague spot? One play is doubtless as widely advertised as the other and the casts of both are probably equal in ability. And yet the crowd goes to one and stays away from the other. Of course the answer is plain. One has merit; the other has not. The play which is to be given on the Chautauqua program is one of the few good ones, the few which have had exceptionally long runs in New York and Chicago, this proving without a doubt that "they have the goods." "Turn to the Right" ran 4i:i nights in New York and 319 nights in Chicago. It is called "the comedy that will live forever." It has the heart interest of the ever compelling story of mother-love. It is clean. People who are familiar with the Chautauqua type of play agree that this is a fine exumple of the type. A special single admission price of 11.00 is announced for the at traction, but. season ticketholders will escape 'this extra tax. This looks like an opportunity for lovers f drams especially comedy-drama. BABY CLINIC WAS MOST SUCCESSFUL I Total 169 Babies Ex j amined, Of Whom 75 j Saved From Death Or Invalidism i j The Baby Clinic, which closed here j Wednesday afternoon at 4.30 o'clock I with a baby parade, is described as a jcomrlete success throughout. Dr. IK. P. B. Bonner, the State physician in charge, declares that, of the 169 j babies examined up to noon Wednes day, at least 75 were saved from (death or permanent Invalidism by the (discovery of defects that were not j previously observed, but that can be ! remedied. j Of all the babies examined, the 'three that make the most marked improvement during the next six months will be awarded five dollars in gold each. The prizes are given by the three leading banks of the city, and will be presented after a corps of local physicians, along about Thanksgiving time, have examined the baby candidates, and have decid ed the winners. A total of $108.26 In receipts from the sale of baby tags Tuesday had been reported up to noon Wednesday. Some sales had not been heard from. The money thus raised will be used by the Welfare Worker for the ben efit of the babies themselves; to pro vide necessities for sick babies whose parents cannot themselves buy the things needed. Dr. K. P. B. Bonner, and Dr. Zenas Fearing, City Health Officer, lectured Tuesday night at the Community Building on topics relating to the care of babies, and were heard by an ' interested audience. They stated I many facts of definite value to inoth- ers. I The Welfare Council Is expressing sponse of the public to every request that they have made. Without this spirit of co-operation, members of tne Council declared Wednesday l,hat the Bal'y C'"nic coM "0t haVfl i been made the success that It was. 'The Welfre Worker especlally thanks W. C. Twiddy, local agent for 1 a popular make of scales, for the use i of a set of scales during the clinic. j ; BALLOONS READY TO START ON RACE TODAY Milwaukee, May 31 (By The As sociated Press) Thirteen balloons ! today tugged at their moorings ready ' to start at 3:30 this afternoon in the j thirteenth national balloon race to Idecide on the three entries of this j country for the International contests ! in Switzerland In August. Six Million Starving In Chinese Province Shanghai, May 31 (By The Asso ciated Press) Six million people of the twenty-seven million in the prov ince of Hunan are starving and hun dreds of thousands. are certain to die before midsummer, according to es timates of mission workers. Canni balism Is rampant. Asks Operators To Agree On Coal Price Washington, May 31 (By The As sociated Press) Secretary Hoover today assumed responsibility for fix ing a reasonable price on spot coal during continuance of the present coal strike. At the opening of the conference here today of union and non-union operators Hoover declared that any .Agreement between operator- looking towird fixing prices, evf;i though In the interest of the public, would be. Illegal, and there fore he asked the Individual oper ators to agree with him upon a rea sonable price In their respective dis tricts. SPKIN(i CARNIVAL PLEASES The Spring Carnival given by the Young Woman's Club at Mrs. D. A. Morgan's, on Road street Tuesday night from eight to eleven o'clock U declared by those who attended to have been fully up to advance pre dictions. The trip around the world, the foolish house, the booths, the music, the dancing all were thor oughly enjoyable. Features of the evening were th3 classical dancing of little Miss Mary Byrd 8a under and the Instrumental music rendered by Graham Iledrlck and Wllborne Harrell. A good-sized crowd wasln attendance. Vote for George J. Spence for Trial Justice. He will appreciate your support and rote. I