THE DUN
Volume Vill. Dunn. Morth Carol,
POUR 22 GALLONS
MOONSHINE DOWN
INTO CITY SEWER
Federal Officers Give Citizen*
First Glimpse Of Liquor
Destruction
ADAMS AND JACKSON
MAKE HAUL IN MINGO
Seize Largo Quantity of Liquor
and Destroy Six Distilling
Plants—Will Issue Warrants
For Soma Of Leading Men
Of Dunn District It is Inti
mated.
Some hundred* of Dunn'.- dsn ten i
who wore denied n ptV* n'_ Chit C
Pngr’j aliened dcatiuilluu of iun«
<lo*cni of quails of bo'ideil liquors
a fow day* ago were given an rye*
'utl late W«-d.)e*day evening when
Prohibition Enforcement Officer* A.
n Adam* isiitl A A J li'tcmn KihmitM
Iwnty-two gallon.1 of moonshine to
town aid advertised its :1s»»ru lion
»■ .he comer c.i il'oad Str t a-rl
W bon Avenue. The idliryrr s\r*.l
that they wanted to show the Dunn
populace how cattily Federal officers
could let the ardent stuff trickle into
■ sewe**.
Nearly a dozen jug* of the stuff
were burctej at this most popjtav
corner in tows. John L. Thompson,
one of ths bitterest enemies of liquor
in Oiu surrounding country, ww in
vited to preside over whnl many be
lieve war tiie christening of Dunn'*
sowers. Ho weibied the hammer which
broke tbe first jug. Local newrpuper
men wore Invited to break the aue
cccding jugs, but none of them cois'd
be found.
Officer* Adams and Jackson had
jurt returned from a raid through the
twasipa of Mingo on the edge of
Johnston, Harnett and Sampson coun
ties. They had aprit mcsl of t’le day
on the raid. According to their re
ports six distilling plants—nil of the
modem copper type—were smashed
daring the day. In addition to the 22
gallons of liquor they captured sev
eral hundred* of gallon* of low seines
ihoutandi of gallons of beer ready for
the stills, many pounds of other in
gredients slid lots of other supplies.
Although neithgc JWild
plants they did
r*y thnl several of the plunti were
found within w few hundrad yards of
some of the most prominent farmer*
of the district and that war-a-it«
would be served within a few days
upon men who stand high in the ag
llcultural and social life of the com
■mnmlltt *
Their decision to dc-troy the liquor
!n town was reached because of the
many insinuations and innuendoes in
cident to the secret destruction or
disappearance of a large quantity of
liquor seised here a few days ego
; by municipal officers from the draw
ing room of a Pullman car attached
to an A. C. L. tourist train. They had
» large and interested audience
which, although many hundreds of
gallons of Liquor have been saisod
and confiscated here, aaw for the flirt
time liquor destroyed.
WASH BRYANT IS GIVEN
THREE YEARS IN PRISON
Harnett Farmer Found Guilty of
Blnelmdiog And la Fined $200
And Seat te Prison
Wash Bryant, white, said to be
one of the most notorious btockaders
•f Harnett County, must serve three
years in the United States Prison at
Atlanta and pay a fine of $200 for
violation of th« prohibition law upon
separate occasions in June and July
of this year. Convicted two weeks ago
iipon testimony suepllad chiefly by
two young sons who stated that they
Had been for$Ml in _*_._ . .
. Mil whlekoy upon threat* from theij
father. Judgment »„ impoMd upon
Bryant Monday by Jujg, Connor.
The Harnett farmer, for that wai
> hie ewn announced way of makl’io a
lle'.ny, fared Jiuiyr Connor two wr!k!
aco not loop after he had killed bii
. *‘f*' H* 7* «n»ltted of murder
, Charyea of manufaetuHay and cell.
Iny whlekoy followed two ruM. or
Bryan fa aeena of aetlettlea. Th«
firm raid wat in Juno. Me waa pivot
. * preliminary he.riny, fayaiahad bond
. and returned home, a month after
Ward a eecond real at hi* farm aettcr
another Wy rapture and Bryant wai
■ -hyair rauyht in tho toil* of the law
L. B. Button, for poaaeeniny whlo
.* *ey upon two oeraelone. waa diner
■1200 and route. — Rateiyh Evan In.
• Timm.
Wa appreciate tho reat tliiny aftoi
wo have neen the Imitation.
Moit of we take better enro of n«i
•u'.omobile than tre do of ourMivee
Don’t lot ambition yet M far ahead
. that it !mc« ehfht of the job at hand
• I',
^■9rmmmw—
DOG VETERAN OF WAR
IS A VISITOR TO DUNN
Cm»" Can-mi Mark* Ot Shra*
aal Wound And U**— Master
Nood* Aid
“IUd Cfau,” a culiic with a war
rctoid of which ajy humi'i
la preud. was a vidlot to Dunn Wed
ncttluy. Hobbling an a Irg a-iatUuvd
by Gnnan thrapncl «l Sedan and
«‘?UC'U)ig from the cffitti of mustard
JUi Qilnikrutrt fd at VchKin, she wa«
an intoicsting personal** Ui Dunn's
i-igr number of former frervif* man
. win* ri'intmh«rid ii«c ifn'irf giv.cn
! by *urh us the m Uia World War.
! “Itvd Cross** it owned by f’rlvjiU*
‘mk Smiling, recently dfKlw^cd
rom service ut Camp Dix, N. J. S;*e
vr.s picked up on the Sedan Arid bv
A^huta RlerJIng afier her light lc*
rad bel li shattered. An army *3;goon,
•vilb a leva for dog*. l ad nursed her
-- --- «<iu t iowr-i.n^c
made hoi the mascot of ilia com
ia.;> whoso momlicra named her ••Kml
Cross."
The little collie was woaiy when
he arrived helix She and 1 or m;.*
vr haii walked al! the way from Mor
r«dk nl-cre he held hi* i*v; j,,.. Yj, .
[ .We hoi. Id for El Pnso. To*, home of
i'1' matter wh».-e pr.J.: Ku upc'Ied ii m
a spurn hoboing. Without funds he
UpealeJ to the local post of the Am*
i .can Log on for ml and wat given
s lift
ttwl Cnils' gunit are spotted from
he effect* of tho gas and there i* a
Trent luhip on her leg from lh? rkr..’
:el wound. She it wc!l.|*a<rri a*, d
i-w numeiou* tricks at the eomraand
of her miu.cr. Private Ctt.l i.•* j.
■he son of a prominent fa: me - who i>
cine is ecus.- K1 Pa-o. He will g.*e
ed Crone a good honu when Ihcy
irrive there.
NEGROES WILLODSERVE
EMANCIPATION DAY
'’las Interesting Progrhm For Jeaw
■ ry I In Cafr.mor.oiation OI
Frestdonl Lincoln’s Action
Emancipation Day. rommemoraV
~K President Lincolns' proclamation
1. ough which the slave* of the south
x-rre given their freedom, will be ob
eyed In fitting manner here by the
legrocs on January 1, according to
n announcement made yesterday by
<r«i.M|jjyiaaaro
Inn the celebration, fteremonlei *ur
ounding the occasion will be staged
n Metropolitan Theatre, beginning
*t 2:30 o'clock.
An excellent musical pro^rtm bps
>ern arranged liy Mayn D. Holmes,
richer of music in the negro
t'Kiifiit Tha nriiiflnal >i(d.>v*s nf ihp
lay will be made by Dr. Diggs, of
Winston-Salem, who recently scccpl
d the pastorate of the Negro Holi
ness church here. Dr. Codringtan and
ather local negro leaders, alio will
peak, and it is probabl. that a »e
i«j of health picture* will l»e shown
under the auspices of th< Stab? Board
of Health.
This will be the first t.m* negroes
f the Dun District have attempted
my organized program in ob*ervanre
of this day which moans so murli to
hem. They will not attempt any gao
1y parade or pageant, being satisfied
o observe the rrsat <lay with the
Irgree of dignity and solemnity it
deserve*. The L:spatch, Dun and its
>eoplo generally, wi h them much
ucccss in thia undertaking and trust
•hat they will gain much from thia
tnd succeeding observance*.
When a man has been down ami
?ul for u reasonable length of lime,
he deserves no sympathy until ho ha<*
nut himself back on u i.el{-support
ng basis.
NEGRO PARENT-TEACHER
LEAGUE HAS MEETING
Mora Thao 200 Members Present
Men day Pledge Support Te ,
School Faculty
More Uiun 300 members of the
tegro parent-toucher league of Dunn
■net in the negro Masonic Hall last
Monday night and pledged their un
laiiertng support to I'to faculty oi
he Harnett County raining school
chich now has an enrollment ef m»r*
chan 600 students. Into posting talks
on personal hygiene anti on the nrr
oseity for fall cooperation with the
teacher* were made by Dr. C. B. Csd
rington and Roe. Harbour, pastor of
the Afrlean Methodist Episcopal
ehuieh.
Tho league also pledged It* sup
port to Secretary T. L. Riddle, of the
Chamber ef Commerce, In his cam
paign which began Monday to clean
up the negro quarters of town. This
campaign has been waged with won
derful succ-cms this work.
This Icagus la oue of tho strongest
. n lit rtale and Ja doing wonders for
e morale of the negro educational
°if* lto-o. Virginia McLaughlin.
wlfc of Alen McLaughlin, one of the
loo ding negro farmers of the Dunn
, *
NEGRO FARMERS PREPARE
FOR BOLL WEEVIL ATTACK
liefer Direction of Prof. Jtau W.
Vino* Tkoy Will Start Ca»
po*Bn lor Diversification
That greet and often neglected
army of negro farmer! who coesti
ttitr a large part of the tenantry and
no email pelt of the land owners of
the Dunn District are soon to begin
art.ee preparation for Ola reception
•' the boll weevil when he makes his
ippcarance In their fields. Under the
Icadrmhip of Jas. W. Vines, prinei
pnl of the llernctt Couaty Training
Ifrhool here, a graduate of Tuskegee
1 r.rt itute and n disciple of Booker T.
Wa; hi-ijtion, they will start their
•Mining here next month when Pro
e '3*' Vine* inaugurate* a ten-day
■ not'e in diversified farming moth.
> Is.
Professor Vines is a naUve of Ala
rms and ha* first hand knowledge
■<f boll weevil methods. Since h# eame
err fn.t summer he has been prraeh
irg to his followers In on effoit to
• tkrm to action against the
part. Through the fine work he
•r :-t the negro reboots and for the
nigro community he ha* won me e
SDscl. admiration and ecnfidcnce of
• pcrplo and of those white people
Ho «rc irleicsted in negro prog
With two weeks notice before U»t
'I!'* session of the Harnett countr
r«.r he wai instrumental In staging
vro a r.or.ro department that won
< ox nendution of all visitors
' •• C« jr»v \V. Vanderbilt, who
chi- here du ing Ihe fair, wnwe*
tily .mrrereed by the rogro cx
bbttv
fh* Dunn Diitrkt i» watching Pro
V or Vt.n* activities with much in
■•ir-t sad many white planter* are
e to him for advice concerning
ivc reified forming,
"INAL COTTON REPORT
SHOWS 8^40,000 BALES
Government Blames "Piepeftsie"
For Low Estimate* Early
la Seasiow
Washington, Doc. 14. — Lack of
trarel fund* prevented personal
checking of acreage planted and for*
ter acceptance of “growers" reports
"T T**" T
'jrliuved," the crop reporting board
>f the department of agriculture de
lated In a statement today in an
louncltig tlic final forecast for this
••car's cotton crop of 8,340,400 bales,
•n ir-rcare of 1,800,000 bales ever
the last forecast.
Favorable weather conditions finer
•ho lust condition report on Septem
ber 26, permitted maturing of laic
ration, the board raid, while redoc
on of fertiliser reported earlier in
season war- offset by rriiloe re
fining in the ground from last year.
Jci’l weevil and other Insect damage.
»r.c iwiiwm tain, waa not aj great
~i expected, the hot dry weather of
'•bn early fall hastened the maturity
if the crop and prevented much of
;h<) damrpr which othorwlac would
tvr resulted.
Data on wh’ch the ac:«age in cul
‘ vution waa ostimatud on Jane 25.
■ra* co.-.e l. the statement declared.
- hen checked against data rabraltted
’j? grower* at the time "but It now
-oe.-irs thnt the data open which the
rt raate waa baaed waa misleading,
he nertrege was under Cft'matud.”
KcnorU from the statistician* of
ihc department, who were able to
travel after July 1, Indicated that ro
nerta of acreage reductions on June
2*1 “cxcnvvrated the reduction in
’.creage." the statement laid, adding
that "whJlr many growers actually
'■•dneed thc'T acreage, othcra took
'dvaotnire of Ihe propaganda nrnti
ment and proceeded to Increase their
•>wn ac-enge.”
‘‘Th*» is (till (hr rmalleot erep
••Town rn the United Statu
dnre ISPS.” the statement asserted
The average weight por running
*~,e 1( e^ mated at 497.8 pounds
■'h-' price paid producers December
1 waa J 6 2 cents pe- pound.
• ..e cm maitii production by states,
M eauivalsnt SdO-pound balm, iai
Vi din la d.000; North Caroliai
800 000; 8outh Carolina 700; Ooor
840,000; Florida 18,000; Alabe
m» 880,000: Mit/lwippi 870,000
f^>«'tlana 208.000; Tosas 8.800.000
Arkansan 800,000; T sans sirs 840/
000; Missouri 78,000; Oklahoma 880,
000; California 74,000; Artaona 40,
000; all other ntatac 18,000
R«w people are so poor that the;
esnt boast of at Isast oao rieh reU
tire.
Remember that today U year op
nortunily; tomorrow Is some othe
follows.
’Vlr’ct, is president of the Isamu
Holden, wife of om, o
t'j n’s >>OTt barber*. It Its secretary
sid l.aelllo Willis anon Is its tressm
or. .
#
CITIZENS VO® TO SELL
TOWN’S UMTRIC PLANT
#
Not A OtMMtiBg^CiM Among 578
Who Coat Taee
Without • d •kBhc Vote the chi
cane of Dana TiZuy ratified the
contract through Witch the town'*
municipality owngB aleetric ayatein
will pete into the Hade of the Cara
:lna Power and (Kit Company for
he iub of which la *5,000
no re than the totaLmount of bonda
Anted twenty y calf ago to build the
electric and watemayetemt of the
.own. The-r~~ nfrpTni.ln It* con
tract to bring ita (Bros to Darn end
iMiunc control of %ie syvtcm within
jinely day*.
The largret votatever recorded in
Junn war caat leg the ratification.
3m of a total rtAtntlra of 04*
■here were 678 iW «a*t for the
ale of the plant. JBractiraUy every
woman quallCed v£ participated in
hr election. The mE^aa'i Club play
'd a big part in tbf plartjnn Sixteen I
if ita mrmbe<y divided the town Into
„;vtren dintricte arm -went* to wait.
Ih.y did not klop Atf every woman
vho could be iodBddk^* vote had
srt her ballot.
THe elation cnd«W flgjit v«|«d for I
tot than two yeaf to impm# the
ir. trie lirvief of Sonn Uiroogh ia*
.iorinf one of the & rgur public I
rice corporation* Z~ tali'* "over the
lent Fortumtaly; mperavtf, a peopo
al made by tho Cwnberiand Power
inrt L-ght Ot.pai, now defunct,
j not accepted, fi
Tnq Ce.wi ua .A^nf wfll ex
jsJ it* Ilnee fromfiahioa to Dunn,
.molding the f.rfllnh of a great
R. k line that U, Ih ataUd to ox
en J deep into SoJtCaxultna.
ao v F R N M ENT&xJa N G
COTTONTMS IN DUNN
D opart moat of A*Juun Send* M
BaJoe Hero to bwiUbet of
What per cactofug^ doaa a far
mer ruder throujl paliatttiag bio
cotton to remain aAeaod to weather
if ter it ii ginned,
That i* a queetJM to be decided
ere by the hedargDepartment of
Agriculture througftha ee-aperetioa
wurriiotuui in Mend North CareUnt
Twonty-flvc baW at T«x*j cotton
neve been ihlppa^fcerq^by tho depart
ment from Texaepqln)u Three of the
lumber have beau pig*ad in itoragc
Thu remaining St an placed in vari
ia» poeltion* oat el door*. Three of
the 22 anr lying flat an wooden eap
■o.te and era covered with a tarpan
Ma; tbreo are on edge'on the eupporta
on thy ground; throl ary standing on
*i*d and three try en edgy on thy
ground. The remaining seven bales
'•are been compressed and are lying
» various positions on the ground.
Once a week nat3 the testa art
completed next Jyne. alt of thy hales
.ill be wrghed and tamed ores and
ibe'ir conditions will he carefully no
ted. Next June they and tbo three
'«>!cs in the wyiehoaoc will be appral
od and the pereextage of leas noted.
Vmilar tests are being made in every
■otton growing State In the Union,
'he department hope* through thole
e*U to make as nearly a* possible
»•» accural* computation of the low
in formers through what is known aa
'arm lor* to cotton.
Simuluiooue with theaa testy the
'evarlment is also toying out a chotn
'cal, the m ar.ufactor*™ ef which
claim will mak* cotton non-inflami
V.e. Several of the J>»W aent bore
have been impregnated ‘with . this
hemteat.
_ •
NEGRO SCHOOLS RE.G'N
VOCATIONAL TRAINING
?refya*or Vhm Ondlitt fl ipeo'
Through WhWh Negro Youth’. I
Are te be To«N Fanolog
Although them 1* Vttle hope ea-J
i-rtcincd that the buildlnga far the
«W negro school wffl bo V^mpiated
before late in tbo eewi.ng yMr, Pro
'eesor James W. Vlaedr principal, la
ro ng ahead with plan/for lndtltuttou
of vocational trainlnesdurina ska lata
I lonitif of the proMCit term, fill! of
‘bote plana call for to* otilliaflon of
*!x aaraa af tba tan-eer» IraeR.wbkh
' i U tba «lta for tba new bulfcitng^ far
agrleultnral training. V •
Prof error Viaaa entranced bla la
tantiona In tba rogarf reaurd%y fal
lowing a vMt to tba whoolr by Pro
faaaor B R. Malone, af tba A. and
IT. Callage af QraoatbaroV Wbo W eo
[perrltog of aogro nMotionol orhoola
,1 In Uta *Uta. Hk program w* aane
. tinad by tho aoporvlaar Wbo nfrpaaa
| k«*" plaaawt arga tha wot* to
far doaa by tba loealManeher.
Twaka negro yo«tba«»a leUptt
1 to woali oa tba Mr aaraa. Bnl. aa
, acre will ba allotted *■ *aob Tba-a
■ w.B ba ais grope of twa amok. Raab
gra»P wHl derote Itg WRlan to tba
*'a W
t* %
a,
« .•
— — . |
..“..
to THE SEPARATORS *
to 9
to THE devil U the father of all fences. to
-to The curse of the human race ie its tendency to co- to
to agulate. to
to Thore is but one problem for the family, for the to
I to city, for the states, for nations, for the world: it ie to get to
I * together. to
to The greatest word today that looms oa the horiaon to
to of men's minds is Cooperation. to
to Unfortunately, owing to onr immaturity, only those to
to forces that appeal to some form of opposition are the to
to forces that can induce us even to partial cooperation, to
to We form lodges and clubs the cardinal principle of to
to which is to keep other people out. to
to We build up nations, and the strongest patriotism •
to seems to be developed by antagonism to soma other aa- to
to tion. 9
» Unity is the most advantageous in any direction of *
to human effort, and yet every proposition for nnlty is •
to bitterly opposed. to
» Particularly the cynics ridicule it to
-to We can csrry on our industries only by organising to
to labor and capital into separate camps to fight eacfi to
”* other: when the most primitive common sense can sea *
to that industry cannot prosper unless capital and labor to
to- work with each other. 9
^ The greatest evil of money ia its segregative func* *
v tion. It tends to separate men one from another. • 1
As soon as a man becomas rich he removes to the to 1
' ouwuii/a. iuu ■ iwiw nr 10 uiv Micser trv nu w«ju, ine ♦
wider hi* park and the higher hi* fence. # I
* The mein effort of the millionaire teems to be to * !
* keep himself away from other people. *
* . , He even takes hU pleasure in exclusive forms—in •
* club* which other people cannot enter; in private *
* yachts which other peopla cannot afford. «
And yet almost all the pleasure of a human beta* *
* coires from contact with his fellows and with the conv *
* mnn lot of men. * i
* Whatever draws one aside from humanity Is vici- * <
* OUS. 9 ,
* Caste, heredity, nobility and hierarchy have bred • i
•• all manner of physical, social aad moral peats because •
* they have fenced off portions of the human race. *
> The sense of superiority is a sort of spiritual acse- *
r? B a: ”*e more you scratch it tbe worse it crows. *
: Democracy. the true epirit of democracy., meane *
* the comfortable sense of human kinship. Then is an ele* *
* ment of satisfaction in it that it unknown to all sristoc- *
* racies. ^
The greatest Seer of the human race perceived this s
I *nd berod.Ul Hi. teaching upon lo^wfidTto tihe^J I
* sence of brotherhood. 9
There was a deep significance in what He said onee *
v when word was brought to Him that His mothar and • 1
* hl‘ brother wished to aimak to Him. A crowd of people *
t were around the house. He went to the door and stretch- *
* ing out His hand over the multitude; "Behold my moth- ♦
; OpSnmy bretirt,n,,’-D^ *™«k Cr»rS^St *
NOVEMBER LEAF
SALES ARE BEATY
Total of 73,206,017 Pound* of
Tobacco Sold im 1S2 Waro
bouMt At t27ilt
A total of 78,206,017 pound* of
>of tobacco waa mid tn 182 war*
houses In North Carolina during the
month of November at on average
nice of >27.02 per hundred a* eetn
**.cd with the November 1920 aver
age of 24.71 according to the montfe
X rerort ef Frank Parker, Agricul
tural Statistician. A total of 70,601,
23 pounria of tobacco is credited to
'he 1921 acaaoa at an average ef
'70 per hundred.
"Comment* received with the Ne
edier sale* report* from the to
acro warehouse,, indicate that
bout 63 per cent of tht 1921 crop
baa been marketed” seya Mr. Parker
' i his anulyai, of the sales. The
cewja'a producers' sale* to date have
amounted to 80,921,628 pounda, (la
lad: ng estimate* for missing r*
aoTls), while the latest govern meat
climate for tho total crop W 206,
000,000 pounda
“The recently revised reports from
tbo Department of Agricult*re show
the 1910 crop as 822,464 pounds
from 628,460 acre. Three warn ac
tual rale, during that year when the
« production of 2tO.lM.4n pound!
'rcm 460,011 acre*. The actual
-alca wor# is par cent mart than
rhown by tha cmau.
‘Tka high prior* paid for tobacco
th# 1019 aaasoa which avar
• rcH pi rent*. occaeiontd an overpro
duction la 1020 whan farmen «aU«
amounted to 421.409,000 pound*
from 626.204 acre*. Price* for 1020
enltivatlae of a different crop, tha
two member* competing with aaeh
other for excellence, egetablaa and
fruit* will be given attention by Ui*
groupe.
Through thla training Profamar
Vine* hope* to touch negro farmor*
of tha future th* vthia of 4itonifi
cation In farming. Upon th* made ft
foundation he In new laying he hopos
to halld i groat itruetum whoa* In
fluent o will he dlaMet wide.
The taachen' heme, new gati^ up
on the now tchool eite, will ha toon
plote-l tarty In January when Pru
**aor Vine*, who U to wad in A lo
am* nett weak, will eatahlieh hla
•-.mo there. Immediately afterward
he will begi* carrying out th* pro
grum ho hat planned.
RAPfo GAMS M
JOINT MARKETING
Co-operative marketing ha* prog
•*te**4 Tory rapidly in th* last few
woeke, declare* Dr. B. W. Kilgore la
a etetemeat just Iraaod. Among th*
outeteadteg happening*, Dr. KiSara
give* th* following:
1. Th* PraeU.at of th* United
SUtra in Me m oarage to Congraaa this
weak un th* following language la
dleeueelng agrieultarul condition. and
•he imperative need of help for the
farmer "la th* mala, th* remedy UV
'•» distribution aad marketing. Every
-roper encouragement rbouM he giv
jh te the co-operative marketing pro
gram."
2. The Kautucky Burley Tohaeeo
Grower* Oo-operatlre Association
wa* Incorporated oa th* 2tth of Nt
vember la Ufa State under the eo
openthre law paraed by our le«i do
or* at lta Mat regular raraiaa, with
tha view of ra-Incorporating under
th* law. at Kentucky whan suitable
laws are provided far that purpoe*
in that State. Th* Kentucky Burley
Association cover* tha hurley tobacco
grower, la Keatacky, Wait Virginia,
Indiana, and Ohio, th* m—bardklp
■'Win* <nrvr ou.w*. *na CD# pmtMc
of th. crop eigced more Un
$5. 80 large • percentage of tho bur
Icy tobacco hoi boon ~lg—| in Km
taeky that tha warehoeroe bora a
greed not U open end tho hWm
uvoroged 991.01. er lore than half of
tha 1919 average, and leee Am the
actual eeet of production. Tho roealt
It ahowa la tho 1991 crop. It bolag 11
per eaat lam thaa tha 1990 prodae
Um.
“Dartag November there were 74^
499,917 pound* of farmer*1 tobacco
eeld (inelading eotonatee far mlae
|lag report*) The price averaged
•97.99 m compered vtth 994.71 far
November leal year. Tbie amount la
eao loerth of the total erop prodec
ed, and the eeaaen'a mimi of 109,991.
•90 poaade leavee 114400,099
pound* to be marketed during the re
mainder of the eeaean.
"The maikata bringing hlgheet prf
cm daring November gate Twpjav
Opringe 930.10; Aberdeen 914.99;
•ad FarmvlBo 994.94. The W0*M
market aold 91.319410 pound* dv
I the^Wryuat ******* **•
HID SPRING FAIR
TO BE STAGED IN
DONN NEXT YEAR
n— iwm To m
Up Of 0*1* Holpfwl AH—
M r——wi—
Tim priow object of (bo pibf ex
ist ttloi wiU bo to unwifi track
«i Mra cCeck toieiac in the
»— Dictrtet, obbeopb eoaetdereble
utentien will be ptan flowed ud
brebbwr end —tt ft*]* in the
(cm the fair to to bo hold ofleon of
"■ «• l«unl| will «Mn to la
laca hasdrada of famore to damto
► jboU part of thalr lama to tha
ttttan of food crept that will at
W la tha aprin*.
Tha mtac fair will mat inter!oro
«* aU with tho regular oanaal Octo
*tr fair, although it will ham prectt
saUjr ntiy Stature that It haa. Tha
—lag prigr—i hawotar. will ha can
ted entirely to homo itmm tho aor
roandtag ooaotloa and tha —m
—»<* w® ho teitod to ready warth
■hOa attrectfoca. la ptaoo of tho uon
J catch-pansy , tho
aidway than trid ho
War tho hripM
a be.
•rep wil he aoM throagb tha aw
datloa. which haa already otoctad ha
Ureotaaa and it pimdlio to aall tha
mp.
Tri-Store ■— ■ —
h. Tha Tahoaea Orawots Co-opor
■ilm hcaoctot.ioa for tho atom of
Korth and Booth Corelis* and Vir
ginia it otfll rapidly algniag ata
bora la Chore three atotoa. the preaeet
wahonhip of the Areec lotion being
areaod U^M. Under the eon treat,
argoataetion caoaet taka place until
loo aery, and the lndtettio— an that
by that tee a vary largo pofcoatago
»f tho tohoeee crept of thoao three
*etea w« ham heea aigned hr the
prewora. Directors will ho elected la
loawory and thio will giro plenty of
tea to got ready to aoU next year**
4. Tha Co-op* rattve association*
far cotton hi Oklako—. MlaaUaippi,
Tex**, and Ariaoaa bar* baaa «f
tnlsad aad tha crop* af thane atatas
•r* hoiap a*Id tkie paw thraaph th*
taaaeMioa* vMi faad retail*. No **•
rlaas dURcuKp baa baaa oaeooaterad
To Daabla Qaota
*• Th* Narth OeraHna Cattoa
Graver* Ce eparaHr* H—rlatlaa ha*
* m—hanbJp af araaad prov
en, with orcr 140.000 win* alroadp
•ifaad. Tba mlafaaaae requireinont af
tba contract It tar tbO.bbO bale*, aad
ndleetioae are that daabl* tbl* *
laaant win b* tocarad bp tba tba* th*
contract pa ratio arpaniaatloa ia Jan
otry.
• Carotin*, GonrpW, Ala
bama, Arhaaaae, aad othar cotta*
Trovtnp otata* are omatttac. which
with th* aaaa alroadp arcaniaad prow
,t*,“ M aad N par emt af th*
erttaa af tba United State* aad al
"i*dy tbora baa baaa oepaaiaed tba
AaMi-tcsa Ootaan Or—are Eaehonp*
a* aa oretbaad aolfcnp apanep for
tba oa* af all th* data ahaa orpm
7 TV* Paantit fT i m— a —* ML—_h_._
for North Carolina aad Vlrptal* vaa
•rpaaisad tat Anpaat, mHb a
banblp af araaad 1,00* aad la a—
•«nnd la atUlnp tha paaa— af tba
rrww mambeaa af tbaaa —a itota.
Tba memborNilp af tbaaa iti r la
ttam la tbl* etata bam maap af tba
boat fa—art aad b*Na— aad pro
foe—aal pa*pin vMh farmlap later
a— la tba —to. Tba aa— ia tm* af
other Nates. Alraadp la tbU Etete
ikoro at* araaad 40,004 each —m
ban. and tba a—her I* raptdlp pr—
d*Rp- Th— an baNnim a—
Nat—* aad tba ami— MM make
I