VOL. TWENTY-TWO FABMVILLB, PITT COUNTY. NOBIS CABOUNA, FRIDAY, AUGUST 2gth, 1931 ? NUMBER SIXTEEN _m0m__???.? ? I 11, ? - - ''t^^rn^rn^mrnLaimm^mJmmm Sales Begin Tuesday Morning, Sept 1st; And You Are Invited DOKSAIJESM1Y; FACTORIES ENLARGED TO TARE CARE MIRCMWING MABKKT Farmville's Growth As A Tobacco Market Assured The Farmville Tobacco Market Offers Unrivalled Facilities for Promptness in Handling the Farmer^ Product ? Market Opens Tuesday, September 1st?Season Promises to Be Biggest in Its History. The Farmville Tobacco market will open Tuesday, September 1, with prospects of a banner year, as this market has steadily grown from two small houses, capable of hand ling only a few thousand pounds, to one with four moderif brick commodi ous warehouses, selling more than twenty million pounds. Starting off with double sales dai ly and with improvements made to the warehouses and tobacco factories, Farmville is now well prepared to handle much more tobacco than ever before in its history. Last season tobacco was sold on the Farmville market from a distance of from sixty to seventy-five miles, while this season farmers are expect ed here from even greater distances. This issue of The Enterprise gives a portion of its space to the "Golden Weed" and within its columns our warehousemen and a good number of our business firms have individual message of interest andlfisportaace1 to our readers. - The modern tobacco town-of Farm ville which is now a model of com pactness, convenience and efficiency, was brought into a real existence about fifteen years ago, when it be gan build a mighty group of brick structures out of the ashes of the old t V wooden houses, which it occupied the first several years of its existence. As the Farmville market is now constituted, it offers unrivaled facili ties for the marketing of the farm ers' tobt-cco under conditions that guarantee the top dollar for- every pound sold here. The floor apace of the four large warehouses is amply sufficient to easily handle eight hun dred thousand to a million pounds daily. The factories and redrying plants have all been put in apple-pie order for the season, and some of ? f TV* sett received. One now Iumi it tt i *Vh--. 2^2 I rlarMl ? . ? |hysimn and must be given as "a last resort" Whether any of these requisites was respected, nobody knows. But the departmentalism overtslked themselves. For instance Dorsett was voted an incorrigible. The story which the Black Aggies peddled was quite taa dnating- The "unruly nigger" had kicked and cursed a guard. He was ordered whipped. His -shirt was lift ed, his trousers lowered and he was made to describe a semi-circle over a barrel. The mathematical precision of the Black Aggies fascinates the folks hereabouts.. The narrative as handed down by high-ups in the fete was that the Black Aggies suggested to Dorsett thai he have attendants at this solemn ceremony, that in deed he he held In plaee over the .barrel. "Naw, sir, I dont need any Nigger^saidfs^idQ^tently^s^he gnat hour arrived >' ' ? .W r "? ? ?* ??!!.-"*?? ->ir J-?.: * tTIT "Boas, I speck you better get them two niggers to hold me," the story comes down officially. It seems that ? ^ carried. the conviction that nader.-s reign Co# tswor^ I-" ''-a-* * ? I. "Those unable to find jobs must (i0. || # Japan Goes Wild Over Lindberghs Welcome Without Prec edent Extended to Fa mous Flying Couple Tokib, Japan, Aug. 27.?One of the greatest welcomes Japan has ever ex tended to any visitors was accorded today to Colonel and Mrs. Charles A. Lindbergh. Scenes of wild enthusiasm here and 8t the Kasumigaura airport, 45 miles away, where they completed their adventurous 7,000 mile flight I from the United tSates yesterday af ; ternoon, were many preludes, howev er to the display of oriental hospital-1 ity which is forthcoming. While the newspapers ground out more special Lindbergh editions, while decorators draped more boule vards with bunting and while tremen | dous crowds of Lindbergh fans wait on the curbstones for a glance at their hero, the Lindberghs slept late in the comfortable home of Dp. Rudolph B. Tuesler, director of St. Luke's International hospital A six day fete is before them, rounds of entertainment, of sight seeing, of speech making. The gov ernment has arranged almost every minute of their time in the thorough going manner of the Far East. The shot by an assassin last November may interfere somewhat with the program* however. The radio announcer, who described j every smile and every movement of the Lindberghs after they landed, told of Hamaguchi's death in the middle of the broadcast Colonel and Mrs. Lindbergh, sleep ing so soundly in the center of an empire which insisted upon doing them honor, were tired. Lindbergh '-himself, was sun burned. His nose looked as if - it might start to peel momentarily. The famous flier's wife said she was in need of rest and the ministra tions of a hair dresser after the rig or she experienced in becoming the first woman ever to fly the Pacific ocean. FarmviUe i Offers More Advantages Uncle Sam Selects This Market As The ''Key Market" For Govern Grading Service. In addition the regular sales system in vogue here for the past quarter of a century for the handling of the golden weed, the United States' government has this year selected FarmviUe as the "key market" for die Eastern Carolina tobacco belt for heir grading service. Men of experi mce wiU be sent here for the purpose >f grading the tobacco of any farmer vho desires to have same govern nent graded. Arrangement for this ervice was made especialy for those vho desire it, and all you have to do o get it is usk the scales men for it, ind when your tobacco is weighed nd each basket you wish to be grad d will be checked and the standard ;rade will be placed on the right and top corner of the tag after it is laced on the floor. Remember, this service is only for loee who wantit?4f you don't want our tobacco graded, please dont ask ?.it^-at?Lit 'W??t be gr?deu. FarmviUe wants you to have hat you want when it comes to sell ig your otbacco. ?; Remember, yon can sell it "your ay" in Farmville. (eels Thrilled As Do-X Passes Flies Up N. C. Coast On| Trip to New York With All-Night Stopover in Norfolk I Norfolk, Aug. 26.?The DO-X, larg I est heavier than air liner in the I world, rode at anchor in Hampton I Roads tonight, a short distance from ? the naval air station, Tier tanks filled I with fuel for the hop to New York ? tomorrow in completion of a four I continent flight begun more than a year ago. I Capt Fritz W. Hammer, in com I mand of the great flying boat, and I officers and crew of the German j I craft, were guests of honor at a din-1 ? ner given by the city. The flight to New York will start I ? at 7 o'clock, eastern standard time, i and Captain Hammer expected to be ? over the metropolis by 11:30. The! I DO-X will fly over the city, circle the I Statue of Liberty, and land in tfiel I The great flying ship came up the I coast from Charieston this morn ing at a speed of approximately lOOt miles an hour, most of the time at little more than 50 feet from the sea. Passengers described the trip | I The DO-X came in over the naval II station and circled over Norfolk and] I Portsmouth before dropping to her] I anchorage. After the passengers had I departed, a welcoming party went on] I ? board to extend greetings to the of-1 fleers and eraw on behalf ot the iSThe DO-X started more than a I I year ago on the flight |hat too^jher from Germany across Southern- Eu- I rope to the North AfricaiJ^asfcl thence across the South Atiantic^gfl Brazil and northward over the 'West Indies ta Miami, Fla. ivinn Ik) ^ ttjr |mav THa rils-no B. 6. Thompson Has Cotton Plan Would Exact a Binding Agreement to Cut the Acreage in Half Goldsboro, Aug. 26.?B. GT Thomp son, Goldsboro cotton buyer and one of the larger cotton planters of Eas tern North Carolina, has come for ward with a new plan for the relief of cotton farmers of the south. Signed agreements by every land-, owner and landlord in the south in which it is pledged that the acreage for the next three years will be only 60 per cent of this year's acreage with a heavy enough forfeit clause to make the agreement binding would solve the trouble, Mr. Thomp son believes. Mr. Thompson addressed his plan to southern cotton planters at large. His scheme of organization, to in sure that the contracts would be ob served, would be to organize every township id every cotton producing state. With the individual townships organized, state federations could be formed of county organizations and in turn congress should be asked to validate and legalize the voluntary agreements in the contracts for a southwide set up based on the town ship organizations, he aaid. Vigilance committees should be ap pointed in each, township to see that the plan is followed, he added. If this was done, Mi\ Thompson said, cotton farmers would receive from 10 to 16 cents a pound for their cotton this-year. Mr. Thompson finds fault with the Long, Bilbo, Sterling, George Lank ford and farm board cotton plans and advances his own as a panacea for the existing condition. , "You may take my word for it," Mr. Thompson says, "unless we do something to curb production and raise the price the whole south is doomed to poverty and bankruptcy. Your time would be just as profitably employed to take flight and go to the labyrinths of Egypt, for the pur pose of employment, as to continue to make an over-production of cot ton." Granting that the originators of the Federal Farm Board idea meant to benefit the people at large, Mr. Thompson charge? the board mem bers with a lack of long range busi ness sagacity. "They should have exacted pledges and binding agreements from the planters of cotton, wheat and every thing else they have assumed to con trol the price of," he said, "for a fixed per cent of reduction in acre age, so as to have kept the supply within bounds of the normal demand. That would have assured them full protection on their 16 cents a pound advance on cotton, $1.25 a bushel on wheat," etc. Mr. Thompson advocated a 50 per cent reduction in cotton; 25 per cent reduction in wheat, com, rye and oats; 33 1-3 per cent cut in tobacco, and predicted such a policy would "give an impetus to every line of bus iness in every category." , , ? New Irish Songster ' Frank Connors worked M a mes senger boy in New York Cky until two weeks ago. Then a theatrical man heard him sing and signed him op for five yean at |500 a week. Long's Cotton Plan Runs Into Amendment Threat -- -1: _ '1 \? - : r Louisiana General As sembly Spends Entire Day Considering Pro posal in Committee Baton Rouge, La.H Aug. 26.?Gov ernor Huey P. Long's bill to prohibit the raising of a cotton crop next year was reported favorably to the Louis iana House of Representatives to night, and will be read and voted on , | I ? tomorrow. After a day of discussion in which one legislator challenged the consti tutionality of the bill, the committee met and amended the measure to give the governor, authority to repeal it by proclamation in the event lesfe than the number of states producing 75 per cent of the cotton grown, in the United States agree to adopt the plan, the committee decided to use the Federal Government crop rieport of 1980 as the basis for determining the 75 per cent , v ,:.As the cotton plan bflfr constitu tionality was being attached jby Rep resentative Gilbert DuPre, at St. Parish, the senate ?pent U. [time today ft-passing Senator V. Y. Whittingtdn's concurrent resolution, memorialising congress to grant a * lo&s legality of the bill on the grounds it failed to carry the proviso that contingent states raising 75 per cent of the cotton must' act before the Louisiana law becomes effective. Soon thereafter the measure was giv en to a sub-committee for the inser tion of the contingent or other necea sary clauses. s " In pressing his contention, DuPre charged that faith had been broken with the New Orleans cotton confer ence held last week. i "You can't destroy a man's cotton without just compensation," he shouted. "I don't say that. The Constitution of the United tSates says it." His was the only pointed attack on the bill. _ Meanwhile a rumor was circulated about the Capitol th,at a bill or reso lution was in the framing to author ize Governor Long to leave the state on a 10 or 15 -^day speaking cam paign over the south in support of the cotton holiday plan. - ' ? ? ?' - ^Washington, Aug. 26.?Hardly a day passes Without the Farm Board receiving another plan for solving the south's cotton difficulties, j Word has come that each is con sidered, but none of the number presented has been made public by the r ;?/ rivr'-f FIRST BALE OF COTTON S iBBBreS7< PER POUND Wadesboro, Aug.^ 26.?Anson coun "" 1 ? ' / Over 23 Million Pounds , 'Jri > -r ?; ^ / Sold Here Last Season / "? * " Farmville Has Four Large Tobacco Warehouses, Two Sets of Buyers Representing All of the Big Tobacco Companies With Double Sales Daily; Three Mammoth Tobacco Factories and Numerous Storage Houses Now with everything in readiness for the opening of Farrnville's tobac co market, which takes place next Tuesday, September 1st, the fanners of all Eastern Carolina are extended a most cordial welcome to pay this market an early visit. The Farmville market consists of four as large and modernly built warehouses as can be found in the state, with a total floor space of around 175,000 square feet, furnish ing ample room for approximately a million""pounds of tobacco daily, three large factories and redrying plants and several storage houses and pack ing plants, the floor space of some of which has been greatly enlarged since last season to more convenient ly take care of Farrnville's steadily growing market. ? Possibly one of the greatest assets to the tobacco industry here is its progressive, hard working and cou r teous warehousemen, each and every one of whom has been in the tobacco business since early boyhood and who know tobacco from the plant up; and their success as warehousemen^ is substantiated by the fact of Farm ville'o steady and continuous growth, serving a larger area from year to year, bringing ii fanners from great distances who realize and appreciate the advantages of selling their tobac co on the Farmville market Did you know that Pitt county sells more tobacco than any other county in the; world? Well, it does. Fann ville last year sold "21,504,420 pounds, and Greenville 62,365,180 pounds, a total of 83,869,600 pounds, while Wil son county was second, with 77,788, 672 pounds. The opening of the tobacco market each fall is an event looked forward to eagerly and hopefully by practi cally everyone. Business, to a great extent, is adjusted with that date in mind. So all of us are looking for ward, to the opening of the market Tuesday, September first. The so norous tone of the auctioneer's voice will be sweet music to the entire pop ulation, and the folks generally are anticipating a chandge of the tide financially. The citizenship of Farmville ex tends all tobacco growers a hearty welcome. Col. Luke Lea is Colorful Fipre Leaped Into Prominence When He Brought Or der Out of Chaos Ornmmmmmmmmmrnm Nashville, Tenn., Aug. 13.?Luke, ( Lea, convicted today by an AshevUlf^ - N. C., jury and sentenced to serve from six to ten years on ftnr counts ? of a charge of conspiracy' to de-1 fraud -the Central Bank and Trust Company, is one of the most colorful figures who ever played a leading role in Tennessee politics. The publisher's caree , political leader began in turbulence. He leaped to prominence in 1908 when the Demosratic state convention was about to break up in turmoil. Lea, then a tall, smiling but unknown lawyer, had gained attention by the skill with which he had made " one point of order after another until an experienced chairman was helpless. > When other leaders Were about to give up hope of restoring order Lea seized the gavel and eventoaUy gain-' ed control of the convention. From the day of that coup and the-aomination of Malcolm R. Pat terson for governor that grew out of It, until tfc*. election of the present governor Henry H. Horton, Lea (Continued on page six)