' I 11 - - II* _ ? _ _ ^ ? ? . I ? ? l l., ? J.~ ? ??, ? VOL. TWENTY-FIVE FARMVILLE, PITT COUNTY, NORTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY, JULY 13, 19S4 NUMBER TEN ? . . . ? * ..... ... .... ? " r ~ ??. TTiTWM.i-U-i.-it.-. !? -.*.ifc2kkWi>s '?*.. t V?^i V/? ?i?-i ' _____ _____ _____ ____ _____ _____ ' _____ _____ ______ _____ ' _______ Opening Dates of All Belts Oftitfa&ySet by Administration Officials and Tobacco Men Thursday Farmville Businessmen To Boost Local Tobacco Market i .1 I N. C. Is Surpassed Only By N. Y. inTaxes Paid U.S. Five States Pay Federal Gov'nment More Than Half of the $2,672,318, 602 Received in Taxes. Washington, July 11.?In five of the forty-eight states, New York, North Carolina, Illinois, Pennsylvania and California, the Federal Government collected more than half of the $2, 672,318,602 received from taxation in the fiscal year just ended. Eleven states, Arizona, Idaho, N. Dakota, S. Dakota, Vermont, Wyom ing. Arkansas, Mississippi Nevada, Utah and Montana, meanwhile con tribute less than 1 per cent of the Federal tax yield. As usual New York had the year's biggest tax bill, $654,321,80$, North Carolina was second with $260,344, 351, Illinois, third with $214,714,810, Pennsylvania 4th with $193,552^222, and California 5th with $151,245,457. At the other end of the scale, Wy oming paid the least, $1,170,330. The presence of North Carolina, es sentially an agricultural state among the leaders was attributed by Treas ury officials to source collected taxes on tobacco manufacturers, later paid by citizens of the country over. The State's income tax payments 'were $12,960,071 as compared with $217, 611,109 in miscellaneous taxes, in cluding the tobacco levies. Every State in the Union showed increases, ranging in some cases as high as 300 per cent, in miscellaneous tax collections for the fiscal year as compared with the year previous to raise the grand total for the country from $873,047,820 to $1,483,789,755. MISSES DAVIS AND COATES ENTERTAIN. i Greenville, July 13.?On Thursday evening from 6:30 to 8:00 o'clock, Masses Sallie Joyner Davis and Miss Dora Coates were hostesses at a very delightful party in the Ragsdale Hall gardens, to Mrs. J. B. Spilman and their friends on the College campus. I Sugg Denies Cod I f lid in Leaf Dates I Greenville Tobacco Man I States that Buyers and I Warehousemen Agree I on August 23rd. i I Greenville, July 10.?B. -B. Sugg, I Greenville warehouseman, today de ? nied that there is any conflict between buyers and warehousemen regarding the opening date of August 23rd for the Eastern Carolina 5ofaaeco belt. ? Returning from White Sulphur Will Measure Acreage Here Supervisors Are Receiv ing- Instructions Here From State Specialist; 4,000 Cotton Tags On Hand For Distribution To The Farmers. Greenville, July 11.?Eighty Super visors who will measure cotton and tobacco acreage for the Federal Gov ernment were receiving instructions here Wednesday in preparation for beginning of operations immediately. E. F. Arnold, director of the local farm department, stated that Mr. Johnson, of State College, was here instructing the supervisors relative to measuring acreage as provided under government tobacco production contracts and that work would get un der way in Pitt County immediately. Mr. Arnold, who returned from Raleigh Tuesday night, stated that he brought back 4,000 cotton tags, and that tagging of 1933 cotton on hand would begin within a few days. All cotton of the last crop must be tagged if it is to be relieved of tax provided under the Bankhead cotton control act recently passed by Congress. Rotarians to Meat In Annual Outtng NeitMayNiglit Picnic Dinner Will Be Served In City Park at The Swimming Pool The Farmville Rotary Club held its Bweekly meeting last Tuesday eve Ining in the Farmville Sigh School ?building at 6:45. A steak supper ?was served followed by the reading, ?correction and approval of the min ?utes of the previous meeting. Chair Iman of the program committee ask Hed for the co-operation of the mem Ibers in the efforts of the commit ?tee to prepare the programs for the ?coming year. I John Lewis asked the special com Imittee which was appointed to get lin touch with Mr. Jeffress relative Ito the anticipated highway change ?through Farmville. The committee Iwas so instructed. I Discussion of the Club's annual ?outing waa advanced. at thi? point, ?it was moved, seconded and passed ?that the outing be held next Tues ?dar. July 17 at the Municipal Swim ?ming Pool. (I I John Lewis was named as pro-11 IfpH&^eader for the evening bis II M. _ ^ . t V-V.'-; '":.. . , t . jl I BUSINESSMEN OF FARMVILLE GALLED T8 MEET MONDflY NIGHT JULY 16th % TO THE BUSINESS MEN OF THE TOWN OF FARMVILLE: There will be a meeting in the Town Hall, Monday night at 8:00 o'clock at which all interested business men and citizens will be present to formu late plans for the advertising of the Town of Farmville as a Tobacco Market and shopping center; lets all get behind it aijd maks 1934 the best season Farmville ever had. ? . On August 23rd, the Farmville Tobacco Market will open; the more tobacco that is brought to Farmville, means more motley to be paid out here and more money spenders to be here; the greater the business for the warehouse, the greater will be the business for the stores and the Town in General. Come to the meeting Monday night and help plan an advertising campaign that will be worthwhile to all concerned. JOHN B. LEWIS, Mayor. Dollfuss Announces Hus? Jew Cam paignVs. Nazis Cabinet Shake-up; New List of Members Pre sented for President's Approval; Death Pen alty For Mere Posses sion of Explosives. Vienna, July 11.?Englebert Doll fuss, Austria's fighting little chancel lor, announced a huge new drive against Nazis today after concen trating in his own hands all the mili tary and police power of the nation. The death penalty will be dealt out for the mere possession of explosives, Dollfuss announced, in an effort to stop widespread bombing outrages. In a cabinet shake-up Dollfuss pre sented the resignation of the whole group to President Wihelm Miklas and then submitted a new list for Miklas' approval. Dollfuss appeared determined to stamp out the whole Nazis movement in Austria. Taking a leaf from the note book of his neighbor and friendly protector Benito Mussolini, Dollfuss will add several cabinet portfolios to his ac tive duties. He will be chancellor, foreign min ister, minister of defense, public se curity and agriculture. All military and police power in Austria will be concentrated in his hands through Hie defense and se curity posts. A communique asserted the step was necessary for peace and order and to wipe out thp last vestiges of treasonable movements. ? . I MBS. JIBflTIE TYSON SMITH I I Greenville*?Mrs. Bettie Tyson I Smith, 56, died at one o'clock Wed Ineaday morning; in Pitt Community Hospital - after an illness of over a I year. She had been critically ill the ?last several days. Funeral services were conducted Canal Claims Child's Life Edward Mooring Age 4, Drowns in Small, But Full Stream, In the Or mondsville Section. Edward B. Mooring, the four-year old son of Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Moor ing, of the Ormondsville section, in Greene county,, was drowned in a canal while accompanying his mother from a tobacco barn to the home Monday afternoon. The body was carried about 500 yards down the canal and was not( recovered until early Tuesday morn ing. The mother had a small child in her arms and Edward was following by her side when they reached the ! bridge across the stream. Hi^h wa ter had washed out a {dace in the bank and the child fell into the rag ing stream and disappeared. Funeral services were conducted from the late home .Tuesday after noon at .3 o'clock by Rev. M. Phillips, of Hookerton. Burial was made in the Heath cemetery. Surviving are the parents and a sister, Verna Erleen. . Eastern Firemen In Convention 11 Sectional Association Guest at Morehead City and Atlantic Beach New Bern, July 12.?The East ? ern Carolina Firemen's Association I met Tuesday night at the fire sta ? tion in Morehead City, with Alfred ? A. Kafer, Jr., of this city, president, ? presiding. R. A. Joyner, of Farmville, ? acted in his capacity as secretary ? treasurer. ? Addresse of welcome were made I by Ha^or IT S. Gibbs, for the city, ? and D. B. Willis, for the Rotary ? Club. Stanley Woodland, chairman I ? of the Morehead City Port Terminal I I commission, bold of plans for early I ? starting of th? port development and I ? stressed that it was a state, not host a local project, of benefit and I B interest to ail North Carolinai'*1* - ifS 1 North Carolina Gets Feminine C. fcj. Camp 22 Camps Approved To Date With Estimated Enrollment of Around 1,700 Women. Washington, July 11.?The Federal Government was shown today to be investigating a sizable pile of dollars in a sort of feminine CCC plan, de signed to fit womln to jobs by a brief, but intensive re-education course. Thirty-one camps and schools for unemployed, unattached women, each an experiment painstakingly adjust de to its community, will start func tioning within the next four weeks. Twenty-two have been approved. Nine more are. under consideration, with prospects of being approved. Each individual camp or school re ceived on the average of about $5, 000, which * will exhaust available funds. Enrollment will total about 1,700. The camps are partially an out growth of an insistant interest on the part of Mrs. Franklin D. Roose velt. Agreeing with some who wrote her letters that unattached women should enjoy some equivalent of what CCC camps have done for un at tached men, Mrs. Roosevelt last year succeeded in having established Camp Tera, at Bear Mountain, New York. In April, she opened the White House to a conference on the subject Directed by Miss Hilda Smith, of the Emergency Relief Administra tion, the womens' camp will stress a field in which she is expert-work ers' education, which she definels as "consideration of practical, economic problems wage earners will meet in their day-by-day working life." Program Planned For "Farm Week" ^ ?? % ^Several thousand North Carolina farmers and farm women are looking forward to an "educational vacation* at Parfa and Home Week at State eoUege^July^l ^to Aftyuflt ^ ^ With delightful recreational activi Tobacco Markets OponsAig, 23rd Local Warehousemen Advised That August 23rd Date for Opening of Eastern Carolina Markets Accepted The opening date of Thursday, August 23rd, for Eastern North Caro lina tobacco markets fixed by the United States Tobacco Association in session at White Sulphur Springs, W. Va., last Week has been accepted according to information received by local warehousemen. An effort had been on foot the last several days to change the date to the 28th, but the decision Thursday definitely retains the date formerly approved by the tobacco association. August 9 for South Carolina and Border markets, and August 1 for Georgia, previously set by the Unit ed States Tobacco Association, were also decided upon, it was stated. Local warehousemen are putting their warehouses into condition for the early opening date. J.C.L?iirAe cspts Post as Gods Hsid Acceptance of Position As Tobacco Leaf Code Administrator Unoffi cially Announced. Greenville, July 11.?It was unof ficially announced here today that J. C. Lanier, a former Greenville lawyer, and member of the tobacco section of the Agricultural Adjust ment Administration, has accepted the position as Code Administrator of the loose leaf tobacco industry. Mr. Lanier was tendered the posi tion, which is said to carry quite a boost yi salary by the code authority of loose leaf auction tobacco ware houses at the annual convention of the United States Tobacco Associa tion at White Sulphur Spring last week. i Doubt was expressed at the time that Mr. Lanier would be able to ac cept the offer because of regulations of the Agricultural Adjustment Ad ministration barring those who nego tiated codes from administering them. The report received here today in dicated that obstacles in this connec tion had been removed and that Mr. Lanier would take over the duties, as Code Administrator. ' This means that headquai$?fcs of the code authority will be established possibly in Greenville. It was said that 180 field mon would be employed in enforcement of the code, dealing with weights, fair trade practices, of was stated^, so that a definite check may be kept Delegations Boost More Health Money ? ? ? ? ? i. i. ?+ I Call on County Commis sioners to Increase the Budget to Aid in Fight I ing Death ToiL Greenville, July 10.?Recommenda Itions for an increase in health ap I propriations in the county for the next fiscal year were given hearty I support by two delegations repre senting the Pitt Copnty Medical So I ciety and the Kiwanis Club, appear j ing before the Board of County Com Isioners in regular monthly session at Jibe court house Monday. A proposal to increase the health department budget from around five thousand to eight thousand annually, to permit the employment of an all Itime sanitary inspector and additional I nurse was presented to the Board J several days ago, in the hope of im I proving the infant mortality death rate in this county, described as the ["highest" in the state. Although the Board listened to the I delegations' request that the increase be included in the new budget, no {definite action was taken. The mem bers, however, assured the visitors fhttt something definite would be done by the first Monday in August. Mayor Roy C. Flanagan and Joe Taft. representing the city of Green ville, informed the commissioners the aldermen were ready to do their part in the employment of the all-time sanitary officer, believing that it would throw an additional safeguard around the lives of people in all sections of the county. Taft, a member of the city council, acted as spokesman, and said the city fathers at a previous meeting had decided to join the county in the proposed movement for. improved health. The city and county will be asked to appropriate $100 each a month for defraying the expense of the sanitary expert. Spokesmen of the Medical Society who have vigorously stressed the pressing need of improved health facilities in view of the continued in crease of the mortality rate among children, were Drs. L. C. Skinner, K. B. Pace and Tom Watson. The death rate amorg children in Pitt was said to be 55.0 per cent com pared with the state average of 19.3 per cent. The situation has been de scribed as "alarming" by members of the medical profession, especially in | view of the fact that infants seem to be bearing the brunt of death's as sault. The causes of the mortality toll were ascribed mainly to stomach disorders most common among babies The commissioners also voted to ! increase the salaries of court house employees ten per cent of the three I cuts ordered the past three years. The commissioners had promised to restore the salaries as soon ai con ditiona justified. The cuts in most instances were of .a; voluntary nature, especially flTT>nng elective officers. Those voting for the increase were Cox,. Smith and McLawhorn; against, Williams and Dudley. . ? ? YOUNG PABMVIIXB MAN i MAKES HIGH RECORD - Citizens of Farmvjille and Pitt County feel a touch of pi-ide in, the recent achievement of a y&tgr follew townsman, Mr. James M. .Wheless.-. muatStf in standing the N. C. State Board examinations for Pharmacists, He made the highest score of all those The Sfc Newa and Observer led , % a# , ., tulations and friendly good wishes jpy ay: ; - ? - <^7^ ^. ?' ' MA QnmrDV i vr/in MAoni5(JKiN-L?{llrn