VOL, TWENTY-FIVE FARMVILLE, PITT COUNTY NORTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY, JANUARY 11, \U* NUMBER THIRTY-SEVEN : ' ' '? " '? -!!!!.''I.'... J.1 it.i" i? '.-mi. -? ? ii'. ? ????. . New Mystery Elements Enter HauptmannCase ? - ? Hoffman Reported To Have Confession From New Figure In The Crime ?Trenton, N. J., Jan. 15.? A report emanating tonight from a high source, but wholly lacking in offi cial confirmation, said Governor Hoffman had in his possession a purported written confession from a new figure in the Lindgerbh baby slaying. Neither Governor Hoffman nor his press aide could be reached, but this source said the governor had made overtures to the leading offi cials who participated in the cap ture of Bruno Richard Hauptmann ?sentenced to be electrocuted Fri day night?to serve in an advisory capacity to study the value of the purported confession. If these advisers consider the "confession" of value, it is said, the governor will stay the execution until a through investigation can be made. The nature of the "con fession" has not been indicated and the name of the person involved if nuw Miuwii, A secret conference in New York late today between Federal, New Jersey and New \ ork officials add ed to the tense feeling here that a sensational "break" was imminent. The conference was attended by Colonel H. Norman Schwarzkopf, head of the New Jersey state po lice; J. Edgar Hoover, chief of the Bureau of Investigation of the United States Department of Jus tice, and Lewis J. Valentine, po lice commissioner of New "iork City. They met in the office of Mayor F. H. LeGuardia. After the conference, it was said no announcement would be made until tomorrow afternoon, when an other meeting will be held. None of those participating in the confer ence would talk. Governor Hoffman, who has been active in the case, and who made a nocturnal visit to Hauptmann In his cell recently, was absent from the capital throughout the day. At torney General David T. Wilentz, who prosecuted Hauptmann and who has been critical of Governor Hoffman's activities, also was ab sent from the capital. He left his home in Perth A.mboy during the afternoon and his destination could not be learned. The possibility that Governor Hoffman had obtained an important new statement from Hauptmann himself, or from some other person professing to have knowledge of the crime, was speculated upon in the light of the mysterious actions of the officials. Colonel Mark 0. Kimberling, state prison warden, said today he had not seen Hauptmann since last Saturday ? the day the prisoner's plea for a commutation of sentence to'life imprisonment was turned down by the state court of pardons. He would not comment on the significance of the fact that he has not been making his customary daily visits to the death house. ? MRS. ALICE JEFFERSON TURNAGE Pinetops, Jan. 11.?Mrs. Alice Jef ferson Turnage, sixty-five, wife of the late Henry C. Turnage, died Fri day morning at seven o'clock at the the home of her daughter, Mrs. M. E. Lane, at Pinetops, from injuries sustained in an automobile accident Christmas Eve, and a subsequent at tack of pneumonia. Funeral services were held Satur day afternoon in Pinetops at the Lane home and interment was made in the Fountain cemetery. Mrs. Turnage, a member of i prominent Pitt County family anc possessing the attributes of a Chris tian gentlewoman, was highly es teemed in this section of the State. She is survived by three daughters Mrs. S. L. Parker and Mrs. M. E Lane, Pinetops, Mrs. Earl Trevathan Fountain, and a son, Floyd Turnage Chapel Hill. TO RELEASE TAXES Greensboro, Jan. 15.?Judge John son J. Hayes today said in U. S. dis trict court, that tomorrow he wil sign orders directing the return t the textile mills in the State of th more than $6,000,000 in impounde processing tax funds which the corn held while the constitutionality u the taxes was being determined. Judge Hayes declined to order th return until he received a text c ?JSI2t . f.p. Them were SOS Poles and 31 Bonus Situation Tokos Now Turn Inflationists Revive Campaign as Signs of Veto Come from White House Washington, Jan. 15.?A furious struggle to force payment of the soldiers' adjustment service certifi cates in "greenbacks" instead of bonds was forecast by Senate infla tionists tonight as strong indications came from the White House that President Roosevelt would veto the compromise bonus bill. A poll of the Senate by the Unit ed Press, however, showed that there are now at least 64 Senators? more than the required two-thirds needed?prepared to override a veto of a bill stripped of currency expan sion provisions. They included 48 Democrats, 13 Republicans, two Far mer-Laborites and one Progressive. In addition, five Democrats and three Republicans who voted last year to sustain Mr. Roosevelt's veto of the highly inflationary Pitman bill now are listed as "doubtful." Speaker Joseph W. Byrns predict ed tonight the House would again pass a bonus bill over a White House veto. ?- The attitude of the Senate, it was believed, would depend upon the bill's provisions to finance the debt to the soldiers. W. R. BRANN W. R. Brand, 87, well known and esteemed Greene County farmer, died suddenly Sunday morning at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Z. D. Cobb, near Farmville. Mr. Brann, who enjoyed excellent health, had been apparently feeling very well | when he retird the night before, his death occurring as he empted a pan ? of ashes and started in the doorsteps of the home. He was an active and faithful member of the Free Will Baptist churcn, attending services for milts around each week of his latter days. Last rites were held from the Cobb home Monday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock and interment was made in the family burial ground. Mr. Brann is survived by three daughters, Mrs. Z. D. Cobb and Mrs. Bennett Tyscn, of Fahnville, Mrs. Mollie Gordon, of Oklahoma, and three sons. WiM, C. F. and John H. Brann, of the Farmville section. State's Farm Income IncreasedUnderAAA During the two and a half years of the AAA, the total increase in North Carolina farm income was more than $416,785,000. This figure is the sum of the AAA benefit payments plus the increased valuation of farm crops since 1932. In 1932, before the AAA, the value of farm crops in this State was $104,362,000, said*Dean I. 0. Schaub, of State College, who had charge of > the AAA programs in North Caro lina. ? With the inauguration of the AAA : in 1933, the valuation of farm crops rose to $194,390,000. The following year it climbed up to $262,973,000, ? and in 1935 it was $248,348,000. > The total increase over 1932 dur i ing the next three years amounted to $390,625,000. In addition, the i farmers cooperating in the crop con l trol programs received more than ? $26,160,000 in benefits payments. Up to September 30, 1935, the benefit payments had reached a total , of $26,159,193. Since that time other . payments have been made, and yet , others are now due, the dean pointed , out. The benefit payments, classified by commodities, were distributed to North Carolina farmers thus: to bacco $14,515,189, cotton $10,689,540, corn-hogs $848,005, and wheal $97, ? 451. * . From the summer of 1933 up to [l September 30, 1935, farmers in Pitt ? cbunty received a total of ,$1,222, e 108.61 in AAA rental and ;benefit ^ payments. ? Payments to growers in Greene county was $564,183.36. ?I* j - * ' **?* ? ? f BETHEL TAKES HONORS In games, on Tuesday night, de scribed as well played by both sides, 5 the Bethel boys defeated Farmville ' Production Credit Association Meets At the annual stockholders meet ing of the Greenville Production Credit Association, which serves the counties of F*itt and Greene, held at Greenville on January 11, reports by officers showed that this cooperative credit organization of farmers had a very successful year in 1935. The meeting was attended not only by stockholders but also by many farmers who are not members who desired to acquaint themselves with the credit facilities which the asso ciation is offering to the farmers of this section. An invitation had been extended by the association to all farmers to attend. After the report of the year's oper ations had been made by J. C. Gallo way, secretary-treasurer of the asso ciation, the report being illustrated by charts, showing how much busi ness was done, how much it cost to run the association, and how much income was received, the meeting was addressed by Mr. Ernest Gra ham, president of the Production Credit Corporation of Columbia. Mr. Graham said that be means ot production credit associations "Far mers have been able to reduce the cost of making- and collecting loans and by keeping the system on a sound basis they can obtain funds from nvestors at costs as low as those available to any other industry. The associations do not lend government money but bring the farmer in touch' with the investment market. As they furnish credit to farmers at actual cost they must make their loans on a sound business basis and they can lend only an amount which may be repaid from the operations of the borrower's farm." The associations, Mr. Graham i pointed out, charge 5 per centum in- j terest and the borrower only pays for the time he actually has the money. The association, he pointed out, is operated by the borrowers, each borrower being required to take j out Class B Stock in the association equivalent to 5 per cent of the initial loan and may obtain new loans in the same proportion without purchasing additional stock. The directors of the association are elected by the stockholders. More than 43,000 far mers in North Carolina, South Caro lina, Georgia and Florida financed their operations with more than* $14, 000,000 worth of credit through .these associations in 1935 as compared with 31,000 farmers using $9,000,000 in 1934, a very substantial increase. Another substantial increase in the number of farmers using production credit is expected in 1936, Mr. Gra ham said, as more and more farmers are availing themselves of the serv ices offered by the associations as they learn of the' advantages offered by this permanent cooperative sys tem. Mr. Mack G. Smith of Pitt County and Mr. J. M. Murphy of Greene County, stockholders, made short talks and expressed their apprecia tion of the services they have re ceived from the Association. The Greenville Association made 531 loans for $223,515 last year. The two members of the board of directors of the association elected at the meeting are J. P. Davenport and G. L. Mewborn. Other members of the board elected a year ago are Dr. Paul Fitzgerald, N. F. Palmer and Jno. R. Carroll. Messrs. B. A. Pope, G. M. Britt and J. H. Bobley, Pitt County voca tional teachers, and their classes were present. The vocational class of Fountain under the direction of Mr. B. A. Pope, instructor, presented a splendid program. I 1 To Continue Collecting | Taxes (>n Tobacco By E. F. Arnold, County Agent I have been advised from Wash ington that in as much as the Kerr Smith Act has not been declared un constitutional, the Internal Revenue Department will continue to collect taxes on all tobacco for which taxj warrants have not been written. Therefore, it will be necessary for all growers who have oversold their cards to purchase additional al lotment cards or else they will be required by the .Internal Revenue Department to pay taxes on all to bacco sold during the previous two years. The reef ore, when we resume checking marketing cards and farm ers ^receive notices to come in and purchase additional cards to take care of errors that were made "in issuing tax warrants, they should do so promptly. ' ? . REV. WILDERMAN TO PREACH HERE SUNDAY ? . .. ? ?> v ? / Rev. Wilderman, of Parraele, will fill the appointments of Rev. H. M. ' Wilson, this week, preaching here on Sunday morning and in Falkland on Sunday evening. ? .. J < l M Landlord Slays Tenant Farmer Son of Tenant Seriously Injured In Shooting at Greene County Farm Wilson, Jan. 15.?Paul Nethercutt, ? 50-year-old Greene County farmer of Bullhead Township, was shot to death and his son, Lyman, 24, waa ; seriously wounded at their home < this afternoon by J. F. Owens, their 50-year-old landlord, during an ar gument over crops and the mov- , ing of the Nethercutts from the , Owens property. -j Owens killed Nethercutt and shot < his son with a .32 calibre pistol i when, according to Owens, they started toward him in a threaten- j ing mariner. The shooting occurred in the < yard of the Nethercutt house and a | few yards from a truck on which , were piled most of the Nethercutt j household goods in preparation for j moving away from the farm. - A ^""1' in Vn Q Aum uwens wciu ? ...u ..... , house across the road after the ( shooting and was there when Sheriff . H. K. Cobb of Snow Hill, arrived with Deputy Sheriff F. C. Carrawsy < and State Patrolman A. C. Johnson. , He did not resist arrest. j Owens was placed in the Wilson ; County jail and is being held with- j out bond. , Owens told officers he went to ( the Nethercutt house to see about , them moving and that when he ap- j proached the place Nethercutt told , him to "keep out." Owens went , into the yard. It was then that ( Nethercutt and his son adopted a 3 threatening attitude, according to j Owens, and started towards him. , Nethercutt, Owens said, had a brick , in his hand and Lyman acted ai if ( he was going to attack him. 1 "Stay back," warned OwenB, who , said that Lyman had threatened his j life two of three times beforn. But, he said, the youth camJe right | on and Owens fired twice, hitting j him once in the arm and oncej in his ^ side. I Seeing that the elder Nethercutt had a brick, Owens shot at him ( and hit him in the head, killing him. 1 "I didn't mean to shoot him in the ( head," said Owens. I meant to , shoot lower." , After Nethercutt had fallen to ( the ground, Lyman kept coming to wards Owens, the farmer said, even ( though he had been shot twice. 1 They fell into a ditch and tussled. .Owens said that he hit Lyman with the but of his gun until the youth said: "I'm through now." The boy's ' strength had seemed suddenly to ' leave him. "I'm through now you've ? killed him." He pointed to his fa ther as he said this to Owens. 1 Owens said that Nethercutt had 1 owed him money and that he had ' sold some of his corn and had not ' tried to pay the debt. * Owens said that he carried the pistol to the Nethercutt farm be- 1 cause of the threats of Lyman on 1 his life. Lyman was taken to a hospital on top of the truck that held the furni- ' ture of the Nethercutt family. He was reported to be in a serious con dition tonight. farm Program Agency Meets * By E. F. Arnold, County Agent Greenville, Jan. 14.?The Pitt County Long Time Farm Program Planning Agency met in the County Agent's Office laat night There were one hundred percent present at (this meeting. The planning agency lis composed of the following leading farmers in the County: J. E. Wins low, Chairman, John R. Carroll, Sec retary, F. M. Kilpatrick, 0. M. Mc ? Lawhorn, W. R. Tyson, J. V. Taylor,, i A. L. Woolard, R. L. Little, G. H. Pittman. G. E. Trevathan, J. H. Blount, J. P. Davenport, Alton Gard ner, R. L. Worthington, John T.' Thorne, W. H. Dail, Jr., and Roy T. Cox. The following interested fawn* ers were present: L. W. Cherry, ;J. S. Fleming and C. A. Tyson. The meeting was called for the purpose of discussing the contem plating resettlement work in the County and to complete securing cer tain information requested by the Department of Agriculture. Mr. George, with the Resettlement Bureau, submitted^ certain types of work the Resettlement Bureau de sires to carry on in Pitt County and requested the cooperation of this Board. After going into the im mediate work requested by the De partment of Agriculture,,the meeting adjourned subjbct to the call of the County Agent ? 1 ? ? ? ? ? ? ? - ' Turkeys sold by Chatham County farmers during the holidays season brought in pi?re than $14,000 in cash to the grower* -i.'fj.j Ul??lmtn8nlnr 1 Westminister Choir To Appear trlhrMefi U |3? The famous Westminister choir un der; the direction of Or. John Fmley vVilliamaon, will be heard at Memo rial Auditorium, Kaleigh, Feb. lytn. ihe North Carolina Music Festival Association is sponsoring the appear ance of this celebrated groupe of singers. This concert will be one of the high spots of musical entertain ment during this current season, dinging entirely unaccompanied, no instrument of pitch except the hu man voice. They protray nearly every tone color possible to the'hu man voice. , ? Programs presented by the West minister Chorus range through a wide assortment of musical moods, dramatic, sentimental, sombre, and bright even to merry. Spirituals, classics, and modernistic popular ar- 1 range men te are all included on their ' programs. , 1 ? - ? -i sl;m mere lorty-one singers ut vma symphonic- chorus, and they are 1 everyone real singers. This groupe are tuned up before-each concert just as you would tune an orchestra. I'he members of this unique organi- ' zation are not only singers but each individual in this choir directed by 1 Dr. Williamson are, in fact, com- ; plete musicians, each having attain- . sd professional rating as a player of either piano or organ. Perfect dic tion, sonority of tone, flexibility of rhythmn, vitality?these are four of ' the major requirements of good chor al singing according to Dr. William son and he demands this and gets it From the Westminster Choir. His idealism in accepting nothing less than the best at all times from his singers has made it the important organization it is today, an interna tionally famous groupe which has ; won superlative praise from critics both here and in Europe. Every choir director, choir mem ber, and singers of the calibre, who , love singing should especially hear this concert and receive the inspira- ' tion and pleasure afforded. Dr. Williamson is donating the ! concert to the N. C. M. F. A. All ; the money will be used in the work of the Association in carrying music to the masses of North Carolina. A wonderful program to hear, a great jause served. ? a Stresses Importance Of Balanced Farming The abolition of the AAA- has in tensified the importance of ; a well i balanced farming schedule on every North Carolina farm. The wide-awake farmer-trill raise at home the food and feed crops needed to supply his family and his : livestock, said Prof. C. B. Williams, bead of the State College agronomy department. He-will also devote a great deal i of his land to soil-improvement and erosion - control crops, Professor Williams added. Taking into consideration the un certainty of prices which farmers may get for their cash crops this year, he continued, it would be most unwise to specialise in the production of cash crops, with the expectation of buying large quantities of food, feed, ^and fertilizer. A general increase in the produc tion of cash crops will no doubt low er the price to such an extent that farmers' cash incomes this year will be rather limited, the professor de clared. In view of this, it is essential that the farmers plan every way possible to reach a state of self-sufficiency, he added, so as to reduce to a mini mum the things they will have to buy with their limited cash income, - Every farm should have a year round home garden with a large vari ety of vegetables. There should be enough grain, hay, and pasturage to supply all the livestock with a bal anced ration. v Soil-improving crops Gke cowpeas, soybeans, velvet beans, and lespedeza, plowed under at maturity, will build up thel land and at the same time re duce the amount of fertilizer needed. First plan''for the food, feed, and soil-building- crops, Professor Wil liams, urged, then more or less as a side line, arrange for the production of some cash crops. HOBGOOD-TUGWELL The wedding of Miss Carrie Mae Tugwell and Mr. William Redin Hobgood, of Walstonborg, was quiet ly solemnized on Monday morning, December 23, in Greenville,, according to announcement being nude here. Mrs. Hobgood is the only daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Tugwell, of Walstonborg. . > Miv Hobgood is the son of Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Hobgood, who live near mm ' ? ? ? '' FniwTOa. Delegation Confsrs I On Project In Pittl C ounty Assurred of Drainage Undertaking Provided $50,000.00 Is Furnished I Raleigh, Jan. 16.?Pitt County yes-li terday wag assured of a WPA drain-1 age project along Swift Creek, near! Greenville, provided the county com-J missioners will appropriate $60,0601 toward the cost of the undertaking. The Works Progress Administra-1 tion will allocate $104,000 to theji project and begin work around I February 1, if its terms are met,j( State Administrator George W. Coan, J, Jr., yesterday told a Pitt County || delegation. Affecting an area of from 25 to 1171 a square miles, the drainage project I j was commenced under the CWA. J, program but was never completed. I. The delegation appearing at the! State office of the WPA yesterday L in the interest of the project in-l, eluded: W. E. Hooks, G. G. Dixon, I, H. T. Stokes, J. B. Pierce, F. H.J, Kilpatrick, J. H. Coward and P. R. Taylor of Ayden; H. P. Quinerly, J. I. R. Harvey, and Isaac Kilpatrick of|' Grifton; S. I. Dudley, F. M. Woo ten J | and P. H. Conley of Greenville; B. M. |' Lewis of Farmville; G. S. Porter of J' Chicod; and R. T. Cox of Winterville. J' IN THE THROES OF REVISION ] The FarmvillC Enterprise is in its j j annual throes of revision of the j subscription list and requests that I j its subscribers be patient until it has) been corrected. If you have paid your subscription and are not receiving the paper this week, let us hear from you. If you have not paid your subscription and are still receiving the paper let us hear from you. If you do not re ceive the paper and are not paid up, 1 let us-again insist on your'letting us hear from you. WE MUST HEAR FROM YOU. All AAA Payments Will BaGompleled All AAA benefit payments due North Carolina' farmers up to Jan- 1 uary 6, 1986, will be paid, according to ? word front Washington received by Dean I. O. Schaub, of State Col lege. The treasury department has an nounced that all AAA checks now being distributed are good and may be cashed at any" time. The "dean could not say just when checks for payments now due will be dfstributed, as preparations for these - payments had not been com pleted at the time the AAA work was suspended. The tobacco -marketing cards used during the past season had been checked over at the state AAA tobac co office at State College and were almost ready to be sent to Washing ton for final approval. The marketing cards are necessary in determining the ?mount of the tobacco adjustment payments for each grower, the dean said. iThe state AAA cotton office was making preparaiona for the cotton price adjustment payments which were offered to assure growers at least 12 cents a pound for their lint Dean Schaub expressed his belief that some way will be worked out for completing these and other pay ments within a reasonable time . ? Farmers who kept faith with ?heir crop adjustment contracts up to the time the Supreme Court invalidated the AAA deserve to get the payments promised, the dean said, and the government ? intends to keep faith With these farmers. ' - Desverlkraiid Over In TOd napping Charge I Greenville, Jan. 16.?Donald Dea ver, 28-year-old Raleigh man, waiv ed preliminary hearing in mayor's court here Wednesday morning on a charge of attempting to kidnap the two Children of B. V. Morton, local business man, -and was cpmmitted to-Pitt County .Jail to await trial in Superior Court next week when a term of criminal court will be held here. Bond was set at $1,000, but [Deaver was "tunable to provide it me offered nof'teetimony at his pre f Henry Gftba- of Dana, Henderson [County, reports: killing a hog weigh ing UtS gflK-aet and therefore plains- produpig the largest hog in Tobacco Grower May win ? *** w w*T 0 m ? Larger Sum InBefjfnU Payments Greatly In Excess of AAA Levels Proposed Under New foop Plan; Tar Heels Attend Conference ? . .? , i.;; t Washington, Jan. 15. ? Payments to I tobacco fanners greatly in ex ceae of those received under AAA contracts are in contemplation un der the soil conservation which th* administration is expected to Spon sor shortly. Sums have been tenta tively mentioned which are nearly three times the old payments, and also include conditional subsidies to the growers. ' A group of, Congressmen espe cially interested in tobacco and representing both flue-cured and burley areas, today conferred with J. B. Hutson, Jr., head of the divi sion which includes tobacco, and learn as much as possible about the Other AAA officials in an effort to proposed plan as it affects tobacco. They left the conference fully satisfied with the plan of the de partment and eveolved a plan of their own for financing it insofar as it concerns tobacco. The conference was arranged by Representative Harold D. Cooley, of North Carolina, a member of the agriculture committee, who was accompanied by Representative John R. Mitchell, also a member of the agriculture committee, and Rep resentatives Braswell Been, of Georgia, and Frank Hancock, of North Carolina, who represent large tobacco growing districts, but are not members of committees which will handle either the plan itself or the means of financing it in its initial stages. "While all sums that may be men Lioned at this stage of the program are tentative, it' is quite possible that flue-cured tobacco farmers will receive as much as seven cents a pound for keeping the conditions proposed to be incorporated in the soil conservation program. That sum would be nearly three times the benefits received under the AAA, and those familiar with the situation think that the larger benefits would serve to offset the loss of the Kerr-Smith act, which furnished another form of deter rent in the nature of a penalty tax on excessive production. It is not now proposed to have a Reparate program xor tobacco or any other commodity, and the plan will require some form of pew tax ation in order to- finance it, with processing taxes of one kind or an other generally regarded as the most feasible means. While means of continuing pay ments for control of tobacco pro duction were being discussed as a result of the invalidation of the AAA by the Supreme Court, the legal consequences of the highest tribunal's rulings were also receiv ing attention. This centered par- , ticularly upon the proposition of curbing the powers of the courts, and brought an interesting observa tion from one member of the Tar Heel delegation. In the opinion of Representative Zebulon Weaver, veteran member Of the House Committee oa Judi ciary, there is no chance of enact ment at this session of Congress of any of the many proposals for curbing the powers of the courts, with the possible exception of a measure to provide that lower courts shall not pass on the consti tutionality of acts of Congress, but shall merely certify them to the Supreme Court for determination. "In my opinion, measure has a great deal o|f merit, and while I am not prepared to aay it, I am certainly not prepared do say that I yrill oppose it," said Mr. ? Weaver today. "I think our com mittee will give serious considera tion to a proposal of that kind and that there is a good chance of its being reported favorably." ? i i FORD OUTPUT FOR 1^935 WAS 1,335,865 UNITS - World production of Ford cars and trucks in 1935 totalled 1,335,865 units, it was announced today at the home offices of the Fotd Motor Co. This compares with world production of 855,037 units in 1934, of more than 56 per cent, it was said. Production of Ford units in the United States and Canada in 1985 totaled 1,272,885 units, a gain of 667,447, or more than 77 per cent over the 715,438 units produced in 1984. The announcement recalled the prediction made by Henry Ford more than a year ago that Ford would produce "better than a million" units itn 1636. ? .y+ifv. ; I