“The State News,” from The Independent, Elizabeth
City, N.C., March 18, 1927.
Digest of Things Worth Knowing About Old North State Folks and Things
Governor McLean
directed Attorney General Brummitt to investigate the charges of graft against
certain employes of the State Board of Health in connection with the
administration of the State sanitary privy law, which were brought to public
attention on the floor of the Senate by Senator Rivers D. Johnson of Warsaw in
which he said that an inspector of the State Health Department contracted with
a contractor to build privies for $18 and that the owner had to pay $25. In
other instances, the charge for building the privies was less, Senator Johnson
said, but there was a difference between the contract price and the charge to
the owner.
--
N.A. Townsend of
Dunn and Clayton Moore of Williamston were named by Governor A.W. McLean as the
Eastern special superior court judges authorized by the emergency judges act
which was passed by the 1927 General Assembly after the bill creating
additional districts had gone on the political rocks surrounding any attempt to
redistrict the State. Both men have served in the General Assembly since
1921.
A.L. Clodfelter, one of the city’s well-known citizens and a Confederate
veteran, died at Lexington after an illness of several days, aged 80 years.
David
B. White, youth of North Carolina, filed suit in Mecklenburg Superior Court for
$10,000 against the Southern Railway, alleging arrest without cause. He stated
in his complaint that he was going from Charlotte to Pelzer, S.C., to visit an
uncle. He was arrested in Greenville at the railway station charged with
loitering and within five hours was in shackles on the county roads.
--
Robert and Herbert
Taylor, two 13-year-old boys, were found guarding a still near Greensboro.
Howard Barham and A.L. Taylor are accused of being the operators. When the
officers got to the still at the early morning hour they found the youngsters
there. They are the youngest prisoners ever brought in by the authorities on
charges connected with the making of liquor.
--
Herndon W. Goforth
of Lenoir, N.C., American consul at Sao Paulo, Brazil, received four serious
stab wounds inflicted at the American Consulate by an American giving his name
as David Canfield. Canfield, who was arrested, claimed that he had stabbed the
American consul in self-defense. He went to the consulate on private business.
--
Rev. W.L. Barre,
pastor of several Baptist churches in Davidson County for the past five years
or more, has received a call to the Shiloh Baptist Church in Camden County, one
of the oldest Baptist Churches in North Carolina. The church in Camden was
formed about 200 years ago.
--
Julius E. Jernigan,
well-known Sampson County farmer, aged 72 years, who died last week, is survived
by 12 children, two children having preceded him to the grave; 82
grandchildren, 15 of whom have died, bringing the number to 97, and 20
great-grandchildren.
--
Judge E.Y. Webb
announced that he would appoint J.Y. Jordan of Asheville federal clerk of the
Western District of the United States Court. This also means, Judge Webb
stated, that the clerk’s office will be located in Asheville. Jordan has been
deputy clerk in the Asheville office for four or five years.
--
A. Homer Smith, who
was charged with the death of his wife and serious injury of his two sons,
submitted to a charge of second degree murder, and was sentenced by Judge R.A.
Nunn of New Bern, presiding in Superior Court, to not less than 10 years and
not more than 15 years in the State’s prison.
--
The oldest engineer
of the Seaboard railroad, “Uncle Jim” Weldon of Lewiston, died at his home
following a brief illness. He was 83 years old and 62 of those years had
engineered the “Huckleberry Special” between Lewiston and Portsmouth.
--
H. Lee Wesey of
Winston-Salem was killed near Salisbury on the national highway when a car in
which he was riding turned over. E. Donichy of Greensboro, who was driving the
car, escaped with minor injuries.
--
Herbert M. Poe,
Atlantic Coast Line engineer, prominent Masonic and fraternal leader and
secretary of the Seaside Division of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers,
died at Rocky Mount after a brief illness with pneumonia.
--
Miss Iona Allen,
girl wife of Taylor Allen, died in Mt. Airy as a result of a pistol wound in
the throat. Her slayer was Tommy Martin, aged about 17, who was playing with a
pistol.
--
Dr. Thomas A.
Bohannon, for many years a leading citizen and medical practitioner, died at
his home in Burlington after a long confinement caused by a fall in which he
fractured his hip. He was 86 years old.
--
The North Carolina
Board of Nurse Examiners will hold examinations in Raleigh in the House of
Representatives April 12th, 13th and 14th,
according to the secretary, Mrs. Z.V. Conyers of Greensboro.
--
Appointment of
Pardon Commissioner H. Hoyle Sink and Thomas G. Bowie of Asheville County to be
special superior court judges was announced by Governor W.A. McLean, who is
spending several days at Pinehurst.
--
Charged with an
attempted criminal attack upon Mrs. Etta Griffin, 19, who alleged that he
forced her into his automobile at the point of a pistol near Wilmington, W.T.
Benson, 22, of Summer Hill was jailed without bond.
--
R.D. Thompson Jr.,
four-month-old son of Mr. and Mrs. R.D. Thompson of Raleigh Was found dead. The
baby was having been accidentally smothered to death as he slept in bed with his
mother.
--
John Hardy, white,
and Leonard Williams, negro, dead, and Cam Pridgen, white, and three other
negroes were seriously injured as the result of a boiler explosion near Warsaw.
--
A.C. (Sandy) Kelly,
former sheriff of Moore County, died suddenly a few days ago following an acute
indigestion which lasted about 10 minutes.
--
Verdict of murder
in the second degree was returned at Hendersonville by the jury trying William
Bennison for the slaying of federal prohibition agent V.E. Grant last June.
--
Unidentified
robbers took around $250 in cash and checks Tuesday night during the supper
hour from the grocery store of H.C. Armstrong at New Bern.
“Be happy, honest,
and live moderately,” was the recipe given by Mrs. Jane Childers of Dillsboro
on the occasion of her 104th birthday to those who would live a long
life.
Within two hours
after a divorce had been granted Mrs. Lula F. Jones in Wake superior court from
George M. Jones, 68, the latter married Mrs. Arratta Bryant, 55.
--
Luke, the
17-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Luke Mizell of Brown Spring section near
Williamston, died from a gunshot wound accidentally inflicted when a gun fell
from a wagon.