Saturday, June 29, 2024

Joseph Porterfield, 21, Suffers Spinal Injury in Wreck, June 29, 1924

Young Man in Hospital with Spinal Injury After Wreck. . . Joseph Porterfield, 21, of University Station, Caught Under Over-Turned Ford Roadster Near Durham Late Saturday afternoon, and Suffers a Fractured Third Vertebra

Suffering from a fractured third vertebra and possible serious internal injuries about the chest, John Porterfield, 21, of University Station, is in Watts hospital as the result of an automobile accident Saturday afternoon near the Grove Park tea room, three miles from the city.

Porterfield is in a serious condition, an x-ray examination revealing the fractured bone in the lower region of the neck. He was examined late Saturday evening by physicians for other internal injuries.

Ed Carden, a companion of the injured youth, was in the accident but escaped unhurt. The accident occurred near a curve in the road, the light Ford roadster turning completely over in a sudden and unexplained manner. It was virtually demolished.

After the accident Porterfield went, apparently not seriously hurt, to his home in University Station, where he is employed by the Southern Power company. Later in the evening, however, his condition grew worse and he was rushed to the Durham hospital where the true nature of his injury was determined.

Porterfield is the son of Mr. and Mrs. J.S. Porterfield of Hurtle Mills and is a brother of Joseph Porterfield of this city.

From page 2 of the Durham Morning Herald, Sunday, June 29, 1924

Arson Case Before Judge Sinclair This Week, June 29, 1924

Arson Case Is Slated for Trial in Court This Week

Sheriff Harward Saturday mailed notices to all members of the county grand jury to appear for duty on Monday morning. A.W. Weatherspoon is foreman of the jury whose term expires at the end of the special term, which will be convened on Monday by Judge N.A. Sinclair.

In point of public interest the investigation of alleged fraud at the Eakes store precinct in the last Democratic primary, scheduled for Tuesday, is the most important business to come before the jury.

Listed among the 165 cases of the special term of court, which will also be the last court conducted in Durham county by Judge Sinclair for several years, are two arson cases against I.G. Finch, who is alleged to have fired a dwelling on Driver avenue in East Durham last year, in conspiracy with Robert Marshall, owner of the dwelling, and two murder cases, one against Phillip Rogers and one against Harry Mitchell. Neither of the two negroes have been captured that are charged with murder, but the grand jury will be asked for indictment against the two. Rogers shot a negro woman who went under the name of Rogers last summer in Haiti in summer in Haiti in front of house in which the two had been living when he saw her with another negro man. Rogers is alleged to have shot another negro in the leg while a “crap” game was in progress in Haiti early in the year.

E.D. Upchurch, white man, is charged with manslaughter following the death in January of a man by the name of Smith as the result of a collision of the two near the Pearl Mill during the holiday season. Smith was riding a bicycle and Upchurch was driving the automobile which passed over Smith, resulting eventually in his death, it was stated by officers Saturday.

The number of cases involving liquor is, as usual, the largest on the docket. Illegal possession and transporting liquor stand well up in the number of cases. Speeding and reckless driving is also charged against a score of defendants. Charlie Beavers is charged with driving an auto while intoxicated, illegal possession of liquor, and injury to property, but Ed Scarlett goes him better with four cases of the same general nature. The latter is charged with speeding, injury to property, transporting whiskey, and driving an auto while intoxicated. E.L. Fields is charged with forgery on three counts, and the cases are docketed for Monday.

It is probable that only a small number of cases will be disposed of at the special criminal term, for many of the defendants are out on bond for appearance at the regular term of criminal court in October.

From page 2 of the Durham Morning Herald, Sunday, June 29, 1924

Granville Deputies Shut Down Seven Stills This Week, June 29, 1924

Granville’s Cops Get Seven Stills. . . Clapp and Bragg Hot After Makers of Illicit Moonshine Near Oxford

Oxford, June 28—The Granville county officers have been hot on the trial of the illicit stills this week, capturing a total of seven since Monday morning. Deputies M.C, Klapp and E.N. Bragg are making Granville county an unsafe place for the manufacture of bootleg whiskey. The stills captured this week are as follows:

Deputy M.C. Klapp captured a 50-gallon still this morning in the Tar River section of the county and destroyed about 800 gallons of beer. Everything was in readiness to begin work.

Friday M.C. Klapp and E.N. Bragg found a small steamer hid out near Knap-of Reeds.

Thursday Officers Clapp and Bragg captured a steamer of about 75 gallons per day capacity, one 60-gallon still in the making, tools, a number of tubs and containers for whiskey, and destroyed over 1,000 gallons of beer near Olive Grove colored church. They also got nine bushels of meal and about one-half a sack of malt. The officers stated that the plant was not in operation, but they attributed the reason for this to the fact that there were services at the church.

Yesterday the same two officers captured a complete 60-gallon copper still and destroyed 600 gallons of beer near Providence.

Monday Officers Klapp and Bragg captured two stills, one steamer of about 200 gallons per day capacity and destroyed about 800 gallons of beer near Knap-of-Reeds. the officers stated from the appearance of things, the parties had just completed a run and had “mashed-back.” The other one was an old government still of about 60 gallons capacity, found hit out near Pocomoke.

From the amount of stills captured, it appears that if the officers had been on vacation, Granville county would have had an oversupply of “white lightning.”

From page 2 of the Durham Morning Herald, Sunday, June 29, 1924

Deputy’s last name spelled Clapp in headline and Clapp and Klapp in article.

Knap in the name of a location refers to the crest of a hill.

Hail Broke 40 Windows at New School, Killed Pig, June 29, 1924

Storm Damages Still Coming Into Durham

Belated reports reaching the city from the country districts tell of the damage wrought by the driving storm last Tuesday which has not been equaled in the past 10 years in this vicinity.

Reports from Lowe’s Grove state that over 40 window panes in the new school building were shattered by the storm, which contained hail in the southeastern sections of the county. A resident of the district said Saturday that hail stones were so large that a pig at the school farm was killed by the hail storms in the storm.

From page 2 of the Durham Morning Herald, Sunday, June 29, 1924

Leave Child Labor Laws to States, Say Cotton Manufacturers, June 29, 1924

Against Child Labor Proposal. . . Cotton Manufacturers Oppose the Federal Amendment

By Associated Press

Blowing Rock, N.C., June 28—E.C. Dwell, of Charlotte, was today elected president of the Cotton Manufacturers Association of North Carolina, and J.C. Evins of Spartanburg was elected president of the South Carolina association. S.F. Patterson of Roanoke Rapids was elected first vice-president of the North Carolina association and Hunter Marshall Jr. of Charlotte, secretary and treasurer. S.M. Beattle of Greenville was elected first vice-president of the South Carolina association. The executive committee will elect the secretary and treasurer.

Both associations endorsed the proposal for a branch of the Richmond federal reserve bank in the Carolinas.

The North Carolina association endorsed the plans for the enlargement of the textile department of state college. The association also endorsed restrictive child labor legislation by the states but went on record against the federal child labor amendment.

From the front page of the Durham Morning Herald, Sunday, June 29, 1924

Durham Morning Herald, Sunday, June 29, 1924

Posse Kills James Littleton, Who Was Accused of Shooting His Wife, June 29, 1924

Posse Shoots at Negro 17 Times; Finally Killed. . . Negro Shot and Severely Wounded His Wife; He Was Surrounded in the Woods by the Posse

Kinston, June 28—Surrounded in a woods and hemmed in within the small space of a negro home in the New Branch section of Onslow county, James Littleton, negro, who on June 20th shot and severely wounded his wife of one month, was shot at 17 times and finally killed by a posse of the sheriff of that county, according to word brought here yesterday morning. Littleton shot his wife at the plantation of Walter Tyndall in Jones cunty and has been a fugitive from justice ever since. It is alleged that the cause of the shooting was because his wife had informed him that she didn’t love him any more.

In the shooting scrape that occurred Thursday morning when the negro was killed, a relative of Tolson Jarman, who is employed here in the store of H. Stadiem, was injured when a bullet struck his knee cap. No other members of the posse were shot. stories as to the exact place where the shooting took place vary, some accounts stating that the negro took refuge behind a tree. The negro was a native of South Carolina. His wife, brought here after the shooting on June 20th, was thought to be dangerously wounded, but she is getting along nicely now, it is reported.

From the front page of the Goldsboro News, Sunday, June 29, 1924

Governor Morrison Speaks Before Convention on Klan, June 29, 1924

Governor Morrison Speaks Before the Convention on Klan. . . Governor Morrison’s Speech

Madison Square Garden, N.Y., June 29. (AP)—Governor Morrison, speaking before the convention on the Ku Klux Klan question, stated:

“Are we without trial or evidence in a political convention to try, condemn and execute more than a million men, who are professed followers of the Lord? What do we mean by religious liberty? We mean, there shall be no legal test for the office. There shall be no discrimination of any man on account of his religion. But has any party ever placed itself to prevent foolish religious intolerance or bigotry? We cannot do it.

“I love many Jews, and I love many Catholics, and I have appointed both to office and laugh at the Ku Klux Klan since becoming governor of North Carolina. these men who can’t get into this order unless they profess to be Christians, have organized this association in which they won’t let a Catholic or Jew come. How can we help it? If anybody wants to be so foolish, and isolate themselves, can we prevent it by the action of a convention? It is a case for keepers of the protestant cause in the United States. It is not a matter for government action until they violate the law, and then the police power should act with the swiftness of lightning and the determination of a just God.

“My American brothers, let us deal with this matter in a high, just and wise way as becomes, not the followers of political standards, but the followers of the standards of Thomas Jefferson, and above all of the Lord Jesus Christ.

“We believe that when the great Democratic party speaks to the American people in the major resolution, all the people of this county will be in accord with the constitution.

“It will kill the Ku Klux Klan if we adopt it, and the suggestions of a majority will make a half million K.K.K. members in the next 10 days is my judgment.

Governor Morrison finished by launching a ?? for Senator Walsh. “I would like to see this great Catholic make a candidate for President or Vice President of the United States,” said the governor.“

From the front page of the Goldsboro News, Sunday, June 29, 1924

Klan Plank Defeated; Platform Submitted at Democratic Convention, June 29, 1924

Klan Plank Is Defeated at the Convention Early This Morning. . . Resolutions Committee Submits Its Platform to Democratic Convention. . . In Beginning the Committee Pays Profound Homage to the Memory of Woodrow Wilson. Text in Full Was Read at Convention Yesterday with Exception of Klan and League of Nations Issues

New York, June 28. (AP)—The text of the platform submitted to the Democratic National Convention by its resolutions committee, follows:

[To read the rest of this article, see newspapers.digitalnc.org/lccn/sn93064755/1924-06-29/ed-1/seq-1/]

From the front page of the Goldsboro News, Sunday, June 29, 1924

Massive Tornado in Ohio Kills 300 and 1,500 Injured, June 29, 1924

Hundreds Reported Dead in Storm-Swept Section. . . Storm Sweeps Middle Western States; More than 300 Dead. . . State Theater at Loraine Collapsed Killing Over 200 People; Probably 1,500 People Dead [Injured] in Total Area

Cleveland, Ohio, June 28—Three hundred are dead and at least 1,500 are injured in Loraine alone as the result of today’s tornado according to reports reaching Col. D.H. Pond, director of the Red Cross civilian relief.

Col. Pond announced he had arranged for tents for 1,000 people to be shipped from Camp Perry.

The storm carried telephone and telegraph wires down, isolating Sanduskie, Loraine, and other points in the northern part of the state, and making confirmation of reports impossible early this morning.

A streak in South Loraine also is reported to undetermined, from Sanduskie the report that car-ferry had blown over. Inter-urban service between here and Loraine, Sanduskie and interior points is at a standstill.

The first report received here from staff correspondent of the Plain Dealer, who motored back to the first available telephone east of Loraine, were to the effect that 200 were killed in the State Theater collapse at Loraine, and that more than 40 others are dead in other parts of the city.

Reports from various other sources place the dead as high as 500. Eighty dead having been taken from the State Theater in Loraine. The chief of police of Elryie, reported at 9:30 tonight.

Estimates of 300 dead and 1,500 injured are not exaggerated. The entire fire and police department and ambulance equipment has been sent to Loraine.

The only way to reach Loraine form Cleveland is through Elyrie, and the roads are jammed with refugees headed away from Loraine, and relief parties who are on their way there.

About 50 members of the 112th Engineer Corps of Ohio National Guards were rushed to Loraine in taxicabs on the receipt of Gov. Donohey orders. They were in charge of Col. Ralph R. White.

A Nickel Plate train is ready to take the remainder as soon as they have been mobilized.

-=-

Chicago, June 28—A terrific hurricane late tonight struck along the south shore of Lake Erie, devastating several towns and cities, and taking a toll of 350 lives, buildings, bridges, and trees were leveled, and probably 2,000 persons were injured in the brief but disastrous storm.

The wind swept a swath nearly 50 miles wide from Sanduskie at a point between Loraine and Cleveland.

The most extensive damage so far reported was at Loraine, where rows of buildings were blown down, and a theater was partly caved in on a Saturday afternoon audience, and the storm descended almost without warning, overturning automobiles, unroofing houses, and swept by so rapidly that beds, and many other articles of furniture were left untouched. The property damage will amount to many millions of dollars, and reports have not come from other regions.

-=-

Cleveland, June 28—The chief of police at Elyrie, nine miles from Loraine, said that the last reports that at 11 p.m. estimate the dead at 200 with hundreds injured. A number of the injured were brought to Elyrie late tonight, the chief said.

Elyrie escaped the tornado entirely.

No telephone or telegraph with either Loraine or Sanduskie was available from Elyrie.

-=-

Chicago, June 28—Railroad wire connection with Loraine, Sanduskie and other Ohio points between Cleveland and Toledo were practically eliminated tonight as a result of the storm.

The Baltimore and Ohio reported that it had a wire to Sanduskie for a few minutes late in the day.

The New York Central said all its wire were down between Toledo and Cleveland, while the Nickel Plate said its wire were out of commission in the storm area.

Five persons were killed in Sanduskie, according to a message sepirted(?) received at the telegraph office of the New York Central from their operator in Sanduskie station.

From the front page of the Goldsboro News, Sunday, June 29, 1924

Goldsboro News, Sunday, June 29, 1924

Friday, June 28, 2024

J.H. Honeycutt, 65, Believed Murdered, June 28, 1924

Farmer at Goldsboro Believed Murdered

Goldsboro, June 26--The body of J.H. Honeycutt, 65-year-old farmer, who disappeared from his home early Saturday morning, was discovered late yesterday afternoon by officers who have been conducting an untiring search. The body had apparently been dragged from some distance and hidden in the underbrush along the river bank near Toler’s Bridge, six miles from the city. He had been shot several times in the head and his gun was found lying beside him. Sheriff Grant placed a guard over the place during the night so that nothing might be disturbed.

A negro named Tyner supposed to be the colored man Honeycutt when to meet, is now in the county jail under suspicion.

From the front page of the Concord Daily Tribune, Saturday, June 28, 1924

Bible Salesman Assaults Zeb Long for Not Buying New Bible, June 27, 1924

Book Agent Attacks Solicitor Zeb Long. . . Courthouse Lawn at Statesville Scene of Personal Encounter Thursday Afternoon

Statesville, June 27—Zeb V. Long, solicitor of the 15th judicial district and former state senator from Iredell County, was assaulted yesterday, in front of his office on the courthouse lawn, by D.D. Dickson, sales manager of the System Bible Company of Chicago.

Dickson, who is in Statesville selling his books, called at Solicitor Long’s office the day before and was given a patient and interested hearing, Mr. Long telling the agent that if he would call later he would given him an answer as to whether he would buy the work. Yesterday morning the agent came into the solicitor’s office and was told by Mr. Long that he had considered the proposition, but that it did not suit him to buy. The agent was insistent, and after he was given a second refusal, told Mr. Long that the success of his business was not dependent on the sale and, after making other remarks which Mr. Long considered, unbecoming, the solicitor ordered the agent to leave his office.

Later in the day, Mr. Long started to the post office and as he was going out through the courthouse lawn, Dickson called to him:

“I think you are due me an apology.”

“No,” said Mr. Long. “I’m sure I don’t owe you an apology.”

A second demand for an apology was refused and Dickson struck the solicitor, who met him blow for blow in a fist encounter which lasted for a few minutes until they were separated.

In a hearing yesterday before Magistrate W.C. Moore, Dickson submitted to a simple assault and was fined $5 and the costs. Solicitor Long pleaded self-defense. Dickson gave Dallas, Texas, as his home.

From the front page of the Concord Daily Tribune, Saturday, June 28, 1924

Contest Suggests Calling Reckless Drivers "Motormorons", June 28, 1924

New Words to Describe Reckless Auto Driver. . . “Motormoron,” “Killped” and “Roadhogism” Win Prizes for Coiners

New York, June 28—Hereafter, when they are placing you in a rut across your middle, on a stretcher, and the jolly laughter of the motorist who has just run you down is ringing in your ears, it will be a sign of bad breeding to say “Darn it” to express your emotions.

“This is sheer roadhogism,” you can say, “and that fellow there is nothing less than a motormoron. It is killpeds of his ilk that make the highways of America a menace to life and limb.”

Three nice new words to write in the back of your family dictionary, along with “scofflaw.” They are prize-winning words in a competition held by the Insurance Press, announced in the current number. Bernard Holzer of Richmond, S.C., invented “motormoron.” “Killped” is a suggestion of a 14-year-old boy, Stanley A. Frazier of Gouverneur, N.Y. “Roadhogism,” which is, after all, only about one half of 1 per cent new, comes from J.C. Sellers of Jacksonville, Fla.

From the front page of the Concord Daily Tribune, Saturday, June 28, 1924

Salisbury Bank & Trust Merging with Wachovia, June 28, 1924

Two Salisbury Banks Said to be Merged. . . Stockholders of the Salisbury Bank and Trust Company Signing Over Stock to Wachovia

Salisbury, June 27—The Salisbury Bank and Trust Company, one of the city’s largest banking institutions, is to be merged with the Wachovia Bank and Trust Company, which has a branch bank here, it was learned tonight when stockholders of the Salisbury Bank and Trust Company admitted they were signing over their stock to the Wachovia bank.

Formal statements were not made by officials of either bank. W.E. McWhirter, cashier of the Salisbury Bank and Trust Company, stated tonight that he would issue a statement Saturday.

From the front page of the Concord Daily Tribune, Saturday, June 28, 1924

Klan Issue May Be Fought Out on Floor of Convention, June 28, 1924

Seems Certain Now That Klan Issue Will Be Fought Out on the Floor of the Convention

. . . .

No Rift in Cloud

By the Associated Press

New York, June 28—The cloud of the Ku Klux Klan hung so heavily over the Democratic National Convention today that the platform committee after an all-night session, was unable to see a rift of light.

In a last effort to prevent an open rupture on the floor of the convention, the committee authorized Wm. Jennings Bryan to select as many members as he might deem necessary to enlist the aid of party leaders and the various candidates for the Presidential nomination, to remove what was regarded as a serious threat of a split in the party.

Moreover, the members of the committee under instructions from their deliberations to support a plank specifically naming the Klan, volunteered to confer with their colleagues and urge that there be a reconsideration of the question.

From midnight until dawn, the Klan issue was a subject of intense debate.

Before seeking rest, the committee directed Chairman Cummings to notify the convention that the committee had been unable to complete its work and to ask the convention to recess until 3 o’clock.

. . . .

From the front page of the Concord Daily Tribune, Saturday, June 28, 1924

Concord Daily Tribune, Saturday, June 28, 1924

Madison Planning Big 4th of July Celebration, June 28, 1924

Madison Will Have Big Celebration July 4th

The American Legion Post of Madison is preparing for a big time on July Fourth. The James Hudnall Post of this city has been invited to join with the Madison Post and have accepted the invitation.

Judging from the Madison Messenger and the way the paper is supporting the committee in charge of the celebration, it will be a real community affair. Madison has evidently been ransacking her bank vaults and found a lot of gold, which she is now offering as prizes for all manner of stunts billed for the occasion. The business men of the town are solidly behind the affair and the word goes out to the people of the county to come and share in the fun.

From the front page of the Tri-City Daily Gazette, Leaksville, June 28, 1924

Local Lodge of Ku Klux Klan Formed June 27, 1924

Ku Klux Klan Lodge Formed Here Last Night

It is said that a local lodge of the Ku Klux Klan was organized last night at Dunn’s Hall on the Boulevard, with about 40 members.

The matter was the subject of much discussion on the streets today. It is known that a meeting was held last night and the night before, and as near as it could be learned, the meeting was called for that purpose.

The membership, it was said, was made up from men from the three towns.

About a year ago there was some talk of klan here, but it was understood that no steps were taken to organize a lodge until recently.

From the front page of the Tri-City Daily Gazette, Leaksville, N.C., June 28, 1924

C.S. Wilson Receives Annapolis Appointment, June 28, 1924

North Carolina Boy Goes Annapolis Naval Academy

College Park, Ga., June 27th—A North Carolina boy, Calvert Statham Wilson of Southern Pines, N.C., who has just been graduated from Georgia Military Academy, has received an appointment to the Naval Academy at Annapolis, his appointment coming from Congressman W.C. Hamner of North Carolina.

Wilson was graduated with honor, being one of the 13 men to win the coveted Gold Eagle, given for excellence in deportment and in class-room work. He was athletic editor of the G.M.A. magazine, “The Gamilaced,” winner of the medal for the best kept room, member of the band, winner of second honors in the Senior Class, and was graduated as second lieutenant. He will enter the Naval Academy in July.

From the front page of the Tri-City Daily Gazette, June 28, 1924

C.R. Williams, 78, Has Died, June 28, 1924

Death of Mr. C.R. Williams

Mr. C.R. Williams, a highly respected citizen living near Leaksville, died at a hospital in Danville this morning. Mr. Williams was 78 years of age. He had been in the hospital for a month.

Surviving are Mrs. Williams and seven children, Mrs. S.S. Wilson, John Williams of Lontrose, Colo., C.R. Williams of Reidsville, William Williams, Alex Williams, Mrs. C.N. Wilson, Mrs. William Duncan.

The funeral service will be conducted at the home Sunday afternoon at 3 o’clock.

From the front page of the Tri-City Daily Gazette, Leaksville, June 28, 1924

Louis Thompson, 70, Beats Wife to Death, Then Kills Self, June 27, 1924

Beats Wife Fatally, Then Takes Own Life

By Associated Press

Spartanburg, S.C., June 27—After fatally beating his wife with a shot gun, Louis Thompson, 70 years old, a prosperous farmer of near Switzer, cut his own throat with a pocket knife and then hanged himself.

From the front page of the Tri-City Daily Gazette, Leaksville, June 28, 1924

Klan Issue Big Obstacle in Way of Party Platform, June 28, 1924

Klan Issue Big Obstacle In Way of Party Platform

By Associated Press

Madison Square Garden, New York, June 28—Responding to appeals of party leaders to give more time for the platform committee to work on the Ku Klux Klan plank, the Democratic National Convention, after a brief morning session, recessed until 8 o’clock this afternoon, day light saving time, seemingly hopelessly divided on the issue of whether the Klan is to be named specifically and surrounded by war clouds loaded with threats of a party split.

Convention managers sent Homer Cummings, chairman of the platform committee, to bat to explain to the convention why the platform was being delayed, and to plead for more time. Tired and worn by continuous loss of sleep since Tuesday, Cummings gave as dramatic a recital as ever has been heard in a National Convention, explaining the deliberations of the committee and its inability to reach an agreement. He told amid dramatic silence how after an all-night session, the committeemen had gathered around their table in the breaking dawn of day, and recited in unison the Lord’s Prayer, after which Williams Jennings Bryan had raised his voice and spoken a prayer for divine guidance.

From the front page of the Tri-City Daily Gazette, Leaksville, June 28, 1924

Tri-City Daily Gazette, Leaksville, N.C., Saturday, June 28, 1924

What a Modern Kitchen Looked Like in 1920s

Thursday, June 27, 2024

4th of July Plans in Franklin, N.C., June 27, 1924

Plan Good Time on July Fourth. . . Committee Has Arranged a Fine Program for Celebration Next Friday—Large Crowd Expected

Arrangements are being rapidly completed for one of the biggest Fourth of July celebrations ever held here, which will be staged next Friday. Many attractive events have been arranged, and a nice list of prizes will be given to those taking part in the various events.

The full program arrange for the day is as follows:

9:30 A.M.—Big Street Parade. Prize for best float, $10 in gold. Second price, $5 in gold.

11 A.M.—Climbing greased pole. Prizes will be placed at top of pole, and if you can climb to them, they are yours.

1 P.M.—Catching greased pig.

3 P.M.—Minstrel Show at the Court House.

5 P.M.—Races:

Sack race—First Prize, baseball bat; second prize, baseball.

Three-legged race—First prize, baseball glove; second prize, baseball.

Hundred-yard dash, 16 years or over—Prize, fishing tackle.

Hundred-yard dash, under 16 years—Prize, baseball and bat.

Fat man’s race—Prize, $2.50 in gold.

Girls’ sack race—Prize, box of candy.

Tug of War—Winning side gets treat at drug store.

8 P.M.—Oxford Orphanage Singing Class at Court House.

Come early and stay late, and enjoy every minute of the day. A large crowd is expected, and the business men of the town will be amply prepared to care for all demands for plenty of good eats, ice cold drinks, and places where you may rest and keep cool. We will expect you to be here.

From the front page of the Franklin Press, Macon County, N.C., Friday, June 27, 1924

Get a Phone and Save Money, June 27, 1924

Telephones

No one doubts the value and convenience of a telephone to the farmer. Poor serv ice and almost prohibitive rates makes many farmers do without them.

The farmers of Clay County, North Carolina, own their lines and phones and pay 25 cents per month for switchboard connections.

Doing the next few weeks County Agent Arrendale plans to assist in organizing a dozen or more lines in Macon County. If interested in an up-to-date rural telephone system do not fail to discuss the question with your neighbors and co-operate with County Agent Arrendale.

From page 2 of the Franklin Press, Macon County, N.C., Friday, June 27, 1924

Sign Up for Farmers' Tour in August, June 27, 1924

Farmers’ Tour

The week of August 11th-16th is the time set for the farmers of Macon County to make a trip to East Tennessee and some of the counties of Western North Carolina.

The points on the prepared route are as follows: Canning plant at Newport, Tenn.; poultry fattening plant at Morrison, Tenn.; creamery and poultry fattening plant at Bristol, Va.; kraut factory and cabbage and potato fields in Watauga County, N.C., creamery and soy bean harvesting machines at Lenoir, N.C.; dairy, creamery, and poultry fattening plant at Hickory, N.C.; apple orchards and cheese factory at Haywood County.

The expense of the trip should not be much, since the nights will be spent in camps. Those wishing to make the trip should see County Agent Arrendale at once so that plans can be made.

From page 2 of the Franklin Press, Macon County, N.C., Friday, June 27, 1924

Informative Farmers' Picnics Being Planned, June 27, 1924

Farmers’ Picnics

Many have pleasant recollections of Picnic Week last year.

Our own Jimmie Gray, assistant director of farm demonstration work; J.A. Arey, dairy specialist; and Allen G. Oliver, poultry specialist, have agreed to spend the week of August 4th to 9th holding meetings in Macon County. It will not be possible for these men to go to every community in the county but they can hold meetings in six communities.

County Agent Arrendale does not want to go to the same places this year with the same men. He wants to know which communities would want a meeting. A good picnic ground with plenty of shade and good water is all that is necessary. Get together and let him know what you have.

From page 2 of the Franklin Press, Macon County, N.C., Friday, June 27, 1924

Ellijay Items in The Franklin Press, June 27, 1924

Ellijay Items

Mrs. Eva Ashear and Misses Clyde and Kate Henry came up from Franklin Tuesday to see their grandmother, Mrs. E.C. Henry, who is very sick. Dr. Angel was a the dear old lady’s bedside Tuesday afternoon, and she was reported to be considerably improved Wednesday morning.

Mr. and Mrs. Joe Palmer of Franklin visited friends in this section for a while Tuesday afternoon.

Mrs. Kay Hulme of Atlanta and some members of her family are visiting Mrs. Hulme’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. T.P. Moses. Mr. Montgomery Mincy has gone to visit old friends in the neighborhood of Otto.

Mr. John Buchanan has purchased a saw mill of Mr. John Dills. He plans to have it running at a site on the head of the creek in a week or two.

Mr. Chas. Moore has sold his runabout truck.

Mr. Walker Grantham and family, of Florida, are visiting friends in this neighborhood.

The sick people at Mr. Jess Worley’s home were fast improving when the correspondent heard last.

Mr. Riley M. Peek has returned to his position in New York City.

From page 2 of the Franklin Press, Macon County, N.C., Friday, June 27, 1924

Cashiers News in The Franklin Press, Friday, June 27, 1924

Cashiers News

We are having some fine weather at this writing.

There was a large crowd at Whiteside Sunday. Among those going were Mr. Thad Cloer and family, Mr. Ralph McCall, Mr. Roy McCall and family, Messrs. L. Dillard and Robert McCall. They report a fine trip.

Mr. and Mrs. Grady Watts left here Sunday for Franklin, to spend a few days.

We are glad to hear that Mrs. Hampton Pell has returned to Cashiers, after being gone for three months on account of an operation.

Mrs. R. Lee Rogers was visiting home folks Sunday.

Mr. and Mrs. Tom Dillard and Messrs. Pearl Johnson and Leo Curtis made a trip to Cashiers Sunday.

From page 2 of the Franklin Press, Macon County, N.C., Friday, June 27, 1924

News from Upper Cartoogechaye, June 27, 1924

Upper Cartoogechaye News

We are having some pretty weather at this writing, and the farmers are making good use of it.

Mrs. Van Frazier of Carson Branch is spending a few days here with relatives and friends.

Mrs. Manson Stiles of Lawrenceville, Ga., is spending a few days with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Sweatman.

Mrs. John Gribble of Franklin is visiting her mother here, Mrs. J.B. Anderson.

Mr. Wymer Love and two daughters, of Poplar Cove, were visiting in this section Saturday and Sunday.

Miss Rebia Huscusson of Poplar Cove spent Sunday with Miss Annie Anderson.

We are having fine singings at the Cartoogechaye Baptist Church every Saturday night and Sunday night. Everybody invited. We had some visitors at the singing Sunday night from Nantahala. We hope they will come again.

Mr. and Mrs. Ed Ramey of Buck Creek passed through this section Monday on their way to Lawrenceville, Ga.

Mr. Jason Ledford of Prentiss, N.C., was a visitor in this section last week.

Mr. Frank Anderson has returned home after a stay at East La Porte.

Mr. Fred L. Nichols of Lawrenceville, Ga., passed through this section Monday.

We are sorry to report that Mrs. Hez Dills is on the sick list. Hope she will be out again soon.

Miss Annie Mae Cloer of Nantahala was visiting her sister, Mrs. Hez Dills, a few days ago.

Everybody come to Sunday School next Sunday morning at 10 o’clock at the Cartoogechaye Baptist Church.

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Upper Cartoogechaye News

We are having some very hot weather at this writing.

Mrs. Manson Stiles of Laurenceville, Ga., is spending a few days here with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Sweatman.

We were certainly sorry to hear of the death of Dr. Siler. He will be greatly missed here.

Miss Annie Mae Cloer of Natahala passed through this section Monday.

Miss Edna Dills is spending a few days with her brother, Mr. Lester Dills of Skeenah.

Miss Hallie Huscusson of Franklin was visiting in this section last Sunday.

Mr. Joe Sweatman left Monday for Cashiers, N.C., where he expects to work for a while.

From page 2 of the Franklin Press, Macon County, N.C., Friday, June 27, 1924

Battle Branch News in The Franklin Press, June 27, 1924

Battle Branch News

The farmers are suffering with heat these days, and we are needing rain.

Mrs. John Stanfield is real sick at this writing. We wish her a speedy recovery.

Mr. Sam Dalrymple was a visitor in this section Sunday.

We are glad to know that Mrs. Fannie Hopper is improving after an operation. We hope Mrs. Hopper will be able to come home in a few days.

Mr. and Mrs. C.L. Ledford were visiting on Allison Creek a few days the past week.

Mr. Ben McConnell has been very sick, but is improving.

The little infant of Mr. and Mrs. B. Hodgin is real low at this writing.

Mr. John R. Ledford was visiting on North Skeenah Sunday.

Mrs. C.T. Ledford was a business visitor on Cartoogechaye Monday.

Sorry to report that Mr. Fred Henderson had the misfortune to lose one of his work mules a few days ago.

Miss Edna Dills, from Cartoogechaye, has been visiting Mr. and Mrs. Lester Dills, of this place.

From page 2 of the Franklin Press, Macon County, N.C., Friday, June 27, 1924

Franklin Press, Macon County, Friday, June 27, 1924

Icing the Cake by Stevan Dohanos, 1945

Rockingham Paper Mill Up and Running, Recycles Old Paper, June 26, 1924

Paper Mill in Operation. . . Rockingham Paper Mill Now Running Full Blast. Capacity 6 Tons Daily. A Big and Unique Enterprise, and Model Plant. Mill Supplies Material for the Adjoining Cone and Tube Factory. Old Paper and Magazines Will Be Bought

The first roll of paper was turned from the huge steel cylinders of the Rockingham Paper Company’s model plant here last week, and this marks another epoch in the economic life of the community. This town now enjoys the distinction of being the manufacturing center of one of the only three cone factories in the entire South, and of one of the only three paper mills in North Carolina.

And it is a revelation, this fine new paper mill. It is an eye-opener, and few of our citizens have any idea that such a plant is in actual operation here. A visit to the plant (and all are welcome) will prove intensely interesting.

And besides being another manufacturing enterprise for the town, and an important feeder for the cone and tube mill, giving employment to a score of men, it provides a cash market for the disposal of old papers and magazines; and housewives scattered over the town and county can turn a good account many a penny from old papers and magazines that have accumulated around one’s home. The mill pays 75 cents per 100 pounds of old paper, etc., delivered at the mill.

A description of this new industry, with its kindred cone and tube mill, and the story of how it came to be located here, makes interesting reading.

History of Cone Mill

To begin with, the moving spirits in the Economy Cone and Tube Co. are W.H. and P.L. McCall, who is 14 years his brother’s junior, has been in the business only a few years. P.L. graduated from Clemson in 1926, and at once went to work in this Hartsville plant. Later he and his brother decided that they could build machinery, improved on the Hartsville outfit, and start up for themselves. So they went to Georgia and began the slow and tedious work of building a plant. For months they worked, their inventive minds collaborating and finally perfecting machinery that is generally conceded to be unexcelled for the service required. But they were handicapped in Geogia by the inability to get paper wherewith to make their cones and, too, Geogia was far removed from the center of their trade. So P.L. set out early in 1922 to find a town in North Carolina (which is the leading yarn manufacturing state) that would come up to their ideal for a site. McCall went to Spencer, Marion, Charlotte, Asheville, and a dozen other towns, but at none did he find his site. Passing through Rockingham on Saturday afternoon, he noticed the pond of water by the depot, and so on impulse he alighted, and on Sunday walked around the town, looking over the lay of the land. He came across a strip of ground just west of Great Falls mill, along side the Rockingham Railroad and at the head of Midway pond. Just here he quickly realized was the ideal site—rail transportation, plenty of water, close to town and in almost the center of the yarn district of the State. He left Rockingham Monday straight for Georgia, and from then on the plans of the two brothers centered around Rockingham. They came here, organized the Economy Cone & Tube Co., and P.L., at once set to work building a two-story structure 70x100 feet. The machinery was shipped from Georgia in May, 1922, and in early summer the plant was in operation, with W.H. McCall president; A.G. Corpening vice president; and P.L. McCall-secretary-treasurer.

The Paper Mill

From the very first the McCall brothers realized their own paper in order to economically run their cone mill. The could not hope to make money with paper shipped from Georgia, and so they set to work interesting local men in their enterprise. The Rockingham Paper Company was organized, capitalized at $75,000 (some stock in both companies is still for sale), and the stockholders elected H.C. Wall as president, W.H. McCall as vice president, and P.L. McCall as secretary-treasurer; and with J.P. Harbough in charge of the books for both companies.

This was in the fall of 1923. Work was at once started on erecting a building adjoining the cone and tube building, and $15,000 was expended in a structure 80x200, with basement and much of it concrete floor. Fifty thousand worth of paper mill machinery and other equipment was ordered; and the McCall brothers personally erected this complicated machinery. And in the erecting, they actually improved upon the machinery and the usual placement thereof.

In the meantime, their cone and tube plant has been steadily in operation—as steadily as was possible with raw paper having to be shipped from Georgia.

Two valued employees of the Cone mill are R.O. Bateman and L.A. King, who came with the McCall brothers from Georgia and who have been in this cone and tube line of work for many years. Bateman is in the cone and tube plant, while King keeps the machinery in order.

Finally last week the last screw was tightened, the last roll adjusted and the mill is ready to grind.

As it is grinding, this converting of old paper, magazines and books into a sheet hundreds of feet long and 16 ½ inches wide (it can be 80 inches wide) that the Post-Dispatch would particularly dwell upon.

First, in the front of the building are two huge round vats, in which is dumped the old paper, etc., all this is kept wet and churned about, thoroughly softening it and tearing it to bids. It is then dumped into huge bins in the basement beneath, and from there forced by pumping back upstairs to large basins where water is thrown upon it and it in turn pulverized still more. Screens then catch all refuse, and the refined pulp is carried to the paper machinery proper. Five mammoth machines constitute a “battery,” with a continuous blanket passing over and beneath the machines. Four large cylinders, with sieves, revolve in vats in which is the pulverized pulp, and the blanket, over 90 inches wide, passes over this revolving cylinder which in the revolving has picked up in the sieves the particle of wet pulp; this sticks to the blanket, and then, still sticking to the blanket, it passes from one machine to another, gaining thickness and strength until finally it gains sufficient strength to leave the blanket and proceed “on its own.” Then it goes to other steel cylinders in which is team and the drying process started, and in a few more feet emerges and automatically winds itself into large rolls, a completed product.

At present the mill is making a grade of paper 16 ½ inches wide, basis 140 pounds, since this is what is required in the adjoining cone and tube plant; but later the company intends manufacturing a wider paper and paper for commercial work, wrapping paper, etc.

Colored paper can be made simply by putting the desired dye in the big mashing vats.

One of the prime essentials for making this paper is water. The company has an abundance of that, and 600 gallons per minute is pumped into the vats and into the various machines. Part of the plant is run by electricity and part by steam, this latter being necessary in “drying out” the wet paper.

The mill will run night and day, stopping late Saturday afternoon and beginning at 6 AM Monday morning. About 10 men are employed on each of the two shifts, with a like number in the cone and tube mill.

. . . .

From the front page of the Rockingham Dispatch, June 26, 1924

County Ag. Agent Argues With Latin Professor, June 26, 1924

Unusual!

By W.H. Barton, County Agricultural Agent

Now come one “Dr. Hubert M. Poteat, Professor Latin at Wake Forest College,” and causes the mountain to bring forth a mouse: “I want to say with all possible emphasis that vocational education in the high schools is a tragic and criminal mistake,” says Dr. Poteat.

For God’s Sake!

Since when did it become a crime to teach children how to work? Since when has it been a crime to inspire youth with aspirations for the development of the great common things that God has placed at his door for the economic “healing of the nations?”

Since when has it become tragic for the State to attempt to thus open the eyes of the blind and unstop the ears of the deaf? Some of the prominent Latin writers did not regard such teachings as either a tragedy or a crime, and I dare say that the same writers would have rejoiced at the opportunity of having the farmers of their day taught vocational training in t their youth.

They advised the farmers of their day to sow and turn more clovers, vetch and lentils for the sake of the soils of a waning agriculture, but their advice was not adopted; else we should not have the record: “their lands were no longer productive.”

North Carolina has more poor land than people, and more people than she is feeding with home products.

The people of the United States owe a total debt of over $100 billion in notes, mortgages and bonds alone; and agriculture, the basis of all prosperity and progress, is waning as never before in the history of the country, as indicated in her farm mortgage, and other indebtedness.

In view of all this, is it “a tragic and criminal mistake” to attempt to relieve this situation by teaching that in our public schools that would tend to right this condition?

The Power to Think

I agree with Dr. Poteat that “the power to think and the power to aspire distinguish men from the beasts of the field,” BUT I submit that the “power to think and the power to aspire” may be just as thoroughly developed by studying plant roots, et. al., in a living, burning, up-to-date science like agriculture; as by studying Latin roots and dealing with the dead past.

What the youth of today needs is to be waked up to the wonderful possibilities buried in his father’s back yard and back-field—INSPIRATION, first, is what he needs; and that comes only thru INFORMATION concerning the miraculous possibilities lying all around him but hidden from his view.

Since when did it become “a tragic and criminal mistake” to attempt such a revolution among the steady yeomanry of America by giving vocational instruction in our public schools!

The day has passed for attempting to make only one kind of educational grist from all kinds of grain. It can’t be done, and shouldn’t be done if it were possible.

From the front page of the Rockingham Dispatch, June 26, 1924

Wednesday, June 26, 2024

Lightning Kills Cow, Two Calves in Pasture, June 26, 1924

Lightning Struck Cows

On Monday p.m. lightning struck a big pine tree in the pasture near the Highland Peach Farm and killed one fine cow and two calves that were standing under it. They were discovered Tuesday p.m. They belonged to C.C. Wilson and Bud McAulay.

From the front page of the Rockingham Dispatch, June 26, 1924

Deputy George Seawell Broke Up Stills in Beaver Dam, June 18th and 24th, 1924

Seawell Gets Stills Deputy George Seawell on June 18th broke up a blockade still about 200 yards from The Rocks, out in Beaver Dam; and on the 24th he broke up another still about two miles from Seven Springs, also in Beaver Dam. From the front page of the Rockingham Dispatch, June 26, 1924

Curb Market Will Be Open Wednesday, July 2, 1924

Curb Market. . . Next Wednesday, July 2nd

We have been requested by both producers and consumers to announce that the Rockingham Curb Market will be open next Wednesday, July 2nd. If satisfactory sales are made on that date, the market may be kept open on Wednesday as well as Saturdays for a while at least.

--Anna Lea Harris, W.H. Barton

From the front page of the Rockingham Dispatch, June 26, 1924

Colored School Teachers to Attend Six Week Summer School at Rockingham, June 26, 1924

Colored Summer School. . . Six Weeks Beginning July 14

The State will conduct a six-week’s County Summer School for the colored teachers of Richmond county beginning July 14th at Rockingham. The director of the summer school will be J.B. Prother, assisted by S.P. Ancrum for primary work and methods.

From the front page of the Rockingham Dispatch, June 26, 1924

Teacher Marries New York Attorney, June 26, 1924

O’Kelley-Williams

Friends locally will no doubt be surprised to learn of the marriage today in Wilson of Miss Theresa Williams and Mr. Charles O’Kelley. The bride taught in the Rockingham graded school these past two years. The groom is a native of Tennessee, but now a practicing attorney in New York.

From the front page of the Rockingham Dispatch, June 26, 1924

Clayton Brasington, Sudie Jenkins Wed in Newberry, S.C., June 26, 1924

Brasington-Jenkins

Mr. Clayton Brasington of Wadesboro and Miss Sudie Jenkins of Rockingham were married at Newberry, S.C., last Saturday. They are now in the western part of the State on their honeymoon, and will make their home in Wadesboro.

The bride is the very pretty daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J.W. Jenkins, and attended Converse College at Spartanburg. She has many friends here and elsewhere who will learn of her marriage with much interest.

Mr. and Mrs. John Walter Jenkins

Announce the marriage of their daughter

Sudie

to Mr. Clayton Brown Brasington

on Saturday, June 14th, 1924.

At home after July 1st, Wadesboro, N.C.

From page 7 of the Rockingham Dispatch, June 26, 1924

H.D. Steadman-Marie Covington Marriage, June 25, 1924

Steadman-Covington

Friends were agreeably surprised Wednesday to learn of the marriage Wednesday morning at 10 o’clock of Mr. H.D. Steadman and Miss Marie Covington, which occurred at the District parsonage with Presiding Elder J.H. Shore performing the ceremony. The couple left immediately in their car for a honeymoon trip to the mountains of Western Carolina.

The bride is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James A. Covington. She has been the stenographer and bookkeeper in the office of the Richmond Insurance & Realty Company, and by her unfailing sweetness of manner and executive ability, she has won many personal and business friends. The groom is a native of Inman, S.C., and for one year was principal in the city schools here. For the past several years he has been bookkeeper for Great Falls mill. The friends of both join in hearty congratulation, and are glad to know that they will continue to make their home in Rockingham.

Mr. and Mrs. James Alex. Covington

announce the marriage of their daughter

Marie

to

Mr. Horace Dean Steadman

On Wednesday, the 25th of June 1924

Rockingham, North Carolina

From page 7 of the Rockingham Dispatch, June 26, 1924

Three Infants, 16- and 23-Year-Old Women, Confederate Vet, 82, Have Died, June 26, 1924

Deaths

BONNIE LEE HINSON, 16

MISS LOUISE CHANDLER, 23

MINNIE V. HARRELL, 5 Days

NORA ELIZABETH DAWKINS, Infant

ADAM SIMPSON, 10 Months

LT. W.R. COVINGTON, 82

Bonnie Lee Hinson

Bonnie Lee Hinson, grandson of Wm. T. Hinson, died Wednesday night after but a few hours’ illness. He was 16 years, 2 months, and 16 days old. The interment was at Eastside cemetery here today.

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Harrell Infant

Minnie V., aged 5 days, died the 20th and the little body was interred at Northam the same day. She was infant of Mr. and Mrs. John Harrell, Roberdel No. 2.

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Dawkins Infant

Nora Elizabeth, born Feb. 13th, 1923, died the 22nd at Roberdel No. 2, and was buried the 23rd at Eastside cemetery here.

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Simpson Infant

Adam, 10-months-old infant of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. S. Simpson, died June 21st in Mark’s Creek township.

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Louise Chandler

Miss Louise Chandler died at the Hamlet hospital on Thursday night, June 19th. The interment was at the Seagrove graveyard near Wadesboro on Friday.

She was 23 years old and was injured in the Morgan mill in Scotland county Feb. 29th, and ever since then was in the hospital paralyzed from the waist down. She leaves a mother, two sisters and a brother.

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W.R. Covington

Mr. W.R. Covington died in the Charlotte Sanatorium Tuesday. He underwent an operating there June 15th, but his age and weakened condition were against him.

The remains were brought home Wednesday morning with the funeral from the Baptist church at Roberdel Wednesday afternoon, and interment at Bear Branch. Many and beautiful were the floral offerings, and the scores of relatives and friends evidenced the regard in which this fine old gentleman was held.

He was a brave Confederate soldier, having been a second lieutenant. He was 82 years, 7 months and 22 days old. The Post-Dispatch hopes to have a more detailed sketch of his life later.

From the front page of the Rockingham Dispatch, June 26, 1924

Rockingham Post-Dispatch, June 26, 1924

Doing Dishes at the Beach by Stevan Dohanos, 1952

Prohibition Agents Raid Home of Gordon Benton, June 1924

Home of Gordon Benton Raided—One of “Big Six”. . . 85 Gallons of Corn Liquor and 175 Empty Five-Gallon Cans—Benton Was in North Wilkesboro Last Week

The following by L.J. Hampton dated from Yadkinville, June 15th, appeared in last week’s Elkin Times:

Eighty-five gallons of corn liquor and 175 empty five-gallon cans, some of them with the odor or liquor upon them, were found in a little out-house adjoining the kitchen of Gordon Benton’s home near Dellaplane in Wilkes County Saturday by Prohibition Agents R.L. Lovelace, Randall and Kennedy.

The liquor and cans were confiscated by the prohibition officers. Benton’s wife first asked the officers not to search any too closely about the premises, but seeing their determination not to leave any stone unturned, she made some excuse or other and left. She was seen running through the woods nearby and that was the last glimpse the officers had of her.

Benton is known to prohibition officers as one of the “Big Six” in the liquor game. Federal agents direct from Washington here on a secret mission are said to have shadowed the Benton home at various times within the past several months. Officer Lovelace, the local enforcement officer on the job, has also been keeping a close watch on the premises. The raid and the quantity of liquor captured Saturday is a distinct feather in Lovelace’s cap.

Lovelace was “tipped off,” it was said, to the effect that Benton was at home and the officers watched the house for several hours before they swooped down upon it. The “tip” proved to be a mistake, but now with a warrant in their hands every deputy marshal in the state is on the watch for Benton.

Benton is said to have made what is commonly termed a “killing” in the illicit liquor traffic and is accounted one of the wealthiest men in the game. He is said to own two Lincoln cars and nine others altogether, all of them Buicks and Hudson speedsters except one Ford car. The Hudson speedster captured about three weeks ago with over 100 gallons in it, after a race along the Boone Trail, is said to have been the property of Benton. Sylvester Sparks, a negro, was captured with the car. A white man made his escape from the car before the officers could overtake it.

From the front page of the North Wilkesboro Hustler, Wednesday, June 25, 1924

Terrible Hail Storm in Iredell, Alexander Counties, June 1924

Terrible Hail Storm Passed Through Iredell

Crops were damaged [valued at] thousands of dollars in Iredell county June 14th by a hail storm, which started into Iredell at the Wilkes-Yadkin line that Saturday afternoon and increased in intensity until is passed out the southern border of Iredell. The width of the storm was two to five miles wide. Shell-like hail, some places two feet deep, fell, says the report.

Wheat was beaten down, gardens and fruit ruined. Cotton faired worst; six to eight inches high, [it was] stripped to the ground.

Crops on Mocksville road were reported ruined. Tenants were hit hardest.

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The same afternoon in Alexander county, a hail storm—or the same storm—passed through Little River township, the Taylorsville Times said, June 19th. “It was especially severe in the vicinity of Popular Spring church. The corn was stripped and the cotton and small grain crops badly damaged on some farms—the third destructive hail storm in the county in the last 10 days.”

From the front page of the North Wilkesboro Hustler, Wednesday, June 25, 1924

Tuesday, June 25, 2024

Prohibition Cases Before U.S. Commissioner J.W. Dula, June 25, 1924

Cases Before U.S. Commissioner J.W. Dula

One day last week Dick H. Waters, Deputy Sheriff Will Bauguss and Police J.V. Bauguss were arraigned before U.S. Commissioner J.W. Dula on the charge of interfering with a Prohibition officer in the performance of duty. The charge grew out of the arrest of Grant M. Harless of Ashe County in North Wilkesboro several days before. Harless gave bond for his appearance in court to answer to the charge of having had whiskey in his position. Mr. Price, assistant district attorney of Salisbury, was present at the hearing of Waters, Bauguss and Bauguss and asked that the bond of these men be fixed at 45,000 each. The bonds were given and a hearing set for July 18th. Prohibition Agent Harless was later arrested in West Jefferson on a charge of perjury preferred by D.H. Waters.

Commie Pruitte of Traphill township was tried Monday for illicit distilling and bound to court.

From the front page of the North Wilkesboro Hustler, Wednesday, June 25, 1924

Anna Belle Cardwell-Lane Atkinson Wedding June 24, 1924

Cardwell-Atkinson Marriage

Miss Anna Belle Cardwell, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Genio Cardwell, and Mr. Lane Atkinson of Elon and of this town since last year were united in marriage June 24th, Tuesday of this week, at the Methodist church. The bride has been a teacher since finishing going to school at Elon College and is an accomplished young woman, the bridegroom being a lumber inspector.

The ceremony was performed by the pastor in the presence of friends and relatives, the church being beautifully decorated.

From the front page of the North Wilkesboro Hustler, Wednesday, June 25, 1924

Miss Vannoy is Bride of Dr. E.C. Moore, Lenoir Veterinarian, June 25, 1924

Miss Ethel Vannoy Becomes Bride of Dr. E.C. Moore

Tuesday morning in the First Baptist church at 10 o’clock Miss ethel Vannoy, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Louis W. Vannoy of Wilbar, became the bride of Dr. E.C. Moore, veterinarian of Lenoir, who a few years ago was located here.

The wedding occurred immediately following that at the Methodist church, the ceremony being performed by Dr. Kyree from Lenoir, the pastor, Rev. W.L. Griggs, being absent from town.

The church was beautifully decorated with wild flowers. Those who attended were principally those who went to the Methodist church just prior.

Among those who attended from out-of-town were Mr. and Mrs. Alderfer Trivette, recently of Fayetteville.

From the front page of the North Wilkesboro Hustler, Wednesday, June 25, 1924.

The wedding immediately followed some event at the church, but the newspaper article never stated the event.

Edgar Storey to be Superintendent of Wilkesboro High School, Miss Eloise Starr 6th Grade Teacher, June 25, 1924

T. Edgar Storey Elected Superintendent of Wilkesboro High School

At a meeting of the Wilkesboro school board Monday T. Edgar Storey of Trinity, N.C., was elected superintendent of the Wilkesboro High school. Mr. Storey is a graduate of the University of North Carolina and a class mate of Mr. Horas Sisk of this place. He is highly recommended as a school superintendent, having had 10 years experience in this capacity. His early home was in Watauga county.

Miss Eloise Starr of Wilkesboro was elected teacher for the sixth grade.

From the front page of the North Wilkesboro Hustler, Wednesday, June 25, 1924

Miss Ida Phillips Died at Long's Sanatorium, June 25, 1924

Miss Ida Phillips, daughter of Mr. Hiram Phillips of Watauga county, died in Statesville last Thursday at Long’s Sanatorium, a tumor being the cause of her death.

From the front page of the North Wilkesboro Hustler, Wednesday, June 25, 1924

Attorney J. Frank Davis, Formerly of Wilkesboro, Died in Oklahoma June 18, 1924

Mr. J. Frank Davis, Father of Mrs. Frank Blair, Dies in Oklahoma

Attorney J. Frank Davis, formerly of Wilkesboro, father of Mrs. F.P. Blair of this place, died Wednesday, June 18th, and the funeral was held the following day. He died at his home in Muskogee, Oklahoma. Mr. Davis was a brother-in-law of Messrs. Clarence and B.S. Call of this place. Mr. Davis’ wife died July 24, 1923.

From the front page of the North Wilkesboro Hustler, Wednesday, June 25, 1924

Miss Starnes, 15, Is Still Missing, June 23, 1924

Thought Missing Girl Was in Greenville. . . Efforts Made to Locate Beulah May Starnes, Who Left Home Here Several Days Ago

the following from the Sunday issue of the Greenville, S.C., News, will be read with interest here:

“Reulah May Starnes, 15-year-old girl of Concord, N.C., mysteriously disappeared from her home there Friday and is believed to be in Greenville in company with another woman and two men, according to a letter from the girl’s mother, received yesterday by Chief J.E. Smith, of the local police department.

“She was enticed from her home by a Mrs. Bobbie Jones, 21, of Concord, Mrs. Starnes stated in the letter, the two young women joining two men in a nearby city and then coming to Greenville.

“Where Mrs. Starnes secured her information as to the whereabouts of her daughter is unknown, but in the letter she added that arrangements had been made to secure board and lodging for the two girls and two men in a boarding house just outside the city limits on State Highway No. 8.

“A search for the girls by police was unrewarded yesterday, but it was hoped, they said last night, that the four will be arrested. The men, if apprehended, will be held for North Carolina and federal authorities, as it is expected charges of violating the Man White Slave Act will be made against them.”

It was stated here today by Chief Talbirt of the concord police department that no trace of the missing girl has yet been found. Her father went to Greenville Sunday and made a search of the city with police officers, but his daughter was not located.

From page 2 of the Concord Daily Tribune, Tuesday, June 24, 1924

Beulah or Reulah? Talbirt?

Loretta Lawing, 16, Disappeared Sunday Night, June 22, 1924

Young Girl Is Sought by Police in Charlotte. . . Miss Loretta Lawing, 16, Last seen in Company of Merman [Herman?] Bennett, Winston

Charlotte, June 23—Charlotte police today were requested to aid in a search for Miss Loretta Lawing, 16-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J.T.A. Lawing, 210 North Long street, who disappeared Sunday night.

When last seen she was in an automobile with Herman Bennett, young Winston-Salem man presumably enroute to her home after spending Sunday afternoon with a friend.

Members of the family discount the theory that the couple eloped, saying that Miss Lawing had not met Bennett until Sunday afternoon and was not with him for any length of time then. However, they were at a total loss today to understand the disappearance of the girl. Police in other towns have been asked to keep a lookout for the young woman.

Miss Lawing, who has light auburn hair, bobbed, and hazel eyes, left home early Sunday afternoon to visit Miss Mozella Redfearn on North Brevard street, according to her parents. There she met Bennett and in company with Miss Redfearn, Miss Lawing started home when Bennett offered to take her. She accepted, and they left presumably for Miss Lawing’s home.

Bennett, it is said, is an employe of the state highway commission.

From the front page of the Concord Daily Tribune, Tuesday, June 24, 1924

North Wilkesboro Hustler, Wednesday, June 25, 1924

Deputy Sheriff Harris and Hodges Shut Down 260-Gallon Still, June 24, 1924

Big Still Found Near Washington

By the Associated Press

Washington, N.C., June 24—The second largest still found in the county during the past two years was captured by Deputy Sheriffs George Harris and J.J. Hodges this week near Haw Branch Church in Chocowinty, it has been made known at the office of the sheriff here. The still had a capacity of 260 gallons. The still was warm when it was found by the officers, it was said.

The plant was complete in every way, the officers stated, and contained about eight gallons of corn whiskey. At the same time the officers poured out about 800 gallons of beer, which they found at the still.

From the front page of the Concord Daily Tribune, Tuesday, June 24, 1924

Deputy Otis Apple Locates 60 Gallon Copper Still June 24, 1924

Find Still Near Greensboro

By the Associated Press

Greensboro, N.C., June 24—A 60-gallon copper still, complete in every detail for operation, was found this week on city property near Reedy Fork Creek by Deputy Otis Apple. The still was considered one of the best ever found in Guilford County. Officers say that its last running was probably made about two days before it was found.

Information obtained by the officers points out that it has been operated frequently and has been one of the main forces from which prohibition violators of Greensboro secured their product.

The still was brought to the city convict camp.

From the front page of the Concord Daily Tribune, Tuesday, June 24, 1924

Benjamin Brown, 20, Drowns in Creek, June 23, 1924

Benjamin Brown Drowns in Creek Near Tarboro. . . Attempted to Cross Creek Against Advice of Friends and Brothers; Tragic Accident Grief to Many Friends; Funeral This Afternoon

Mr. Benjamin Brown was drowned late yesterday afternoon in a creek near Pinetops, about one mile from the home of the young man. A number of friends and brothers had crossed the creek, and he attempted to cross again, against the advice of his brothers, being a poor swimmer.

His friends, not realizing he would make the attempt, did not realize until too late that he was not with them. He was drowned.

Mr. Brown was a young man of many fine qualities, entering his 21st year, and in the employ of Farmers Bank of Tarboro, having a very bright future before him. He was the eldest son f Mr. and Mrs. B.W. Brown, who live abut seven miles this side of Tarboro.

He is survived by his father, mother, three younger brothers and one sister, and large circle of friends who mourn their great loss.

Funeral services will be held this afternoon at 5 o’clock from the home, interment following in the family burying grounds near his home. Rev. Dan Iverson, pastor of the Presbyterian church of Tarboro, of which Mr. Brown was a faithful member, will conduct the services.

Mr. and Mrs. W.S. Brown and children and Mr. and Mrs. H.D. Brown of this city will attend the funeral services this afternoon.

From the Wilson Times, Tuesday, June 24, 1924

Lt. Russell Maughan Flies Across U.S. in Dawn to Dusk Trip, June 24, 1924

Monday, June 24, 2024

John McReady Avoids Death When Plane Crashes, June 24, 1924

Daring, Pluck and Skill

John McReady, who leaped from his machine when his engine went dead and thus saved his life, is a pretty good example of brains, daring and pluck.

When the folks saw his plane fall and burst into flames, they expected to find the charred bones of the valiant knight of the air who has performed almost impossible feats with his plane. Much to their amazement McReady walked into their midst, smiling and safe.

What will not the genius of man be able to accomplish eventually? From the editorial page of the Wilson Times, Tuesday, June 24, 1924

Police Want Drunken Men Who Killed Saddle Horse Sunday Night, June 24, 1924

Men Alleged to Have Been Drunk When Horse Was Killed Sunday Night

The brutal killing of a saddle horse late Sunday night on the Spray-Draper Road when three drunken men in a car ran into the horse, breaking both front legs. The rider escaped with slight injuries. The horse was the property of John Westley Haizlip, student at the military school. The young man was returned to Spray about 10 o’clock Sunday night near Mrs. Cox’ place, when the car struck the horse.

Chief Vernon is determined to find the parties and see that they are suitably punished. He is asking people to be on the lookout for a car that might show signs of blood stains as the horse was bleeding badly.

From the front page of the Tri-City Daily Gazette, Leaksville, N.C., Tuesday, June 24, 1924

Airplane Crosses U.S. in a Single Day, June 24, 1924

Lt. Russell Maughan Makes History in Conquest of Air

By the Associated Press

San Francisco, June 24—Lieutenant Russell Maughan wrote a new and spectacular chapter in the history of man’s conquest of the air yesterday when he spanned the North Carolina continent in less than a day. The hazardous and grueling flight was his third attempt. He left Mitchel Field, New York at 2:59 ½ eastern standard time, halted briefly at five refueling stations enroute across the mountains and plains, and arrived at Crissy field, San Franciscu, 9:47-15 o’clock Pacific time last night.

From the front page of the Tri-City Daily Gazette, Leaksville, N.C., Tuesday, June 24, 1924

Tryon Country Club Opens, June 24, 1924

Country Club Completes Pool, So Take a Swim

The Tryon Country Club has completed a standard concrete swimming pool 40 X 60 feet in size and with a depth of from 3 to 8 feet.

The water is supplied from the Pacolet and when Dog Days come a plunge in cool depth will undoubtedly prove to be the popular pass time of young and old alike.

The approaches will be sodded and the pool kept in condition at all times. Members of the club, their families and guests of members are invited to use it freely.

From the front page of the Polk County News, Tryon, N.C., June 24, 1924

Fire Occurs When Dodge and Buick Crash, June 24, 1924

Gas Tank Smashed, Sunday Crowds Watch the Blaze

Sunday afternoon a Dodge and Buick locked horns on Trade Street and as a result of the collision the Buick’s gas tank suffered a puncture while the Dodge lost the major portion of its wind shield.

In some mysterious manner the escaping gas became ignited and in a short time half of Tryon was watching the blaze.

While the cars were being moved from the highway, a traffic jam became imminent and only through the strenuous efforts of Chief Wilson was confusion averted.

A brake that wouldn’t hold or a car that wouldn’t steer or some such minor matter was the leading factor in the collision which resulted in no great damage to either participant and seemed to afford considerable amusement to the throng which quickly gathered.

From the front page of the Polk County News, Tryon, N.C., June 24, 1924

Land of the Sky Train Special Beginning June 29, 1924

Land of the Sky Special After June 29th

The Southern Railway and Atlantic Coast Line have established effective June 29, a through train between Jacksonville and Asheville, to be known as “The Land of the Sky Special.” This train will operate over the Atlantic Coast Line from Jacksonville to Savannah, and over the Southern from Savannah to Asheville.

From the front page of the Polk County News, Tryon, N.C., June 24, 1924

The photo is a cover of a 1904 brochure for a Land of the Sky Train.

Tryon Country Club Holding 4th of July Tournament, June 24, 1924

Golf Bugs Stage Fourth of July Tournament

The annual Fourth of July Tournament of the Tryon Country Club will be staged July 3-4-5.

Trophies will be awarded winners and runners up in all the events. A silver cup will be given for the low qualifying score.

In the ladies’ flight cups will be awarded low qualifying score, first flight and runner up.

Qualifications and finals to be 18 holes played under the rules of W.S.G.A.

Secretary Gerald Stone advises all members and visitors to bring their bathing suits as the new swimming pool will be open.

The Club will give a dance at Oak Hall on the evening of July 5th and an orchestra has been engaged.

From the front page of the Polk County News, Tryon, N.C., June 24, 1924

New Polk County Cotton Gin Opening in August, 1924

Modern Equipment Feature of New Columbus Gin Plant. . . Polk County Ginning Company’s Model Plant Will be Ready in August—Expected to Handle 2,000 Bales

One hundred progressive Polk County farmers have subscribed stock in the Polk County Ginning Company, and the officers, after careful consideration, have purchased the latest and most modern ginning equipment, so that all cotton handled by them will be clean and the seed kept pure and in perfect condition.

The motor driven Lummus Automatic Air Blast outfit is extensively used in sections of the South where pedigreed cotton is grown, and it has proven the most economical and effective equipment obtainable.

The Polk County Ginning Company at great expense has erected its gin and seed house in order to accommodate the cotton planters of the section and the patronage of every planter will be appreciated.

Many of the best known farmers in the county are financially interested in the company, and they have invested their money in the best obtainable equipment so that the cotton grown in this section may be handled in an up-to-date manner.

The concern expects to give good service, better ginning, and a fair and square deal to every customer who brings his cotton to Columbus this year.

The ginning company will buy cotton, and exchange cotton seed meal and hulls for seed and will act as receiving agent for the North Carolina Cotton Growers Association. They have made strong affiliations with reliable mills and will be in direct touch with heavy buyers by phone, thus inassuring the highest market prices for cotton ginned in Columbus. No drayage charges will be made on cotton seed purchased by the company.

Columbus is an ideal location for a ginning plant to accommodate Polk County planters. It is on the State Highway traversing the county north and south with good top soil roads communicating with the cotton producing territory.

Columbus has adequate banking facilities, a big factor to the grower who wishes to cash his checks promptly in order to settle with tenants, pay fertilizer notes, etc. The hotel accommodations are very good and several stores stock staple merchandise. The hard surfaced road to Tryon provides a means of quick communication with that prosperous city.

In the last analysis every resident of the county will be benefitted by the activities of the new corporation because when Polk County dollars stay at home to work from Polk county’s continued prosperity, Columbus, Mill Spring, Tryon every community in the county will be directly affected.

Let’s gin every bale of cotton grown in this section at the new Columbus plant owned and operated by dirt farmers who are individually and collectively interested in seeing Polk County grow and develop.

Let’s pull together to make Polk County great! From the front page of the Polk County News, Tryon, N.C., June 24, 1924

Polk County News, Tryon, N.C., June 24, 1924

News from Faith, N.C., June 24, 1924

Country Correspondence

Faith

Mr. S.P. Fraley has awarded a contract to Mr. John B. Earnhardt to make his residence a good deal larger and add another story to it. He has a crowd of carpenters at work and has just finished covering the new building and putting a nice brick front to the residence and trimmed it with granite, and we just found it out today. We can hardly keep up with the different improvements in and near faith.

W.M. Rogers has bought a fine new car.

John S. Watson gave us his old time Indian pipe for our collection. He is a fine clever man.

Mr. W.M. Sloop has an old time marriage certificate he says he is going to give us for our collection.

We have been invited to go to Grace Church above Salisbury June 29th, 1923, as a special big time is planned for that date.

Mr. J.A. Frick, the tailor Salisbury, did fine job for us.

Mike Mitchell, manager of the Salisbury Café, is one of the finest young men in Salisbury. while taking breakfast we met M.C.M. Smith, the speed cop of Salisbury, and Mr. H.O. Freeze, who also eat there.

We met two pretty girls, clerks in Eli Joseph’s store. They were Misses Margaret Wilkerson and Estella Hicks.

We met F.M. Shoaf, manager of the Lentz Grocery Co., and Miss Jessie Austin, a pretty girl clerk, and Elmer Rufty, a meat cutter, and B.E. Torrence.

We are having the hottest weather you ever saw.

S.C. Morgan of near Gold Hill brought me some homemade eczema save at Faith today.

We saw a pretty young lady at the Empire Drug Co. selling a lot of fine neck ties for gentlemen. She was from Atlanta, Ga.

Mr. Beck was out at Faith with a big load of Coca-Cola Friday. He is one of Salisbury’s finest young men.

J.T. Wyatt today received an order for a pair of millstones. A check came along with the order to pay for them.

The new warehouse foreman at the freight depot is a fine young man. He signed up our bills of lading all o.k. and said our goods would be shipped off today.

Mrs. R.R. Williams picked one bushel of beans from her garden June 14th.

T.T. Page, an experienced café man, is now working for Mr. Glover at Dutch Lunch No. 2.

We will have 150,000,000 people in the United States in 1950, says one of our correspondents, if the increase continues as at present.

Some one can get a chance now to lease that rich gold mine in Rowan county.

Here is what we have in Faith: five stores, one Baptist Church, one Reformed Church, one Lutheran Church, one large garage with electric equipment, one eating house, one furniture store, a number of granite quarries, two barber shops, a large number of happy families, several motor trucks, and two horse wagons hauling granite from the quarries to the railroad and loading it on cars.

In the Stanly News Herald of September 8th, 1922, page 2, the fourth column, you will see a fine article headed “Autumn in the Mountains.” It is one of the best pieces we have seen about the beautiful mountains. Some one wrote it who had a lot of good knowledge and knew how to write.

Mr. and Mrs. Jim Nance and wins motored up to faith to do some shopping.

Everybody here likes to see Mr. Barnhardt come to Faith every day because he brings our mail. Our letters have orders from all parts of the United States. Some letters have checks in them for work that has been shipped.

We visited Salisbury Ice Cream co., and they gave us a mess of that good ice cream. Here are the names of the men there: L.N. Lipe, J.C. Lipe, J.R. Fisker, W.M. Rudisell, G. Plyler, A.C. Harrington, W.M. Holshouser, J.E. Nance. They are all fine, clever young men.

--Venus

From page 8 of the Concord Daily Tribune, Tuesday, June 24, 1924

News from Georgeville, N.C., June 24, 1924

Country Correspondence

Georgeville

The rain which fell Sunday afternoon was very much needed. The heat was very intense for the past few weeks.

Miss Maye Shinn of Concord is spending some time here visiting relatives and friends.

Miss Ola Furr, who has been at the Charlotte hospital, where she submitted to an operation, has returned to her home here.

Mr. Edward Shinn of China Grove spent the week-end here with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J.C. Shinn.

Mr. L.E. Mabrey, who is traveling, spent the week-end here with home folks. Master James Shinn of Concord is visiting his grandfather, Mr. J.L. Shinn.

Miss Maye Shinn of Concord is visiting her aunt, Mrs. M.F. Barrier.

Miss Novella Shinn spent the week-end in Concord with her brother, Mr. Archie Shinn.

Spencer Lee, Erman Long, Alonzo Furr and Misses Gladys Long, Virgie Turner, Lona Turner spent several hours Sunday afternoon at the home of Mrs. J.M. Kluttz.

Mr. and Mrs. Joe Shelton and children of Greenville, S.C., are spending several days with relatives here.

Mrs. Lizzie Nance and child, of California, are visiting her father, Mr. T.J. Shinn.

Eastern Cabarrus and Stanly counties were visited by a heavy wind and tropical storm Saturday afternoon, damage being done ot buildings and livestock.

Mr. M.F. Teeter spent last Friday in Concord.

From page 8 of the Concord Daily Tribune, Tuesday, June 24, 1924

Concord Daily Tribune, Tuesday, June 24, 1924

Motor Magazne Illustration by Ruth Eastman, June 1921

Sunday, June 23, 2024

Austin Sparks, City Electrician, Killed While Working on High Voltage Wire, June 23, 1924

City Electrician at Shelby Electrocuted. . . Austin Sparks Killed While Working on High Voltage Wire

Shelby, June 19—Austin Sparks, 22 years old, son of William Sparks, and city electrician, was electrocuted this afternoon while working on a high voltage pole on one of the business streets of Shelby. Lois Lispcomb, another city employee, made a daring climb up the pole and with pliers cut loose the wires and belt holding the limp form of his pal.

Efforts at resuscitation by physicians hurriedly called were in vain. He gave a few gasping breaths after being removed from the pole, due, the physicians say, to artificial respiration as there was little life, if any, in the body when removed from the pole by Lipscomb. There were 2,300 volts in the wire he is thought to have come in contact with.

The transformer on which young Sparks was working was disconnected from the four high voltage wires above, but it is thought that in moving his body, his head touched one of the wires above while his “climbers” or feet were in contact with a “guy wire.”

He had been in the employ for four years of either the city electrical department or the local telephone company and was popular with his fellow workers.

He was a brother of John Sparks, outfielder on the Shelby baseball club, high school champions.

From page 2 of the Concord Times, Monday, June 23, 1924

Last name spelled Lispcomb on first reference and Lipscomb on second reference in newspaper article.

Joe Swindell Charged with Rape of 13-Year-Old Girl, June 23, 1923

Joe Swindell in Serious Trouble. . . Lodged in Jail Early Monday Morning Following Arrest Charged with Committing Revolting Capital Crime

Joe Swindell, about 25 years old, skillful driver of fast automobiles and winner of a number of amateur motor car races on the local race track, is in Pasquotank County jail charged with rape of a 13-year-old girl on a warrant issued by Solicitor W.L. Small and sworn out by Police Officer George Twiddy on the basis of information given Twiddy by L. Carl Blades, treasurer of the Foreman Blades Lumber Company.

Swindell was arrested Monday morning at 20 minutes past 1 o’clock as returning, he is quoted as saying, from Norfolk and Virginia Beach. He had started up west Main street. Chief of Police Gregory and Police Officer Twiddy of the local force were on the lookout at the First Citizens National Bank corner when Swindell’s Durant swung around the Bee Hive building, corner of Main and Poindexter streets, and headed west. Twiddy stepped in front of the automobile with his flashlight and ordered it to stop. As the car came to a standstill, Twiddy and the chief told Swindell to consider himself under arrest.

Thus came to its climax and conclusion a chase that had begun early Sunday afternoon and that had led to Norfolk, Virginia Beach and back again; a chase, however, which Swindell seemed to have been all unconscious of, as the First & citizens National Bank building, where he was arrested, is police headquarters.

Practically the entire Elizabeth City police force was on duty Sunday afternoon and Sunday night in an effort to apprehend Swindell. Sheriff Charles Reid, who was also armed with a warrant issued by Solicitor Small, and Deputy Sheriff Pritchard went to Norfolk and Virginia Beach. Police Officer Twiddy was stationed at South Mills, where he remained until 11:20, reaching Elizabeth City only about an hour ahead of Swindell, and the remainder of the force was on the lookout for Swindell here. Failing to find their man at Norfolk or Virginia Beach, Sheriff Reid sent his deputy to Suffolk, but called the latter home on learning by long distance telephone that Swindell had been apprehended here.

The fact that Swindell was arrested in the city is explained by the police on the ground that he had persuaded himself that the family of his victim would hush the matter up rather than face the publicity which a trial in the courts would involve.

Though the warrant was not sworn out until Sunday, the alleged crime is said to have occurred on the preceding Thursday. The alleged victim is now in a hospital, and though a preliminary hearing is set for Tuesday, it is not believed that at that time more can be done than to set a definite date when the prosecuting witness can appear in court against the defendant.

As clear a case of rape as has ever been tried in the courts will be developed against Swindell if current accounts of the affair are substantiated in the courts. Only 13 years old, Margaret is undeveloped even for her immature age, it is said. She had never been out with Swindell before, those close to the family say, and was trapped into an automobile ride with the deliberate plan on Swindell’s part to carry out the crime which is alleged to have been committed against her. Swindell, it is said, cultivated the friendship of school friends of his intended victim in order that he might have her lured on the trip that for her had such tragic ending.

Swindell, on the other hand, stoutly maintains his innocence of the charge against him and says he will be able to clear himself in the courts. He will be represented by strong legal counsel if he is successful in his efforts to secure Thomas J. Markham and Aydlett & Simpson to defend him. Pending the securing of counsel, however, he refused to see a reporter in his cell Monday afternoon.

Swindell is married but divorced, having made no attempt to contest an action which is wife brought against him on the ground of infidelity. He had never lived with his wife for any length of time and prior to her action for divorce she had him before the recorder’s court for abandonment and non-support.

It was a little less than a year ago that Joe Swindell’s name was mentioned in connection with an attempt at suicide on the part of an Elizabeth City French war bride.

From the front page of the Elizabeth City Daily Advance, Monday, June 23, 1924

R.L. Griggs of Harbinger Says Currituck County Blessed with Fertile Land, June 23, 1924

Needn’t Try Elsewhere If Can’t Live in Currituck

“Land that I have in potatoes would ordinarily yield 700 barrels. This year it looks as thugh I might get 1,200 barrels.

So said former Sheriff R.L. Griggs of Harbinger, Currituck County, Saturday while in the city by way of illustration of a statement that he had just made to the effect that never had Currituck seen such a yield of potatoes as is being dug this week.

“Give us labor and transportation and our section of Currituck would be one of the richest farm areas in the State.” Mr. Griggs went on to say, “With our fertile land bounded by the Albemarle Sound n one side and Currituck Sound on the other, the man who can’t make a living in lower Currituck even as it is needn’t try to do it anywhere else.”

From page 7 of the Elizabeth City Daily Advance, Monday, June 23, 1924

Ernest Midgett Charged with False Pretense in Buying Tires, June 23, 1924r

Young White Man Held on Charge of False Pretense

Ernest Midgett of this city was held for Superior Court under $200 bond on a charge of false pretense in recorder’s court Monday morning, on evidence of D.A. McCoy, garatge man, and J.M. Weeks to the effect that Midgett obtained a set of tires from the former belonging to the latter on the representation that he had paid Mr. Weeks for them.

James E. Wilson, colored, for riding a bicycle at night without proper lights was taxed witt he costs.

Enoch Williams, colored, for assault on one Roxie Hill, also colored, was fined $10 and costs.

From the front page of the Elizabeth City Daily Advance, Monday, June 23, 1924

Harvey Etheridge Killed When His Brother Ran Over Him, June 23, 1924

Killed by Auto Driven by Brother

Winston, June 23—Harvey D. Etheridge was killed here yesterday when an auto alleged to be driven by his brother, Jack D. Etheridge, ran over him and failed to stop. Later the car was wrecked and was found loaded with liquor while the occupants escaped.

From the front page of the Elizabeth City Daily Advance, Monday, June 23, 1924

Rev. Josiah Elliott, 77, Still in the Pulpit, June 23, 1924

Oldest Minister Keeps Constantly at His Work

Rev. Josiah Elliott of Hertford, oldest minister in the Chowan Baptist Association, preached two earnest and helpful sermons at Blackwell Memorial Church Sunday, and good crowds were present at both morning and evening services in spite of the extreme heat of the preceding week.

Mr. Elliott is 77 years of age, but he keeps constantly at work. He now has no pastorate but supplies wherever he is needed and does home mission work not only on Sundays but whenever and wherever the opportunity presents itself.

More sympathy and help for those who are struggling to turn from their evil ways, and a higher standard of living for church members were two matters strongly urged by this veteran minister Sunday.

While in the city he is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. C.J. Ward.

From the front page of the Elizabeth City Daily Advance, Monday, June 23, 1924

Hundreds Attend Ensign Marcus Erwin Jr.'s Funeral, June 22, 1924

Hundreds Attend Ensign’s Funeral

Asheville, June 23—With hundreds present the funeral service for Ensign Marcus Erwin Jr., who was killed in the explosion on the battleship Mississippi, were held here yesterday.

From the front page of the Elizabeth City Daily Advance, Monday, June 23, 1924

Temperature Hit 103 in the Shade; Fans Sold Out, June 23, 1924

Artificial Breezes Were at a Premium. . . Temperature Reached Highest Mark Here Saturday at 103 in Shade

Artificial breezes were at a premium in Elizabeth City Saturday when the heat wave reached its zenith here and every dealer in electric fans had sold out is entire stock.

More than 125 were sold during Friday and Saturday. D. Ray Kramer delivered 73 fans during these two days—driving to Norfolk and getting 29 extra fans to fill the stream of orders that flowed into his office Saturday. W.S. White & company sold something like 35 fans during Friday and Saturday, and P.W. Melick Company sold out their entire stock of fans.

When Norfolk registered a temperature of 98 and Wilmington a temperature of 101 Saturday afternoon, Elizabeth City’s temperature in the shade was 103.

Coming in the midst of the potato season, the heat wave proved to much for some of the men trucking the potatoes for long hours at the Norfolk Southern depot. Farmers had to rest their teams frequently in plowing the fields and a few lost their stock as a result of the heat wave.

From the front page of the Elizabeth City Daily Advance, Monday, June 23, 1924