B(>a wv) .4> X * w j. i * SKETCHES By J. C. R. liU!5 A?l) HIS PLEBS Senator Bob Reynolds, recently re-, turned from a tour of Soviet Russia and now in the mid3t of a mile-1 a-rainute speaking tour for repeal of the Eighteenth Amendment, sat at a table in a. local restaurant Tues-I day partaking of good old American ham and telling his friends how things look on t'other side of the globe. By his talk, the bystander could ea3ily assume that Buncombe's pride and joy cares not a little bit for the "land of whiskers." Pausing between bites, the Senator addressed ! his companions something like this:! "Boy3, I don't like Russia; I don'tlike Russian vittlea; I don't like the Russian language; I could never be a Communist; I don't want to be anything but just a plain, ordinary North Carolina Democrat; I'll swear to you! that 1 wouldn't trade your beautiful little county of Watauga for the en- j tire Soviet Union. I visited many Russian cities, conversed with high; officials, and mingled with common j people, and during that tour of many j hundreds of miles I failed to find one single unemployed worker, neither did j 1 find one hungry individual, and, fur-; thermore, not a drunk man did my eyes behold from the time I left Manhattan uutil I was again within the shadow of the Goddess of Liberty. Prosperity in a mis-managed, misgoverned country," smiled Bob, "and crime, poverty and economic chaos in our own perfectly-governed America." leaving me restaurant Senator | Keynoias unKea amis ?iui a pis nlng tori-driver and a grimy printer, and ambled along up Main Street- A couple oi homy-Hatch farmers followed close behind, and chuckled 'merrily as "their Bob" tola em of his adventures abroad; of hob-nobbing with dukes and priuces and barons and stuff; of j feasting on "gooey" conglomcrn- i uufi, at glittering bonnnct tables; of war-debts and recognition of Ked Russia and the "New Deal." jusi like a neighbor boy returned from the big city . v . and the folks who surrounded him were plentyglad to have him back. A deposed Democratic dictator, raw as a piece of beefsteak and mad aa the devil at everybody, leaned sullenly against a telephone pole as Senator Bob and his proletariat admirers made their way to a waiting cor. His brows were Arched and his mouth was drawn into a sarcastic smile. An innocent looker-on heard the disgruntled politician mumble a bellicose challenge to the beaming solon's congeniality. something like this: "Imagine a United States Senator walking up street with a bunch like that. nn,at .......l.1 if--,.,. -- o ? t-i-i. t? xvdiu i 4UHA- ui lmiwui miiia of such an outlandish performance? Why the blinkety-blank** blank nincompoop ought to lie deposed . . . he's destroying the dignity of the office!" But Bob Reynolds doesn't care a bit what the gentleman thinks, and the taxi-driver and the printer and the farmers go about their duties in an undisturbed manner . . . just as if the remarks had never been made . . . and thank the Good Lord every now and then that Senate or no Senate, honor or no honor, glory or no glory?Bob Tlcy nolds holds on to the "common touch" like grim death to a skeleton ! And everybody should remember that a man doesn't destroy himself, politically or otherwise, as long as he sticks to his friends! OAfig TT1F. POPK. WATSON! Just to prove that there's a nigger lurking in the "repeal woodpile," a brother editor down in the fiat country puts the following question right dab up to his readers: "Are the majority of people in North Carolina going to let James F'arley, wet Catholic postmaster general, dictate to them as to how they must vote on any question, especially a moral one? FARM NOTES Corn that was damaged by worms and drouth was cut for silage by C. A. Shaver of Stanly County and la now in perfect condition for feeding. Eastern Carolina cotton growers report the crop being practically picked out at this time. The growers are picking, ginning and selling as fast as the crop opens. Good yields of Korean lespedezs ore reported in Alexander County. Lee Roy Preslar says he secured 254 bales of hay from less than five acres. I . * ' WAI An! VOLl'ME XLV. NUMBER 17 rufeTewis says he thinks officer shot police chief [Boone Boy In Interview with Uniiir Paper. Tells stor> of Tragedy. Says He Shot li? Self-Defense and Shows Bullet Wound Received in Affair: at Blue Goose. "They Ought Not to Have Rushed Me." Soys Prisoner, < Rufe Lewis, held in Caldwell Coun-I ty jail on a charge of the fata! shoot- J ing cf Hill Hagaman, Boone police-! man. gave out his first comprehcn- \ oitc mtcivicw uuu lueaaav, wnen: Louis H. Wilson of the Lenoir News- j | Topic interviewed him in his cell in j the bastile of the neighboring- coun-; ty. Since Lewis failed to tell The' ! Democrat any details of what he re-1 membered to have happened, the principal portion of Mr. Wilson's story is published: He said he would enter a plea of "guilty in self-defense," and admitted that he "shot kim in the arm and shoulder," but said he thought that Farthing, a Watauga County deputy ] sheriff, shot him in the back." Chief Hagaman, who died Octo-! ber 10th from wounds allegedly in-1 flicted by Lewis* .32 automatic Colt,; was raiding the Blue Goose filling station in Boone for whiskey when he met his death. He was accompanied by Albert Farthing, a deputy. Young "Lewis was told that his | county citizens were saying that he j wasn't sorry for Hagaman's death.! "There's nothing to that," he said.j "I thought I shot in self-defense and! I am sorry he's dead." He admitted being drunk and having drank & pint and a half of whiskey during the late part of the day, and further that the filling station housed 25 pints of liquor belonging to him, "hut it was mostly for myself." Rule, immaculately dressed, calmfflr.nti.ntipd nn Pnn-o R> HODGES IS GIVEN i FEDERAL POSITION! J Second Frtrenagv Phun Comes to I Wataugn In Form of FieW Manager j for Federal Land Bank. Commission Arrived Thursday. Charles U. Hodges of Eocr.c, Route j 2, who for thirty ycar3 has taught alternately in the schools of the mountains and the "lowlands, ha; b?en appointed general field manager for the Salisoury branch of the Federal I^and Bank, and his commission arrived Thursday. Mr. Hodges has been working temporarily for three weeks and the lucrative position keeps him in the Piedmont section most of the time. The appointment is indefinite, and the work calls for the supervision of groups of from six to ten appraisers. Mr. Hodges received the second appointment tn Watauga County under the present administration, R. L. Clay of Boone hvaing secured a dopu. y collectorship some time ago. He is particularly adapted to his new work, is . a fine citizen and is receiving the congratulations of friends on his preferment. He has been active in Democratic activities throughout his adult life, and the appointment, which came through Congressman Doughton's office, is largely In appreciation for his fine party record. Abram Potter Passes At Tamarack Home Abram Potter, 85 years of age, died at his home at Tamarack on October ySrafl Funeral services were conducteu on the following Sunday and interment took place In the Maine graveyard. A largo crowd of friends and relatives were present to pay their last respects to their aged neighbor and friend. Mr. Potter wm bcm and reared in the Tamarack section and was well and favorably known throughout the county. He was a consistent church member, having joined the Baptist denomination during his youth. "Uncle Abe," as he was called by most everyone, was a good neighbor, and was never known to speak harm of his acquaintances. He was an apt Bible student, and perhaps read the Scriptures more often than anyone in his community. He was married to Mlas Selina T'nilllnn TX/illroa Pruntv In T 3VS and was the father of eleven children and a large number of grandchildren. Surviving are the following children: Mrs. General Maine and Johni nie Potter of Tamarack; Mrs. Enoch Potter of Meat Camp; Mrs. Martin i Potter of Jenkins, Ky.; Mrs. Omie i Martin of Lodl, Va.; Mrs. Jake Potter of Butler, Tenn.; Mrs. David Mart tin and Clarence Potter of Shouns . Tenn; Ira Potter of Ashland; Mrs > Monroe Ward, of Rominger, anc i Leonard Potter, of Morganton. Mrs Potter died nine years ago. a T .AU Kjrl independent Weekly Newsj BOONE. WATAUGA COTJ1 I Bridegroom 0 Meets Death Of Jealous I Don Wallace, resident of N;?rth | Fork Township who on last Satur- l i day took to himself a bride, Tues- ! day left a widow, when be expired j i, la an Kli/ab.t!tton hospital from I the effects of a bullet fired point J i blank into the abdomen, allegedily ] by Ferd Wilson, neighbor. 1 < The shooting which occurred on Sunday evening in the neighbor- < hood in which both --oang men lived, . > is believed by officers to have been | i a result of jealousies existing be- i tween the two on account of the young lady, who twenty-four hours ( previous the dead man had prom- ; j ised to love, honor and cherish. The j , tragedy took place, it Is said, near j the Tennessee line, and from re- ; ( ports The Democrat is able to gath er, no vvora vas spoken as a pre* j iude to the shooting. ; 1 WTY. PERRY DIES J THURSDAY; FOR 40 YEARS A TEACHER Prominent Cove Creek Citizen Sue- F cumbs to Brief Illness; Career Centered About Church Work and the Schoolroom. One of Founders of Large High School. Funeral Services Are Conducted Friday. William Y. Perry, 6.3 years of age, and one of the foremost citizens of' m the Cove Creek section, died at bisllii home last Thursday evening, after aa ai illness which had not appeared serious y< although he had missed going to his ai work as teacher in the Cove Creek a! High School for a few days. Reports m are that his condition was such that c$ no particular anxiety was felt, and tl that he bad talked to a neighbor over vi the telephone p few. minutes before death came. m Funeral services ware conducted n< from, f he Cave Creek Baptist Church in Fritoy afternoon by the pastor,. 01 X A. McKaughan, and interment was sc in the cemetery nearby. J< Surviving are the widow and fourirti children, Thelma, Maude, Don, Grady | pi and John, all of whom reside in the ai l Continued on Page 8) Rev. Armburst Si i Declared Agai A representative crowd, composed g of citizens from the different sections c of Watauga County, gathered at the tr courthouse Monday to hear an ad- bi dreas by Rev. J. H. Armburst, of A North Wilkes bo ro, and to subsequent- hi ly organize a citizens association for !ij tne teaching of law observance, ouch H as the one which the visiting minis- tl ter heads in the neighboring county. R Rev. Armburst was introduced to ir his audience by Dr. J. D. Rankin, ei dean of Appalachian College, and ira- ir mediately launched into the discus- h sion of the crime wave which is fi sweeping the nation and the import- n ance of the good citizens mailing a ci solid front against the violation of the laws of the land. He referred in the outset to the slaying of Police p Chief Hill Hagaman, and cited the t tragedy as sufficient incentive to Wa- v tauga citizens to organize themselves ( against the common enemy of law- v lessness. The speaker then went into c the organization which he helped to r found in Wilkes and asserted that j. the citizens' action came on the heels a of a horrible record of crime?thir- v. teen men had been murdered within v twelve months, and that while his v, mass meeting was being held a foul murder was committed. ^ Only one murder has occurred In s Wilkes since the formation of the orCongressman Doughton < Will Vote for Repeal Washington.?Declaring that he proposed to vote for repeal of the 18th amendment at the North Carolina election November 7th, Representative R. L. Doughton, who came to Washington Tuesday, said that he would issue a statement on the prohibition issue soon. "I will vote for repeal, but do not -want to be put j in the attitude of trying to influence ( anyone on the question. It should oe understood that this is not a ref erenaum on repeal, dui simpiy leavi tag the matter so that each State ( ) may decide what it wants to do on , . the liquor question." Mr. Doughton is busy attending ses- ; . sions of a subcommittee of the Ways : . and Means Committee of which he i 1 is chairman, preparing the revenue . bill tor consideration of Congress which meets In January. ' \ DE >aper?Established in the s'TY. NORTH CAROLINA. THURSO. if One Day i At Hand I lival In Love } W&Etece Is said to cutve con- i versing ;vith a man named Potter, when Wilson is alleged to have walked up, silent and deliberate, *t?d fired the fair?1 bullet into the ibdomen of deceased. The missile jawed through the liver and death j wsarjei two days afterwards. Officers from Boone searched the :ountryr?ide for the fugitive* but up until Wednesday noon, he had not taen apprehended and there were 10 clues as to his whereabouts. Wilson is about twenty-five years lid and the son of Roby WQmhl Both he and Wallace come from Watauga families and are well , cnown in the western part of the I ;ounly. No details as to the funeral of ihe dead man were available. ionasTlovill to f FEATURECOUNTY WIDE DRY RALLY; ormer Congressman and State Sen - J2 ator to Be Trinclpal Speakers as!( " Stage Final Ilotuid-up in ' County-wide Rally. Seven Commu- ' hlty Sj?eakings Announced for the Closing Days of Dry Campaign. t 1 Charles A. .Jonas, former Congress- t an and wheel-horse in the Repub-1 s ?an organisation in North Carolina, !l icl W. R. Lovill, Democratic law- i ir of Boone, former State Senator i id aggressive partisan, will puff t i the peace pipe of political agree- 1 tent, and furnish the oratory at a )unly-wide. dry rally to be held in i te courthouse in Boone, Friday, No- < unber 3rd, at 7:30 p. m. Ij Clyde R. Greene, publicity chair- < an lor the uiys. in insking: the an- 1 Yuncement says the drys are swing- i g into the last lap of their strenu- . caiitpsJeii with t rslliss in various.. ; Actions of the county, but that the < >nas-Lovill fireworks will likely fur-| Ish che high spot for the entire cam-1 \ iif,"- me i-uuiitj 1a ucmg y/iucty \ Ivertised and canvassed and it is j (Continued on Page 8) < ( peak As War nst Lawlesness ] Miization, said Mr. Arniburst, and ; jnditions are clearing up. The folks lean business, he said, and have the ; acking of the bar association, tfce merican Legion, the good, honest j ard-work'.ng folks in every walk of fe and greater than all, the -hurches. e recalled recently having witnessed le execution of a Wilkes man at sleigh, and stated that his belief i capital punishment had not abac1 as a result, and that such a crimsal was entitled to no mercy. He said i is organization had no political af-j liation whatsoever, constituted, icrely an aggressive machine against rime, and was bearing fruit. Mentions Prohibition While stating that he bad no purose of making a prohibition speech, he minister expressed the belief that ihen the flood gates of whiskey are urned loose, there will be such a 'ove Ul U1IUC tlUU ICkW ILMilCAJ iu LUUI ' ountry has never before known. He efralned from calling names but staed that a jurist who would announce . policy of leniency toward lawbreakers, while the lav/ still exited, van operating contrary to the oath ie took when he v/ent into office. Discussing briefly the beer situa-. ion Rev. Armburst brought figures' rom his home town police court' (Continued on Page 8) Condition of A. S. Harris Is Pronounced Serious Mr. A. S. Harris, manager of the 3painhour Store ,is a patient at a Statesville hospital where Sunday evming he underwent an appendix opsration. His condition following the iperation was said to be satisfactory, >ut press time information is to the iffect that the condition of the popilar merchant is serious. His friends lere await rurtner information witn leep anxiety. G. M. GOFOBTH DIES George Mitchell Goforth, aged 80, former county -agent and prominent Caldwell citizen, died at his home in Lenoir Saturday and funeral was held Sunday. In the last active years of his life Mr. Goforth was employed its a fertilizer salesman and while engaged in this work became acquainted with numbers of farmers in Watauga County. MOC Year Eighteen Eighty-E \'f, OCTOBER 20. 1933 Pays Visit to Boo SENATOR BOB REYNOLDS REYNOLDS CITES NEED INFLATION lunior Senator Visits Briefly in Boone Tuesday as Me Makes Hurried Tour for Prohibition Repeal. Says Little (talks Should Be Aided. Senator Robert R. Reynolds spent the noon hour in Boone Tuesday, shaking hands with a group of friends and briefly discussing national issues, before leaving on the next lap )f his whirlwind campaign for repeaJ >f national prohibition. He spoke in Sparta that afternoon at 2:30. "The New Deal is going good,' said he genial Bob when questioned by rb.c Democrat, "but I am inclined to he opinion that inflation of some ort must eventually come. The high ords of big finance are against any nflationary move- -they have the noney and naturally don't, want it :heapened?but the farmer and small lome owner deserve a chanco. to pay off their mortgages with cheaper nunc/, iiiuciy-iive per cent. 01 infi lomrnon people are living under mortgages, continued "Our Bob,' and they yin't pay them under present conditions. "Reducing the value of the lollar appooxs io be a solutiGn, and leitbeiv the State nor the Nation can _?mjmp.r irnleaa the individual , citizen ;an unburden himself SBBRQHj H Senator Reynolds, recently back :rom Russia, does not believe in or iphold many of ? the principles of the 3oviet Union, and when questioned m the repeal situation in North Carina, declined to make an estimate us to the extent of the wet majority. I He stated that the drya were sndiy when they claimed advan.age in rural sections. "The country man is the best informed citizen wt lave,'' he said, and added that he expected theni to register repeal majorities in most sections. He expressed regret that he could not speak in Boone, saying that he had appeared here before and thought it best to take his message into territory in which he had not so ofter Appeared. He was accompanied by his secvetary, Jolin3ton Avery, and pavid L. Strain, former State campaign man age r. PRIZES GIVENAT CLOSE OF CARNIVAI Merchants Pleased With Progress o Buy now Campaign. All Business Houses Report Increase, and Streets Are Thronged. Boone's Third Annual Bargain Car nival, conducted this year in connec tion with the Buy Now Compaign o the NRA was the most decided sue cess in the history of the annual mer chandising event, in the opinion a all reatilers interviewed the first o the week. Many reported sales fo the week ahead of holiday business i late years, and there was a geuert reviva 1 of buying. At the close of the event SaturJa evening the streets were crowder passage was difficult and intermitten showers didn't dampen the ardor c the crowd which assembled in froi (Please turn to Page 81 Mrs. Holden Davis Dies pvii :? 1 in WUU TT 1115 LiUllg 11I1ICS Meager information reaching T1 Democrat saya that Mrs. Holden Di vis of the Silverstone community, die there the last of the week at an ai vanced age, and following an illne: of many years.. No funeral detai could be learned. Mrs. Davis was the former Ml: Ellen Mast, a member of one of tl county's most prominent families. 1 her active years she took a leadli part in church affairs, and was know as a high type christian lady. H host of friends throughout the court will hear of her death with genuii sorrow. Surviving is the aged husband ai several children. DIRECTORS REAR * FINE REPORT OF R. AND L, SUCCESS j Auditor from State Insurance Department SubmUs Report Friday. Sayn ? Local Ansoclarto". I** Fiae Shape, and Has Earned Considerably Wore Than Average. In Position to Set ! AaJd? Fond to Moot Emergeoctee. James W. Hill, auditor for the State Insurance Department, was present at the Friday evening meeting of the directors of the Watauga Building jn and Loan Association, and m submitting the report of kis complete audit of the affairs of the institution, took I occasion to commend the directors 'and secretary for the fine manner in \ ! which the local Association has been J managed. j Mr. Hill especially complimented the secretary, W. H. Gragg, and Mrs. Carrie Horton Bingham for the ex- J cellent condition of the books, ancC explained the audit item by item, jas different members of the director! ate had their queries promptly and satisfactorily answered. Cites I^arge Earnings Mr. Hill pointed out that the audit indicated a five and three-quarter per cent, earning over the past year on stock in the association which he | described as being far ahead of the average for the State, and advised the directorate that if should they see fit, they arc in position to set aside several thousand dollars at tliis time as # reserve emergency fund, to be used " I in case of some contingency. | He also cited as an exceptional example of business acumen, that of seventeen pieces of property which. J the Association had sold and subse1 auentlv bousrht. each . a paying good returns on the investraent. All the Association property la ^ ' rented, and according to recent appraisal is worth today six thousand dollars more than is invested therein, flood Place for Money Mr. Hill, whose business >t is to fcaB find something wrong and tell the /id# directors, il it exists, took occasion - ?! to commend the management on evV " : ery hand He pointed out that while aisli 'Ithere were arrcagee on >nstxllmo?iKjj$Sg^^|J 1 stock, that the sipn total of these .-rg&g > ' past dtre obligations was satisfactorily I low, and the directors expresseu ine ~ ' ~j?5 collective belief that the most of ' these woyld be paid by the first of Jfl the year. i "There is no excuse for losing money in the Watauga Building and ! Loan," said Mr. Hill. "It is thoroughly solvent, well managed and a good J place to put money. "In closing the auditor advised consistent advertiaj lug to even better acquaint the.p^oj pie of this section as to the benefits they may derive from being partners - in this home-owning institution. 1 Prowlers Enter Store at Blowing- iRock Sunday ! H. C. Hayes, prominent Blowing i Rock merchant, lost about twentyfive dollars in merchandise ana Micuigc, wircu uumiuwu ptuiirs cutered his store Sunday night. Entrance was gained by boring a hole through a window sash at the rear of the building, and removing a stick which held the lower sash down. The window was then raised and an exit was made by unfastening the front j door from within. Mr. Hayes had left only small f change in his (.ash drawer and no merchandise seemed to have been molested save a number of flash light batteries. A son-in-law, Mr. Robert Hardin, and his wife were living in an adjoining apartment, but did not hear the intruders. f Bloodhounds were brought to the scene, but failed to follow the trail any distance, indicating that the rob. bers had entered a waiting automof bilen Miss Dayvault Becomes Bride of Mr. Holshouser y A wedding of unusual interest" in 1, this section took place in Concord on it last Saturday when Miss Dessie Vir>f ginia Dayvault of that city became it the bride of Mr. Eubert Holshouser of Boone. Mrs. Holshouser is the daughter " of Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Dayvault and is extremely popular with a wide eirS cle of friends throughout the State, and was formerly a student at the ie Appalachian State Teachers College l- here, where she acquired a large clr:d cle of friends. It was while a student 1- here that she met Mr. Holshouser. is Mr. Holshouser is a son of Mr. and Is Mrs. W. I. Holshouser of Blowing Rock and has been one of the most as successful attorneys in this city for le several years. He is well and favortn ably known throughout this section ig of the State. m Mr. and Mrs. Holshouser will make er their home in Boone. le Mr and Mrs. K. E. Sberrill and Miss Katherine Bowling, of Lowell, J? id N. G.. spent the past week-end with Mr. and Mrs. Pete Justus.