Newspapers / The Journal-Patriot (North Wilkesboro, … / Sept. 24, 1934, edition 1 / Page 8
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StatrH^mafS Stat^ Ra^Uksn OuUniaa Afliida N«w Deal In Addrnss Before G, 0. P« Leaders THfe JOUIINAL-PAI STS In jiired In Accidents Du*' teSfoBthof. s;.' W- ith of AoKiMt, Motor ^ Y^ide Barean Reports ■/ S> :■ S*. .* Keletsk, Sept. Jl.—^Aatime* LlOe Mcldents killed T1 persona aal^ip^red 578 othere durlac Angnst; tke state motor Tehlele a reported today. Seventy knied in Jnly. accidents. Tke August toil raised to 541 *. ■ a. number killed tbls year In t months, compared Vith 600 tlMlties in automobile tcrecks tiling the similar period of JSM. *>' Ab astonishing record noted kr Mrs. Belle Stronach, statlstl- •fan who keeps the accident |e- Vfrtts, was the fact that seven •Ifldren under fonr years of age wm killed by automobiles while tkay played in the streets in Au- Cnst and seven othere were In- Skved.' One 18-months-old child and oMT Of two years of age were MBong gthe “pedestrians” killed. A'tofal of 21 pedestrians was Uned and 65 injured. There were 389 accidents in Angukt. involving 579 drivers. nt and run drivers killed six parsons and injured 22, while •ve persons were killed or in ured in accidents in which in* taoeicated drivers figured. There vmre 14 deaths and 75 injuries attributed to accidents caused by veekless driving. PAIR CLOSES SUCCEISSFUL EXPOSITION (Continued from page one) tory manner throughout the week, playing for the free acts | administration had poured fa front of the grandstand and rendering concerts throughout the week. The free acts and a georgpoiis display of fireworks *afh nig ill were very much en- jfoy(ni !/y ilie thousands who at tended the exposition. The fair week program came Id a climax on Saturday after- nooa with auto races put on by the Gray Air and Auto Racing Association, of Daytona Beach, yiorida. As several hundreds looked on they were thrilled and chilled by *be speeding regulation race cars piloted by professional driv ers, seven of whom took part in tke races. Spectators were treated to their first excitemeut in the first race when a car driven by Michael DeConea. of Daytona Beach, crashed through ihe fair KTOunds fence as it left the track «B the east end. George Fergu- ■OB. former Wilkes youth now keated in Charlotte, won the first race. As a diversion four motorcy cles put on a race that was not lacking in thrills. Of the four starting two finished, the others haring taken the dirt headfirst •n the east eiid Of the track. However, no one was injured. The second auto race was '■Chont accident but in the fin al asstest the same driver who Bd In the fence in the first bad the misfortune to fraek up with a lost right rear wheel on anotlivr car. Chick Tocag, North Carolina’s racing tampion, came out victor with Ceorge j^erguson one length be- feiad in the final burst of speed. The fair this year was ably managed by W. A. McNeill, pres ident and general manager, and J. C. Wallace, acting secretary. (Cbhttn«ad tram pact one) treulte and oonaerrative groups InaMkd of RepabUcans and Dem- ■oorau..'S-- _ y Ho .pralaed tha RapuhiUcan party in Wllkea aa having ebnr- age and loyalty and then remark ed that the campaign this year TOttld be a queetion of coming forward aa Patriots to guide the nation at its crossroads and' not merely a political fight. He assailed the Democrats for fall.aro to keep pledges of the 1982 campattfn, comparing it with that of 1916 as a campaign of subterfuge. He said the Dem ocrats howled about a deficit in the budget of .the Hoover admin istration and pledged a balanced budget only to run the deficit up to 19.000,000,000 in the first 18 months of the present adminls* tratlon. "Democrats,” he said, assailed the Hoover adislnlstra* tion for having nine bureaus but under their leadership the num ber has increased to 67.” Chairman Meeklns continued his address with vigorous en thusiasm as he,’ assailed a “pa ternal government that has plac ed a premium on idleness.” He quoted A1 Smith as saying that Roosevelt is so popular “because no oiie wants to shoot Santa Claus.” In Aigricultural re|ginientation Chairman Meeklns said he saw signs of approaching dictator ship and said that he sincerely feared that unless Republicans put on the brakes in the election this fall that there would never be another popular election iu this country. He further declared that the Democrats have aban doned everything they ever stood tor. His comments on the Maine election tended to show that the into Maine $8,000,000 for relief when the state pays less money than that sum into the federal treas ury. With only three ‘ congress men in Maine the Democrats cannot spend on that basis all over the nation, he said. He clos ed with another plea for unity and a big vote in Wilkes and that leader.s in the G. O. P. here should stimulate interest among the women of the party ranks. This was the chairman's first vi.sii to Wilkes and he was en thusiastically received. All the party's candidates tor county of fices were present. Textile Strike ^ Comes To'CIIki! s,#’ Woiicers aa They Re turn Tr Joha This Morning; ' Tro^ "Bank Home «- BENEFIT CARD PARTY FRIDAY NIGHT, 8:00 Chktl^tte» Sepb .tt.vr-'Th* fl«g of peacA floktod oyor, the Mopd- statned. Southern taxHle frant today and In many instances tex tile worksrs sang hymns of joy as they awaited the d'jwn's shrill whistles to take them ,back to their looms and iplndles. Elated over the end of the gi gantic walkout, which began three weeks ago, strikers and workers alike paraded through the streets hnd highways ' until the early hours this morning, shouting and yelling with joyous abandon. In Union, 8. C„ tragedy over took a group of the celebrantii as a truck load of women andi^lrls, their legs dangling over tka flat body of the vehicle, was side- swiped in a traffic jam. Thirteen were Injured, three crtticatly. Troops Start LmtIuk White the textile workers pa raded in large demonstrations, shouting “a victory for the un ion,” the first evacuation of mili tia from the strike area got und er way. However, the process of de mobilizing the greatest peace time army that baa ever assem- blrd for duty in the south— so.aethlng over 6,000 men—was expected t o require several days. Indications were that In some areas soldiers would be on hand in full force tomorrow morning when the mills re-open. Gover nor Blackwood, of South Caro lina, the first chief executive to call out militia, said bis troops would remain on duty “until there is an assurance peace and harmony will prevail.” Janiora Wifl Gather At WfaukMr Cress Roads On Saturday For District Bfeet (Continued from page ona) mil nil '* ’ r Day for Mafe^ by ^ a buslhosa session at 7 o’clock . In tto Conkcll H»U. Tke mooting ‘ win ;h« presided over' by W. JC. Btt^rdivant of North ’?l^llkeoboro, wSo is District Deputy of the Seventh‘s DistMct. ' Thd other cdflcers of the Dis-! trlct are as follows: C, B, Burchette,‘-Honda,^Jun ior past connettor; D._A. Rqlnk’t- Bo n, Mount \%liy,r?«onaelIor; Bradley Dancy, North., WUkes- boro,'-*vico councilor;-d. A; Can ter, North Wllieeboro,- recording . /secretary; N. P. Bryant, Yad- kioville, assistant recording -sao«. -, retary; L. W, Coo, Copeland, field secretary; O. R.-Calloway, Rondai treasurer; Kyle Hayes, New Hope, conductor; VR,' J. Dorse, Copeland, warden;. Claude Howard, Windsor Cross • Roads, inside sentinel; B. D. Byrd, Honda, outside sentinel;' R, R. Crater,’’ Ronda, chaplain. The seventh district compris es Snriqr,.. Wilkes and Yadkin counties, Wlfh T5 councils and a membership of 1,282. ^ HANDKERCHIEF IS MAIN CLUE FOUND IN HUNT FOR CHILD Nashville, Tenn., Sept. 20.—A blood-stained handkechief bear ing the letter ”D,” a small hair pin. and dark stains upon a su burban street were the mute ervi- dences of tragedy in the hands of police tonight as the officers sought to solve the disappearance of six-year-old Dorothy Distel- hurst. Whether the child, who was last seen at 1:16 p. m. Wednes day on her way home from school was kidnaped and slain, killed accidentally by a motorist who hid her body In the vicinity, struck by a train that dragged L -r • J J avay, or experienced Prisoi^rs Caught, Tried and gom^ other less dire fate remain- Sent To Prison In One Day (Continued from page one) Asheville, Sept. 21 — Eight hours after they held up a sales man from Brooklyn, tied him to a tree and then wrecked his au tomobile. two youthful hoboes from Miami, Fla., were captured, identified, indicted and tried and were on their way to Raleigh to serve 15 year.s at hard labor to day. The prisoner.? are Ralph Bar ton, 26, and Ray Hampton, 20. and their victim was John T. Mocan, who picked them out of a group of prisoners at the Madi son county jail at Marshall at noon after Sheriff Guy English had arrested them on a bus as it arrived in Marshall. WATAUGA TO GET NEW BANK SOON -WaBhington. Sept. 20.—The lYatauga County Bank is to make Ra Appearance in Boone within Uie leext few days. Representa tive Doughton has been informed •y th* federal ,-leposit insurance ■imfnistratioii. in which the new iBstltUtion, an o-Jtgrowth of the •id Watauga County Bank, has ■t .'tokens membership to insure its •eeounts. The reopening plan has passed Qie board of review and found to ho satisfactory, and all that is ’ lacking now is approval of the comptroller of the treasury, re- as a routine matter. The Stw.^ank will have capital stock 120,000; common stock, $20,- AM; undivided profits, $11,000; Mrplus, $30,000, and and a re- Ksrve for contingencies of $22,- *82. Doughton urged immediate ;»eUon so the bank could open 'Mxt week. ISTATE FAIR OFFERS CLUB WORK PREMIUMS ^^*JH?eIub members entering l^f^lbits at the state fair, October " ' t to 13. will run into some keen «B«petltion, says L. R. Harrill, - a(ate club leader. ' Bpt it wm be well worth their The experience will be '■.»ci;aWe, he pointed out, and win also be a total of $1,- . AM in prises awarded to the ^/«kBBer. Olriy Nortli-s club Sp^^^jpgBjjbers 'Who ara actively engag- .clttk .work AfeJs year may the exhlktta. A most interesting feature in connection with the card games will be the Post Office, at which one may purchase letters for 25c. which will contain the num ber of article to which the pur chaser is entitled. These articles will consist of donations made by the members of the Woman’s Club, all of which will be valued at not less than 25c and some as high as $5.00. The proceeds from this party will be used for the Woman’s Club House, which they hope to build on the lot donated by Mr. and Mrs. F. C. Forester, within the next two or three months. Anyone wishing to make res ervations for a whole table or one player is invited to do so, and may call Mrs. Dudley Hill, phone 360, or Mrs. F. C. For- e.ster. phone 102. Bridge clubs and their mem bers, husband or friends are in vited to make this their regular meeting and attend as a club if they desire. ed a mystery. Police and United States department of justice agents were Investigating all of those possibilities, however. Highway and Public Works FARLEY SAYS POSTAL BUREAU TO PAY WAY Commission Meets Sept. 27 Raleigh, Sept. 21.—The .state highway and public works com mission will meet next Thursday to canvass low bids to be receiv ed in Wednesday’s letting, but expects to hear no delegations, Charles Ross, general counsel said today. The commission will publish notice when it will receive dele gations, and until this is done all sessions will be executive, Mr. Ross said. St. Panf, Sept. 21.—Postmas ter General James A. Farley to day said he would ruake every effort to operate the postal de partment without profit or loss but on a balanced budget. “I do not want to make the postal establishment a profit making institution,” he said in dedicating St. Paul’s $2,700,000 new postoffice. “On the other hand, I do not want it to be a burden on the taxpayers. "Every cent over and above what we pay for necessary ex penses should be used to im prove service and to better work ing conditions of the personnel.’' Correction In a short article last week telling of some extra long beans exhibited here fk® name of the grower was inadvertantly given as J. W. Walsh, of Walsh in stead of J. W. Church, as it should h.'ive been. LOU Kneej^ction tetter-you CHEVROLET SMOKING A CAMEL when westy or "low” makes you "feel as gdW as new.” There is a deligbtful "lift” which quickly banishes that "all in” feeling. Enjoy this "energizing effect” as oftra as you want! Caasrscostlsrtohaecot Mvsr ym senrsi. tetter-you Lincoln farmers have cured out more hay this season than ha.s ever been harvested before in the county, according to the county agent. XOTKT!: By virtue of a power of ator- ney and for te phurpose of dis tributing the proceeds among the signers of said power of attorney executed to the undersigned by ■Mrs. Ella Ogilvie and others, tte undersigned will, on October 20, 1934, at 2:30 o'cloc’t p. m.. at the garage of J. T. Finley, deceased, on the north side of C street, in North Wilkesboro. N. C., in close proximity to the new post office building, sell to the highest bid der upon the following ternts: One-fourth cash, one-fourth in three months, one-fourth in .six months, and the remainder in nine months, subject to the con firmation of the undersigned, the said garage and lot upon which it stands, being lots 17 and 19, in Block 44, map of North Wilkes- boro, having a frontage on C street of 50 feet and running back 140 feet to an alley, con taining 7,300 square feet, sub ject to a party wall agreement with Isaac H. McNeill contained in deed to him recorded in of fice of register of deeds of Wilkes county, in Book 147, page 501. For full and complete descrip tion of the lands herein to be sold, see deed from Winston Land & Improvement to J. T. Finley, recorded In office of reg ister of defies of Wilkes county in Book 18, page 266, This 30th fiay of Sept. 1984. T he Ownership Test is simplicity itself. Chevrolet, through any of ita.denlere, will gladly lend you a new car to drive, over the same routes and in the same way you drive every day. Chevfofet is confident you will lAe the freedom from jolts that Knee-Action hrin^ —the restfulness of shock-proof steering—the luxurious appointments of the big Fisher body —the getaway of an 80-horsepower engine— the smooth, sure action of cable-contioDed brakes—the refreshed feeling you enjoy when you are through. In fact, Chevrolet beBevee that the Ownership Test will prove to your complete satisfaction that the low^riced dev- rolet is the car for you and yonrs. CHEVROLET MOTOR CO., DETROIT, MICH. Ompare3uivrM$h>uideUv9nd pricaandea$y (Lit-A.C. terms. A Gmerai Meters Vabte ■ J. R. RINLTY,; Rower of AUoroey. -ii, DtTCfit i-16-4t r By Rower of Attorney
The Journal-Patriot (North Wilkesboro, N.C.)
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Sept. 24, 1934, edition 1
8
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