Newspapers / The Journal-Patriot (North Wilkesboro, … / Nov. 21, 1935, edition 1 / Page 8
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en '. •; w qyiL TRIED OtD^ Dimdsed of in of'IVosent 'T^nl^itexed Court Fllo' Caudill, convicted of In- «eat lA the present term ot su- peripr court in Wilkesboro, was ■eotenced to from fire to eight XMhi at bard labor in the state penitentiary. Jndge F- Donald Fhinips, presiding over the mixed term, pronounced the sentence.- The Jury returned a verdict of guilty but recommended the nier- «y of the court because of Cau dill’s small children. A great part of the time tjils week has been consumed trial ct civil cases. Followine-are those in a-hich Judgements are ■aerdicts have been handed down.: G. H. Tatum versus I. O. -Speas and Arnold Hunter, plaintiff re- eovers $3,500. Winston-Salem Hardware com pany versus J, T. Prevette and E. Pardue, case dismissed and plaintiff taxed with costs. There have been five divorces xranted.: Ray Von Holloway vs. Mary Catherine Holloway; Snow 'Frevette versus Addie Prevette; mizabeth Duncan Johnson versus Walter P. Johnson; Hobert Reeves versus Nora Reeves; ■ Fan nie Myers versus Lester Myers. Herman Foster, convicted of prostitution and adultery, was given a suspended road sentence of 12 months. With the jail cases off the docket the remainder of the icrm will be devoted to trial ot the civil calendar. ^URNAi5»A^^UOT,;feTH WUmBORO' N. 0.^^ Mrs. Thomas A. Edison Now a Bnde i All indications pointio,| the amateur actors’ program Friday night In the Wilkesboro school auditorium being one of? the highlights of the year lor public programs. r.ThiB.noveL stage, feature* W be- ing gpoBsored by.-tbe WllkeftbbBi| Woman’s,’ciiib and the profits? from the admission charges of 16 and 26 cents will be used in the construction of a community house lor Wilkesboro. Any person or group of persons with a stage act, song, dai.ce, reading, etc., ic«y enter the con test in competition lor the three valuable prizes to be ottered. The three prizes will be a fountain pen given by the Goodwill Store, a prize donated by Spainhour- Sydnor’s, and a permanent wave by Wisteria Beauty Salon. i-- ’.-V' CX)KP61M1 opening in WlltoP' cos. distributor;^married ni^ny ferred; mutt be a hunt ^ car and be ableto JE anrety bond, Olr^ rM^a with appllcatfda. Ail - “Saleaman”. Jipanul- i fiOT 8PBIN08, Va.... *r. aad (above),! arc spendiag their hoaayauoa her*. ia widow of ’Thomaal A. Ewa, Um&m iaveator. Mr. .HsiJim bTfiranUin, .Pa., is a rottred' steel executive. They were neighbrn aad chOdbood sweethearts at Lake' Qtantanqna, N. T. in the 1870’a " ■ - Mpite '.Ji PO|t SAlxr'^ eoae a good level farm of nlately seventy poi^ lOapty^ In the Mountain . VI|iw?>?secti^.;^. , This , farm ia, UH «. *^p|jdt*te^l of cultivation. «l^ RtM iiidld- "^Ings, In exc||ll^f'“ • er desires ^ .... property. If IntoibaieM. addrees .. inguiries to: Box liet^i.WL sfton-Salem, N. C. — The program will begin prompt ly at eight o’clock. ■ I More than 30 entries have al-1 ready been made for the contest, assuring the public that there, will be a full evening of enter-1 tainment that is sure to. furnish | variety and suspense. Charles Elledge. playwright and humorist, will be master of ceremonies. PUBLIC PULSE. This is a column open to the public for free expression. The .loumal-Patrlot does not aa« sume any responsibility for articles printed under this heading, and neither endorses nor condemns them. Please be a.s brief as possible. CAMPS FOR JOBLESS WOMEN ARE ASSURED The Children’s Home Society of North Carolina, Incorporated, located at Greensboro, is com pleting the thirty-second year since beginning its important type of child welfare service to homeless and unwanted children. During these years over :1000 work and responded with gen erous financial support. The Society maintains a plant at Greensboro with complete fa cilities to operate in all branches ot child care. The infants placed with the Society receive careful examination before they are of- Last Rites Held For P. M. McNiel little ones have been accepted in- \ fered to foster parents. Ill The Society operates within a to their care ai;d then placed approved fos.er homes. budget and is clear of debt. Lve- This work is financed entirely j ry dollar received during the CASTLE OF DREAMS COMING TO LIBERTY One of the most unusual and Bpectacular stage shows on the road is Castle ot Dreams which ixraes to the Liberty Theatre for three performances only on Tues day, Nov. 26. Coming direct from New York thi.s company will on ly make six stops in North Car- eiina on their ?vay to the i’acific «iaat. The management of the Liberty feels very fortunate in securing this attraction for North Wilkesboro. as it has been high- lb' recomended as heitig otie of the outstanding attractions in the east this season. Headiiig a cast of stars is Fricltlm Wade, NBC Radio Tenor for years witii Roxy and his gang. The l.enora Daticing Girls direct from the raramouut Theatre iu New York, Six Girls who arc oul- •tanding dancers alone would be worth the price ot admission. The eompany comprises acts from the eapitol Theatre. .New Yprk, Earl Carroll’s Sketch Book, Ziegfield Follies and Tamya Harri direct from Java, making her first A- mcrican tour. A broadway revue at popular prices. l,y voluntary donations from child loving citizens ot North Carolina. The Society makes only one appeal each year—during tlie holiday period from Thanksgiv ing through Christmas, The Children’s Home numbers among iis patrons sulistanlial people of the stale who have rec ognized the value of the Society’s holiday appeal will go into new work now being planned for lO.’lB. “M’ith improved conditions | throughout the Slate the Societyj (mntcmplates an increase ot do nations and if hopes are realized will enlarge operations in 1936 to meet the maximum demands lor their type of service,’’ Jehu J. I’hoenix. superintendent, slated. CITY RISES AND , Ethiopians Victorious On FALLS TWICE A DAY! Southern Front; Italians Expect Counter Attack Like a lofty ship riding the] tide, the Hotel Wilkes building | .\d(li.s i»liaha, Nov. 2h.—Slash- rises and falls twice every day I ing Ethiopian victories at tho on a dry land tide that corre-1 cost of hundreds of casualties A large throng of relatives, friends and acquaintances of P. M. McNiel. who died Sunday morning at his home at Purlear, gathered at New Hope church Tuesday afternoon to attend the funeral service. Rev. James -M. Hayes, pastor of tho First Baptist church in Beckley, W. Va,, Rev. F. C. Watts. Rev. A. W. Eller and Judge Johnson J. Hayes took part iu the service. Interment was in the church cemetery. Me was 83 years of age and leaves his wife, Mrs. Julia Anne .McNiel, and the following chil dren; L. L. McNiel, Wiley F. Mc Niel. Mrs. Sallie Canter and -Mrs. Etta Kilby, of the Purlear com munity, Iredell MoNiel, of Millers Cr^ek, and Gordon McNiel, of Eugene, Oregon. Mr, McNiel was held in high esteem as a good citizen of his community and a faithful mem ber of New Hope Baptist church. Friendly Comment I see In the paper, that the City Fathers met a few days ago and outlawed the hog pens in the city of North Wilkesboro. I won der what they are going to do with the hogs. Guess they thought It wouldn’t do to outlaw all the hogs at once the jails wouldn’t hold ’em. Anyway they started some thing. Why almost the next day nearly a hundred of the papas ot the leading country of Europe met and outlawed Mussolini and his whole country, hogs and all. Yours for a better world in which to live. T. J. FAZIER. Raleigh, Nov. 20.—Establish ment’of a camp for unemployed young women in North Carolina, corresponding to the CCC camps for men, was assured by a grant of $7,000 made to the emergency | FOR SALE Theatre in town of 1,200, now, showing profit; complete In All , deUils; also, coi^lejo ^the«w .^iSJtaent-In A-i *Mlt|fri, "y fn apcratIon;|«ni TroaiipiUw^^- corn tnitcblM All for a 8aqj|yice if sdhl. al^wce. Address Joujjh- al-Palrltik^V 11-14-Th-tf Procurement Division, Pul relief administration today by Works Branch, Washington, '’I). Harry L. Hopkins, federal admin istrator. The camp will be established and supervised by the office of C. E. McIntosh, state director of the national youth administra tion. Plans have not been for mulated definitely. Presumably, the camp — or camps—will be similar to the! three maintained in the state j during the summer at Brevard | College and Neuse Forest for j white women and one at Brick j School, near Rocky Mount, for' negro women. I C„ Nov. 12, 19^5. Sealed bids, in duplicate, will be puM^Hy opened in this office at 10 a.'tii., Dec. 9, 1935,_ for furnishing *11 labor and materials and perfom|J| Ing all work for a Vault, PaaBtRW and Driveway Extension at vthe ir. S. P. O. at North Wilkesboro, N. C. Drawings and speclticatloM, not exceeding one set, may ,be obtained from th© custodian of the building or at this office the discretion of the Assistaj Director of Procurement. Public Works Branch. W. E. Reynolds. Assistant Drector of Procure ment, Public Works Branch. ll-21-3t Author Says He Talks j With Dead Over Phone! New York, Nov. 19.—Cosmo. Hamilton. English author herei from Surrey for a brief stay, said tonight that he believes he is the I only man in the world who has ; with spoiuls with til© surge of the .sea. Columbus claimed the world was round. ’’King’’ Wilbur Glenn Volivia of religiously zealous were reported tonight from the j — — - southern battle front while Em- j D&U8|ntcr x FC&ChCS peror Haile Selassie personally j Mothcr’s FunCral urged on Selassie the defenders of his' Zion City. Illinois, tells tlie world j empire, that it is flat and four cornered. 1 The successful ambuscade ot a Geophysical scientists at the j train of 72 Italian trucks, carry- Guif Refining Company’s new re- ■ ing Somali warriors and muni- sesreh and development lahora-! tions, was described in unofficial lories, Harmarville, Pa-, pains-} reports from Harar. takingly measuring and graph!-j ;\ioro than 150 Somalis were eally recording the undulating ebb , kHied or wounded while Ethio- and flow of dry land tides 2 4 | pjg„ casualties were estimated in hours oach day, know the world j excess of 300. The battle, south WILKESBORO CASES ARE REVERSED BV SlUPREME TRIBUNAL Continued from page one) is not flat; never will be round, even it it stops revolving and los es Its centrifugal force which flattens the earth at the poles and bellies it out at the equator. They have definitely established l that combined land and marine j tides distort the earth’s shape, like a ball of putty—elliptical at of Sasa Baneli on the left bank of the River Fafan, was waged without quarter. Several Italian officers were wounded, but escaped, and 53 of the trucks were believed captur ed. the Harar dispatches slated. Phillips and hearing set before Judgje J. A. Rousseau, of this aity, who later signed an order wntinuing the hearing and .set- tog It back before Judge Phil lips at the August term of court. Judge Phillips granted the writ, ordering the i>«n’s funds aiul records turned over to the new nayor and board, composed of Atforney J- F Jordan, mayor, C. Y. Donghton, (’• A. I.owe, J. R. Henderson and W. E. Mnilhey. He also refused to allow th© ’’old ioard” to give bond and retain- He records and funds while their appeal was pending but ordered a© "new board ” to give bond in »Se sum of $1,500 to pay salaries loe the old officials of th© town ,*«t8 and other emoluments of lie offices. The supreme court’s deoision reversed thi.s order and lemaniled tile town’s books to *‘oUi buard. The appeal to the supremp zoun by the “old board" on Judge Clement’s order regarding It© ballots set out the tollow;ng nontentions: .'ll ,1) The ballots which it au- iborized and directed to b© can vassed were illegal and void, aad r.2> that said ballots were cast in contempt of court, and (3) for ihat the election officials failed W furnish valid ballots, and (4) eta: no legal ballots were cast tnd those "’lio Presented them •lelves to vote were denied legal ballots, and (5) that the regie tor closed the polls shortly a ter mid-day and left the PoLin.g slace.’’ times, egg-shaped at others, de-1 Purlear News poor indication which is. beyond a doubt, ,i ten iiia.ss. North Wilkesboro is rising and falling from 13 to ’2 3 inches twice each day. Gulf Oil scieiuisls slate. Falls 25 F^t, Unhurt SaiiDiego, Calif., Nov. 19.— Two-year-old Helen Louise Mur- *»y toppled backward from a sec- aai story sflndow today, turned m swmersaim in a 25-foot. fall— s*dV poli^ were told, seemingly Haded her feet. She suffer rd onlrSiit bruises. pull j l>t?RLEAH. Nov. 20. - Rev I .\very Church is to teach a clas.s at New Hope Thursday, Friday and Saturday night. They are to study the Church Covenant and the New Testament Church. Rev. James M. Hayes, was on his way Tuesday to Lenoir to run a revival meeting. .Mr. J. C. Cooper and family I moved here last week. Ho is to ! lake charge of the roller mill at , • uH this place, that was purchased by eait 1 is no so , . Arthur Clark some tim© ago. Us thill '•* “ pending upon the gravity of the moon and sun. (lonceriied with dry land tides only insofar as they effect ex tremely delicate gravity iiislru- meiits used in locating oil be neath the earth’s surface, fiult- men leave it lo laymen to ponder: do earth tides cause eartliquakes’’ When is it high tide at Kan.sas City’.' In Death Valley’s desert wastes? One thing laymen may readily deduce; the but viscous. Its thin cru.st is a Mrs. Frances Taylor, 78, died at the home of her son, Willi© Taylor, near 5mithtown Thurs day night ot last week, after an illness of several years duration. She had been blind for eight years. Mrs. 'Taylor is th© widow of ih« late Cas Taylor, and is sur- talked over the telephone people who are dead. j Deeply imbued with spiritual-1 ism, Hamilton arrived aboard the | Berengarla to relate how he often I sits by his telephone in his Sur-| rey horn© awaiting calls from the late Sir Conan Doyle, Lord North- j cllffe. Lord Balfour and the late. Lord Birkenhead. I CARLTON’S HARDWARE SAVES its customers many dollars. Our QUALITY merchandise and our LOW PRICES attract customers. Your savings here are worthwhile. Try it yourself this week. THANKSfilVINC SPEHALS Roaster Shot Gun Coal' Hod 79c $5.95 29c Sheet Iron Heaters Single Shot Rifle Sausage Mill $1.49 $4.50 81.45 “It’s going to be hard calling, Bill ’Pap,’ declared Mrs. Carrie, Stoltzenburg when she beard of | the marriage of her mother, Mrs. Mahala Scott, 65, of Chillieothe, O., to Will F. Kaltenbach, 23. WANT ADS vired by the following children: PL.AIN QUILTING one dollar per quilt. You furnish everytbiug. .Mrs. J. W. Matthews, Of East { Mall to Mrs. V. G. EUer. Pur lear, or leave at Claud Pear son Store. 11-21-lt-pd Bend. Oscar Taylor, of Siloam; Flora Ulrich, of Florida; Willie^ Taylor, of Smlthtown; Miss Han^ Shoes! Shoes! nah Taylor, of New York City, | LOST: SlmmoiLS Innersprlng mat ^ K. Tin FI© A0 and a number of grandchildren. Miss Hannah Taylor is a free lance evangelist and ihission worker of New York, and preach ed her mother’s funeral Satur day. Rev. Chas. H. Hutchens and in the funeral services, which tress between North Witkes- boro and Miners Creek Wed nesday evening between 6 and 7 o’clock. Finder please notify Prof. R. V. Day at Millers Creek. 11-21-lt-pd! IR EVERY member OF THE FAMILY Rev. Ellis Norman i He has had much work done on were held at Union Grov© church j Saturday at 2 p. m. Interment I followed in th© church cemetery, i .Miss Taylor, the evangelist, a I native of Yadkin county, has I been doing mission work in New York city for several years and she explains that she works in- dopendently of any concrete or ganization or federation, but does her work where she finds it is needed. She is a member of a Yadkin county Friends church.— Yadkin Ripple. ices, wiiicu ^ ———— - assisted her learn BEAUTT cm.TURE-A profitable profession. The State’s most up to date Beanty school, folly accredited. A com plete conrs© for only $50.09. Mae’s School of Beauty Cul ture, North Wilkesboro, N. C. ll-25-4t *’ ' ^ ' th© mill properly and hopes to ' have the mill going iu the next _ ten days. A hard driven hall struck Mrs. i Miss Electa Eller spent some John Marler of Wisconsin in the 'lime with her parents, Mr. and ' eye after it had crashed through .\i, s W T Eller Sundav. | the front door, bounced from the vrs lliilh Minis spent someh'«ll into the living room and on .x.is. luun .1111 s 1 into the kitchen where sh© was time with her parents. -Mr. and. "‘vo Mrs. J. H. Davis, this week Rate Church, of Honda Favors Low Cost Housing Washington, Nov. 19.—Seere.- tary Perkins today indorsed the idea of a nation-wide, long term cooking a meal. LOST OR STOLEN—SRIALL Setter Bitch, white, with black ticks, small high-set ears. Very liberal retvard for return to Journal-Pa triot Office. Don’t buy j-our SHOES unlfil you have seen our new stock of Men’s, Ladies’ and Chil dren’s SHOES. We are offering some unusual vaJoes Men’s Shoes I Perry T. Goings, now of Se- very sick. Mrs. Inaiicll Yates and jalla, Mo., is suing his wife for | p7o-rrm^f1ow cosrhousing con-^Mis^ Lola Bell Yules spent the j a divorce because h© ’.vants to rtructinn such as the 10-vear one week-end with their aunt and Lettle down. He claims since his; million dollar plan of Senator uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Church, at uiarrlage in 1924 she has made j Robert F Wagner of New York. - Honda. him change residences 65 times. I WANTED: Idvo wire man as au tomobile salesman, one who is not afraid ot work and who is interested in Increasing his in come. Previous experience un necessary. For full particulars and interview write The Journ-. al-Patriot. ll-2X-tf . ...$U9to$2.98 Udies’Shoes $1.49 to $2.98 Children’s Shoes 75c to 97c See our line of used CLOTHING, keep yourself warm this winter cost if you trade with us. You can at small Bare’s Fair Ston G. T. BARE, Prop. At Our Old Stand—Next Door to Goodwill Store TENTH STREET NORTH WILKESBORO, N. C. HAZARDS QUIT' PlAY FULLY BUILDING RIVERS AND OAfAS IS A LOT OF FUN EH,G00FY7 THOSE DROPS I VlATERVfEHT 'a
The Journal-Patriot (North Wilkesboro, N.C.)
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Nov. 21, 1935, edition 1
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