/ ISSUED WEEKLY VOLUME LIII PRIN Jf. C, NOT MEN 7. March 15, 1928 $2L00 A YEAR Mp VANCE NUMBER ME Brame inenucai Company To Start Operations Soon PtentlaCompletod And Machin ery Being Moved " North WUkceboro. Start In Two Weeks 0 Company Has Testimonials Of Many People Attesting The Worth Of Brame’s Salve. Finishing touches have been put'on the Brame Chemical Company build ing on Salisbury street and machinery is being installed. The building is a substantial briclt structure, one story in height, and built along the most modem lines to accommodate the buninesswhich it null house. , A part. the machinery is being hauled by truck from the old Brame Drug Comppnyplant at North Wilkes s installed in the With other new ma chinery which will be purchased and installed upon arrival. It is . -- — planned to have nie pint here in operation in about two weeks. Arthur Ross is president of the concern, while William Armfield is the secretary. During the past sever al months, the Brame people have been distributing samples, of the Brame’s Vapo-mentha Salve, which the plant makes and have obtained some hearty responses from* the sam ples so distributed. Testimonials are at hand from several hundred users of the salve, including those from Judge Johnson J. Bayes, Judge T. B. Finley and Rev. L. W. Gerringer. When the plant is ready to produce the salve in large quantities* a good business is anticipated. It will be recalled that Arthur Ross and associates several months ago bought, the Brame formula and ma chinery for its manufacture from Dr. Brame, at North Wilkesboro. Brame’s salve has been manufactured for years and is recognised as a household rem edy in North Carolina and other states. 'It has been introduced also in . foreign countries with decided success. Faison Again On Trial John W. Faison, of Richmond, Va., charged with the murder of Mrs. Elsie Holt Snipes, whose divorced husband lives in Asheboro, is again on trial in Force Busy Remodeling Building For Rose Store A force of workmen, employed by Rose’s chain of 5, 10 and 25 cent stores, is engaged in remodeling the Caveness building on Sunset avenue, formerly occupied by the Old Hickory Cafe. Work will be pushed forward to completion and the standard Rose oViain store fixtures will be installed at once. When the work is completed, . a stock of goods usual to the Rose chain will be placed in the remodeled building. I Randleman Woman Dies In Danville Mrs. Quincy Hardister Ellington Succumbs At Home Of Son While On Visit. Mrs. Quincy Hardister Ellington; aged 55 years, died in the Memorial hospital, Danville, Va., Monday eve ning following a stroke of paralysis suffered two days before her death. Mm, Ellington had made her homo in Randfrpym for more than thirty ypaxs but for th* past year she had been hvipg with her son, Coy Hardister, in Dwdh* She was preparing to re turn to her home in Randleman when she. i Was stricken. Mrs. Ellington was,A conscientious Christian woman and * faithful member of St Pauls Methodist church, in Randleman. She , was a good neighbor and held in high esteem by all who knew her. Funeral services were conducted yesterday afternoon at 2:20 at St Pauls church by the pastor, Rev. J. H. Brendall, Jr., and interment made in the church cemetery. The deceased is survived by two sons, Coy Haruister, of Danville, Va., James Ellington, of Randleman, and one half brother, C. W. Cranford, of Asheboro. To Preach at Local Church Sunday afternoon at.2:80 oclock, end .*t the Aaheboro Holiness church Sunday evening at 7:80 o'clock. The public is invited to attend these Bertricea J A Mmk jgm ***** Convene I Randolph Superior Court for the trial of cases on the etaOdodnt will , convene in Aaheboro Monday atoning with Judge N. M. Townsend, «* Dwm, ill jr. Judge Townsend will hold iourtfa pla«tf Jud^Webb, whe €ounty Republican Executive ^Committee Recommends Wright By Vote Of 1* To 5 Over Nolan AHen—CofflHM Bowman In Charge Of C« The Republican county executive committee in session in Asheboro Sat urday afternoon hy a vote of 15 to 5 recommended the appointment of Frank M. Wright as postmaster at Asheboro to fill the place made va cant by the death of U. C. Richardson. The other candidate for the recom mendation was Nolan Allen, assistant postmaster under Mr. Richhrdson. Riding rotkgh-shod, the Republican old guard, with Cephas Bowman en gineer in charge, drove the steam rol ler over the meeting, outvoted the op position at every turn and smothered every effort to give the patrons of the Asheboro office any hearing in the deliberations. Mr. Bowman was frank to state that an appointive postmaster is selected for political ac tivity alone and that on this basis Mr. Wright deserod the recommendation of the committeef The patrons of the offioe, he thought and so did Chair man C|ox, have nothing to say relative the appointment of a postmaster, and the fact that Mr. Allen held in his hands a petition signed by 1100 pa trons of the Asheboro office had no bearing on the matter whatever. J. S. Lewis asked for a primary in .Asheboro to ascertain the wishes of the patrons of the office in the mat ter, but this suggestion got'little or no consideration froip the twenty members of the Republican county executive committee attending the confab. Mr. Allep carried out this idea by stating that if he couldn’t get the recommendation of 75 per cent of the patrons of the postoffice he would withdraw from the race. Spokesmen for Mr. Wright coun tered with the statement that their candidate for the place had -circulated no peition, and, had he doner so, .he could probably come into the meeting with as many signer^ as Allen. Even before the actual voting in secret session, the observer could tell which way the cards were stacked and that Allen had not a ghost of a show for the committee’s recommendation. Mr. Wright, recommended at the meeting Saturday afternoon, is a former Clerk Smbhrior Court of Ran dolphwS*tJThaving served from 1914 to 1922. He was defeated for the office in 1926 by the late W. A. Lovett, Democrat. Before coming to Death Claims Ira Freeman At Ether Had Owned And Operated Gen eral Store For Fifty Years, And Was Leading Citizen. Sunday morning at 8:30 o’clock, Mr. Ira Freeman, aged 74 years, died at his home at Steeds, Montgomery county, eighteen miles south of Ashe boro on Highway 70. Mr. Freeman had been in his usual health until Tuesday preceding his death Sunday, when he suffered a stroke of paraly sis. Mr. Freeman was a remarkably active man for his age. At the time of his death he, with his son, Mr. T. R. Freeman, operated a general store, which Mr. Freeman had owned for more than fifty years, hi addition to this, he was Postmaster of Steeds, and had held this office for twenty five years. Mr. Freeman was. not only a leader in the business of the com munity, but he had been an active member of the White Oak Springs Baptist church at Ether for more than fifty years. It was in the ceme tery at church that the bunal service was held. The funeral was held at the home at 2:00 o’clock Mon day afternoon by Ray. Samuel Mc and Rev. C. A. Davis, both of High Point. Surviving are his wife, who was Miss Ellen Auman; and the following ten children out of a family of four teen children: Walter E. and C. R. Freeman, Raeford; Ray Freeman, of Philadelphia; T. R. Freeman. Steeds; Mfdin»aa George Davis, J. E. H°g«i and M. D. Dunlap, of Steeds; Mrs. G. N. Thomas, Aeheboro; Mesdames Wm. Boroughs and Lela Norman, of Sea grove; two brothers, Mr, Wiley F*«e* man, of High Point, and W. L. Free man, of Staf; two sisters, Mrs. Enos Auman and Mrs. O. A. Needham, of Either. ' V Town To Employ v Night Policeman A. M. Oglesby Dies From Heart Attack Called Suddenly Monday Night When Condition Was Thought To MaveT Veteran Conductor Albert M. Oglesby, aged 43, for twenty years a conductor on the Norfolk Southern railway lines, died suddenly, at his home on Sunset ave nue, in Asheboro, about 10 o’clock Monday night, from a heart attack. Mr. Oglesby had been in ill health for ;the past several weeks, but his health had apparently improved and he was able to come up street to greet his many friends. Mr. Oglesby moved to Asheboro with his family about a year ago from Aberdeen. Prior to his resi dence at Aberdeen, he hqd for several years lived *1 West Efed. On coming to Ashebo$o, Mr. Oglesby and his family affiliated themselves with the Jftrst Methodist Church, South, and took an active interest in the civic, social and ie|igious life of the town. Captain Oglesby, as he was best known, was a son of the late Rev. 6. A. Oglesby, who was killed by a train at Troy about 23 years ago. . Rev. Mr. Oglesby was at that time pastor of churches at Troy, Biscoe and star. Capt. Oglesby had been on the Nor folk Southern run out of Asheboro for several months. Prior to being transferred to this run, he was on the main lines from Charlotte to Raleigh. Surviving are his widow and six children, who are Albert, Carolyn, Nicholas, Ada Reives, John and Eliza beth. He leaves also one brother, Judge John M. Oglesby, of Concord} and one sister, Mrs. M. P. Burke, of Roanoke, Va. The funeral was held Wednesday morning at 11 o’clock from the Meth- | odist Episcopal church at West End by Rev. B. C. Reavis, pastor of the First Methodist Church, Asheboro, as sisted by the pastor of the West End church. The body was laid to rest in the church cemetery. A great throng of friends of Mr. Oglesby and the family from many parts of the State gathered to pay last tribute to the deceased. The floral offerings were many and beautiful. In the cemetery in which Mr. Oglesby was laid to rest, was first buried Mrs. Oglesby’s moth er. Native long leaf pines form the background of the cemetery and many of the graves may be found in the California Dam Bursts And Takes Heavy Toll Of Life 75-Foot Wall Of Water Sweeps Down Valley, Washing Away ' Everything In Sight. A big dam, 185 feet in length, and backing up 38,000 acre feet of water, in the San Francisquito canyon, in California, burst without warning late Monday night, turning a 75-foot wall of water loose down the valley, inun ' dating and sweeping away homes and everything else in its path. The dam impounded water for the city wood, in the Sandhills. Commenting on this action, the Vass Pilot says in part: “A name well known in all df the Carolinas is that of Herbert W. Jackson, of Richmond, the head of one of the big hanks of the South, a man formerly from this State, and eon who has done much to advance .the entire South to the progressive plane it now occupies. When a man at this caliber joins in the aggressive work of this community it is beeaaee he can read in the future a story ef creation and expansion. Mr. Jackaen has been in the class -with Walter Page, whose name is -synonymous with interest in this State, amd He Mr. Page, while both these men went elsewhere to carry on, both held is remembrance the old State and batik were always ready to lend a hand to keep up the motion.” Mr. Gunter Addresses First Meeting; Of Kiwanis Clnfc The first meeting of Asheborete newly organized Kiwanis Club war held in the social room of the hirst Methodist Episcopal Church Thursday evening. Mr. T. A. Burns, president of the club, was in charge of the baa iness session which was held follow ing the dinner. Mr. Burns then in troduced Lieut. Gov. J. U. Gunter, of Sanford, the speaker of the oeeaakn. Mr. Gunter’s topic was "Kxvuatf^ and his talk was interesting and eatae taining. With Mr. Gunter were tnm other members of the Sanford Khsan is Club, Messrs. Fisher MaWpeace. Will Makepeace, Herb Edwards, and St. Clair. The Sanford GUk sponsored the Asheboro Club :ahl have been most helpful in StarttoK the Asheboro organisation well. Ptaaa are now well laid for the organteMftat and Charter night will be obeereal April 12th. The meeting time is safe for each Thursday evening. Mr. Cooper Addresses Club Meeting At Ridge’s Strnm Farmer, March 1*5.—Last night, Mr. S. A, Cooper, agriculture teacher at Fanner made a talk on “the Brood Sow* St club meeting held at C. C. store. Next Saturday night, 17, another meeting will be held the same place, and the subject ft ' wilft. be “Feeding layis hens and growing off baby chicks.* Those present at the meeting urday night were: Mr. and IT C. Grimes, Mr. and Mrs. C. CL Mr. and Mrs. Victor Ladcey, Jacquiline Parker, Billy Grimes, Boss Wood, Lewis Wood* '