Newspapers / The Courier (Asheboro, N.C.) / Sept. 9, 1937, edition 1 / Page 3
Part of The Courier (Asheboro, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
rife WOMEN’S PAGE Weddings, Parties and Personals. Phone 144 Personals Miss Thelma Hugging is at Sum ter, S.i C. this week visiting rela tives. Miss Eunice Bulla is spending this week in Washington visiting her brother, Ben Bulla. Miss Mary Shepherd spent the week-ena with her mother, Mrs. F. A. Shepherd at Liberty. Walter Crissman and Murray Miller, High Point attorneys, are in Randolph county today. Mrs. Eliza Edwards and Miss Cora Edwards of Sophia were among the county people attend ing court today. Mr. and Mrs. Franz Strickland are hone for a short visit to Mrs. Strickland’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. S. C. Eaddy at Jacksonville, S. C. Miss Mary Little Steele of Rock ingham, who will be a member of the local school faculty this year, was in Asheboro yesterday for a short visit. Jack Hayworth Better Reports from Jack Hayworth at Wesley Long Hospital, Greensboro, indicate that he is improving from his recent serious illness. Another blood transfusion was given Tues day afternoon—this time William Hayworth, a cousin, giving the blood. Leaves for State John Alexander, son of Mr. and Mrs. Kemp Alexander, left today for Raleigh where he will enter State college. He will enter the freshman class. Coffins Visit Mr. and Mrs.®. J. Coffin of Cliu pel Hill have been in Asheboro for the past two days visiting friends and relatives. Fulps Called Away Rev. and Mrs. J. B. Fulp were called to Selma, Ala.. Wed nesday on account of the serious illness of their daughter, Mrs. E. K. Wachtel. They will remain un til her condition is changed. Dal las McDowell will have charge of the services at the church on Sun day. On Visit to Florida Miss Bernice Jones of Liberty is on an extended visit to West Palm Beach Florida, having accompanied her cousin, A. L Jones home. Lawn Party At Central Falls 11th The Women’s class of the Cen tral Falls M. E. Church will give a lawn party on Saturday Night, September 11th at the home of Levi Harrelson. Everybody is in vited to attend this event. Dallas McDowell will CONDUCT SERVICE SUNDAY Dallas McDowell will be in charge of the services at the Pil grim Holiness church on Sunday in the absence of the pastor, Rev. J. B. Fulp who is away on account of illness in the family. Mrs. Lester Rich Hostess to Circle Of M. P. Church Circle 3 of the Central Methodist Protestant church met with Mrs. Lester Rich for the September meeting on Monday evening. Mrs. Frank Redding, Jr., presided over the meeting and conducted the mis sion lesson which was precede i by devotions led by Mrs. Brown. The devotional topic was “Patience.” During the brief business seseio’i, several important items relating to the budget were discussed. Mrs. Charles F. .Smith was welcomed back into the circle after several months absence due to ill health. Ice cream and cake were served by the hostess. Memorial Service For Mrs. Moring Held By Circle Mrs. John K. Wood’s circle, meeting at the M. E. church Mon day afternoon, held a memorial ser vice for their deceased member, Mrs. W. H. Moring. The meeting stArted in a most appropriate fash-’ ion by the singing of several fav orite hymns of this beloved mem ber who was a talented musician and gave generously of her musical talent and ability to her church. A solo, “Beneath the Cross of Jesus,” sung by Mrs. Neely Hun ter was most effective. This ac • companiment was played by Miss Ethel Johnson. Miss Emma Rice also added to the musical part of Hie program with a piano selection. Rev. H. P. Powell, pastor of tht church, gave a fitting tribute relat ing to the life and service of this Splendid woman whose passing has been a real loss to this section of North Carolina. Mrs. A. R. Hix, hostess for this meeting, invited the members to, the social room after the program, for light refreshments. Compliance work under the 1937' Agricultural Conservation program .is in fuil swing in most North Caro lina counties. i W: ;-V‘ L - - ' \ Sorosis Group Hears Talk % By Mrs. Smith on Travels Mrs. Cotitrsn G. Smith was spea ker at the Soroais meeting Wed nesday aftitjVioon held at the home of Mrs. Francis White. Mrs. Er-1 vin Frye Was associate hostess with Mrs. White at this meeting which was an unusually pleasant occasion, i Mrs. Smith discussed briefly the ten countries .which she visited dur ing her sumftier abroad. Especial.y did she stfeess England and Scot land. The pageantry of London was an impressive feature of the trip. | The beauty of the English coun Presbyterian S. S. Class Enjoys A Picnic Supper Mon. The members of Mrs. C. G. Smith’s Sunday- school class of the PresbyteriwSfthurch enjoyed a pic nic supper at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Reid II. Hanner on Tuesday evening. In addition to the supper, Dr. Smith enterUtined the group with stories of4 Jus recent European trip. Visitors,, other than class mem bers were: MfS. Fannie Chisholm, Dr. C. G Smith ana Jim Riddle. Job Hunting? Don’t Overdo Your Charm By Betty Clarke UP) Feature Service Writer You're trying to get ajob. Per haps you’re one of this year’s col lege graduates. Or perhaps job hunting is atr*old story. In either case, you get out your best suit, give, yourself a shampoo, and put on yput brightest look. For thesuccess stories tell you person ality will get the job. They’re right, young lady—but you must yCpfember that personal ity implies gfood grooming as much as sparkling enthusiasm. So, when ,you get out that best suit, be surU it's conservative in cut and cofer, and pressed neatly. Your blousdb must be spotless. And if you’re the sort of person whose blouses is forever parting company with your skirt, wear a tailored dress. Don’t forget to wear your hat And gloves. Your employer-to-be may want to a&f if your gloves are as neat as tfre restof your outfit. It doesn’t always follow. And keeto^-yeur hat on—even if you feel yim? golden curls really should be ehown, Your executive may not be SJMtfc susceptible. This is Aft time to experiment 'with your coifjfure. The way you’ve been vreaiipK your hair probably is as good ag any. And you’ll look more l-atumf Better keep your new wave a few days before job-hunting begins — again, it’s the naturalness that count-?. Don’t cr nfuse your brightest look with the brighter of cos metic? F.mjloyers, as a ru'». are ultra consegrative. They don’t mind a hit 'of'lipstic*c and a ovidj application.of. rouge, but most of them oly.evi to flas.i/ nail polish. Clean .•\u.as and neat manicuring are far nioie impo cant than col ored na 1 \ Representatives from 20 counties attended the recent farm manage* ment conference in Lincoln Coun fty. — »> »r i 1 — ; W. H. Lawrence, Gate County farmer, reports that his poultry 'flock added $800 to his farm income during the past year. IMARKETI REPORTS] Average Spot Price New Orleans.—The average price of middling cotton at 10 southern spot markets today was 9.05 cents a pound; average for the last 30 market days '9.96 cents a pound. CHVHbfte Cotton Basis, middling 7-8, 9.45c. Chtflotta Produce Leghorn hms, pound .12c Colored hens, pound.15c Green cabl Sweet pel String bei White egi Leghorn fi Yellow sqi No. 1 new No. 2 new :wt. ..$1.00 >ushel .90c ihel.$1.25 sen .30c irs, pound ....... 15c bushel .$2.50 potatoes, cwt. $1.25 potatoes, cwt. . .75c By midday the cotton list shows net gains of 12 to 16 points. Stocks held gains near the fourth hour. SteqlpV*ere among the first to push forward. Commodities were somewhat uneven. New York. Wall street gains were reached .jarly today in U. S. Steel, Chris!#,General Motors, United AifcrffC and Goodrich. Cotton futures opened stead./, 1 to 8 points higher on cable and foreign buying. Cotton: ?OcL 9.14; Dec. 9.15; Jan. 9.16; March 9.22; May 9.35. July 9.43. ^ -- i tryside, long famed in song and story, was also described by Mrs. Smith. Courtesy of the English policemen, the multidunous book stores, and the homes of great men will remain a vivid picture to the speaker and her audience. Scotland, with castles and beau ty galore, was graphically describ ed by Mrs. Smith. After the program, the two hos tesses served an ice course to the twenty-two memberspresent. There were no visitors at this meeting. Pickle Favorites Breakfast Menu Cantaloupe Cooked Corn Cereal Cream Poached Eggs Buttered Toast Coffee Luncheon Menu Cream Of Asparagus Soup Waffles Fruit Cookies Sliced Oranges Tea Dinner Menu Broiled Lamb Chops Creamed Peas Mashed Squash Bread Currant Jelly Head Lettuce Celery Seed Dressing Apple Pie Coffee Olive Oil Pickles 36 small cucumbers 2 cups thinly sliced onions 1 1-3 cups white mustard seed 2 tablespoons celery seed 1 1-2 cups olive oil 1 1-2 cups salt Vinegar to cov er Select cucumbers about four inches long and two-thirds inch in diameter. Cut in thin crossway slices. Select mild-flavored onions that are about one inch in diame ter. Sprinkle onions and cucum bers with salt and let stand one hour. Drain well. Add rest of the ingredients except vinegar. Pour into sterlized jars and cover with vinegar. Seal and store in dark cool place. A mild-flavored vinegar of the best grade should be used. Green Tomato Pickles 8 cups chopped green tomatoes 3 cups chopped sweet red pep pers 3 cups chopped green peppers 1 cup chopped onions 2-3 cup salt 2 cups granulated sugar. 2 cups vinegar 1 tablespoon cinnamon 2 teaspoons cloves 2 tablespoon celery seed Discard cores from tomatoes. (Do not peel.) Chop tomatoes and add peppers, onions and salt. Let stand two hours. Drain well. Add rest of the ingredients and let boil quickly for 10 minutes. Pour into sterlized jars and seal immediate ly. Fried mush or hominy grits are good to serve with fried or baked chicken if there is plenty of gravy to accompany both. m ttay FEVER victims may take 11 heart with a scientist’s an nouncement that each tear de stroys a million bacteria. • • • A girls' softball team is con sidering silk stockings as team equipment because they are bet ter for getting runs • • • At least one forgotten New Year resolution will be recalled when it comes time to store the straw hat you svfore you’d throw away. • • • - Any taxpayer con tell wor ried economists how long pres ent wages will last. Until six days before the next Saturday, of course. v * • As the depmssion fades, profit eers again are rearing their ugly heads. Someone offered a radio commentator a penny for his thoughts and he accepted. r • • * rraer An Australian finds the United States a “wonder” spot. And he didn’t add, “wonder what next" #pot- ' . • . Vice President Gamer, re ports say, is getting perturbed about the lack of national economy. Jf he could Just pass the idea on to Congress. • • • Should the tax investigators look into that Alabama firm of Graves & Graves as a personal corporation? . tcopyrlsht. 1IST, NBA Service, Inc.) Hasty Contends He Shot in Self Defense (Continued from Page 1) referred to a book in the solicitor’s hands. ‘I think it unfair for the solici tor to read from those papers.” “If* you knew what I was read ing from and where I got it you would not say it is unfair,” su'd Mr. Coggin. “I know what it is and where you got it,” answered Mr. Moser. “Than,” laughed Mr. Coggin; you shouldn’t say it is unfair. Here the court called at adjourn ment for a few minutes. Ems Kennedy was next placed on the witness stand and discussed hearing Babe Yow “threaten” Hasty. After considering argu ment and bickering among the at torneys, Mr. Kennedy said the de ceased told him that Arthur Hasty was trying to “mess him up” again and he was going to "fix him.” He further swore that Yow went in with an open knife in his hand. Solicitor Coggin was at a loss to know why Mr. Kennedy had failed to give the court this infor mation when Hasty was up for trial last court and was told that Mr. Kennedy was at Vass at a hunting lodge. Tom Hatwood, colored cook for many years” was placed on the the Hasty brothers ‘off and on for stand again and told that Yow ask ed him what “Mr. Will and Mr. Arthur” were doing when he saw them sitting talking, and that he warned him of his (Yow’s) inten tion of ‘cleaning out the place” ad ding, “If you don’t want to be in it, you’d better get out.” Tom stated that Yow was “under the in fluence of whiskey”. J. L. Overman gave Babe Yow a “bad character” as did Tommy Brookshire, former jailor, who ad mitted that he had never been ac tually "mean” when arrested- by him. Nathan Cox was put on the stand and his testimony ruled out. Bobo, a barber, who came to Ashe boro from South Carolina, also gave Yow a bad name. Clifford Meyers, a county depu ty, was then placed on the stand and swore that both Kennedy and Tom Hatwood were both “bad at drink” themselves. Pearly Miller, night police offi cer, again took the stand and was asked about the character of Will Hasty, and Hatwood and stated that they “drank some” giving Hat wood a "pretty bad” character. Of ficer Miller was also asked about what Wilbur Martin, nephew of the Hasty brothers, said at the night of the coroner’s inquest when Dr .Lambert asked what Yow had in his hand at the time of the kill ing. Mr. Miller stated that Mar tin answered that he ‘had nothing. If he did, he did not see it.” He was also asked if Yow was danger ous when intoxicated and he ans wered that he had never considered Yow violent. He was “fussy” but not dangerous. Dr. Mattison was then called to the stand and was asked about an attack which Will Hasty had soon after the shooting. The doctor stated that Hasty was not drunk, that he had a heart attack and his blood pressure was 96. Will Hasty, brother of the de fendant, was placed on the stand and asked about his ailment during last court week, which he said was a nervous affection and when ask ed where he went after being dis charged from the local hospital, re called after sometime, that it was Dr. Ashworth’s hospital which, he claimed was not a place for treat ment of drunks, but ‘nervous.” This concluded the evidence and, before court adjourned for noon re cess, the Judge asked the attorneys about the length of time they would require for speeches. As best it could be ascertained, it will take the better part of the after noon for the lawyers. Solicitor Coggin tsated that he could do wanted in thirty minutes. The state yesterday afternoon placed four witnesses on the stand in opening its case. R. H. Brown, Asheboro, the first called testified he was in the cafe when the shooting took place. Af ter giving a general outline of the fixtures and equipment in the cafe, Mr. Brown stated he was seated at a counterabout four or five feet from the defendant and his bro ther William Hasty. Arthus Has ty, Mr. Brown said,had one hand on his brother’s shoulder. Nearby, he said, Yow was standing. A few seconds later, the witness said, Arthur Hasty had walked around in rear of the conuter. Yow he said was then standing at the opening between a counter which runs north and south and one run ning east and west. ‘‘A second later,” Mr. Brown said, “I heard a click, then a she1, and Yow threw up his hands—” here thfe witness placed his two hands across his shoulders showing the manner in which Yow reacted after the shot was heard. When questioned by Mr. Goggin, the witness said he heard two more Announcing That Miss Marjorie Monroe is now ready to serve you at MARGARET’S Beauty Shop Phone 116 South Fayetteville Street shots. He 3taled he saw a pistol in the defendant’s hand—that the pistol was pointed his direction but that the bullet “evidently” struck Yow. The next he saw Yow, Brown stated was on the sidewalk outside the cafe. Under cross examination, whan pressed for a reason why he con sidered the defendant shot Yow, Mr. Brown said: “I saw a pistol in Arthur’s hand —I heard the shot and Yow was ly ing on the sidewalk.” Mr. Brown said he helped place Yow in an ambulance and rode to the hospital where the man was declared dead. Later, he said, he understood the body was taken to Pugh’s Funeral Home. City Policeman, Miller was plac ed on the stand and told of seeing the defendant after the affair. He said Mr. Hasty was decidedly “nervous” and seemed to have been drinking. H. L. Loflin, employed at Pugh's Funeral Home testified as to three wounds in Yow’s body. He said one was just below the collar bone and seemed to have taken a course through the dead man’s chest. Two other holes, he said, one above the other, were located in Yow’s left side. Under cross ex amination said, he could not say that the wounds were caused by bullets. Mrs. James Ollie Yow, widow of the dead man, the next witness, said she last saw her husband alive the morning of the 18th. He was going to work at that time she said. She said he was in perfect health that morning. The next she saw him, was in Pugh’s Funeral Home, dead. What appeared to be an an effort on the part of the defense attorney to bring out evidence that Mr. Yow was a man of unusual strength met with little satisfactory response from the witness. /‘He weighed about 180-190 pounds, did he not”, she was asked. “He weighed about 175 pounds”, came the answer. “He had big strong muscle did he not”?, was the next question. “And big arms”? “No Sir”, Mrs. Yow answered, “his arms were very thin". Questions regarding her hus band’s action when he had been drinking were overruled by the We have recently installed Frederic Permanent Waving Machine and we invite you to try an end curl or permanent from $2.50 to $8.00 at the SERVICE Beauty Shop PHONE 417 court. Deputy Sheriff Ben Morgan was called and testified that a previous witness, R. H. Brown, was a man of good reputation. There was no cross examination. Court was then adjourned until this morning at 9:30 o’clock. A custom union, Zollvercin per mitted goods to be sent free of duty, in the earlier 19th century, from one section of Germany to another. The American Geographical So ciety of New York is the oldest geographical society in the coun try, It was founded in 1852. A lawgiving citizenship to all native-born Indians was passed by Congress in 1924. To prevent disease entering the United States, the public health service last year inspected 15,981 incoming vessels carrying 1,916, 727 persons. Tuesday, Sept. 14th Randolph Drug Co. Cash — Cut Rate Phone 408 ' We Deliver CITY SCHOOLS OPEN THURSDAY, SEPT. 16th Let Jones Outfit The Whole Family DRESSES Children’s fast color print dresses. Attractive patterns, neatly tailored. 48c to 97c School Prints 36 inch prints. Fast color for school dresses. Dainty pat terns. Light, medium or dark grounds. At— 9c, 15c & 19c yard Boys’ Knickers Boys’ Knickers. Wors ted, tweeds and cordu roy. Sizes 5 to 18. 97ct0 $1.98 Boys’ Overalls Boys’ Overalls. Made of good quality denim. Triple stitched and full cut. Blue Bludd and Anvil brands. 48c, 69c, 79c, 89c Children’s Play Suits Children’s play suits- Broadcloth blouse Q'Tp with wool tweed pants. Assorted colors U I BOYS’ Dress Shirts Boys’ Dress Shirts. Plain and fancy patterns. Past color. Size 8 to 14. 48c School Opening Special Big thick pencil tablet Big wide pencil tablet Pen tablet Large composition book SPECIAL Note Book Paper, 40 sheet package. 2 packages 5c WARM COATS Children’s and Misses’ new fall coats Plain and tailored styles. Also fur-trimmed. Some with tarns to match. $2.98 «• $7.95 CHILDREN’S OXFORDS A real school value. Tan or black lace. Oxford leather or composition sole. Sizes up to 2—at Misses’ tan oxfords. Leather sole and heel, with rubber heel tap. Novelty ties—at * • A Lesson In Economy Awaits You At— iW. W. JONES & SONS “ASHEBORO’S LEADING DEPARTMENT STORE” >••1
The Courier (Asheboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 9, 1937, edition 1
3
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75