Newspapers / The Mount Airy News … / Dec. 10, 1925, edition 1 / Page 1
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I had clothes tinder my prison *i when I got a rhaaca to get into the boa ear where I had horn loading til* I joat look off my prison rlothea and roda out. 1 went down to Raleigh yards, down through the main of Raleigh and acroea to where I could get a freight to Sehaa. Mai I went to Florence and l Florence back to Wadeaboro. I 1 a freight into Winston where my Wood spent two days with his faat By in Winston, according to his awa than went tc Roanoke, he went to Bhiefteld, W. Ta.. Huntington, W. Va., and Hm flan to Braatwen, W. Va.. where Ua ■ether Hrea. It was there ha said *- - t J iL. tnanlraHr 11 Am aas a n wcfiTwi un infjHriuon to come hack to North Carolina where he it there aight he people who like to aae Mai. West Ridtag With Gtrki -1 easts back toto North Carolina • fcjr the way of Galax. Spent the ■ight aad Sunday in North WQkea "Where did I stay? Oh. with ftlaada. Daring the aftornoan I was gat riding with another fellow and JieMvb of girls. -Nice girls? Sure, I call 'mm nice." ia aae thing, I wiah you say for ma. baddy. Soase fel Haffman ia Raleigh told a that I was oa ary way to Greensboro to get another Jew. I never said any such thing aad I would like for the people to I didnt 1 read the papers all the Picked ap the Greensboro at Florence the aMrahtg after I gat away. They had a picture of •e ea the front page. Didnt aa I am." front tooth of (he aa he enjoyed his im «r | "Do yoa expect to haw I aatiea next year?" "Oh, t deal know; I abit fat asaaa aaoagh to ha srarod of anything, hat WMhow 1 am getting tired of this ■art of life Always nmatag from aametbing |' kiadar tbiak^ni r^bask pie of the state will realise 1 Nrt a Httte mmip waond mi I ftmm Mwt dMat trill Mm. For Mr Am "MM MT wtfa —njtog again? Mo. I taM Iht mKm Mat I Mt (ha h«»« Mk town whan I toft down at ■alaigh I <tont hold any *wl«a •Ml wooldnt do Mm any torn" Wood la uuMfm tntoy hnoaad to Mm IrMtoD county jail Mmfttog atata prison idWatola. Ha «aya Mm* ha wont hraak oat tonight m ha llfcaa tha fallow* around Mm ptoca K« ! marona paopto to tha ritf tanirht ara looking thair em for tha drat tfana. Darin* tha aarijr afternoon tha nntad ranfto haM opan haaaa at tha Jail. Word MMt ha had baan eaptur •d apraad around town and litaralljr hondrrdu iiuwdad through tha oorri dor of tha jaii to gat a gihnpaa of him. From banhar to ton thay all paaaad tha call of Mm captorad em vtot and all prom.anead hbn an afta hla fallow. Tha ahailff dlaauaarad what waa fotnc on and fM ■ **°P *° rt. RatoHrh with Ka bandft haa noth Wood waa aMklng hto tour to a Dndga aadaa which ha aaya balonga to a fHand to Huntington. Ha to waarhtg a brown awaatar, riding hraarhaa and pattaaa. HYMAN . T1LLEY ARSON CASE BEGINS IN STUART Stuart, Vs., Dm. S.—The trial of Loon and Charles Hymaa, of Grama bam, and D. E. Tllley, of Mount Airy, on charges of arson win bo raited next Tuesday mom in* in tho °»trick <lrealt conrt. Tho three ec Om of them la a formal charge of arson aad tho wimd charres that they conapired to act fir* to tho Patrick Jokkiaf company. Inc., at Stuart Cor tho par pooo of collecting insurance. The caw wiD bo stoutly netstsd by tho three awn wbo are hopeful of be in* able to coin lacs the jury by alibis that they were not in Stuart whoa the fir* broke oat as tho night of August 4 and that they could not, therefor*, b* guilty of the offense. no state dshas that the Hj man brothers organised the stock com pany among themsehrse. tao».uiod a stock of gen real fflprcKainine, rented a storehouse near tho railway station aad then insured the stock far $ttr 000. The fir* broke oat on the eve jof the formal opening and at least oae of the Hyman brothers aspects to show that ho was In Winston-Sa lem, N. C, providing for refr*eh lasnts on the morrow for tbooo who afied to see the new enterprise. The state win have a "mystery" witness who is expected to tell of the actual coat of the goods sad through him K is expected to show how the fire was started. The fir* broke out at the height of the drought. Stuart's water pressure was sa low at time that no effective work done la Another case of interest oa the Pa trick/docket Is the ouster prooeediuL against f. D. Walker, a member otj the hoard of supervisors, whooe r mo*1 is sought CM the ground that he undertook to do road mark i the county hi violation of hia oath of $1<MM0 to Ills., poe. S.—An aid tie* on, has brought Mr. and Mra'phll Mangos aa offer of 110,000 from P. B. Cherloski, Detroit vtolMat. On the back of the violin, which coat M sages tK, is a label which reads: "Antonio fltradivarius Cismana M* faeishat Anno lTIt." aad ia aa* ear. the Initials -A. fall the m In a meeting that hung ever until near midnight lift night the farm W* worked oat meet at their tlone, going on record in oypoeitlon to the ptepimd rtteniion of the atate wide school term from sis t» eight month*; advocating the abolition of lawyer*' speeches to the jury aa the moot effective method Af triale hi superior courts, h ing the setabllohment of a printery to supply free test hooka ta| school ehikhtfi^ Th« tlao Advocated nt Auitrmllan | ■eadjustment of the of taxation, a d reqaeeted the to refvee the rale in crease ankod by the Weetem Union Telegraph company. On the (abject of the Judiciary, the farmer* demanded the expedition of trials rather than the creation of new coorta. la proponing the abolish r-.nt -/ I,—., Kalnra ■nwfil Ol lawyer ■ ■ ipWCIHM DtrTOTr Jury*, they enggeeted that the neya address themaelves briefly to | the jodg«, permit him to expiate law In all its applications te the < and let the Jury take the ease and brteg in a verdict according to the] nliMUi and the law. ' What kind of reception the pro noeed farmer-labor qoestinnnaire will •ret from next spring's candidate* for public office cannot be forecasted WANT PARDON OF LAST ■ OF ALLZNS Naw Governor of Virginia Will Daarlle, Vs.. Dae. 7.—A mornMot luu been started to soiiuo executive tlinuir for the lost rcmalataf ■■■ baro of the A Don clan of Carroll Comi ty stilt in the penitentiary serving Ion* tenaa for their part la the Mo toric courthouw tragedy whkh took place in HBlsviHe la March, IMS. Sidna A lira and Waaler Edwards are the two men bi the penitentiary and t Is hi behalf of their liberation that petitions are aoon to 'be circulated throughout Virginia addrtasH ta1 Governor-Elect Harry Flood Byrd. No effort will ho Bade to eecare1 action by Oowiaw TrtnUo. Throe years a(o he pardoned Sidna Edwards and Friel Alton, hot declined to fie* freedom to Sidna Allan aad Weatey Edwards. It la thought tueieee to re-preoent the matter ta 0 iieiasc Trinkle since hia axproaaioa of lioaa on that subject. The atltads af th* hKoahf Governor la aat known hat there la raaeoa to haHaea that mm form of eneoui aliassait mat kan been glieii to relatliaa who have never failed to work for the Nheety af tha m and who, eoaalag from mo— tela stock hove probably feh their Claude Swaaaon Allen and Floyd ABen MM tha ealy two of the ate ringleaders te die hi the eiatUW. «Mr. It waa a ballot froas Fl.iyd Allen's gna. that aant Judge Thorn ton Sfasaie to hla death aa he eat on the beach Jaat after aeatsntlag hha to a year in tha penitentiary for a eral aad several af the court officials lay dead when the smoke of battle To Whom the Mac of I the land in It04 | * my*oiy. for tki i \am at ghma to Don Jam Dartolone Tapia by the Spanlah pmnw of Califor nia. Do* Tapia ruled Ma an iraa hand, ftoipjoiiUy drieing off invader*. Bo diad la 1K>, laarlai the ranch to hi» widow and two aona. Hia ( will containing ono of tho la California'* history, to tho to tho ** ■A San tont of thoy claim." Dtroetiac tho payment ho alao gave the fathers throo if sugar, a valuable boqaeat in thooo day*. Tho Tapia family hold tho ranch until IMS when thoy sold it to Don Leon Victor Prudhomme for $400, half of which waa paid in "metalMe currency," the root la "ft>oda at cur the title and he reduced hi* fortune la legal tiVte with tho United Statao government until, la 1M7, ha loot tho ranch in •etUement of a 11,400 gro cery bin to Don Matio Keller, of Loo In 1870, Keller'* heir* sold the tract for 910 an acre to Frederick Hastings Rindge, late hoabond of May K. Rindge, present owner and director of the property. . Rindge came went in 1970 in aearrh of health. Re bought the 18.000 acre* <imid the* jeer* of early *ettler*. who branded his ranch of mountain* and beaoho* "Rindge'* ridiculoua pur Retaining hi. health. Rindr* Imcu pursuing • pat vision, now ■boot to bt realized—that the hog* uni|t would become prettily 4t •tgned homo sites—bat hi. .traggle to fcssp the original grant intact forced him to boild a SM0.000 rail way at kit own txptnic to praaeat railway linos. Recently, aftet a long uwut battla, ' V> acres wara R»'«md for a mili ary highway from 'Ha north. Mr*. Hindge bitterly tha highway ^tending that H would de.tiuy por ion« of tha h*ach and would not con '-rm to tha proposed landscaping da-1 dgn. Mow, by the return of the it ta known U»t the 1,000 haw Mi and traveled well on the w li.valipaawt of 400,000 Km of allotted to them by tha Soviet riad Tartar. Moagol and Chineee Catholic prieata, a rabbi, all maatera of valuable trbdea. The foundation of theae rilla|*a am* with tha Baaalan revolution. eaa not to racogniae tha Bad goearn ; tha othar choka waa to loin tha Bad amy. Although all of than wara again at tha Soviet idea, till tha latter choice waa better for They joined tha array and they ■rera placed in the aaaie battalion. n». Beda gave them about 400,000 wraa of land, agricultural Machinery, lomestic animal* and everything tha | arnen need, and they arere to guard he border from Mongolian and Chin pee attacks. That waa the beginning of tha vil lage*. They built houaaa, agricul tural building?, brick factoriaa and a Hour mill. Within a abort tiaaa they lad fui mad a mat induatrial centtrr la a territory where only wild tribe* 1 iatafl. They all mhM CUmn, Moogol Intoreottng thing' ia that they didn't forgot their Mother langua**. Not' that, hot they created a new Euro pean civilisation They built ihui eh— i ml ithftftit whtff tfrw Honftritn language i* spoken. Even their elm' »re adopting thb language. Money la a thing unknown to thett. Buameaa is done by the ancient meth Mia of exchange. Meat of their oat out ia aold in Yladiraatok where their tuaineai alao ia tranaactod in the ex -hange of their inuducta (or articiaa they need. Al^^7>i^7otiMrBW.rk JackaooriDe, BL, Dae. 6.—While hane itealing haa ahown a ataady de wue with the peering at yaara, the brti-Horee Thief aaooctetfon rtill up of a awjerlty «f I ■ lMt to IMS. Hi hiatory with tlM mm the World War period. Virginia dark-fired ■ a* mm fiS? _ now demanding • 7S pa cant op of all the dark tobacco it stata. They have alrer.dy 7,000,00© pound* or 17 par seat of the total production in Vhrginia. The to haeco farmer* at the old ball of Vir ginia and North Carolina are pfen ning roorgaaiaatiaa on tha haata <f • M par cant control eon tract aad ttm Sooth Caroliniana who have benef* ad greatly from the Ing th# W a par cant of all tobacco in tha South Caro lina bait aa iti definite goal. In nana of thaae three batto are tha farmer* i^llling to carry on aa aai> ciation without a majority siga-ap of the groweri and in the old tnbim belt of North Carolina and VirgMn aa well aa in Sooth Carolina provislsa la made in the future contract, ap proved by tha representative* at thp | fad abort of Ml par cant, signer* : have tha pit»liege of their name* daring a definite Provided withdrawal* do not the percentage halow 50 per cent «ef 'he production of tha bait, thU M par cent or more will orgaaiaa into aa aaaociation. Otherwiae there wfll ha The reorganication of the growara of Virginia, North aad South Carolina ia being carried aa •trictly by type pool* la the variooa belt* of the St*tea, according to *ae retory M. O. Wilson of the Tobaaae Growara Cooperative Aseodatloa wha '•mphaaiiea the fact that each graap of tobacco grower* will orgaaiaa aa a separate unit bat with the reaerved right to federate with groupe aad to determine own ilacteJ diiactw* h thoae from other pool* tha tema of federation.
The Mount Airy News (Mount Airy, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 10, 1925, edition 1
1
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