THE NEWS-RECORD " MADISON COUNTY RECORD,, Established June 28, 1901. FRENCH BROAD NEWS Established May 16, 1907. - Consolidated Novambdr 2, 1911 , PRICE A YEAR ' The PROGRESSIVE FARMER " J THE NEWS-RECORD ; BOTH A YEAR FOR THE ONLY NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN MADISON COUNTY VOL. XXI MARSHALL, N. C, FRIDAf AUGUST 23, 1929 . - ...... : 8 Pages This Week 130Q 1mm WHAT IS THERE ABOUT SHIRT TAIL THAT CAN BE CONSIDERED AS SO FRIGHTFULLY IMMODEST? Remember Things That Were Utterly Shocking ' Yester day Are Commonplace Today . to it were put off the floor. Large placards were to be found at most of the dancing floors, giving notice that no ragging would be tolerated. A girl who permitted her partner to rag was regarded as having sunk to the depths . of depravity. By Carl Goerch in Newt and Ob- It wasn't long, however, before server, Raleigh, N. C. everybody began ragging, and then Speaking from a general standpoint nobody thought anything more about .there is no such thing as modesty; it's jit. As long as only a few were doing a conventionality. There is no such it the practice was considered as be- thing as immodesty; it's unconven-ing disgraceful. When that particu. Help For The Veteran The American Legion, District of Columbia Department, has started something needed in the form of a non-profiting, employment bureau for aiding former service men who are out of work. Veterans are register ed, facts about them recorded, and references carefully investigated. When an employer needs a man the facts about several men who can pos-, CONTROVERSY IS REVIVED RELATIVE HEIGHT OF MOUNT . MITCHELL AND CLINGMAN'S DOME AND MOUNT GUY V V OT UNDER FIRE. -'Asheville, N. C, Aug, 22, A con troversy, three quarters of a century COURT NEXT WEEK IN MADISON COUNTY tionality. Modesty, according to Webster, is "free from all undue familiarity, in decency or lewdness: restrained with in due limits of propriety." Con ventionality is "adhering to social formalities or usages." If a : woman were to pause on Main street, lift up her skirt and ad just her garter, passers-by would jasp in astonishment, and the general verdict would be that she was the personification of all things immodest. And yet, that same woman can wander up and down the beach, at tired in the most abbreviated kind of i costume, and nobody pays any at ;ention to her whatsoever. Her legs ire bare and most of her back is in ;he same state. She is not consid jred immodest. This summer the stockingless vogue s gaining numerous followers. First ff there was much criticism concern ng the style and the opinion of many )eople seemed to be that anyone wno ippeared in public places without itockings was doing something of a lecidedly brazen nature. Why are bare legs considered per 'ectly proper on the beach and why ire they censured on the streets? You answer that one. W. O. Saunders, of Elizabeth 3ity, appears in public in a pair of lajamas, and people raise their hands n horror.. v "The height of indecency 1", . r"H6w terribly immodest!" "Positively shocking I" These, and similar comments were ieard everywhere. But what was here about Saunders' costume that ras indecent? Where did the 1m lodesty come in? What was so erribly shocking about it? Pajamas consist of a coat and ants. They afford just as decent a overing for a man's body as does a 'aim Beach suit. Nobody has any iistification for saying there is any !iing indecent about a, pajama-ward-be. It isn't a matter of modesty; it's jnventionality. It is because Saunders departed rom the conventional garb of men lat all the criticism was raised. So I ir as modesty and immodesty are jncerned, they cannot possibly he nsidered as factors. Suppose, this afternoon, you were be walking along the principal xeet in your town and should take sudden notion to pull out the tail f your shirt and let it hang on the it side of your trousers, instead of s customary place. Everybody you met would think u were either crazy or frightfully imodest. What in the world is there about a lirt-tail that can be considered im odest? People aren't in the habit of going tout with their shirt-tails exposed, i when somebody gets the idea that 'would be more comfortable to let iem stay out, instead of letting em constantly try to get out, he is garded as being immodest.' Where is there any Bense in such a arge? Another supposition. Suppose you sre occupying a dressing room in me bath-house at the beach. While a state of what might be called gligee, you discover that yon are t of cigarettes. Yon take stock of ur costume and find that you have ; your shoes and box, an athletic irt and what are known as "shorts." lening the door of your room, you unter out Into the open and stroll to the place where cigarettes are idv : :::-- " v Seventeen women faint and the lice reserves are called out. Why? . Because yon proved your f indecent , Because yon are re- rded las having' done . something i y immodest. After you have sefe d things with the police, yon re n to the bath-room, shed the shoes c and shirt and shorts, and don1 a ;hing suit that is far more abbrevi d and that exposes much more of ir body than did your former cos ne. ' ' i-- f ; 3 i'. -iVhv should your, appearance in rt and shorts be considered int dest? Why should it be perfectly per to wear one of these scanty hing SUitS? ':-.V-;.' ' lot because Of modesty, but be st of conventionality.- 1 i : Lbout 18 or 20 years ago,; young cs began abandoning the waits two-step. A new kind ' of a e had come in; a horrible, wi ly dance, generally referred to .he rag." Dancers who resorted lar form of dancing: became general, criticism and condemnation were dis carded. If everybody in Elizabeth City were to appear in pajamas tomorrow morning, nobody would notice' any thing unusual or "immodest" about the apparel. To be modest, therefore, it would seem that you have to do as the crowd does. If you are doing a thing all by yourself, you are guilty of im modesty. Last Sunday morning, before I had finished dressing, I went out on the front porch to see the paper. When I returned my wife chanced to see me. It so happened that I had failed to put on a shirt. Did you go out on the porch in your undershirt: she inquired, in horrified accents. I admitted the truth of the accusa tion. "Suppose somebody had seen you." she protested. Well, what if somebody had seen me? What is there out-of-the-way about a sleeveless shirt? Where does the immodesty come in? Modesty has nothing to do with it whatsoever. The women used to wear a gown which was called the "slit skirt." It had a' short slash up the side, reveal ing casual glimpses of ankle and calf. The garment was considered the height, of immodesty for, a mqnth or so. Look what they're wearing today 1 And yet, the knee-length skirts of today are considered respectable and modest in every respect. What is considered extremely im modest today becomes entirely mod est tomorrow. Modesty, it would seem is based upon conventionality, ana conven tionality is based upon the abhorence and dislike of the average individual to see someone else do something of an original nature. Modesty, there fore, is akin to jealousy. Going: back once more to W. O. Saunders and his pajamas. The principal reason why there has been so much criticism concerning hid little experience is because it proved him to be original, daring, inventive and unconventional. There was absolute ly no reason in the world for all the hullabaloo that was raised. Nary a solitary reason. If people had pass ed him by with a polite greeting, if the preachers and editorial writers had ignored him, if the whole thing had been treated as an every-day occurrence, unworthy of special at tention, Mt .Saunders would have stalked back to his domicile, ripped off his pajamas, donned his regular suit, and cussed out everybody and everything in Elizabeth City for fail ing to appreciate his originality. People don'flttreTor anybody to be original. Originality in wearing apparel is termed immodesty. Origi nality in conduct is termed eccentri city. Originality in thought is radi cal. And yet. when you come to think about it, practically all the progress that has been made in the world has been made by people who hao. origi nal ideas of some kind or another. Originality is the ppice of life. You can get a bigger kick in five minutes by doing something original than you can out of following the conventions for a life-time. If you don't believe it, try it out for yourself. Try Saun ders' pajama stunt, if you wish.. Pull out your shirt-tail and let it flap in the breeze. Throw your collars ana neckties into the garbage can, where they should have been placed many vears asro. if you are a woman, dieted to the cigarette habit,' throw rxy your cigarettes and start using a corn-cOb pipe. you warn o gy efooted down to work, whose busi- tipm I it. exceot your own. ' Modesty? Nothing but a lot of rubbish, so far as ninety per cent of the so-called modesty is concerned. -- The only reason I don't come out in pajamas myself is that I wear night shirts. The only reason 1 don't come nut In a nlcrht ah Irt that I : "-: - Wall, never mind the reason t just naturally ain't going to da "It modesty or no modesty. . - - - x " W 1 J .' j l ...1 sibly meet his qualifications are avail-iwi revivea nere .. . ,. T. ... . , . it Was discovered that Clirvgman s could be carried on all over the coun try we would soon hear less about the out-of-work veteran. It would, too, kill off a lot of men who plead the service-to-country act, but are loafers in intent. SHELTON DEAD; WIFE IS HELD Fred Shelton, said to. have been shot by his wife, Flossie Shelton, who is being held in the Madison county jail at Marshall, died at a hospital in Greeneville, Ttnn., shortly after mid night Tuesday morning, August 20, after he had clung tenaciously to life for 34 days with a bullet wound in his head. Since Shelton was taken to the hospital from Madison county, on the night of July 16, he had been in a semi-conscious condition, and several days ago the hospital attaches gave up hope for his recovery. Shelton did not ciseuss the -hooting during his stay at the ho.pital, other than to whisper aiino.-i iotally incoherent and scattering remarks while in a semi-conscious state. Ac cording to reports, one of these whis pered statements was: "It was no accident." The body was sent to Shelton's rel atives in Madison for burial. Flossie Shelton, his bride of a few weeks, is being held in the jail at Marshall without bond on a charge of firing bflfata4'ahOt. It haTbeen re ported that no preliminary hearing will be held for Mrs. Shelton, due to the nearness of the Madison county term of Superior Court, which will convene Monday, and that the hear ing will be held before the Grand Jury. Dome, a high mountain in the Great Smky Mountains National ParK near Asheville was on tentative barometric measurements, conducted by the U. S. Geological Survey, declared to be higher than Mount Mitchell in the Blaqk Mountains east of the city. A$imilar controversy raged in 1848 when 'Thomas Clincrman and Dr. Eli- sha Blitchell, after whom the two mountains were named, each claimed for his peak the honor of being the highest mountain in eastern America. Dr. JUitchell lost his life in scaling Mount Mitchell to prpve the height of that peak. v A (third rival tor tne neigni aDoye sea level supremacy has appeared in the little known Mount Guyot in the heart of the Great Smoky Mountains wilderness. Mount Guyot, barome trical ftwjasurements show to be high er jthafceither Mount Mitchell of Clinirtiah's Dome. As the measure- mehtsco,mpleted by the Geological SuryeyPwere barometrical only and the cul height must be decided withjsflrfteylng instruments there are many; fto-still believe that lordly MourifciMitChe11 will not be dethroned fromi; the position of highest mount ain in .the east. ThjBiftftiVation of Mount Mitchell is determined--at 6,711 feet above sea levelJf i'.Ther' barometrical measure ment! Bho-vfc' that Clingman's Dome is above 6,W& leet in altitude and the sumnjit oFMo'unt Guyot towers 7.025 feet aboT the sea. These latter two altitutlesyfiheweveri; are at present tentative,' hence the controversy. 1 yyg.;' TROUTIEARED IN ASHEVILLE PUBLIC SQUARE THOSE BACK SEAT BLUES The salesman calls it a rumble seat, To many it's a humble seat, To mother-in-laws a grumble seat, To tourists just a jumble seat, To sister it's a mumble seat, To grandpa it's a stumble seat, To wise gals, just a dumb belle seat. The Pathfinder. "O Brung Bacj Mu Typist T' M3" I My typust is qway on hjer vacatuon Mu typost ix awt fot a werk My tyiat id away in her vaxatium i While thesw keuys play hide anf serk. Bjing back, bing bzch, brung bqck My typixt tu me, to mr Bging bxcj, brinf bacj, bting baxk muy rypist to mee. The Pathfinder. THREE MURDER CASES MAY BE TRIED "whoozit in MADISON" 'ZEB MERRILL" Superior Court, which will be held in Marshall next week with Judge T. B. Finley, of Wilkesboro, presiding, may prove to be one of unusual inter est. It seems quite probable ' that three murder cases will be for trial. The fact that Fred Shelton is dead, j h is wife, Mrs. Flossie Shelton, who is held without bond in a cell in the jail at Marshall will be tried for murder, las he !s said to have died from shots fired by Mrs. Shelton. State vs. John Davis is on docket. Davis is paid to have shot and killed Bunt Roberts on the Doe Branch sec tion of Madison county in a quarrel. It is also possible, if not probable, that the case involving the two Lan ders brothers in the shooting of Al bert King and Arthur Stanton, who are now in the county jail awaiting trial, will be heard. It seems that the case may be delayed on account of the little Stanton girl, now in an Asheville hospital, not being able to testify. This twelve-year-old girl Vtn be an important witness when the .case is tried, and if her condition is such that she cannot attend court, the case may be continued. DID YOU KNOW- Once upon a time a horny-handed hillside farmer tied a plow line a- round a calf's neck, handed the other end pf the rope to his young son and gave mm instructions as ionows: TW fW nrp :n nj npnr Take this calf to town and sail ' him to the butcher. I want $5.00 I Asheville. 13 wood workine for the calf, but if the butcher will (,.,-,,., D a not pay five, you can back down, 50 , plants, 11 textile mills, flour, cents at a step, to $3.00 If the ; d jgt m g artificial butcher will not pay you $3.00, bring , B the calf and the rope back home." stone plants and 2 stone cutting The boy set off on his errand and i,,,., , . , conducted the calf to the butcher's establishments, 4 sheet metal door, where ensued the following dia- 'WOrks, and 4 manufacturers of logue : - I Boy: "Pop sent me in to sellyou pottery, in addition to many Butcher: "How much does he want other establishments manufac- Merrily They Rumble Along Rumble seat riders will give a vote of thanks to the inventor of the so called rumbletop now seen on a large number of cars on Fifth Avenue, New York, and other great arteries of au tomobile traffic. This ingenious de vice is carried in a small space when days are fair and warm, but when sudden showers or chilly nights make protection necessary the rumbletop is quickly assembled. Transparent Py ralin side and rear windows enable the rumblers to view the landscape. In short, this ultra-modern accessory transforms the two-seater sports coupe into a four-passenger closed car. Hebrew'Holy Days Are Recognized Men of Jewish faith in the Navy will be granted leave in the future when conditions permit, to observe their high holy days, Rosh Hashonah, and Yom Kippur. They will not be the less valuable to their country be cause they have a religious faith, and make it known. Asheville, N. C, August 21. Asheville is probably the only city in the United States where the angler, were he allowed to do so, could pur sue his "favorite sport in the center of the public square. Over 5,000 brook and rainbow trout disport themselves in the great electric fountain which is an ornament of the civic center, the fish having been placed there for rear ing purposes. Baby trout wkere placed in the fountain early in the year by W. M. Smathers, local fisherman and conser vationist. They were taken from the Balsam Fish Hatchery near Asheville while auite vounsr and will be fed throusrh the summer season, the food being provided by one of the markets of the city. Late in the fall they will be placed in the many trout streams near Asheville. Asheville has become a mecca for fishermen owing to the restocking Dolicv which has kept the streams of this section alive with brook and rain bow trout. Hundreds of miles of good fishing waters are available in the mountains near the city, nearly 200 miles of which are in the protect ed Pisgah National Game Preserve in which fishing is allowed during a part of the summer months. The long fishing season which ex tends from April to September has been made possible through the con servation of the fish resources during the year. An attraction also is the bass fishing which has become more important with the creation by dam ming of streams of nearly fifty arti ficial lakes in the vicinity of the city. t Tobacco coring and. grading has now begun in all parte of the State. Growers are encouraged by the good prices prevailing on the Georgia mar. : Though a county agent haa been at work in Stokes County since the first of July, he has already placed several pore bred dairy heifers. HAVE YOU A RELATIVE OR FRIEND WHO HAS LEFT NORTH CAROLINA? If o, yon can help bring him or her back for the greateit gathering of former Tar HeeU ever attempted in North Carolina. Tha State, through Covenor O. Max Gardner and the HOME-COMING COMMIT TEE, widiea to extend a cordial invitation to ; these strayed sons and daughters to com homo for State and Connty celebrations, October 12.19, 1929. Every resident of North Carolina can help by providing names of former Tar Heels to whom these invitations may be sent. - A . .. Every person in the State is urged to fill in the blank below wgtb the name and address of friend or relative who has formerly made his orher borne in North Carolina and forward it to the Department of Con serration an Development, Raleigh, N. C. (Person suggesting name) (City or town) (Name of formtr Tar Heel) 1 : I - (Native eoonty) , - I (Full Address) (Occupation) $5.00 but said if you would not pay that much, I could come down to $3.00." And the boy went back home with Three Dollars and the Rope! i We are relating this story, which is really an old one, simply to make it clear to you what kind of a boy Zeb Merrill WAS NOT! We know not much of his boyhood but from his present day reputation we would sur mise that if Zeb had been the boy in the story, he would have held out for the top of the market, which in this case was $5.00; that he would have closed the trade without buidging from the price, and that if the butch er had given him a five-dollar bill the boy Zeb would have had it changed, turned over three dollars to his dad and salteid down the other two dollars in Zeb's own pocket! For it is after this manner of do ing business that some of our most successful Cow Traders have risen to prominence in their vocation, and we find Zeb rated as one of the best. Most of you readers know Zeb, know where he ' lives and how he lives know more than we do of his past life, both as to the open and the darker phases of his career. Zeb has a nice home and a hospitable nature, but he hai few or no chickens, for which his alibi is that something got among 'enone night and in wholesale manner kiHed off a hundred fowls. We believe this, although the num ber stated may be what you would call a round figure. And we do not want you to suspect that Zeb spirited awav his own', chickens at night and turned them into cash on a good mar ket, for we can assure you that Zeb would not be the man to treat his own family in any such measly way, CowWrader though he is! We can now see that we will not be able to do justice to Zeb Merrill in one chapter or issue. We are willing fco continue the story next week,, if our readers find it interest ing, sp far. ,We leave it to you: You may have' it if you want it Old subscribers who are behind with Us will please look at the label on their miners and send in some money. Otherwise Wi will have to cut you off, in' wnlch we are perfectly se rious, for money is required even in a country print, shop. Help us out, and incidentally let us know wheth er yon are further interested in the life of Zeb Merill, as we propose to write it. " New subscribers are always wel come. Tne paper teas yon oi our Dig standing offer, 'including the News- Record, Progressive Fanner and Pathfinder. Here is where yon getj . i t the worth or yonr money,, ngnt aero at home. . Yon scratch our back ana we will see that yours does not go unscratched. , - IN A LATE1$?U ' Hon. Gee. M. Fritehard Of Marshall, Asheville v ' . end Washington. , ' - Revealing for the first tim George trained himself to ko crimination odor and col pollL ' speaking.- ucts? -The Asheville Times. Stint On Feed; Lose On Eggs Cutting down the poultry feed, es pecially the laying mash, in summer means that laying will be seriously curtailed not only for the present season but later. "Our experimental records show that to curtail or discontinue the lay ing mash to hens during late summer will result in poor yields of eggs later," says Dr. B. F. Kaupp, head of the poultry department at State Col lege. "The body of the hen must be maintained first and if sufficient feed is not furnished, she will use that given for egg production to build up her body. Production of eggs will fall off and if the hen draws on her body supply of nutrients, she will suf fer in vigor so that production later will not be satisfactory. If not sufficiently fed, the hen will draw on her body supply of fat to build the yolk of the egg and on her storehouse of minerals and vitamins to put into the egg.1 This drainage affects the condition of the body, says Dr. Kaupp, and undermines the health of the bird. He insists that the hen needs a mash feed along with the right amount of grain each day. When putting on the new growth Of 8,000 feathers, she needs additional care and attention. White corn, fed alone, will not give a hen all the food nutrients needed. While the egg is 65 per cent water, it also contains 10 per cent of fat, 14 per cent of protein and 11 per cent of minerals, mostly in the shell. There fore, laying hens must have a good laying mash and grain feed each day in the year. In addition to this, each bird must also have at least seven pounds of green feed to each 100 birds every day. If these requirements are net, there is no reason why some eggs might not be secured throughout the summer and the body of the bird suf fer no diminution in vigor fej future production. , . . ;. . ' Youngsters will probably pass n- long the news that a New York fath . er dropped dead while spanking his ' Son.r.'r. ,,X;.r . ii'.'i :A :- -.'; -V4 '4 The new North Carolina Crop Im provement Association was definitely launched ' at the Farm Convention last week. ' . . - . i " t . , It is no trouble to tell where corn has been planted after clover in Wilkes County. Ie r-""' i' r