Newspapers / Polk County News and … / Oct. 30, 1924, edition 1 / Page 10
Part of Polk County News and The Tryon Bee (Tryon, 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
cuvyiiMuyggro \* THE CHURCH IS VITAL It is more vitally necessary than the city or state gov ernment. Supporting it does not mean doling out gifts as to prof itless institution. It starts your children on the right path and so insures their steadfast happiness. It sets the moral standard of the community. It furnishes comfort when sorrow and death comes. It flavors all social life. BUT It cannot exist unless you wish it to. How much support do you give it? How often do you come to church. It's just a question of whether the church is necessary enough to you to be contin ued in the community or whether you want it 'to shut up shop. . | GO TO CHURCH SUNDAY Church of Christ CONGREGATIONAL Rev. J. L. Daniels, D.D., L.LD., Pastor Emeritus * ' Rev. Will B. O'Neill, Minister EPISCOPAL Sunday Service: Holy Communion 7 :30 Sunday School .10:00 Morning Prayer and sermon 11:00 Friday 5 P. M. Litany and in tercessions for the sick. Rev. C. P. Burnett, rector. METHODIST First and Third Sundays at 11 A. M. Second and Fourth Sundays at 7:30 P. M. Sunday School every Sunday at 10 P. M. Rev. R. P. Fikes, Pastor. SUNDAY SERVICES Church School, 9:45 A. M. A graded school with classes for all. Morning Worship, 11:00 A. M. J. P. S. C. E.f 4:00 P. M. WEDNESDAY "Quiet Hour", 4:30 P. M. A friendly welcome awaits you! BAPTIST Regular services each Sunday 11 A. M. and at 8 P. M. Special Music Evening Services Sabbath School at 10 A. M. Public Cordially invited. Thomas L. Justice, D.D., Pas tor. CATHOLIC St. John's Church, corner Mel rose Avenue and Lanier St. MASS ? Sunday, 9 A. M. Rev. J. A. Manley, Rector. xm WHY WASTE WORDS We could show you a thousand reasons why building and loan stock is a good investment. But why waste words. Shares sell for $100.00. Payments 25c per week per share. i Polk County Building & Loan Ass'n. W. S. Green, President. Fred W. Blanton, Vice-Pres. H. H. Carson, Secretary Pressing 50c Pressing and Cleaning, $1.00 STEAM PRESSING CLUB Phone 172 Tryon, N. C. SHOES REPAIRED Return Postage Paid Goodyear Shoe Repairing System. Send us your old shoes and we will return them to you as good as new. English Brothers, Hendersonville, N. C. The Southern Planter RICHMOND VIRGIN A Semi-Monthly America's Oldest Farm Publication 50 cents for One Y ear ? $1.00 for Three Years; $1.50 for Five Years Twice-a-Month 170,000 Twice-a-Month j 20 or More Pages of good live reading each weiek in The News Greeting Cards and Envelopes We have an exceptionally attractive line of greeting cards for the coming holiday season ranging in price from $3.50 to $10.50 per hundred with your name and personal greeting neatly printed on them. Give your holiday greeting cards an individual touch. Place your order now to insure prompt delivery. Let us show you samples. Polk County News Residence Phone 596 115 South Church Street W. C. SHIVERS COMPANY HEATING AND PLUMBING CONTRACTORS First Class Plumbing our Specialty. High and low pressure, Steam, Water and Vapor Heating. Spartanburg, S. C. Donahoo's Studio 112 1-2 East Main Street SPARTANBURG, S. C. W. F. LITTLE NOTARY PUBLIC TRYON, N. C. j Spartanburg-Hendersonville Touring Car Schedule Leaves Tryon for Spartanburg 1 10:10, 1:30 and 5:35 I Leaves Tryon for Hendersonvill i 10:10, 2:10 and 5:35 i v ? * ' 5 ? 'Vn THE WEEKS EVENTS IMPORTANT NEWS OF 8TATI, N* TION AND TMI WORLD BRIEFLY TOLD HOUND ABOUTJHE WORLD A Cendm?d Rooori Of Happening Of IfitoTMt From All point? Of TIm World Foreign ? The English edition of the Nichl Nlchi, a publication close to the Jap anese foreign office, Toklo, editorial ly urges the return of M. Hanihara as ambassador frtfm Japan to the United States. Anti-Chinese riots started by aggres sive Filipinos at Cabantuan hare been completely suppressed by the constab ulary members who are patrolling the streets of Manila. Chinese stores have been reopened, according to official advices. The Soviet Russian commissar for finance, M. Sokolnlkov, announced re cently before the All-Russian parlia ment now In session in the Kremlin that, despite the fall of the British La bor government, English bankers with the support of certain American finan-t cial institutions had agreed to advance Soviet Russia extensive commercial credits. Capture of the town of Chiaoshansu, near Shanhaikwan, China, by the Man churian troops of Chang-Tso-Lln, who previously had taken the town and lost it. is reported at Shanghai in a Tientsin dispatch to the Eastern News agency. The divorced women of Czechoslo vakia have formed a "divorcees' un ion," which they hope will serve as a valuable experience club for the ben efit of the country. They have also started a daily newspaper. A efory recounting confiscation by the German authorities of a French balloon which landed near -Emden is printed In the Paris newspapers. The balloon Is srfid to have landed on Ger man ?ofl and received every attention and aid from the authorities, but was finally confiscated. A French surgeon placed young Mme. Marquette, wife of a wealthy cloth manufacturer under chlorform preparatory to an operation when he discovered that her heart had ceased to beat. He declared her dead. Her face retained its usual color and the limbs remained soft and supple. Other physicians were called, but none were able to tell whether she was dead or alive. Berlin dispatches announce that Chancellor Marx' efforts to obtain outside support for his coalition gov ernment In Germany have failed and the relchstag has been dissolved in preparation for a general election. The polling is being forecast for No vember 20. President Ebert consented to the dissolution when the cabinet for mally advised him of the state of af fairs. Washington ? Changes made recently before the New York State Federation of Wom en's Clubs that the veterans' bureau had draped the coffins of soldiers with cheap and shoddy flags and had contracted for 300,000 which were found to be minus a row of eight stars, have been answered by Director Hines with an assertion that all flags pur chased since August, 1922, only 2,400 in number, were examined and met with federal requirements. In a ruling of general application, the board of tax appeals has decided that a lessee of chattels is not author ized to deduct from his gross income amounts set aside each year to be used in replacing property upon expi ration of the lease under which it is used. The board held that the tax-' payer may deduct only such amounts sr are actually expended for replace ment during each taxable period. The petitfbn of the Southeastern Ex press company to set aside the order of the interstate commerce commis sion for a reconstruction of express rates in zone 2 and the petition of the American Railway Express com pany and railroads over whose lines it operates for reconsideration %f the order reducing class rates in the west and south, were denied by the inter sjtate commerce commission. A well defined movement, backed, seemingly, by members of all par ties, has developed looking toward the listing of all voters who fail to vote at national elections. It is thought that the preparation of lists of non-voters, and the publication of these in local communities, would create a greater interest in the value of the suffrage privilege to every citizen, and make for a better and more intelligent citi zenship. The department of agriculture Is sued a statement saying Secretary Wallace, who is in a hospital at Wash ington recovering from a recent opera tion, had authorized the "most posi tive denial" of rumors that he intend ed to resign his cabinet post. A statement urging that half-holiday be granted by employers to industrial workers throughout the country on November 4, in order ty" with all citizens to go to the polls, was issued by the executive council of the American Federation of Labor. Lists of taxpayers showing the amount of income tax each have been available for public inspection in the offices of collectors of internal reve nue by direction of Commissioner Blair. Announcement of the order, which compiles with the new revenue law, was made by Secretary Mellon. Hearings on Pullman rates, set for ' November 6 at Chicago were postpon I ed by the Interstate Commerce Com mission until November 22. The hear ings are on the complaint of the Order Of United Commercial Travelers of America against the Pullman company. have "equal opportuni Governor Abelardo RodrlgoM. of tie northern itatrlct of Lower California, Mexico, announced at Meiicall, tha he had ordered an immediate invest - gallon of reports that Japanese finan ciers, co-operating with an Ameri^? agent, had planned to place 20,000 Japanese on a tract of 100,000 acres of land in Pescadero Cut, south of Mexi can. Federal courts cannot refuse jury trials in contempt cases arising out of labor disputes, the Supreme court held In two cases one coming from Wisconsin, brought by Sam Michael son and others, and tbe other from Kentucky brought by S. C. Sandefer, Michaelson was charged with conspir ing to interfere by picketing. Invitations have been mailed from the navy department to more than 250 newspaper publishers and manag ing editors in the United States re questing their attendance at the Ha waiian maneuvers next spring. The trip will furnish an opportunity, Sec retary Wilbur's letter says, for the navy to ''inform the public thorough ly in regard to what it is doing and attempting to do." "In short," the sec retary added, "the United States navy wishes to report to its owners through the press." The editors will leave San Francisco on the transport Henderson about April 15, 1925. '? ?? Domestic ? Dr. William Jay. Schieffelin was elected chairman of the board of trus tees of the Tuskegee Normal and In dustrial Institute for Negroes at Tus kegee, Ala., at a meeting of the board at New York. Unsuccessful applicants for the post mastership of New Orleans have filed with President Coolidge and the post master general a protest against the manner in which the examination was conducted. David Windsor, Prince of Wales, may fall off his horse now and then? but he surely can ride when he wants to, he demonstrated recently at Hamil ton, Mass. With a leg up on "Desert Queen,*' from the stables of Bayard Tuckerman, Jr., his host at Savin Hill farm, England's future king displayed an almost reckless horsemanship in following the hounds, and with royal abandon, uncorked a series of sprints and dashes that left no doubt of his horsemanship and love of the sport. The missing portion of the famous $100,000 Doheny-Fall note, which fea tured in the Senatorial inquiry in the leasing* of Navy oil reserve lands, was produced by Mrs. Doheny in the court of Federal Judge Paul J* McCormick, Los Angeles, Calif., who is trying a government suit in an attempt to can cel leases granted E. L. Doheny on tbe Elks Hills reserve. The officials of the Southern Cotton exchange, an od-lott cotton-trading or ganization, have been summoned to ap pear before Supreme Court Justice Charles T. Guy as a result of com plaints made by W. W. Chambers, dep uty attorney-general of New York. Three men were drowned and two 1 women rescued after an automobile crashed through an embankment rail at a curve and plunged into a canal near Geneva, N. Y. The machine, with its side curtains tightly fastened, turned upside down in the canal. Frank Tower, Edward Parish and Har old Devey were drowned. Gasoline prices will be regulated by the market price for coal, Walter C Teagle, president of the Standard Oil Company of New Jersey, said in a statement made public at Tulsa, Okla. He based his statment on an analysis of the petroleum situation by the com pany. > Discovery of a case of leprosy at Elizabeth, N. J., by Health Officer Richards. The patient, Jose Sanchet Ponce, a Spanish sailor, has been in Elizabeth for eight months receiving treatment for a disease which baffled diagnosis until Dr. A. R. Cassilli, city bacteriologist, was called. Ponce was removed to the city detention hospital until it is determined whether he shall be sent to the federal leper colony in Louisiana or deported. Two men held up Isadore Finkel in his Newark, N. J., jewelry store and escaped with $7,000 in unset diamonds, a ring valued at $1,000 and $200 in cash. Thirty street car passengers were injured in Chicago, the other day, some seriously, when the car collided with a motor truck. Rain had made the streets and rails slippery. Inves tigation imflcated that no one waa fatally hurt. Seven persons, including five fire men, were injured and 19 families driven from their homes itt*a St Nich olas avenue tenement house by a blaze fire department officials said was ig nited by a pyromaniac. Five children hanging by their hands from window ledges on the fourth floor of the five story building were rescued by fire men. Violet Dickerson, 19-year-old mother, has been acquitted of murder in the hold-up and killing of Louis Hirsch, an aged storekeeper last November. Three 7-year-old boys were instant ly killed and 17 other children were injured, several seriously, Recently, when an interurban car crashed into a school bus about eight miles east of Lorain, Ohio. Four men ? one of them an ensign ? were killed and 18 others injured in an explosion aboard the new scout cruiser Trenton . while at target prac tice the other day off Virginia capes. So great was the force of the explo sion that an access door at the rear of the turet was opened and four meii blown overboard. Rev. F. L. Hudson of Gadsden, was elected moderator ol the Alabama synod of the Presbyterian church, U. S. A., which recently began its an nual 8essioB at Huntsville, Ala. He suc seeds Rev. H. L. Turner of Sheffield, who opened the assembly. The world-circling airplanes which left Medford, Ore., en route for San Diego, Calif., arrived at Mather fieid, east or Sacramento. The aviators were given f ^banquet and dance. They ex pect to Continue east from San Die go, vis* ting San Antonio, New Orleans and Daytok Ohio. < I the efficient business man f Printing Satisfaction Having your printing done bv a firm *?> takes pride in turning out quality work % not only satisfactory, it is profitable K $ Let us estimate on your next work W guarantee your satisfaction with the? 8 completed job. com 500 Letter Heads, $6.50 ENVELOPES POLK COUNTY NEWS Better Baked Bread, Cakes, Pies, Pastry and Rolls, always at You can get hot rolls here 8 to 9 a, i and 5 to 6 p. m. THE QUALITY BAKERY Tryon, N. C. GOOD LUMBB Good Lumber will save J3 dollars in construct a and in the longer serviai renders. When you are ready to tj or repair present struct# let us figure on your rep ments. If its building materia.', * have it. Hugh M. Thompsn Lumber Co, Lumber and Builders Sipffc SALUDA, X. C. _ A. L. MA YYAND? Maker of Men's ft Spartanburg, S. C. All Our Work is Done Here in Our She Public Accounting Straightening out tangled book accounts a specialty Reasonable Rates. ERWIN M. THOMPSON, Saluda. N. C. Tip-Top Work at Our Top Shop If your car rteeds a new top, back or side curtains or paint ing, you can depend upon us to duplicate the original fac tory's job. The only differ ence ' is in price ? ours is much lower. ROPER BROS. Phone 344 Spartanburg's Biggest Auto Top and Paint Shop New York. ? Tentative groupings of the eastern railroads into four large trunk line systems, proposed in a re visal plan of consolidation, presented to the interstate commerce commis sion last Saturday, would give the Pennsylvania railroad a route mile age of 15,900, the largest of the group, according to information obtained in railroad circles. Closely follwing would fee the New York .Central, with a mileage of 15,400, the Baltimore & Ohio With 13,300 and the "Nickel Plate" with approximately 12,000. Officer Robbed B) I (ireonsburo. A'twhi sensational Itobhip in * sheriff was lir- I u;ion and it- ft n i ,i.i two bold ????!??? band.'- ? wood near Handh-nur. -- of the city. \v? -?? jVara^ Tfic ( Itjwty % I'M-*" dleman. rte<- ;i? tkn>ni'-r' * ' the bandits in hot Pl over a tangled m pe vice ing his h- ad .it. 1 <&?>' c: ground 'uy'uncoz*-3 9 o'clock until r. 1' M "J who had stolen <?ver ih"' valuable uai.h trox ---csnf. i? i r t' a vaiua"'^ r., "? made g?"<i t ? r ' phy#:c**. is beinp tr-:.-- ^ P\ hom<' at Uar:i' ' Randolph an<: "'J't&efe5 were aearrh.nif ^ Trotzky Moscow. .Ai:er^j Who has be. n ^ of Kislokod^k aioflg^ two months, br ' a signi#^ ?% sias noo.1 ,f a ^,'ic a large ass* i kar. .he ???* ? ^ ern Caucasia ' ? ar,v ^
Polk County News and The Tryon Bee (Tryon, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 30, 1924, edition 1
10
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75