Newspapers / Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, … / Jan. 30, 1929, edition 1 / Page 1
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VOL. XXXV, No. 13 SHELBY. N. C. WEDNESD’Y, JAN. 30. 1029. Published Monday, Wednesday. and Friday Afternoons 10 PAGES TODAY THE CLEVELAND STAR By mail, per year (in advance) $3.60 Carrier, -per year On advance) 13 00 LA TE NEWS The Markets. Cotton, Shelby __1914c Cotton Seed, per bn._— 67!4e Rain Or Snow? Today’s North Carolina Weather Report: Increasing cloudiness fol lowed by rain or snow Thursday or probably In west portion late to night. Not quite as cold tonight in east, north and extreme west por tions. Herb And Al Meet. President-elect Herbert Hoover and his rival in the recent cam paign, former Gov. Al Smith, met each other and chatted together for about 25 minutes in Miami, where they are vacationing yester day. They talked about incidents of the campaign, Smith congratulat ing his victor and wishing him luck. “And I meant It, too,” Smith declar ed after leaving the Hoover vaca tion home. MOM 0.5. COURT HEK Federal Court Here On March 18. Jurors From Several Counties. Jurors for the next term of fed* eral court here have been drawn at the deputy clerk's office in Char lotte. The term is to convene on Monday, March 18, and the jurors follow: Durham Bridges, R. 7 Shelby, Cleveland; J. Lester Oreen, Boiling Springs, Cleveland; C. E. Ewing. Lincoln ton, Lincoln; Geo. W. Gam ble, 210 N. Loray St., Gastonia; Gaston; P, A. Summey, Dallas, Gas ton; D. H. Harmon, R. 2, Bessemer City, Gaston; J. H. Newton, Iron Station, Lincoln; E. A. Hamrick, Shelby, Cleveland; . Clyde Powell, Lawndale, Cleveland; E. C. Craft, R. 1, Cherryville, ' Gaston; Lee Beam, Grover, Cleveland; C. C. Croots, R. U Belwood, Cleveland; A. J. Jolley, * * R. 2, Mooresboro, Cleveland; A. A. Richards, Casar, Cleveland; George Owens, R. 1, Rutherfordton, Rutherford; R. B. Miller, Harris, Rutherford; J. A. Price, Casar, Cleveland; Jacob Goins, Vale, Lincoln; > Alexander Cook, ft. 4, Lawndale, Cleveland; E. & Geer,' R. I„ Rutherfordton, Rutherford; D. C. Spronce, Llncoln ton. Lincoln; D. A- Lynch, Caro leen, Rutherford; Cliff Reason, Mooresboro, Cleveland; I*, M. Uh gan, R. a. Kings Mountain, Cleve land; Forney Reinhardt, LincoM ton, Lincoln; Ben Jenkins, Lattl more, Cleveland; J. H. Carpenter, R. 1„ Belwood, Cleveland; Zeb C. Mauney. Shelby, Cleveland: W, E. Moore, Forest City, Rutherford. »,..u ■ .Am .i > Bam And Four Mules At Beams MH1 Burned The bam of Mr. Josh Wright at Beams Mill was destroyed by fire Saturday night about II o’clock. Fire was of unknown origin.' Burn ed in the bam were four mules, one truck and a couple of automo biles, as well as a quantity of feed. It is estimated that the loss is $8, 000 with no insurance. The insur ance expired a short time ago and the policy was not renewed, it is reported. District Governor To Address Kiwanis District Governor Tim Crews of the Carolinas District of Kiwanis will rddress the Kiwanis club at Cleveland Springs Hotel Thursday night of this week. Mr. Crews lives at Spartanburg, S. C„ and will b~ing with him Allen Rogers, president cf the Spartanburg Club who has a splendid voice and will render sev eral vocal selections. A full attend ance is desired by the Kiwanis Edu cational committee which has the program In hand Thursday night. Mr. Parker Operated On At Local Hospital Mr. J. L. Parker, merchant, op erating a store on N. Washington street, was operated on a few days ago at the Shelby hospital.. He has been suffering Intensely, but his many friends will be pleased to learn that he Is Improving some what now. His son, Mr. Eugene Parker and wife of Clemsqp Col lege, S. C. were up to see him over the week-end. Gaffney Weddings Decline Slightly The sale of marriage license in Gaffney, South Carolina, fell off quite a bit last week, according to the Gaffney Ledger, but of the five couples securing license during the week one couple was from Shelby: Arthur C. Booth and Rena Tea'. Another couple securing license #as Jesse Elgar Silver, of F*r«st City, and Essie Tidwell, of Caroleeo. THIEVES IN STORE LEAVE BIO MONEY Plggly-W'egiy Broken Into, Bills Not ToP',b-1 But Chance Is Taken In these serve-yourself stores, such as the Plggly-Wiggly, a fellow on occasions gets the best in the store rnd on occasions does not be cause he may not know' where to find it. Such must have been the embar rassment Tuesday morning of the fellow, or fellows, who broke Into and robbed the Piggly-Wlggly store on LaFayette street here Mon day night. The thieves apparently got what they breke in for, mensy, but In waiting on themselves they failed to get the best package, Roll Of BUI* Left The cash register was ransacked arid about $47.50 in small bills and change. Including many pennies, was taken but in nicking out their own goods from Manager Ira StiU well's crsh regi ter they failed to see a package-of bills, some several hundered dollars, laid near the cash register to be p’aced in the bank t'-r'ay. What they got was the change left out of the deposit for carrying on the trade today. Entrance was made by smashing a pe nel out of the back door so that it might be unlocked, or so that those entering could crawl through. Moral, if any: Perhaps the next time they will not enter a store where even a burglar has to serve himself, taking the chance cf over looking something extra good. Sam Lattimore Is Mentioned For N. C. Prison Head, Said Observers, Fmref, Bel'eve Gard ner Will Reappoint Eon. Releieh,—Collapse of the opnosl *ion to Superintendent Oeorge Ross Pou. of the state's prison, prepares newspaperdom fcr announcement almost any day that Mr. Pou will -erve through three administra tions and thrt Governor Gardner will reappoint him when the duty of naming a new prison boa*d and a superintendent conies to the ex ecutive. jnsre nave oeen a lew names oi fered to Governor Gardner, among them Sam C. Lattimcre, of Shelby; Major Leonard, of Lexington; for mer Warden Srm J. Busbee, and former Chief Cle~k T. W. Fenner, of Raleigh. But there been no campaign for any of these. Con trariwise, Mr. Pou is the peculiar beneficiary of nearly all of Gover nor Gardner’s special friends The work which Mr. Pcu did for Gov ernors Morrison and McLean en titled him to conslde-ation at their hrnds. He got it. Sim'larly, the fight which he made on Governor Gardner as a candidate in 1920 pre pares him fine'y for the usual bouncing. But in this instance, the friends of Mr. Gardner are making themselves first aid to Mr. Pou and of all the men who have worked for Mr. Pou, none can be nrmed in the same day with the Gardner asso ciates who have busied themselves everywhere for Superintendent Pou. That of course impresses Mr. Gardner. Another thing does. The governor has commented publicly on the hold which Mr. Pcu has on the affections of the prisoners. The Gardner philosophy is love. He would not put a man in charge of ’>’-ifoners who did not inspire af fection. He does not say that, but it is not necessary. All the things that now stick out favor Mr. Pou. He is in the position held by Governor A1 Smith. There was nobody with whom the an’i-Smith men could head off Old Al. The anti-Pcu men have had the came trouble; They probably relied a good deal on the knowledge that Mr. Gardner owes nothing to Mr Pou. But they find themselves now faced with a more difficult argu ment. .Tfiey must meet the Pou friends who contend that a duty to the state demands the Pcu reap pointment. A shrewd business man like Mr Gardner will investigate that con tention. If the prison should turn out to have been managed with the cuccess set up for it by all the friends of Mr. Pou. Mr. Gardner would inevitably be driven to ap pointing him again. And it looks very much as if Mr. Pou has built up a bomb proof "claim. “We Only Did Our Duty^ That was statement ot capt. ueurge rma (fourth from left), master of S. S. America, upon arrival of liner in port after stirring sea rescue. The nhoto shows. 1. to r.. Cant. Giu* scppe i avaivro, oi tfte ireigflter Honda; Mrai Harry Manning, her son. chief officer of the America and command#- of the gallant life boat crew; Captain Fried and Mrs. f^ried. i International N««rarm) “Milky” Gold Gets Highest Honor Of Any High Athbte All-Southern FootbaT Fla'er Now 1 Cap!aiis His Third Team. MUt. Gold, star Shelby high ath ’ete and an All-Southern football player as well as an All-State brse ball player, last night entered the record books as one of the few high school athletes ever to have cap tained three teams. Just before meeting the Lincolnton cagers last night the Shelby high baslqHbc 11 squad elected “Milky," their* long-limbed hero, captain of the basketball quint. All-Around Athlete. Last spring Gold was captain of the baseball team, playing at short stop and pitching, th that role he was nrmed on the All-S’atp .team, being accorded all-state hopors the previous year as an outfielder. Last fall Gold was captain and strr full back of the Shelby high football eleven and was named on the all Wcstwrn eleven. - All-State eleven, <(n4 was placed, on an end berth of the All-Southern Ugh school eleven. His leadership of his teams wr s merited as is shown by the fact that he was picked on practically every mythical team in the two sports In the state. Last year he was a center of the flashy Shelby high basketball five and was rated rs one or the best basketball players in the state. In the game with Liner In ton last night, Gold, who has been out of the line-up for near a month, cele brated his new honor by being the high scorer in his team’s 20-6 win over the visitors, which, incident ally, was the first victory the high cagers hrve turned in since the very beginning of the season. Which in dicates vary much what the pres ence of the three-team captain means to any Shelby high line-up, be it football, baseball, cr basket ball. Prior to the boy's game the Lin colnton girls defeated the Shelby girls in r good game. Big Game Tonight. Perhaps the biggest game of the year is to be staged in the “tin can” tonight with the highs play ing the Durham highs, four or five ‘lines state champions. The Dur ham boys will remain in the city to night and will be entertained in Shellyr hemes. Friday night the fast Kings Mountain term comes here for a game. COTTON STEW HI 111 COUNTY Thieving Gang Seems To Be Work ing Upper Section of ,j County Now. ^gB||>ough the major portion of the cw||p in Cleveland county has been picked reports indicate that thefts of cotton from fields in the upper section of the county in recent weeks have been numerous. One man has been arrested in connection with the thefts and will be given a hea.ing here today. Farmers hi the No. 8 section, who have been worried by the stealing of cotton from their fields at night after it was picked, are of the opin ion that an organized cotton-steal ing gang has been working the sec tion from Cherryville to Union Mills. Miami, "Fla.—Rosalie Belle, Sem inole maiden, is back from a six months' exile in the everglades, im posed because she imitated the cos tumes of her white sisters. Medi cine men caught-her s earing a one -piece bathing su;* Gardner Might Appoint Jo. Danids To Succeed Simmons Former Secretary Of Navy Great Supporter Of Governor. Much Slice ulation. Raleigh—While It‘appears that ' the house will follow the example of the senate and pass the Person bill to restore to the governor the | power to appoint United States senators in case of a vacancy, as an economy measure, and without re > , , I gard for its political consequences, speculation has already begun as to whom Governor Oardner will ap point when, and if, Senator Sim mons dies or resigns. The most widespread rumor is that Governor Gardner will give the ad interim appointment, ■ which would last from a few days to a maximum of two years, to ^secre tary of the navy, Josephus Daniels. It is known that . Mr. Daniels is getting' very tired of being merely the ex-secretary of the navy, and that he has ambitions to become* an ex-senator. Mr. Daniels, in all probability, would be well pleaaed With a purely honorary appoint ment, such as Mrs. Felton, 6t Geor gia, received several years Ago. and to serve only one day. All predic tions that Mr. Daniels win get the appointment are based on the as sumption that he would not be a candidate to succeed himself In the next Drimary. > Such an arrangement would have many advantages from Gover nor Gardner's pdlnt of view. He could honor a distinguished North Carolinian, please one-Df his prom inent and enthusiastic supporters, and, at the same time, keep out of the bitter fight which is sure to de velop when the permanent oecu pant of the senate seat is chosen. The Daniels’ newspaper has been enthusiastic about Governor Gard ner from the beginning, and rela tions between the two men are more cordial than they have been be tween Mr. Daniels and any Gover nor with the exception of Bickett. With the influence of his paper, and his friends, it would be much easier Or Mr. Daniels to receive an appointment from Governor Gard ner than to win a primary contest, especially if he were to agree not to attempt to stay in the senate per manently. Chairman O. M. Mull, of the Democratic state committee, has announced his support of the bill as an economy measure, and most of tlie members of the house agree with him. “I see no more reason why we should have a special primary, which is expensive to choose a senator in case of a vacancy, than we should to choose a secretary of I state or any other elective state ofr ficer. At the next general election the people would have an oppor tunity to choose a different sena tor if they disapprove of the gover nor’s selection. Of course the man appointed by the governor would have some advantage in entering the primary,’ but If he were unsat isfactory to the people they wound have no hesitancy In defeating him and electing the man they really wanted,” Mr. Mull said. OMjer representatives, who de cline to be quoted .by name, express the opinion .that it would be better to have- a hand-picked senator than one choaan by tpe people. High School Girl At Lattimore Diet Fourteen Year Old Daughter of Mr. And'Mr*. T. C. Stockton We* Of Heart Trouble. Patsy Ellen Stocktpn, fourteen year old Lattlmcre high school’stu dent. died this morning at 4:15 o'clock at the.home of hey parents* Mr. and- BOC^’ C. Miss Stockton had been stek for A month with A heart trouble mid every .medical attention was given in ah effort to restore her health. Her death Is a source of great sorrow to her fellow students in the Lattimore high school where she was • very bright and popular stur dent. She Was a member of thff. Lattimore Baptist church and ty survived • by her parents, one sister and one brother. Funeral services will be held ThursdAy afternoon at 3 o’clock at Double Springs Baptist church by Revs. I. D. HarrtU end D. O. Wash burn and interment will be in the cemetery there. "WHOOPEE” VEILS NOW BECOMING FRENCH RAGE Paris.—They may be • giving _ up the veil in Turkey but they are taking to it in Paris. "Whoopee” is the new name for short, nose length veils Which some Parisian women, mostly mannequins# so far, are wearin bonnets. Whoopee veils are new er for evening than afternoon since the originator, J. Suzanne Talebot, showed the same- type of veil last spring on street hate. A. *s P. To Move. According to Manager H.-E. Richbourg, - the Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea company’s store will shift its headquarters to new and more commodious quartern next dooiyto the present location, some time this week. The move has been contemplated sometime. "You may say that we will be open for busi ness in our new headquarters Sat urday,” Mr. Richbourg said. These new quarters will include a mod em market, and will be commodl ously arranged. Gov. Gardner Played Coarse In Par-Then They Checked Up Max Was Shooting Some t'njmown Cleveland Springs Golf, Missed Four Jfoles. Raleigh.North_Carolina’s first go ing governor put in his first guber natorial golf Saturday on the links ; of the Carolina Country club. The details leaked out yesterday along with the cards. Par for the Carolina course 1* 73. Governor Q. Max Gardner, who told newspapermen at his first press conference that usually he did 18 holes in around 80 showed Just 73 strokes, which is par for tha course and attained b> few. Representative Odus M. Mull, with whom the governor was pair ed, had 78. Chief State Bank Ex aminer John Mitchell and his as sistant, Ben Roberts, each had 7T«. Capital City links enthusiasts rubbed their eyes. Here, they though-, was not only a golfing governor, but an expert llnksman. Then they studied the cards more closely, and the cat was out of the bag. Th4 gubernatorial foursome had only gone M holes COST COLLECTING TUXES IN COONTT HANKS VERY LOW Only IS Counties In 100 Colleet Their Taxes Cheaper Than Cleveland County. Not only Is the direct tax in Cleveland county one or the lowest comity rates in North Carolina, but in collecting those taxessonIy a few counties manage to do it more economically. \Thls information is contained in an article. "Cost of Collecting Taxes," in the University News Letter. Only 13 counties in the state have a lower tax collection cost than this county. In this county the cost of collecting the taxes us only 1.29 per cent.of the total taxes collect ed. The average county cost for tax collection is X27 per cent of the gross Igvy, or 1.98 per cent more than in this county. The-News Letter pjaced tax col lecting coats under two heads—di rect and indirect. The direct is the cost of the actual collection, while the indirect is the interest upon money borrowed hi anticipation of taxes to be collected. The direct cost of collection in this county is .18 per cent of the gross levy, while the average cast aver the state for the direct,lfcvy is 1-60 per cent of the levy. The indirect, or Interest cost in this county Is only .11 per cent of the gross levy as compared with an average cost of .61 per cent of the gross levy for the state. Columbus county where the cost of.'tax collection is only .73 per cent of the levy has the lowest Cost in the state, -while Jones with a > cost of 9.61 per cent of the tax levy is the highest. Aged Mothsr Of Mr* W. I*. King Saeeanths fa Lang UhtMa At Age Of M Teen. Mr*. Melissa, Goode, wife of the late William T. Ooo^e, died Tues day morning it 11 o'clock at the home of Her only daughter. Mrs. W. p. King on Sumter street. Mrs. Gouda had been in Hi heaRMofcm %£%£ smt-ss a stroke 9? plrelyste. to nujke her home • with Mrs. King. Site -was M years of age and before marriage was Miss Melissa Webb, of Ruth ford county. She moved to Cleve land and Used on Buffalo after hr marriage. Her husband preceded her to the grave about thirty years ago. Mrs. Goode was a woman of fine traits of character and belov ed by all who knew her. The fu neral services were conducted this tnocnlng from the King residence by Dr. Zeno Wall and Dr. Hugh K. Boyer and IntenHent was In Sun set cemetery. Mrs. Goode Is survived by her daughter, one brother Robert Webb of Forest City and one sister, Mrs. Julia Walls, of Henrietta. She was a member of the Con cord Baptist church, near Forest City, In the community where she was born and reared. Petitions On Bill Forwarded To Mull Several Petitions Sent To Raleigh About Solicitor’s Pay Here. Several petitions, for and against, the proposed legislative bill chang ing the solicitor of the Cleveland county court from a fee basis to a fixed salary were mailed to Raleigh yesterday and today. At least two petitions mailed, it Is understood, urged Representative Mull to pass the bill placing the solicitor on a fixed salary. These petitions, it is said, were signed by several score citizens of Shelby and the county. At least one petition opposed the bill and urged that it not be passed, many of the signa tures being those of local lawyers. The proposed bill will be aired before a legislative committee there Thursday, according to Mr. Mull, and several county citizens are ex pected to attend the hearing. Rush Stroup Gives To College Library The latest contribution through The'Star to the Boiling Springs li brary was made yesterday by At torney Rush Stroup, fofiper county treasurer, and consists of a 37-vol umc encyclopedia for the school. Rum Sleuth Corruls Group Of Pint Rum Purveyors In Shelby Fills Court Room With Men He Purchased Booze From After Working Week And One-Half Here Unknown To Any One Except Mayor Dorsey. Shelby hns had its first real taste of rum sleuthing! Right about the time that the court of inquiry started upon its task of drying up Shelby. Mayor W. N. Dorsey decided to do a bit of sponging In the liqufir traffic him self. and his efforts resulted in 10 so-called bootleggers facing the court here yesterday with such a stack of undeniable evidence against them that all were convict ed—the convictions running the gauntlet from the sale of "short pints" to half gallon sales. The prosecuting witness was a detective. O. O. Ooben. employed by the mayor. and who had been working In the town securing evid ence for a week and one-half be fore he turned over his purchases and names to the city police for ar rests. The entire affair came like an unexpected clap of thunder to tiie general public, and the major ity of those from whom the detec tice, or ‘‘informer’’ fa he called litm self, purchased spirits were round ed up and headed for the court room before they knew what it was all about. Today Mr. O. O. Ooben Is no longer a etttaen of Shelby but due to his short visit some nine or ten young white men are paying court fines and costs, or are wortkig on the Ho. 8 rock bile. , How He Worked'It. On Thursday,. January 17. a rath er heavy-set, red-faced. middle aped man. neatly dressed and hav ing all the appearance of ailing mtt,"'rtdp|*d ofrf«l Shelby and •HWW’Toomkr There was, nothin# particular!# striking about bis make-up, except .that his com pletion, might ‘suggest thgt he would not be adverse td taking “a nip now and then.” And since b.e wasn't particularly striking in ap pearance no one gave, him much attention.. Apparently he dldn‘t have on acquaintance in town, rautlieiio.he made ’ein 10 reports running t»w rowjflf now. could take a deck of.playing cards and make the cards dp. a little of everything ex cept talk. Then he seemed some what indirectly to know something About the narcotic trade. And lit tle by little with his card tricks and his flushed5 face he worked up an acquaintance with some of the boys who are fond of peeping at the whole card and kissing “short pints.” Started Buying. One night he had to have a pint and he called upon some of His friends..Eventually he got his pipt, paid two dollars for it, but ho <fld not seem to limit his patronage to one man, and here and there about town for a week or more he bought more pints,,going out of town on two occasions to secure half-gallon lots. But that gets ahead of the story —no one knew that all this wae going on, or, rather that there was anything unusual about it. To get back to the beginning. Along about mid-month the man known here, and not greatly loved in certain sections now, as O. O. Ooben read in the papers about a drive to clean up Shelby's liquor ! traffic. He was moving to Ashe ville from some other state and decided that he might help while his household stuff was coming in The next day he called on Mayor Dorsey In a casual manner and of fered his services. At the end of the conference the visitor and the mayor reached an agreement, and until yesterdayjno one, with the ex ception of one officer ‘put wise” last week-end, knew of that agree ment. The agreement was that Mr. Ooben was to try his hand at rounding up some of the bootleg gers here by buying from them and getting his evidence first-hand. . Which gets back to the story left off above. uumicn irnnc. Detective Gotten purchased booze, according to his court story tn practically every section of Shelby. Each purchase he carried to his room and labelled with the name of the seller, the price paid, the date of purchase and other infer motion. Kf, the time he was in a local rooming house. Police were a little suspicious and he changed to a room in a residential section. Last week-end he needed a little I aid and so informed the may**, who iii turn introduced him to Ed Dixon, plain clothes officer of the city po lice. And the two were hia lone ac quaintances in Shelby except fhr the fellows he hung out with and purchased from. Sunday night he Informed the mayor tiiat a man In Ida business:, could work Just so long In a town before Uia- rum handlers “got Wise," and that his time hen was about, up. Early Monday morning all of his purchases, each purchase neat ly labelled, ware lined up behind the desk in the city hall. Twelve war rants were sworn out, the police force called in, and within an hour or so ten of those from whom Qo ben declared lie made hi* purebasas were cu. route. ta .She ceest. ream with city- officer* nmr&ilng*1iefi1ntl them carrying numerous gallons of boore put up In "short pints.", ,a few standard pints, and trait Jare. Of the 10 one plead guilty the moment he saw the face of “In former" Qoben. The others plead “not guilty" through their lawyers, and asked for a Jury trial at first. Later as Mr. Goben began to. pick up his pints In order, tell where they were purchased and how, it was decided that po jury was need. At thd conclusion 6i the evidence the defendant who plead guilty to (Continued on nag* ten) Mayor Unperturbed By Those “Peev$d” At Rum Detective sponsible At Much As He,” He Bays. Tuesday afternoon afternoon aft er "the Informer,*’ who staged Shel by’s unexpected and surprising round-up of bootleggers, disappeared Just as mysteriously asbe appear ed, some of those who sold Mjn whiskey and were to turn hailed into courtJaeqgusa somewhat, wrathy about it, averting to rep$iM»y. ^ One report reaching’the CJfcy Hall was that one oTthe fellows the detective turned up tonight de clared that he would give fifteen dollars to get his hands on the de tective who trapped him. V, ^ "Well,” declared -Mayor W. X. Dorsey, “that fellow can come and see me. I guess I ant about as much responsible for his coming here as he was. Ahdtf they W*ht to see anybody shout it, they may find my telephone •nnrobcrln the directory or loeata”»rtfe*. I got him to do the worV, Shd-appsWnt ly he did it,” Goben Raid Helped School Fund Here Paris Brothers Fined $300 In Court t __ Here Today. Were , Delivering. Among other things carried out by him. O. O. Goben, boose detec tive who rounded up *lxni$ oau der en alleged bootleggers here yester day, made an indirect, contribution of $300 to the school fund of the county. The last capture resulting from the detective's activity was that Dewey and William Part* with around five gallons of Unubr, The capture was hied* ever the week end on an alloy between Nof th Mor - gan and North LaFayette street after the detective Upped off Police Chief Richards and Policeman IkT Dixon that the Paris brothers ware making a delivery to htrt and could be found at that point. In county court today Judge Kennedy fined Dewey Paris $200 and the costs and plastered a $100 fine and the costs cn William Paris Their car was also confiscated and will go to the man who holds a mortgage upon it for appraisal value. High School Play On Thursday Night The high school sjr,” to be present school auditorium l considered to be stage efforts put school students of
Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, N.C.)
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Jan. 30, 1929, edition 1
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