SOCIETY News MISS MAI ME ROBERTS—Social Editor—rhonr 25B. New* items Telephoned Miss Roberts Will Be Appreciated. Auxiliary To Give Tra. Monday from S to fi p. m—The Spanlsh-Amcrican auxiliary, assist ed by the members of the literary rlubs of the city, will entertain the Visiting ladies of the encampment uith a lea at the Woman's club room. All ladles of the town are cor dially invited Calendar Of Social Events. Tuesday nnj Wednesday at 4 p. m —Mesdames Draper Wood an 1 Henry Mills will entertain at bride I at the home of Mrs. Mills in Clove- | land Springs load, Monday 4:30 p. m The Loui'.e English eirele No 3 will mret with Miss Flossie Gnre at her home on S. LaFayette street Monday 4 p. m The Pauline lade eiicle will mert with Mrs. Robert Doggett at her home on N LaFayette street Monday 4 p m —The Attic Bos’ic eirele will meet with Mrs. W H Blanton at her home on S. LaFar ' ette street. Mlsa Caroline Blanton 1 Gives Bridge Tea. ■ Miss Caroline Blanton delightfu lly entertained on Wednesday after I noon a few of her friends at 4:30 ! oelock with an informal bridge-te.v ’at her handsome home on W. Ma; ! ion street, honoring Miss Xather/n [shepherd, guest, of Mrs. D. W. Roy ster. Misses Helen Campbell, of Columbus, Ga„ and Corine Parker, Jof McRae, Oa. guests of Miss Katherine Dover and Miss Jar. c Sec rest of Monrof. guest of Miss Mary Brandt Switzer. The large living room where the ' tablea were placed was beautlful'y [arranged with mixed garden flowers. I Miss Blanton received her guests [ wearing a white sport dress. Miss ' Shepherd was gowned in blue crepe de chine, Miss Campbell wore pink georgette. Miss -Barker wore flower ed chiffon and lace and Miss Sec rest wore powder blue georgette. Mwdunes Sperling And Ledford Give Tea. , Mesdames George Sperling and L. H. Ledford charmingly entertained Wednesday afternoon from 4:30 to 6:30 o’clock at the handsome Sperl ing home on the Fallston road, hon oring Mrs. Norman Lee, a bride of two weeks, with a lovely tea. The lower floor of this handsome new home was thrown ensulte and elaborately arranged with a variety of garden flowers. Mesdames J. A Suttle and Will Llneberger welcom ed the guests on the front porch. Presiding over the register which was arranged on the porch war Mrs. Fred Morton. Receiving just inside the sun room were Mesdames Chas. Burrus and C. B Suttle. Mir F. B. Morgan received in the liv ing room and Introduced the re 1 reiving line, which was headed by Mrs. L H. Ledford, gowned in light blue chiffon with lace flounces on the skirt and shoulder bouquet of pink snapdragons and sweet pea*. The bride. Mrs. Norman Lee, stood (next wearing her handsome wed ding gown of ivory satin with flounce of real lace and silver threads. Mrs. George Sperling was gowned In powder blue georgette with shoulder bouquet of pink rose buds and swansonia. Mrs. L. V. Lee, mother-in-law of the honoree was attired ir. blue chiffon wttn shoulder bouquet of sweetheart, roses. Mrs. Ed McCurry. a recent bride, was gowned in white and rose taffeta with appliqued skirt. Mesdames Prank Kendall and Con nelly Eskridge, also recent brides were honored in the receiving line. Mrs. Kendall wearing her wedding gown of white satin back crepe wi'h deep appliquec net flounce, and Mrs. Eskridge was gowned in victory blue georgette and slippers of the same shade. Mrs. Fred Webb of Forest City wore shaded orchid ma line and Mrs. Me. L Matheson, mother of Mrs. Henry Mills was at tired In black lacc and chiffon. Receiving between the living room and music room were Mesdames B O. Stephenson and Henry MU'-. Receiving in the music room and furnishing beautiful music during the afternoon were Mis Hugh Plas ter. Misses Bertha Bosnc and Mayme Roberts. Receiving betwcri the music room and dining room was Mrs. Hugh Mauney. The dining room table was cover ed with a Venetian lace cloth and In the center was a mound cf Queen Ann’s lace colored In green and yellow, gladiolii and other gar den flowers, with silver candlesticks holding yellow tapers, tied with green tulle, the serving tabic and mantle were also graced with silver baskets of mixed flowers, a color note of yellow an dgreen predomin ating also In the refreshments of green cream, with yellow and greet mints and fancy angel food cates embossed In green and yellow de signs. Those serving in the dimnr, room were Misses Clara, Madge ami Made Sperling, Flossie Grice. La line Grigg and Louise Ledford. Inviting the guests to the punch table which was arranged on the north porch were Mesdames D. Z. Newton and Hansom Casstcvens. The punch bowl was presided over by Mesdames Robert Wilson a.d Yates McSwain. Bidding the guests goodby was Mrs. Carlos Grigg. The guest list included about three hundred and fifty. -..11 ^ At The Churches SHELBY PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH H. N. Mrlllarmid, Pastor. 9:30 a. m.—Workers council. 9 45 a, m.—Sunday school. 11 a. m.—Worship. 7 p. m.—Junior Christian En deavor. 7:15 p. m— Young People's choir. 8 p. m.—Worship. 8 p. m.—Prayer service. NEARBY BAPTIST CHURCHES Rev. H. E. Waldrop, Pastor. Ross Grove. Thursday before the first. Sundays at 7 o'clock; first Sundays at It o'clock and third Sundays, afternoon at 2:30 o'clock. Sunday school each Sunday morn ing at 10 o'clock. . Eliaabeth: Saturday night, before second Sunday, second and fourth Sunday at 11 o’clock. Sunday school each Sunday momtng at 10 o'clock. Eastside church: Third Sunday morning and every Sunday night. Sunday school at 10 o’clock each Sunday morning. Buffalo church: Saturday before the fourth Sunday and on fourth Sunday in each month at 2:30 o'clock. Sunday school at 10 o'clock eBch Sunday. SHELBY CIRCUIT (Methodist) Rev. R. L. For bis, Tutor. El Bethel: preaching first and third Sundays at 11 a. m. Sulphur Springs: preaching fourth Sunday morning and second Sunday afternoon at 3 o'clock. Sharon Church: preaching sec ond Sunday morning at 11 and fourth Sunday afternoon at 3. Pine Grove Church: preaching third Sunday afternoon. Salem Church: preaching flrat Sunday afternoon. InFAYETTE ST. M. E. CHURCH Rev. T. B. Johnson, Pastor. Sunday school each Sunday at 9:4.Y Marvin Blantgn. Supt. Preaching each Sunday at 11 a. m. and 7:30 p. m. Prayer meeting each Wednesday evening at 7 30. Epworth league each Sunday evening at 6:45. DOVER BAPTIST CHURCH D. F. Putnam, Pastor. Sunday school 9:45—C. G. White, superintendent. Preaching at 10:45 by Rev. Mr. Johnson. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Dr. Zeno Wall, Pastor. Sunday school each Sunday morning at 9:30 o’clock. Preaching by the pastor at 11 a. m. and 8. Mid-week prayer service each Wednesday at 7:30. All B. Y. P. U.s meet each Sun day evening at 7 o'clock. A cordial welcome awaits all vis itors and strangers. CENTRAL METHODIST CHt’RCH Hush K. Boyer, Pastor. Wm. Lineberger, Supt. Sundav school. Mrs. Geo. A. Hoyle. Choir Dlree tor. Mrs. P. L. Hennessa, Organist. 9:43 a. m. Sunday school e\ery Sunday. Preaching services 11 o'clock. Sermon by Rev. Allen Loruner. Evening service 8 o'clock p. m. Service in charge ol Epworth L. a gue Mid-werk service every Wednes day 8 p. m. H THKKAN CHURCH. The place ol meeting Is the Mar ion street school building. Thr pleaching Is.by Student-Pcs-, tor Olenn S Ekard Sunday school each Sunday at ! 10 a. re Preaching services each Sunday at 11 a m and 8 p m Visitors are alwav welcome. Strangers are urgently united io make this their church-home Mrs Edith Morris ol Belfast wa$ sent to prison on a charge of em bezzlement a few hours after her! wedding. Mr*. I). W. Royster Honors Guest. Tlie home of Mrs. D. W. Royste: was arranged with a variety of gar den flowers Wednesday evening when Mrs. Royster gave a lovely bridge party honoring her hous*; Rut:sr Miss Katheryn Shepherd of Ctncinatti. The punch bowl was placed In the sun parlor and punch and cakes were served throughout the evening. After the games water melon was served on the poren The guests Included Misses Shep herd, Mary Suttlc, Louise Bailey, Katherine Dover, Montrose Mull, and Corlnne Parker. Dwight Houser, Norris Lackey. Steve Woodson, George Wray, MiltoVi Loy and Chax Eskridge, No First Degree Or Second In S. C. (Continued From Page One) ed that If Rafe King Is not convict ed of murder, the Jury could return a verdict of guilty of murder in the second degree or even of guilty of murder in the third degree. This would not bp possible as In South Carolina court, there is only one de gree of murder. The South Carolina Jury eould return a verdict of guil ty of murder, which automatically carries a sentence of death in the electric chair; It, could return a verdict of guilty of murder with a recommendation to the mercy of the court, In which event it would be mandatory that, the presiding Judge .1, K. Henry, would pronounce sentence of imprisonment in the South Carolina penitentiary at Co lumbia for life; it could return a verdict of guilty of manslaughter, which In South Carolina requires that the judge Impose sentence of from two to thirty years imprison nent. either In the State peniten tiary or on the public roads of Stork county; or the Jury could re turn a verdict of acquittal. These air wit uiuy veraicus, unoer sou in Carolina law, permissable in any murder case. There is no discre tion left, with the judge under South Carolina law' as applying to the first two verdicts mentioned If the de fendant is found guilty of murder, the Jurist is forced to impose the death sentence; if the defendant is found gutjty of murder with a rec ommendation to mercy, the Judge has no choice except to sentence the defendant to the penitentiary for life and of course if acquitted the defendant is immediately freed. Robes Required. North Carolinians who have been attending the trial commented with some amusement that Judge Kill ough Henry, presiding at Chester, had “donned a flowing black robe" on account of the special occasion. Judge Henry may have regarded the trial as a special occasion, but under South Carolina iaw, all jurists presiding In the Palmetto state are required to wear these black robes while any eourt Is In session; this applies to civil court as well as criminal court Another provision of South Caro lina law, which is not always re quired by all judges but which could be enforced if the jurists saw fit. is that, all attorneys practicing in the court: must appear in the court "room attired In a white shirt uid a black suit In tonnrr d.ivs [rigid adherence to this rule too* [place but is not always done in !a' ter days and is not being done ui tlie Chester court. South Carolina law requires that the sheriff if the county in wh’.li court is sitting shall personally escort the presiding judge from • u domicile to the court chambers and shall escort the jurist back frni the court house to his stopping place No "High Sheriff." One North Carolina newspaper representative a few days ago re ferred to Sheriff Fred E. Quinn of York county, where the alleged crime is charged to have been com mitted, as t.iie “high sheriff" _»f York county; in South Carolina there is no high sheriff. The official designation Is sheriff and his as sistants, as many as he may have, are termed deputy sheriffs. In short, there Is about as muc 1 stmiliarity between North and South Carolina courts, procedures and practices, as there Is between night and day. Editor Martin Gets On Brother Hoover Editor Santford Martin, of the Winston-Salem Journal, tells Pros’ dent Hoover the South didn't vote for him. but against “something," In the editorial appended hereto: "Hoover Makes His Choice.’* "A vear ago President Coolidge was railed upon to make a choice. It was then that he issued his fam ous statement: "I do not choose to run." That was a vital choice. It was a decisive moment in the career of Mr. Coolidge when he came to the point where h«v had to make this choice. It was the parting of the ways for him He had to take one road or the other. There was no middle route "Lately President Hoover has al so been called upon to make a vital choice. And in effect he has said: "I do not choose the South." In dealing with the delicate race ques tion he came to the parting of the ways. He was forced to take one of two courses. There was no middle road. One led South and the other North and West. The president de liberately chose the Northern and Western route. ‘This explains, in a nutshell, we think, the appearance of the wife of a negro congressman for tea at the White House. This negro woman w-as the guest of Mrs. Hoover for .he same reason that Booker T. Wash ington many years ago was the luncheon guest of President Roose velt. That reason was and is politics. "White House teas for wives of congressmen are primarily politi cal, rather than social. But the peo ple cut through politics and see only the social side. "The president could have drop ped her name and won tremendous applause in the South, but he would have brought down upon his nead a stor mof criticism from the North and West, and in his next campaign would have lost count.ess thousands of votes among the negroes and foreign element in those sections. Hoover knows today what Roose velt knew in his day. namely, that negroes hold the balance of power in certain Northern states which the Republican party normally must ifie&u miner* sun ^is pkytoicjftiicks with the mercury VIT’HEN the summer sun is playing tricks " * with the mercury, and your home is the coolest place to he found—then you'll doubly appreciate a telephone of your own. Friends often neglected during the hot summer months can be reached without leav ing the comfort of your home—delightful vacation outings can be planned—invitations given—all arrangements made — by tele phone. Safe from the rays of the sun, with the telephone in arm's reach, the day's mar keting and shopping takes but a few mo ments. This warm weather friend costs only s few cents a day, and there is a class of ser vice to fit every need and income. Just call the telephone business office, or if you pre fer, any telephone employee will gladly take your order for service. SOUTHERN DELL TELEPHONE AND Tfl IftAPI CCAiPANY iNCOmOfSATtO ; carry in order to win a national 1 elect ion. f' So it tomes down to this: As i o !wpen political turmoil in the Nor’li j and West and political turmoil in j the Smith. President Hoover deliber ately clio.se turmoil in the South. And this all comes back to n premise The Journal and Scn' ccl ilaid down several months ago I namely, that. Mr Hoover .knows the [Sou*,i; lie knows that the South politically, is not. for him. He knows "that the people of the South did not | vote for him last fall, that they d d not vole for anybody or anything, but that they did vote against some bod v and something, and that as a result of this vote of protest he re ceived certain electoral votes in this section of the country. "When he appointed his cabinet. President Hoover demonstrated that he was making no bid for Southern political support in future cam paigns. He has now given a further land more emphatic and conclusive demonstration of that fact by Ills handling of the delicate rare ques tion confronting him in Washing ton. "Mr. Hoover knows the South well enough to understand thoroughly that no man ran receive the politi cal support of the South who ever remotely indicates a leaning toward social equality even for political purpose of the white and colored races. He knows that fundamental ly, when the test really conies, the race Issue in the South transcends all other Issues. It is a biological fact that once the race issue is seri ously raised in any Southern state all other issues are forgotten. That is why sane leaders of both races here strive manfully, in season and out. to keep the race issue out of politics. That is why the South'* greatest reader of the negro race. Dr. Robert R Moton, head Of Tus kegee Institute, declares that the best negroes in the South do not want social equality of the races, because they know it would be dis astrous to both races. "Having taken his stand on this issue—having made his choice, which is the historic choice of the Repub lican party at the North in dealing with the race problem—President. Hoover, of course, will not make another bid for electoral votes In the South. He probably would n t have won the electoral vote of ti ls section again in any event, but in the light, of what occurred at the White House the past week, it. Is impossible to conceive of his carry ing a Southern state in future. From the viewpoint of the South; Mr. Hoover has made a fatal and an un pardonable political blunder by playing politics with the race is sue." Crowell Addresses Kiwanis Meeting (Continued from pace one.'* Carolina provide more adequate care and treatment ot the feeble minded, pointing to the badly con gested condition of the present in stitution at Kinston. Old age deferred is the secret of success if that old age ern be made efficient, asserted the distinguish ed physician, but he said that h* I could never understand why a rmn l or woman wished to linger in this j life on a bed of pain after usefulness had departed. He concluded his ad dress of the evening with the state ment that, the best people are get ting better and that the other cpiss are growing worse. ‘.‘-The fellow go ing nowhere is the chop we see: driving his automobile at the most dangerous speed," said £s. Crowed Il.irhison Rrpnri At. last night's meeting of * Knvanis club Dr. ,T. W Harbison who was district delegate to the Ki wanis International hireling in Mil waukee submitted a detailed reporf relative to the convention, in which he praised the hospitali'v extended, the delegates by tire Wisconsin city and said that every Kiwanis mem ber should make an effort to attend at ’cast one national convention tf no more. Dr. E. B Laltimore. president at i (lie local club, presided at last night's meeting and lit program for the evening was in the hands of Dr Tom Mitchell. <;. o. r. spi.it wide open, JOIJETT SIIOUSE CHARGES Kansas City. — Jouett Shouse. chairman of the national Demo cratic executive committee, up >n his arrival home issued a statement in which he declared that the Re publican party “is widely split in half a dozen directions.” “It is not our job to formulate policies,” the chairman stated. “It so happens that the Republican party is just now furnishing us with a policy ready made.' Penny Column LOST: PAIR OF GLASSES IN brown case. Finder please return to Chickasaw Thread Company. 2t oc OLD NEWSPAPERS FOR sale at The Star office. Twen ty cents per hundred. Call at the press room. tf-26x 1 .. .then ore; y ou r protection in The Whole Story Is This... MOST well-known tire manufac turers in America 8e.ll at least thrae dlfcerent qualities of tires. So does Montgomery Ward & Co. 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