Newspapers / Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, … / July 10, 1929, edition 1 / Page 2
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Polkville Mention Of Personal News (Special to The Star Mr. and Mrs. Joe Lawrence and Misses Willie and Pearl Pendleton's of Biltmore spent the week-end a* R. J. Pendleton's home Mr. and Mrs. Kzel Floyd visited Mr. and Mrs. Roland Doyle of Linoolnton. Mrk and Mrs. P. S. Gettys and family visited Mr. Gettys' brother of Rutherford county. They were accompanied by Mrs. Smith Ledbetter and two children Dwight and Ruby. Master James Gettys spent Sun day with Master Jack Pendleton Misses Pauline Floyd and Blancne Mode Visited Misses Effle and Blanche Lackey Sunday. Mr. O. W. Powell ha.s ret timed home from Charlotte on business trip. " Mrs. Smith Ledbetter and two children are spending a few da vs with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. P. S. Gettys. Mr. and Mrs Marvin Bridges were visiting Mr. and Mrs R J. Pendleton Sunday Mi?s Roe Mary White spent Sun day with her sister Mrs. Wyate Stamey. Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Crow spent the week-end with Mrs. Crow's par ents, Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Martin. Mr. and Mrs. F H. Origg have re turned home from Kentucky. If Mr Edison can t find a new vegetable--source of rubber. he might experiment with lobster. Peoria, Star. 666 is a Prescription for Colds, Grippe, Flu, Dengue, Bilious Fiver and Malaria. It la the moat speedy remedy known SICK HEADACHE Ei-Sheriff Suffered From Con stipation and Folt Very Bad Until Relieved by Black-Dranfht. Ardmore. Okie,—Mr. W- N. Mc Clure, tor severe! yean a resident of this city fill Third Ave. N. W >. formerly wee ft political leader In Pike County, Antenna, where bo •erred aa sheriff and county Judge. “I uaed to suffer with sick head ache*," nye Mr. McClure. “These ■pells would come on me and I would feel very bad. X would set bilious and upset “My trouble was constipation, and after X found It out. 1 began using Black-Draught This quickly re lieved the cause, i ’■ got all right "I began using Black-Draught In r the CmL tny home, ahortly after War, when X lived In Pike County, Arkansas. X earns out of the war, Ilka many other soldiers, with bad digestion. X suffered a lot from sick headache and distances. I would get constipated, and for a while I would feel very bad. “X found this medicine brought quick relief for constipation. and re moved the cause of my headaches and dlsarineea, to we have always triad to keep it to the bouae. “After X take a course of Black Draught, X feel fine. My system Is rid ot poison, end my appetite picks up.’* Sold ersvywhere. Try it nc-20* blackdraught »«r (omliualiun for f mi 111 p.tlion inili^cation Hiliousortt I Gaffney Man Charged With Ini plication In Gastonia Slaying. Gastonia.—At a lengthy session ol municipal court here this morning Delhiar Hampton admitted •Cap tain of the guard” which is alleged to have fatally wounded Chief of police Aderholt and painfully wounded three other Gastonia offi cers at national textile workers un ion headquarters here in a riot June 7, last, was bound over to super ior court without bond on a charge of murder in connection with the chief's death, and ordered held In bond nf $ir>00 on a charge of as saultwith a deadly weapon in con nection with the wounding of of ficers, Rae.fi, Gilbert and Ferguson Judge A C. Jones presided at the session This hearing was ordered by Judge Harding before whom proceedings had been brought by defense attor neys. JUnison. Flower . Abcrnethv and Sigmon to effect the release ol Hampton from Jail where he has been held for tiie past ten days longer, after being arrested in Gaff ney and brought back to Gastonia on a charge of romplictly in the killing. The only evidence brought out by the state in the hearing today was that of Adain Hord. who was pres ent at-the tent colony when the shooting took place: and that of Tim Rankin who said Hampton told him that he was at the tent colony on the night of the shooting. J. Frank Flowers, who concluded the cross examination of the states witnesses, objected strenuous'y to the introduction of Rankin's evi dence, saying that, the officer had not warned the prisoner that what lie might say would be used against him Jimison and Flowers did not, say they would institute habeas corpus proceedings to procure the relea-,9 of Hampton, but Indications were 11 hat they would, since they Insisted that a complete stenographic ac count, of the hearing be made and ! handed them today. Mr. Hord testified that. In answer to a call from the strike headquart ers he. chief Aderholt, Charlie Fer guson, together with Gilbert and Roach whom they picked up at the corner of Loray and Airline, w ent to the lot on north Loray street where the tent colony was located, accord ing to Mr. Hord, the first shot came LANDIS SHOE SHOP For The Beat Shoe Rebuilding. Rebuilt And New Shoes For Sale. Abo Headquarters For Singer Sewing Machines & Parts. West Marion St. 3rd Door From Western Union. Shelby, N. C. ■- - - - ' MMi Aiumwmm. ItHUMtM At All Orui Star**. Adults 7J*. Cklldrsn 60s. SttVM Off Stomaek Trwiklaa. You It Appreciate Its Worth w. e. louwtws, m. d. If you hare any of the following symptom* 1 have the remedy no mattfr what your trouble ’uis been diagnosed: Nervousness, stomach trouble, loan of weight, lost of sleep, so^e mouth, pain* in the hack and shoulder*, peculiar swimming in ibe head frothy like phlegm in throat, passing mucous front the oowels, especially after taking purgative. burn ing faet. brown, rough or yellow skin, burning or itching skin, rash on the hands, face and arras resembling sunburn, habitual constipation, . (sometimes alternating with diarrhoea! copper " or metallic taste, skin sensative to aunheat,forget* fulness, despondency and thoughts that you might lose your mind, gums a fiery red and falling away from the teeth, general weakness with loss of energy. If you baxe these I symptom* and have ! taken all kinds of medicine and still aiek, 1 eapecully wat you to write tor my doouci. Mr*. J. D. Collett, Route No. 4, High Point, N. C,., whore picture appear* here, write*: "During the winter of 1927-28 I took yourtreatments,and lam glad to aay that my family doctor aaya I have no •ymptoms now. I look, feel, and am a different perron altogether. I cannot thank you and your medicine enough”. FOR FREE DIAGNOSIS AND LITERATURE WRITEi W. C. Rountree, M. D., Austin, lcvas. Mill. J. U. COLLETT Horn the front door of the building or from a point very near the door, the second shot came from a win dow, and it was at this shot that Aderholt fell wounded; the third shot came from the tent, and from then on there was a regular fusil lade, said Hord, Roach and Gilbert fell about the same time, he said, after Aderholt was shot, He said that Hampton told hint in Jail a few days ago that he was inside the bui'ding talking to Beal when the shooting was going on. All the shooting was from shotguns. Mr. Hord testified that lie had seen these armed guards several times on his occasional visits to the headquarters, and that they wtre armed with shotguns. He said he saw four guards that night, ad armed with guns. Mr, Flowers tried on cross exami nation to get from the witness the admission that there was no trouble there and attempted Invade private property. Mr. Hord promptly met at the colony until the officers got this sally with the reply that they had been summoned to come there, that there had been some disorder, even if everything was quiet when they arrived. He to'.d Mr. Flowers that the guard first accosted of ficers Gilbert with a shotgun, and flint the trouble started then. Judge Jones held there was pro bable cause and bound the defend ant to court without bond on the murder charge and put him under a $1 .SOO bond on the assault charge Miss Julia Poynt* was among the spectators at the court, as was Wal ter Trumbull. John D. Brodsky, chief counsel for the defendants, was not in court. Disenfranchisement In The South. John Temple Graves In Orlando, Fla., Reporter-Star. The New York World, In many respects the most able and interest ing of American newspapers, In veighed last week against the Sou thern senators who voted for the exclusion of aliens in the congres sional reapportionment count, but willing to have disenfranchised southern negroes excluded also. The World charged that these senators ere willing to ride roughsod over the constitution "in their effort to preserve for ft comparatively small number of white voters In the south representation In congerss out of all proportion to their number." That the abstract logic of the southern position In thia respect has its flaw cannot be disputed. But there fa. at least, a plea In abate* ment. The World overlooks two cir cumstances which, when the mach inery of American politics la con sidered. may have given the south ern white man actually leas of a voice in national politics and «Jw southern negro actually more of a voice than their respective numer ical strengths deserved. The first circumstance is the sya tem cf apportioning delegates to National democratic conventions. Without regard to the wide varia tion in the proportion of democrats in different states, each state is al lowed twice the number of delegates ' that it has representatives In con-! Kress This mean* that states like Pennsylvania, which never vote democratic, have considerably more voice in democratic conventions than southern states which nearly always vote democratic. It means, in effect, that the soutern white man whose ordinary political ve hicle has been the democratic par ty, has not been proportionately represented in the most vital decis ions of that party. The second circumstance Is the heretofore skeleton organisation of the republican party In the south, an organization in many Instances based op the votes of southern ne groes. While the republican party has a fairer system of apportioning delegates to Its national conven tions than the democratic party has. the southern delegations in re publican conventions, nevertheless have had In the paat a represents - tlon out of proportion to republican strength In the south. This means they sometime exercise an actual determining influence In the na tional conventions of the republi can party. And this party has been generally in office at Washington since the civil war. Since the political destinies of the nation are determined funda mentally in the conventions of the two great parties. The World should ask Itself whether the two circum stances named above do not offset whatever disenfranchisement of the negro on general election day the south may be guilty of accomplish ing. Or, to put it another way, whether the southern white man’s superior representation in congress not balanced by the southern ne gro’s superior voice in the choice of a president of the United States The theory is one thing ;the con dition another.. Theoretically the south as no leg to stand on in Us disregard of the fifteenth amend ment. Under actual conditions, how ever, without regard to the socia problem the negro represents, it Is possible that the southern negro <©r those who control hum has weighed more in strictly national politics than the southern white. Scholars at; Cambridge have in vented a language containing'cnlv 500 words called "panoptlc Eng lish. It is said that nearly all or dinary conversation can be carried on with this limited vocabulary. But it will never be popular in the United States senate BIVES FORECAST OF LAWS REEDED Wituton-Salem.—An Indication ol what the legislative program of the North Carolina Federation of Labor will be at the next elections and before the general assembly has been given by T. A. Wilton, presi dent, in a statement for publication. He said "there should be a short ening of hours among the mill work ers of the state. Night work in the textile mills should be prohibited. The age limit for child workers should be raised. Free text books should be furnished to the chil dren of the underpaid parents of this state and the children of the farmers who are now suffering from the farm depression. Compulsory school attendance and no free text books work a hardship on the par ents, and the state needs educated citizens for the future. The Sou'h ern textile states, with India and China, are the only place;- left that permit night work for women in textile mills. Even Japan has pro hlbtted women working p.f night in cotton mills,” Mr. Wilscn states. Mr. Wilson Issued a statement for the labor press calling upon organ ized labor to make an aggressive effort at labor legislation and pr; dicts much activity during the nex few months Simultaneous with M.\ Wilson's statement, the executive council of the American Federation of Labor Issues a warning that the member ship of the A. F. of L. should ignore appeals for contributions from Com munists and the "bores-from with in." The council called attention to the International Labor Defense and the Workers' International Relief, stating that these organizations would use any money raised in an effort to Injure the efforts of the A. F. of L. It is said that Liberia owes us on ly 120.000. Liberia must be ve> v careless in the matter cf her bor rowing—Troy Times MAXTON COP SOUGHT ARREST OF PATROLMEN <? Parsing through Maxton on a tour of the state recently, the members ot the state highway patrol headed by Capt. Charles D. Farmer fail. ed In turning a comer to go around a safety flasher erect ed at a highway Intersection, and Maxton's Deputy Sheriff W. YV. Smith wired Sheriff McMillan at Lninberton to arrest the patrol for the in fraction of the law, says the “Scottish Chief” of Maxton. "Mr. Smith says that Sher iff McMillan claims he was not in his office and failed to get the message In time to < make the arrests,” the paper I states. j ADMINISTRATORS NOTICE. Having qualified as administrator 11 of the estate of Martha Macason. deceased, late of Cleveland couiry, North Carolina, this is to notify ”.l persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to exhibit them to the undersigned at Shelbv, N. C., on or before the 26th day ol June, 1930, or this notice will he pleaded in bar or their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment. This June 26th, 1929. PRANK L. HOYLE. Adminis trator of Martha Macason. Jno. P. Mull, Atty. ADMINISTRATOR’S NOTICE. Having qualified as administra tor of the estate of S, J. Bingham, deceased, this is to hereby notify all persons indebted to said estate to make payment of such indebted ness immediately to me; and this is to notify all persons holding claims against said esetate to file same with me on or before the 17th day of April. 1930, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of recovery thereon GETTYS BINGHAM, Admr. es tate of S. J. Bingham, deed. Newton <Sc Newton, Attys. Her husband’s sweetheart A gripping story of a blind girVs fight to hold her husband’s love T list Christine lincw the truth. Gone wu the sweet dream of lo»e which her marrisge to Rcliohad brought her—since thet other woman. Nine, hid com* into cheit home. His "si*er," Rslio bed celled her. But he seemed to change somehow. Often there clung to hits the odor of lilacs-Nina's perfume. "’You needn't lie," Christine once fold him sad) v. "I knowyoti love Nina But you needed money. So you married me, a blind girl, and brought Nina here nied, prote«ted, pleaded—had almost convinced her that she had been wrong. Then came this fragrant summer t night when suspicion became certainty — when she had knocked it Ntni'i door — tod Nina had streamed. "(shall wait for you, Relio, in wy own room,” Christine had called through the door. And sooowshe waited, white-lipped, dry-eyed, gripped by emotions that as vour sister, cnimcing to hide from me the truth. The hurt to my heart doesn't matter. I can oever repay you for the —happiness—you have given me, for having sold yourself to a blind girl, even for a time " Of course be had dc August Partial Contents'^ /or August Hoi ’ Could Ao^ Wodio Whi( One Vpmto Did for Lot* When Lovers Pretend Ttroishedl Youoc Siaoeri Whet They Never Knew —and 8 other storitsf seemed to rend her very sou). Resd her dramatic rrvelstion, “Out of Hrr World of Darkness," ia August True Story. Tune in_pn the True Story Hour Broaeicai t every Friday nitht tur IVOR and the Columbia Chain. Consult YtU' Paper jor Exact Time, Out Now! True Story At All Newsstands—only 25c Au Mechanism on top , where it belongsI *re many reason a the mechanism of 1 Electric Refriger ator isplaced on top of the cab ' inet. Here are 3 vital reasons: 1. Refrigerating-mechanisms develop heat in the process of oooling the interior of the re friaerator. This heat escapes and rises. Therefore, General Electric hasplacedtherefrigcr sting mechanism on top so that the escaping heat travels away from the cabinet. 2. Placing all the mechanism on top of the cabinet achieves maximum food storage space within the cabinet. 3. With the mechanism on top, the inside of the cabinet is free from obstructions and easier to keep clean. There Awhj all the Genera There are now more than 300,000 users and not one has ever spent a dollar for repairs. ^ isit ouf display rooms and see the new ali-eteel models. GENERAL 0 ELECTRIC ALL-STEEL REFRIGERATOR HORD & RANSON LafAYETTE ST. PHONE 720 % JiURNIS'G O.v ICICLES for /At "ntrth pule" room uhere "Standard” rasoline is t/.'ted in temperatures re n{. inp from ISO abort to 40 be low zero. fit sides the “Standard” prosing pound there is only one other laboratory with apparatus complete enough to brinp out. side road conditions indoors. It is the Bureau of i'tandards in I’aihington, D. C. the Rainbow Nowadays it »eem* to the average motorist that there il a different colored gasoline at every gas tank he draws up to. If you have tried these gasoline* —if you have been “through the rainbow"—we ask you to do two things. First, note that the new “Stand ard" Improved Gasoline rs not colored. Second, try this gaaoline and compare the result* with any other gasoline at regular prices you have ever used in your ear retard’ less of color or claims. Compare it for power, mileage and anti-knock qutlitiei. Thousands of motorist! have al* ready made this comparison. The result is that more than twica as much "Standard” Improved Gasoline is now used tt the near* esc competing brand 1 An oil company with tba great* est facilities for producing n finer gasoline is back of "Stand? ard” Improved Gasoline—in back of it 100?S. Remember, it't performance in tha motor that sells tosoline! frove it yourself I STANDARD Improved 1ASOUNE [ESSO-—the Giant Power Fuel is (dared red merely In distinguish it from "Standard" Gasoline.] I T S T H E C H A M P I O \ TO! F A v O R,I T J? THE CHOICE OF IOOOOO MOTORISTS During the past Twelve Months ©Idsmobile ii on the rising tide of public favor. During the past twelve months alone, more than one hundred thousand motorists have demonstrated their approval by buying Oldsmobilcs. And this tremendous publicacceptance continues to grow. Month after month, new records of success are being reported from every section of the country. Official figures 60 far available for 1929 show an increase of 55 per cent over the corresponding perioa in 1928. These buyers selected Oldsmobile from the entire field after driving it, giving it their own exacting tests, and making critical comparisons—because their own good judgment told them that no other automobile in Olds mobile’* price group combine* *uch performance, reliability, comfort, beauty, and luxury. And they have found, in actual own- ' ership, all the enjoyment and satiafac tion that they anticipated. Thou sand* of owner* have written in Ito express their enthusiasm for the Oldsmobiles they purchased. Come and examine this fine Oldsmo- .f bile Six-—drive it—compare it* epedfi cation* with those of other car*.1 Then you will know why thousand* upon thousand* are turning to OIda mobile. Then you will understand why Oldsmobile owners everywhere ’ are so ready to praise their cars. The VIKING —eh* new 90-degree V-type Eight at medium price—,f built in the Old# factories by Oldamo bile craftsmen. and aold through Oldsmobile dealer*. At St999 for all model*, t. o. h. factory, Lanstnx, Michigan, it i* a* outstanding in value m its held a# the popular Oldamobile Six. the fine ear of low price. TWO DOOR SEDAN $875 f n. K factory, Lansing. Michigan. Spars tire and bumper $ extra Coamdcr th* Delivered Price UmUtr tfc# fathered price m well a* the lilt •»*« whra OMHriai ■•t*acUla nl«u. OMiavkflt delivered price* lacliM «alr ruwniUc ch&rfM far delivery end f O lds mob i l| Hawkins Brothers DEALERS READ THE STAR. IT NOW GOES INTO 5,000 HOMES EVERY OTHER DAY. $2.50 A YEAR BY MAIL. FOUR WEEKS A QUARTER BY CARRIER BOY.
Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 10, 1929, edition 1
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