Newspapers / Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, … / Oct. 11, 1929, edition 1 / Page 8
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Rutherford Farmers Getting ‘Rep’ Pure Bred Jersey Cattle Section Send Jersey Bulls To Kinston fair. One Calf Bought There For $300. Rutherfordton, Ocl. 11 —Flv» pure Jersey bull calves of the very oest ; breeding t» be found were sent lo Kinston this week. According to F E. Patton, county agent, these calves will be on exhibit at the Kin ston fair and will be sold todav at the State Jersey sale. These calves were consigned by following Jersey breeders: Mr. Ed Thompson. Forest City;; Mr C. B. Grose, Forest City, R-2; Mr. B. G. Moore. Forest City, R-2; Mr J. C Buff, Ruth and Mr. o, J. Holler, Union Mills.' Rutherford county is getting a splendid start in good dairy cattle and is getting-a reputation over the state for Jersey cattle of good breeding. Not long ago, some Jei *ey* were sold In Yancey county and last year we sold Jerseys in Pclk, - Jackson and Avery counties, also the state Jersey sale at Statesville This speaks well f6r the Jersey breeder! ol Rutherford county Our dairymen are not selling to go out ol the business, but are re placing with better bulls and toil ers: Last month n bull calf was bought which cost $300. Each ve«r more farmers arc bcconurif! inter ested in livestock. If the interest keeps growing, w-e will soon have c number of good herds. A number of farmers are now looking lor some good heifer-, hihI arc preparing for them by sowing pastures this fall. A1 Smith May Help Tammany Which Cut Him, Says Observer Charlotte Observer A proposition of Florcllo LnOtiar riia, who is making spectacular race for mayor of New York to provide e political job for former Governor Smith has created a general run of newspaper discussion. LaGuardri proposes that if elected, he will of fer Alfred E. Smith the chairman ship of a commission to reorgantre Factory Prices ON \STOVES, HEATERS And RANGES IP AGAIN WASHBURN SCORES WM-.00 I. Our Special Price on | HOT WATER i l HEATERS. r 1 8«yer Before have we offered such {Bargains in Heaters, Stoves and Ranges. I'Wfc Have just unloaded a car—and can • suply your needs at FACTORY PRICES. Our Buyers have made a special effort <f6 get the right kind of stoves and we are glad to announce they have. We will install your Stove or Heater FREE —SEE US. We can supply you with extra Grates and Parts. We sell the famous Phillips & Buttorff line of Heaters and Stoves and ALLEN’S PRINCESS RANGES. Come in and look our display over. Cleveland Hardware frv Company — WASHBURN’S — WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. PHONE 73 — the city government. The fusion candidate points out that vhllt governor, Mr. Smith advocated the placing of Charles E. Hughes at the head of a commission on the re organization of the state govern ment, and he would pay the former governor the same compliment wi<h respect to the city. It is The Bos ton Transcript making remark th'i there is more than politics and sensationalism in this suggestion holding that while it "is tioc the affair of any other community whether New York shall re-elect a dude mayor and continue undrv the present costly city government, a larger constituency than even that of New York would welcome the Suggestion that some such use he made of the services of Governor Smith." Then, continues The Transcript, in the fascinating autobiography h? has given the public, Governor Smith touches lightly upon n .‘ ob ject which might well command greater attention. Here is a man who polled the largest vote through out the nation ever cast for a Dem ocrat, yet the day after election, in stead of remaining the mentor and guide of his party, he is cast aside like an old shoe. That appeal's to be the American custom, as Parker. Cox. Davis and many others of both parties could testify. No man knows New York city better than Alfred L. Smith, yet the Tammany iro.m which he came, knifed him in his presidential campaign and threw him aside after the election. Smith owes Tammany nothing but he owes much to the com munity. Blind Republican par tisanship fought his every effort to improve conditions in the state gov ernment. and it now has a chance to redeem itself by giving LaGuar dia a chance to make good on his promise. The Transcript does not take Mr. LaGuardia or the pronpecls of his election to seriously, but it holds that “in this suggestion of a reform in the city govemmnt along such lines as the disembodi"! Smith might map out, he has said something.” Women May Serve Upon State Juries Charlotte Women Voters Discuss Proposal For Women To Sit On Juries In N* C. Charlotte's recent troubles !n selection of a Jury for the Adtvhcl: trial was a topic for discussion I amonK members of the Mecklen burg chapter of the League of Women Voters upon receipt of the monthly news bulletin issued bv state league, in which there is an alysts of the opinions held by many proi nent judges on woman's rig bus and ability to act as a juror. “When women were, enfranchised in some state they became eligible to jury service because that service is held to be one of the duties and rights of a citizen," the bulletin state. "In North Carolina th">e has been a discussion as to wha’. the word 'men in the constitutional requirement for jurors means Chief Justice Clark gave an opinion that 'men' means both men wsnd women. However, his opinion has not been tested, and it js usually thought that a change in the con stitution, or at powering women to act, will be necessary.” Eminent judges in statements prepared for the national league have praised women as jurors the bulletin brings out. One has said that "women bring to the jury a quality that is one of the mr*t valuable assets in jury service They bring honesty and a sense j of fair dealing among men, a s^se | of the majesty of law prope-ty j tempered with mercy." Another is quoted as follows: “They make as Intelligent jurors as men, rather better, as they pay more attention and preserve be*ter order. Tire objection to women on juries are that there are many disagreeable cases dealing with si x i elation of which respectable women should not hear or know. Tins is nonsense .If such tilings exist, res pectable women should hear them, judge the guilt or innocence of the parties, and then go out into the world to better conditions and prevent like cases. It Is high time women took a hand In this aspect of society. There is always strong objection to women as jurors on on the part of the doers and those who abet them.” LUTHERAN CHURCH SERVICE A? EAST MARION SCHOOL Rev N. t). Yount announces ser vices for tire Lutheran congregation at the East Marion street school building Sunday: Sunday school at ten o’clock. Morning worship, elev en o’clock, subject "An Expensive Misfit.” Luther League 6:30, sub ject, “Prayer as Jesus Taught It.” Evening worship, 7:30. subject “A Balanced Life.” In connection with the morning service the Holy Communion will be administered. Special offering for Salem Hebrew Lutheran Missions. Visitors feci the friendly welcome WOMEN TO MIKE PEACE UNGER 1 Lady Astor Sees Permanence Of j Kellogg Pact In Feminine Support Of It. > The world will never go bark j from the Kellogg pact because wom en will be an important factor ir, holding their governments to it, de clares Lady Astor. M. P., in sn ar ticle in the October issue of McCalls magazine. Delegated by McCall's to attend the recent conference of the Inter national Council of Women ir Lon don, Lady Astor reports on the im portant work which women a:e now carrying on for peace. "Women know that peace is es sential to their homes and their children and all they care for; and I believe their peacemaking activi ties are among the surest hopes of the future. Women In Politics. “I have been in the British House of Commons for ten years—-nearly the whole time that there has been any kind of women’s suffrage in England—and I have been able *o see. with ray own eyes, wivvt has been the consequence of the entry cf women into politics. ■‘And what I have seen is that in ten years more laws to protect the homes and the children of the coun try have been passed than in a hundred years before; more politi cal attention has been given to so cial questions; and things like hous ing. health, pensions and education havq come to the forefront. It has been the same in every country where women have been given the vote,. ■'Recently there was held In Lon don a meeting of the International council of women, and the proceed ings of that conference brought out this point very clearly. "They discussed, of course. all sorts of things, from migration to the cinema; for the objects dt the National councils are very wide, and include all forms of social better ment; but the one subject they *11 cared most about, whatever country they came from, and whatever their special task in life, was pears. Everything ran off in that direction however it started. "When they discussed education, for example, it was with a view of . seeing how history and patriotism j could be taught without arousing I hatred for foreign nations. The.; reported on their schemes for the ; exchange of teachers and scholars | between one country and another, a j plan which is now working, not I only between England and America, but between a great many neighbor ing European countries; they told of ,the success of international camps of scouts and guides and of efforts to secure translations of In ternational documents, to place them in libraries all over the world. "Since the World war everything has changed in international rela tions; and since the Kellogg pact has been sighed and ratified we can really hope that the change wi’l he lasting. The great Ideal set up bv that pact has been accepted by the Powers; and whatever doubte. i and scoffers may say, I believe that the world will never go back from it. "And what is more, I thing ihe women are going to be a very im portant factor in holding their gov ernment to it in the letter’and-in the spirit.” Morrison To Speak On Armistice Day Cameron ' Morrison of Charlotte, former governor of North Carolina, will be the principal speaker at the Armistice Day celebration to be held in Forest City an Novembe. 11. The Armistice Day celebration is j being sponsored by Willis Tow - | cry post, American Legion: the I Woman's Auxiliary and the Kiwani? | club, of Forest City, and from all | indications it will be one of the lirg cst events of Its kind ever held in Forest City. The other legion posts of the county are cooperating 'vi'h i the loca^l organization in putting | across this celebration and several j thousand people trom all over I Rutherford county are expected to i attend. — Dies Of Wound. Deputy Sheriff Claude Gentry. 49. of Asheville. died of wounds said to have been inflicted on him when he atempted to halt a fight in the Woodfin section of Asheville Saturday r.ight. He was badly slash ed with a knife. Toe Heads Grange. Dr. Clarence Poe. editor of the Progressive Fanner” was unani mously elected as the first master of the North Carolina State Grenec at the conclusion of a two-day or ganisation meeting at Raleigh. The Dear Old Times. From The Cincinnati Enquirer. Progress may be all right, but no old-timer can be convinced that blowing smoke rings to amuse the baby is superior to singing ‘t to sleep with the sweet, old lullauyv State Fair To Open Monday In Raleigh-Big Show Offered Raleigh.—Monday morning, Oc tober 14, the North Carolina State lair will open, at Raleigh, for it, second season under the ownershio and management of the state of North Carolina. Many unique features are con nected with the fair. Gove -not Gardner predicts that it will bo the greatest success of any exoos< tion ever attempted in the South. In preparation for the fair, prep aration have been made to handle the greatest crowds ever assembled tn the state. "There will be no traf fic congestion, unless tire crowd on any one day exceeds 150,000, "T. B. Smith, secretary-manager of die fair said tecently. In preparation for the fair, a new road has been constructed, from Raleigh io the fair grounds, and three large new parking lots have been graded. The highway patrol will have charge of directing traffic. Home comings have been held for many years but North Carolina is the first state to attempt one on a state-wide scale. An effort is being made to get 250,000 former Tar Heels to return to their native state, and to the fair and home coming. President Hoover, recogni7ing the important of the home coming bui, unable to attend himself, is sending Joseph M. Dixon, native Tar Heel, and former senator from Montana as his personal representative, to deliver the greetings which hp for a time planned to give in person. Although the first state fair wr.s held last year, it was not complete. Consequently the formal dedication will be held this year, on Monday. Since last year the building pro gram has been completed, with the construction of a new poultry bam and the expenditure of $65,000 on the grounds, in grading and top soiling. “Education With a Kick" has been adopted as the State Fair slogan. There will be plenty of fun for everybody. The Sheesley Greater Shows will appear on the midway. The greatest group of free acts ever booked in the South, according to Mr. Smith, who saw them a!'., b - fore booking them, is scheduled to appear before the grandstand. Lord ing the free acts will be Wilno, The Human Cannon Ball, in this act, Wilno is shot 100 feet through the air. His double was killed in this act at the Eastern States Exposi tion, at Springfield, Mass. Racing will be a big feature of the fair. For the first five days, j horse racing will occupy the center■ of the stage. Purses totaling $7 - j 200 are offered for the races, the j highest purses ever offered in this I state, and four $1,000 stake races have been scheduled as spreia’! features. Saturday. October 19, the \ last day of the fair, w ill see the j auto races, between such world fa- ; mous stars as Herman S nuvch | Bob Robinson, and Doug. Wallace. "Miss Personality," Miss Julia Bradham. of Rocky Mount, who de clined an offer to appear in Errl Carroll’s revue to return ir the Rocky Mount High school, will he! the feature attraction of the eve ning programs at the fair. Other ; evehing features will be moving i picture fireworks, including the Battle of the Marne, and thrilling games of auto polo. The free acts will be presented both afternoon and evening. A total of $25,000 is offered for exhibits of agricultural products is being offered by the state fair this j year—the largest total premium list, ever offered in the history of tl s state. Among the many exhibits wi'.l be a poultry show, housed in a new building, cattle, sheep and swim? ex hibits, filling all the space allotted to them. In fact, all the exhibi I space at the fair will be filled th. year. County and community exhibits from all sections of the state will be displayed at the fair, as wall as many exhibits of special interest to women. Uneteriliaed Glasses. w. W. Wiggins, owner, and J. L. Jordan, manager of the Sir Walter Drug store at Raleigh, were given a fine of $5 and the casts in city court at the Capitol City several days ago when, they were charged with violating county healtn regu lations by using unsterilized glasses at a soda fountain instead of paper cups. Both Set Free. John P Rankin, prominent Mooresville contractor, and Russell Holtczclaw, a negro youth of the same place, were given a hearing before a recorder’s court at States ville recently on charges of setting fire to the barn of J. W, Neal, of Mooresville, on July 13. They were; both set free. Fixing The Blame. Another week of labor difficulties in North Carolina saw five men kill ed and almost a score of otners wounded in a riot at Marion, the subsequent joint burial of the vic tims, the'calling out of 110 nationa1 guardsmen to maintain order, and the instigation of an inquiry to fix the blame for the affair. Daughters Are Meeting. The thirty-third annual conven tion of the North Carolina division of the United Daughters of the Confederacy is in progress at Statesville this week. More than 300 registered delegates and visitors are gathered representing 114 chap ters of the organization embracing more than 6.000 members. It’s Hard On Him. Trenton, N. J.—Charles Malinski has retired from saloon-keeping and intends to live on a farm with his mother-in-law. He said so in court, “That," remarked United States At torney Foreman, “would seem to be punishment enough.” Judge Cla-k concurred. LOOK FOR OUR SALE AD IT’S COMING — AND RED HOT WAIT Save Your Money For This Sale—The Sale of Sales THE PARAGONS high quality merchandise— Furniture and Home Fur* dishing t‘. go on sale THURSDAY, OCT. 17TH WE HAVE SOLD OUR LEASE AND FIXTURES and must move by Christ mas. We’ve got a big job before us—but we like big jobs. Save your money for this sale. You know our merchandise and as for prices DON’T YOU WOR RY'. Leave that to us. WAIT Save Your Money For This Sale and Save Money. THE PARAGON (Shelby’s Best.) The Halifax county board ot agri culture has worked out a program of farming to be attempted in the county next year. mighty monarch of the air Mnrlpl O? Power Deteetipn and tike t iUUUCi tubes dIu, f™,- ... s new “45 tube* plus four tuned •oru of radio frequency; Absolutely no hum and no oscillation at any ware length. Automatic sensitivity coo. crol gleet uniform range and power all over the dial. lm proved Majestic Super-Dynamic Speaker. Heavy, sturdy Maiesdc power unit, with positive voltage ballast- Jacobean period cabinet of American Walnut. Doors of matched butt walnut with overlays on doers and interior panel of genuine imported Australian lace- . — wood. Escutcheon plate, knobs and$ | 50 door pulli finished in genuine silver 1U f k*?» ear jesfic, that has ended tune in... 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Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, N.C.)
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Oct. 11, 1929, edition 1
8
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