Newspapers / Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, … / May 13, 1931, edition 1 / Page 1
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8 PAGES TODAY ■t Malt, art rnr, in MnHt) .. «2.Mj Carrier. DM rear. (In •> • Published Monday, Wednesday and Friday Afternoons. I Fair And Cool. Today’s North Carolina Wcathn Report: Fair and continued cool lo nijht and Thursday. Tourist Travel. Rutherfordton, May 13.—For the purpose of developing plans fur the promotion of tourist travel from the north and east to the Great Snuiej Mountains National I’ark, by the way of Kings Mountain battlcgiound Chimney Rock, Hickory Nut Gap, and other historic and scenic points, a meeting will be held here Friday night under the sponsorship of the i Rutherford County club. Represen tatives from Bryson City, Waynes ville, Sylva, Canton. Asheville, Chim ney Rock, Forest City. Shelby, King:, Mountain, Gastonia. Charlotte, York.' S. C., and other points hate tereed to attend. Banquet Gold StarMotherAt Auxiliary Meet Sails Next Week To Visit Her Son's Grave In France. Bon voyage was wished the only Cleveland county gold star mother, Mrs. Prank L. Hoyle, who will visit her son's grave in France this sum mer at a special banquet in her honor given at the Woman's club room Monday night by the Ameri can Legion auxiliary of the Warren Hoyle post here. Mrs. Hoyle will leave Shelby Sunday for New’ York and will sail next Wednesday with a party of gold star mothers all of whom will for the first time since the World war visit the graves in France of the boys who gave their all. The banquet was one of the most colorful meetings ever held by the auxiliary, of which Mrs. Tom Gold is president, and officers of the legion past, named for Mrs. Hoyle’s son, were special guests along with Mrs. Hoyle and two other gold star mothers, Mrs. J. W. Allen and Mrs. J. F. Hippy. Mrs. William Crowder was in charge of the program. Haye* Speaker. The principal speaker of the evening was Rev. L. B. Hayes, pas tor of Central Methodist church. Other features of the program were solos by Mrs. John Lovelace with Mrs. L. B. Hayes as accompanist, readings by Miss Carobel Lever and piano selections by Miss Mary Helen Lattimore. Bag Fresented. Near the close of the program So licitor W. S. Beam, commander of the local legion past, presented Mrs. Hoyle with a handsome leather travelling bag. given by members’ Of the post and filled with articles and accessories given by the auxiliary. Mrs. H^yle responded briefly to xpress her appreciation for the banquet, the bag and accessories and the good wishes of her friends. Mrs. Hoyle will be the first gold star mother of this section to visit France as a majority of the Cleve land county boys killed overseas were returned to their native land tor burial. Scouts Prepare For Lake Camp Many Scouts From Cleveland Coun ty To Attend Lake Lanier Camp. According to information given by officials of the Piedmont council of ■'be Boy Scouts of America, the • various scout troops of Cleveland county are making plans for at-1 tendance at the Piedmont Boy Scout i camp at Lake Lanier this summer, j Troop One of Belwood, under the leadership of Scoutmaster J. Alvin | . Propst was the first troop in the county to make reservation for camp attendance this year. At the present time the following! Cleveland county troops are sched uled for attendance at the council camp: Troop one, Polkville, July! 6th to 11th; troop one, Belwood. July -Oth to 25th; troop one and three of Shelby and troop one and two of Kings Mountain will attend camp the week of August 10th. Others are to be scheduled In the next few weeks. Forty troops of the Piedmont council area are already scheduled tar the summer camp and indica tions are that every period of the camp this year will be filled to capacity. From 800 to 1,000 are ex pected to be in attendance this summer. A number of Shelby scouts are plnnning to spend the entire sum mer at camp among whom are Mai Spangler, jr. and J. Franklin Jen -kens, —.— — -——.—i__ Attend Title Game Messrs. Feester Lewis, Roseoe Lutz, and Bill Lattiniore yesterdey at tended the Class B. western chatnp tjpship baseball game at te„. Airy fetween the Mt. Airy clan and Cherryville.'Mt. Airy won by the lop-sided score of 25 to 1. Contract Let For 6 Miles Paving In No. 6 Township Four Of Rutherford Bankers Get Money; Taylor Given Time Put Up $52,500 There Today. Taylor Glvrn Until Saturday T. M. To Raise His Part. Others Are Freed. Criminal action against four of five former Rutherford coun ty bank officios was nol prossed in superior court here today by Judge Iloyle Sink when they put up a total of $52,300 to be turn ed over to the depositors of the defunct Rutherford County Bank and Trust company of which they were officials. The fifth man, J. L. Taylor, who was president of the bank, was given until Saturday at 1 o'clock to raise $15,000 or serve a prison term. The four former, officials who put up the $52,500 today were K. S. Tanner, Sam Elmore, Frank Oates, and W. B. Walker. Five Convicted. The four along with Taylor were convicted at the February term of court at Rutherfordton of accepting deposits In the Rutherford Bank and Trust company when they knew that the institution was insolvent. Judge Sink who presided at that time made the proposition that if they would raise $75,000 by this term of court he would not Impose prison sentences as he believed the interests of all concerned, particu larly those of depositors, would be best served by payment of the $75, 000 to depositors. If they were un able to raise that amount, he inti mated that they would get- prison terms. xanner, Elmore, Oates ana Walt er came into court there this morn ing and put up $52,500 and criminal action against them was suspended, according to a message front Editor R. E. Price of The Rutherford News. Taylor wds then given until the last of the week to raise his portion. Just how much his portion will be was not made public until 2 o'clock this afternoon. Doggett Verdict. Criminal action against E. B. Doggett, of Forest City,, in connec tion with the closing of the Farm ers Bank & Trust company at Forest City was’"suspended, or nol prossed, in a similar manner today by Judge Sink. Doggett was arrested at the same time as were the fire Ruther fordton officials but had never been tried. The charges against him were practically the same and were sus pended today when he put up $7, 500 to be paid out to the depositors of the defunct Forest City bank. Other Cases. It is somewhat doubtfull if the murder charges against Mrs. John Lynch and Paul Searcy, 19-year old farm hand, will be taken up at this term in Rutherford. Th°y wore charged with killing Mrs. Lynch’s husband. In City Sunday DH. H. K. BOl'ER ,y' The sermon at the 11 o'clock ser vice Sunday morning at Central Methodist church will be preached by Dr. Hugh K. Boyer, of Charlotte, a former popular pastor of the church. Dr. and Mrs. Boyer will spend the week-end In Shelby. Rev. L. B. Hayes, Central pastor,' will on Sunday morning preach the bac calaureate sermon at the Granite Falls high school. Young Women Will Sell Poppies Here Mrs. Misenhelmer Heads Legion Auxiliary Poppy Sale On " " May 23. ’ More than 30 young women of Shelby will assist In the memorial poppy sale of the American Legion auxiliary, Saturday, May 23, accord ing to Mrs. Reid Misenhelmer, gen eral chairman of the sale. The corps of workers who will offer the bright red popples to the people of Shelby to be worn in honor of the World war dead has been completely or ganized by Mrs. Tom Gold and will be ready to go on the streets with flowers early on the morning of poppy day. Every worker will be a volunteer, donating her services to help make poppy day a success. The general direction of the sale will be in charge of Mrs. Misenheim er. She will be assisted by a corps of district chairmen, who will have charge of the sale in the different districts of the city, and by Several special chairmen who will handle other parts of the work of the sale. Each of the chairmen will have ac tive committees to aid them in their work. As Much Land Tax Reduction Here Possible Without Any Sales Tax Grier-Folger Plan Would Cut Rate 27 Cents, Same As Mac Lean Cut. ^Special to The Star.* Raleigh, May 13.—Tables of fig ures purported to have been pre pared by Senator Rivers'D. John son, of Warsaw, and attempting to show that all counties of the state would levy additional tax rates to that proposed in the Grier-Folger plan, were criticised and denied yes terday by Senator Folger and other senators who claim that the figures were based on two false assump tions: that no reduction hi the present school cost would be made, and, that all counties would reduce values 25 per cent. Senator Folger, in reply, points oi^r that it is the-1 purpose to actual wyite into the law certain reduc tions in sehool cost that cannot be. evaded by the counties. As to re duction in values, the legislature pbstponed action on revaluation to such a late date, finally leaving it optional with the counties; that only a few have undertaken it Re ports from several of those, be said, [indicate that a reduction of less j than 10 per cent is being made. [ The counties will receive practl cally as much tax reduction under the Grier-Folger plan as they will under the other plan, while at the same time the pepfcle will be spar ed the obnoxious sales tax, Senator Folger states. Tills will be accom plished by increased state aid and a reduction in school cost. The Johnson school bill, he points out, does not carry any definite reduc tion in the total school bill—which, if true, would mean that the John son figures of an average rate of 18 cents would still be levied by all counties for the six months term under the MacLean-Johnson plan. Senator Folger supplies a table to show that the tax rate reduction made possible under the Grier-Fol ger plan is an average of 31 cents, without any sales tax, while that probable reduction under the Mac Lean-Johnson plan, with a sales tax, is only two cents more, 33 cents, based on Senator Johnson’s figures. A few of the counties are given to show the companison, as follows: McL.-J. G.-F. Cleveland_27c 27c Burke . 31c 25c Catawba __ 33c 32c Gaston „ __ 27c 24c Lincoln _ _ 25c 25c Rutherford „._43c 38c Polk __ 39c 35c DePriest Bolt Fails To Draw Mike Whiteaer ! — Catawba Republican For Hoover Hickory Lawyer Refuges To Join Col. Mann And Dcrriest In Split. George DePriest, former Shelby postmaster and G. O. P. chairman | in Cleveland county, started plenty of talk in Republican ranks when he gave an interview to 'Die Star some time ago in which he stated that he and many other Republi cans believed it would be disastrous for Mr. Hoover to be nominated again. Last Sunday he listed several Republican leaders in this state who might line up with him and Col. Horace R. Mann, of Tennessee, in forming an anti-Hoover bloc for the next Republican convention. Among those named by the Shelby man was A. A. (Mike) Whitener, veteran Republican campaigner of Hickory. Mr. Whitener, the Newells—Jake and Cliff—Mr. DePriest and others of their view frequently kick over the party traces and differ with the present heads of the party in the state, Messrs. Jonas, Duncan, Prit chard and others. But this time Whitener refuses to disagree. In telling how Whitener spurns the bid to join with Col. Mann and the former Shelby postmaster In or ganizing the state against Hoover, The Hickory Record says: “The clarion call to the colors of Colonel Horace R. Mann, of Ten nessee, which a Shelby dispatch, Sunday, states has been heard by! George DePrlest, prominent Repub-1 llcan leader of Cleveland county, has not stirred any sympathetic! impulses In the breast of A. A. (Mike) Whitener. of Hickory, a wheel herse in G. O. P, circles of North Carolina. “Mr. DePrlest may think Colonel Mann has sounded a ‘toscin of re volt,’ but to the Hickory attorney and G. O. P. leader it Is Just an other form of ’horse feathers,’ H "In a statement for the press to-! diy, Mr. Whitener broke a prolong ed political silence to say that he! was genuinely surprised to find his! name listed with those of a number of other North Carolina Republi cans as "logical’’ supporters of the Mann movement. He declared his (CONTINUBD ON »AOI BIGHT.* Brings Bride For Week-End In City; Mr. and Mrs. Fred Mauney, of En-' field, and Mr. Lloyd Mauney, of] Chapel Hill, spent the week-end! here with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Mauney, and attended a Mauney birthday dinner hrCatawha county. His parents did not know Mr. Fred Mauney, who Is manage! of the Rose store at Enfield, was married until he came here for the week-end. He married a Miss Bishop of Scotland Neck on April 18. He was recently transferred from Cov ington, Va., where he managed the Rose store, to the managership at Enfield. | Injured Boy Still Unconscious Here Geo. Turner, 12-year-old colored youth who was one of the three in jured 17 days ago in an auto collis ion at the county fair grounds, still remains unconscious. He has rallied several times and apparently recog nized those standing at his bedside. His mother coaxed him into saying a few words Monday and reports that ho said "yes” and “no" and asked that he be allowed to sit up in a chair. His grandmother, Dora Dogwood and aunt, Fuschia Dog wood died from injuries they receiv ed in the same accident. Niece Of Mr. Logan Dies In S. Carolina Mrs. Lula Logan Moore, a niece of Ex-sheriff Hugh Logan died in McConnelsville, S. C. Tuesday ac cording to a telegram received here yesterday. She will be buried at York, S. C., today. Mrs. Moore has a number of relatives in Cleveland county and many friends to whom the news of her death comes vrith great sorrow. Masonic Notice. Camp Call lodge No. 534 A. F, & A. M. meets Friday hight, the 15th, in regular communication. Work in the third degree. Visitors welcome. Negro Goes To Chair For Attack On A White Girl Near Grover j (Special to The Star.) Gaffney, s. C., May 1J.—J. P. Moore, 22-year-old negro with a criminal reputation In the two Carolina*, will die In the elec tric chair at Columbia on June 12 for an attempted assault on a young white girl near Grover several weeks ago. Sentence was passed In court here yesterday after the negro was convicted of assault with In tent to ravish. ' The victim of the assault, rno lives just across in South Caro lina from Grover, was one of the principal witness** in the hear* in* which started at 11 o'clock vcsterdaj morning. No evidence was offered by the defense. Moore pled not fnilty when brought into the court room. Attorneys F. J. Jeffries nut! Raymond Dobson were appoint ed by the court to defend Moore, who has been in jail In Shelby several times and is well known in this section. In the assault he failed to accomplish his purpose as a man In a nearby field came to the Ctrl's aid. Cleveland County Farmers Are Ashing Receivership For Credit Co.; Seek Recovery Of Money Cotton Acreage And Fertilizer Being Reduced A reduction in cotton acre age of ten percent in the belt and a reduction of thirty per cent in the use of fertilisers is revealed in a report made by an expert who has made a thorough survey throughout the belt. ' This expert goes on to say that In addition to a reduc tion in the cotton acreage and the use of fertilisers, the farmers have bought a much lower grade of fertiliser this year than ever before. While his report does not analyse the situation in Cleve land county, there 1s a notice able increase in forage and feed crops. Considerable grain has been sown and these crops look most promising. Mrs. John Beam Died Yesterday Unexpected Turn For Worse Follow ing Arrival of New Bora Son. Funeral Thursday. Mrs. John A. Beam died Tuesday evening at 7:30 o’clock in the Shel by hospital, the day after the birth of her son, John A. Beam, Jr. The news of her unexpected passing was the cause of general sorrow In the community and sympathy for the bereaved husband who is a prom inent young business man of the city. Mrs. Beam was well and favor ably known to her host of friends. She was a devoted wife and mother and loyal to the Central Methodist church of which she was a member. Mrs. Beam was bom August 9, 1895, at NewelL this state and was mar ried to John A. Beam, of Shelby, on January 6, 1921. She was a grad uate in nursing from a Charlotte hospital. Since coming to Shelby she had made many warm friends. Surviving are her husband and three small children: Emma Joe, Joy Ann, and the Infant son, John A. Beam, Jr. Also surviving are four sisters Mrs! M. E. Deittrich, of Pitts burgh, Pa., Mrs. J. J. Thomasson, Misses Mattie and May McLaugh lin, of Charlotte, and two brothers, Mr. John McLaughlin, of Newell, and Mr. L G. McLaughlin, of Utica, N. Y. The funeral will be conducted Thursday morning at 11 o’clock from the Beam residence in Beau monde Terraces by Rev. L. B. Hayes, pastor of Central Methodist church, assisted by Rev. H. N. Mc Dlarmid of the Presbyterian church and Rev. Zeno Wall of the First Baptist church. Interment will be in Sunset cemetery. Mr. Caldwell Goes With Reynolds Co. The many friends of Mr. Tod R. Caldwell will be Interested to know that he has accepted a position as salesman with the James E. Rey nolds and Co. of New York. He will travel Michigan, Indiana, Ohio, Western Pennsylvania and northern New York state. Mr. Caldwell has held a responsible position with the Cleveland Mill and Power company of Lawndale for about five years and this concern regrets very much to give him up. The James E. Rey nolds and Co. are selling agents of the Cleveland Mill and Power Co. Would Place N. C. Agricultural Credit Corporation With Receiver. An action was filed In Superior court here yesterday by Senator Peyton McSwaln, representing 30 Cleveland county farmers, asking that a receiver be appointed for the North Carolina Agricultural Credit Corporation and suit was also Insti tuted for the recovery of >1,850 al leged to have been paid the corpor ation as a deposit to secure loans. The hearing on the recclversnlp, which will be of Statewide interest as the credit corporation has loan ed money to farmers all over the State, la scheduled to be heard be fore Judge Wilson Warlick at New ton on Saturday, May 30. Falrriew Group. Formers sponsoring the action, an members of the Falrriew Credit Group of the Lattimore section are: E. M. Eaker, L. It. Elliott. F. II. Grlgg, P. a Gettys, John Oold. M. A. Hasty, A. A. Jolley, C. C. Powell, W. J. Powell, R. A. White, J. h. White, ft. I. Whlsnant, Dewey Webb. ±. W. Jolley, Foster Elliott, J. E. Martin, Z. C. Mauney, W. Fred Powell. E. O. Peeler, J. H. Palmer. John A. Powell. Tom Jenks. C. S. Whlsnant. I. Whlsnant, G. D. White, J. V. Bridges, John I*. Bridges, W. D. Crowder and J. J. Powell. Insolvent? The complaint alleges that the credit corporation, which has bead quarter at Raleigh, Is Insolvent. It Is also alleged that the company has suspended operation and charges mismanagement on the part of of ficials and failure to collect loans and accounts. In Asheville Today. Sheriff Irvin M. Allen. Police Chief McBride Poe ton and County Judge Maurice R. Weathers spent yesterday and today in Ashevllie at tending court They were witnesses in a Federal auto larceny chat go in which the local officers participated in the capture. Attorney C. B. (Pnt) McBrayer, recorder pro tem, presld over this morning's session of coun ty court. Alleged Killer Caught In S. C., Gone 7Months Claim Glenn Killed Rival In Love Woodward Glenn Missing Since Shooting Gainer In No. 3 In October. Cleveland county officer* arc on a trip today to Newberry, S. C., to get Woodward Glenn, ne gro, charged with fatally shoot ing C. B. Gainey, also colored, in No. 3 township last October. Newberry officers yesterday noti fied the sheriff's office hero that, Gicnn was being held there. Was Cove Affair. The slaying, according to Deputy Ed Dixon who investigated it at that time, developed from a love triangle. Gainey, Deputy Dixon says, was walking homq with Glenn's girl on the night of October 19, 1930. when Glenn caught up with th;m and shot Gainey three times. The girl ran ahead when the shooting start ed, it is said, and continued to the home where she lived. Glenn fled, and has been at large since that time, and Oalney's body was loft by the roadside until officers were called. Mrs. Sperling Buried Tuesday Mrs. W. R. Sperling of near Waco was found dead la bed Monday morning at 5 o'clock, death resulting from a heart trouble from which she had been suffering and was un der the care of a trained nurse. Mrs. Sperlings condition had been ser ious, but It was not felt that the end was so near and her passing was a great shock to her family and many friends. Mrs. Sperling before marriage was Miss Amanda Yarboro. She was 70 | years of age. In early life she Join ed New Prospect Baptist church and was a loyal and faithful mem ber, devoted to her church, her home and her neighbors. She lived a very Industrious life and was a woman of unusual business Judg ment, assuming largely the respon sibility of home and farm because her husband was afflicted with blindness. Surviving are her husband and five children, Mrs. David Beam. Mrs. Herman Beam, Mrs. Andrew Carpenter, Mrs. Zeno Hord and Yates Sperling. One sister Mrs. Green Morgan of Shelby and three brothers John, Albert and James Yar boro survive, together with 16 grandchildren. Funeral services were conducted Tuesday morning at 11 o'clock at New Prospect church by Revs J. W. fiuttle, W. E. Lowe, I. D. Harrlll and D. G. Washburn. Special music was furnished by the male quartet from the First Baptist church. A beauti ful floral offering and a large crowd attested the esteem in which she was held. “Fanner Bob” Not To Run; Hoey Keeps Mum About Senate Race Donrhton To Remain In Congress, He Informs. Shelby Man Says Nothing. Congressman "Farmer Bob” Dough ton will not oppose Cameron Morrison for the Democratic nom ination to the United States In 1932 as was rumored, but one guess is as good as another about what Clyde R, Hoey, Shelby attorney, will do. Every other week for several months prospective opponents for Morrison have been talked. At least three or four are mentioned each time, but Hoey’s name is always somewhere In the list. Several of those mentioned have eliminated themselves, others have been over looked as new names bobbed up, but what Hoey Is going to do has been answered only with question marks. Any number of politicians and campaigners would like to know. The Shelby man has been asked time and again about his 1932 am bitions and he has managed each time to answer In a manner that left his questioners right where they started. The campaign of 1932, is a long ways off yet as Hoey sees It— and there he leaves It. “Farmer Bob’* Out. From Washington comes the fol lowing dispatch from H. E. C. Bry ant informing that Doughton will not oppose Morrison: “The R. L. Doughton boomlet for the United States senate has been quietly headed off by “Farmer Bob” himself. The representative from the eighth district, where Re publicans used to flourish, will not enter against Senator Cameron Morrison. He has Informed friends that he Is not a candidate, but will stick to the house, where he has risen to a position of Influence and power. In the last congress Mr. Doughton was sixth Democrat on the great ways and means commit tee. a much sought-after position, in the climb from <he bottom to the top round of the ladder. In the coming organization, If the Demo crats control, he will be fourth man. “Ever since Senator Morrison took his seat the talk about Mr. Dough ton as an opponent In the party primary next year has Increased. Many strong personal friends wrote him urging him to run, but never a word did he say; he did not take contctukd oh no« mnjrrji Ten Projects In Construction Job; Treated Surfaces Must Be Completed In Month Contrv-t Calls For $10,000 Expendi ture On Roads About Shelby. Contract was let this morning at 10 o'clock by the No, 6 highway commissioners for six miles of dou ble surface treated roads, embrac ing about ten short projects in and near Shelby, the work to be com pleted in thirty days or certainly not later than June 27th. Contract calls for an expenditure of $10,332. Three Bidders. Biltmore Cqncrete Co., of Ashe ville, was the Tow bidder on the 63, 000 square yards of stone and tar treated roads, similar to the state highway No. 18 south of Shelby. The bids on which the contract was awarded was 16.4 cents per square yard, against 16.9 by Kiker and Yount of RetdsvlUe and 18.75 by’ Sam Finlay, Inc., of Atlanta, Ga. Representatives of the three bid ding companies were present at the opening of the bids by the No, 6 highway commissioners, Mike Bor ders, Tom Cornwell and Marvin Blanton, this morning in the grand Jury room of the court house. Roads To Be Treated. Prom highway No. 20 at the county fair ground to the coun ty home. , Sumter street from N. Wash ington street to Buttle street, a distance of about two blocks. N. LaFayette street by the Washington street school to the steel bridge at Hopper’s park, a distance of about four blocks. Thompson street from high way No. 20 west to the Graham street school. Gardner street from the Shel by mill to Martin street, a dis tance of two tenths Of a mile. Then Martin street from Gard ner to Warren, two tenths of a mile. The circle drivevTn front of the Shelby hdspltal. The road from highway No. 20 at the Blanton farm west of Shelby through the Dover mill village to highway No. 190 at tl»e Moser store. Morton street from No. 18 at the home of Mrs. W. E. Morton to the Lily mill. Road from Ella Mill, at South LaFayette St. to the Lily mill. Cemetery Drive from W. Mar lon street through the ceme tery. Shelby And No. 6 To Pay. The City of Shelby and No. 6 town ship road fund will pay the entire cost of the tar and gravel surface treatment of these short stretches and that the cost of same will be $10,382 based on the low bid of the Biltmore Concrete Co. No assess ments will be levied against the abutting property owners. Most of these treated roads under this contract will be eighteen feet wide. Surveys have been made by Dan Frazier, local civil engineer and specifications drawn by him under the direction of the state highway engineer Mr. NoeU of Marion. Mr. Frazier will supervisor and Inspect the work while It is being done. Local citizens were Jubilant today over hearing that these short road projects will be carried out right away, especially by the Graham and Washington street schools where the children have been greatly Incon venienced during the winter months In getting back and forth to school, at the Shelby hospital where the summer dust has been an annoy ance to the patients, and the Sun set cemetery drive. Hal Schenck Under Operation This Morn Mr. Hal Schenclc, of Lawndale, general manager of the Cleveland Mill and Power company, underwent an emergency appendicitis operation early today at the Shelby hospital. At noon it was reported that ha withstood the operation and was getting along nicely. He became sud denly ill yesterday afternoon School For Deaf To Put On Program The superintendent of the Deaf and Dumb school of Morganton will have charge of the Kiwants pro gram Thursday evening. He will have with him three or four teach ers and several children to put on the program under the under privileged child committee,
Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, N.C.)
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May 13, 1931, edition 1
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