Weather
north Carolina: Generally fair
>xcept afternoon thundershow
,r5 tn west and north central
x>rtion Monday.
The Ellwkkand
Aar I
8 Paget
Today
VOL. XLL No. 87
SHELBY, N. C. MONDAY, JULY 22, 1935 Published Monday, Wednesday and Friday Afternoons.
nr Mill, par jaar. (la artaia—> _ WJP
Carrlar, par J«ar. (ta >mmi .. W.MI
Rain And Cold
Increase Danger
Of Boll Weevil
Few Instance* Arc
Reported Here
Vl,tered Rep«t» Of Peste In This
County, But Threat Alarms
Farmers.
r,rtd hard ram smiting Cleveland
eotton fields last week threatened
farmers with the scourge of the boll ;
nffvil This is the kind of weather |'
rtjat encourages the insects to bore, j
ind this is egg laying time.
Warm dry weather would be bet- j
for the cotton crop at this par
ticular stage.
Few Reported Here.
County Agent John S. Wilkins
said this morning that he had re- i
reived scattered reports of the pres- j
ence of the pest, but had not seen
g definite “epidemic” as yet.
Increases in weevil infestations,
n-ere reported by county agents for i
the week ending July 13. An aver-1
age of counts indicates that slightly i
more than 10 per cent of squares!
are punctured in the state on un- j
poisoned cotton. The crop is fruit
ing well, the reports show.
Differences between early poison
ed and unpoisoned fields are no
ticeable An average Infestation of
less than five per cent of square",
was found in fields receiving early
applications of poison.
With a continued abundance of j
rainy weather, and emergence of,
weevils from squares, rapid in
creases In infestations may be ex- !
pected.” says W. C. Nettles, exten- j
sion entomologist, advising Individ- J
ual growers to watch infestations 1
closely and apply poison dust where ;
conditions justify the practice. 1
Mrs. Julia Paris
Dies At Age 38
Funeral services were held Thurs
day at the home of Hamlet Harvey '
ol Dover Mill for Ms mother, Mrs. i
Julia Harvey Paris, who died Wed
nesday of heart trouble after an 111- .
ness of two months. Hie was 88
years of age.
Rev.. W. A. Elam was in charge 1
of services and interment was in
the Dover Baptist church cemetery. ]
Mrs. Paris, until a short time ago ,
lived in Pacolet, S. C., with her Orly
daughter. Mrs. Walker Moiris. 1
twice married. Mrs. Paris’ first 1
husband preceded her to the grave ‘
several years ago. Of her Immediate ‘
family only her son and daughter ■
survive.
Three CCC Camps
Open In N. C. Soon ■
ROCK HILL, 8. c., July 32.— j
South Carolina youths numbering
several hundred will soon occupy
three Civilian Conservation camps
* York county.
The camps will be located as fol- J
'°ws: One m the Ebenezer sec
tion near Rock HSl for work on 1
the Pishing Creek soli conservation ‘
Project and two in the Kings
Mountain battleground National
Park, one a State forestry camp
and the other a national park
eatnp. U. W. H. Redfem will have '
t^arge of the Ebeneeaer camp and
P B. McAlister will be superin
tendent. '
Mm. Lem Cornier’*
Brother Is Dead
■Jordan Franklin Setzer, age #0,
well-known Catawba county farm
er. died last Monday set his home
near Catawba. He suffered a stroke
of paralysis some time ago which
he never recovered. Two sons and <
five daughters survive, together with 1
one brother L. N. Setzer of. Clare- ■
mont and two sisters, Mrs. Lem
Conner of Shelby and Mrs. Hugh
Belk of Union Mills.
I
Morning Cotton
LETTER
VEW vork, July 22.—The dis
tant months bore the brunt of sell
ing both purchases of Oc
'°°er tnd what appeared to be new
partly hedging, which forced
t widening in discounts,
Textile reports show little im
— *oodf demand and the
weat..er is favorable. However, con
tacts are tightly held and sales
•gainst the new crop will havc to
increase to warrant any decline ol
consequence.—E. A. Pierce and Co.
the markets
^ Oft, spot.UK to 124c
<2; Iff -”ton' —-3200
tog, car lot
Over 2 Thousand Gather To
HearOklahomaQuadruplets
They Give A Popular Program At Kings Mtn.
Saturday Night; Mother Keys Tells Of
Their Arrival And Traits
Two thousand people gathered last night to see the Keys
quadruplets who rendered ^*ffrogram of sacred music at the
First Baptist church and appear again Saturday night of this
week at Kings Mountain under the auspices of the American
uegion.
At Kings Mountain they will give
i program of popular music, re
ritations, etc.
The mother of Roberta, Nona.!
Mary and Loeta was here last night I
md got as big a hand from the!
arge audience as the quads. They,
ire spending two weeks with Rev. j
3r. Crouch at Morganton and fill-!
ng daily engagements in Western j
Vorth Carolina. Dr. Crouch was
heir pastor at one time in Hollis. I
Dklahoma.
Only One Other Set
"How many sets of quadruplets
lo you know of it America?” Mrs.
Keys was asked by a Star reporter.!
T know of only one other set. four I
jirls about four months old in Lans- i
ing Michigan. Quadruplets have
been bom to other mothers in Am
erica. but they did not live."
The girls when born in Hollis
June 4th twenty years ago weighed
from 3 3-4 to 4 1-2 pounds. Now
the are juniors in Baylor Univer
sity in Texas and their weights
range from 130 to 157 pounds. One
is a blonde, the others of the brun
ette type. Two are much heaviei
than the others.
Father an Undertaker
Their father. Flake Keys, is an
undertaker and hardware dealer in
Hollis and u’hen the four children
arrived, there was great excitement
(Continued on Page Eight)
Bailey to Cast His Vote
For Proposed AAA Measure
Youth Loses Arm
I
As Car Overturns
At Filling Station
Kay Whisnant. Kings Mountain
Boy, Injured in Wreck
On Highway 20
Ray Whisnant, 21-year—old son
>f Mr. and Mrs. C .C. Whisnant, of
Stings Mountain, lost his left arm
in the operating table of the 8hel
>y Hospital Friday night as the re
sult of *n automobile wreck on
Highway 20 earlier In the after
ioQn.
The arm was torn and shattered
is his car overturned near the Cit
es Service Station. Apparently,
te was trying to avoid a collison
vith another car, said to have been
lriven by Gene Franks, as he em
■rged from a side road. His car
iwerved against cars in the service
station lot, overturned, and pinned
roung Whisnant underneath it. *
A negro who was riding with him
n the front seat was uninjured.
Mr. Whisnant is in the hospital
oday, uninjured save for the loss
>f his arm.
Lynch Buys Herald
At Kings Mountain
Haywood E. Lynch, formerly of
Soldsboro and now of Kings Moun
ain has purchased the Herald
»ublishing House from G. G Page
if Buies Creek.
Mr. Lynch has been In Kings
fountain for the past several mon
hs as editor of the Kings Moun
ain Herald and business manager
if the Publishing House.
He has been recommended highly j
iy Mr. Page, and has been well re- i
eived in Kings Mountain.
Medical Society
To Meet Tonight
The Cleveland County Medical
society will hold a meeting July 22
it 8 p. m. at the Shelby hospital.!
Papers heard at the American Med
cal association meeting will be dis
:ussed. All members are urged to be
>resent.
Shelby Scouts Plans To Attend
Jamboree Of35,000 At Capital
With “on to Washington” as a
ilogan, half dozen Shelby Boy
scouts are planning to join 35.000
American youths in a few weeks an
he National jamboree in the espi
al city which will celebrate the
!6th anniversary of the scout
novement.
Scoutmaster Paul Wilson win be
5 charge of the Shelby contingent
*ieh will spen a week at the
>i*geet scout meeting ever held.
Vith him will be C. Rush Hamrick
r. Edwin Spangler, Avery Willis
IcMurry, Bill Legrand, Ben Smith,
,nd perhaps one or two others,
rhose applications have not been
eard from.
There will be 135 scouts from the
ouncil. embracing 11 counties who
oil meet at Lake Lamer lor a week
..
of intensive training August 15.
prior to entraining that week end
at Gastonia for Washington.
The .jamboree wil lbe situated
mostly on the Virginia side of the
Potomac river, m a camp which
oovers more than 400 acres, which is
now being fitted with facilities of a
modem city. The gathering of
scouts from every nook and comer
of the United states is at the in
htation of President Roosevelt, who
s also honorary president of the
organization.
The first day in Washington will
oe featured by a review of all the
scouts lined up in columns of eight
on each side of Constitutional
Avenue while the president passes
through this rank and file of future
American citizenship i
Senator J W. Bailey of North
Carolina will support the new Con
gressional measures designed to
ceep the AAA alive. He gave his
•easons In the following statement
Saturday:
"The present situation k as fol
ows:
"The department of agriculture Is
issuming that the old AAA, that
s the existing law, will be held un
sonstitutional. This includes the
Bankhead act and the Kerr-Smith
ict. The so-called AAA amendments
low before the senate are really
lot amendments, but they consti
ute a new bill. The effort in this
lew bill is to substitute for the
•Id AAA, provisions which will make
t cbnstitutional, and therefore, sub
stantial, I know that our farmers
ire satisfied with the existing law,
>ut the difficulty here is that the
existing law may be held uncon
ititutional in the midst of the harv
:st, and the new bill, or so-called
imendments, is by way of antici
lating such an event and prevent
ng disaster.
“I have not opposed the bill as
t came from the department of ag
iculture at any time or in any man
ler or degree. I have opposed two
ommittee amendments. There is a
iroad difference between an amend -
nent inserted by a committee and
he bill as prepared by the de
lartment of agriculture. One of
he amendments put in by the
ommittee clearly contemplated a
eturn to cooperative marketing of
obacco. I mink our farmers in
initely prefer the present system
o cooperative marketing. Regard
ess of opinion as to the theory or
irinciple of cooperative marketing,
ts application to tobacco brought
lisaster in North Carolina and cost
ur tobacco fanners almost the
alue of one entire crop. I do not
hink there ts any likelihood they
rould welcome a return to any
hing of that sort.
"In your presence and In the pre
ence of about 4,000 farmers in the
taleigh meeting this year by the
ecretary of agriculture, I am un
willing to pursue any course tend
ng to depress prices. No matter
jest the farmers are not receiving
teps to bring them down. When
hey get low I think we are all
ustified in taking steps to bring
hem up, but when they get high
do not think either you or I or
he department of agriculture should
ndertake to bring them down. At
(Continued on page eight.)
3 Prision Guards
Freed By Jurors
In Mecklenburg
Release Captain Little
On Cruelty Charge
j "Not Guilty" Is Verdict After July
Stays Out AU Night On
Convict Case.
CHARLOTTE. July 32 —Three
former convict camp official* were
acquitted yesterday by a Jury in
Ktecklenburg Superior court of mis
treatment to two short term negro
convicts wnoee feet had to be am
putated after their imprisonment.
Those acquitted were Dr. C. 8.
McLaughlin, former prison physic
ian; R. C. Rape, a guard, charged
with neglect of duty, and Capt. Hen
ry C. Little, former camp superin
tendent. charged with assault with
Intent to kill.
Jury Ou* All Night.
The jury returned its verdict at
10 o'clock after having recevted the
case Saturday afternoon at 2
o'clock. The trial occupied two
weeks in a special session of Su
perior court before Judge Wilson
Warllck.
The state charged that the con
victs, Woodrow Shropshire and
Robert Barnes, were confined last
winter in an unheated cell and that
their feet froze, necessitating am
putations.
The defense, denying mistreat
ment of the negroes, sought to show
that the convicts themselves were
j responsible for the gangrenous con
idition of their feet by wrapping rags
I and cords about their ankles, cur
| tailing the blood flow.
Assault charges against Dr. Mc
Lauehlin and P.arw» wprp Hismiuari
Friday by Judge Warlick upon com
pletion of evidence.
The three defendants, together
with T. M. Gordon and J. W. Eudy
camp guards, orlnally were indict
ed on several counts, including
three felonious charges, assault
with a deadly weapon. maiming
and torture. Charges against Gor
don and Eudy were dismissed early
last week.
Shropshire and Barnes. the
stumps of their legs exposed to the
Jury, were the chief prosecution
witnesses.
Capus Waynlck, chairman erf the
state highway commission, the de
partment having charge of prison
camp operations, said he was not
surprised at the verdict.
Waynlck said there was little 11k
lihood of any of the defendants be
ing re-employed by the department
as prison officials. They were dis
charged because of what was inter
preted as infractions of prison
camp regulation.
“The action of the commission,”
Waynick said, “was not based on
any possible developments with ref
erence to the outcome of the super
ior court trials."
Waynick said the case Illustrated
the difficulty a prison camp offic
ial has in determining where an of
ficial’s actions cease to be those
prescribed by duty and become acts
of a criminal nature.
The Observer said “when a Jury
retired about 2 o’clock Saturday
afternoon they took a ballot and
four men wanted to convict one or
more of the defendants. The jury
continued to discuss the verdict and
, take ballots and at 9 o’clock Sat.ur
j day night there was only one mar.
j holding out for conviction. The Jury
I then retired for the night and Sun
j day morning took another ballot.
| This ballot revealed the jury was
! unanimous for acquittal of all de
fendants on all counts.”
Announce Faculty
At Lattimore Hi;
Expect Good Year
A complete faculty was on hand
at Lattimore this morning to be
gin the current school year with
prospects for an increased enroll
ment over last year.
Prof. R. D. Arrowood said that
his faculty would be composed of
?1 teachers, eight in high school
and 13 In grammar grades work.
Following are the teachers: Pau
line Dedmon, Shelby; Mary Robin
son, Kings Mountain; Eunice Robb:,
Gaffney; Helen Collins. Shelbv;
Madge Sperling. Shelby; Inez Bea:r.
Cherryville; Ruth Whlsnant, 8h*
by; Lillian Logan, Rock Hill, S C.:
Margaret Hamrick, Grover; France
Graham, ■ Earl; Christine Maunev,
Davidson; Mildred McKinney, Shei
by; Irene Hamrick. Rutherfordton;
Mrs. Yates Harrill. Lattimore; E. E.
Davis, Spindale, H. D. Stetler, Mid
dlesburg. Pa.; H. E. Mosley, Kin
ston; Felix O. Gee, Shelby; P. M.
Coley, and R. D. Arrowood, Latti
more
Two rooms are being fitted in the
gymnasium to take care of extra
classes, pending PWA allotments for
an addition to the main high school
building.
Teachers Certain
To Get Increase,
Raleigh Reports
Those Who Taught In
’34 Will Benefit
Hubbub And Hullabaloo Was Pre
mature. Says Authority Ob
School System.
RALEIGH. July 32.—Every teach
er who taught tn the North Caro
lina public school system last year
will positively will get a 30 per cent
Increase tn his or her salary this
coming school year and also any
Increases that may be due to either
Increased experience or better cer
tification. It was learned here yea
itrrday from a high state official
! who Is in a position to know what
; he Is talking about.
He declined to be quoted directly
at this time, but indicated that plans
are now in process of development
which will make it possible for the
State School Commission to grant
a minimum salary Increase of 20 per
cent, to every teacher employed this
year who also taught In the schools'
last year. It, was Indicated, how
ever, that new teachers who are em
ployed for the first time this year
cannot expect to receive as mneh as
teachers who were employed in the
schools last year and in previous
years.
It was indicated by this state of
ficial that, all the hubbub and hulla
baloo raised over the state during
te past week over the question of
teachers’ salaries has been some
what premature and that the entire
problem would have been worked
out by the State School Commission
and the State Board of Education
in due course of time.
More Donations
To Local Hospital
Two more donation* have hem
made to the Shelby Pubhc hospital,
!*■ w** announced this morning: bv
Mrs. Clyde R. Hoey of the Roapi
tal Axillary, which organisation la
seeking gifts with which to furnish
the wards and private rooms.
D. Huss Cline has agreed to fur
nish a private room complete at a
cost of (250 which includes every
thing necessary such as furniture,
springs, mattress, table, chairs
lamp, etc.
An individual who withholds his
name, has made a contribution of
$100.
The hospital auxiliary will mert
Wednesday morning at, 10 o'clock
at the hospital and all members afr
asked to attend, as well as these
who handed their names to the dif
ferent church circles, indicating a
desire to Join the organisation.
| COMPLIMENT MISS BELL
AT CHARLOTTE PARTIES
, KINGS MOUNTAIN, July 22 —
Miss Louise Bell returned' to her
home in Kings Mountain last, Wed
nesday after spending a week with
Miss Ava Barnett, at 1611 Grace
| street, and Mrs O. A Steel of
Gracon Park, Charlotte. Miss Bell
vas complimented at a number of
i social affairs during her visit.
Mrs. G. O. Biggers complimented
; ner at a pretty Gypsy luncheon at
her home on East Seventh street
and her hostess gave her a fare
well party on Tuesday evening be
fore she returned home. Fourteen
young people were present and en
joyed a pleasant evening of games
Refreshments in yellow and white
were served at the close of the even
On Wednesday she was hon<
8 Incheon given by Miss Ka
erine Patterson at her home
East Seventh street. The lunch
the library, each table beng laid
was served at small tables set ui
two guests.
To Begin Revival
In S. A. Meeting
Revival services wilUbegm at the
IlHSund
Salvation Army Hall^unday. jm
8 wlth Rev- L W. Martin doing the
('reaching. Regular services are
v.eld each Sunday beginning with
- Jnday school In the afternoon and
^nowed by preaching services at
.h°° 7 « P- «n- Every person in
he city not in regular attendance
ette^d6 °ther 501,001 15 UlVlt*,S te
Dr. Bridges Goes
To Saluda Seminar
Dr. D. T. Bridges, well-known
physician of the Lattimore com
munity. left Sunday afternoon for
Saluda, N. C., to attend the pediat
ric seminary for two week.", involv
ing the study of children s diseases.j
G-Guns Spat Leaden Death
For Dillinger 1 Year Ago
I
Gangster* will feel safer now that Metvtn Purvis, chief of the GM
cago office of the Department. of .luattca Bureau of Investigation, has
resigned to return to private life. Mr. Purvis, shown on Mtn left afovue,
wse a cMef faotor in bringing John DMiingor and “Pretty Boy" Floyd
to thetr doom and proved hlmeelf a veritable avenging angel wher
ever gangsters were concerned. Purvis in shown above as be turned
over Mb office to Ms successor, Denial M. ImkM, friruwir of “Wash-,
ington.
It Was Ju*t One Year Ago Today That Pub
lic Enemy No. I Fell Under The
Guns Of Purris* Men
Today a year ago John Dellinger, hold bad man preemin
ent of modern times in the United States, died at the hands
of Federal police officers as he emerged to the street from
a Chicago fheatre in company with a blonde woman.
Bankhead Control
Act k Declared
Unconstitutional
eMon At G inner* Sue For
eMon As Ghwn R«e Por
Injunction
SHERMAN, Tex , July 3B — Thf
! controversial Bankhead cotton con
Itrol act, born of the New Deal, ha;
been declared unconstitutional b;
Federal Judge Randolph Bryant.
Granting an injunction agains
enforcement, the Judge flatly said:
"I think the law is clearly anc
plainly unconstitutional.”
His ruling came on a plea foi
injuction filed by D. C. Wallace
Gunther, Texas, ginner, who suet
on behalf of himself and all othei
cotton ginners of Texas and th(
Texas Cotton Ginners’ association
“Owing to the unusual and ex
traordlnary circumstances presen
in this case, I think that an injunc
tion should issue upon the givinf
of proper security,” Judge Bryan'
said.
“It is only a very thinly disgulsec
attempt to regulate the productlor
of cotton under he pretext, of th<
exercise of t$ie taxing power of thi
natipnal government. This power
if it exists at all, is not c.ommittet
to the national government unde:
the terms of the Constitution o:
the United States, but is expressli
reserved of the States.”
The case was set for hearinf
September 11 on its merits.
Judge Bryant set $100,000 as thi
amount of bond the Texas eoltor
ginners’ association must, make be
fore the injunction becomes effec
tive.
__
Mr. Evans Hartgrove of Charlotti
is spending this week with his par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. J W Hartgrove
Standing Room Only as Charlotte
Sees Free Ball in Blue Law Defi
CHARLOTTE, July 22.--Chariot-j
te's blue law yesterday failed to stop
baseball, golf and tennis inside the I
city limits although no admission
was charged for these entertain
ments nd recreation activities. Three
news-stands and four shoe shine
parlors, however, felt the pinch of
the law with their owners being!
summoned to court on warrants is- i
sued by cltv police yesterday when
they were found to be operating in
alleged violation of the blue laws i
The Charlotte baseball club put:
on a free game which drew such a
crowd as has not been seen at the
local field in many a day. In fact.,
the doors had to be locked finally
to keep the crowd from taking pos
session of the whole plant. Upwards;
of 10,000 persons jammed the park
and several thousands more - could I:
not be admitted, baseball officials!
stated. U
The HMerest and municipal golf
;ourses, the only courses inside the
:ity limits, reported good crowds in
>pH« of rather heavy rains which
ell during the afternoon. No fees
vcre charged for the use of the
course, it was stated.
Tennis courts and bicycle rental
igencies also operated all day with
>ut benefit of fees for their services
Police Chief E. D. Pittman stated
hat his men circulated among the
various recreational plants of the
:ity and saw no money changing j
tends, therefore no arrests were!
nade for violation of the blue lawsj
n spite of the fact, that all were
crowded with patrons
Chief Pittman did, however, ar
•est three operators of newsstands
md four operators of shoe shine
parlors for operating in alleged op
position to the mandates of the city
•ouncil with regard to Sunday busi
ies« activities 1
uir Klin wiiiui ir» nnui iih-vp iv *
tually slain him was that, of Melvin
Purvis, South Carolinian and for
mer member of the detective staff
of the Charlotte police force, who
has since achieved nation-wide fame
as the chief of Uncle 8am's oele
j bra tod "G-men,” Purvis recently re
igned his post, to write the story ol
his exploits for a popular maga
zine.
Lima Jail Break.
DttWnger, an Iowa farm boy who
turned Chicago gangster in the days
of rum-running and easy money,
first came to general national notice
when he delivered several members
of his gang from the Jail at Lima,
Ohio, where they were begin held
on murder charges. In the fight at
the Jail, the Sheriff at Lima was
killed. Thereupon, the citizens of
place. Shortly afterward Dll linger
placee. Shortly afterward Dtllinger
was captured and handed over to
the keeping of the woman Jailer.
But this bird was not to be held so
i easily as that. Early in 1934, he fore
ed his way out of the jail at the
point of a false gun carved from
, wood and painted, and made good
his escape and that of several of his
companions.
Following that, somebody coined'
the name of Public Enemy No. 1 for
i him, the epithet, stuck, and has ap
. plied to whatever famous gangster
: has happened to be in the public
1 eye since. But, none of them has so
, well deserved the name as Dillinger.
i A slashing fellow in the style of the j
' old bad men of the western fron
tier, he terrorized the entire north
Middle Western part of the country
j for the six months following his
death and preceding his death. And
not oniy the Middle West. The fame
1 of his exploits spread throughout
| the nation, and he was continually
reported as being seen in New York,
in Maine, in Texas, in Louisiana,
and even in North Carolina, down
to Shelby's neighbor, Lincolnton,
which was so impressed by the prob
I
(Continued on page eight)
Judge Hoyle Sink
Sees Grand Jury
As Rubber Stamp
Opens Criminal 1 arm
This Morning
J. T Roneyoatt AS* i*
For KfflMi One SBorSm
For THeA.
Judge Hoyle Htak
•or! a t or of She g*i
n Nort h- Carolina,
neeks' form of
lust, before noon
lervatton t/hat
largely a "rubbur
wHcttor."
Solicitor Bpusgaan
licnolr, « Cleveland
lack at him from th
•<t through tht
criminality for
startling bad
i atngle murder t
tonal angle.
On Oea
.fudge Sunk Sold
lad Just been
n by deputy clerk Ml Osborne,
hat. H, was here So perfoem a eer
loue and responsible duty- "Tour
jeefulness depends on your own ro
lources," he said.
wMeh
"Often, In my eight yean on the
benoh,' he said. “I have seen neigh*
hors with *omP grievance against a
fellow, and without nerve enough to
swear out a warrant themselves, aa
they have a right to do. go before
the grand jury, seeking to place on
them the responsibility. If you run
across any cases like that, kick
them out of the back dOor, If “you
have one. if not, out the front.'
Obsolete System
The judge's criticism of the grand
Jury system is that it is outmoded.
One hundred years ago, a Jury of
an aocused man's peers was neces
sary to determine probable cau-e
But today, with communication so
rapid, he consider the system ob
solete.
Members of the Jury. tfhose
names were drawn from a hat by
Fulton Cline, small son of the sher
iff. are:
Julius Bridges. J. D. Crowder. Ed
gar Origg, Alfred Brackett, Qgbum
Lutz. J. T. Honeycutt (fortMttv.
Graham l. Hamrick, Ohartee Oar
ter. John P. Boggs. Arthur Met.
Cassle Wilson, T. C. OeMps, K H.
Lutz, J, H. BRioet, J. L, aMMemey
er and J. R. Bridges.
The civil term will beam next
Monday. On the dooket of thg'efUB
Inal term tor today are the follow
ing cases:
Pete Newton, bigamy; Grady
Blanton, assault, good behavior;
W. C. Blanton, assault, good behav
ior; R. R. orimes, emtoCMlenient,
bound; R. R. Grimes, embeartemenc,
bound; Albert Jewell, reckless drive,
appeal; Horace Fulton, bastardy,
hearing; Nathan Wilson, rape,
bound; Lon Gentry, assault, bound;
T K- Turner, reckless drive, appeal;
Harry Putnam, B. and R larceny,
good behavior; Wallace McOlniy,
B and E. larceny, good behavior;
Bill Blanton. B. and B. larceny,
good behavior; Harry Putnam. B.
and E larceny, good' behavior: How
ard Royster. B. and E. lareeny,
bound; c. s. Hook, embeszlenient,
bound; Joe Barber, B. and E. good
behavior; Robert Webb. indecent
exposure, appeal; Fred Willis, driv
ing drunk, appeal; Mary Webb, va
grancy. appeal; Cliff Beatty, V. P.
L.. appeal; Roy McClinton, larceny.
appeal; lom Proctor, drive drunk,
appeal; Harold Mathewson, aban
don, appeal; Luther Newel, forgery,
bound, Carl Ernest, conspiracy,
bound; Howell L. Foust. B. and E.
larceny, bound; W. A. Harbin, ap
peal. O. W. Underhill, reckless driv
ing, appeal; Ray Huffman, forgery,
bound; Julius Rippey, V. P. L„ ap
peal; Klutch Newton, mal. injury,
appeal; Claude Lotte, B. and E. lar
ceny, bound; Fred Campbell, B. and
E. Larceny, bound: Luther B.
Hoard, W. C, appeal;; Jesse Smith
A. D. W„ appeal; Shuler Waiker
A. D.W.. appeal; Nine Hamilton, P
D.. appeal.
Co. K Men Return
From Camp Glenn
•Captarn Peyton McSwam and his
Company K 130th North Carolina
Infantry, detrained hero Sunday
noon at the Seaboard station,
bronaed and conditioned after two
weeks at Morehead Ctty.
Sixty-four members of the Shelby
company attended. Thay wan dis
appointed that no boxing
ionshlpe were held, for thatr con
tenders were primed to bring borne
some titles, but 30 men were quali
fied on the rifle rangg.
MMMiiHiiHiili