Newspapers / The Kings Mountain Herald … / June 20, 1935, edition 1 / Page 1
Part of The Kings Mountain Herald (Kings Mountain, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
TRADE WITH YOUR HOME MERCHANTS >❖*+**+❖+++++«**+<•<••>•£•+• Mountain ■fr******************V*4i READ THE APS IN THIS PAPER ■v v •' v ■!• 4* *!• *h*I* *!• *2* »i* rv -!* ^ VOL, 33 NO, 24 KINGS MOUNTAIN, N. C. THURSDAY. JUNK 20, 193! *1.30 V YKAK IN ADVANCE State And National News Condensed In Brief Form —State News— GASTONIA, June 19.—The bodies oi Fred H. Turner, 33, employee of the Pettit Motor Company in Char lotte and a member of a prominent Mooresville family, and Miss Ruth Christine Randall, 20, popular young Cramerton woman, were dragged from the muddy water of the South Fork River near Cramerton early to <lay after the ear in which they were riding had crashed into a bridge on the Eagle Mill-C'ramerton road and plunged into 20 feet of wa ter beneath. 16 NEW CASES RALEIGH, June 19.—Records at the state department of health to <lav showed 155 cases of infantile paralysis, most of them in the eas tern part of the state, had developed this year. The tota-1 was swelled by 15 new cases reported yesterday. This brou ght the number of cases reported so fat this month to 96. Three other new cases were unofficially reported. CHARLOTTE. June 19.—Reports indicating that Southern cotton tex tile mills are strictly observing the industry's former NRA code provis ions today were in the files of W. M. McLaurine, chairman of the Sou them cotton textile industry’s con formance committee. "Reports on operating policies of ■cotton mills in 65 centers of the ^Southern states reveal that every ■one is conforming strictly to the recommendations of the industry’s conference here June 7 for mainte nance of policies in effect under the former NRA code.” McLaurine said in a statement yesterday. KALEIGH, June 19.—The hiembers ■of the “Third House” of the 1935 general assembly—that is, the lob byists — received more for their ser vices in fees and expenses than did the members of the general assem bly, figures compiled today by this bureau front the reports of expendi tures on file in the office of the sec retary of state show. Reports fiied by 119 lobbyists out of a total of 121 who registered during the gen •eral assembly, show they received $109,222.G5 in fees and expenses, while the "salaries of the 17b mem bers of the general assembly of $000 each for the session and of $700 for the lieutenant governor and speaker of the house amounted to only $102,800 for the session. Thus the lobbyists who reported how much they received both in fees and expenses, received $6,422 more than did member of the gener a! assembly in salaries from the state. RALEIGH, June 19.—The dry s' fight to forestall liquor referendums in 18 counties, authorized by the 1935 legislature, will shift to Raleigh Friday wiien Judge Clawson L. Wil liams holds a hearing on an injunc tion to restrain Franklin county vo ters from having an election June 29. RALEIGH. June 19.—The state highway patrol last month arrested 1.074 persons for traffic violations. Including 118 persons charged with driving while drunk. Capt. Charles I). Farmer reported today. RALEIGH, June 19.—The state eugenics board tomorrow will cor eider ordering the sterilization or 19 North Carolinians who are men tally diseased, epileptics or feeble minded. Seven of the cases invole persons who by their own consent are seek ing sterilization under the 1935 law allowing such procedure and an un usual feature is that none of the cases are for persons in state insti tutions. CHARLOTTE, June 19—Two white convicts escaped from the «tate prison camp near Huntersville this morning, according to a report a* city police headquarters. The escapees, according to the. report, were Howard Weaver, 24. and Cecil Grant, 20, both of Char lotte. National News HUMAN MOCTH NOT MADE FOR CORN ON COBB GREENVILLE, S. C'., June 19 — This thing of eating corn on the cob may be pleasing to the palate but it is hard on the teeth. Greenville dentists warn that the human mouth was not constructed for such aclivily and the teeth pa.\ lie penalty. FDR ASKS NRA TO WATCH STANDARDS WASHINGTON, June 19.—The new NRA was directed today by President Roosevelt to examine clos iy uiij changes 'vnieh occur in la or standards or fair trade practices following abolition of codes. In a letter to James L. O'Neill, act ing administrator, the President stated: “It is of primary importance j that his work should be done very J carefully and under the supervision j of an impartial committee.” ASK ACQUITTAL FOR LUKE LEA CHATTANOOGA, Tenn., June 19 —Counsel for Luke Lea, former Nashville publisher now in prison n North Carolina, has filed a mo- i tion in Federal court here to have a I verdict of "not guilty’ entered to ■harges of aiding and abetting bank ing law violations in connection with the Holston-Union National Bank failure at Knoxville, Tenn. LANCASTER, S. C.. June 19.—The state sent another procession of wit nesses to the stand today in its ef fort to convict T. S. Thurman, for mer deputy sheriff, of conspiracy in the $18,000 Springs mill hold-up near here last winter. Indications were that the state would rest late in the day. Thurman’s three, co-defendants, Manuel Miller, James Miller and Leroy Holliday, all of Charlotte. N. C„ pleaded guilty to charges of high way robbery at the beginning of the trial, and will be sentenced after Thurman is tried. LANSING, Kas.. June 19—A scori o" officers and guards led by Warden Lacey Simpson subdued 300 riotin convicts early today in the inky dark ness of the Kansas state prison coal mine and ended a destructive 21 tv-- - mutinv Soon the first lift load of mini u, ... sheepish, bedraggled, came to the surface and they marched past a line of heavily armed prison county and state highway officers to their cell bl(>ck 60 feet away. UNION, S. C„ June 19—Two men vere shot to death today in rioting at the Monarch plant of the Monarch Mills Company where a part of the too employees went on strike last night. Those killed were W. R Frank lin, a magistrate's constable, and A. L. Stutz. an employ of the mill. The outburst came at noon a working shifts were changed. JUNE 22 FIRST DAY OF SUMMER? This coming Saturday, June 22, is the first day of summer, according in the calendar. There are plenty of Kings Mountain citizens who would swear, however, that summer has al ready arrived—that it has, in fact been here several days. NUMBER OF ARRESTS DURING WEEK END About a do"zen arrests were made over the past week end according to police reports. Most of these arrests were charged with being drunk. One was charged with highway robbery. POSTMASTERS TO MEET The annual convention of th» North Carolina State Bruncdi of Postmasters will be held July 3 and 4 at Charlotte, N. C. Among the prominent men to he heard is Hon orable William W. Howes, Fi t Assistant Postmaster General. of Washington, D. C. Postmaster J. S. Ware is planning to attend the meet ! ing. MY NIGHT IN KINGS MOUN TAIN Editor’s Note: An elderly gen tleman came into the office and said that he had gone since the morning before without food, that he had slept on the floor all night in the railroad station. He asked us to buy some of the Npocm he had written. We told him that if he would write us a stoiy on his night in Kinga Mountain we would pay him for it. So his story follows below: A few weeks ago I left New Or leans, where I had bean employel for a long time, and came by train and bus Into western Georgia. Krom there on, until I reached Greenville, S. C., (where I ran out ol' money), 1 was able to make a bare living. Tuesday I trod the highway from Gaffney, S. almost to Kings Mountain. Night fell shortly after I got there. Tired, hungry and mon eyless? I went into a poolroom to rest and to escape a heavy down pour of rain. Anxious to get under cover for the night, I looked up the night policeman and asked him if any provision was made to take care of people who were placed as I was. I mentioned the fact that 1 am not far from seventy years old and had trampled the road foodless all day long, and needed rest and sleep. I was told by the policeman that no provision had been made to take care of men placed as I was. He said people ought to stay where they belong. He didn’t explain how they were to live in their home towns when they were moneyless, jobless and friendless. Finally he told me I could stay in the railway station. I thanked him for that. There was one man and two wo men in the waiting room when I got there. The arm-rests on the ben cites make it impossible to lie down on them, so all step on the floor with a layer of newspapers to rest on. Almost any kind of a shelter looks good on a rainy night to on*1 who has no other place to go to. But who likes to see women lying ! MAKE APPLICATION FOR HOME 1 jOANS EARLY Salisbury. N. .June 1 !• -The at tention of home owners iu Jistress who desire aid of the Home Owners' Loan Corporation, was called to the fact that under the amendment of HOLC Act, recently passed by Con fess. the peCod for tiling new appll cations will expire at midnigh*, lune 271li. l:r;5. After that date, it was stated by T. ('. Abernethy, State Manager of the Corporation here, no applications will be receiv ed from home owners who are in distress and who are eligible under the law for assistance, and lie urged that all thost desiring assistance file their applications at once. Mr, .'*■ •rnethy stated that regula tions, as to eligibility, remain virtu ally unchanged, and those desiring complete explanation of what cases are eligible may receive it either by •ailing at the State Office. Post Of fice Building, Salisbury, N. or one of tlie District Offices, or by writing for full information. Office hours of the Corporation, for the summer, became effective two or *hree weeks ago. and are from 8:?,d a. m. to 4: fJO p. m. Mr. Abernethv stated that these hours have been changed, for the convenience of the public, and application clerks will be on hand in the State and District Offices until 5:110 and later every nf tcrnooon until the time limit for fil ing applications expires. District offices are located at fol 'c-ws: Kaleigh. Charlotti. Ureei. boro. Asheville and Greenville. on a floor. There are plenty of rough and dangerous men on the road. There are also plenty of high-type men on the road who are trying to get a liv ing for themselves and familes. To see men and women lying down, hungry perhaps, on a bare, unclean floor, one must say this should not be. There should lie some real heart felt interest shown at least to the woiihy poor. And we suould remem her that nobody really loves the hard-boiled, unsympathetic, - individ ual. Prominent Pharmacist Of City Dies Monday YOUNG DEMOCRATS TO MEET (Special to The Herald) The North Carolina Voting Demo cratie Clubs will meet in annual Cot vention in Raleigh, on June 28th ami 29th. The Stale Executive Commit tee will be called to convene, to gether with the Committee on tin Convention, at the Hotel Sir Walter Raleigh, on Thursday evening, June 27th, at 8:30 I>. M. The principal speaker of the occa ion will be the Honorable Rush I) Holt, the “Baby" of the Senate o' West Virginia. Senator Holt is one of the mosl outstanding young I)eni oerats, not only in the Souih, but in 'he entire country. lie was elected defeating an old line politician and outstanding statesman, before lie had reached the age of 29. He will attain the constitutional age of a United States Senator between now and the State Convention. Senator Holt has had office space in the Senate office building assigned to him. as well as desk space in the Senate hall, but may not be sworn 'ti until he attains his 30th birthday, on June 19th. He is said to be a speaker of rare charm, is a thorou gh pro-administration Democrat, and will undoubtedly have a singular appeal to the Young Democrats of the State. A number of red-hot controversies will in all probability be slated for deliberation. POLICEMEN HAVE NEW UNIFORMS The policemen of Kings Moun tain are all diked out in new simmer uniforms this week. The new uniforms consist of cap, and shirt. No coat is to be worn and the same regulation pants are to be used. All four police men have been outfitted. In The WEEKS NEWS •‘NOTING NOTES!’’ —Composers' do Homework, too. This is Johnny Green, young American composer and band leader, “at home" with Mrs. Green. He’s heard with his band over the CBS eastern net work Friday nights from 8 to 8:30 (EDST) in a new program with Christopher Morley. WEYERHAEUSER KIDNAPPERS CAUGHT—H. M. Waley (right) confessed kidnapper and William Mahan his partner in the crime. Mrs. Waley was ^arrested with her husband. ANTAGONISTS—Public debate between these two antago nists as to the merits of the AAA has culminated in a pair of articles published this month by The Country Kime, na tional farm magazine, in which M. L. Wilson, assistant sec retary of agriculture, (left) defends the Wallace schemes for “national agricultural planning,” while D. D. Casement, Kansas farmer, vigorously denounces the whole program. NEW BEACH FASHION — worn at Santa Monica by Betty Grable, picture favor ite. The frock is made of blazer-striped linen in brown, orange and white, cut in a wrap-around style. It laces at the waist line with a white cord. WINS NATIONAL OPEN — Prescott Gush (right), President of the United States Golf Association, presenting the cup emblematic of the U. S. National Open Championship t Scm Parks, Pittsburgh golfer. Alabama Pitts, who served a term in Sing Sing Prison, is given pei mission to play pro tcssionai baseball by Judge Landis, base tal' czar, Charles Christian Schell, age 48, who ror nearly three years has been a popular pharmacist at the Sum mers Drug Company, passed av.ay Monday afternoon, his death com ing ;is a great shock to his many friends here and else-where. Dr. Sclieel had been in poor health for sometime, but the seriousness of his condition was not known until a tew days before his death. Dr. Schell died in the ambulance while en-route to Waynesville where he was being carried for treatment. IBs body was removed to Lenoir, his old home, Tuesday night. Funeral services were held at the First Methodist church, l,<>noir,Wed nesday morning at 11 o'clock, with Rev. Mr. Tuttle, a former friend, in charge. By request of the family, the pas tor read the 121st Psalm and hymns "The Old Rugged Cross"’ and 'Lead Kindly Light” were sung by the choir. Interment followed in the Schell family plot in the Lenoir cemetery. Dr. Schell is survived by his widow and one son, Charles Chris tian Schell, Jr., who has just recent ly graduated from Georgia Tech He is also survived by his aged mother, Mrs. Marcial Schell, two brothers, J. E. Scliell of Lenoir. W. A. Schell of Newport News, Va„ and several sisters. ATTEND SCHELL FUNERAL Among Kings .Mountain people who attended the funeral services of Dr. C C. Schell at Lenoir, Wednesday were Rev. J. W. Williams, Mr. and Mrs. J E. Herndon. Mr. and Mrs. B. S Neill. Mr. and Mrs.A. H. Patterson Mr. and Mrs. Carl Davidson, Mrs. H. T. Fulton, Mrs. Joe Barron, Mrs. E! L. Campbell, Mrs. J. E. Garvin. Mrs A. L. Moore. Mrs. Troy Carpenter and Mrs. C. W. Harper. BOY SCOUTS ENJOYING CAMP Three troops of Boy Scouts are enjoying their stay at the Scout amp at Lake Lanier. Tryon. N C'., his week. Troops 4. 5, and fi of Kings Mountain are now in camp. Other troops will go to camp later. The boys attending from troops 4 and 6 are listed below. "The Herald has not received the list of troop 5. Troop 4 sponsored by Grace Methodist Church. E. L. Davis, S. M.; J. "D. Jones, James Smith, Elmer Owens, Clyde Jenkins. Dennis Dees, Robert Brid ges, Clyde Green. Ned Pearson, Wil bur Jones, Archie Bridges, Raymond Harris. Troop 6 sponsored by First Baptist Church G. A. Bridges, S M.: .1. C. Ftrirl^ .1 T. Pheagin. Buddy Falls, Howard Edens. Two kinds of people to worry a botit: The well-bred iil fed and the ll-bred well fed. Through STATE CAPITOL KEYHOLES ( By Bess Hinton Silver* SPOTTED —The gubernatorial race (chiefly between Clyde R. tjoey and A. H. Graham) is a bit spotted from the standpoint of public inter est throughout ‘the State. You can talk to travelers and one will tell you that Hoev is running wild while another will avow that Graham is far in the lead. Most of the disinterl ested lads getting about over the State will fell you, however. that rhe campaign has not progressed far enough to raise many bets. The po litical gamblers want to see the bor es warm up before they lay the long green on the mahogany. **** STIRRING When Thad Kur«, principal clerk of the House of Rep -esentatives for several terms, an* nunced that he would be a candi date for Secretary of State next spring, be didn't stop there. No. sir, Mr. Eure is determined to unhorse (Cont'd on page four)
The Kings Mountain Herald (Kings Mountain, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 20, 1935, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75