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The review. [volume] (High Point, N.C.) 1908-19??, July 14, 1921, Image 1

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The Advertisements
In this paper as well as
the other news matier
We recommend oar advertis
ers to our readers and urge
them tO tO Save eAytradiog
V
In these days of the hirh
1
cost of living it means
a saving of dollars and
cents to you. Be wis.
and read the various ads
The Review is read and appreciated
larse body
of people who bg four-fifths of thz goods sold in High Point the laboring people
.
pol. 29, No. 16
Point, N. C.
In a Fight to Death
Who Really Wins
When the Farmer
Neither Buys Nor
Sells; What Then?
In a i
,vill die
it. can
better co
li comes
squeezing
ski
(The Commoner)
ht to the death the farmer
If bia- business thinks
,eed him without limit it had
!sider ins resources, wnen
to the pinch he can stand
better than any other class.
a1 J. yi,rif tt r it "I Vl A r 11
'rsday, July 14, 192 L
$1.50 a Yeat
Like a Swift Flying
Shuttle Thru Space
HIGH FALL KILLS NEGRO
A negro employe at the new hotel
fell from the ninth story Tuesday
killing him instantly.
The Knocker's Prayer
nselt.
Lord please dont let this town
grow, I ve been here thirty years
and during that time I have fought
every public improvement. I've
He can raise all that knocked everything and everybody. I
-l i j i ii.. i - .
raises
of tlu
Bier's
pose t
The
jy V.v.
raises n
will go
nlllS MS
suppose
family need, but n ne , nave clone all 1 could to keep this
own tioiw growing and never
INDIAN EX-CRIMINALS S
SALVATIO
- W
silken THREAI
o more than he needs the rest;
1 1 ITU. JL v I
people will starve. iiie
jrjhis supplies the world sup
e surplus fails ?
armer can raise the material
.v to clothe himself and fam
ol, cotton and silk, but if he
to more the rest of the people
naked. It is the farmer's sur
al that clothes the world
i -f ii t
tne surplus Jans;
i mer can, if necessary, pro-
uwn ii on? growing and never have
spoken a good word for it. I've
knocked hard and often. I've put
ashes, on the children's slide and I've
made the policemen make the boys
stop playing ball on my vacant lot.
Whenever I saw anyone prospering or
enjoying himself, I have started a re
form to kill the business or spoil the
fun. I do not want the young folks
to stay in this town- and I do all I
can by law. rule anX
even
en
ordinance to
-w -r : i . i
fueil. tie can raise ms drive them away. It pains me. O
he can bum corn cobs and Lord, to see that in spite of ray knock-
- , 1 J 1 A .'II I Jl J . , ,
tms town is Degmnmg to grow
wili
the
ne:
to
imoie
f he must, dui wnat
the. railroads when
ither buys nor sells?
ill become of the .packers
have no meat to pack? And
become of the grain gam-
there is no market gram
on? What will become of
-tores when the farmers
rade? And what will the
s do wnen the little stores might come it the town
nrl what will the manufac- grow, which would cause
Ml
1 V O'
Some day I fear I will be called on to
put down sidewalks in front of my
property and who konws but Imay
have to help keep up the streets that
run by my premises This, Lord, would
be more than I could bear. It would
cost me money, though all I have
made his ''been made right here in
this town. Then, too, more people
begins to
me to lose
go i some ot my pull, 1 ask, therefore, tr
the J keep this town at a standstill, that
Jl 1 - J 1 1 A
and the rairoad employes j Exchange.
OA II
the business stops: Anu ;
tae banks do when they
ov rich loaning the people's j
all the people do
to
-
A Subject of Utmost
Importance to Us
City Planning'
Hindoo woman reelina silk undwfc
Former criminal chief who has been led
atvation Army tutelage. (Insert)
better ways by the Salvationists.
hen the whoesalers
And what
will
10
Wl
What will
en nobodv reeds them? What I Oo
work WITH THEIR HANDS and
i : a living from Mother Earth -
$t is the last resort, as it was thf
Important Discovery
list.
Wi
tie
middlemen continue to lord
the producers of wealth, or
learn that they must "SERVE
would live, and serve for a
toll? The flower that
i i j
s in beauty on the stem snouia
..viiao iHp roots that do their
hrhe dirt. The roots eill iiv ! sica
fades riot only live coyo
tasonable
100!
Paradichlorobenzene is a big word
which to the chemist has a meaning of
its own, but to the average person,
it means more peaches and cream. It
is the name of a chemical, recently
discovered by experts of the United
States Department of Agriculture
which is sure death to the peach tree
borer. This little insect out of the
way and peaches in these parts will
be more plentiful. To the producer!
and the consumer of the prunus per-
the announcement ot this dis-
atfords no little pleasure.
Sin, silk and salvation form a com
bination that is working miracles be
r ueath the tropic sun of India.
Sin has rocked in the very cradles of
the criminal tribesmen for centuries.
That same vicious system of caste
which has sentenced the son of a
weaver to weave and the son of a
storekeeper to keep store has through
ages condemned the son of a criminal
tribesman to rustle cattle, pillage and
commit murder.
But now the Salvation Army by using
silk to take the sin out of the "crim" is
bringing about both the material and
spiritual salvation of a people.
These criminal tribesmen, gathered
into settlements by the British govern
ment, were taken in hand by the Sal
vationists, were taught to care for the
mulberry trees, to rear the silk worms,
to reel and weave the silk. They have .
egased to be criminals. They have be-
come expert weavers, aud they like
Hietr ne jobs. They work at them
more industriously than they ever did
at banditry. And they are now reeling
and weaving more than a ton of raw"
silk a month.
n-each country the Salvation Army
adapts its methods to the peculiar
needs. Here in the United States it
i.do.es a great work among the prisoners
An "penitentiaries. It maintains nurser
ies in th slums, rescue homes and ma
ternity hospitals, industrial, and Amer
icanization centers and institutions ot
many other kinds. To support these
during next year the Army will ask the
people of this country to contribute
$10,000,000 during its 1920 Home Serv
ice appeal from May 10 to May 20.
For some time the High Point peo
ple have had under consideration a
city plan by which this city wuld be
expanded in the future. About a year
ago a committee of the Chamber of
Commerce collected considerable data
on city planning in other cities. A
few weeks ago Mr. E. S. Draper, of
Charlotte, talked to the Kiwanis club
o nthe subject of city planning.
As tlie subject is studied and talk
ed, our people appreciate more fully
the need of a city plan for High Point.
At the same time they realize to a
greater extent that to put a city plan
into effect is no small task. -
Our people have the problem before
tbem, however, and according to High
Point's way of doing things, it will
be solved at the right time and in
the right manner.
The kind of plan which our town
should adopt is a matter requiring
much deliberation. It might make a 1 neither team
devnite outline for growth for the
next twenty or fifty years, with littre
or no changes in hings as they are at
present. Or it might make consider
able changes in things as they now
are.
Among other things a city plan
would deal with street
the extended city
Greatest Ball Game
on Record, all Say
High Point and Danville
Battle Over Four. Hours
Through 22 Innings
High Point Scores One Run in the
Twenty-Second Frame and Wins
By Count of ? to 6
Danville, Va., July 9. In a game
believed to be on5 of the greatest in
tire annals of baseball history, Dan
ville was today defeated by High
Point 7 to 6, High Point scoring the
winning tally in the 22nd frame of
the memorable contest, which lasted
for four hours and seven minutes and
was made possible by the efforts of
the teams to play a double-header.
The game began with free hitting
and erratic fielding, neither Atkinson
nor Day, the- two starting pitchers,
lasting but two rounds, but from the
eighth to the twenty-second innine-
could push across a
'tally, though both frequently had
runners on second and third base with
j nobody out, scoring: beine prevented
only by sensational fielding plays that
time and again brought the grand
stand to its feet.
The winnine run was sprtrorf
layouts for I through no fault or weakening on
It might or might the part of Harris, the local heaver,
not have to do with correction ot who had stuck to his post on the fir-
streets as they are at present, de- ing line for 20 long innings. Wal
pending on the kind of plan that the j dron, first up in the twenty-second,
people see fit to adopt. A city plan ' got on by a fluke hit which was pop
would deal with railroad corrections, j ped up high in the air and fell De
street car line extensions, future lo- j tween the assembled Danville infield. -cation
of schools, and the improve-! He was sacrificed to second by Ro-
WELL KNOWN CITIZEN DEAD
R. B. WHiite, one of High Point's
prominent and usefut citizens, is dead.
fully "bene-I here at 'vs home on Lindsay street.
1
i
Champ Clark II
ne
fnv new If we High Pointers are
" ' ?ftPr season So with fitted by the discovery, we must see! -ne
lives near to Nature's .to it that the rurals on the loamy fligh Point ExpOSltlOn
rlmwc- tne milK irom
Wn- slortes of this section are made ac
.! J 1 4-1. 1, a. w. 1 rmA 4-on "
reat and Nature will protect ; quainieu
fh- nvotects her child. : how to use it. This is a little wee job
t 7 to d iin i the straggle 1 for the Merchants' Association. High
MffiiSSR;? airS should concern them
lnvP and brotherhood and selves to the extent that there is a
, loe and Drot srnoou of the chemical in town, and
co-opcvanon : vv uy n" 1" " . i j
er the common
aim
He
for
Wh i
us i ice
:o et
;h and all ?
Whv not should show their irienasnip to uie
; farmer by distributing instructions as
to how to use it. Chamber ot com
merce Bulletin.
Farm Convention
Begins August 30
1 u;.--
form.
North Carolina Farmers' and
ft' omen's Convention will begin
4 4- OA r nf
nornmg, August
gh Thursday, September
College, Kale. gn.
ram is not yet in nnai
rmnmw arrannemeats
Route 4 News
One of Two Biggest s
Events in 50 Years
By J. C. PA'TTON
roui
Two of the biggest events in fifty
years will go down against this year;
that is big with particular reference
to the welfare of home manufactur
ers. One is concluded. It was the
Hirh Point Furniture exposition.
vt a rv a f liiiih Kii I KK t mere is no question uui uiai mg"
Master Edward Clodf elter says that ! Point people have shown America
there will be frost by. the fifth of something. These men showed North
October according to the katydids. Carolina something once before, m
r;i Tc,v ninrlfpl-i thp matter of freierht rates, when they
iVllSC-3 ""lei ci.v . , T n .1, mof
speuren oetter rates irour uic y
pre!
spent last Wednesday at Shady Grove,
attending the singing. A large crowd
was present.
Mr. J. Walter Tuttie
anr family
made and the : secretary now . -'-.th. FouSn in Raleigh
correspondence with some 01 me iwu, , thCvs nhsolutelv no
r m.
ihd
ire
the L
ers who
th convi
? G C X l tX V 1
ScCollus
Hon. Ii.
Howard,
Bureau;
gressive
of State
ers taki
farmers
for thei
A lar
program will be taken by a discussion
ot tac biggest problem now comiuni
timer, that of mar
use for the electric chair.
the account ot the
After read-
trial of Dr.
than anv other class had ever been
able to secure. In the matter of the
exposition they built a building which
New York could not equal. They
caught Grand Rapids things which
even the old school did not believe
possible. In a quarter century these
ment ot present school sites. A com
plete and practical park system would
be taken care of in an up-to-date city
plan.
Theq uestion of Zoning, or grouping
of residences, industries, stores and
commercial houses comes within the
scope of plans adopted by some cities.
Zonna1 protects residenfces and resi-
man and scored on Holt s smerle to
centerfield.
The game was made the more re
markable by the fact that it was a
free hitting contest throughout, the
visitors accumulating 22 safe blows
and the locals 21.
Atkinson and Day started off equal
ly, each yielding four bingles in two
dential property from the ill effects of; frames, but Danville had the best of
pacing industries of stores in too
it on opportune errors and scored five
close proximity. It also regulates the tallies m the first frame, a lead that
height of buildings and the per cent of j the Pointers did not overcome until
L-c-,-: "Trvth Carolina a
xti-pts Amons tnesueaa-:
, . .i ? 4. ec:msr the account 01 uie mm ut rvUT... - - ,
have oeen inviteu w QTW nnP would arrive at that men nave mrgeiy mww u6iu
ation are: Henyy wajace. -Slt is the general opinion unpopularity
or agricunuie, ' of tne people in this community that
i, John, Hopkins university, , of t Vg e be home There
C. Stuart, of Virginia; J. K. L UT- r ZL, -iv this
- ' , r ri'n cr in x r i v t cauvii.y
rarm "v"i ---- . - nlpfl.
one ior instance, moam r-"
fulrQ it for ffrant-
j win v.i'vV if a TYian kills one ot
eu. ' c
his fellowmen h should pay the pen
aiLJ ' L.u cp -i --! i -i-Vii hoct- tlnpv have paid very
reunion wa i-" , - - . - .. r
i i i 4- t'irioir i oTTnnnnn I 1 1 1.1 irr iiiaLti
cnurcn last oliuuo-j' i aiiv-nvw . o, f
1- Vsvit I hi V tr , i SL 1. UdOl-Ui tiuuiv i"1"" "
ni-p-irlpnt. National
Dr. Clarence Poe, editor Pro
aFrmer, and Dr. Carl Taylor,
College. With these speak
ng the leading part the
are bound to be well repaid
i1 coming.
part of the time on
the
Quite a
land Moravian
asrainst southern-made
furniture and have -demonstrated to
the world that Carolina-made goods
are as good as the best.
Many of the manufacturers them
selves still stand in their own light,
in the opinon of the writer, for while
showing western buyers and northern
knvPrs that their wares ar as good as
j.v- . .J - l--4-l
teaching
iii the
product
illf
tion c
Addre
sabjec
rural
r'-e:no:
after n
mam,:
the
tivelv and profitably
that are alive to the "sltua-
j nn 1 j 1 I. rVACDT1 T
ot arrora nox lct uc
:s will alos be made on
economic - , tendance.
cmi conditions. n"-;r I cv-viruvP lesson.
rations will be given during; ..o.-
ns in nnultrv work, orchard ; us uuiy " - f Winston. The
i a rm
:raent. ivestock judging
farm linery. Visits to the experi
nent station plats will be featured.
Special demonstrations in home economic-
; De 0f interest to all women
attending tire convention.
Rooms wil be furnished free at the
State College, but visitors will have
to furnish their own toilet articles and
I'erl line .. Meals will be furnished for
50 cents.
The Convention officials expect rec-
1s this year, on account ox
ling agricultural conditions
trcng program to be pre-
church, also
his ' charge of services at Union Cross,
ketmg his cnaige Wachovia
Arbor. La,st Sunday week members
nf air these churches gathered at
viHonfT The exercises were very .a
A -Zr and i good and was enjoyed by a large at
production and g o , Rev McCuist read the
followed by an un-
srldress by Key.
XT QlinWntl. O.
11. . . . , J JT
writer and husband attenaea .uie
V1 The contemplated new lighting sys
tem which will be installed m the
near future in the Moravian churcli
at Freidland will be of great inter
est to Ihe people in this community
c i- rp0ret to
xv. -w- -
still on tne sicjv
oru ci
the el
and t:
sentec
Eve
you i
body
else is going, why not
1 -v- vv- 1 C
i atp he will soon be well.
There ill be a series of meetings
at Shady Grove beginning the second
SUysinRJ Cfodf elter and son, Clyde,
UOOieitei a
list. We
barn
Dr. Ii- F. Knapp, head of the de
Partment of poutry husbandry aJ
State College, Raleigh, will represent
thjs state the World's Poultry Con
pess to he held at The Hague, Sep-
moer 3
called on R. M.
ney SL has his new
completea. kinir. if all the
h leruraLivt:!
- t
people .are
without work that we ?ee
to 13.
Stai
all the
imey's Jewel v Store so.) .3
stanctarcl makes of watches and for less
:han you can order the same, quality
considered. We are distinctively
headquarters on watche.
1 4-V. i- 1C
Raveling around on the roaas,
a pretty idle world.
Wanted$40.00
has j these days they will all realize, what
many of the wiser ones ao toaay, dim
that is that the Carolinas have a
greater buying power than has Cali
fornia that a North Carolina dollar is
hrmrlvpri cents, where a van-Loxiii
dollar is not, if you hape to spend a
big part of it in extra advertising to
sret it.
We hope very much that the High
Point folks will open up their doors
some of these days, invite in all the
home folks, and then go to the same
trouble in showing the nome ioik-s, ,
what they can do that they have m
showing outsiders. .The results will
more than justify the effort of this
we feel sure.
At any rate our hats are oft to
wio-h Prtint. These fellows have
proven that Carolina-made goods are
the equal of any. They are no pik
ers. They pulled off a national event
in a national way. ;
The value of this expo sition, the
furniture people of the state,, arra fo
the state as a whole is inestimable. "
The next big event of the yearns
coming, Made-in-CaroTinas exposition,
held in Charlotte September 12-29.
This exposition offers really the
niviwvrtTmitv the home manufac
Something a newspaper correspon-
Hp.nt in Washington has said about -
bbngreman Hammer has caught the
felicitous attention of The Philadel
phia Record, which hears a name of
happy augury, 'one name which is a
triology of three great ones, suggest
ing, successively, the conqueror, the
eloquent sage and the high god Thor,
no less." The Washington correspon
dent had said something about Ham
mer being the successor to Champ
Clark, for William Cicero Hammer is
the man under discussion, and he rep
resents thii seventh North Caroina
district. There was suggestion about
Clark's, .mantle falling upon the
shoulders of Hammer. The Record
had heard that it is merely for Ham
mer to reach out with his long and
generally effective acquisitive aim
and get it. But would it fit? It is
the suggestion of The Record that af
ter some altering to meet his greater
physical propotrions for Hammer
stands six feet and weighs more than
300 pounds that mantle should fit
him. His biographicau record, in
many ways, matches that of the latter
leader of the Democracy m tne
House, except that he comes later to
the nails Ol congress uiau iicxmjj
did. He has taught school, has edited
a country newspaper, is a member of
the bar, and was Federal District At
torney when he received the congres
sional nomination resulted -in his elec
tion Jast Fall.
And The Record seems at the first
of the discovery that Hammer has the
loudest voice in the House, which
somewhat oversteps any claim of the
sort that might ever have been made
for Champ, ana he has the matter
with which to load that voice with
authority. If this voice has not yet
been much heard in Congress, it must
be remembered that those hails are
still strangely new to him. He is
speaking out boldly enough in his
newspaper, The Asheboro Courier,
which, if not quite the metropolitan
medium that The Marion Star is,
nevertheless is no joke among jour
nals. Thei strokes of this Hammer of
North Carolina, echoing through the
column, of the Asheboro Courier,
have not been lost upon ears in the
White House. They have been pound
ing vigorously at the sins and the
tion. They strike at the Republican
shorts "to e no' ...vcn.MP i reduc
ing tariff, out a pronibtivc taiin
the loss that they may coyer, to the
end that there is plenty of air and
light.
Zoning makes it possible for a city
to have those economic and social ad
vantages which are essential to in
dustry. In addition to protected resi
dence districts for workmen and exec
the seventh, when they forged ahead,
only to have the locals knot the
count in the eighth.
Deacon Atkinson was relieved by
Harris, who twirled for the remain
der of the game, keeping hits fairly
wrell scattered by allowing 18 in all.
Jenkins, who relieved "Red Day,
got its run in the eigth, and was not
scored upon, though touched for 13
safeties.
A Week's Suppy of Thrills for One
Admission.
High Point: AB. R. H. PO. A. E.
Winston, c.f. .... 10 0 1 6 0 0
Pierre, c 9 1 2 17 4 0
Wadron, 2b 9 2 3 5 7 0
Roman, r.f 9 1 4 3 2 0
Holt, lb 9 1 3 23 0 I
T. Day, I.f 10 1 0 5 0 0
Wacha, 3b 10 0 1 4 0 1
Blakey, s.s. 9 0 4 2 6 1
V. Day, p 1 0 0 0 0 0
Jenkins, p 3 1 1 0 1 0
Frennick, p 5 0 3 1 5 0
Danville : AB."
Mcintosh, l.f. . . 1 0
Worth, c.f 9
Murphy, s.s 9
Clark, r.f 10
utives, it provides industrial districts gave way to Frenninck when Danville
where are found those advantages
which will often determine a manu
facturers selection for location of a
plant. It secures the absence of resi
dences, extra large sewers for indus
trial waste, wide heavy hauling, pave
ments, extra high pressure fire sys
tems and water mains. It makes pos
sible large building lots, and the clos
ing of all streets unnecessary to
through traffic. These things are
provided economically only when dis
tricts were set aside in a city for in
dustrial plants, and their presence is
a big factor in inter-city competition
for industrial progress.
A city plan deals with the sym
metrical, harmonious development of
each section in its relation to the city
as a whole. It is, for a city that has
a start in promiscuous development,,
a big job; but is as important as it
is difficult. Chamber of Commerce.
Trinity News
Mrs. Parker left for Sampson coun
ty a few days ago. She expects to
be gone two weeks. f
Mrs. Oscar Woosley has been visit
ing at. the parsonage.
Work has been resumed on the hew
church. ,
Rev. Mr. Woosley attended the dis
trict conference at Coleridge.
Mr. and Mrs Bruce Craven went to
Ramseur Jast Thursday.
Rev. Mr. Elliott and daughters were
here for a short time last week.
Clarence Everhart has been on a
visit to Thomasville.
A good many from here celebrated
the Fourth in High Point.
Mr. Wishart, of High Point, was in
town Saturday evening.
Mrs. McGlammery is visiting her
sister, Mrs. Bruce Craven, on College
cfvppt.
Miss Ida Ingram visited the Misses
Johnson- Sunday. -
Miss Rebecca ParrisJf was m town
Sunday evening.
Mr. Sylvester Bouldm and family
were on Johnson street Sunday even
ing. Two Men Arc! Given
Hearings by Squire
Trexler, 2b
Gault, 3b . . .
Martin, lb .
Minitree, c .
Wright
Thompson, c
Atkinson,( p
Harris, p ...
9
9
8
7
0
1
1
8
R.
1
1
0
1
1
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
H. PO. A. E
1 13 1
5 4 0
0 7 8
4 10
3 14
3 18
1 29 0
2 9 3
0 0 0
0 10
0 0 1
2 0 6
0
0
0
0
0
6
o
o
o
0
6 21 66 31 2
R.
.t,i1p Fflo-e- and R. H. Mytrs, white
rvlfTo.-n o h on vi n O" Saturdav-I
4. 'fn4-A-Mus l-inco who hnVP nOWH XHtfll, . , . TTT n
"llV t': " rfTrr , afternoon bet ore Magistrates vy. vx.
Brown and John Davis on charges Ox
immoral conduct. Probable. cause was
rich with war profits." They smash
every Republican snake that shows
its mal i Lead in the verbiage of
any prjosel legislation.'
democrat with a large and a small
d' and may well be that Champ
Clark's mantle waits for him," re
marks t: e .'-. d. "We ; i : Id
thnr. he has the humor that . Champ
had. and, perhaps, it will be as well'
if he hasn't. It was his tunnyhone,
as much as apy other one thing that
kept the Missourian , from reaching
was his as-
White Man Found Guilty of Discharg
ing Firearms.
JessHill, white, was found guT
before Judere Walter Royal in mi :
found and the defendants were ui-Ljpai court Monday on a charge
Totals 81
Batted for Minitree in 18th.
Summary
Score by innings:
High Point
031 100 100 000 000 000 000 17
Danville
500 000 010 000 000 000 000 o ?,
Two-base hits: Roman (23, Waldro .-,
Frennick, Blakey, Clark (3); Home
run, Jenkins. Sacrifice hits: Wort ?,
Waldron, Roman, Murphy, Mart; .
Double plays: Waldron to V. Day to
Holt; Trexler to Murphy to Worth;
Waldron Ipd Pierre. Base on balls: o f
Hams 1; off Frennick 2. Struck out:
by Atkinson, 1; by Harris, 7; by Da y
2, by Frennicw 9, by Jenkins 1. Stoh
bases: Gault (3), Worth. Hits: o.f
Atkinson 4 in 2 innings; off V. Da
4 in 2 innings; off Harris 18 in
innings. Winning pitcher, Frennick;
losing pitcher, Harris. Time: 4: "7.
Umpire: O'Keefe and Baird. Attend
ances 2,000.
Hill Must Show
Good Behavior
Map
or Woman
, rxn hnnr.snare
r i-l-mo- XL.UU an u""1 -r
weeniy J.' "Bin"o" household neces
time, s ellmg Bn . Aga
Co , A-295, Binghampton, N. Y.
inrpr nas evei nu. iu aviuui.; - .. tit.
visual picture to the many thousands piration and almost his accomphsh
of home people of the merits of his ment.' ,
products. It is an old saying that vv e felt sure thisnew North Caro
"Seeint? is believing," and there is no Una talent m the House would rot
Arafat hut that a ereat change is here long remain undiscovered, and having
p?iented S convince the home peo-found it. The Record doesn't care
5! that home-made goods are of high whether it is a tack-tapper or a. sledge
fes- thera the VP
dered held for Guilford Superior court
under bond of $500 each.
The arrest ofFagg and Myers grew
out of the trial and conviction of
Myrtle Collins, white woman, who was
last week sentenced, by Magistrate
Brown to "serve 30 days in jail. The
woman was arrested near the city last
week by Deputy Sheriff Wagner and
Chief of Police Blackwelder.
- " '
. WATCH, CLOCK AN
JEWELRY REPAIRING
Stamey's Jewelry Store
SHEET MUSIC
All the Favorite Hits
PHONOGRAPHS AND RECORDS
discharging firearms near the c ty
Judgment was suspended upon pay
ment of the. costs in the case.
.H. L. Brunell was found not gui't.
of reckless driving.
Ransey Barnett was found guilty f
operating an automobile wfthnnt
lights and paid half the costs" in the
case.
For operating his automobile wHh
otu the year light burning, C. D. Wel-j
bom paid half -the costs.
T. D. Sprewals was found guilty of
speeding and was 'fined $5 and the
costs.
Lavalliers, watch bracelets, beau
ty pins, watch chains, knives, fJ
pirs, cuff links, fobj. Best qazli j
St
i
I
A
-a

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