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The News and Observer du lieu suivant : Raleigh, North Carolina • 5

Lieu:
Raleigh, North Carolina
Date de parution:
Page:
5
Texte d’article extrait (OCR)

1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 on in o'clock. on announced Collins. con- He THE NEWS AND OBSERVER. RALEIGH. N.

TUESDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 7, 1939. 5 SUPREME COURT TO BEGIN TERM Unemployment Compensation Test to Feature First Week of Spring Term An appeal by James Page, South Carolina Negro, from death sentence conviction of casino danin County for Beaufort, cer will usher in the spring term of Supreme Court here this morning at 10 o'clock. Specially set on the docket of 20 cases on appeal this week is the suit of Unemployment Compensation Commission versus Jefferson Standard Life Insurance Company, Wake County, on question of liability of members Federal Home the, Loan Bank System for unemployment compensation tax. The Unemployment Compensation Commission won a judgment in Wake Superior Court September 29 of 1938 for $3,605.92 due from the Jefferson Standard Life Insurance Company as fees for unemployment compensation covering company employes. The corporation appealed from the ruling of Judge Hubert E.

Olive on two exceptions: First, that unemployment compensation fees do not cover soliciting business because are "independent conagents, tractors;" and second, that the company is not liable for any tax whatsoever because it is a member the Federal Home Loan Bank System and as such is an instrumentality of the federal government. An opinion in insurance company would exempt from unemployment compensation benefit all employes of member organizations and would encourage insurance companies to become members the Federal Home Loan Bank System. One Capital Case. The capital case, only one on docket this week, involves the alleged criminal assault on 22-year-old Mary McGann in her tent at traveling show playing October 11, 1938, near Washington, N. C.

The prosecutrix, who did a nude dance for the show, alleged that Page entered her tent at 2 o'clock in the morning with what to be a in his threatened Weapon, she hand alarm and 'assaulted her gave continuously for an hour and 45 minutes or more. The defendant contended that he entered the tent to collect money she had borrowed and that he took her clothes instead. The defense counsel, headed by H. S. Ward, contends that Page's conviction was based on prejudiced evidence, that the warrant defective in that Mary McGann is married and that her married name should have been used, and that her unsupported testimony included "inherent improbabilities" and was "materially contradicted." The Court this week will hear ten cases from the first district, eight from the 21st, one seventh and one from the eleventh, The eleventh district appeal, spectally, of set, $500 involves against a J.

W. referee's Pack judg- for defects in construction work for Mathan Katzin and wife in Forsyth County. Pack had sued the Katzins for discission of a building contract and the referee. later upheld by Supreme Court, ruled in favor of the defendants. Pack appealed.

DEATHS And FUNERALS W. A. CRADDOCK. W. A.

Craddock, 66, retired Southern Railway locomotive engineer, died yesterday morning at the home of his brother, D. S. Craddock, in Cary. His home was in Warrenton. Funeral services will be conducted Tuesday afternoon at the Craddock home in Cary with the Rev.

C. H. Norris in charge, and burial will follow in Montlawn Memorial Park. Pallbearers will be the following nephews: G. E.

Craddock, C. R. Craddock. D. S.

Craddock, Bobbie Craddock, H. M. Holt and Comery Penny. Surviving are two sons, E. W.

Craddock of North Dakota, and W. A. Craddock, now in Hawaii; one daughter, Miss Esther Mae Craddock of Huntington, W. and two brothers, D. S.

Craddock of Cary and E. W. Craddock of Spencer. Several nieces and nephews also survive. O.

W. HARRINGTON. W. Harrington, 76, Greenville citizen and former Pitt County sheriff, died Sunday night at Oteen, where he and Mrs. Harrington have been living with their son, Dr.

C. L. Harrington, for several years. Dr. Harrington is a government physician at Oteen hospital.

will arrive at the S. G. Wilkerson and Sons Funeral Home early Tuesday. Funeral services will be conducted at the funeral home Tuesday afternoon at 3 o'clock by Elder S. B.

Denny, Primitive Baptist minister. Burial will be in Greenwood cemetery. Active pallbearers will be S. I. Dudley, D.

C. Dudley, L. W. Tucker, Ed Ward, W. L.

Nobles, J. C. Gaskins, J. F. Harrington and E.

R. Dudley. Mr. Harrington was the son of the late Mr. and Mrs.

John Harrington. He was born and reared to near House Station and was the office of sheriff in isolected again in in 1902, serving two terms. He also was deputy under Sheriff L. W. Tucker from 1904 to later was government cotton weigher in Greenville for a number of years.

Mr. Harrington leaves no immediate survivors besides his wife and son. He had only one brother, the late J. J. Harrington, of Greenville.

MRS. MAUDE L. BUIE. Maude Lyerly Buie of Lemon Springs, wife of Dr. Lexie Buie of the State Board of Health, died Monday morning at 8 o'clock at Lee County Memorial Hospital after an illness of a week with pneumonia.

Mrs. Buie, who was an outstanding woman in the Lemon Springs section, was born in Rowan County, OUT OUR WAY By WILLIAMS YEH, I JIS GAVE A WELL, I CAN'T SHOW, BUT IT WAS A SEE HOW TH' NAWFUL FLOP--I AUDIENCE EVER GOT TWISTED UP AN' NOTICED THAT WAS PLAYIN' HIS PART SLIGHT MISTAKE AN' HAD HIM PLAYIN' MY PART! 3 AI COPR. 1939 BY NEA SERVICE, INC. THE DOUBLE J.R WILLIAMS ET. M.

REC. U. S. PAT. OFF.

the daughter of Mrs. J. M. L. Lyerly of Salisbury and the late Dr.

Lyerly. Dr. Lyerly who died 17 years ago. was a minister of the evangelical Reformed Church and founder of the orphanage at Crescent. She was leader in community affairs, a member of the Community Club and active in church work, and was secretary-treasurer of the Missionary Society of the Methodist Church.

band, two daughters, Betty Ruth, Mrs. Buie is survived by her husand Janice, and by one son, Carl Dickerson Buie. Surviving also are her mother, Mrs. J. M.

L. Lyerly, and the following sisters and brothers: Mrs. John Coble Toledo, Ohio; Mrs. E. F.

Menius, New Bern; Mrs. Ray R. Fisher, Asheville; Mrs. G. E.

Moore, Baltimore, Mrs. Nevin Stamm, Bellfonte, Miss Jean Lyerly, Salisbury; the Rev. J. M. L.

Lyerly, Dubuque, Carl H. Lyerly, Greenville, Ray P. Lyerly and Virgil S. Lyerly, Crescent. Funeral services will be held at 11 a.

Wednesday at the Methodist Church in Lemon Springs. Interment will be in the Lemon Springs cemetery. W. A. WATKINS.

A. Watkins, 68, widelyknown Harnett County farmer, at his home near Angier early Sunday night. He had ill for the past two weeks with pneumonia. Funeral services will be held Tuesday afternoon at 2 o'clock at the home. The Rev.

Charles B. Howard, pastor of the Buie's Creek Baptist Church, will officiate. Burial will be in the Young Cemetery. A native of County, Mr. Watkins moved to Harnett 16 years ago and had resided in the Angier section since.

He was one of the leading farmers of his community. He was a member of the Tabernacle Baptist Church in Raleigh and took an active part in the civic, social and religious affairs of Harnett. He was a son of the late Mr. and Mrs. Hartwell Watkins of Route 1, Wake Forest.

Surviving Mr. are his widow, Mrs. Vienna Watkins; one daughter, Miss Ida Watkins; three sons, William, Kenneth and Danny Watkins; one step-daughter, Mrs. Dupree; a brother, Johnnie Watkins. a half-brother, N.

J. Wat- kins, both of Raleigh. JOSEPH W. LEE. Windsor William Lee, 50, merchant of the Merry Hill Mail Route, died at his home at Lee's Saturday night.

He was stricken with paralysis on Friday night, death following in about 24 hours. Mr. Lee was a Mason. Survivors are his widow, Mrs. Myrtle S.

Lee, and the following sons and daughters: Joseph, Robert and Lucy Grizelle Lee of the home; Mrs. Edythe Byrum and Mrs. Audrey Smith of Merry Hill; Beulah Ballinger of Tampa, and Miss Evelyn Lee of Baltimore, Md. He also leaves several brothers and sisters. The funeral was conducted from the home Sunday afternoon by Rev.

L. M. Dixon of Colerain, after which interment took place in the Lee Cemetery with Masonic honors. Salisbury. -J.

O. Sparks, 56, J. O. SPARKS. prominent business man and civic leader, died early Monday at his home here of a heart attack.

Funeral services will be conducted here Tuesday at 11 o'clock. Sparks was a native of Gaffney, S. and was connected, with the North Carolina Co. here for 13 years, later heading a furniture concern which he organized. He served two terms as president of the local Merchants Association and was a director of the State body at the time of his death.

JOHN W. PAISLEY. -John Wharton Paisley, 84, descendant of Revolutionary and Civil war leaders in Guilford, died Sunday night at his home near McLeansville. The funeral will be held Tuesday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock at Bethel Presbyterian Church. Rev.

L. H. Edgerton and Rev. J. K.

Roberts officiating. Paisley, who for a year, leaves three sons, W. H. Paisley and Porter Paisley, of Guilford County, and J. P.

Paisley of Longview, Texas; a sister, Mrs. J. M. Hendrix, Greensboro; and four grandchildren. Lieutenant John C.

Paisley, a son, was the first Guilford County officer killed in action in the World War. MRS. ALBERTA POPE. Dunn. Mrs.

Alberta Pope, 66, widely-known Sampson County woman, at her home on Route 6, Dunn, early Monday morning. She had been in declining health for sometime. Death was attributed to infirmities of old age. Funeral services will be held afternon at 2 o'clock at the Tuesday, Branch Baptist Church, near Dunn. The Rev.

C. A. Jackson, Free Will Baptist minister, will officiate and burial in the church cemetery. A native and life-long resident of Sampson, Mrs. Pope was the daughter of the late William L.

and Eliza Sills Tew, and the widow of S. L. Pope, who died several years ago. She was a member of the Baptist church and also took an active part in other affairs of the community. Surviving are several children and a number of brothers and sisters.

MRS. IVA F. POWELL. Weldon Iva F. Powell, 64, died Saturday night following an illness of only a few days.

Funeral services were held Sunday afternoon from the residence and were conducted by the Rev. C. T. Rogers assisted by the Rev. J.

J. Boone of Smithfield. Mrs. Powell was born and reared in the Aurelian Springs community of Halifax County and was the daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs.

J. B. Smith. She was married December 23, 1905, to P. I.

Powell, also of Halifax County. She was a member and active worker of the Methodist Church. Surviving are her husband, two daughters, Mrs. Naomi Powell and Mrs. Jessie Britt, both of Roanoke Rapids; two Hoyt Powell of Roanoke Rapids tons, and Hobart Powell of Philadelphia, and one brother, J.

B. Smith of Roanoke Rapids MRS. LUCK A. CAMPBELL. Greensboro.

Mrs. Lucy Ann Campbell, 72, whose death occurred late Sunday night in the Piney Grove community of Guilford County, will be given funeral rites at 2 o'clock Tuesday in New Garden Friends Church with the Rev. Rolling Gibbs and the Rev. Joseph Peele in charge. Mrs.

Campbell suffered: a paralytic stroke a week before her death. She leaves four sons, J. A. Campbell, Greensboro, W. F.

and A. L. Campbell, of Guilford County, and Andrew C. Campbell, of Hanes; two daughters, Mrs. Florence Jessup, of Guilford College, Miss Ruth Campbell home; a sister, Mrs.

Ellen May, of Guilford County, 22 grandchildren and nine great grandchildren. JOHN S. WALLACE. Stellings Wal1a lace, 52, member of the Greensboro police force, died Monday morning after three weeks of illness. The funeral will be held at Florida Street Baptist Church at 3 o'clock Tuesday afternoon, the Rev.

Charles Saunders, officiating. Mr. Wallace, a native of Moore County, leaves his wife, three daughters, a son, a grandson, five sisters and three daughters. A. M.

CARMEAN. Spring M. Carmean, 58, died at his home in Spring Hope Monday afternoon at 5:30 o'clock after an illness lasting six months. He is survived by his widow and eight sons and daughters: A. M.

Carmean, New York City; Mrs. L. G. Sawyer, E. R.

Carmean and B. G. Carmean, Newport News, Mrs. Brown's Funeral Home 1836--More Than a Century of Service--1939 Ambulance Service Phone 336 at 11 from the home, with her pastor, Rev. T.

G. Vickers of Chestnut. Street Methodist Church, offciating, assisted by Rev. R. L.

Alexander. Interment will be in Meadowbrook Cemetery. Surviving are her parents; a sister, Mrs. Ed Heinsberger; and a brother, H. B.

Gibson, of Lumberton. MRS. HATTIE B. WALKER. Hattie Bell Walker, 75, died at her home, on Route 1, Reidsville, Sunday following a stroke of paralysis Saturday afternoon.

Mrs. Walker was the wife of the late R. A. Walker. Surviving are three sons, Fred S.

Walker, Luther N. Walker, of Reidsville; Ira P. Walker, of High Point, and three daughters, Mrs. John R. Walker, of High Point; Mrs.

D. R. Stadler and Mrs. I. H.

Pritchett, of Reidsville, Route 1. Funeral services were held Monday afternoon at Lowe's Methodist church of which she had been a member for 60 years. Burial was in the church cemetery. MRS. MARY HARKEY.

Mary Lilly Harkey, 60, died at her home in West Albemarle early Sunday morning, after an illness of three weeks, which followed a stroke of paralysis. Funeral services were held Monday afternoon at 2 o'clock. at Luther's Lutheran Chapel, in Rowan County. Interment was in the church cemetery. The deceased is survived by her husband, John W.

Harkey; two daughters, Mrs. Onnie Coy-Fine, of ray, of Concord; L. Albemarle, and Mrs. Charles. MurHarkey, of Albemarle; four brothers, Luther, John, Dave and Adolph Eagle, all of Rowan County, and two sisters, Mrs.

John Morgan, of Richmond County, and Miss Linda Eagle, of Salisbury. MRS. LUCY LOWE. Siler services for Mrs. Lucy Lowe, wife of L.

R. Lowe of Siler City, will be conducted Tuesday afternoon at 2 o'clock at on Rocky River Friends Church, of which she was a member. died suddenly Sunday afternoon of a cerebral hemorrhage. Mrs. Lowe is survived by two daughters, four sons, three sisters and A halfbrother.

WILLIAM E. WINTERS. Chapel body of William Early Winters, World War veteran of Chatham County, who died at Oteen Hospital Monday, will arrive co cot cos co cer "We Clothe the Family for Less." The New Spring Belts Have Arrived! Featuring "The Belt of The Month" As Seen In VOGUE A AMERICANA pot (Similar To Upper Illustration) By SCHAFFER $1.48 A unique and most pleasing design of gleaming patent leather. The colors are Japonica, Green, Springtime Wine, Parisean Blue and Black. Sizes 28 to 36 adjustable.

Other NEW SPRING BELTS in the most popular designs and colors Doeskin, French Kid, Patent--Pleasingly priced at 48c 98c $1.48 $1.98 Arrivals For Spring! Socks "Phoenix" 294 Pairs for $1.00 4 styles--long supporting to lastex tops--Pastels With darker EV-R-UP shades. Sizes Jaunty and as MAIN FLOOR Hudson-Belk Co. persons from throughout Lenoir County. He was a member of a wellknown family and a farmer on a large scale. Surviving are his widow, Mrs.

Annie Harper; six sons, Glenn, Thomas, Roy, Lloyd Daniel and Earl Harper all of Deep Run and four daughters Mrs. Bernice Pate Kinston; Mrs. Ralph Tyndall, Pink Hill; Miss Polly Harper, Kinston, and Miss Audrey Harper, Deep Run. Also surviving are several brothers and sisters. Willie Willis By ROBERT QUILLEN 1-4 "I don't see why old people are scared of It never seems to hurt any in the movies." (Copyright 1939.

Publishers Syndicate) by train in Durham Tuesday morning at 1:30 o'clock, his widow, Mrs. Mattie Bradsher Winters, will accompany the body. Mr. Winters, a native of Stem, had been a patient at the government hospital several weeks. The body will be brought to Andrews Funeral Home here to be prepared for burial.

Surviving are his widow. two daughters, Josephine and Margie Winters, and three sons, Harold, David and W. N. Winters. MRS.

J. V. BELL. Mrs. J.

V. Bell, 60, died here afternoon at the home of daughter, Mrs. B. K. Traynor.

Mrs. Bell was Miss Bertha Higgins, of Jones County. She is survived by her husband, of Washington, D. three sons, James and Averitt Bell, of Washington, and Leon, of Norfolk; three daughters, Mrs. R.

D. Godley, Jr. and Mrs. T. R.

Moore, of New Bern, and Mrs. Traynor; three brothers, Percy Raymond Higgins, Bern and Leo Higgins, of Newport; and two sisters, Mrs. Mittie Yates of Newport, and Mrs. Mattie Taylor of Bogue. Funeral arrangements are incomplete, but burial will be in New Bern Tuesday or Wednesday.

BLACKLEDGE HARPER, JR. the funeral of Blackledge Harper, A Deep, Run report said 58, held from the Free Will Baptist Church there, was attended by Mrs. Willie Ranes, of Warrenton, and Mrs. Florence Bass and Mrs. Betsy Hinsley of Henderson.

OSCAR REDDICK. Reddick, 43, died Sunday night in a local hospital. is by his wife and several survived children. Funeral services will be held from the home West Lee Street Tues- at 10:30 morning day ducted by the Rev. R.

Interment will be Maplewood MRS. ALICE C. BURKE. -Funeral services for Mrs. Alice Cora Burke, 49, who died at her home Sunday night, will be conducted Tuesday afternoon at 2 o'clock at Union Chapel Methodist Protestant Church.

Rev. J. U. will be in charge of the services and interment will be in the church cemetery. Surviving are two children, Mrs.

Aslee Hendricks and Albert L. Burke, of Henderson; three sisters, Interest Rate. Cemetery. Washington, Feb. 6.

(A) The Treasury Department Sunday the interest rate a new $300,000,000 issue of Reconstruction Finance Corporation notes would be seven-eighths per cent. Dated February 15, 1939, the notes mature January 15, 1942. R. J. Nixon, Williamsburg, Mrs.

R. V. Rich, Mrs. G. L.

Fox and Alex Carmean, of Spring Hope. Funeral services will be conducted from Gibson Memorial Methodist Church here Tuesday afternoon at 3:30 o'clock by the pastor, the Rev. George W. Blount, assisted by the Rev. Ben a Fisher, pastor of the Castalia and Peachtree Baptist churches.

Burial will be in Pine View Cemetery. MISS LUCY H. GIBSON. Lumberton. -Miss Lucy Humphrey Gibson, daughter of Mrs.

H. B. Gibson of Lumberton and Dr. H. 1 B.

of Asheville, died in a local hospital Monday of pneumonia following an attack of influenza, Funeral services will be held Tuesday WHEN YOU STEP OFF THE Crain IN NEW YORK The Hotel McAlpin is only a EMPIRE STATE BLDG. block away from the PennHOTEL sylvania R. R. Station and McALPIN only seven minutes from the Grand Central Terminal. B.

0. Motor Coaches stop at our door. Decidedly, the Hotel McAlpin PENN. STATION is "A Great Hotel" in the center of convenience. GRAND CENTRAL TERMINALBIG, BEAUTIFUL, NEW ROOMS WITH BATH Single from $3 Double from $4.50 2 POPULAR PRICED RESTAURANTS HOTEL BROADWAY at 34th STREET, NEW YORK Under KNOTT Management JOHN J.

WOELFLE, Manager Church there, was attended by EASY "HELP-YOURSELF" SHOPPING WITH MORE THAN 2,500 HIGH BIG QUALITY STAR ITEMS AT LOW COST Super 111 WEST MORGAN ST. MARKETS Kinaston Hall PRESERVES 4 554 COLONIAL COLONIAL COLONIAL Red Sour Pitted JELL-0 MILK CHERRIES ANY FLAVOR BEETS No. 4 Tall Cans 2 No. 2 4 Pkgs. 3 Cans Cans VIM PEP Fresh EGGS Doz.

DOG FOOD 4 Cans 174 Southern Manor PLUMBS 2 2 NO. CANS 214 Fruits and Vegetables Quality Meats Strawberries 2 pts. 27 SAUSAGE lb. Bowl FRESH PORK FRESH CELERY Stalk Crisp Spare Ribs Cooked lb. Shrimp Raw Shrimp Lettuce Firm Large Head 2 for 13, 2 lbs.

lb. BONELESS VEAL Rolled Roast Rump Roast Bananas 4 Ibs. 19, 24. lb. lb.

CORNED Gwaltney's Genuine Roe Herring APPLES Fancy Winesap 4 lbs. 19 2 for HAMS Smithfield Mackerel Filets 2 lbs. lb. GRAPES Red Emperor lb. 15 KOSHER DELICATESSEN Donald Duck In The P-ant-ry! By Walt Disney TO THE ANT, THOU THIS IS THE ANTS DOING, DOGGONE SLUGGARDS! CONSIDER CONSIDER WERE UNCA LAZY KIDS! HER WAYS AND HER WAYS WHAT DONALD! WAKE UP! BE BE WISE!" DALY 1939 by World Walt rights Disney reseryed, Enterprises R-7 DISNEYE.

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