Saturday, March 14, 2026

Will Farnsworth, 55, and Son Furman, 17, Arrested for Selling Liquor to Jesse Vandyke, March 15, 1926

Two Are Held for Selling Murder Liquor to Vandyke

Gastonia, Will E. Farnsworth, 55, general storekeeper and farmer of the Bessemer City-Cherryville road, and his son, Furman Farnsworth, 17, are out on $1,000 and $3,000 bonds, respectively, today, following their arrest by officers on warrants charging that the two sold Jesse Vandyke, murderer of Chief A.L. Painter of Cherryville, a quart of corn liquor, which the slayer drank when he was on his crazy, drunken spree.

Jesse Vandyke swore at a hearing that he bought the liquor from the Farnsworths the day before he killed Painter, January 13. He went to their store three miles outside of Cherryville. “Mr. Farnsworth went into the old store building handed me a quart. I gave him $1.50 in cash and my check for $1.50 for it,” Vandyke said.

“This is not an ordinary case of bootlegging,” Solicitor Carpenter argued. “it’s an extraordinary case. If that is the liquor which caused the homicide, if they furnished the liquor that caused the killing of Painter, they are a party to the crime. It’s a question almost of murder and not of selling liquor. If that is so, the matter of a five or ten thousand dollar bond is a very small thing.”

“Murder is not bailable. If Farnsworth sold this liquor to Jesse Vandyke: if that is the impelling or immediate cause, then the man that sold this liquor is just as guilty of murder as Jesse Vandyke is.”

From the front page of The Cleveland Star, Monday, March 15, 1926

Other articles have spelled the last name “Van Dyke.”

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Grover Splawn Wins Medal for Essay, March 15, 1926

Won Essay Medal

Grover Splawn of Boiling Springs High school was the winner of the annual Selma Web Medal this year for the best essay by pupils of Cleveland County schools. Young Splawn’s subject was “The Highway to Success.”

From the front page of The Cleveland Star, Monday, March 15, 1926

To see a photo of Grover Splawn, go to:

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Evelyn Huggins Received Medal for "The Heart of Briar Rose" March 15, 1926

Recitation Winner

Miss Evelyn Huggins, Boiling Springs student, was the 1926 winner of the Selma Webb Recitation medal. Her subject was “The Heart of Briar Rose.”

From the front page of The Cleveland Star, Monday, March 15, 1926

To see a photo Evelyn Huggins, go to:

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Flay Hoey Sells His Share of Grocery Store to Andrew Dellinger, John Justice, March 15, 1926

Flay Hoey Sells His Grocery Stock

Flay Hoey, who has owned and operated a retail grocery store on N. LaFayette street since he purchased the half interest of his father-in-law Charlie McBrayer, has sold the stock of merchandise to Andrew J. Dellinger and John J. Justice, who took charge today. Messrs. Dellinger and Justice will continue the store at the same stand. Mr. Dellinger gives up his position with Arey Brothers with whom he has been associated for the past 12 years.

Mr. Dellinger has sold a lot adjoining his residence on the Cleveland Springs rode to Mr. Hoey at a consideration of $3,000.

From the front page of The Cleveland Star, Monday, March 15, 1926

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Hugh Miller Finding Work for Mutes, March 15, 1926

Miller Says Mutes Are Good Workers. . . Hugh Miller, Shelby Native, Says Deaf Employees Make Faithful Workers in Furniture Plants

Local people acquainted with Mr. Hugh Miller, head of the state department for the deaf, will be interested in the following news item appearing in the Raleigh News and Observer last week:

Services rendered by the several mutes in High Point furniture factories have been satisfactory, stated Hugh G. Miller, chief of the Bureau of the Deaf, in the Department of Labor and Printing upon his return yesterday from Furniture City, where he conferred with a number of manufacturers with regard to the working of the deaf.

Mr. Miller stated that he was successful in finding a number of jobs for mutes who have petitioned him to procure jobs for them. Furniture men are very well pleased with the results they have obtained from the several mutes in their employ, and they have no fear that they will not get efficient work from the mutes, said Mr. Miller.

Since the instituting of the deaf employment service in the Department of Labor and Printing at the start of the Grist administration, the results obtained, according to Mr. Miller, have been remarkable.

In speaking of Mr. Miller, who is a mute, Commissioner Grist described him as being one of the hardest workingmen in the employ of the state.

From the front page of The Cleveland Star, Monday, March 15, 1926

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Chess Biggerstaff, Who Had Been Working in Florida for 5 Months, Died in Work Accident March 8, 1926

Lattimore Man Killed in Florida. . . Chess W. Biggerstaff Meets with Accidental Death While Working for Big Construction Co.

Chess W. Biggerstaff, age about 36 years, was killed March 8th in an accident while in the employ of a large construction company in Florida, according to telegrams received here Saturday by his father Robert Biggerstaff, formerly of Lattimore, now living near Ellenboro. Mr. Biggerstaff had been in Florida about five months working for a large railroad construction company. Details of the accident, which brought about death, have not been learned.

It is understood that his body was brought to Lattimore and carried to Rehobeth church, where it was interred Monday. He was a brother of Mrs. S.C. Crawley of Lattimore, W.P., Biggerstaff of Lattimore, Tom A., I.N., and Joe Biggerstaff of Rutherford county. He was married to a Miss McCoy of Lincoln county, who died last June. For a while he lived in Charlotte, going from there to Florida, where he met with a fatal accident.

Several telegrams were exchanged before his relatives were located, after which they asked that his body be returned to Cleveland county for interment. Information is being awaited by the relatives as to the nature of the accident which caused his death.

From the front page of The Cleveland Star, Monday, March 15, 1926

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New Subdivision Named Cleveland Heights, March 15, 1926

Cleveland Heights Name of Division

The development property recently purchased by O.M. Gardner and O.M. Mull on the Elizabeth road and Highway No. 20 just beyond Cleveland Springs has been named Cleveland Heights, or “Suburban Shelby Supreme.”

About 50 lots of the property will be sold by pre-development sales this week, handled by Shelby’s entire list of real estate agencies.

From the front page of The Cleveland Star, Monday, March 15, 1926

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