Little Elizabeth Hayden gave a birthday party to a number of
her little friends Wednesday at the beautiful home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
J.F. Hayden on East Washington street. A delightful time was had. Dainty
refreshments were served and souvenirs given her guests by the little lady, who
so charmingly entertained on her 7th birthday.
Referee Ferguson of Greensboro was here Monday afternoon
relative to the bankrupt stock High Point Loan company.
Rev. M.L. Cannup of New York City, formerly pastor of the
Lutheran Church, spent Monday here, enroute to Salisbury to visit his people.
Rev. Mr. Cannup will return to the city next Saturday and will occupy the
pulpit at the Lutheran church Sunday.
Mrs. D.L. Clark gave a recital of her music pupils Saturday
evening at her home on Washington street. Refreshments were served.
Mr. A.H. Sisson, superintendent of the Southern Car company,
returned today from his farm five miles out from Charlottesville, Va., where he
spent his vacation.
Mr. A.E. Eschelman, manager of the Southern LiveStock
association, is a guest at Mt. Vernon springs for a short vacation.
Mrs. Daisy Allred, Miss Lena Ritenberry and Miss Ruth
Sechrest have returned from their vacation at Black Mountain.
A negro, who it is alleged committed highway robbery, his
victim being Charles Shelton, was before Squire Suttenfield Friday, who had him
bound over to court.
An automobile club, something that has been needed here for
some time, will be organized at an early date.
Rev. Sidney Love, Secretary of the North Carolina Prison’s
Aid Society, spoke at the Air Dome Sunday afternoon at 5 o’clock to an
interested audience on the subject “The Daughter Though Gavest Me.” Mr. Love is
right on the subject of discrimination shown to the benefit of the man when a
woman is put on trial for misconduct. He claims, and rightly so, that the man
who caused the woman’s downfall or any way contributes to her degredation is
equally guilty. “Remove the cause,” he says and the woman will remain clean and
virtuous and that means for the man to keep away and when he is guilty to make
him pay the penalty the same as the woman, and that will go a long ways towards
keeping the woman from further erring.
Mrs. John R. Davis has received notice of the death of her
sister, Mrs. Sina Coble Goley, at the home of her mother in Worthville.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Harrison went to Kinston Tuesday where
they entered their little son in the institution at that place.
The city police department has been reorganized and all the
vacancies filled by electing Officer E.A. McGhee as chief and the following
patrolmen: F.M. Yates, W.L. Blackwelder, R.C. Andrews and C.S. Carroll; J.O.
Wood, chief health officer and patrolman southside and J.M. Evans, assistant
health officer and patrolman, northside. A desk sergeant will be on duty all
night.
Misses McBain, Arline Porter, Annie Markham and Florence
Hill of Greensboro are guests of Mrs. C.C. Barnhart.
Mr. and Mrs. R.N. Mitchell, who have been absent a month,
returned Tuesday from Kentucky.
Miss Alice Strickland returned from Greensboro Mondaya where
she attended the wedding of her friend, Miss Carrie Young.
State Councilor J. W. Sechrest of the Jr. O.U.A.M. returned
yesterday from North Wilkesboro where he went in the interest of the order.
Mr. J.M. Broughton, who is spending some time in California,
and who is now at Mill Valley, a suburb of San Francisco, writes to his son,
Mr. J.M. Broughton Jr. of this city, that he is taking hikes and auto trips
over the mountains. The temperature there, he says, is like that we have here
during the Thanksgiving season. One of the interesting features of this trip,
he says, is the meeting of old acquaintances who went out there in ’49 and
remained. He expects to return about September 1.
Commissioner of Insurance Jas. R. Young left recently for
Montreat where he will spend a short time. Mr. Young has been ill and his
physician advised a short stay in the mountains for his health. Treasurer B.R.
Lacy has also gone to the summer resort to spend his vacation.
There has been placed in the North Carolina Hall of History
a map of the battlefield of Fredericksburg and Chancellorsville, this being
drawn with pen by Engineer Officers W.L. Martin and Claud B. Denson, of the
Confederate States topographical engineer corps in September, 1963. Officer
Denson referred to was Capt. Denson, so long a resident of Raleigh and who at
the outbreak of the war had a military school in Duplin county, he having
entered the service in the early spring of 1861.
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