12-DecemberPOSfAL RECEIPTS SHOW THE RECORD CIRCULATION THE LARGEST IN THE COUNTY. THEY DON’T LIEi
“HERE SHALL THE PRESS. THE PEOPLE’S RIGHTS MAINTAIN! UNAWED BY INFLUENCE AND UNBRIBED BY GAIN.”
VOLUMN X X X IV .M OCKSVILLE. N O RTH CARO LIN A, W EDNESDAY, DECEMBER 7 , 1932 NUM BER 20
NEWS OF LONG AGO.
W hit Was Happening In Davie Before
The Days of AutomohtIes and Rolled
Hose.
(Davie Record, Dec. iotta, 1902)
R. E. Betts, of Asheboro, visit
ed his brother, A. L. Betts this
week.
The Mocksviile telephone system
has been improved very much late
ly. Miss Sallie Etchison is now
telephone central.
Miss Sadie Hanes, the popular
and acccomplisbed daughter of our
townsman Phillip Hanes, will be
married Tuesday, Dec. 2 3rd, to
Prof. R. D. W. Connor. •
Thos. E. Martin end Miss Lizzie
Ratledge, daughter of Henry Rat
ledge were married by Rev. W. C.
Wilson a t the parsonage 0 u
Thanksgiving. L onglifeaudhap
ptness to the young couple.
G. C. Patterson has been appoint
ed postmaster at Cooleeemee. Mr.
Patterson will make a good and
efficient officer, we believe.
John Naylor spent Sunday with
his parents at Cana.
HoopeV & Allen expect to be
ready to start up their new flour
mill on Dutchman creek about
Jau. 1st.
We understand that electric lights
will soon be installed at Cooleemee.
M. M. Kurfees, of Louisville,
Ky., is at his old home on a visit.
He travels for the Kurfees Paini
Co., and says business is fine.
Among the arrivals at Mocksville
Hotel this week are Revenue officers
McCoy and Patterson, W. F. Daniel
Virginia; I. D. Ellis, S. C.; Capt.
John Ramsey, Salisbury; B. K.
Huntzinger ,Pa ; Dr. Kalb, 111.;
T. C. Proctor, Va.; Lawyer Craig,
N. C.; C. B. Ellis, N. C..
A. H. O’Brien, of Maxton, will
move here in a few days and will
go into the furniture business with
his brother-in-law, A. L. Betts.
They will manufacture furniture,
coffins, etc.'
Little Charlie Wofford, of Coolee
mee, who was seriously injured by
a steam rock ca.rt, is improving.
TomM isenheimer has accepted a
position as clerk in the J. N. Led
ford store at Cooleemee
Pen Co.unor, of Randolph county,
is visiting friends at Cooleemee.
Statement of Ovmership
Management, Etc., of
The Davie Record.
This statement is made twice a
year to comply with a law passed
by an act of Congress of August
24 , 1912. ,
The Davie Record, published,
weekly at Mocksville, N. C.
Editor, C. F. Stroud, Mocksville,
N. C. '
Known bondholders, mortgagees
and other security holders, holding
I per cent or more of total amount
of bonds, mortgages or other se
curities. None.
C. F. Stroud, Editor, Owner.
Sworn to and subscribed before
me, this 29th day of Nov. 1932.
S. M. CALL, Notary Public.
My commission expires Aug. 1 6,
x 934- _______________
Won’t Take Office
Until April.
Although elected in November and
due to go into office the first Monday
in Drcember Raymond Cline, sheriff
elect of Cleveland county will not
take charge until April I, and. Sheriff
Ivy M. Allen will hold on until that
time. In every other coonty in the
state the sheriff goes into office the
first Monday in December but Cleve
land permits its retiring sheriff to
complete his tax collecting for the
previous year and make a settlement
with the county su that the incoming
sheriff may start off with a clean
sheet.
Nuggets of Gold.
Speaking before the delegates to
the National Grange meeting in
Winston-Salem, L. J. Tabor, master
of the national organization offered
some gold nuggets of thought.
Instead of commenting upon
these nuggets individually, we leave
them for the consideration of each
reader of these columns;
“ The return of the saloon in any
form would be the nation's greatest
backward step. Our duty is clear.
We must oppose any repeal or
change iu the eighteenth amend
ment that does not make for true
tem perance."
“ A general moratorium on farm
debes would be more daugerous than
auy other proposal thus far made
for the relief of agriculture.”
Neither rugged individualism
or a belief in supermen can restore
prosperity, but the effort of every
one, when we pull together, will
save agriculture, and America.
The National Grange at this
session is met by a positive chal
lenge to adopt a program that gives
assurance to courage and hope to
rural America.’’
“ Speedy aud definite actiou Dy
the coming short session of congress
011 several definite needs is imper
atively demanded.”
The first step in any long-time
policy for rural life must be founded
on a sound program of land utili
zation, and It is high time to give
renewed thought to the problem of
conservation ”
•Distribution costs must be re
duced so that the farmer may re
ceive a larger share of what the
consumer pays. The farmer must
be given more rather than less con
trol in baudliug the products of bis
own toil.”
“ The purpose of this act was a
stepin the right direction, and when
amended it must be by the friends,
and not by the enemies of agricul
ture.”
“ The Grange will continue to ad-
vocote t he export debenture or some
epuivalent method as a complement
to the protective tariff structure."
“ The first step ts to broaden the
base of taxation, coranel income,
luxury and privilege to bear a lar
ger share of the costs of society,
and turn tax-dodgers into taxpay
ers ” :
“ The complete overhauling and
reorganization of the functions of
government \k a need of the hour,
aud will make for public morale
and added confidence, as well as
money saving and improved serv
ice. ”
“ The veterans’ bureau must be
radically' reorganized to shut out
from recsiving compensation those
who are on the federal payroll or
or otherwise drawing fat salaries.”
I® 1®
(9 PRETTY
g DOLLS GIV*
£ EN AWAY.
I®
I®
I®
I®
UfcJ
A)
AJ
AJ
At
g
The Record has a
limited supply of pret
ty 17-inch dolls that
we are going to. give
to our subscribers free
of charge.
All old or new sub
scribers who pay $1
or more on subscrip
tion between now and
Dec. 24th, will be giv
en one of lhese pretty
dolls free. Bring or
send us your subscrip
tion today.
Who Remembers?\
Who remembers the Harmony
Hill Campmeetijig fifty years ago?
Who remembers Bitlv Green and
his bugle? Aud how, when it came
for services, he would blow them
into the meeting? Who remembers
Dennis Dingier, and how the - boys
would tease him at the dinner hour?
Who remembers Berry Joyner, the
old colored man who lived under
the lull, who thought bis “ white
folks” were the real thing? And
the 'good old brandy that Berry
would give the boys and then ex
pect a good liberal tip—which was
in every case forthcoming?
Who remembers W. D. Tharpe,
outstanding figure iu that section
in those days, with his fine herd of
Jerseys? The Tharpes were leaders
in progressive farming methods,
fine wbeat-growers, and all round
good fanners The heritage of the
Tharpe butter lias been carried
down to the piesent time, and the
high standard and fine taste is to
this day peculiar to their product.
Great changes have been wriughc
in the fifty years. Each year my
mind goes back to the early and
tender years wjien the young men
would walk between the big rows
of tents holding the bands of their
girls.” Each year the boys would
get their new dresses ready for the
Big Day in October. Backin those
days it was colder thau it is now,
and large log fires were built be
tween the rows of tents. . The en
tire scene is one that has left an in
edible impression on my mind, and
tue minds of a great host of others
of that period.—N. D. Tomlin, in
Statesville Record.
Graig Estate For Widow
New York.—William R. Craig,
a cotton and sugar oroker, who died
November 14, 1931, left a gross es
tate of $4 ,2 3 4 ,8 6 0 and a net of $3,
6 6 0,9 6 5. according to a transfer tax
appraisal filed by tjie state tax com
missioner’s office. Of tbe net estate
of $1,8 2 7 ,9 7 5 was the value of se
curities.
The widow, Mrs. JIargaret C
Craig, of 55 Park avenue, is the
prineipal beneficiary, receiving be
quests including a life estate in $1,-
0 0 0 ,0 0 0 and a legacy of $87 5,3 0 9;
property iu Davie county, North
Caroliua and personal effects there
totaling $7 1,0 0 0, aud a life interest
in property iu Amite and W ilkin
son counties, Mississippi, valued at
■$ii.iiS.
The Presbyterian Hospital aud
the F ifth; Avenue Presbytian
Church, in New York, each receive.
$100,0 0 0.
William R. Craig, New York
cotton and sugar broker whose will
was filed in the New York tax com
missioner’s office, owned a winter
estate at Jerusalem, near Mocks
ville.
No Tax Worries In
Pike ville.
The citizens of Pikeville, Wayne
county, will not pay any town taxes
this year, it was deejded at a recent
meeting of the town council. Pike
ville. owes no money and has money
in the bank.
The meeting was presided over by
E. P. Vail with J»D. Hales as clerk
Thecommissionersare L B. Smith,
R. H, Hosea and R S. Smith. It was
stated that the Atlantic Coast Line
railroad had sent their check to cover
taxes, and the cleric was instructed
to return it, and advise them that
they would not be required to pay
any 1932 taxes.
Thisisthesecond town in Wayne
county so far to adopt the plan of
eliminatingj.932 taxes, Eureka being
the other.
If successful caudidate lays his
election to his own efforts,- it de
feated to the la c k 'o f appreciation
of the voters..
Legion Gives New
Throught On Fight A-
J gainst Disabled.
Publicity is being given to the Na
tional Econolnv League and its at
tempt to organize business men of
the country in a drive in the comir g
ing session of congress to curtaii by
some $450,000,000 the benefits now
being paid veterans of the World
War. and other wars.
“We wonder if the business men
•>f this community have given
thought to the amount of money that
is brought into this community each
month as a result of the sums paid
to Warld War verterans,” W. 0. By-
erly, Commander Post No. 174 of
1’he American Legion here said to
day. "We will let the others for
themselves, but for the World war,
the total disability compensation for
the entire nation amounts to $204,-
620,000 and disability allowance
$104,277,000. Thedifferenceis that
the larger figure is for disability con-
nested directly with the veterans’
war service, and the smaller sum is
not. The total for these two items
its is $308,897,000 per year, which a-
mount is what is received by veter
ans and spent by them for the neces
sities of life, etc.
“The population of the United
States is 122,775,046, according to
the last census. Therefore, for every
man, woman and child in America,
the above sum of $30S 897,000 means
if properly divided down, about 20
cents per capita. Now, this is NOT
what it costs them—far from it. It
is what they receive indirectly
through these veterans. The cost
comes out of the Federal taxes, large
Iy from the Federal Income tax paid
by 42,000 persons who have annual
NET incomes of more than $6,000,-
000 000 per year. In 1928, their net
income, or profits, totalled $6,309,-
000,000.
"In a city of 10,000 this 20 cents
per month per capita, means, on an
average that the world war disabled
veterans of that community received
from the government $2,000 per
month, or a total of $24,000 for the
year. In a city of 5.000 it would be
total of $1,000 per month.
"As a matter of coal fact, the a-
mount is much larger, because such
disabled veterans naturally raside in
toe towns and cities. A careful sur
vey made recently of a typical A-
merican city of about 20,000 popula
tion (Inglewood, Calif.) per month.
If that ratio would hold good
throughout all towns and cities, then
the one of the 10,000 population
would get $5,000 per year.
"Does this money mean anything
to the merchants, to the doctors, the
dentists — yes, and the bankers,
sihoo! teachers, tax payers and la
borers? Of course it does, because
they would miss that money each
year It eo'uld easily be the differ
ence between profit and bankruptcy
for many firms.
“Then there is another side to the
story. Many of these veterans have
no other means of support than the
small sums they receive from the
government. Take this support a-
way from these disabled veterans
and what is going to happen?
"They are almost certain to be
come wards of the city and county.
Remember, the disabled veterans are
paid out of Federal taxes, and not
from local and state taxes. Their
pay comes out of the huge profits of
the Federal income tax payers. But
if they become burdens on their local
committies. then they effect theaver-
arge American home owner and busi
ness man.
"Besides, they fought for the
Federal government and it is a feder
al obligation, cot a state or local lia
bility. Our State Commander Bryce
P Beard stated in his Armistice Day
address in Raleigh that this is a
Federal obligation and will remain
•so. That’s the tvay this Post sees it
also, and it looks to us very much
like that group of larger income tax
payers are attempting to transfer
! this federal obligation from the
1 larger income tax paying group many
• of whom were profiteers during the
! war to the baeksof the local citizens
1 will be deceived by the midleading
! propaganfie of the so-called "econo-
'• my” league ”
Thinks General As
sembly Should Kill
SomeLaws.
Frequently .one hears tbe opinion
expressed that the next legislature
could perform a righteous .act by
killing tnanv of the present laws on
tbe statute books. The need for
such action is cited in this story
published recently in the Monroe
Enquirer:
“ A colored man, who lives about
two miles east of town, one m orn
ing last week, took his trusty polk-
stalk shotgun troui its rack over the
door and shot a rabbit that had been
eating cabbage, turnips and other
garden truck in his garden. Mr.
Rabbit was prepared for the table
and served up as a pie at the noon
day meal,
" AU well and good unlil Union
county’s game warden heard about
the colored man sbootin’ game out
of season. The colored man was
duly arrested, brought before a
magistrate and fined $5 .0 0 for the
crime— $2 c o costs and #2.00 for tlie
magistrate who tried the case^—
00 in all for shooting a io-cent
rabbit in the cabbage patch.
“ But the colored man, who is an
industrious farmer, and who never
dreamed that shootin’ a little old
mollyeoltontail and eatin’ it would
cause such a furore, has no money
to pay his fine, and is likely to go
to jail for 3 0 days—all for shootin’
a measley little old 10 cent rabbit.
“ Should the poor colored man be
required—according . to law —to
spend 30 days in jail his iacarcerat
ion will cost the county around
$12 0 0— all on account of killing and
eating a 10 cent rabbit.
' ‘ We paid several thousand dol
lars to our legislators to go do vn to
Raleigh and place a damfool law 011
the statute books to plague a poor
nigger for shooting a io-cent rabbit
which was detroyiug his vegetable
garden.” .
Says Hancock Will Be
Consistent, Voting Wet.
Youreditoral criticising the posi
tion of Mr. Hancock on the prohibi
tion question isn’t altogether fair.
He was nominated on a wet plat-
torrn. , He ran on a wet platform ,
and he was elected on a wet plat
form, and now in lining up with
the wets he is simply being consist
ent.
And that’ by the way, is a lot
more than can be said of some other
people—rnyseif included.
For many years I have claimed to
be an ardent “ dry.” N otw ith
standing that fact, I voted the
“straight” ticket, from Roosevelt
and Reynolds on down.
Afier having done that, if I still
contend that I am for prohibition,
I am either a fool, a liar, or a hypo
crite.
By their votes the people have de
manded liquor. N ow letthem have
it But let’s cut out the hypocrit
ical cadt about being “ dry” after
having just voted “w et.” —H. D.
LINDSAY.— Winston Journal.
Died Of a Broken
Heart.
United States Senator Wesley
Jones, Rrpnblican. of Washington,
who had served continuously for 33
years in.the Senateand House from:
the State of W ashingtton and was;
defeated in the recent election by
Homer T. Bone, Tacoma Democrat,
died at Seattle, Saturday, literally of
a broken heart He was 69 years -old
and had conductea a vigorous cam
paign for re-election and when the
voters of his states repudiateehim it
was more than he could bear and
the day after the election entered a
Seattle hospital and after 10 days he
passed out. His term would have
expired March 4, next.
WdnT BeToldOfficially
There is no provision for official
notification of persons who are elect
ed to office. Presidential candidates
who are usually officially notified of
nomination even when they are on
hand ,at the convention and help
name themselves. But if the candi
date chosen doesn’t learn of his
choosing from the newspapers, or if
his friends don’t tell him, that is his
lookout. Under the system the re
sult is determined by the choosing of
531 electors on the first Tuesday
after the first Monday in November.
But there is no law to compel the
elector to vote for the candidate he
was designated to support. So the
election doesn’t really take place un
til the first Wednesday in January,
when the electors of the several
states meet at the State capitals and
formally cast their votes. The votes
are forwarded to the secretary of
tbe senate of the United States and
on the second Wednesday in Feb
ruary Congress meets in joint ses
sion to canvass the electoral votes
and declare the result of the election.
So the election is not officially pro
claimed until near the date of the
inauguration. And even then the
presiding officer, annonncing the re
sult, doesn’t say postively that some
body has been elected. The formal
announcement, as recalled, is that
John Smith and Bill Jones “ appear to
have been elected.” They have re
ceived the majority of the votes but
the announcement doesn’t make posi
tive commitment.
It may be said that the casting and
and counting of the electoral votes
and the Official announcement of the
vote is puroly formal. So it is, gen
erally speaking. But notwithstand
ing these events are given little heed
because the election is supposed to
haye been settled by the November
balloting, if some of the electors
were to default, fail to attend, or
vote for others, and the returns re
ceived by the secretary of the senate
didn’t show a majority for some
body, there would be no election.
The house of Congress would have to
do to the electing and regardless of
how the vote was cast in November
the members elected two years ago
would decide. Each State would
have one vote and that vote would
be decided by the majority of the
congressional delegation Isn’t it
surprising that we haven’t, disposed
of this antiquated machinery long a-
goand brought the proceedings up
to date in a way that would make
sure that there would be no doubt a-
bout choosing the man for whom the
majority, of the people voted? The
jjiund-about method was all right for
the purpose for which it was estab
lished, but since modern methods
have made the electoral college of
none effect for generations, why
should the thing be continued iu the
face of possible danger?.
When Mr Cleveland was elected
the first time Democrats generally,
remembering what happened to them
in ’76, were uneasy lest there be a
lip between the cup and the lip.
When the eleetrol votes were can
vassed and the result announced a
Democrat who was still a bit disturb
ed about the thing going all the way
vithout mishap approached Senator
E’dmunds, of Vermont, and asked
hi m if there was any provision for
notifying the winning candidates.
0 « r e f lsciinn Senak r Edmunds ’an
swered 1 .hat there was no such provis-
sion; that candidates were left Jo as
certain the facts for themselves; and
he added that never in the history of
the country had a successful candi
date failed to be on hand for the in
auguration. With that record Dem
ocrats may feel assured that Roose
velt and Garner will hear the news
and be on hand at the proper hour
March 4 —Statesville Daily.
Can’t Keep Up.
J. H. Holloman, of Greene county
h as so many grand children he can’t
k.cep up with them and doesn’t know
all'their names. Theotherdavwhen
his-. 11 Iiving sons and. daughters gave
hi: n a dinner on his 76to anniversary
a c ount showed tvere were 80 grand-
cbi. Idren present and some were ab
sents
THE DAVIE RECORD, MOCKS VILLE, N. C. December 7,
THE DAVIE RECORD.
C. FRANK STROUD • • Editor.
Member National Farm Grange.
TELEPHONE
Ehitered a t the Postoffice in Mocks-
vllle, N. C.. as Second-class Mail
m atter. March 3.1903.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
ONE YEAR. IN ADVANCE
SIX MONTHS. IN ADVANCE
$ I OO
$ 50
A man who will lie, steal, get
drunk and live an immoral life may
be a fine politician but a mighty
sorry citizen.
Less, thau three weeks until
Christmas. You can save money
by trading with the merchants who
advertise in The Record
Despite the fact that this country
went democratic a month ago by
7 0 0 0 ,0 0 0 majority-, Mr. Recovery
hasn't yet made his appearance.
..When the filling stations and
diug stores are turned into saloons
we know where you can purchase
a but ch of automobiles at your own
price.
Republicans in North Carolina
ha> e something to be proud of after
all. Two years ago we had but
seven men in the legislature, while
this fa'll we elected ten It could
have been worse.
If all the folks who voted for
liquor in th'e recent election were
Jurned out of the church there
would be a great reduction in
church membership
Prices of cotton, wheat, corn and
other farm products failed to take
an upward swing after Mr. Roose
velt was elected Farm products
are lower than before the recent
landslide.
It is mighty hard to pay five or
six dollars apiece for votes and
then not get what you paid for.
A fellow who will sell his vote will
bear watching but you can’t watch
him when he casts his vote.
The Congress of the United
States is in session. May peace
and prosperity be our portion for
the next four years regardless of
High Johnson, Norris, King Fish
Long and Robert Reynolds.
The North Carolina legislature
could save the taxpayers several
hundred thousand dollars annually
by abolishing the State Highway
Patrol and reducing the salaries of
the county superintendents of pub
lie instruction.
Sometimes editors get cussed out
by their readers and may deserve it
A reader writing to the Winston-
Salem Journal takes the hair and
hide completely off EditorSantford
Martin. He accuses Martin of vot
ing to put in a wet crowd and
claiming that the wets would en
force prohibition. The Journal
seems to have played dry and voted
wet. Thousands of others must
have done the same thing.
The new county officers were
sworn in Monday and have assura
ed their various duties. These
gentlemen are hopest, upright citi
zens and will fill their offices with
honor to themselves and the voters
who elevated them to the positions
they are now holding. The good
people of the county should give
them their hearty CO operation.
The outgoing gentlemen who serv
ed for the past two years, made
many friends who wish them well
in whatever tasks they mav under
take. The new officers are not
bosses but servents of the people,
and they are paid to assist the pub
lie in every way possible. They
have assumed grave responsibilities,
and need your aid and sympathy
in sailing the county craft and
keeping the old boat off the rocks.
P. R. Lapish Dies.
Mr. P. R. Lapish, 7 7, died at
his home near Turrentine Nov.
2 8 th. Funeral services were held
at Campbell W alker Funeral Home
in this citv Wednesday afternoon
at one o’clock, conducted by his
pastor, Rev. Cletus Pritchard, of
Statesville. Burial followed in
Hickory Grove Methodist church
yard. Mr. Lapish is survived by
his widow and three sons, G G-
and R L. Lapish, of Kanuapolis;
E. S Lapish, of near Center; tw o 1
daughters, Mrs Chas. Gaybard, of
Rowan county, and Mrs. Will Rea
vis, of Statesville. Mr. Lapish was
a member of Jericho Christian
church, and had many friends who
were saddened by the news of his
death.
War Debt Paternity.
Mr. Roosevelt whose name is men
tioned by Aristocrat with becoming
I reverence need hardly be tn such a
hurry to deny the paternity of the
foreign debt problem. These debts
were chiefly made while the Demo
crats had comtrol of the government
and It will be pretty hard for the in
clining President to disavow all rt-
sponsibility for the whole deplorable
m es\ The party which he now
heads is unquestionably more ac
countable for the part our country
took in the late war and for the
events that brought us into this for
eign imbroglio than any other party
or sect. While the war propoganda
went forward with a bang Mr. Roose
velt was assistant secretary of the
navy and so fa- as is known here did
not throw weight of influence against
foreign entanglements.
Of course Mr. Rooseveltoughtnot
to be blamed to much for what took
place between 1916 and 1920 for he
w is scarcely more then than a babe
in the political woods but it is the
irony of fate that he should inherit
Mr. Wilson’s kingdom and the 13
points and the league of nations at d
the international debts. He will find
it necessary to graiple with the for
eign debt problem growing out of a
cruel and needless war which he had
something to do with. No wave of
the hand nor flourish of magic wand
can brush aside the distressing prob
lem.
The war days were bond-issuing
and bond-3elling davs when one was
not allowed to express an opinion
without danger of punishment, days
of big loans to the allies and plenty
of easy money. The people thought
prosperity had dropped out of heav
en; they did not know that it was
pumped up from below. Mr, WiI-
son ,was thought to be the daddy of
war prosperity and so :n a sense he
was. M aybethereisasortofpoetic
justice in having at the head of the
government in a little while a Demo
crat who will have to become the
foster daddy of the foreign imbroglio
resulting from tne war. He will
have the sympathy of the Republi
cans as wellJis the Democrats.—
ARISTOCRAT, Greensboro News.
Land posters for sale.
r>;;
X&.&
- .
Let Us Gin Your Cotton
When You Bring Your Cotton
to town drive down to see US
“Yours For Good Service”
Green Milling Company
1.4» »x» >1« »l< >!■ ■!« H
MR. FARMER!
I We are in a better position to handle]
I Your Cotton Than Ever Before
We Appreciate Your Business
FOSTER & GREEN
S. .I. .I. .I. .I. g. >1. ft fr frfrgH
Near Sanford Motor Co.
>x» * * * .? * ■> .I. .I. * »1» f r » j . » * » » g * * * g .j. * 'I* >1« »1« >1' »! ■ >f» ■)
TO CUSTOMERS 0 ? THE
SOUTHERN PUBLIC UTILITIES COMPANY-
I N order that our customers
may benefit immediately from the re
cent reduction in rates for electricity,
our accounting department, on biils
to be sent out December I, will fItjure
each customer's bill under that sched
ule which it appears will be to the
best advantage of that customer.
Not only do our new rates mean
a very material saving for a large pro
portion of our customers, but the new
rates, with electricity at 3% cents per
KW hour for the first 150 KW hours
and 3 cents per KW hour for all con
sumption above that, mean that our
customers in general may enjoy the
fullest measure of comfort and con
venience that may be derived from
electric service at an, insignificant
cost.
Residential customers whose con
sumption is less than 28 KW hours
per month (and who do not contem
plate increasing their consumption)
will find it to their advantage to take
service under schedule I-B1 which is
as follows: $ 1.00 for the first 13 KW
hours or less used per month; 7 cents
per KW hour for all consumption In
excess of 13 KWH used per month.
However, with electricity at 3%
cents per KW hour up to 150 KW
hours and at 3 cents for all consump
tion above that figure, very few cus
tomers, we believe, will ,deny them
selves the greater convenience ,and
comfort which they can have so
cheaply and few will elect schedule
l-B.
flonfh/y B/// /n 00/^ —
T h e a c c o m p a n y in g g r a p h sh o w s th e c o m p a riso n S s tw e z n the. o ld S o u th
e r n P u b lic U tilitie s lig h tin g sc h e d u le , th e a v e ra g e r a te in th e 177 la r g e s t
c itie s in A m e r ic a a s w o rk e d o u t b y th e N o r th C a ro lin a C o rp o r a tio n C o m
m iss io n , a n d th e n e w r e s id e n tia l s e r v ic e sc h e d u le o f th e u tilitie s c o m
p a n y . Y o u w ill n o te th a t th e n e w sc h e d u le N o . I , d e p ic te d b y th e h e a v y b la c k
lin e , is m a r k e d ly b e lo w th e c u rv e r e p r e s e n tin g th e 177 c itie s ; I n th e u p p e r
le ft-h a n d c o rn e r is sh o w n a lso th e n e w g e n e r a l lig h tin g sc h e d u le , o p tio n a l
sc h e d u le l-B .
I f y o u k n o w w h a t y o u r c o n s u m p tio n is y o u c a n fin d th e p o in t n e a re st to
i t o n th e s la n tin g lin e s a n d d e te r m in e ' w h a t y o u r m o n th ly b ill w o u ld b e a t
th e o ld r a te , a t th e a v e ra g e r a te in th e 177 c itie s , a n d a t th e n e w r a te s e m
b ra ced in o u r n e w sc h e d u le N o . I re p r e s e n te d b y th e h e a v y lin e s.
A U o f th e n e w sc h e d u le s o f r a te s f o r e le c tric se rv ic e a n d th e n e w sc h e d u le
o f r a te s fo r g a s se rv ic e a re o n file a t o u r o ffic e a n d o u r c u sto m e rs a re in
v ite d to in s p e c t a n d s tu d y th e m . I f th e r e is a n y q u e stio n in th e m in d s o f
a n y c u sto m e rs a s to w h ic h sc h e d u le th e y sh o u ld be u n d e r o u r re p re se n ta
tiv e s w ill be g la d to a d v is e w ith th e m , e x p la in th e sc h e d u le s in d e ta il, a n d
b e o f a n y a ssis ta n c e p o ssib le .
SOUTHERN PUBLIC UTILITIES CO.
E. C. MARSHALL, President
f
L
THE q
Largest
D a v ie
LOCAL I
Mrs. E
last week
Attorm
day last
ness.
,J. Fraal
was a b u |
nesday.
Cb as.
Grove, w |
business.,
Mr. an<
Redland,
shopping.
Mrs D
D. Pass s
Salem sh<
Mrs. R
quite ill f
is much I
Renew
a pretty t
free. Cal
these doll
Mrs F
dricks, ot
iu town s
J. P. C
in town \
thanks lo |
L. S.
laid up vf
past weel]
again.
The G;|
‘to meet
night at 1
house.
Mr. anl
little dat|
in town
pleasant 1
Petty
who subsl
scriptionq
and get
Thomal
Mrs. J.
days agoI
they will I
Mr. au<|
Miss C an|
vere in
their C hr|
The ci|
work on
Christmal
work on
AttornJ
day or twl
reports til
ty chilly j
The R j
If you
dolls y o J
get it befl
W illiaJ
Cartner,
- Tnursdav
W inston
a load of
There
Grove scl
Dec. 10.
will be sol
good tin |
Christtna|
W ork I
building
which wal
time ago.
wood conl
about 25
Mr. anj
who h a v j
Mrs. W.
the Harr
boro stre
new homi
A prett
old subse
n.ore on 1
mas. Ca
We canm
Capt J
was in to
killing a
China and
of last wed
a: 754 P°{
the rate o]
day. If 1
Davie we I
I>w. Mr. Wil-
i the daddy of
in a sense he
I a sort of poetic
head of the
I while a Demn-
|to become the
srn imbroglio
ar. He will
the Republi-
Democrats.—
ciro News.
THE
gigr
sale.
Itton
ton
IS
iy
handle
,I, ,I , ,T,
r
%
the DAVIE RECORD.
L arg est Circulation of Any
D avie County Newspaper.
LOCAL AND PERSONAL NEWS.
Mrs. E. C. Choate spent one day
last week in Salisbury shopping.
A ttorney B. C. Brock spent one
day last week in Ralsigh on busi
ness.
J. Frank Essie, of near Courtney
was a business visitor here W ed
nesday.
Cbas. B. Broadway, of Shadv
Grove, was in town last week on
business.
Mr. and Mrs. Sanford Smith, of
Redland, were in town Thursday
shopping.
Mrs Dewey Gant and Mrs. M.
D. Fass spent Friday in Winston
Salem shopping.
Mrs. Rowe Davis who has been
quite ill for the past several weeks
is much better.
Renew your subscription and get
a pretty doll for your boy or girl
free. Call or send. We can’t mail
these dolls.
Mrs Fred Styers and Miss H en
dricks, of near Yadkiu Valley, were
in town shopping Friday.
J. P. Chaffin, ot Clarksville, was
in town Thursday and has our
thanks ior a frog skin.
L. S. Kurtees 1 who has been
laid up with rheumatism for the
past week or two, is able to be out
again.
The Garner heirs are requested
to meet at Lexington Thursday
night at 7 :0 0 o’clock in the court
house.
Mr. and Mrs. W alter Shutt and
little daughter, of Advance, were
in town Thursday and gave us a
pleasant call.
Petty 17-inch dolls free to all
who subscribe of renew their sub
scriptions to The Record. Call now
and get yours.
Thomas W. Rich and Mr. and
Mrs. J. W. Barksdale, left, a few
days ago for Miami, Fla , where
they will spend the winter.
Mr. and Mrs. E. H . Smith at;d
Miss CanaStroud 1 of Iredell county
v ere in town W ednesday doing
their Christmas shopping.
The city schools will suspend
work on Friday, Dec. i 6 th, for the
Christmas holidays, and will resume
work on Monday, Jan. 2nd.
Attorney A. T. Grant spent a
day or two at Boone last week and
reports that the waather was m igl-
ty chilly on the top of the world.
The Record dolls are going fast.
If you want one of these pretty
dolls you had better come in and
get it before they are all gone.
William Cartner and son J Lce
Cartner, of Kappa, were in town
Tnursday on their way home from
W inston Salem, where they carried
a load of todacco. ’
There will be a pie supper at Oak
Grove schoolbouse Saturday night
Dec. 1 0. Lots of good things to eat
will be sold. AU cctne and have a
good time. Proceeds go to the
Christmas tree fund.
W ork has commenced on the re
building of the Cooleemee hotel
which was destroyed by fire some
time ago. The new building is of
wood construction and will contain
about 25 rooms.
Mr. and Mrs. Fletcher Click,
who have had rooms with Mr. and
Mrs. W. H. LeGrand1 have rented
the H arris Bungalow, on Wilkes-
boro street and mpved into their
new home Thursday.
A prettv doll free to all new or
old subscribers who pay us Jx .0 0 or
iiiOre on subscription before Christ
inas. Call or send us your renewal.
We cannot mail these dolls.
Capt J. S. Phelps, of Cornatzer,
was in town Saturday and reports
killing a fine 16-month-old Poland
China and 0 . I. C. hog on Monday
of last week which tippen the scales
a; 754 pounds. This hog grew at
the rate of about x $4 pounds^ per
day. If there is a bigger hog in
Davie we havent heard of it.
Mrs. E. L. Gaither, Mrs. R. B,
Sanford and Mrs. Cecil Morris were
shopping in Wiustoa-Salem Friday.
M. G. Fos:<-r. new Register of
Deeds, lias moved from Cooleemee
to the Hendrix house two miles
south of Mocksville.
Roy Call, who holds a position]
as shoe salesman with a Louisville,!
Ky., shoe store, arrived home Mon-I
day to spend three weeks with h is|
parents.
JudgeJohnH Clement is presid
ing over the December term of|
D^vie Superior court at Mocksville
Judge P. A. McEIroy was billed to j
be here.
Conductor D. P. Foard, who
was badly injured when his train
wrecked near Kernersville earlv
last week, is getting along nicely
at his home in W inston Salem
Capt. Foard suffered a crushed
shoulder, a broken collar bone to
gether with other injuries.
Little Mary Nelle H unter, 2 dav-
old daughter, of Mr. and Mrs. C.l
R. Hunter, of near Cana passed a-|
way Sunday morning at 3 o’clock.!
Funeral services wete conducted atl
3 o’clock Sunday afternoon, at tliel
home and interment was at E aton's|
cemetery.
A house belonging to G. G.l
W alker and occupied by Paull
Hendrix, located on Salisbury street!
was slightly damaged by fire early[
Monday morning. The fire boysj
arrived in time to put out the fire,
caused bv a defective flue, before|
much damage was done.
Smoot Names Officers.!
Sheriff C. C. Smoot 1 who assumed!
his new duties as sheriff M onday.!
has appointed C. V. Miller, off
Farmington township, as jailor, andl
Mr. Miller has moved into the jailf
and taken’charge. Mr. Miller waa
a deputy sheriff for several yeara
during the administration of sherif
Cope. A. U. James, of this cityj
has been appointed chief office!
deputy, and has assumed his duties.l
Other deputies appointed will be an-p
nounced next week.
Smoot Takes Oath.
Sheriff C C. Smoot, whose bond[
was delayed in arrivi’.ifr here, wa9
sworn in as sheriff Tuesday at noon
and immediately assumed his duties.
AU the other county officers were
sworn in Monday.
Lttend Funeral at Crewe
I Mr. and Mrs. S. C. Stonestreet
lent to Crewe, Va., Sunday to at
Jmd the funeral and burial of Miss
|lariette Foote, daughter of Mr.
nd Mrs. Henry Foote, iormerly
(f Cana, who was killed in an auto
mobile accident last Friday evening,
Iiss Foote was a'neice of Mrs.
ttonestreet. Mr. and Mrs. Foote
lave the sympathy of a host of re
latives and tnends in Davie in the
leath of their young daughter.
Redland News.
Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Smith spent Tuesday
1 Mocksville. witb Mr. and Mrs. Robert
|>mith.
Mr. and Mis Oliie Allen, of near Clem-
Inons spent Sunday with his pareots Mt*
pnd Mrs. C. W. Allen.
Mrs. C. W. Allen is on the sick list we
|tre sorry to write.
Mrs. Tom Dunn who has been suffering
Kor several days witb cold and Au is im
proving very slowly we are sorry to note.
Mrs. Fred Sides and little daughter
3areldine and Miss Thelma Sides spent
jtae week-end with Mrs. J. A. Smith.
Mrs. G. C. Hanes spent Tuesday with
daughter Mro. Ollle Beauchamp.
Miss Minnie Carter near Advance visit-
led Miss Violet Potts Friday night.
Mr. and Mrs- Robert Smith, of MoCks-
Iville were the Sunday guest3 of Mr. and
|Mrs. W. 0. Dunn.
Miss Geneva Smith spent a while Fri-
Ilay evening with her aunt Mrs. R. C.
pmith.
Mrs. S. H. Smith visited Mrs. Tom Dunn
Friday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. C. V Miller and children,
fepent a while Friday night in Winston-Sa
lem with Mrs. Miller’s sister.
There will be a pie supper at Bethlehem
|Methodist church Saturday night* Dec. 10.
Proceeds will go to the Sunday school.
JThe public is cordially invited to come
but and enjoy themselves.
Fork News Notes.
Miss Eliza Chaplin, who has been very
sic't, is improving slowly.
Road foreman. W. M. Sheek moved his
family from our town to Advancethe past
Wiek. we are sorry to lose these good peo
ple from our midst.
Miss Biddie Davis, spent the past week-
e id witb relatives and friends in Salisbury.
Charles Livengood, of Reeds, visited re
latives here this week.
Misses Marylee. and Mildred Carter, of
S nith Grove, spent the Thanksgiving, holi
days here with friends.
Mr. and Mrs. U. D. Wyatt and children,
of Winston-Salem visited here this week.
Mr. dnd Mrs. Wm. L. Bottoms, of Ben-
nettsville, S. C., speat the past week end
here with Mrs. Bottoms* parents. Mr4 and
Mrs. C. L. Aaron.
Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Burton, have had flu,
but are better now.
Mrs. W. D. Hodges, and daughters. Mr?.
J. F. Burton and Mrs. U. D. Wyalt spent
Thanksgiving day with Mr. and Mrs. R L1
Kinder, of Harmony!
Kappa News.
Mrs. B. J. Foster and little grand-daught
er Virginia Foster, spent Tuesday with
Mrs. C. C. Smoot
M issesJamieKnoxandAnnaBell Ha-
gar. of Cool Springs were guests, of Miss
Frances Jones Monday nighr.
Misses Mary Mason and VeraH:>lton. of
CoolSpringsy were guests of Mi:S Mae
Steel Smoot Monday night.
Miss Mariv-^ayes. of Cool Springs spent
the week end with Miss Edith Koontz.
Miss Bertha Jones spent Sunday night
with Miss Mary Ellen Smoot.
Miss Veatrice Jones spent Saturday
night with Miss Minnie Koontz.
Miss Helen Jones spent Saturday night
in Mocksville the guest of Miss Sadie Mae
Foster.
Carl Jones spent Saturday night in
North Wilksboro. with Navis Jones.
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Kecchiey who have
made their home with his parents Mr. and
Mrs. W. F. H. Ketchiethepastyearmoved
to Iredell county last Thursday. We are
ssrry to loose these fine young people from
our community and wish them much suc
cess in their new home.
Mr. and Mrs. William Green. M. W-
Koontz and little daughter Elizabeth and
Miss Verla Koontz spent Friday ia Salis
bury shopping.
Marvin Williams and Miss Anna Sea
mon were united in marriage on Saturday
Nov. 26. in South Carolina. We wish them
much joy and happiness through life.
The ladies of the community showered
Mrs Marvin Williams with a number ot
beautiful and useful gifts at her home
Friday afternoon.
.enter news.
Mr. and Mrs. B. P. Garrett. Kenneth
and Richard Phelps and E. E. Phelps
spent Sunday afternoon with Doc Barnes
and family at Woodleaf.
Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Tutterow, of Wins-
ton-Salem visited Mrs. H. F. Tutterow
Sunday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs S. F. Tutterow and Miss
Stella Tutterow spent Monday afternoon
in Winston-Salem.
H. W. Tutterow, spent the week end
here. He holds a position wiih Swift
Company in Winston-Salem.
Miss Mae Dwiggins, of Greensboro spent
the week end with her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Henry Dwiggins.
Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Forrest and son, Carl,
and Miss Mary Helen BarneycastKi visited
Mr. Le^is Forrest and family at Kappa
Sunday
Misses Sarah and Anna Mae Anderson.
Millard Anderson and James Owensspent
Sunday in the Mountaius and Western
North Carolina.
Miss Myrtle Anderson, of High Point
was a recent visitor in this community.
Mr. and Mrs. 0. 0. Tutterow, of Salis
bury visited L. M. Tutterow and family
recently.
Mrs. H. W. Tutterow ana son, H. W. Jr.,
are spending this week with June Jarvis
and family, of Cooleemee.
Miss Maggie Dyson spent Tuesday in
Winston Salem shopping.
Mr. and Mrs. L. R. Powell spent Friday
in Morganton.
Roy Lowery who has been visiting Mil
ton Parker has returned to Greensboro.
Sam Murphy and Albert Herrion, of
East Spencer visited in this community re
cently.
Plans are being made and parts nave
been out for a program for a Christmas
tree at Center. It will be noticed that a
tree was not held last year because of the
work on the church.B P. Garrett has just finished making a
number of improvements oo his shop. He
has enlarged it considerably and now has
a very modern and up to date shop which
will meet the requirements of the peuple.
County Line News.
(Too Late For Last. Week.)
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Craft and children, of
Winston Salem spent Thanksgiving with
Mr and Mrs. R. A. Elam.
Dorothy, the little deaf and dumb daugh
ter of Mr. and Mrs. Al Horn died early
Friday rooming. ^
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Renegar, of Gra
ham sp nt Thursday with Mr. and Mrs.
Jim Campbell. *
Mr. and Mrs. J C. Jones anJ little son.
Miss Veatrice JoiijjS and Mr. Reid »Towell were the dinner guests of Mrs. Henry
Stroud Sunday.
Mr. T. J. Towell is ill at this time we
are sorry to know.
Mr. and Mrs. N. M. Blackwetker, of Stat
esville spent Thursday evening with Mr.
and Mrs. M. L. Godby.
Little Miss Ruth Campbell, of Harmony
spent Thanksgiving with Mildred Godbey.
Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Ratledge spent Fri
day afternoon with their daughter, Mrs.
M. L. Godbv.
Mr. and Mrs. J. Will Horne, of Winston-
Salem spent Thanksgiving with Mrs. W.
B. Horne.
Useful Gifts.
Be sensible and give gifts
that are useful. In our store
you will find such gifts as
Leather Goods, Kalf Priced,
Fountain Pens, Pen and Pen
cil Sets, Toilet Goods, Candi
es and many other items to
select from.
Let Us Show You
i
Visit Us Often
Let Us Serve You.
LeGrand’s Pharmacy a
On The Square g
Phone 21. Mocksville N. C. §
TlllllllllllKlllliuilllllllllllllllllllIIIllHWt
WELCOME
SHOP!
I MAKE BELK’S YOUR I
, CHRISTMAS STORE I
. Thousands and thousands of lovely and useful gifts are now ready
t for selection at BELK’S New Store where Statesville, Iredell and
t adjoining counties will buy their gifts FOR LESS this year. • Every ®
[ department features its share of special gift values. Remember,
, you get best selection if you choose early.
I ------------------.-------------.----------_ _ £
[A Few Christmas Gift Suggestions &
SEMI-PASTE PAINT
One Gallon Makes Z 1-2 When Mixed
K U R F E E S & W A R D
BARGAINS! ;
SPECIALS THIS WEEK.
Ienty women and childrens
Hose IOc per pair.
Plenty Sweaters for all the
family at Bargain Price.
Plenty of Coats for men, wo
men and children.
Plenty Red Goose, Wolverine
and Ball Band Shoes and
Boots for all the family.
Men’s Union Suits bOc
Full Fashioned Hosieiy 48c
See our Clothing before you
buy. We can and will save
you money;
Plenty of Outing yard 5c
8 lbs Lard 55c
Salt 95c
Coffee Ib IOc
Crackers 2 Ibs 25c
Crackerslargesize ■ llclb
PeanutfButter I Ib IOc
Eagle Brand Milk 20c can
I Ib Can Pork and Beans 5c
Flour $1.95
Plow Points at 1-3 off list
See our line dry goods before
you buy. We have the best
assortment we have ever had.
Felt hats 89c up.
Yours For Bargains
J. Frank Hendrix
• General Merchandise
For Mother
A New Coat or Dress
Night Gowns
Lingerje
Gloves
Silk Hosiery
Blankets
Dress Material
Bathrobes
Bedroom Slippers
Table Linens
Madeira Linens
For Sister
Lovely Negligees
Lounging Pajamas
Silk Hose
Evening Dresses
Silk Lingerie
Mules and Slippers
New HSndbags
Dress Groves
Sport Sweaters
Silk Scarfs
Dance Sets
For Dad
Suits and Overcoats
Suspenders
Belts and Buckles
Dress Shirts
Dress Socks
Neck Ties
Silk and Wool Scarfs
Underwear
Dress Gowns
Bathrobes
House Slippers
For Brother
Our Boys’ Department is filled
with useful items of boys’ wear
ideal for gift purposes, such as
shirts, ties, belts and buckles,
hats and caps, pajamas and
underwear, suits. sweaters,
overcoats, shoes, etc. Be sure
to see them!
BelkjS Toy Department ^
• will be located in the Bargain Basement, where we will have the
finest display of tovs everv offered to our customers, at prices that I
I will save. Hundreds of oth^r inexpensive gifts will zlso be found
in the Bargain Basement. Don’t fail to.visit it! j
BELK’S
Department Store
1 Statesville, N. C.“ We Sell For Less"
TH E W O R 1 A sT SELLiKG- RADTb-1
Pbuco has done U again! Now )ou may hare a fine, full>perform ing mulliptc'lulm radio set at an amazingly low price. Look al llio
model illustrated at (he left. Juit imagine, a new modem radio receiver viih 9 Tubes in a magnificent band-rubbed Lowboy Cabinet* At Rach a low pricc
Features! Fcalure* you cannot
obtain in any other radio receiver. TWIN SPEAKERS, Shadow Tuning, Toae Coatrol, Automatic VoIome Control, Superheterodyne Circuit 4 and complete with new Pbileo High EiScieney Tubes. Note the low price and ask Qt about oar terms. It is now easy to own a fine radio. Buy and enjoy ibis marvelous aew set
O
MODEL 91-L
Special Values-COMPLETE
Tax Paid
CALL AT OtIR STORE
TODAY OR PHONE FOR NEW, FREE BADIO BOOK—
“PHILCO BOOK
OF FACTS"
Information!
PbUco Baby Crand models are the
greatest valoe In all radio history I
5 Tube $36.50—7 Tube $49.50—
8 Tobe Long and Sbori Were
Combination $59.95 — 9 Tabe
$69.50. ± Complete, TAX PABO.,
DON'T WAIT!!
You may have any Philco radio for-
ONLY A SM ALL
D O W N fPAYMENT
EASY TERMS
THS IS OURFAMOUS BABYCRANO MODEL
C. C. Sanford Sons Co.
“Everything For Everybody”
ir'ji'
fffffi DAVlE RECORD, MOCKSVILEEJ
A Soap Bubble Blowing Party
□ P
>5 the early 1830’s, we are told, prevent uncomfortable dampness to
soap bubble blowing parties were pretty frocks and play suits.
the fashion, and furr.ished many Make a rich solution with a mild,
hours of amusement for our moth- pure soap, like Ivory. Add a few
ers and fathers, and even grand- drops of glycerin. When the guests
. others and gr~ndf»there. have put on their aprons each one
Nowadays when st*d> hns so should be given an ordinary, inex-
•n:\ny utilitarian a n d personal pensive clay bubble blowing pipe,
functions in our social scheme—es- _ Children are always pleased with
p«ciully iin'e the si»? *e k1 ‘d cm* b? the idea of a competition—especial-
used for everything including care Iv if the hostess awards some sim-
of the baby, Uui;J«.r.ng delicate pi ■» prises. A board of judges should
fabrics, scrubbing floors and other be appointed (chosen from among
seemingly unrelated trsks - we the children, if possible—otherwise
have perhaps lost sight of how grown-ups may serve) and each
much hilarity and good fun can be contestant for the prizes should be
had from a cake of ordinary white required to blow his or her prize
*->ap.
A soap bubble blowing party will
keep any group of children—and
even a group of grown-ups—amused
and entertained for an afternoon.
For the little ones the affair will
need to be carefully planned. A
wise hostess will provide—or sug
gest that the little guests bring—
brightly colored and decorated rub
ber aprons: These can be purchased
at the ten-cent store and will add
winning bubble before, the judges.
Ample time for preliminary prac
tice should be allowed.
An interesting variation of the
soap bubble blowing party would be to ask the guests to come in cos
tume .and stage a party exactly like
the ones their mothers and daddies
enjoyed when this fad was at its
height The children will enjoy
dressing up and any grown-ups
present will be equally glad to have
to the general color and gaiety o f. a pipe, a cake of Ivory soap and a
the occasion and at the same tim e; bowl and join in the fun.
I
I
PRETTY DOLL FREE
AU persons who subscribe to
The Record or renew their sub
scriptions by paying us $1.00 or
more on subscription, will receive
a pretty 17-inch long doll free.
These dolls cannot be mailed. If
you want one of these dolls call
or send for it soon. The supply
is limited.
Suppose This Were The Heading Of A {Newspaper
Article About YOU And YOUR Car!
IF YOU drive a car you have had narrow escapes-you
may have Almost, been involved in some serious acci
dents or you may have Almost been in need of the im-
mediate help of a dependable insurance agent. These
“almost” accidents should remind you to make sure of
your insurance.
E. C Morris
Real Estate And Insurance
AU persons who renew their subscrip
tions and all new subscribers wUl re
ceive a 1933 Blum’s Almanac free. Call
and get your copy today.
The back to the farm inovemi
appeals to us about twice a ye|
when watermelons are ripe.
Send us your subscripts]
and receive a 1933 Blur
Almanac free. Don’t
too long.
Notice Of Sale!
By virtue of the authority given I
the undersigned Trustee in .a certal
Deed of Trust executed by Jerri
Lindsev and his wife, Mary Lal
Lindsey, dated December 31st, 193[
and recorded in the Office of Regisl
er of Deeds of Davie county in Bool
24 of Mortgages on Page 451-2 (de"
fault having been made in the pay!
ment of the indebtedness thereby se]
cured), the undersigned Trusteewill
offer for sale to the highest bidder a |
the Court House Door in Mocksvillel
North Carolina, the following de|
scribed land at 12:00 Noon, on.
§ Tuesday, December 27t.h, 1932
Beginning at a stone on the Nortf)
side of the public road, Hege and
Jordan corner, thenre with the road
partly in George Frv’s line 137 poled
to a stone in the road. Lanier’seorn-l
er in Fry’s line; thence in Lanier’s!
ine South 70 degrees East 32 polesl
to a scone, Lanier's corner; thencel
South 6 degrees East 43 poles to al
stone on bank of Yadkin River, La-I
nier’s corner; thence up the river 49|
poles to the mouth of a branch where
it empties into the river; thence upl
the meanders of the branch 33 polesl
and 13 links to a stone, Hege’s corn-]
er; thence East 10 degrees North
Doles in Hege’s line; thence North
degrees East in Hege’s line 127 polesl
to a stonein Alex Hege’s line; thencel
in his line North 85 degrees West 24l
noles to a stone the beginning, con-1
taining Forty-nine and three-fourths|
(49 75) acres, more or less. Less One
(I) acre sold off to George Fry, andl
Three (3) acres sold off to JacofcT
Hege, Jr.
TERMS OF SALE: Cash.
This the 23rd day of Novemberl
1932
J. BENBOW JONES, Trustee.
Sale of Land Undei
Mortgage.
By vertue of the powers containe
in a mortgagee deed executed to m
by Mrs. Sarah A. Richardson, de
fault having been made in the nay-
ment of'same. Iw ill sell for Casl
at the court house door in Davfc
county N. C , at public outcry to the!
highest bidder on Monday Januarv 1
2nd 1933 at 12 o’clock m., the lands
described below. Viz: being the
Newtown Richardson home place
situarated in Clarksville township,
Davie county, N.. C.. and bounded as
follow: Starting at a stone corner
of J. A Richardsons land and run
ning South with J. A, Richardson
line 8 chains to a stone, corner J. A.
Richardson line; thence East, with J.
A. Richardsons line about 27 chains
to Jqhn Smoots corner; thence North
with Smoots line to Charlie Hart
man’3 corner; thence West with
Hartman’s line to a stone in John
Browns line; thence South with
Browns line to a stone John Browns
corner; thence West with Browns
line to a stone John Browns' corner
in Sam Cartners line, thence South
with Cartners line to a stone in J. A.
Richardson line; thence East , to a
stone the beginning corner; contain
ing about seventy-five acres more or
less. This Nov. 28th 1932
G. L WHITE, Mortgagee.
By E. H. MOftRIS, Atty.
Ifyou are constipated, bilious, have indigestion, dyspepsia, soui* stomach, the new tonic tablet, COLOJfEX, contains pepsin, yeast, bile salts, pan- creatin, peppermint and vegetable tonics—the very same agents Nature manufactures in your body to eliminate poisons, aict digestion, and cause natural bowel movements. It’s unnatural to drench the system with
artificial enemas or powerful drugs. Take a few pleasant COLOXBX tablets and purify your system Nature’s way. This valuable formula would be very expensive compounded on
physician’s prescription, but you can get a sani-taped package containing 28 lemon-colored tablets for only 60 cents at any drug store. Ninety per cent of human ailments come from clogged colon, so if you are not feeling well trv 'COIiOJfEX today on guaranteed satisfaction or money back basis
For Nerve Exhaustion, Loss of
FIesIi and Weakened Vitality,
Irogen Is Ideal Tonic Remedy
N orth Carolina Man Tells Why He Thinks It Is “The Best
Medicine in the World.”— Great Prescription Quickly Re
vitalizes the Blood and Restores Vigorous Health.
Tlie number of victims of nervous
exhaustion and general breakdown
is steadily increasing in the United
States, according to tlie statistics
of health experts. Xt appears, from
their reports, that nature has failed
to provide for the abnormal strain of modern business and social life, and it is not .surprising that the
nerve cells give away.
When the nerves are deranged ’the digestive organs are impaired, food ceases to yield the prope: nourishment, the blood becomes
impoverished, insomnia appears, and the usual result is a general
nervous breakdown.Men and women who get in this condition, or who feel it approach
ing, need a powerful but safe restorative tonic, which ,will build up
and strengthen the entire system and, at the same time, act directly upon the digestive and assimilating organs.
HAS PHENOMENAL SUCCESS
IROGEN’S success has been phe
nomenal. Although the first pack
age was . put on the market less than a. year ago, the sales in this vicinity have already run into thou
sands of bottles, and letters are pouring in unsolicited from people
In every walk of life, telling of the wonderful^ relief it has afforded
from suffering and general physi
cal weakness.
One of these, which is typical,
comes from A. D. Ballard, of Bilt-
more, N. C., near Asheville, the father of six children. Mr. Ballard
writes that he noticed a Iallin- otf in weight, accompanied by continuous backache, with touches of
rheumatism and weak kidneys.
“After taking only one bottle of
IROGEN, I found that I had gained five pounds,” he writes enthusias
tically. “All the pains in my back
have gone, I feel strong and fit for
a day’s work every morning, I sleep
well and am always hungry at meal
times. I believe it is the best medicine in the world.” ,
NOT A PATENT MEDICINE IBOGEN is not a patent medicine'.
It contains Food Iron, Nutritious Malt, Valuable digestives and other
famed tonic aids of recognized
medicinal value.
V.’hr.f this powerful reconstructive medicine has done for count’ecs thousands of people everywhere,
scores of whom are .residents of this
vicinity, it is fair to assume it will do for you.IF.OGEN may be obtained in
,either liquid or concentrated tablet
form. At leading druggists and dealers in medicine everywhere, Including
LeGrancTs Pharmacy, Mocksville, N. C.
Cooleemee Drug Store, Cooleem ee,N. C.
NOW ONLY ONE DOLLAR.
W. P. SPEAS, M. D.*^ * »»• »• w* at*. 4.
I Rioom 324 R. J. Reynolds |
$ Building J
I Winston-Salem, N. C. I
I Practice Limited to Disease |
I Of The Eyeand Fitting Glasses %
f Hours 9-12: 2 -5 *■|> s»1* »1» »1» »1« »I" »1« »1« »1« »1» >I< »1« »1« »!■ >>
DR. E. C. CHOATE
DENTIST
Office Second Floor Front
New Sanford Building
Office Phone 110
Residence Phone 30.
Mocksville. N. C
BEST IN RADIOS |
YOUNG RADIO CO. I
MOCKSVILLE. N. C. §
BEST IN SU PPLIES |
... o
DR. R. P. ANDERSON
DENTIST
Office In Anderson Building
Mocksville. N. C.
Phones: Office 51) Residence 37
WANTED!
We want the im
portant news hap
penings from every
section of the coun
ty. Dropus a card
or letter if a new vo
ter arrives at your
home; if your moth
er-in-law comes on
a visit or dies; if the
son or daughter gets
married or anything
worth mentioning.
Old papers for sale.
CAMPBELL - WALKER FUNERAL HOME
Distinctive Funeral Service to Every One
!AM BULANCE - .- - EM B ALM ERS
Main St. Next To Methodist Church
[Day Phone 4803 Night Phone 4811 or 163
zy xoioii maKes
Your Life Miserable
Laugh nt money worries if your colon is free of p.oisonous waste. HeretS Nature’s way to banish sickness.
PLEASE
PAY
******¥****¥**¥*¥*•*¥¥***¥****¥¥¥44¥¥¥¥¥*★*★
I★★★★★★★*it*★*
★★★
*★★
★★
I★*S’* . * . Hr •'*
*
I*★★
NOW!
Yesterday we requested a De
linquent Subscriber to settle his ac
count with us, and he replied:
“I am honest, and I will pay you
if I live. If I die and go to heaven
t
I will send it to you. If I die and
do not go to heaven I will hand it
to you.”
We think most of our Subscrib
ers are honest, but we need money
now to meet obligations. Please
let us hear from you.
THE DAVIE RECORD,
P. S. When your son or
daughter leaves for College
send them The Record. A
special rate to students.
★
★★★ir+irir★
★★★★★★★★*★★★★★★★Ir★★★★irir★★★★★iriririr<+•Z★★★ir
ir$★★★★
ir★tiririr-It
iriririr★★iir’ir
iririririr+■viririr★irir%ir
I
★
Z%ir
ZJ ★ -
*
I
VOLUMX
NEWS
WhTt Was
The Days oil
(Davie Re|
R. E. Be
ed his brotf
week.
The Mocll
has been im|
ly. Miss
telephone c<J
Miss SaJiI
and acccorai
townsman
married TiJ
Prof. R. D.l
Thos. E. [
Ratledge1 d |
ledge were |
Vvilson a t)
ThanksgiviiJ
ptness to tbl
G. C. Patl
ed postiiiastf
Patterson
efficient offiJ
John N ay|
his parents ;
IIoopeT
ready to stal
mill on D |
Jan. ist.
We under!
will soou be|
M. M.
Ky., is at li|
He travels
Co., and sa4
Among tl]
Hotel this i
McCoy and I
Virginia; 1.1
John RamsT
Hautziugerl
T. C. ProctJ
N. C.; C.
A. H. O’I
move here i
go into the j
Ills brother]
They will
coffins, etc. |
Little Chq
mee, who
a steam rocH
Tom Misq
position as i
ford store at]
Pen Conn
is visiting fa
Statemel
0 Manai
The
This statj
year to con
by an act
24 , 1912.
The Da^
weekly at
Editor,
N. C.
Known
and other s|
1 per cent
of bonds, il
curities.
C. F. Str
Sworn tol
me, this 29S
S. M. Cl
My conn
1934-
*
Wcn
Althoughl
due to go in j
in DrcembeiJ
elect of CIe
take charge)
Ivy M. AHeJ
time. In etf
state the shl
first MondaJ
land permit
complete hi]
previous ye
with the cot
sheriff may|
sheet.
:A/i
POSTAL RECEIPTS' SHOW THE RECORD CiRCuLATiON THE LA r g EsT IN THE COUNTY. THEY DON1T LIE.
Z h e R e t o r t .
“HERE SHALL THE PRESS.“THE PEOPLE’S RIGHTS MAINTAIN: UNAWED BY INFLUENCE AND UNBRIBED BY GAIN."
•
VOLUMN X X X IV . M OCKSVILLE. N O RTH CARO LIN A, W EDNESDAY, DECEM BER 1 4. 1932 NUM BER 21
^v;
NEWS OF LONG AGO.
W hlt Wa* Happening In Davie Before
The Day* of Automobile* and Rolled
' Hoie.
(Davie Record, Dec. 17, 1902.),
Last Thursday evening Ri ber-
Jones was shot by Frank Clary,
near Calabaln. The boys had been
drinking and got to fooling with a
gun when it was accidently dis
charged, inflicting a wound which
resulted in Jones dying that night.
Coroner Bailey held an inquest on
the t2 th and Clary was lodged in
jail to await a preliminary hearing
later.
Lawrence Duke, of Cooleemee,
was in town last week on business.
Dr. W. O. Spencer and two sons,
of W inston, spent Thursday night
with his parents, Mr and Mrs. 0.
H . Spencer.
H. L. Austin has been quite ill
for several days but is better.
Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Stallings, of
Wilson, are spending several days
in town.
C. C. Daniel, of Kappa, was in
town last week.
W inter, with bad roads, is upon
us.
J. C. Giles, of Ephesus, left Mon
day for Fries. Va , where he has
gone to accepe a position.
M. A. Foster has opened his new
stoie at N orth Cooleemee.
There will be a Christmas tree at
Liberty Methodist church on Christ
mas flay afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Will Cornell have
moved into their new home near
Eppesus.
• Miss Mollie Gabard, of Nestor, is
visiting relatives at Eppesus.
The sidewalk in front of the chair
factory is in a horrible condition.
Semething should be done.
The floor of the Cooleemee cot
ton bouse gave way last week and
dumped several bales of cotten in
tae water.
There will be a Christmas enter
tainment at the Farmington Metho
dist church on the night of Dec.
2 4 th.
Dr. W. C. Martin has sold his
broomstraw meadow.
Rev. and Mrs. W. L Sherrill left
Monday fot Elkin, where Mr. Sher
rill will perform the ceremony in the
marriage of Mr.-Mason LiIIard to
Miss Cathrine Gwyn. Mr. and Mrs.
Sherrill will return Friday.
Mrs. Agnes McDaniel and Mrs.
Mary Stewart, two widows of Ex-
Confederate soldiers, walked all the
way to Mocksville, about 12 miles,
to see about their pension checks:
The Record and you will know
when the checks arrive.
AU local mail for County Line
will go direct from MooksviIle in
stead of going by way of Statesville,
and will reach there much earlier.
That Durned Rabbit
Law.
I was talking with some fellows
f om the rural districts and one said
it will soon be time for Beasley to
go to the legislature and I want him
to enact some sure enongh laws.
W epeopte in the country are durn-
ed tired of having to buy licenses to
hunt onr own rabbits and possums.
If a man has 10 boys if I understand
it right, he would have to buy 10
licenses before they could go rabbit
hunting.—T. B. Lauey, Monroe
Journal.
Corner Turned At
Lenoir.
W hen you see, as I did Saturday
an ifl-year-old factory hand buy a
carton of cigarettes and take the
change from a $ 1 0 bill, you can
-just stop worrying and /reading
about canditions and go ahead and
and buy that furniture or suit of
clother for she has not only turned
the corner but she is here —Zeke,
News-Topic.
No Wander New York
Went Democratic.
There is no surprise or wander
that New York City went so heav
ily Democratic in the recent elec
tion when one sees the high baud
ed mariner in which Tammany
Hall conducted elections.
Satuiday the federal government
sifting election fraud charges call
ed on the clerk of the board of e-
lectious for the production of vot
ing machines from several New
York. City districts.
One of the districts was the one
in which W alter S. Mack, Jr., ran
for the state senate on the Repub
lican tieket, and after a conference
with federal prosecutors Mack is
sued a statement. He said much
of the evidence on which the gov
ernment is now working was the'
result of his own investigation and
of affidavits which he had subm itt
ed.
Information contained in the af
fidavits showed a picture of "al
most Incredible crrruption and dis
honesty.” Mack said, quoting one
man as saying he saw 14 men en
ter a polliug place "throw out the
watchers, after which each man
went into the booth, started to vote
and continued voting for about 10
m inutes.”
Mack said an inspector in one
district reported 6 0 0 votes cast in
the machine and only 170 signatur
es in the registration book.
S. Howard Cohen, another Tam-
manvite and president of the New
York City board of election has
been sentenced to 3 0 days in the
federal house of detention for re
fusing to produce records of the
general election for review by a
fed e r a I • grand jury. Evidently
there is as much rottenness in the
elections in New York as there is
in North Carolina and other Demo
cratic states.
Tbinks Saloon No
Worse Than Liquor.
Rocky M ount,—Dr. A. J. Barton
Baptist minister of W ilmington and
nationally known dry leader, said
today he was quoted not much
coucerned whether the saloon comes
back “ if the liquor traffic comes
back” as he would "prefer the sal
oon to having the government en
gaged in the Iiquoij traffic.”
His statement was made before
the North Carolina conference of
the Methodist Episcopal Church,
South, shortly before the conference
began consideration of the report ot
its committee on temperance and
social service.
It is one of the Alm ighty’s rarest
blesssings that 9 0 percent of the
henpecked men never find it out.
PRETTY
fe DOLLS GI V-
EN AWAY.
The Record has a
limited supply of pret
ty 17-inch dolls that
we are going to give
to our subscribers free
of charge.
AiI old or new sub
scribers who pay $1
or more on subscrip
tion between now and
Dec. 24th, will be giv
en one of these pretty
dolls free. Bring or
send us your subscrip
tion today. Stf
Cost $1,000,000 Week
To Run The State.
Poiuting out that the cost of gov
ernment in North Carolina is now
slightly more than $1,0 0 0 ,0 0 0 a
week or $5 3,3 0 0 ,0 0 0 for all purpos
es for the fiscal year ending June
3 0. 1 9 3 2, an editorial in the Novem
ber issue of The Carolina-Virginia
Retailer, official organ of the North
Corolina Merchants Association,
cries out “ when will this thing
stop?”
An editoral in the same issue re
fers to the agitation in some quar
ters for a 2 per cent gross sales tax
in order to raise $10,0 0 0 ,0 0 0 more
for State purposes as “ government
al confiscation ”
These two editorials, written by
Willard L- Dowell, editor of the
publication and secretary of the
North Carolina Merchanta Assoc
iation, are regarded as the opening
guns of the Associations’ campaign
for a reduction in the cost of the
State government and against the
imposition of any new'taxes, espec
ially of a general sales tax. It has
been indicated for some time that
the mei chants of the State would
not only oppose any form of a sales
tax, as they did in the 1331 General
Assembly, bnt that they also would
try to get a reduction in present
taxes by favoring a cut in the cost
of the State government.
The editorial pointing out that
the cost of government in North
Carolina is now about $1,0 0 0 ,0 0 0 a
week, says:
“ Thirty years ago the total cost
of operating the government of the
State of North Carolina was $1,-
8 6 3 .8 4 9 , while for the fiscal year
ending June 3 0, 1932, this figure
had increased to .5 3,3 0 0,0 0 0. In
other words, for every day in the
year, including Sundays and holi
days, the State government spends
$146,428 57 or a total of $1,0 2 5 ,0 0 0
every week.
“ Thirty years ago tne total State
debt was $6 ,5 2 7 ,0 0 0 and this year
it is $ 1 8 9 4 3 7 ,3 4 2 , which represents
a per capita debt of approximately
$60 for every man, woman and
child in the state.
“ Wlieu will this thing stop?
" It will not stop uotil the people
of North Carolina unmistakably im
press upon their legislators aud
those having charge of State affairs
that the limit has been reached—
yea, far exceeded—and that they
will not'stand for any additional
taxes.
“It will stop when the people de
mand the elimination of every non-
essential service of the government
and wnen the people themselves are
willing to give up ‘government de
luxe’ with all of its atteudant frills
and fancies ”
In the editorial dealing with the
proposed 2 per cent gross sales tax
entitled “ Governmental Confisca
tion,” Mr. Dowell says:
“ Practically every man elected to
the next Legislature is committed
to the removal of the 15 cent ad
valorem tax for the support of the
six months school term. If this
tax is removed, the State will have
to raise #4 ,0 0 0 ,0 0 0 of additional re
venue to replace it.
"Practically every man elected
to the next Legislature is commit
ted to the principle of balancing
the budget by legislative enactment,
and since the State is now running
an annual deficit of approximately
$6,0 0 0,0 0 0, additional revenue to
that amount must be provided.
“ Ten million dollars of new
monev. W here will.it come from?
“ Many men are saying the only
way to meet this fiscal emergency
is to levy a gross sales tax of 1 per
cent or 2 per cent upon everything
that retail merchauts sell. Thesej
advocates of this species of taxa- j
tion do not seem to realize that
what people want aud must have is '
How The Democrats
Carried Randolph.
William Cicero Hammer, the big
Democratic boss of Randolph coun
ty has been dead more than two
years but his spirit goes marching
no aud his mantle has evidently
failed on the shoulders of Ttemo
cratic adepts in holding the elec
tions in Randolph county.
■ The Randolph Tribune says that
in the November election the De
mocrats voted 91 absentee votes in
the South W ard at Asheboro. while
the Republicans presented 11 ab-
sentae ballots only one of which
was allowed to be voted. About'None-half of the 91 votes cast by the
Democrats were chaneged by the
Republicans because, some of them
were non-residents, some of them
were not on the registration books,
some of the certificates were impro
perly filled out, while some of the
ballots were not signed on the back,
and various other causes, but these
challenges amounted to nothing be
cause the ballots were very readily
put into the box. • The 11 absentee
ballots presented by the Republi
cans were all challenged, and all
except one was kept out of the box.
Oue of the grossest irregularities
was the voting of Mrs. M. E.
Chandler who was voted an absen
tee ticket in the South W ard, but
during the day went to the polls in
Ramseur where she has been living
for the past three years and voted
in person. Mrs. Chandler voted
the Republican ticket in Ramsuer
but w;as voted a Democratic ticket
In the South Ward.
The Tribune publishes a list of
names of the 91 absentee voters in
the Asheboto South W ard and it
should be an easy matter for offi
cials if they-have any respect for
decency in elections to check up
this list and find oat who isrespon-
sible for this alleged illegal voting.
Certainly some one is responsible
for voting the name of the Repu
blican Ramseur woman a Demo
cratic ballot in Asheboro when the
woman in question voted in person
at Ratnsuer.—Union Republican.
Weather Has Helped
Autumn rains have come to the
rescue of the stretch of Highway
90 between Fork and Mocksville,
it appears, the crushed stone there
has became packed bv traffic months
earlier than was iridicted by mid
summer conditions The stale
highway commission last week an
nounced this section was "closed
t mporarily and established a ce*
tour, which is taken here to mean
that the traffic-bound macadam sur-
f tcing process is now to be finished.
Completion of Highwav 9 0 has
s >. often been anticipated that it
would perhaps be best to hold the
shouting until the detour signs are
down again and completed need is
actually in use. However, the pro
bable early completion is welcomed
as it will unquestionably result in
some relief to the traffic congested
stretch of No. 10 between Lexing
ton and the river, which besides its
importance as a traffic artery per
haps also bears the distinction of
being the worst located and worst
constructed stretch of principal
highway in the state!—Lexington
Dispatch.
a reduction in taxes, not more taxes
and that any sales tax adds to the
the total tax burden
“The people of North Carolina
are unable to pav the taxes which
are now assembled against them
. . . Economic conditions cannot
improve until there is a reduction
in the cost of government Instead
of levying $10.0 0 0”,poo in addition--
al State taxes, the State should re
duce the present tax load/by at
least that amount . . . Ten million
dollars of added taxes upon the
people of North Carolina at this
time would be governmental con
fiscation.”
Charley Ross Mystery
RevivetL by- Death.
New York.—The Charley Ross
case, a kidnaping mystery in the
death from hunger of a derelict of
the city streets.
Perhaps, like countless others
before it, the new clue to the solu
tion of one. of the most baffling
crimes of American history, may
lead nowhere. Scores of persons
in the years since four-year-old
Charley Ross was abducted from
in front of his Germanton, Pa.,
home have claimed to know bis
whereabouts, but all have failed in
proof.
Mrs. Emma KIeinertz1 of Cats-
kill, N. Y., believes she has evi
dence that the Bowery derelict.
William Bronson, of uAose death
from malnutrition she read recent
ly in a New York paper, was really
Charley Ross. Detectives were in
Catskill yesterday questioning her.
Officers at the missing persons
bureau were skeptical wheu they
received a letter from Mrs. Klein-
hertz identifying Bronson and Ross
had been triends all their Jives. He
was a small boy when she met him,
and he told her he was the Ross
boy. She said he gave her papers
in substantiation of what he said,
and made her promise she would
not disclose their contents until he
died These papers, still in her
possession, were to be shown to
detectives.
Chariey Ross was four years old
when he was kidnapped 58 years
ago. Branson’s age on the death
certificate is 6 2 . H e had no re
latives liviug.
There was only one mark of iden
tification on the,Ross boy—a vac
cination scar. A similar scar was
the only mark found on the body
of Bronson.
The promise of fireworks was the
lure used by two men who coaxed
the 4 -year-old child into their horse-
drawn vehicle the afternon of July
t, 1874. His brother, W alter, six,
was kidnaped at the same time,
but was found crying on a Phila
delphia street corner, eight miles a-
way, several hours later.
On December 18 of the same
years two men were shot and killed
during a robbery. W ith his dying
breath one of them gasped: “My
name’s Joe Douglas. W ith tae is
William Mosher. We stole Char
ley Ross. I don’t know where the
kid is.”
The bodies of the men were iden-
iifiedlater by W alter Ross as those
of the kidnapers.
A fortune was spent in the hunt
for the boy. One trial led to Al
bany and the territory near Catskill.
which was a circumstance that
prompted New York police to check
the new clue.
Mistakes.
W hen a garage man makes a
mistake be adds it on vour bill.
When a carpenter makes a mis
take it’s just what he expected.
W henapreacher makes a mis
take nobody knows the difference.
W hen a lawyer makee a mistake
it was just what he wanted, because
he has a chance to try the case all
over again.
W hen a judge makes a m istake it
becomes the law of the land.
W hen'a doctor makes a mistake
he buties it.
~But when the editor makes a
mistake—Good Night!
91-Year Old Cotton
Picker.
Miss Zilphia Howell, living near
Goldsboro, though 91 years old, has
this season picked 1 ,1 0 0 pounds of
cotton. She thinks little of walk
ing two or three miles to visit neigh
bors and friends, when -she is pot
picking cotton.
Charges Others Than
Needy Are Getting Red
Cross Supplies.
Far be it from me to wish to inter
fere with the distrribution of Red
Cross supplies to a single person who
needs it, and I may be totolly mis
taken about conditions, but I have
wondered why, during w hat is called
hard tim es, and when the U nited
States is supposed to have a deficit
of a billion dollars each year, the
governm ent would undertake tosup-
port so many people in a style to
Wnich they have never been,- ac
customed.
W e read of people who are des
perately hungry, of millions of un
employed, of those who com m it sui
cide because they connot feed their
families, of children who faint from
hunger a t school, I am probably not
inform ed upon the subjett, but I had
thought the Red Cross flour and cloth
was for such as these; and not for the
m oderately well-to-do farm ers who
own their own hames. have raised
bountiful crops. These rather sub
stantial farm ers often, it is true have
diffichlty in finding cash to pay their
taxes. It would seem th at the gov
ernm ent could benefit such fam ilies
m ore by m aking it so they could keep
their homes than by doling out to
them groceries of which they already
have a superfluity.
Y et, to the casual observe, it ap
pears th at the m ajority of the people
who are obtaining help are such fair
ly well-to-do families, th at many
families who are suffering do not
obtain help, and that those who se
cure flour and cloth get at least tw ice
as much as necessary and w arte it.
According to, announcem ents in the
paoers. certaip restrictions w ere to
be observed in distributing the flour
and cloth. Y etitisg iv en to fam ilies
who have bountiful crops, who either
have regular jobs or regulrr work
on the farm and parttim e jobs; who
own cars, buy snufi, tobacco, candy,
chewing gum , peanuts. Coca- Cola,
and attend the picture show.
I have oeen told th at flour was. dis
tributed to a woman who had 56
bushels of w heat threshed and had
$300 cash on hand, as well as money
in the bank. Three or four have
brought it to our observation th at
in some cases, where the head of the
family is m aking $3 a day, and the
w heat crop is large, that family; ob
tained 50 pounds of flour each week.
In another fam ily/w here, according
to their own story, at least four or
five of the chilnren are earning an
aggregate of $400 or $500 a m onth
and helping the homefolks substant
ially and tne homefolks make adequ
ate crops on their own farm and a
rented farm , flour and cloth have
been obtoieed.
It is not, in my opinion, any con
scious dishonesty on the p art of the
people which makes many seek help
when they are already com fortably
fixed. On the contrary, these fam
ilies—good, deserving, but not really
needy—think, rightly or wrongly,
th at there is a vast surplus of the
supplies and that everyone who can
use any of them is entitled to his
share. They say, “ There is lots of
stuff to give away, and we had ju st
as well nave some as everybody else.”
I fear that it is a doctrine of “ Chacun
poursoi” (everybody for him self),
and that many of those who apply
for aid thev could well do w jthout
are too thoughtless.of the fam ishing
hordes.
To distribute aid to everybody who
needs it and to nobody who .does not
need it is. obviously, too stupendous
a task for anyone to perform , A
survey would probably reveal little;
city w elfare Workers and anyone not
on the inside by the seem ing poverty
of the plain farm xPeopIe who never
knew luxury, but who never cam e
within ten thousand miles of starv
ation An investigation m ight -rev-
eal tn at no aid has been distributed
amiss. In my opinion, if the real
truth could be arrived a t .' it would
reveal th at seldom dad there been
quite such a hoax—innocently per
petrated, perhaps—and tg a t few
iks had been so bungled as the dis
tribution of aid for the distressed.—
RUTH LINNEY1 W inston Journal.
THE DAVlE RECORD, MOCKSVlLtE, N. C. DfictiMBgfi 14, -93*
THE DAVIE record .
t. FRANK STROUD - • Editor.
Member National Farm Grange.
TELEPHONE I.
Entered at the Postolfice in Mocks-
ville, N. C.. as Second-class Mail
m atter. March 3.1903.
can’t face our creditors and enjoy
the holidays.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
ONE.YEAR. IN ADVANCE - $ I OO
SIX MONTHS. IN ADVANCE - J 50
We wonder just how dry Senator
Josigh Bailey feels sitting on the
lap of Bobbie?
Now is the time for everybody to
quit yelling hard times and go to
talking prosperity.
W hen the Congressof the United
States opened last week it sounded
more like a howling mob than it
did a body of serious thinking law
makers.
It is dangerous to travel the high
ways in automobiles these days. It
is also dangerous to walk or drive
horses and wagons on the highways.
We may all have to take to the air
in self-defense
The Christmas holidays are dam
pened by the fact that new apto
tags must be purchased during the
holiday season or the old car park
ed iu the barn or garage. Us fellows
who haven’t $ 12 50 are liable to do
some walking after new year’s.-
John Nance Garner, speaker of
the House, and Vice President elect,
seems to have been sadly disap
pointed last week w hen, the Con
gress failed to give a two-thir<l vote
for the repeal of the I Sth Amend
ment. John seems to be as wet or
even wetter than Senator Bob Rey
nolds.
rations or cash. W hich goes to
show that history often repeats it
self.
Christmas presents, such as
checks, turkeys, persimmon pud
ding, locust beer, crates of oranges,
grape fruit, tangarines, pumpkins,
etc., will be gladly accepted by ye
editor. No cigarettes, cigars, beer
or corn liquor will be accepted. A
word to the wise should be suffi
The North Caroliua legislature
will be expected to repeal the T u r
lington dry law. The democrats
voted for more liquor and better
liquor, wine and beer, so the only
thing to do is give them what they
voted for.
When North Carolina had .thoiis
ands of whisky distilleries a,tid bar
rooms galore, there were'also hun
dreds ol b ockaders and bootleggers.
Snch will be the case when the sal
oons and the distilleries are brought
back.
The editor has been invited to
attend a big dinner at Raleigh Fri
day. The Governor and tnanv
other notables will be present.- and
a sumptuous feast will be spread
befoie the hungry editors. If we
had enough money to get to Ral
eigh. and back we could buy enough
rations with it to last us until after
Christmas.
It is' only ten davs until Christ- j
JtVas. If our friends means to help I
us to enjoy this glad season they ]
will have to get busy and mail us
their subscription or renewals. We
Just about forty years ago Coxev
marched to W ashington with an
army of unemployed men who were
demanding bread. Gro"er Cleve
land was president at that time.
Coxev and his bovs didn’t get the
bread, but if our memory doesn’t
fail us, they were jailed for tram p
ing on the grass around the capitol.
Last week another hungry crowd
marched on Washington with H er
bert Hoover filling the presidential
chair. The boys were not put in
jail, and left without getting any
In the death of Charles A. Cle
ment, early last week the town of
Mocksville and the county as a
whole, loses one of its best known
citizens—a man who had been in
public life for more than half a cen
tury. We presume that Mr. Cle
ment knew as many or more men,
women and children iu the county
than any other one citizen. For
nearly sixty years he was a sales
man for C. C Saniord and C. C.
: Sanford Sons Co. He lived to seeI
the town and county make wonder
ful strides along all lines. Many
changes took place during all these
years but Charlie Clement remain
ed, the sajne clever, efficient sales
man to the last. Hundreds of peo
ple always called for him when they
went shopping at Sanford's. He
took snecial delight in waiting on
his farmer friends. He knew them
all and they all knew him. His
death has removed a landmark from
this community. He will be miss
ed as much or possibly more than
any one man in town. His life was
spared not only three score and ten
years, hut 13 years were added. We
will miss ‘ Mr. Charlie” as he bad
been called by us for more than 50
years. Peace to his ashes.
Concord News.
Rev. J. 0. Banks filled his regular ap
pointment here Sunday at 10:00 A. M.
Every second Sunday services wifi he at
IOoclock and Sunday School at 11:00.
Mr. and Mr?. Arthur Baker of Route 2
spentSundav with the letters parents. Mr.
and Mrs H. M. Deadman.
Miss Ruth Hodges a member of the
Woodleaf factItv spent the week end with
her parents, Prof. and Mrs. J. D Hodges.
There will be a cake, pie and box sup
per Saturday night. D*c. 17th,at'the home
of Mr. S. D. Daniel. Proceeds go for the
Christmas tree Everybody is invited.
NOTICE!
I have been notified from the de
partment of Conservation and Devel
opment, that they will nbt be any
bounty on Hawks and Crows this I
season A. E. HENDRIX,
Game Warden.
THE MORRISETT CO’S.
“LIVE WIRE STORE”
Winston-Salem, N. C.
PROSPERITY SALE
PROSPERITY--PROSPERITY
IS COMING AGAIN
MORRISETT’S PROSPERITY SALE—JUST WHAT
WINSTON-SALEM NEEDS » '
Holiday Specials
I
Pure Linen Handkerchiefs. Ladies •
Pure Linen Handkerchiefs, Ladies
PureLinen Handkerchiefs. Men’s '
Pure Linen Handkerchiefs, Men’s
AU Linen Napkins
AU Linen Napkins
AU Linen Napkins
Special Dinner Napkins, all Linen, doz.
Special Dinner Napkins, all Linen, doz.
72 inch Pure Linen Table Cloth
72-inch Nabasco Finish
72-inch Beautiful Mercerized
58-inch Mercerized Specials
Linen Table Cloths, asst, sizes
Embroidered 5 piece Sets
Bridgeand Breakfast Sets
Pure Linen Pillow Cases, pr.
Embroidered Pillow Cases, pr.
Bed Sets Sheet and Pillow Cases
One More Case Outing 1
5,000 Yards Druid Domestic
Small Quantity of Long Cloth
05c
IOc
15C
25c
05c
18c
25c
$1.49
$2.98
98c
69c
59c
39c—49c
98c. $1.49, $1 98
49c. 79c. 98c
49c—98c
98c
75c
98c, $1.49
05c
05c
05e
BLANKErS LARGE SIZE PART WOOL
Blankets, singles, part wool' 69c
Blankets, singles, cotton 39e
Extra Special Double, cotton 98c
Baby Blankets 39e, 49c, 69c
B aty Shawls 49c
81x90 Colored Bed Spreads 49c
8ixl05 Colored Bed Spreads 98c
81x105 Colored Bed Spreads $1 69
LACE CURTAIN SPECIALS
Marquisette Panels. Fringed 25c
Marquisette Pairs, hemmed 49c
Lace Pairs, hemmed 79c
Beautiful(Quility Marquisette 10c, 15c, 18c
Colored Dot M arquisette 15c
Beautiful Drapes 25c. 49c, 69c. 98c
KID GLOVES—GREAT VALUES
Solid Colors and Combinations 98c, $1 49, $1.98
Job Lot Fabric Gloves 19c
Job Lot Fabric Gloves 39c
s l m a s P r e s e n t s
t o B t m
Santa Claus Is Dispensing Many Gifts Through
C.C.
dl Gifts of every description for your family and friends. They are going to make a lot of smiles this Christmas
Prices? Lower than ever. Reckon you folks aint got the money to spend you used to have, but then—that’s not
I* say in’ you can’t do any Christmas Gift buying. There is something to fit every purse at C. C. Sanford Sons Co.
S SHO P NOW!
Si
Jj And here—folks—is unloadin’ a lot of Gift Suggestions. Reckon a lot of these will answer your “What to Give”
It questions.
S4* , c r.™ .„,™ „ GIFTS FQR „HIM„, GIFTS FOR “HER”
Costume Jewelry
Silk Hose
Gloves
Lingerie
Hand Bags
Handkerchiefs
Week-End Bags
Umbrellas
Scarfs
Living Room Suites
Electric Toasters
Electric Percolators
Electric Irons
Cloves
Ties
Shirts
Bath Rnhes
Handkerchiefs
Pajamas
Shaving Sets
Fountain Pens
Bill Folkers
GIFTS FOR “CHILDREN”
Tricycles
Wagons.
Scooters
Raincoats.
Boots
Handkerchiefs
Skates
. Pocket Knives
Rockers
GIFTS FOR THE “HOME”
Card Tables
Radios •-•
Rugs
Electric Sweepers
Eureka, Special For Christmas
Biidge Lamps
Dining Room Suites
Bedspreans
Cedar Chests
» 6 95 and $19.95
Bed Room Suites
Blankets
Card Tables
End Tables
We Are Headquarters for Christmas Candies, Nuts, Raisins, Oranges, Apples and Fruit Cake in
gredients
W
m
n
I im
Ii
I i$
w
m$
Ii
Ii
i
H
III$
Ii
Ii
Ii
w
¥I
Ii
¥
¥
I I
II
M
U
THE Dj
L arg est C
D avie Ct
LOCAL Al
' Ed Hobsi
town a day
business.
J. N. Smd
in town IastJ
skin.
Christmas]
per lb. J|
Hon. Chd
esboro, w as|
last week.
John Becl
town last wi
ant call.
Attorney
Salisbury, u|
last week.
Attorney
Greensboro,
ness last we
Wiliie W.
R. 2 , was in
gave us a pi
C. T. W.
ledge, of W'
visitors here
Mr. and J
little son, of
in town sho]
Mrs. T. I
in town last
office a plea:
C. F. Wai
Sm ith Grov
and left frog
G. Talber
of Advance,
and left frog
Form er slj
has moved I
ner house in
Mr. and i
Calahaln, arl
a fine io pou
at their hom |
ing
Hk
II
I I
« 1
« 1
a
¥
m
m
I i
Ul
The G
of Mo
big toy
“DO
Best A
cheape
10c, I
E3
Beauti
mama
« Nicel
Mai
in oi
Manicil
Hosier
BeantiI
cosmel
Scorl
in oi
Dear
are Io
HARF
[AT
Io o l
/ill!I 69c
I 39cI 9Sc
!;■19c, 69c
I 49cI 49eI 98c.’■j-I SI 69
■3 J
I 3oc
I 49c
?j§§I ^9ciWSiBloc, ISc
I toc
- H JS ■69c. 98c
'shm a
§9, §1.98
.,.liSJH - H I 19cI 39c
5 « « «
¥
Ls
Inot
Io .
I v e
>>
¥¥
¥
¥
¥
M
¥¥
¥
¥
¥¥¥¥
¥
¥
¥¥¥
¥¥
¥
¥
¥¥
¥
¥
¥¥¥
¥
¥¥¥
¥¥
¥
¥
I
¥¥¥
¥
¥¥¥¥
¥¥¥
u
¥
I
I
&
I
I
i
THE DAVlE RECORD, MOCKSVlLtE, N. C. DitctMBER 14;
THE DAVIE RECORD.
Largest Circulation of Any
Davie County Newspaper.
LOCAL AND PERSONAL NEWS.
Ed Hobson, of Salisbury, was in
town a day or two last week on
business.
I. N. Smoot, of Clarksville, was
in town last week and Ipft as a frog
skin.
Christmas Cookies for Sale 6oc
per lb. MRS, E. H . MORRIS
lion. Chas. H. Cowles, of Wilk-
esboro, was in town a short while
last week.
John Beck, of Calahaln, was in
town last week and gave us a pleas
ant call.
Attorney Hayden Clement, of
Salisbury, was attending cour* here
last week.
Attorney H . R. Stanley, of
Greensboro, was in town on busi
ness last week.
Wiliie W. Smith, of Harmony.
R. 2 , was in town W ednesday and
gave us a pleasant call
C. T. W. Smith and George Rat-
ledge, of Woodleaf, were business
visitors here Thursday
Mr. and Mrs. R C. Foster, and
little son, of Iredell county, were
in town shopping Wednesday.
Mrs. T. L. Eaton, of Cana, was
in town last week and made our
office a pleasant call.
C. F. Ward and J. W. Sbeek, of
Smith Grove were in town last week
and left frog skins with us.
G. Talbert and C. E. Faircloth 1
of Advance, were in town last week
and left frog skins with us.
Former sheriff F. G. McSwain
has moved from the jail to the Cart-
ner bouse in North Hocksville.
Mr. and Mrs. William Powell, of
Calahaln, are the proud parents of
a fine to pound son which arrived
at their home last Wednesday morn
ing
Mr. and Mrs. M. R. Bailey, of
Elkin, attended the funeral of Mrs.
M. B. Bailey, at Salem church
Thursday.
Mr. anti Mrs. Robert Foster, of
near Augusta, annnounce the ar
rival of a fine son on Wednesday,
Dec. 7 th.
G. W-. Smith, of Redland, and J.'
M. W hitaker, of Calahaln, were a-
tnong those who called at our office
last week and left life preservers.
M. P. Adams, who dwells in the
classic shades, of South Calahaln,
was a welcome visitor at oursauctum
one day last week.
L. B. W alker, of Roanoke, Va.,
spent several days last week with
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. S.
W alker, near Kappa.
J. W . Felker, of Kappa, and R.
S. Anderson, of Calahaln, were a-
mong those who called and made
us happy last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. H. Gladish,
of Higginsville, Mo., were the
guests of Mr. and Mrs. John Green
several days last week.
C. W. Dull, of Clarksville and L.
L. West, of Redland, were among
those who attended court here last
week and left frog skins with us.
B. D. Howell, of Farmington,
and Oliver Myers, of Advance, R.
1. were in town last week and call
ed to see us. Thanks, gentlemen.
There will be a meeting of the
Kappa News.N. C. Dems. Vote Wet.
Mr. and Mrs. J C. Jones and babe spent W ashington. Dec. 5.—The drys
the week end v.si.ina relaiives in Well. ha]ted the onrush of 0pponepts of
M* Httd Mrs. C. C. Smoot and daughter . . r - . .. , , .
Miss Msry Ellen, and F. F. Walker spent Prohlbltlon ln the house thts
Sunday with Mrs. Florence Smoot.
Mr. and Mrs. June Saifret visited Mr?.
Florence Smoot Sunday afternoon.
Dr. J. W. Foster, of Chicago spent a few
days last week with his parents, Mr. end
Mrs. B. J. Foster.
Theladiesof the community met at the
borne of Mrs. 6 . A Koontz Friday afternoon
and presented her daughter. Mrs. William
Green, a number of useful and attractive
house hold gifts.
MesdamesNolaFosterand Mary Towell
and Reid Towell visited Mrs. Mary Lowery
who is quite ill at the Lowery Hospitall
Friday.
Miss Lucile Koontz and Mr. Foster Thorn
were quietly married Saturday afternoon
at the home of the brides pastor Mr J. 0.
Banks, at Mocksville. MrsThorn is the
attractive daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. E.
Koontz They will make theit home for
a while with the grooms parents. Mr. and
Mrs. Charlie Thorn. We wish them much
joy and happiness through life.
Center News.
C. A. McAllister is visiting his brother
in Virginia.
Mrs. J. H. B. Dwiggins is On the sick
list, sorry to note.
E. E. Phelps of Winston Salem spent
Sunday with B P. Garrett and family.
Mrs. Mollie Tutierow. aged and respected
lady of this community was buried at
Center Monday afternoon. She had been
in ill health for some time and her death
was not unexpected. She has made her
home for many vears with her son John.
She is survived by three sons. T. W. and
John of this community and James of
Salisbury besides a host of friends who
A m erican Legion at the court house will mourn her going. She was about 94
on Friday night, Dec. 16th. All
Legionairs are urged to be present.
Mrs. J. B. W hitley, who has
been spending some time here with'
Mr. and Mrs. R. L. W alker, re
turned to her home at Statesville
hursday.*Rev. R. L. Shoaf, Civil W ar
Veteran and Baptist minister, died
suddenly at his home at Chilhowie,
Va., Thursday night. Funeral and
burial services took place in that
city Saturday. Rev. Mr. Shoaf was be is cordially
at one time a citizen of Davie conn
ty, but left here many years ago.
He was an uncle of our townsman,
W. F. Martin.
— ——— / s .
years ot age.
B. F. Tutterow who has been confined
for about two weeks with blood poison is
able to be out again, glad to note.
Mr. anJ Mrs. Raymond Tuttefow. Ev-
erette and Gra Mae Tutterow of Greensboro
are visiting T. W. Tutterow and family.
Mrs. J. E. Tutterow is very ill at this
writing. Her many friends wish for her
a speedy recovery.
opponepts
fter
noon, rejecting the Garner resolut
ion for outright repeal of the 18th
amendment, all this soon after the
Congress assembled for th short
session.
The resolution failed of adoption
when the vote in favor of it, 271 to
144, fell short of the two-thirds ma-
joiity necessary.
The entire North Caroliua dem
ocratic delegation, with the except
ion of Congressman Abernethy, who
was ill, voted wet:
Card of Thanks.
We wish to thank all of ottr
friends and neighbors for their
many acts of kindness shown us
since our great bereavement in the
loss of our wife and mother. May
God bless each aud every one of
you, is our prayer.
M. B. BAILEY-AND CHILDREN
SEMI-PASTE PAINT
One Gallon Makes 2 1-2 When Mixed
K U RFEES & WARD
BARGAINS!
SPECIALS THIS WEEK.
There will be a box supper at
the Jerusalem Club House T hurs
day evening, Dec. 15th, beginning
at 7 o’clock. Proceedsw illgo to
ward a Christmas tree. The pub-
invited.
• FOR SA LE- German police dog,
7 months old. A bargaio to quick
buyer. B. F. HOLTON,
Mocksville, R. 2 .
4H
« 1
I¥
M¥
UNITED VARIETY STOREi
ANNOUNCES
The Greatest Sensation In Low Priced Toys ever presented in the History
of Mocksville. Toys for every boy and girl in Davie county. Little toys,
DOLLS-DOLLS
Best Assortment of Dolls at
cheapest prices in 1 0 years
10c, 20c, 25c, 48c to 98c
EXTA SPECIAL
Beautiful large size life like
dolls ’ $2.25mama
WE FEATURE
^ big toys, all kinds, shapes and sizes to suit .the pockket-book of everybody-
A B C blocks, toy guns,
airplanes, drtims, autos,
trains, balls, horns, gam
es, harps, books, stoves,
puzzles, drawing sets, tea
sets, marbles, toy clowns
and many other
110 square feet of
space loaded with
table
Toys
not over IOc each. This re
markable IOc table offers
every opportunity to make
your little ones happy on
Christmas morning.
Salts
1 Ib Lard
2 Ib Lard
3 Ib Lard
4 Ib Lard
8 Ib Lard
Plenty Caiidy
Plenty Nuts
Raisins
Oranges, doz.
89c
8 c
15c
J 2 2 c
28c
55c
IOc and up
15.c
IOc
IOc and up
Mrs. Bailey Dies Sud
denly.
Mrs. M. B. Bailey, 6 8 , died sud
denly at her home near River Hill,
Iredell county, about four o’clock
Only Few Cases Tried.
The December term of Davie Superior
ciurt adjourned Wednesday afternoon.
Judge John H. Clement, of Winston-Salem,
was the presiding judge. Only a few civil
cases were disposed of as follows:
Josephine Gregory vs William Gregory
last Tuesday eveniug, death result-.Divorce. Verdict for plaintiff,
ing from heart trouble. Mrs. Baileyj L. E. Burton, Adm'r vs M. M. Anderson,
was sewing when the summons Verdictforpiaintifr..
came. H er husband was in the I w- W- Sowers vs C. G. Call. Petition
room with her when she fell from j“d^c"CD,\- I Fred Dillard and wife vs A. P. Co*,
her chair, death being instantan-, Fraud. Verdict for plaintiff.
eous. Mrs. Bailey is survived by j G. G. Walker Motor Co. vs D. D. Penry
her husband, M. B. Bailey, one1 Money demand. Verdict for plaintiff,
sister, Mrs. R. M. Ijam es1 of this- S. E. MassengaleCo. vs Dr.G.G.Greene
city, and three brothers. A. A: Cart- ju d ^ e" 1 for Plaintiffby consent.L. E. Burton et al Admr s vs S. B. Gar,
ner, of Iredell county, P. -M. and wood and F. E. Wi.liams. Judgment for
plaintiff by consent.
Helen S. Hobson vs J. W. Broadway and
J. C. Charles, surety. Judgment for plain-
James Cartuer, of near Davie Aca
demy. Funeral services were held
at Salem Methodist church Thurs
day afternoon, conducted by her
pastor, Rev. J. O. Bauks, of this
city, and the body was laid to rest
in the church graveyard. Among
the out-of-the county relatives at
tending the funeral were Robert and
Marsh Bailey, of Folsom, Pa.,'M r.
and Mrs. John Bailey and Will
Bailey, add Miss Mary Bailey, of
Winston-Salem, step children of
Mis. Bailey. The death of this
good woman has brought sadness
to the hearts of hundreds of her
friends in Davie and Iredell county.
The bereaved husband, sister and
brothers, have the sym pathy of a
host of friends.
tiff
Fannie Sheek.
There will be a Christmas Pro
gram given at Advance M. E. Chur
ch next Sunday night December 18.
for the young people of Shady
Grove township. Eveyone is cord
ially invited to be present. Begin
ning at 6 :3 0.
Land posters for sale.
Fannie Louise Sheek. 8 -year-old
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. ‘J L-
Sheek, of Winston-Salem, passed
away at a local hospital at 1:40
o’clock Thursday morning. She
had been seriously ill nine weeks.
- Fannie was born in Davie county,
October 2 7 , 1924. and had lived in
Winston Salem four years.
Survivors include the parents;
two brothers. Stephen and John
Kenneth Sheek; a sister, Erma
Gene Sheek; grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. W. R.. Sheek and Mrs. J. S.
Beauchamp, of Davie county.
Funeral was conducted at 1:30
oh ock Friday afternoon at the
home and at 3 o'clock at Macedonia
church, by Rev James E Hall and
Rev. C. O. Weber. Intel ment fol
lowed in the church graveyard.
Miss Anne P. Grant has a hand
kerchief sale on this week and next
some beautiful patterns both ladies
and gents at reasonable prices also
all my felt hats reduced UTone half.
Apples 25c per peck and up
«4
n
n
m 4' ¥ ¥ ¥ h
fit
4H
¥
¥ H
¥
4
5
11 NiceToysCan AllBeFound On Our IOc and 25cTables
I ALargeAssortment of Cliristmas Candies Now on Sale J
«5
Sugar 5 Ih
Sugar 10 Ib
Sugar 25 lb,
Sugar IOO Ib
Trace Chains
Heaviest Hames
Shoveb
23c
45c
$1.13
$4.35
59c I
$1.25*
69c and up’
Do Your
Christmas Shopping
A t
MARTIN BROTHERS
I
¥
¥K
«44
«4
II.¥
¥¥4¥
Many Beautiful Gifts for grown-ups are now on display
in our store. Let us help you decide.
FOR LADIES
Manicure Setst Box Handkerchiefs, Silk
Hosiery; Lingerie, Beads, Stationery,
Beantiful Pictures and a complete line
cosmetics.
FOR MEN
Neckwear, Broadcloth Shirts, Shaving
Sets, Handkerchiefs, Belts, Pocket
Knives, Socks, Bill Folds and nice line of
Bibles and New Testaments.
4ff
¥
¥ ¥
¥
¥
¥ HS
¥
¥
¥
¥
y
y
u
¥
¥
DearDavieCountyFolks: tiff
We can’t tell you about all we’ve got because advertising is costing 4 j
us more every inch, but we do want you to make our store your store during the 4 ff
Christmas drive, and we will dof our dead level best to give you no cause to leave the 41
county to get your Christmas needs. A visit to our store will convince you. We ^ ®
are looking forward to seeing you between now and Christmas. J J
{4 Truly yours
4 The Uiiited Variety Store. ¥
Plow Handles 18c or 2 for 35c
Floor Covering 6 feet
wide 50c per running yd
I have just received a large
Sample Line of notions to sell
ait Wholesale Price.
I am closing out a nice line of
Clothing at about 1-2 price.
I Oil Stove Nesco 4
burner $22.50
I Dresser $9.00
I Bed Room Suite worth
$90.00 to go at $49.00
I Kitchen Cabinet $19.50
Breakfast Room Suite $17.50
Chairs 98c a piece or
$5.50 set
I have the best assortment of
Shoes I ever had. Come in
and look my stock oyer.
Coaster Wagons$1.00 and up
YOURS FOR BARGAINS
J. Frank Hendrix
General Merchandise
TRICYCLES WAGONS
Rain Coatsf Tiesf Soxf Overalls
I AU Kinds of Nutsf Fruits and Candy
I
JJ Scores of useful as well as economical gifts can be found
«4 in our Household and Kitchen Ware Departments.
Specials are Being Offered in Enamel Ware.« 4
$ 4» 4
8 %
14
«4¥¥
# 4
^ HARRY S. STROUD, Manager Mocksville, N. C. Jg
Useful Gifts.
Be sensible and give gifts
that are useful. In our store
you will find such gifts as
Leather Goods, Half Priced,
Fountain Pens, Pen and Pen
cil Sets, Toilet Goods, Candi
es and many other items to
. select from.
Let Us Show .You
Visit Us Often
Let Us Serve You.
LeGrahd’s Pharmacy
• On The Square
Phone 21 Mocksville N. C.
We Can Help You With Your
Christmas Gift Problems \
Martin Brothers
Complete Line Of Groceries
John Deere Farm Machinery.
Statesville Flour and Feed
Let Us Gin Your Cotton
When You Bring Your Cotton
to town drive down to see US
aYours For Good Service”
Green Milling Company
'i I !■frfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfr I'frfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfr*
MR. FARMER!
■ • j . i
: We are in a better position to handle;
Your Cotton Than Ever Before
We Appreciate Your Business
FOSTER & GREEN
• -Near Sanford Motor Co.
******** *99* *9*9******9 'I' 'I''I'
fffiE DAVlE RECORD, MOCKSViLLfi, N. C. December r4 1932
F. H. SISSON
THE TAX MENACE
A GROWING CRISIS
By FRANCIS IT. SISSON
President American Bar.kers Association
N O danger, economic or social, more
seriously menaces our life, happi
ness and prosperity than the rising tide
of taxes %vhich
threaten to engulf
us. Thisisnot sim
ply a problem of
the depression. It
has been develop-
ingfor many years,
growing more se
rious all the time.
T h e depression
merely brought it
to a climax. Un
less drastic steps
are tak^n to re
verse this trend
the problem will
not end with the depression. It will
continue to weigh down and retard
progress for an indefinite period.
In city, county, state and nation the
orgy of spending has run on. It is esti
mated that in the United States the
total cost of all government is nearly
five times what it was before the
World War. Many localities have been
brought to the verge of bankruptcy by
their expenditures, while many have
saddled their citizens with a debt bur
den that will darken their lives and
hamper their progress for years to
come.
The total cost of Federal, state and
local government 111 the United States
is estimated at forty-six million dollars
a day. Based 011 national income in
1930. this represents about one-fifth the
total income of our people, or about
$110 for every individual in the na
tion. Total taxes in 1931 are esti
mated to have taken more than 22 per
cent of the national income. It is occa.
*ion for serious thought on the part of
everyone when one day’s income out of
every four or five must be contributed
to the maintenance of government ma
chinery.
Reductions Possible
United States Government expendi
tures were reduced one hundred and
forty million dollars during the first
quarter of the current fiscal year. The
recent action of bankers in calling a
halt to unnecessary expenditures of
New York City as prerequisite to Joans
will reduce the cost of government in
the country’s metropolis, which is sec
ond in its expenditures to only the
Federal Government. No state in the
Union, in fact, no other government
on this hemisphere, spends half as
■ much as this one city. These savings
;in Federal and municipal costs are only
the beginning of a movement needed
throughout the country, if we are to
; be led out of depression into pros
perity.
Unless the people cau be made to
realize that money for governmental
expenditure can come only from their
own pockets as taxpayers, casting de
pressing effects on both individual ef
fort and general business, there is an
imminent threat that we may be forced
to meet economic difficulties similar Io
those that have so seriously handi
capped ether countries. The question
is not primarily one of merely paring
government salaries or shaving budg
ets, but rather of curtailing govern
ment activities for which we cannot
afford to pay.
The idea that money for these mount
ing extravagances can be raised by fol
lowing the slogan “Soalr the Rich” is
utterly fallacious, for such a policy
will simply exterminate “the rich” and
eliminate sources of revenue. It is also
important to realize that corporate
business iu this country is in no posi
tion to withstand the effects of indefi
nite advances in tax rates. Current
earning reports reveal that fact be
yond shadow of doubt The tax base
must be broadened, and it therefore
seems likely that Congress will be
called upon to reconsider the sales tax,
at least as a temporary measure to help
meet a critical condition in the nation's
finance.
D e p o s i t ‘G u a r a n t e e ’
F a i l s o f P u r p o s e
LOS ANGELES.—While the idea of
the guarantee or bank deposits by
) some legally enforced plan seems to
[ appeal to many people who give it
• casual thought, the fact is that it
has not only failed in every instance
in the eight’stales where the experi
ment was tried, but actually produced
unsound hanking and increased the
number of failures, it was declared by
the recent convention of the American
Bankers Association held here.
“Guaranty of bank deposits carries
an idea that naturally appeals to peo
ple in general on casual consideration,"
the declaration said. "However, in
principle it is unsound and in practice
it is unworkable. It has been tried in
eight States and it has not only failed
in every case, but it has resulted in
increasing the number of bank fail
ures. Taxing properly manage# banks
to make up losses of failed banks is
not only unfair and unreasonable, but
it weakens the whole banking struc
ture. Again, guaranty of deposits
places the ineompoteut and reckless
banker on an equal footing with the
able and conservative tanker, which
encourages bad banking at the ex
pense of sound banking. We are there
fore opposed to the passage of any
law carrying a guaranty of bank de
posits and believe (hat it irf aga.Tnst Mie
interest of the people of the United
States to develop any such system.”
The Best Friend Of,
Hard Times.
TVie best friend of “ hard times’’
is a high tax rate.
Reasonable taxes encourage the
^ investment of capital, the develop
ment aud expansion of industry,
the employment of labor. They
encourage home building, savings
and business activity of all kinds.
Excessive taxes, oil the other
hind have precisely the opposite
effect. They drive money into
hoarding or into tax-free govern
ment bonds, thus depriving industry
of revenue it sorely needs. They
make tor unemployment and for
widespread 'economic distress.
They discourage the home builder.
They cause property to be taken
over by the county or state for un
paid taxes, where it at once becomes
unproductive.
Make no mistake about it, high
taxation, whether by the federal
government, or states, counties or
municipalities, has had much to do
with creating and prolonging hard
times. Every business man in the
I United States knows that So does
every investor. So should every
worker. The oest influence in
favor of good times would be a de-
PRETTY DOLL FREE
AU persons who subscribe to
The Record or renew their sub
scriptions by paying us $1.00 or
more on subscription, will receive
a pretty 17-inch long doll free.
These dolls cannot be mailed. If
you want one of these dolls call
6r send for it soon„ The supply
is limited. ,
I
I
I
I
I
AU persons who renew their subscrip
tion s and all new subscribers will re
ceive a 1933 Blum’s Almanac free. Call
• '
and get your copy today.
cisivecutin the cost of government
and the elimination of bureaucratic
waste, red tape and inefficiency.
And the best place to begin is right
in your own hometown, county cr
state. The tax bill is fast becoming
the barometer of economic condi
tions.
Notice Of Sale!
By virtue of the authority givert.to
the undersigned Trustee in a certain
Deed of Trust executed by Jerry
Lindsev and his wife, Mary Law
Lindsev, dated December 3lst, 1930
and recorded in the Office of Regist
er of Deeds of Davie county in Book
24 of Mortuages on Page 451 2 (de
fault having been made in the pay
ment of the indebtedness thereby se
cured), the undersigned Trusteewill
offer for sale to the highest bidder at
the Court House Door in Mocksville.
North Carolina, the following de
scribed land at 12:00 Noon, on.
Tuesday, December 27th, 1932
Beerinning at a stone on the North
side of the public road, Hege and
Jordan corner, thenre with the road
partly in George Frv’s line 137 poles
to a stone in the road. Lanier’s corn
er in Fry’s line; themre in Lanier’s
line South 70 degrees East 32 poles
to a stone, Lanipr’s corner; thence
South 6 degrees East 43 poles to a
stone on bnnk of Yadkin River, La
nier’s corner; thence up the river 49
pol^s to the mouth »f a branch where
it empties into the river; thence up
the moanders of the branch 33/poles
and 13 links to a stone.. Heee’s corn
er; thence East. IO degrees North 4
Doles in Heere’s Mn?; thence North 8
degrees East in Hege’s line 127 poles
to a stonein Alex Hege’sline; thence
in his line North 85 degrees West 24
poles to a stone the bejrinriine, eon-
tainine Forty-nine and three-fourths
(49 75) acres, more or less. Less Oie
(II acre sold off to Gsortre Fry, and
Three (3) acres sold off to Jacob
Hege, J r.
TERM=! OF SALE: Cash.
This the 23rd day of November,
1932
J. BENBOW JONES. Trustee.
Corn Was In Wagon.
Mr. Henry Foster fell from a
wagon loaded with corn last week
and has been laid up for several days
but was not seriously injured.—Cool
Spring news, Statesville Record.
Sale of Land Under
Mortgage.
By vertue of the powers contained
in a mortgagee deed executed to me
by Mrs. Sarah A- Richardson, de
fault havine been made in the Day
men t of same. I will sell for Cash
at the court house door in Davie
county N. C . at public outcry to the
highest bidder on Monday January
2nd 1933 at 12 o’clock m , the lands
described below. Viz: being the
Newtown Richardson home place
eituarated in Clarksville township,
Davie county, N. C.. and bounded as
follow: Starting at a stone corner
of J. A Richardsons land and run
ning South with J A, Richardson
line 8 chains to a stone, corner J A.
Richardson line; thence Eist. with J.
A. Richardsons line about 27 chains
to John Smoots corner; thence North
with SmooU line to Charlie Hart
man’s corner; thence West with
Hartman’s line to a stone in John
Browns line; thence South with
Browns line to a s^one John Browns
corner; thence West with Browns
line to a stone John Browns corner
in Sam Cartners line, thence South
with Cartners line to a stone in J. A.
Richardson line; thence E ist to a
stone the beginning corner; contain
ing about seventy-five acres more or
less. This Nov. 28th 1932 ' -
G. L. WHITE. Mortgagee,
By E. H. MORRIS, Atty.
Send us your subscription
and receive a 1933 Blum’s
Almanac free. Don’t wait
too long.
USE COOK’s
C. C. G
Relieves LaGrippe 1 Colds,
Coughs, Sore Throat and
Croup.
In Successful Use Over 30 Years
mSt
I
Lazy Colon Makes
„ Your Life Miserable
Laugh at money worries if-your colon is free of poisonous waste. Here’s Nature’s way to l/anlsli sickness.
Fo£ Nerve Exhaustion, Loss of
Flesli and Weakened Vitality,
Irogen Is Ideal Tonic Remedy
North Carolina Man Tells Why He Thinks It Is “The Best;
Medicine in the World.”—Great Prescription Quickly -Re
vitalizes the Blood and Restores Vigorous Health.
Tlie number of victims o£ nervous
exhaustion and general breakdown
is steadily increasing in the United
States, according to the statistics
of health experts. It appears, from
tjieir reports, tliat nature has failed to provide for the abnormal strain
of modern business and social life,
and it is not surprising that the
nerve cells give away.
When tlie nerves are deranged
the digestive organs are impaired,
food ceases to yield the proper nourishment, the blood becomes
impoverished, insomnia appears, and the usual result is a general
nervous breakdown.Men and women who get in this condition, or who feel it approaching, need a powerful but safe res
torative tonic, which will build up
and strengthen the entire System and, at ,the same time, act directly upon the digestive and assimilating organs.
■ HAS PHENOMENAL SUCCESS
IROGEN’S success has been phenomenal. Although the first package was put on the market less than a year ago, the sales in this vicinity have already run into thou
sands of bottles, and letters are
pouring in unsolicited from people
In every walk- of life, telling of the
wonderful® relief it has afforded
from !suffering and general physical weakness.
One of these, which is typical,
comes from A. D. Ballard, of Bilt-
more, N. C., near Asheville, the
father of six children. Mr. Ballard
writes that lie noticed a fallin- off
in weight, accompanied by contin
uous backache, with touches of
rheumatism and weak kidneys.“After taking only one bottle of
IROCrEN, I found that I had gained five pounds,” he’ writes enthusias
tically. “AU the pains in my back have gone, I feel strong and fit for
a day’s work every morning, I sleep
well and am always hungry at meal
times. I believe it is the best medicine in the world.”
NOT A PATENT MEDICINE
IROGEN is not a patent medicine.
It contains Food Iron, Nutritious
Malt, valuable digestives and other famed tonic aids of recognized medicinal value.
V/hat this powerful reconstructive medicine has done for countless thousands of people everywhere, scores of whom are residents of this
vicinity, it is fair to assume it will do for you.IROGEN- may be obtained in cither liquid or concentrated tablet
form. At leading druggists and dealers in medicine everywhere, in
cluding
If you are constipated, bilious, have indigestion, dyspepsia, sour stomach,
the new tonic tablet, COLONEX, contains pepsin, yeast, bile salts, pan- creatin, peppermint and vegetable tonics—the very same agents Nature manufactures in your body to elimi
nate poisons, aid digestion, and cause
natural bowel movements. It's un
natural to drench the system with artificial enemas or powerful drugs. Take a iew pleasant COLONEX tablets and purify your system Nature’s way. This valuable formula would be very expensive compounded on
physician’s prescription, but you can
get a sani-taped package containing
28 lemon-colored tablets for only 60 cents at any drug store. Ninety per cent of human ailments corne from • clogged colon, so if you are not feeling well trv COLONEX today on
guaranteed satisfaction or money back basi?
LeGrandjS Pharmacy, Mocksville, N. C.
Cdoleemee Drug Store, Cooleemee,N. C.
NOW ON-Y ONE DOLLAR.
I W. P. SPEAS, M. P.
$ Room 324 R. J. Reynolds
J Building-
I Winston-Salem, N. Cl
I Practice Limited to Disease
I Of The Eyeand FictingGlasses %
* Hours 9-12: 2 -5 *
DR. E. C. CHOATE
DENTIST '
Office Second Floor Front
New Sanford Building
Office Phone HO
Residence Phone 30.
Mocksville. N. C
BEST IN RADIOS
YOUNG RADIO CO.
MOCKSVILLE. N. C.
BEST IN SU PPLIES
DR. R. P. ANDERSON
DENTIST
Office In Anderson Building
Mocksville. N. C.
Pbones: Office 50 Residence 37
WANTED!
We want the; im
portant news hap
penings from every
section of the coun
ty. Dropus a card
or letter if a new vo
ter arrives at your
home; if ydurmoth-
er-in-IaW" comes on
a visit or dies; if the
son or daughter gets
married or anything
worth mentioning.
Old papers for sale.
j CAMPBELL - WALKER FUNERAL HOME
I Distinctive Fuoeral Service to Evrery One
] AMBULANCE - - EMB ALMERS
J Main St. Next To Methodist Church
JDay Phone 4803 Night Phone 4811 or 163
*
PLEASE
PAY
NOW!
Yesterday we requested a De
linquent Subscriber to settle his ac
count with us, and he replied:
“I am honest, and I will pay you
if I live. If I die and go to heaven
I will send it to you. If I die and
do not go to heaven I will hand it
to you.”
We think most of our Subscrib
ers are honest, but we need money
now to meet obligations. Please
let us hear from you.
THE DAVIE RECORD.
★★★★★★★★★★★★★*★★*★★★★
*★★ir
★★★★★★★★★*★★★★★★★★★★ir★*★*★★★★★*«•>★*■★★★**
★ ir ir ir ir ir ir ■*
ir ★ ir ★ ✓ ★★★
irir★★★★*jrJr★★
★iririr★
P. S. When your son or
daughter leaves for College
send them The Record. A I
special rate to students.
/
POSTAL RECEIPTS' SHOW THE RECORD CiRCULATiON THE LARGEST iN THE COUNTY. THEY DONjT LIE.
®Jr ' SotaIe M t m t K
“HERE SHALL THE PRESS. THE PEOPLE’S RIGHTS MAINTAIN: UNAWED BY INFLUENCE AND UNBRIBED BY GAIN.”
VOLUMN XXXtV.M OCKSVILLE. N O RTH CA RO LIN A , W EDNESDAY, DECEM BER 2 1. 1932 NUM BER 32
NEWS OF LONG AGO.
W hlt W as Happening In Davie Before
The Days of Automobiles and Rolled
Hose.
(Davie Record, Dec. 2 4 , 1902)
One of Toe Atwood’s little boys
is quite ill with pneumonia.
Miss Louise W oodruff, a student
at the State Normal College,
Greensboro, is at home for the holi
days.
Miss Mamie Pitcher, of Concord,
is staving with Mrs. P. H. Dalton
and attending school here.
G. VV. Green has returned home
from a two weeks business trip
through the country buying timber.
J. 0 . Freeman is putting up a
lumber mill here, and will soon be
ready to buy dogwood and hickory
timber.
The store of M. A. Foster, at Eph
esus, was broken into last week and
robbed.
The ladies of the Baptist Aid
Society gave an oyster supper at the
Mocksvilie Hotel Fridap night,
which was a success.
A. M. O’Brien, of M axton, has
moved into the Dr. Bell house, now
owned by W. L. Sanford.
Miss Connor, of Wilson, is a
visitor at Mr. Phillip Hanes' She
will remain for the Hanes-Connor
marriage.
-Miss Guffy, one of the Ccoleemee
school teachers has geeu very ill
with typhoid tever but is much
better.
There will be a Christmas tree
service at St. Matthews Lutheran
church Wednesday night, and at
Society Baptist church Christmas
night
Connor Sherrill returned home
last week from Trinity College to
spend the holiday, here with his
parents.
Miss Mary Wilson Stone, a stu
dent at Salem College is spending
Christmas here with her parents.
A little child of Mr. and Mrs.
John Etohison was hart badly last
Saturday when a window fell on it
Mrs. Tohn H. Stewart has re
turned home from a visit to friends
at Salisbury.
Dug Stars was lodged in jail last
Friday charged with an assault upon
Mr. Ferrell, at Cooleemee.
W. B. Naylor, of Cana, was in
town last Saturday on business.
Herbert Holman and sister Miss
Maude, came in last Friday from
Iowa and Minnesota where they
had been living since Iatt spring.
Herbert will return to the west in
a few weeks.
W. A. Leonard, who sold out
and left Advance about a year ago
for Iowa, has settled hown again in
North Carolina.
Mr. Randolph Pool, an ex Con
federate Soldier, was in town Sat
urday looking after his pension.
H e lives in Salisbury.
G. C. Patterson, recently elected
postraasier at Cooleemee, was in
town Saturday fixing up his bond.
H eexpects to take charge Jan. 1st,
John Haneline, of Cana, was in
town Saturday on business.
And No Red Cross
Flour.
Mr. Lewis W eatherman, of South
Knobs, was in town one day last
week and as usual with Mr.
W eatherman he was talking polit
ics. Mr. W eatherman says that
people who did not live through the
last Cleveland administration don’t
know anything about bard times
and lie says he worked for 12)4
per day and took it in meat to sup
port the family at 12% cents per
pound or a pound of meat each day’s
work from 4 o’clock in the morning
until night. He also said be had
one son now employed by the Chat
ham mills at Elkin who made more
for one night’s work than be receiv
ed for a month’s ’work of about
twice the number of hours each
day.—YadKm Ripple.
Fm Through With
Being Depressed.
For the past three years I have
lived a horrible life. There has
been nothing the matter with me
except that I have been scared
stiff. After three years of fright,
during which none of the things I
was afraid of happened it is high
time I changed and begun to live
like a normal human being once
more.
My salary was cut, yes but it
really wasn’t serious, and I can
certainly still live pretty well, and
a lot better than I have been living
lately.
I propose to start living here and
now—today:
In my closet there are two busi
ness suits. One is too badlv worn
for any mrn in my position to wear
at all it will go to some one who
really needs it. The other I C211
wear when I do odd jobs around the
house. I ’m going to buy two new
suits, and wear them on alternate
days, for that’s the way to get the
best wear out of them. I ’m going
10 buy an overcoat and a hat too.
Mv shirts have fringes on the
cuffs. My underwear is patched,
and my darned socks are ugly and
uncomfortable. My shoes have
been half soled, and the uppers are
cracked. I am buying an entire
new outfit, and my old things are
going where they will do some real
good. I ’m going to stop being a-
shatned of my appearance.
My wife needs dresses, underwear
shoes, hat gloves. I ’ve given her
the cash to buy them with. ‘Get
every thing you need,’ I told her,
‘Nothing more and nothing less’.
The living-room rug is a sight.
Out it goes, and in comes a new
one—and a new living room suite,
While prices are so low; We need
new curtains, towels and even
sheets. Did you ever sleep on pat
ched sheets? N everagain!-
My old automobile has 56 .0 0 0
miles on it, and the best you can
say for it is it still runs. Tue p^int
is dull and chipped, the nickel is
rusty, the upholstery stained aud
worn threadbare, and there are e
nougli rattles aud squeaks to amuse
all the babies from now to.kingdom
come. Every few hundred miles
soma annoying little repair costs me
from 58 cents to $5. I ’m going to
buy a new car because I need it and
want it and because I i_an afford it.
My old radio still works, but I
know that during the past three
years there have been big improve
ments. The new radios sound a lot
better, look better, are easier to
work and thev give you more stat
ions, there’s a new one coming to
our house.
I’m going to buy the books I have
been wanting to read. I ’m going
to see the shows I want to see. I ’m
going to buy everything I need and
can really afford.
And I ’m going to contribute gen
erously to the unemployed because
like most Americans, I want to help
'people in distress.
It all comes down to this—I’m
goiDg to live the kind of life I am
entitled to leid, in living that life
I am aiding others,, directly and in
directly, to live their own lines by
tielping to provide them with the
money and work they need.
I ’m through with being depressed
m body and soul from now on, see
me smile and watch my dust.—
M. C. HOWARD.
Knoxville Tenn- ,
Suggests Fluctuating
Interests.
Will Rogers under the cloak of
sarcasm issues some mighty gocd
advice and utterssigiiifiscant truths.
Recently he suggested that Uncle
Sara tell Europe to "pay or de
fault,” and that is just about the
gist of the administration's present
attitude toward the war debts.
Here is another audacious obser
vation 'oy Mr. Rogers: I have
heard every kind of reason given
for our hard times, and as causes
for our slow recovery. But I have
never heard the real one, that’s that
interest is too high. Thgworldand
about everybody in it are broke
from paving too high interest. No
man should receive more for the
hire of his money then he could
take it and earu with it for the last
three years there has been nothing
that he could have made even one
percent on it. outside of loaniug it.
The banks all failed because the in
terest people owed ’em was larger
than the principal. W hat would be
the matter with banking 011 a real
percentage basis, with the banker
receiving interest in accordance with
the borrower makes on the loan.”
Of course Mr. Rogers is suggest
ing something impossible of being
worked out. but he points to an ine
quity to which his thousands of
readers every day will voice a cau
tious amen.
The borrower who thinks- he is
keeping his fingers in the financial
pulse, often is disappointed to find
that although when money isqtiot
ed as “ eaay,” if he is able to ob
tain a loaii at all, he is not further
encouraged with a drop in the in
terest rate. If he needs it right
badly and has to fall back 011 the
loansharks, they just- about eat
him alive, after he is properly salt
ed and peppered with “ service
charges” of one sort or another.
Luckily there is not much of the
latter practice in Statesviile hut in
some of the latter practice in States
ville but in some of the larger cities
of the state the common practices
of the loan shark have been halted
only the interest of the citizens.—
Statesville Record.
Mistaken Identity.
Monroe Journal.
The big city papers in recounting
the disappearance of Col. Raymond
Robins, influential ‘‘dry" and friend
ot President Hoover, frequently em
ployed "simple mountain folks”
and other rustic phrases, iu describ
ing the western North Carolina
community where Col. Robins was
discovered suffering a lapse of mem
ory.
Fiction, movies, music and folk
lore have conspired against the trne
identity of all sections of the coun
try. The people of the South are
typed as a simple lot, steeped in
tradition, iuaolent, and possessed
of a beautiful, soft voice that greets
every one with "Is yoaail feelin’
fine today? These ate the char
acteristics that dominate our native
drama and they create the prevail
ing estimate of us in other sections.
It is time someone was bursting
the bubbles of"simple folks” in the
South, “ six-shooter ^cowboys” in
the West, and "greedy money
sharks” in the North and East.
It does seem a shame, since Ger
many is too poor to pay her debts,
to deny her the right to spend a
fewbilliou for armament.—Eugene
(Ore.) Guard.
On the theory that Congress may
provide beer by Christmas, bottle
openers should prove quite appro
priate presents.—Fx.
Where The Money Goes
Practically every cent raised bv
axes 011 real estdte in North Caro
Iina goes to the debt service fund,
according to an analysis of the tax
dollar by Commissioner of Reve
nue A. J. Maxwell.
No wonder we are in financial
difficulties when it takes a[l the tsx
on realty to pay interest aud curtail
our bonds, notes and public debts.
There is a lot of talk about cut
ting expenses by firing some public
servants and consolidating depart
ments of the state government.
There is little doubt but that some
bureaus and division could be dis
pensed with and some on the public
Piy roll dropped without impairing
<overnmetit. It might make it
more effecient.
But the ridiculous statements that
great big saving could thus be ac
complished is exposed bv Mr. Max
well. He shows that only 4 .4 cents
of the tax dollar goes to administra
tive purposes
Our spending spree is what ac
counts for the taxes We built on
crrdit and now are having to pay
back the money plus interest The
state has its roads, schools and fine
eleemosynary institutions, but they
are not paid for. The condition is
not the fault of any individual As
a people we wanted our govern
ments to go ahead and spend just as
we as individuals practiced the bor
rowing and spending habit until the
eoonomic cycle turned. Now it is
time to pay.
Mr. Maxwell advocated during
his campaign for the Democratic
gubernatorial nomination a mora
torium on debts of the state until
income should be more nearly com
mensurate with the size of the debts.
As it is now, the taxpayers of the
state must pay debts iu terms of dol
lars that are worth a great deal less
than the dollar face value of the
debts. Wliy not wait until the
former relationship between debts
and income have been more nearly
restored?—Twin City Sentinel.
Dirty Dig.
(From Winstony-Salem Jonrnal)
G. B. Shaw says substitution of
Mr. Roosevelt tor M r. Hoover won’t
make any difference to anybody.
He overlooked the postmasters.
An inconsistent man is one who
will no; accept the same kind of an
excuse from his fellowmen that he
gives for remaining away from
church.
Farm Problems.
The prosperity of the farmer de
pends upon this:
I The cost of his production.
2. The volume of his production.
3. The price he obtains for what
he produces
4 . The price he pays for what he
buys.
The first two are largely the
problems of the farmers as a group.
They are the reasons-for-being of
the co operative movement.
No single farmer, dealing with a
large buying or selling organiza
tion, can have a voice in price. He
must take what he is offered or
lose the business. When he joins
with thousands of other farmers
whose problems ane hopes are one
with his the shoe is on the other
foot. The buying or selling orga
nization lias met its equal—and the
price is much more likely to be a
fair one.
No co operative, ot course, can
raise prices to the desired level in
times like these W hat they can
do is to keep them higher than they
would otherwise be and prepare the
groundwork for future achieve
ment. AU over the couutry. the
co operative movement is making
gains, both in strength and mem
bership, and the results are begin
ning to show. W hen the economic
clouds finally clear, and organized
j agriculture can be ready for a per-
I iod of prosperity unprecedented
in the century.
W ashington dispatches say they
are puzzled what to do about beer.
Just put it in a schooner and slide
. it out on the counter, thass all.—Ex.
Mr. Wilson Did It.
Josephus Daniels in one of his
weekly syndicated squawks quot
ed from some one of his jubilant
Demoeaatic friends th a t. "it took
the Republicans. 10 years to speuci
the surplus Wilson left in the
treasury” and more of this kind ol
rjt. Surely Mr. Daniel would
stick to the facts and would not
broadcast an untruth. Reference
to the World AIrfianac shows that
Mr. Wilson came into power in
1913, an accidental President, due
to the split in the Republican ranks
between Roosevelt and Taft, the
public debt of the United States
was $9 6 5,7 0 6 ,6 1 0 and when Wilson
handed over the reins of govern
ment to Harding iu 1921 the pub
lic debt at that time was $2 3,7 3 7,
3 5 2,oSo or iu other words the U nit
ed States was in debt $2 2 ,7 7 1,6 4 5,-
47 0 more after eight years of a De
mocratic administration than at
any other time in the history of
the country. We want to spell
this out so that the people can
comprehend it. After eight years
of Wilson in the W hite House the
country was in debt TW EN TY
TW O BILLION, SEVEN H U N
DRED AND SEV EN TY ONE
M ILLION, S IX HUNDRED AND
FIFTY FIVE THOUSAND,
FOUR HUNDRED AND SEV EN
TY DOLLARS more than at any
time before in the history of the
country. Mr. Daniels cannot deny
these figures, In fact we dare him
to deny them .—Union Republican.
Hoover Warned Con
gress In Brief.
W ashington, Dec. 7 —President
Hoover’s budget today warned con
gress it must watch the nation's
purse strings, and recommended
that it:
Euact a sales tax of 2 r-4 per cent.
Retain for anoihes year the 1 cent
gasoline tax.
Cut government salaries 11 per
cent and in addition continue the
present 8 1-3 per cent cut under the
furlough plan.
Restrict benefits to veterans by
$127,0 0 0,0 0 0.
Make appropriations of #4 ,2 1 8,-
8 0 8 ,3 4 3.
Mr. Hoover also predicted deficit
of $1,146,478307 for the present
fiscal year, and estim ated a deficit
of $307,0 0 0 ,0 0 0 next year, uuless
the additional tax program and ec
onomy program is adopted.
Did not mention war debts.
W hfte House staff’s pay has been
cut to the extent of three-and-a-
half-days’ wages a month. The
W hite House spokesman, if he is
still around, should consider him
self lucky to stay on the pay roll at
that figure.—Greensboro News.
No dolls will be given away, af
ter Saturday, Dec. 24 th, 9 p. m.
And after Congress has given the
nation beer maybe it’ll provide
something to buy it with.—Ex.
5 PRETTY
DOLLS GIV
EN AWAY.
The Record has a
limited supply of pret
ty 17-inch dolls that
we are going to give
to our subscribers free
of charge.
AU old or new sub
scriber? who pay $1
or more on subscrip
tion between now and
Dec. 24th, will be giv
en one of these pretty
dolls free. Bring or
send us your subscrip
tion today.
S
Paying and Spending
It is KeneraDy agreed that increas-
>e Drrchasing power is the main lever
vith which we can hope to raise our
selves from the depthf. And there
ire two ways in which the individual
?an aid by spending wisely and paying
his bills.
Things got out of hand because
government and individual three
years ago, were spending without re
gard to ability to pay; the lesson that
both should learn is to find out just
how mnch can wisely spent—and
spend it.
It would mean a lot to business
generaily if those who buy would pay
their bills promptly when due instead
of hamstringing the merchant into
providing them with a free banking
service. Pay him promptly and he
will keep the money moving: orders
will be placed, factories will add to
their payrollf and railroads will start
hauling things.
We need to stop waiting for a
Santa Claus to lay the gift of pros
perity in or lap, but above all do we
need to quit seeking bilg-a-boos in
every shadow There is a wide gulf
between managing our expenses
to manage us. And wise manage
ment does ro t rlwavs mean that we
should hold on to a dollar until the
eagle smothers to death--particular
ly if we owe it to some other indivi
dual who would keep moving along.
-E x . _______________
A Worthy Suggestion.
It has been'frequently suggested
that now that the state has taken
over the maintenance of the roads,
it should also take over that part of
the bonded indebtedness of counties
which was incurred in the constrnc-
of roads.
That would appear to be a tremen
dous undertaking at first glace. On
second thought however, the sug
gestion is not so absurd as it may
sound. North Carolina’s highway
system, one of the finest in the na
tion, is about completed. The pro
blem henceforth will be one of main
tenance.
The state imposes a big tax on
gasoline and in normal times, it
should bring in a huge amount of
revenue. W hethertheam ountwould
be sufficient to take care of the obli
gations that would.be entitled by as
suming the counties’ bonded indebt
edness for roads is the question.
However, it is certain that th&
counties need assistance at this time.
They are paying as best they can,,
but under present conditions it is
difficult for them to continue at their
present rate.
This indebtedness for roads is a
problem. Can the state take it over?
Some believe that possible; others
consider it too large for even the
grearstate of North Carolina.
It appears certein that some bill
designed to bring about relief for the
counties will be introduced at the
next session of the General Assembly.
—Wilkes Journal.
Needed Shirts.
The Associated Press deemed the
following story of.sufficient im port
ance to put ou its wires to the big
newspapers and we reckon it will do
for Salmagundi too:
" I met a man near Summit, walk
ing to Silverdale,” HcLeod said to
day. "H e was carrying three bags
of corn shucks.
"H e said he received them as pay
for putting a roof on a house for a
neighbor. He had no use for the
coru shucks. He was carrying
them three miles to a poultry farm ,
where he could exchange them for
empty feed sacks.
".These sacks, he said, he would
take home, wash, and make into
shirts for himself and his smalj son.
“ Furthermore, he had to make
the shirts himself, his wife having
left him when he lost his job. H e
was wearing one of his sack, shirts
at the tim e.” —E x '
Haywood county farmers have
recedtly purchased three pure bred
beef bulls for upgrading the herds
of the county.
THE DAVIE RECORD, MOCRSVlLtE, ft C. DEC^MBEfi 2i, »933 4
THE DAVIE RECORD. First Snow Of Winter.
C. FRANK STROUD - - Editor.
Member National Farm Grange.
The first snow of the winter visit
ed this section Friday evening and
coutinued until IateSaturday morn
ing. The total depth was around
five inches, much of it being hail
and sleet. Temperature readings
Entered atthe Post-office in MockB-j ga,ur{].JV monij„g were 15 degrees
ville, N. C., as Second-class Mail
m atter. March 3, 1903.
TELEPHONE
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
ONE YEAR. IN APV4NCE - $ I 00
SIX MONTHS. IN ADVANCE - S 50
NOPAPERNiEXTWEEK
It has been our custom for the
last quarter of a century to miss
one issue of our paper during the
Christmas holidays Our printers
as weil as the edi or and Hie sub
sciibcrs, need one week's vacation
out ot the 52 rvseks of toil and
strife and trying to make ctie dol
lar do the duty of two or three.
Tlte year just coming to a close has
b 3en one that would try the souls
of the working man- Prosperity
lias been on a vacation for the past
two years, but we are al! hoping
•that be will be back on his job next
year. We have done the best we
c.iuld under the circumstances, but
wili c’.ise the year's business with
a smile despite the fact that some
of our ciejilors don’: raise their
hats when we meet Lhem on the
highways and hedges. The next
issue of The Record will appear 011
Jan. 4 , 1033, the Lnrd willing
To all tnir subscribers, advertisers
and rural conespondeins. I he edi
tor aud the entire force want to
wish a verv merry Ciuisimas and a
hippvand prosperous New Year
Ottr office will he op .-11 n.ost of the
time during the holidays for the
benefit: of those who wish to renew
or subscribe or leave presents for
the editor. W ith these few re
m arks we will bid our readers adieu
until the goad year 1933.
ChristmasNever Grows
Old.
And there were in the same couu-
try shepherds abiding in the field,
keeping watch over their flock by
right.
And, lo, the angel of the Lord
cane upon them, and the glory of
the Lord shone round .ibout them:
and they were sore afraid.
And the angel said unto them.
Fear not: for, behold, i bring yon
good tidings of great jov, ulrch
shall be to ali people.
For unto you is born this dav in
the citv of David a Savior which is
Christ the Lord.
And this shall be a sign unto von:
Y esball fiud the babe wrapped in
swaddling clothes, lying in a man
ger.
And suddenly there was witli the
angel a multitude of the heavenly
IiatIt praising God. and saying,
Glory to God in the highest, and
on earth peace, good will toward
m en.—St. Luke 2 :8 -14.
Much TasTo Collect.
In 1930 when Sheriff Cope went
out of office lie turneci over to
Sheriff McSwain the sum of §4 8 ,-
517 70 in 1930 taxes due the coun
ty but cot collected Last week
when Sheriff JIcSwain turned, ovei
th ; tax books to Sheriff Smoot theie
was a balance of 303 76 in 1932
taxes due the countv but not col
lected. This means that the new
Sheriff has got a big job on his
hands. The biggest laxpaver in
C 'Unty, the Ervin Cotton Mills,
!live already paid their 1932 taxe>.
The total tax to be collected this
year is only a little more than §101,-
OOil which means that the former,
sheriff had collected less than §20. 1
ooo of the 1923 taxes, and most of
above zero. The mercurv climbed
to 23 degrees Sunday morning and
dropped to 20 degrees above zero
Monday. Rojds were almost ira-
Dassable Saturday aud Sunday.
The ice and snow was frozen so
hard that road drags and scrapes
had but little effect. Busses and
trains were far behind schedule Sat
urday. Business was at a standstill
as the freezing temperatures and
impassable roads kept the people
indoors. Two years ago 011 the
same date, Dec. i 6 tb, an. iS inch
snow visited this section and the
ground was covered until after
Christmas. The Christmas trade
has been badly demaralized as a
result of ilie bad weather of the past
ten days or two weeks,
“Courageous Leader
ship’ of Duncan Lauded
By Hoover.
Tribute to the ‘'courageous lead
ersiiip” demonstrated by Chairman
James S. Duncan, of the Republi
can state executive cammittee, in
the campaign in North Carolina in
1932 is embraced in a letter which*1
he received from President Hoover/
Tbe communication follows:
"M v dear Mr. Duucau
" I wish yon to know that I deeply
appreciate your courageous leader
Mocksville School May
Give Up Charter.
The board of trustees of Mocks
ville special charter schpoi district
have petitioned the Davie county
board of education to assume ap
proximatelv $7 0 ,0 0 0 of the indebt
edness of the building and it be
gins now to look very much like
Mocksville which has operated
under a special charter for many
years, will have to surrender its
charter aud be thrown into the
Davie county school system.
The county board of education,
consisting of Peter W. Hairston,
chairman, Knox Johnstone, of
Mocksville, and Major T. P. Gra
ham, of Cooleemee, has agreed to
two thirds of the original building
debt provided the board of trustee,
of which Col. Iacob Stewart is
chairman, will surrender its charter
and deed al! the property of the
district 10 the county board of edu
cation.
One of the last acts of the out
going board of county commission
ers was an agreement to assume
this debt provided the board of
education and the board of trustees
of the school could come to terms.
An official expression of the new
board is not obtainable at this time,
but at least one member of the
board has announced his objections
to the oouiitv assuming t.his debt.
Pension Checks Here.
" Pension checks for Confederate
soldiers and widows were received
by Clerk of Court Hartman last
Thursday. There were 14 checks
for soldiers, §182 50 for the soldiers,
ship of the Republican campaign in I making a total of §2 5 5 5. There
were 31 class B checks for widows
forgjo eash, tota)ingvS'/,55o Nine
North Carolina. It was a high serv
ice to the party. The enduring
principles of the oarty assure its
return to power, and to that end the
challenge of the election is only to
renewed battle in their behalf. I
am personally grateful to you for
your effort and support.
Following receipt of the letter
Chairman Euncanm ade the follow
ing statement:
“ The Republican party in North
Carolina will continue to campaign
aggressively for the principles which
have made the parly great and for
a soundly constructive program.
The determination to fight unceas
ingly for the triumph of our cause
is too strong to permit the forces of
discouragement to become ascend
ant Ultimate approval of the pro
gram of the party in the state and
the nation is anticipated with ab
solute confidence
“ President Hoover is to be com
mended for his faith and courage in
the face of unparalled stress Pos
terity will properly appraise him ."
Names Deputies.
Sheriff C. C. Smoot has announ
ced the appointment of L. F. Sales
of Cooleemte. and Linnie Peoples,
of Clarksville township as special
deputies on bis staff Aaron James
as chief deputy sheriff and C. V.
Miller as jailor, makes four ap
pointments announced oy the new
sheriff. Some four or five other
special deputies will be appointed
within the next few days.
Doctor Burns Patients’
Bills.
Atlanta, G a.— Dr. G. Brown
burned his account book today and
(old bis patients to forget what
they owed him and “ let’s start all
over.”
Dr. Hrown had $81 ,3 6 2 worth of
due bill on his books that he tossed
into a fire. He notified his patients
by mail that he had cltared the
class A widows received checks lor
$150 each, totaling $1,3 5 0. The
total amount of the checks amounted
$5. 455- s.
slate, “so please torget that this this sum must have come from Coo- .... , ,tu - little service of mine was ever renleeinee cotton mills. We don’t
know how the people are going to dered ar.d join me in passing along
this message of good will, good
m inage to pav their ,taxes n n less^ an(J g(Jod cheer ,.
prosperity hits us pretty soon. It gome of the bj|ls de8troyed by
was promised us before the election. Dr Brown had. been running since
Lots of folks tell us about the big 7892, when he started practicing
Jlogs they kill, but few of them mtidicine. H esaidpaym entofthe
bring us Samp es. i_______ ^ woujd a hardship for many
Despite-ill the trials at:d hard and that since the election of Reose-
sliips we h ive to iiidure this is a velt .and Garner ushes in “ a new
good old world after'all day Df |10pc>> would wipe off
The Chiistnns t-p'rii should p-o tne slate and start over,
va 1 every w*-ek in the year. We Hr. Biown formerly was a mem-
w ;U - 1 all be h a p /e r. ' ber of the Georgia legislature.
John L. McDaniel.
John L. McDaniel, 54, of Winston-
Salem passeq away Monday morning
at 5:20 o’clock and funeral services
was conducted Tuesday afternoon at
1:30 from the residence and at 3
o’clock from Oak Grove Methodist
church by Rev,-. G. A. Stamper and
T C. Keat-in.
Mr. McD miel was bnrn October 10,
1878, at Micksville and about twenty
years ago removed Co Winston-Salem
from Lexington.
Surviving are the widow, who be
fore marriage was Miss Essie Sain;
three daughters, Mrs. J. P. Fansier,
Hanes; Misses Ellen May and Eliza
beth McDaniel, of WinstonSaiem
and two grandchildren.
Let’s Have A New Deal
In Mocksville.
Editor Record:—I don’t know exactly
what the tax rate is at present in Mocks
ville, but I do know when it was 25 cents
on the hundred we got our side walks
scraped after snows. Why is it chat we
can’t have sidewalks we can use at such
times as the peesent. Why do men, wo
men and children have to be forced to
take to the middle of the streets to get
up town and to their work? It is high
time that the voters go tn the polls and
vote for a chance in our town officers and
school board; why the Superintendents oi
schools in the one hundred counties of
the state are getting an average of over
twenty eight tiundree dollars a year; they
are pain out of the blood money of the
poor home owmars whose homes are be
ing sold by the authorities to pay these
big salaries to principals and other school
people. How many people can you find
whose income has not b>-:eu slashed from
30 to 60 per cent in the last two or three
years, yet w.~, are paying salaries out of
the tax payers money far above the aver
age man’s income. Why is i ? Do these
people who are living tff the taxpayers
deserve a better living than the rest of
us? Why not reduce the salaries and help
the oppressed home ownet? We have 535 j
representatives in the United States Con S
gress drawing ten thousand dollars each
per year, a total of $5,350,000 per year j
and what are they dom^? Dillydalliiig1
over the alcoholic contents of BEER and
WINE, with people begging for work aud
bread How long will an oppressed and
suffering people tamely submit to such a
state of affairs? “The mills of the the
gods grind slow but exceedingly fine.” A
reckoning is ahead. Let the Wine and
Beer guzzlers beware.
E. H. MORRIS.
It’s an ill wind tbat blows good
to nobody. The snow gave hund
reds of people employment for a
day or two.
Christmas is the season
everybody should be happy.
. Reports were printed in most of
the North Carolina dailies on Dec.
19th saying that the slate highways
The recent ice and snow brought
the old-fashioned sled coasting days
back again. The children enjoyed
were cleaned off and traffic moving | t^e sledding.____________
when normally on Monday. This didn’t, N earlyeverybodyisinthesam e
apply to Davie county. | boat now. All broke together.
CHRISTMAS SPECIALS
We Have The Biggest Line Of Samples
jj We Have Ever Had And Our Price Is The Lowest. |j
{{ Just received a shipment of Horse Hide Shoes
MI We have all kinds of ChristmasCandyr NiitsandFruits $
SI Below Are A Few Prices Qf Our GoodsJ!
S ' . HW Salts . . , . 89: I liava just received a large Soft Shell English ^ 0
I Ib Lard . . Si Samole Line of Notions to sell Walnnts . . 15c S J
2 Ib Lard . . 15c
3 Ib Lard . , 22c
41b Lara . . 28e
8 Ib Lard . . 55c
Recnlar 25c package
Oat M“al . . 19c
Plenty Candy . IOc and up
Oranges, doz . IOc and up
Apples 25c per peck and up
Sugar, 5 Ib . 23e
Sugar TO Ib . . 45c
Sugar, 25 Ib . SI 13
Sugar. 100 Ib . $4 35
Trace Chains . , 59c
Heaviest Hames . $1,25
Shovels . 69e and up
Plow Handles 183 or 2 for 35c
Floor Covering, 6 feet wide
50c per running yard
I liava just received a large
Sample Line of Notions to sell
at Wholesale Price.
I am closing out a nice line of
C othini' at about h nrice.
I Oil Stove, Nesco 4
burner . . $22 50
I Dresser . . $9.00
I Bed Room Suite worth
$90 00 to go at . $49 00
I Kitehen Cabinet $19 50
Breakfast Room Suite $17.50
Chairs 98c a piece or $5 50 set
I have the best assortment of
Shoes I have ever had. Come
in and look my stock over.
Coaster Wagons $1.00 and up
AU $5.00 Wagons . $3 95
Pat Back Meat . 7c to 8 e
FUisins, 15c oz. pack IOc
C'earn Nuts . 15e Ib
Soft Shell English
Walnnts
25c Mayonnaise . 12c
Men’s Overcoats . $3.95
Boys' Overcoats . $2.50
Shirts . . 48c up
Tie3. 50c value . 19c
Ties, $1 00 to $1.50 value 48c
Sweaters . . 25c up
Plenty Odd Coats for Boys
and Men at very Low Price.
Dresses at Wholesale Prices.
A few Hats at 89c
A few Shoes worth $2.50
to $5 00 for . . 98e
Plenty 6 in. Stove Pipe,
2 joints . . 25c
$150 Hammers . 98c
Plenty Stick Candv . 17c
10 doz. IO2 and 25c Mens
Socks to go at 5c pair
I Will Sell You Goads For Christmas Trees At Wholesale Prices
See Us For Anything You Need
J. FRANK HENDRIX
n tiOn The Square”
w -
Mocksville, N. C. uu
< 3 I F X S T O R E
For the remaining shopping days before Christmas we €
are offering many suitable gifts for the entire family,
j. We will be glad to show you through our big stock of *
j| useful gifts that will bring pleasure and delight for years g,
to come. ffi
Parker Pen and Pencils in a big va-
J| riety at very attractive prices.
f The prettiest line of Ties ever
brought to Mocksville. Worth $1.50,
and we are selling them at 25c, 39c,
45c and $1.00 each.
Gift handkerchiefs and hosiery in
attractive boxes.
Bed spreads in many attractive col
ors and designs 59c, 79c, 98c.
Sweaters of all kinds at very low
prices.
Pocke Knives, Watches and Flash
Lights. ^
Radios, Cedar Chests, Trcycles, J?
Scooters and Express Wagons for the v
little folks. Jf:
Many attroctive gifts in our Furni
ture Department.
A beautiful line of Men’s and Boys’
Shirts inattractive patters'from 50c ^
Bed- f
to $1.2b.
Shoes for the entire
room slippers.
family.
Ail kinds of Candies, Nuts, Raisins, and Fruits. Let us I
J fill your orders for Christmas Tree, Treats, Etc., at C
J lowest prices in many years. C
I ---------- = f
Glenn White, prominent merch
ant, of Winston-Salem, and head of
I the firm of W, G. W hite & Co ,
j was in town Thnrsdav on business
and paid us a pleasant call. Gleuu
j is a Dauie county boy who Iiis
’made good iu the -Twia-City.
C. C. Sanford Sons Co.
“Everything For Everybody”.
THED
Largest
Davie
LOCAL
Carroll
C., wili sp
days with
Miss Ol
is spend i
sister, Mr
Deputy
Lrough, o
town Thu
£ [The cou
week remi
—they w
shape.
JIarslial
Fishburn
boro, Va ,
holidays.
•W. L.
16-months
weighed 4
pigs.
Mack C
C. State C
ing the ho
folks.
There
at Center J
night Dec.
seven o’cl
Brewste
ford, stud
are spendii
their pare
Miss Ma
student at
ing the C
“ tytth her p
Felix
street and
at Wake
home for t
Miss Ha
Kirk, stud
Durham, a
for the Ch
Miss Sar
the Gast
spending
here with
Misses I
Adams, st
Greensbor
day for (h
There w
Ijames X
night, Dec
cordially i
MissHfS
gathered
. garden last
late for rip
tion.
Misses
Sarah Th
Greensbor
home Fri
holidays.
Misses
ner, Billie
ree, stude-
are at bom
days.
Miss Co
Mitchell
spending :
enls, Mr.
the Statesv
Misses
Bradley, s
lege, Char
holidays h
Mrs. E. P.
Misses
Grant, an
at Appala
Boone, are
here with
The ma
WafF. of V
years past
tist church
that this a
stroke of
and is still
asks the pr
ville and D
are all ho
minister w
health and
years to co
man ever Ii
Rev. W. B
THE DAVIE RECORD, MOGKSVttIE, R C. DitCgMBER 2i,'t934
ow Iirought
'asliiig days
ren enjoyed
n the satne
Sether.
iS
tp
u $
¥
W
m $
e8t. J{
5
Wt»
I I l t s J
[ods. *1§
15e (si)
12c ®
. 53.95 ®
• $2.50
4Sc up H
19c S
;ue 4Sc
• 25c up
or Boys
Price.
Prices.
S9c
m
9Sc #5
25c WJ
9Sc
17cS
_ . $ pair ^ ft
mfe e s
$
m
m
m
*t
f
In . c . S§
|2 50
lpe.
|1ens
is we
anily.
Ick of
I years
(d Flash
fr:cycles,
Is for the
Jr Furni- ^
tnd Boys’ %
rom 50c g
|y. Bed-
j?
THE DAVIE RECORD.
Largest Circulation of Any
Davie County Newspaper.
LOCAL AND PERSONAL NEWS.
Carroll Haye. of W ashington, D.
C., will spend the Christmas holi
days wilh home folks.
Miss Olga Keever, of Stony Point,
is spending this week with te r
sister, Mrs. Harry Stroud.
Deputy Marshall J. A. Kim
brough, of Winston Salem, was in
town Thursday on business.
§ [The county roads in Davie last
week reminded us of 3 0 years ago
—they were in about the same
shape.
Marshall Sanford, a student at
Fishburn Military school, W aynes
boro, Va , is here for the Christmas
holidays.
•W. L. Ellis, of R. 3, killed two
i6 months-old pigs last week that
weighed 42 0 and 608 pounds. Some
pigs.
Mack Campbell, a student at N.
C. State College, Raliegb, is spend
ing the holidays here with home
folks.
There will be a Christmas tree
at Center JIethodist Church on Sat.
night Dec. 2 4 th 1932, starting at
seven o’clock.
Brewster Grant and Rufus San
ford, students at Davidson College,
are spending the holidays here with
their parents.
SIiss Mary Nelson Anderson, a
student at Salem College, is spend
ing the Christmas holidays here
with her parents.
Felix Harding, Frank Stone-
street and Paul Hendrix, students
at W ake Forest College, are at
home for the holidays.
Miss Hanes Clement and Phillip
Kirk, students at Duke University,
Durham, arrived home last week
for the Christmas holidays.
tMiss Sarah Gaither, a member of
the Gastonia school faculty, is
spending the Christmas holidays
here with her parents
Misses Lucile Horn and Virginia
Adams, students at N. C. C. W .,
Greensboro, arrived home yester
day for the ChristtEas holidays.
There will be a Christmas tree at
Ijames X Roads church 011 Monday
night, Dec. 26 th. The public is
cordially invited to be present.
Miss Effie Boee, of Clement Crest,
gathered ripe tomatoes from her
garden last week, which is rather
late for ripe tomatoes in this sec
tion.
Misses Kathleen Craven and
Sarah Thompson, students, at
Greensboro College, will arrive
home Friday for the Christmas
holidays.
Misses Ruby Martin, Elva Cart-
ner, Billie Howard and Sulon Fer-
ree, students at High Point College,
are at home for the Christmas holi
days.
Miss Cordelia Pass, a student at
Mitchell College, Statesville, ( is
spending the holidays with her car
ents, Mr. and Mrs. M. D. Passi on
the Statesville highway.
Misses Fannie Gregory and Jane
Bradley, students at Queens Col
lege, Charlotte, are spending the
holidays here with their mother,
Mrs. E. P. Bradley.
Misses Jane McGuire, Helen
Grant, and Amy Moore, students
at Appalachian Teachers College,
Boone, are spending the holidays
here with home folks.
The many friends of Rev. W. B.
Waff, of W inton, N. C., £pr ten
years pastor of the Mocksville Bap
tist church, will be sorry to learn
thal. this aged minister suffered a
stroke of paralysis in November
and is still confined to his bed. He
asks the prayers of all his Mocks-
ville and Davie county friends. We
are all hoping that this sainted
minister will be restored to his
health and his life spared for many
years to come. No finer Christian
man ever lived in Mocksville than
Rev. W. B. Waff.
There will be a Christmas tree at
Jericho on Friday evening, Dec.
2 3rd. The public is invited to be
present.
Next Monday is a legal holiday.
Rural letter carriers.will not make
their rounds. They will also have
a holiday on Monday, Jan. 2 nd.
Do your mailing early.
A good friend in Florida has. the
thanks of the editor and family for
a crate of fine oranges and grape
fruit which will go a long way to
ward making Christmas happy for
the old folks as well as the young
ones. It is mighty nice to have
such friends, and may this one live
to be a huudred years young.
Everybody go to Ideal Gro
cery for Christmas Candies,
Fruits, Nuts. Good quality,!
low prices. Also fresh meats,(skies with rising
fish and oysters are cheaper, this seotiou.
A large audience was present at j g j ^ J C Itf8 6 C b i s t -
the high school auditorium Thurs
day eveniiig to s=e the araaiEiar! . Q id S t
school oDi-retta ‘The Kidnappingl
of Santa Claus." The play was giv-! All of the local stores and business
en under the direction of Miss A n-Ihouses in Mocksville, with the ex-
uieM aeBenton. Delightful music I cePtion ° f the cafes and fillioS
wasfunisbed by the bigh schoolj will be dosed on Christmas
orchestra and Cbristnfes Carols were daythis ^ear as Christmas comes on
s u n g by thehigh school Glee Clubs. Isundav- undeistand that a
I number of the stores will also close
Many patrons ot the Mocksville j on Monday. Dec. 26 th, as Christmas
rural mail routes weie t without | day fa„s on Sunday. The post.
mail servicr fiom Friday until yes -1 0fgce wj|j observe Sunday hours and
terday, The rural letter carriers; tjje BaDk of Davie will be closed all
did their level best to make the day There is but little business
rounds but many roads were im- transacted the day after Christmas
passable as a result of the heavy^ aU(j I3usIlless houses that close
ice and snow. The carriers cover-, wjjj suffer much financialiy.
ed as much of their routes as pos-S
sible. Better weather is hoped for j
today. Uncle Sam calls for cloudy 1
temperatures in;
RESOLVED: That I will give sane I
gifts this Christmas. “Gifts That En-g
dure.” That give the recipient lasting
pleasure for years to come, “Gift of;
Utility” such as you can buy at “Your;
Hardware Store ” Scan the list be
low and make your selection now.
Furniture
I Bed Room, Living Room
Dining Room
Odd Chairs
Tables, Magazine Racks
Writing Desks, Book Tiers
Rugs, Simmons Beds and
Mattresses
China, 32 and 50 pc sets
Silver Ware Rogei s A No I
Pyrex Glass
Watches, Clocks
Knives and Forks, Stain
less Steel
Mirrors
Elec Table Lamps
Door Mats
Shot Guns 410, 20, 16,
12Ga .
Remmington and Stevens
Rifles
Air Rifles and Shot
Shot Gun Shells
Coasters Wagons
Velocipedes, Scooters
Colonial Fire Place Sets
Fire Place and Grate
Guards
Boys Axes
Pocket Knives, Razors
Scissors and Shears
Carring Sets
Foot Balls
We invite you to come in and let us
have the pleasure of showing youi
thru the stock. Prices never lower!
than now.
“The Store Of Today’s Best”
Mocksville Hardware Co.
PATRONIZE YOUR HARDWARE STORE
Christmas
roceries
Plan Your Christmas Dinner Menu
now and let us fill the “Grocery
Part” of it.
SAVE YOU MONEY!
We thank you for your patronage during the past
year and wish you A Merry Christmas and A
Happy New Year,
Allison-Johnson Co. <
Phone 111 Mocksville, N. C. j
“We Deliver The Goods” .
Davie Teachers Elect
Officers.
The annual election of officers of
the Davie County Teachers Associat
ion was held Monday night Dec. I2th
at a meeting in the Cooleemee school
building.
E. W. Junker, countv president
and superintendent of the Cooleemee
schools-, presided and after welcom
ing about 90 teachers from practi
cally every school in the county,
stated the obje't of the meeting.
The next speaker on the program
was Prof. W. F. Robinson, county
superintendent of schools Prc-
fessor Kobinson spoke on welfare
work and school attendance.
Major I P. Graham, of Cooleemee
member of the county board of ed
ucation, spoke on Athletics in the
High School.”
- Miss Elizabeth Mann, teacher in
the Cooleemee school, delivered the
concluding speech, using as a theme.
How to Secure Attendance,” Miss
Mann’s clas3 of 40 won the record
attendance mark in the school for
the past month, with only three ab
sentees during the past month, with
only three absentees during that
period.
Officers elected were: President E .
C. Staton, superintendent of the
Mocksville schools; vice-president,
G R. Madison, superintendent of
the Smith Grove school; secretary,
Miss Sallie Hunter, Mocksville High ing 1932 Taxes:
School.
•’Christmas Gifts;!
9
*
$£
I *
m
A
A
n
A
A
I
A
Christmas Is Nearly Here
And We Are Ready With
A Nice Lot Of
Neck Ties—Dress Shirts—
Make A Splendid Present.
We Also Have
Candy, Fancy and Plain
Fancy Box Candy, Nuts,
| Raisins, Oranges, Apples, Etc. J \
See Our Line Eefore You Buy
Our Prices Are Right
Kurfees & Ward
“BETTER SERVICE”
1 1
¥
u
H
U
tfr
M
H
U
2!
$
M
W
¥$
t»
¥
I l
f t
NOTICE!
I will meet the taxpayers of Davie County at the fol
lowing named places and times for the purpose of collect*
FARMINGTON TOWNSHIP
Tuesday, January 3rd, Graham’s Store
Tuesday, January 3rd. Cook's Store
Tuesday, January 3rd. C. D. Smith's Store
Tuesday, January 3rd, Tomniy Hendrix’s Store
CLARKSVILLE TOWNSHIP
Phillips Speaks To Le
gion Post.
Cjlonel Wade H. Phillips, of Lex
ington, past departmental command
er of the American Legion addressed'
the members, of the Davie county, Wedne8day_ January4th. Enoch Bauys Store
post at the court house Friday night. ■ Wednesday> January 4th> Fou!. Corner.s
Colonel Phillips delivered a very | Wednesday, January 4 th, Naylor’s Store
masterful and interesting address. |
D espitethecoldandsnow a large] C A L A H A L N T O W N S H IP
attendance was on hand and the. Thursday, January 5th. Smoot's Store
10:00 a. m. to 11:30 a. m.
12:00 m. to 1:00 p. m
1:30 p. m. to 2:30 p. m.
3:00 p. ra. to 4:00 p. m.
Wednesday, January 4th. Stanley’s Store 10:00 a. m. to 11:00 a. m.
11:00 a. m. to 12:00 m.
12:30 p. m. to l:3u p. ra.
2:00 p. m. to 3:30 p. m.
Lots of people would bs glad to
pay their debts if they had the
money. Others don’t care.
Land posters for sale.
J
SEMI-PASTE PAINT
One Gallon Makes 2 1-2 When Mixed
KU RFEES & W ARD
Useful Gifts. *
Be sensible and give gifts
that are useful. In our store
you will find such gifts as
Leather Goods. Half Priced,
Fountain Pens, Pen and Pen
cil Sets, Toilet Goods, Candi
es and many other items to
select from.
Let Us Show You
Visit Us Often
Let Us Serve You.
LeGrand’s Pharmacy
On The Square
Phone 21 Mocksville N. C.
9:00 a. m. to 10:00 a. m.
. 10:00 a. m. to 11:30 a. m.
12:30 p. m. to 2:00 p. m.
Thursday, January Sth. Poweli's Store . . . 2:30 p. m. to 4:00 p. m.
SHADY GROVE TOWNSHIP
meeting was one of the best held in | Thursday, January 5th, M. L. Godby’s Store
the county in some time W. 0. By- Thursday, January 5th, W. W. Smith’s Store
erly of Cooleemee, post commander,
was in the chair.
Other speakers were Ezra Motley,
comraonderof the Lexington post;
Dr. L. P. Martin, Americanization
officer of the local post; Staley Ben-
net of the Lexington post and Robert
S. McNeil of the local post, com
mander of the 13th district, who in
troduced Colonel Phillips.
Friday, January 6th, Lonnie Hendrix’3 Store
Friday, January 6lh C. C. Walker’s Store
Friday, January 6th, Robertson’s Store
Friday, January 6tb, Bailey's Stare
9:00 a. m. to 10:00 a. m.
10:30 a. m. to 11:30 a. m.
11:30 a. m. to 12:30 p. m.
1:00 p. m. to 2.30 p. m.
FULTON TOWNSHIP
Friday. January 6th,~A. M. Fosters Store . . 3:00 p. m. to 4:30 p. m.
JERUSALEM TOWNSHIP
Tuesday. January 10th. Oavie Supply Co.
Tuesday, January lutb, Cooleemee Drug Store
1:00 p. m. to 3:00 p. m.
3:30 p. m. to 9:00 p. m.
Please meet me at the above time and place and
settle your 1932 taxes. Please pay your 1932 county
taxes now and save additional cost.
CHARLES C SMOOT,
SHERIFF DAVIE COUNTY.
Let Us Gin Your Cotton
When You Bring Your Cotton
to town drive down to see US
“Yours For Good Service”
Green Milling Company
MR. FARMER!
We are in a better position to handle;:
Your Cotton Than Ever Before
We Appreciate Your Business
FOSTER & GREEN
Near Sanford Motor Co.
** * * ** 'I’ 'I' 'I- ■!' 'I’ 1P 'I' -V * * » 'M' 'I' 'I' * 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I 'I' 'I' i -I. * E * »»»’
\
I t m m m re c o rd, m oocsvicee. r c, fcECEV BEfc a t. 1 9 3 2
!NATION’S LAW
iSEEN AS mBDWMKEBS
B a n k er; T ells of L rs a r P u t in
b y M em bers of C ongress on
M ass of T ech n ical M easures
OUTLINING legislative procedure,
Robert V. Fleming, President Riggs
!National Bank, Washington. D. C., gave
the recent convention of the American
!Bankers Association a description of
‘the difficulties and problems confront-
'ing the law-makcrs. Mr. Fleming said
in part;
“The most important part oC organi
zation of the two branches of congress
is election of standing committees.
There are 34 standing committees in
‘the Senate and 4G in the House. These
are the workshops of Congress and the
real work of lawmaking is done in
Committee Rooms.
“The task of legislating for 124,000,*
000 people is a tremendous one. Of re
cent years approximately 20,000 bills
are introduced annually in the two
Houses. Only a small percentage be
come law, but they must be weighed in
committee, accepted or rejected, per
haps amended, reported out, and then
considered on the floor.
“Lawmaking involves about 09^ of
liard and nnspectaculr.r work and
about 1% of oratory. Few tasks ap
pear so easy and are so diftifcult as en
actment of sound and satisfactory leg
islation. Few individuals in any line
^of activity work harder or longer hours
than the chairmen of the important
committees during a session. I have
great sympathy for the members of
Congress whose constituents expect
•undivided attention to every piece of
,legislation m which they may be inter
ested. From my personal observation,
they earnestly and conscientiously en
deavor to do all that is humanly pos
sible.
Public Hearings
• ltWlien a bill is introduced,referred to
committee and printed the next step,
if it is a measure of considerable im
portance, is to conduct a public hear
ing. The committee makes an effort to
listen to anyone who cares to be heard
either for or against a measure, al
though witnesses are frequently limit
ed as to time. Members of the Cabinet
and other officials of the administra
tive departments of the Government
usually testify on measures in which
they are interested and furnish the
committee information in executive
session or otherwise. In this way the
[Administration takes a prominent part
in shaping legislation.
“Due to pressure of work and the
fact that it is impossible for members
of Congress to be technical experts on
every subject of legislation, the com
mittees are inclined to give considera
tion to the merits of arguments pre
sented in testimony and the recom
mendations of the Cabinet and other
officipls. It is therefore highly desir
able, both from the standpoint of Con
gress as well as those effected by pro
posed legislation, that the IatterJiave
an opportunity to discuss frankly the
effects of such legislation.
“We sometimes complain about the
technicalities of legislation, but when
we observe organized minorities en
deavoring to force class legislation
through one House it is a comfort to
kuow such measures may be caught in
the meshes of technical procedure in
the other and there suffer what is
termed automatic asphyxiation."
view of the "banking situation from a
good many people. His idea is as
follows:
“With rents falling and unpaid. Teal
estate does not present a happy pic
ture. Nor does the owner of care
fully selected bonds feel any happier,
with a bunch of them going wrong. A
lot of folks very carefully invested in
preferred and common stocks in the
linest companies in the world and have
seen them fall to perhaps a tenth of
what they paid for them, and no div
idends at all. Some folks kept their
money in saving! accounts in banks,
and some banlis have closed and left
them high and dry. But the situation
is worth looking at very carefully.
“On government authority, most
banks Ihat closed were really solvent
but for frozen assets and popular
timidity. Gradually the closed bank^
are coming out from under and de^
posilors in even bad cdses will‘get at
least 50 per cent Ot their savin;
That’s tough of course; nobody likes/
to lose half of what they had scrimped)
and sacrificed and saved. But when
you hoard and stick the roll of bills in
a coffee pot or under a mattress, some
plug-ugly ccmes along and burns your
feet till you tell him to take it and
welcome.
“And what about the great majority
of banks that weathered the storm,
met all comers and are doing business
as usual, carefully and conservatively,
but safely? What about the savings
in those banks0 They are a full 100
per cent today—and they are the only
thing we know of at 100 per cent any
where. After all is said and done, a
good, well managed bank is still the
best place in all the world for money
or savings. Right now in Ohio the
banks pay the taxes on savings and
pay their depositors 1»*.. interest on
their savings. We can’t think, jusf
now, of many other investments that
are a tenth as safe as a savings ac
count in a solid bank. Why, even a
savings account in a closed Imnk is
actually worth more today than mosl
stocks.”
t
A Country Editor
L o c k s a t B a n k i n g
r IE editor of the Norwalk. Ohio.
Heral_d takes a somev/hat different
Takes Little Ftock In
Depression Talk.
Bailey, N. C.—A. H. Groverhas
heaid about the depression, but
doesn't take much stock in it.
He has just dressed 3 ,4 1 0 pounds
of meat off nine hogs, and says he
spent less than $5 to get them that
way. He explained he grows practi
cally all the food used of his three
horse farm, both for himself, his
help and his stock; has money in
the bank, which is seldom touched
except to buy fertilizer and tools,
and whatever be buys he pays cash.
He added he has yet to go
through a profitless year.
Iredell Man Is Held For
Assault Cn Wife.
Statesville—I. C. Hope, of new
Hope township in Iredell county, 56
years old and the father of thirteen
children; was ordered held under
$ 500 bond when his wife accused
him of assaulting her with a shot
gun and a fire poker.
If and when our national budget
is balanced, we can then swap the
phrase for something slse that will
look good in print.—Ex.
PRETTY DOLL FREE
AU persons who subscribe io
The Record or renew their sub
scriptions by paying us $1.00 or
more on subscription, will receive
a pretty 17-inch long doll free.
These dolls cannot be mailed. If
you want one of these dolls call
or send for it soon. The supply
is limited.
All persons who renew their subscrip
tions and all new subscribers will re
ceive a 1933 Blum’s Almanac free. Call
and get your copy today.
Latterday Needs.
Give me the old mothers with a
cob pipe and gingham apron, and
the old style ftockiug, 'knit bv
grandma The honest to God peo
ple, the old style home full of love,
and the old style fireplace, with the
old style cooking, are things we
need. And we need the old style
mule and not so much of the gas
buggy on the highways.—T. B.
Lanes', Monroe Journal.
Notice Of Sale! \
By virtue of the authority given to
the undersigned Trustee in a certain
Deed of Trust executed by Jerry
Lindsey and his wife, Mary Law
Lindsev, dated Decemher 31st, 1930
and recorded in the Office of Regist
er of Deeds of Davie county in Book
24 of Mortgages on Pafte 451-2 (de
fault having been made in the pay
ment of the indebtedness thereby se
cured), the undersigned Trusteewill
offer for sale to the highest bidder at
the Court House Door in Mocksville.
North Carolina, the following de
scribed land at 12:00 Noon, on
Tuesday, December 27th, 1932
Beginning at a stone on the North
side of the public road. Hege and
Jordan corner, thence with the road
partly in George Frv’s line 13V poles
to a stone in the road. Lanier’scorn-
er in Fry’s line; thence in Lanier’s
line South 70 degrees East 32 poles
to a stone. Lanier’s corner; thence
South Gdegrees East 43' poles to a
stone on bank of Yadkin River, La
nier’s corner; thence up the river 49
poles to the mouth of a branch where
it empties into the river; thence up
the meanders of the branch 33 poles
and 13 linl<s to a stone, Hege’s corn
er; thence East 10 degrees North 4
noles in Hege’s line; thence North 8
degrees East in Hege’s line 127 poles
to a stonein Alex Hege’s line; thence
in his line North 85 degrees West 24
Doles to a stone the beginning, con
taining Forty-nine and three-fourths
(49 75) acres, more or less, Less One
(I) acre sold off to George Fry, and
Three (3) acres sold off to Jacob
Hege1 Jr.
TERMS OF SALE: Cash.
This the 23rd day of November,
1932
J BENBOW JONES. Trustee. ,
Sale
Of course you have heard of the
man who was so lazy that when he
wanted to take a little exercise he
scratched pieces of glass together to
make his flesh crawl!—Ex.
Land posters for sale.
USE COOK’s
C. C. C.
Relieves LaGrippe, Colds,
Coughs, Sore Throat and
Croup.
In Successful Use Over 30 Years
of Land Under/
Mortgage.
By vertue of the powers contained
in a mortgagee deed executed to me
by Mrs. Sarah A. Richardson, de
fault having been made in thu pay
ment of same. I will sell for Cish
at the court house door in Davie
county N. C . at public outcry to the
Highest bidder on Monday Januarv
2nd 1933 at 12 o’clock m., the lands
described below. Viz: being the
Newtown Richardson home place
situarated in Clarksville township,
Davie county, N. C., and bounded as
follow: Starting at a stone corner
of J. A. Richardsons land and run
ning South with J. A, Richardson
line 8 chains to a stone, corner J. A.
Richardson line; thence East with J.
A. Richardsons line about 27 chains
to John Smoots corner; thence North
with Smoots line to Charlie Hart
man’s corner; thence West with
Hartman’s line to a stone in John
Browns line; thence South with
Browns line to a stone John Browns
corner; thence Wast with Browns
line to a stone John Browns corner
in Sam Cartners line, thence South
with Cirtners line to a stone in J. A.
Richardson line; thence East to a
stone the beginning corner; contain
ing about seventy-five acres more or
less. This Nov. 28nh 1932
i G. L. WHITE. Mortgagee,
Cy E. H. MORRIS. Atty.
Suppose This Were The Heading Of A Newspaper Item About j
The Crook Who Stole YOUR Carf
IF CROOKS steal your car. Theft Insurance will make good your loss.
Don’t put ali your faith in locking devices and your own carefulness. jj
These help, out are not infallible.
Isn’t it common sense for you to be fully insured?
E. G Morris
Real Estate And Insurance
For Nerve Exhaustion, Loss of
FIesli and Weakened Vitality,
Irogen Is Ideal TonicRemedy
N orth Carolina M an Tells W hy H e Thinks I t Is “The Best)
M edicine in the W orld.”— G reat Prescription Quickly R e-^
• vitalizes the Blood and R estores Vigorous H ealth. I
The number of victims of nervous
exhaustion and general breakdown
is steadily increasing in the United
States, according to the statistics
of health experts. It appears, from
tjieif reports, that nature has failed io provide for the abnormal strain
of modern business and social life, and it is not surprising that the nerve cells give away.
When the nerves are deranged the digestive organs are impaired,
food ceases to yield the proper nourishment, the blood becomes !impoverished, insomnia appears,
;and the usual result is a general
nervous breakdown.Men and women who get in this condition, or who feel it approach
ing, need a powerful but safe res
torative tonic, which will build up
and strengthen the entire system
[and, at the same time, act directly ,upon the digestive and assimilat
ing organs.
HAS PHENOMENAL SUCCESS
IROGplN’S success has been phe
nomenal. Although the first pack-
age was put on the market less than a year ago, the sales in this vicinity have already run into thou
sands of bottles, and letters are pouring in unsolicited from people In every*walk of life, telling of the
wonderful® relief it has afforded
from suffering and general physi-: cal weakness:
One of these, which is typical, comes from A. D. Ballard, of Bilt-
more, N. C., near Asheville, the. father of six children. Mr. Ballard
writes that he noticed a failin'* off in weight, accompanied by continuous backache, with touches of
rheumatism and weak kidneys.“After taking only one bottle of IROGEN, I found that I had gained
five pounds,” he writes enthusiastically. “All the pains in my back
have gone, I feel strong and fit for a day’s work every morning, I sleep
well and am always hungry at meal times. I believe it is the best med
icine in the world.0
NOT A PATENT MEDICINE
IROGEN is not a patent medicine. It contains Food Iron, Nutritious
Malt, valuable digestives and other famed tonic aids of recognized medicinal value.
What this powerful reconstruct
ive medicine has done for countless
thousands of people everywhere,
scores of whom are residents of this vicinity, it is fair to assume it will
do for you.IROGEN may be obtained in either liquid or concentrated tabletl
form. At leading druggists and’ dealers in medicine everywhere, including
LeGrancPs Pharmacy, Mocksville, N. G
CooIeemee Drug Store, Cooleemee, N. C.
NOW ONLY ONE DOLLAR.
W. P. S PEAS, M. D. *
Room 324 R. J. Reynolds *❖Building * j
Winston-Salem, N. C. * I* * II Practice Limited to Disease *
i Of The Eyeand Fitting: Glasses *
Hours 9 -12: 2 -5
<•
•i* W W v fcIi* *1* v *1* *1* 1J1 •!* •X* 1I* *X*
DR.E. C. CHOATE j
DENTIST
Office Second Floor Front
New Sanford Building
Office Phone HO
Residence Phone 30.
Mocksville. N. C.
BKST IN RADIOS
YOUNG RADIO CO.
MOCKSVILLE. N. C.
BEST IN SU PPLIES
Send us your subscription
and receive a 1933 Blum’s
Almanac free. Don’t wait
too long. ■
WANTED!
We want the im
portant news hap
penings from every
section of the coun
ty. Drop us a card
or letter if a new vo
ter arrives at your
home; if your moth-
er-in-Iaw comes on
a visit or dies; if the
son or daughter gets
married or anything
worth mentioning.
Old papers for sale.
CAMPBELL - WALKER FUNERAL HOME
Distinctive Funeral Service to Evrery One
[A M B U L A N C E - - - EM B A LM ER S
Main St. Next To Methodist Church
[Day Phone 4803 Night Phone 4811 or 163
PLEASE
PAY
NOW!
Yesterday we requested a De
linquent Subscriber to settle his ac
count with us, and he replied:
“I am honest, and I will pay you
if I live, if I die and go to heaven
I will send it to you. If I die and
do not go to heaven I will hand it
to you.”
We think most of our Subscrib
ers are honest, but we need money
now to meet obligations. Please
let us hear from you.
THE DAVIE RECORD,
P. S. When your son or
daughter leaves for College
send them The Record. A
special rate to !students.
★★★
Ic★•*-★★★ >- ir Ir ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★*
★★★★★*
★★★*★1c1c★★
★ ★ ★ ★ Ir * £ ★ Ir 1c 1c 1c Ir Ar & ★ ★
IC ★ ★ 1c . ★ ★ * V 1c 1c 1c 1c 1c 1c Ic .* * ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Ir
1c 1c If 1c 1c 1c
★ *
\***************************************************<
ISSUE NOT PUBLISHED