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03-March
J L Z e J ^ POSTAL RECEIPTS SHOW THE RECORD CIRCULATION THE LARGEST IN THE • COUNTY. THEY DONiT LIE. SL jJ U a a s ^&>v ~ 5 want theim, nt ne^ s hap. \m sgs from every " n o fth eco u n. ^ropus a card ter if a newvo. prrives at y0llr ; if your moth. law comes on t or dies; if the r daughter gets ied or anything mentioning, japers for sale. agw m ^ w tm w w w w TTmmiiui ERAL HOME E very One EM BALM ERS Church Night Phone 4811 or 163 •WERE SHAEL THE PRESS. THE PEOPLE’S RIGHTS MAlNtAIN: UNAWED BY INFLUENCE AND UNBRIBED BY GAIN.” v o lU MN X X X IV .M O C K SV IL L E , N O R T H C A R O L IN A , W E D N E S D A Y , M ARCH I. 1933 N U M B ER 32 - L P5?S 13. w m^ « n Dws YOU are of people of is going appened, y . . a eh week |H :harge of Y ear **** KEffS OF LONG AGO. Whlt Was H ap p en in g In D av ie B efore The Days of A u to m o b iles a n d R o lled H ose. (D avieR ecordl F e b . 15, 1911) q C. C herry re tu rn e d S a tu rd a y from a trip to C h a rlo tte . Miss L ouise 'W illiam s sp e n t F r i day in G reensboro sh o p p in g . C. H. B yerly 1 o t K a p p a , sp e n t Fridayin W inston on b u sin ess. A. T. G rant, J r ., re tu rn e d F rid a y I front a business trip to R aleig h . JIisses A nnie a n d M arie A lliso n spent Friday in G re e n sb o ro s h o p ping. Jordon, the little son of M r. an d Mrs. P. J- R ouse, is d a n g e ro u sly ill will) pneum onia. M issSarah K elly is sp e n d in g th is week in Statesville, th e g n e st of Miss JIyrtle G rah am . JIrs. C. F . S tro u d an d c h ild re n are spending this w eek w ith re la t ives in Statesville. Mr and M rs. R . M . Ija m e s and and little son sp en t T h u rsd a y an d Friday in S alisbury. A new glass front is b e in g p u t in the old bank b u ilding, w h ic h h elp s the looks of the b u ild in g v e ry m u ch . 0. C. A ustin and little so n , of Statesville, spent S a tu rd a y and Sunday in tow n w ith relativ es. Friend A ustin got fo u r sq u a re m eals I while here. R. S. M ercney w en t to H ic k o ry last week w here he h as a p o sitio n as foreman in th e H ic k o ry D em o crat office. [ A. A. W agoner re tu rn e d W e d nesday from S tatesv ille, w h e re he' faccompained h is sister-in -law , -M rs. E L. Griffin, w ho e n te re d L o n g ’s Sauatorium for tre a tm e n t. A concrete sidew alk is b e in g laid in front of the d ru g sto re a n d th e old bank build in g . C o n tra c to r Cecil is doing th e w o rk . , - Master A ndrew M cG lam ery cel ebrated his seventn b irth d a y M o n - day by entertaining a n u m b e r o f h is little friends. D ain ty re fre sh m e n ts were served. Rev. B. F . R ollins, o f C o u rtn e y , brother of o u r to w n sm an R . H . Rollius, has been in to w n th e p a st week looking around fo r a lo catio n . Hehas been in th e m erc a n tile b u si ness at C ourtney several y e a rs an d may move his stock o f g o o d s h ere. No more whisky ads w ill appear in The Record After this w eek. Mrs. Polly H o w ard died F rid a y at the home of h e r n ep h ew , W . T . Myers, at Bixby. A big b irthday d in n e r w as g iv e n at the home of M r. an d M rs. R . L . Walker.on R. 2, M onday, in h o n o r of Mrs, H . J. W a lk e r’s 80 th b irth day. Forty-tw o g u e sts w ere pres. ent. A delig h tfu l tim e The following- n in th a n d te n th grade students of th e M ocksville graded school m ade p a ssin g g rad es 1 > all their stu d ies fo r th e w eek of Feb. 10th: D o ro th y C a ith e r1D aisy Harley, M arth a C lem en t, A n n ie Allison, Jane H a d eh G a ith e r, R ose Oweus, B onnie B ro w n , V e lm a Martain1 L a u ra C lem en t, J a k e S ewart and M ilton Call'. Taylor B ailey, o f V irg in a , h as visiting W . A . B ailey, a t A d vance, w ho is q u ite ill. The follow ing ju ro rs h a v e been drawn for th e M arch te rm o l D avie Superior co u rt: T h o s. Jo n es, W . H. Gaither, T . M . D ix o n , Ja s. A Tivengood, C. W . S te w a rt. W . W . White, P. A . Jo n es, D avid E . B eck, N- T. F oster’ J. J . S ta rre tte , C . A . Davis, L illin g to n H e n d rix , W . J Botvlts, T . M . Peoples! W . H . L ee. W. C. L ath am , A . M . S tro u d , A . M Foster, D . J. B ro w n i W - A Beeker, G . F . F o ste r, F . R . M c Mahan, D . 0 . H e lp e r. J . F . H a n e s, G . R ich ard so n , R . A . D w ig g in s, G. T. T u ck er, Jo h n WT. B eau ch am p , DewisS B oger, H . H . S w iceg o o d , ^ C. C ornatzer, W . L . D ix o n , S . J Smoot, E . R . B arn ey , J . E d O r- L J. C. -B id d er. ....— been • tell, The Enrolling Clerks And Others. W e don’t know whether our new secretary of state, Mr. W ade, made prom ises of econom y and reform when he won the job. But in one respect he is holding on to an old abusing common to the office, and the cause of m uch criticism in recent tim e. Legislative bills parsed are com pleted in the office of the secre tary of State, where they are en rolled. A t each legislative session 4 0 to 50 clerks, usually wom en, are em ployed for that work T be gen eral opinion is that there are two three tim es as m any as are really needed. Pay is from $5 to ”$6 per day. -W hen the legislature made a gesture of curtailing legislative em ployes— they were actually curtail ed but one is being added here and there and for this and that ,during the session— the enrolling clerk’s sffice was ignored. W itn that the secretary of State em ployed the usual number, stated at .''4 0-odd.” T hey have had com paratively little work to do up to now but they draw pry. R ecently there has been talk about this waste and in anticigation Mr. W ade laid ofi 15 of the clerks. A representative has offered a bill to lim it the num ber to j 2 . T he secretary of State says the largest num ber em ployed at any tim e was 43 and w ith the late reductions 26 rem ain. T h e secretary also sug gests that he would be pleased if the Iegislainre would fake the enrolling clerk’s office lroni his domain and relieve him of the responsibility of- em ploying the clerks. ” Be that ab it m ay, the secretary, even as his predecessors, didn’t avoid the re sponsibility of nam ing the usual large number of pay roll attaches. T he reduction in force was not made until a rum bling was heard in the legislature. S om eof the alert newspaper men about Raleigh w ho have no embar rassm ent in giving the lowdown on these m atters —are not under obliga tion to officialdom— should take the pains to print, on the conclusion of the legislating, the num ber of em ployes as compared w ith the num ber of em ployes as compared w ith the number named when the lawm akers weae staging econom y and receiv in g applause from back borne. There are intim ations that clerks are being added from tim e to time, It is probable in som e instances, when inform ation m ust be gathered and analyzed by im portant com m ittees, that more help w ill be needed. That is reasonable not only but should not be cause for com plaint. But notice m ight be taken of the tw o three extras put on w hen only one may be needed. Officialdom' would declare this puerile. T hey have Leen able to get aw ay w ith the pay roll padding so long that they will never quit it unless the public keeps after them and lists for inform ation names of those w ho try to laugh off econo m y dem ands.— Statesville D aily. Large Nugget Found Albem arle.— W hile prospecting on gold m ining property near N ew London a few days ago, R. A . H oneycutt, of the Clairmont sec tion found a nugget w eighing w ith- in a fraction of a pennyw eight T he nugget was picked up just on the edge o f town: Mr. H unneycutt has been doing prospecting work on the property ’ for som e time, m ostly surface panning, until last w eek, when w ashing equipment was installed w ith water furnished from a shaft on an old cordage mill. In addition to m any nuggets weigh: in g from a half to a pennyw eight, a good quality of fine gold has been m inded in N ew London vicinity re cent I y. _________■ I Land posters at this office. Journal ^Helped Elecjt Them. H ouse Judiciary Com m ittee No.'; I turns in a favorable report on the* Bowie-M urphy bill to legalize the’ sale of wines and beer in North Ca rolina. T he approval was effected; quietly w ithout public hearings—, indeed, none had been requested. T he bill now goes before the House; for the scheduled three readings, if it is not killed after one or two readings. T his measure fairly bristles with anticipation. It provides for the sale of som ething that can neither be manufactured nor sold legally in the U nited States. T he sponsors of the bill have high hopes that the inhibition upon the m anufacture and sale of light wines and beer will be lifted by Congress. They want N orth Carolina to be ready when the liquor m illennium is ushered in. And they don’t want North Carolina to lose a penny of beer and w ine tax to any nearby state— the thrifty souls! U nderthisJm easure 1 counties or cities would be allowed to levy a a tax of $2s on each business palce selling ligalized alcoholic beverages. W hat sort of places are these to be? A ll along the foes of prohibition have been telling us that the saloon shall not return. But what is a saloon, if it isn’t a place where ^.al coholic beverages are sold? H ow many of these wine and beer em poriums would be held strictly to: sale of wine and beer? H ow many; of them would handle a , lijtle; “ hard liquor” along with the Winei and beer? Soon the cry would be heard that since there is so m uch bootlegging ing the place where the w ine and beer are sold, they should be allow ed to sell distilled spirits along with ferm ented and brewed drinks. Stripping all argum ents and mo tives aside, the stark fact remains that alcoholic beverages will be sold in saloons if this plan is approved. — W inston Salem Journal. Raleigh Bound. Since the publication in The R ec ord last week of the story about the “ lobby party” at R aleigh at which some of the legislators were enter- tainen by wom en dancing in the nude, there has been a sort of raig ration of the adult male popula.ion of Statesville Som e of them admit that they are going to Raleigh to see a mau about a m ule, but more often they explain that business demands their presence at som e other eastern poing. T his should not be taken to mean that every m ention in the personal column of those Raleigh- bound have arranged with their representatives for iingside seats .Our cub reporter has been instructed to make note only of those who can not be charged with this particular interest. Those not thus m ention ed— w ell, you’ll just have to draw your own couclusions W hich should be plenty incentive for men folk visiting the staee capitol, to first see that their trip is properly catalogued before they pack their grip. Our phone number is 6 50.— Statesville Daily. After Old Man Hauser’* Cash. R S. M cNeill,- administrator of the estate of Fred Styers has filed new action in Davie superior court asking the sum of $7 5 ,00.0 ot John H enry H auser, oldest man ever convicted and sentenced to death in N orth Carolina, for the “ unlawful, w ilful, m alicious and intentional killing and murder” of Styers. H auser’s son in law, who died alm ost im m ediately after re ceiving the full load from a double barrel shotgun in his Iett breast fired by Hauser at their country home near the Yadkin river on M any 2 8 , 1931. A former suit asking the same am ount entered more than a year ago has recently, been withdrawn by the administrators on the grounds that it was instituted be fore he (M cN eill) bad been legally appointed administrator. — Union Republican. Kindness Rewarded. The rector going up the steps of his church' to conduct service, was accosted by a stately old lady in diffi culties with her breathing. “Pardon m e,” she said, “ but would you do me the favor of assist- .ing me up the steps?” "Certainly, madam,” assented the rector, giving her -his: arm. They reached the door;-when'the old lady pausing, asked: “ Pardon me once more, but do you k n o w ‘ who preaching this morning?” “ The rector, m adam.” “ Ob! Then m ight I beg you to do m e yet another favor?” “ Certainly,” replied the rector. “ W hat else can I do for you?” “ Would you be so good as to assist me down the steps^agaip?” )epression Enjoynment. N o people in the world perhaps enjoy “ hard tim es” like we Am eri cans. Certainly it is reasonably douotful that any people anywhere make as much conversation on the subject as w e do. And no people can forget “hard tim es” more Quickly than we. Those of us who can remember other "hard tim e” periods m ust realize that this is so, we'could-recall if we' half tried- that the air was full of predictions as dire as any we have heard in late m onths. W e m ay come to measure pros perity by new standards. But this need not detract a w hit from its enjoynm ent. T hings that were regarded as radical and dangerous in the old days m ay becom e sym bols of conservatism ; but this will only be history repeating itself. Indeed if this period whets our jaded ap petites to the enjoym ent of things we formerly scorned, it will in fact be creating real prosperity. For prosperity that is not measured by happiness is a snare and a delusion. W ealth is a sorry substitute for it. — T he Dispatch, Prefers Jail Fo Wife H ouston, T exas.— Police station vignette: A m iddle aged business man, whose nam e was withheld, strode up to Sergt F. S. Anderson and said: “ Lock me u p .” “ W hat for?” asked Adderson. “ I ’m giving up; I just ran by a traffic lig h t.” Anderson com plied with the re quest. Theu a woman came- hur rying in. If you are going to lock him up, you'can just lock me up, too,” said she. “ I ’m his w ife.” ^ W h a t’s all this about?” Ander son wanted to know. She just broke up a poker game at m y office and now she wants me to go hom e,” explained the hus band. “ I ’ll stay in jail first.” G etou t of here,” said A nder son, "and find some' other place to hide from your w ife.” Weather. Uncle Sam is not willing to accept a scaled-down cash settlem ent of European debts, unattended by trade agreem ents and readjusted tariffs, nor are we willing, beaten as we are to surrender to mr. groundhog, with out settling other differences that are fundamental to our peace of mind. * * * Ther,e has been much, verv much, since groundhog day to indicate that the brute knows its weather onions. With subscribing to the myth, w e are willing to agree to the general prin ciples credited to his highness, in ex change for the privilege of smashing every thermometer within the scope of the Record’s circulation (which is some range, believe us). To the best of our knowledge and belief it’s been twenty vears since w e looked at one of the blamed things, yet two-three times a day we are asked "what did your thermom eter say this morn ing?” * * * W e believe these thermometer de votees would willingly parade around in their undies, if the mercury should happen to get hung up around 90 some day when the piper were crack ing in the basement, and should it leak enough to indicate about 20 above freezing in mid-snmmer, they’d make a dive for their red flan nels. * * * M aye our antipathy for the thing is the result of the run-in with our pater, when one day we tried to prove to him that it was too hot to work, by warming the mercury with a match and offering it as exhibit (a).. Our chores were doubled- that day;and!we escaped .the razzor strap by the skin of our teeth - -Statesville Record. Barber Turns Lawyer. John K . McCall, H ickory barber who read law at_odd hours, suc cessfully passed the Suprem e court exam ination recentlj^i^d'!know ‘full fledged IawyeW hs ^well as tonsorial arti'st. H e is a native of Burke county. The greatest lesson a man learns is the realization that material things are not life and happiness. True happiness only comes from within. There are more paupers living in palaces than walk the streets in rags. The Money For Liquor. An employer doesn’t always know what becomes of the money he pays his hirelings. H e would have a dif ficult tim e trying to check-on the nickels and dimes his employees spend. Such is the condition that would greet an attem pted m inute check up Oi how recipients of federal relief funds use them . Scores of persons here in Winston-Salem have been put to work by means of the federal aid, and they are paid each week Naturally, it is assumed they spend their wages for necessities of life. However, recent development ir d icatesom eof the money is going fir other things,-including whiskey. It has been found that some names on the payrolls, are also on the court dockets. So the authorities conclude that the federal money—part of it- is going for booze. Judge Thomas Watson has made a wise ruling in his municipal court. He has ordered that names of offend ers be turned over to the investigat ors for receipt of public aid and that these offenders be excluded from the welfare list. If these people have enough money to buy liquor, they don’t need help from the public, he avers. - By removing these persons who obviously are not so seriously in need, they way will be opened for employment o f others actually re quiring assistance.—W inston Senti nel. .____________ The Successful Fellow. T he successful fellow is the man who does what others say can’t be done. T he fellows who alw ays say it can’t be done are fooled every day by the man who pitches in and does it. One difference in em ployees is that one says he can’t while the other believes he can and goes ahead aad does it. H e thinks he can, and that is more than half of it. There are said to be m any unsung heroes, but there are more non heroes who do very much singing The Solicitor’s Pay. Some of these days students of governm ent should be able to devise a method of compensating the state's prosecuting officers so they could be paid a fair amouns for their work and would work for the money, thus avoiding neglect of duty and the temptation to pad the pay account. In the old days solicitors wers' paid by fees, so much for this and that. On its face it was the fairest propo sition ever. The result was that many of them sent three-four and more bills of iGdictment when one would have covered the whole busi ness. This was to pad the pay roll and some of tnsm built up a salary that would astonish even the high salarv advocates in later periods.. Under the new arrangements these prosecuting officers have been paid $4,500 with $750 for expenses, a total of $5,250. The. senate dipped off $1,000, leaving the total $4,250. The house insisted on $8,500, with $100 extra for each week the solicitor works over 25 weeks. It was stated that only two of the scores of solici tors work over 25 weeks the year on the job for which they have been re ceiving $5,250 per.- Some of them have less business in their districts and do less work, but they are paid the same, which isn’t fair. But if solicitors work 25 weeks on the aver age they have been paid at the rate of $10,500 per annum, the higbest paid officers in the state. If the a- mount is held at $4,250 the yearly rate will be $9,000. If $3,500 the yearly rate will be 7.000. not taking into account the $100 per week for all work over the less than half year allotm’ent. Which, by the way, m ight be a temptation to a non industrious solicitor to let his work ’ draw out; seeing that he would get pay for over tim e after 25 weeks. Roland Beasley, layman and editor, would have made the basic pay $3,000; which would be at the rate of $6,000 per year, but the lawyers and others wouldn’t hear to less than $3,500. If a solicitor worked all the tim e, or as near whole tim e as the aver age official, the $3,500 would be little enough for a good lawyer who does a capable prosecuting job, and not all our solicitorial districts are assured of either. But working less than half tim e the amounts named are big pay. It may be said that since solicicors are engaged for part time they can do little work aside from the regular job, notwithstand ing the 27 weeks they have to en gage in other work. Depends on the solicitor, say we, The half tim e job should-pay more in proportion, since the solicitor engaged to do tbat and can’t take other work. Depends on the solicitor, say we. The. half time job should pay more in propor- tlon,-since the solicitor engaged to do that and can’t take other work that interferes. There is a handi cap. Bdt the frequent remark that solicitors are the best paid officials in the state is sustained by the facts. Which sets us to wondering whether the districts couldn’t be rearranged so as to equalize the work better. Bnt the district must be kept so as to insure the election of a Democrat. It would never do make changes that effect that.—Greensboro News.: ■: Would Finance Schools With Farm Produce Proposal that farm produce be accepted in payment of school tax es is made by Edgar T ufts, presi dent ot Lees M cRae College at B an ner-E lk, as a practical m ethod of supporting the schools and balanc ing the state budget. Under this m ethod, he said, the state can maintain the greater U n i versity of N orth Carolina; the scale of teachers’ living standards and the public schools at theif pres ent level and still balance the bud get. H e proposed further that in m any schools the. teacbeis could live in sm all rooms in the school houses, prepare tbeir meals from food giv en in paym ent of taxes and save I like to be stingy, save my money, in order that I may pay my debts promptly. The worst abuse ,I hear on the street is the dead beats, b y them selves the expense of room and bill collectors. . board. - I fffi DAVlE RECORD, MQClcgVltEE,' THE DAVIE RECORD. C. FRANK STROUD - • Editor. Member National Farm Grange. TELEPHONE I. EJntered a tth e Postoffice in M ocks- v ille, N . C .. a s Second-class M ail m a tte r, M arch 3.1 9 0 3 . SUBSCRIPTION RATES: ONE YEAR. IN ADVANCE SIX MONTHS. IN ADVANCE $1 00 $ 50 Ju st as soon as th e fa rm e rs finish sellin g th e ir 1932 cro p o f c o tto n w e are lo o k in g fo r th e price to advance. F ra n k lin R oosevelt w ill be sw o rn in as p resid en t on M arch 4 th . and w ill be cussed o u t fo r fo u r y ears follow ing th a t d ate. W ith som e w ives d ra w in g from $75 to $125 p e r m o n th te a c h in g o r h o ld in g dow n political jo b s, w e see n o reason w h y th e h u sb an d sh o u ld w a n t to w ork. T h e price o f c ig a re ttes h av e been c u t ag ain . T h is m ak es tw o c u ts since C h ristm as. W h a t w e w an t to kn o w is w hen th e y a re g o in g to red u ce th e price o f o u r c h ew in g to bacco. Davie Tax Collection Bill. R aleig h . F eb. 22. — F o rm e r S h e r iff R oy G . W a lk e r, of D avie coun tv , w ould be au th o riz e d to collect b ack ta x e s d u e th ro u g h th e y ears 1917 to 1924 , d u e to w h ich period he w as sh eriff of th e c o u n ty , in a p eriod h e w as sheriff of th e c o u n ty , in a bill inirodjiced in th e H o u se y esterd ay by R ep rese n ta tiv e B. C B rock, of D avie. T h e fo rm er sheriff is giv en th e sam e p ow er an d a u th o rity to col lect su ch back ta x e s as th e sheriff h a s and is given u n til D ecem ber 1, 1934 to collect th e ta x e s th u s d u e . Pilot Mountain Takes Two. S m ith G ro v e. F e b . 22.— F re n c h T a y lo r, fo rm er coach o f th e S m ith G ro v e b a sk e t ball te a m s, a n d now s u p e rin te n d e n t of th e P ilo t M o u n ta in H ig h S chool, b ro u g h t b is S u rry c o u n ty g irls ch am p io n s and a fleet te a m o f boys h e re la st n ig h t to d efeat S m ith G ro v e in a fast d o u b le h e ad e r, th e g irls w in n in g b y a score o f 26 to 10 a n d th e boys ta k in g a 28 to 19 v erd ict. . T h e v isito rs d isp lay ed tw o o f th e fa ste st ste p p in g an d sh o o tin g sq u ad s seen h e re th is season an d w o n c le ar c u t victories. T h e g am e w as th e second d efeat b y th e S m ith G ro v e g irls, fo r th e th ird tim e D avie c o u n ty cham pions.. S m ith G ro v e g irls p u t u p a s tro n g fig h t. Davie Circuit Rally Day In connection with our. second Quartly Conference which m eets at Salem church Saturday March 4th at 10 a. m., we will observe Circuit Rally Day. It is the de sire of presiding and pastor th at all the churches on the circuit be well represent ed. During the day from 10 a. ro , to a- bout 3 p. m., we will hear discussions on the different phases of church work by Dr. R. A. Smith, Winston Salem. Rev. M. F. Moores, Rev. John Hoyle and L. D. Thompson also W inston, and Rev. R. C. Goforth of Mocksville will appear on the program once or more during the (fay. Be side these speakers from other places there will also appear some local talent. Miss Mazzie VanZant and Miss Sarah Anderson, of Center Church will each read an essay on an interesting subject to all young people, one of these young ladies will read on the subject "W hat Should TheChurchDo ForThe Young Woman?'' Tbe other, "W hat Should The Young Woman Do For Her Church?” We extend an invitation to ail who will to come and worship and study with us the needs of our leaders and boards. Dinner will be Served at Salem church picnic style at about 17:30, and Salem folks know how to cook and how to serve in a way that makes poor appetites work overtime. AU who desire to do so may bring their lunch with them . Salem has ample tables ready for use close by the church where we m ay feast together. Oak Grove church on Davie circuit would like to challenge all churches in W inston District on paying this year's Con ference Claims. This church has already paid more than half of this year's apor- tionment on Conference Claims and more than was paid in all of last year. J. O BANKS, Pastor. Mocksviile And Coolee- mee Divide. T h e M ocksville h ig h school girls w on a decisive v icto ry o v er th e C oo- lee m ee h ig h g irls in th e local gym T h u rsd a y e v en in g ; th e sco re being 19 to 7 in fav o r o f th e M ocksville lassies. T h e M ocksville b o v s d id n ’t fare so w ell. T h e v isitin g c ag e rs an d th e locals p lay ed a close gam e, th e score b e in g tie d' 19 to 19 a t th e end o f th e g am e. In th e th re e m in u tes e x tra p lay th e C ooleem ee boys sco ied tw o p o in ts m a k in g th e score 19 to 21 in favors. B o th g a m e sw e re e x c itin g fro m b e g in n in g to th e end a n d w ere th e b est gam es w itnessed h e te th i^ season'. We Win And Lose. T h e M ocksville h ig h school cag ers tra v e le d to A d v an ce F rid a y ev en in g an d w ere d efeated b y th e S h a d y G ro v e b oys b y a score of 17 to 25. O u r g irls h a d b e tte r lu c k an d de feated th e A d v an ce g irls by th e score of 28 to 17 . Liberty Hill News. Mr. and Mrs. .Felix Gobble spent the week-end with her brother Carmon W hite at .Winston-Salem.: Mr. and Mrs. Rich Stevison and child ren, of W inston-Salem spent Sunday with her sister Mrs. J. F. White. Miss Bessie Chaffin spent Sunday with M issH azelW hite.; Willie W hite and R. B. Stewart and his sen C. B. of Clemm'on’s speot Sunday with bis parents Mr. and Mrs. J. F. White. Jffisses Hazel and Audrey W hite spent Thursday nightw ifb Mrs. Robert Smith near Cana. Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Current, of Winston- Salt m were tbe guests, of her parents Sunday Mr: and Mrs, W. H. Renegar. Frank Tutterow is not improving much his friends are sorry to hear. M r. a n d M rs. F red M u rp h y , o f N o rfo lk , V a , w h o v isited relativ es a t C ooIe m ee an d Jeru salem last w eek , re tu rn e d ho m e M onday!. Thtee Hurt In Wreck . Salisbury, Feb. 26.—Dwaine Isley and Virgil Howell, of Cooleemee and Miss Louise Adams, of Mocksville are in tbe Lowery hospital suffering from injuries they received late Saturday night when their car was wrecked near Catawba col lege. The three were found in the wrecked car all unconscious and .brought to the hospital by a passerby. Today they had all regained consciousness and their in juries are reported as not of a serious na ture. A wheel on the car broke and caused the wreck, it was stated.* Mrs. Jarvis Dies At Ad vance. M rs. B arb ara K a th e rin e Jarv is. 87 , passed a w ay a t h e r h o m e, a t h e r hom e, a t A d v an ce a t 1:15 o’clock W ed n esd ay m o rn in g . S h e h ad been ill sev eral d ay s. M rs. Ja rv is w as a n a tiv e an d life lo n g re sid en t of D avie c o u n ty . S h e w as b o ru A u g u st 10, 1845 , an d w as a m em b er of S m ith G ro v e M eth o d ist c h u rc h . S b e w a s a w idow of Jessie Jarv is. S u rv iv o rs in c lu d e tw o sons, R C . Jarv is, o f W in sto n -S alem , and J . H . Jarv is, o t A d v an ce, 15 g ra n d c h ild re n a n d fo u r g re a t g ra n d c h ild ren. F u n e ra l w as co n d u cted a t S h a d y G ro v e c h u rc h T h u rsd a y '-m orning, by R evs. W . M . R a tb b u rn an d J. A . B aldw in. Kappa News. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Evans are the proud parents of a fine daughter which ar rived Wednesday. Sheriff C. C. Smoot and tamily of Mucks- ville, were visitors in our burg Sunday afternoon. Miss Msrie Cartner is spending, t h i s week with her c o u B i n Miss Mary Ellen Smoot at Mocksville. News has been received here of the death of Mrs. G. W Smoot, widow of Dr. George Smoot, of Fountain City, Tenn. Marshall Koontz and family and Miss Veula Koontz, spent W ednesday in Salis bury shopping. (Too L a te F o r L aat W e A ) M rs. F ay F o ste r w ho holds a posi tion in G reensboro sp en t th e w eek end w ith h e r h u sband B. J . F o ster J r. M iss Ja m ie K n o x . of Cool S prings, sp en t th e w eek-nd w ith M iss F rances Jo n es. . M r. and M rs. B illie C ox, M r. and M rs C larence G riffith and children, o f H igh P o in t sp e n t S unday w ith M r. and M rs. J . N . Click. M r. and M rs M arshall K oontz and M r and M rs. Bill G reen and children visited M r. and M r*. R . L, K eller Sunday a ftern o o n M r. K ellers con d itio n rem ains very feeble. M rs. F lorence S m oot rem ain s very sick h e r m any frien d s w ill be sorrow to learn . J . N , S m oot and fam ily sp en t S un day a ftern o o n w ith M r. S m oot’s m o th er M rs. S. J . Sm oot. M iss M ary D a y w a lta n d M iss M arie C artn e r v isited Cool S p rin g s hig h school T hursd ay .___________ W e c an su p p ly y o u r n eed s for p o u ltry , n e ttin g , p o u ltry and ra b b it fence, h o g a n d field fence, b arb ed w ire an d n a ils a t reaso n ab le p rices. C. C. S A N F O R D S O N S C O . W e h a v e a good q u a lity lin e of co llars, b rid les, h am es, traces, lines, b a ck b a n d s at a v ery low price. C . C. S A N F O R D S O N S Co. B A R G A IN S in e v e ry th in g to e a t a n d w e ar at o u r b ig sale I J . F R A N K H E N D R IX . Dulin7S News. Miss Sallie Hanelioe spent Saturday with Miss Susie Plott. , Mrs. Sherril Smith; Oi'' Redland spent Friday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. G. B.’McDaniel. Mrs. Mattie Haneline who has been on the sick list for the past week is able to be out again we are glad to note. Mr. and Mrs. P. H Howard were in Mocksville shopping Tuesdav. Mrs. A. J. Hendrix spent the past week with her daughter Mrs. George Barney castle, of Comaizer Roger Howard made a business trip to Salisbury Friday. W. T. Haneline visited his daughter one day the past week Mrs. Hermon Boger, of Clemmons. W. T. Haneline made a business trip to Winston Salem Saturday. Mrs. B. L. Smith spent Friday with Mrs. T. A. Plott, Mr. and Mrs. H L. Gobble visited the latter's parents Sunday Mr. and Mrs. G. B. McDaniel Jjames X Roads News. J. J. Holland who holds a position with the Electro-Lux Company, of Winston Sa lem spent the week-end w ith A. C. Chaf fin's. Ruby Lee People's spent last week with relatives. Willis Gobble spent Saturday night with Mr. and Mrs. John Peoples. . Miss Ruth Gaither spent the week end Sheffield. Mr. and Mrs. Felix Gobble spent Satur day and Sunday in Winston Salem. Miss Susan Peoples and Freddie Lee Lanier spent Friday night with Hazel White. Mrs. W. V. Gobble, Mrs. Felex Gobble, Mrs. John Peoples, Miss Freddie Lanier and Miss Susan Peoples were the guest of A. C. Chaffin's last Tuesday. Mrs. Sam Holland is improving very- rapidly we are glad to state. Dan Tucker the recent visitor of M. C. Ijam es has returned to his home in Iowa. Rev. A. C. Chaffin filled Rev. Clyde Y ates place at Statesville First Baptist Church Sunday morning at eleven o'clock. Alonzo Peoples was a visitor a t tbe home of W. V Gobbles Sunday evening. Miss Bessie Chaffin spent Friday with a friend near Calabatn. Joush W hite filled his regular appoint ment. SEED OATS! We have 100 bushels good seed cats which we are selling at 45 cents per bushel. We carry a big line of Feeds, Flour and Meal. Why not patronize Davie county mills--, and keep your money at home. We are still buying cotton and paying highest 7* market prices for same. We want you to call / and see us when you come to town. W e will always treat you right. Green Milling Co. F. K. BENSON, Manager N e a r S o u th ern D epot Mocksville, N. C. a H ia iu u iH iu n in )ii)n n iiuw w iiiii» H in iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim » « « i:iiiiiiiiiiim iiiin a S P R I N G O P E N L N G Spring D raw s A side Its Fashion C urtains A t C. C. Sanford Sons Co. SPRINGS LOVIEST ARRAY OF DRESSES FIRST, of course, the new Frock will m ost likely get your attention. And you’ll be thrilled about their new fashion points . . . new arrangem ents of neckline . . the long sleeves . . tiny details . . . the bright colors and print patterns. COATS IN A SCORE OF LOVELY MODES N EW Versions in Coat styles the detailed treat m ent of which will intrigue you. The new scarf necklines . . new laper arranegem ents . . . new belted effects . . these and many m ore new details will interest you. Adorable Suits SUITS tailored to perfect the modern silhouette . . as flattering youthful as the fem inine vision could wish for MILLINERY D a r lin g little s h a p e s th a tp e r tly d ip o v e r th e e^e . , . yes th e p re ttie s com plem ents to y o u r new E a ste r costum e you can im agine. GLOVES In th e n ew S p rin g S ty les an d colors A w onderful selectio n C. C. SANFORD SONS CO. “Everything For Everybody”Mocksville, N. C C o o k W ith " S to r e d H e a t" In T h is E le c tric O v e n - C o o k e r 95c Cash $ 1 Monthly Corona Two-HeatsElectric Oven-Cooker “ 7 F o r all k in d s o t e lectric co o k ery in th e h o m e . D o es e v e ry th in g a n o v e n w ill do R o asts and b a k es b ro w n — stew s— -boils— ste a m s a n d fricassees, e n o u g h fo o d fo r an a v erag e fa m ily m eal. B ro w n s fo o d s p e rfe c tly , w h ich stea m c o o k ers, p re ssu re cook ers a n d so-called fireless co o k ers w ill n o t d o . C o o k s larg ely by sto re d h e a t an d uses less c u rre n t th a n an electric iro n . H as tw o . h e a ts — “ h ig h ” a n d “ lo w .” “ H ig h ” h e a t rap id ly b rin g s th e o v e n c o o k e r to te m p e ra tu re d esired a n d th e n , b ecau se o f its effec tiv e in su latio n , th e c o o k e r m ain ta in s this te m p e ra tu re w ith “ lo w ” h e a t. T h e low o p e ra tin g c o st and re d u ctio n o f fo o d sh rin k a g e in a s h o rt tim e sav e th e c o st o f this c o o k e r m a n y tim es o v e r. O p e ra te s fro m a n y 'e le c tric a l o u tle t. E q u ip p ed w ith tw o S L t f p c0*vel c.ont.a in e rs- F o o d p re p a re d in th e o v e n -c o o k e r a t h o m e c a n be served hot from it at. picnics or other outings. Here's Sample Menu From the Oven-Cooker Fried Chicken—Boiled New Potatoes with Parsley Steamed Carrots—English Peas Hot Biscuits - - - - Chocolate Cate Time required—one and one-half hours—Cost o f electricity one seven-tenths cents. and *■ A fc .ii' •*'•• ©ur representative will bring this cooker or any appliance to your home for your inspection. ' S o u t h e r n Public U tilities Co. Tune In On Our Radio Program—WBT1 9:15 A. M. Monday-Friday. By Irving Ba< Copyright 1932. by Irvin; WNU Service I CHAPTER I In W hich a Y oung P atriol B oston by “Snoachir Joins W ashington’s! jt w as m idnight of the! July, IlTo- T he bells O fI ringing- T he surges of I 0ver the arm y lines an* spray into Cam bridge J jn a m om ent nearer bd tbe solemn shouting of I ton Through the darknfl sage Oew out on the wtf and up and down the shoj Borgoyne, Howe, Clint| at the com m ander’s hop were fingering a t the Tbey had had a merry* were now considering th movement. In a near r<J of voung ladies and gel dancing to the m usic o f| cod of love and the god busy In th a t house. I At the first sound of I great men of the E nglisf from th e ir m aps and Iif "It s those d—d, ste| rebels who have put mock proclam ations on I night,” said Gage. “Tlf hanging done in this leave It.” “My dear general, w orry you,”' HoWe -T hey're celebrating th man W ashington a t tl] this m orning. They complish m iracles.” The bells had stoppe] The young people th r room, w here sa t these i to m ake th eir adieux | Among them w as a caused a g reat w aggij They w ere th e comely w eather and the big, I athlete, CoIin Cabot, j f rard college. The gossip had been vious external and ences In this couple. Betsey Faneuii had sa were as unlike as a s h | and every one knew the goat. “Pat,” as by her friends, had g e n | great “com eliness”- word In a land of te l tlon. The B ritish officl conferred upon her tlf beauty. M any gall a the handsom e son of had sought P at’s fa| wealth and th e succe had given h er fath er In all the -Colonies land. A born aristocfl share the resentm ent: [' H e had sided w ith thd helped him in the bread. Colin Cabot w as the) m erchant In a count face w as Interesting I some. It w as a stroif that often w ore a frij he had neither we breeding and there Still, be w as a distid set ap art by his s ta l tow er of bone and m ul an inch tail, deep and f to w aistline. H e had : and agile a s his bod m ates had called hfl Achilles.” B ut the may be said of him I not been spoiled by| For a year before t j arrived he had b een f with K nox’s Boston He had a degree of I service w ith gun, swog Now, In Boston good m anners w ere T et m any had these I not his popularity. M Samuel Langdon. ha understanding fa r bil a natural courtliness* the rare gift of gracf the use of w ords.” qualities had cleared! favor of the best heart of Patience F a I devotion of th e younj other being establishef served only to stre W ll had broken the I A t last E lijah F ay er his knee to one of tyrants. “Tainted” by the young man, P at w as I pathy for th e rebel ho reed in the wind. I accused the girl o f | born as a bear w ith : People w ere to be m4 and the young m an ■ work In one of the ; Mr. Fayerw eather. Suddenly the Minutj shed and die gathe arm y I W hat w as ahe and for the w ealthy ■ Hat’s father? W ouldl bate abandon his superfluous “liberty” In th e old, well-tro fa r he had calmly finm ents of his prc„„ law and held his peag situation th a t tries i T he sound of the his turning point, heart w ere dancing, w as a critical tim e t carried a note of ala m usic and the feet I Colin looked down brown eyes of the m em ber of Paul R el ° f patriots and hadp With th e young coppeT S i s t e r RECORD, MOCKSVILLE. N. C. * •* * * * * * * * * , ******* [ksviile, N. C. tf :er 95c Cash $ 1 Monthly The M a ste r o f C haos 0 y Irving B a c h d le r Conyrlffiit 1932, by Irvine BaeheUer W N U Servic* CHAPTER I Ia W hich a Young P atriot Gets O ut o! Boston by “Snoaching,” and' Joins W ashington’s Arm y, j. Wils midnight of the third day ot ‘ 1775 , Tlie bells of Boston w ere r^'iiz. The surges ot sound flooded Ivft- the army lines and flung their jnw Cambridge and Roxbury. jl, j m-'incut nearer bells answ ered ,Itf solemn shouting of those in Bos- ion " Tliroush the darkness their mes- <ie"' out on tlie 5vestwar^ roads BSS asiU up :i«‘l d0'va the shores.liurjruyne, Howe, Clinton and Gage, si the commander’s house in Boston, T.ere Utigering at the supper table. IJJfJ Imtl had a merry evening and I wre mnv considering the details of a I JfIVfiiient. In a near room a num ber p of rIjiiiig ladies and gentlem en w ere Jt dancing to the music of a violin. The % j ^ 0f love and the god of hate w ere ' ” Jufr in that house, ifl .« She first sound of the bells the wpl p*pat Dicnof the English arm y turned JrPiu their maps and listened. >ker o v e n w ill do. Ig h fo o d fo r an Jst p re ssu re co o k - le d h e a t a n d uses “ H ig h ” h e at :ause o f its effec- h e a t. T h e low r th e c o st o f this lip p e d w ith tw o I r a t h o m e can be >ker jirsley ^ a k e ndIriclty one a loker or any >s G o . Ionday-Friday- ‘•Its those d—d. stealthy, hell-cat rebels who have p u t the Impudent, S I mock proclamations on our houses a t I f JlIjijt." said Gage. "There’ll be some Iiauirin!: done •“ this tow n before I M l i e r . t e i t . ” ' ; "My d e a r g e n e r a l , don't l e t t h e m : 9 * o r r y you," Howe c a l m l y answ ered. S ' ‘ T h e y ' r e c e l e b r a t i n g t h e a r r i v a l of t h e P ! m a n W a s h i n g t o n a t t h e r e b e l c a m p If this m o r n i n g . They e x p e c t h i m to ac- U c M n p l i s h m i r a c l e s . " . The bells had stopped th e dancing. SPi The young people thronged Into the , where sat these men of England, H to make their adienx to their h o st ~ Amon?: them was a couple who had ■J$ caused a great wagging of tongues. f | They were the comely Patience Fayer- TOtlief and the big, m erry-hearted athlete, Colin Cabot, just out of H ar- nrd college. The gossip had been caused by ob vious external and internal diflfer- H ewes in this couple. The exclusive Msey Faneuil had said th at the two wore as unlike as a sheep and a goat, and every one knew th at Colin w as Ifcc coat. “Pat,” as she w as called by her friends, had gentle breeding and pent “comeliness"—an extravagant word In n land of tem pered adm ira tion. The British officers had frankly conferred upon her the fatal gift of . beamy. IIany gallant youths—even ■ the handsome son of General Gage— j W sought Pat’s favor. Inherited I wealth and the successful use of It JiaiJ ”iven her father an influence felt I In atl lfee Colonies and even Iif Eng land. A born aristocrat, he did not share the resentments of the crowd. He had sided with the tin g , who had helped him in the buttering of his bread. Colin Cabot was the son of a sm all merchant In a country village. H is face was Interesting but not hand some. It was a strong, inviting face that often wore a friendly smile, h u t he had neither wealth nor gentle breeding and there the rub began. Still, he was a distinguished person, set apart by his stature—a straight tower of hone and muscle six feet and an Inch tall, deep and broad from neck to waistline. He had a mind as strong and agile as his body. H is college nates had called him “The Blond Achilles.” P.ut the best thing th a t may he said of him is th is: he had not been spoiled by like flatteries. For a year before the B ritish arm y arrived he had been In “The T rain” Wiih Knox’s Boston grenadier corps. He had a degree of preparation for service with gun, sword or saber. ■ Xnw, In Boston scholarship and &ood manners were of great account, ^et many had these credits who had not his popularity. If we-m ay believe ■Samuel Langdon, he possessed “an understanding far beyond his years, a natural courtliness of m anner and the rare gift of grace and hum or In the nse of words.” No doubt these qualities had cleared bis way to the favor of the best people and to th e heart of Patience Fayerw eather. The devotion of the young couple to each other being established, opposition had served only to strengthen I t T heir ^iil had broken the bars in its way. At last Elijah Fayerw eather had bent his knee to one of the greatest of all tyrants. “Tainted” by the politics of the young man, P at was frank In her sym pathy for the rebel cause. She w as reod in the wind. H er fath er had accused the girl of being a s stub- horn as a bear w ith a cub. The young People were to be m arried in October and the young man w as to find his life JWirk in one of the great shipyards of ^ir. Fayerweather. •Suddenly the M inute Men and blood shed and the gathering of a rebel army! What w as ahead for th e XJolony and for the wealthy conservatives like fa t’s father’ W ould the young repro bate abandon his poetic dream of superfluous “liberty” and keep his feet *n the old, well-trodden paths? So far lie had calmly listened to the ar- ptnents of his prospective father-ln- .v and held his peace. H e w as in a 6Ituatlon that tries the soul of a man. 'Tho sound of the bells had been ? turning p oint H e and his sweet heart were dancing, with others. It 'as a critical tim e and such a clam or carried a note of alarm . It halted the Usic and the feet of the dancers, '-nlin looked down into the troubled "town eyes of the girL He w as a member of Paul Bevere’s committee “'P atrio ts and had lately conferred iti the yonng coppersmith. he “The bells call m e and I m ust go,” s said. “W e of th e new faith know w hat It means.” “W hat does it m ean?” the girl asked. “It’s a signal agreed upon. W ash ington has come to take our- army. H e w ill build up a new nation. I m ust go.” W hat differing effects were in the m agic of those bells! F or these two it had turned m errim ent to sadness. ■ A shadow had fallen on their faces. She looked up a t him In^1 silence. H er strong will recovered Its command of her emotions. “My dear one, go If you m ust,” she said. “I know your h e a rt I would not hold you back.” They entered the general’s room to present their thanks and compliments and a plea. A s the young m an gave his hand to Gage he said: ‘‘General, I am already much in debted to you and I am minded to ask of you a favor, relying wholly on your chivalry and generosity to grant it— a pass through the.lines.” T he general, not suspecting the full Im port o f his plea, quickly asked: “W hen to return?” “W hen peace will perm it me to en joy your friendship. M eanwhile I can . A ' v * • . ' “ Don’t Fear. I Love You and Could Love No O ther Man.” give no inform ation of the slightest value to your enem ies.” T he general frowned. “Do ' you m ean to say th a t you are going to leave one of th e fairest, sw eetest maidens in all the world, and a prom ising career, to join th at ragamuffin host who are now only half fed and w ill soon be starving? They are w ith out an organized governm ent to arm , equip and feed them . W e have only to w ait for starvation to scatter this band of peasants. M oreover, they have no training in real w arfare, no capable officers. .T h e soldiers are all poor men. They m ust be paid or their fam ilies w ill starve. W ho is to pay them ? And w hat can you expect from th e officers in that ludicrous arm y? T hey are farm ers, blacksm iths, tan ners, tavern keepers, plowmen, shoe m akers, pretending to be gentlem en.” “I do not know, sir, but I know th is : the good m an must go w here his soul leads Iilm and If need be, leave all th a t he holds dear.” T he general turned to the young lad y : ‘‘W hat have yon to say about this?” “M y dear general, I hope th at you will g rant his plea. If I loved him less, I would not ask i t ” T he general smiled. T here w as a touch of playfulness in his w ords to C olin: “Young man, look a t her. Would you hazard such a prize? Every gal la n t youth in Boston will be trying to w in her. In her color, face and form is' the magic which a t tim es has changed the m ap of the world. W hat shall I say of you?” Extravagance w as alw ays to be ex pected In th e gallantries of an Eng lish gentlem an, yet he spoke In the m anner of one expressing eternal truths. She w as sm iling w hen she said: “My dear general, I wish it w ere as easy to believe you as it is to love you. It is not the fashion here to praise young people. My m other says It spoils them . I find it good fun to be spoiled. Scold him a little more.” ' T he general w as laughing as be said : “If this young m an has never told you how lovely you are, I'll have him court-m artialed and put out of the w ay of his rivals." “Oh, he has done his best to spoil me. H e couldn’t be a better, lover, s ir ”“Good! ‘ H e*m ust be quite a man, a fte r all.” H e .turned to Colin saying: “Boy, I w ill not aid your plan of self-destruc tion. If you put your m ind a t work, you will thank me.” Toung H arry Gage—a tall hand some youngster w ith dark hair and eyes—shook Colin’s hand .whispering: “Sorry, old fellow ! I wish th at all my rivals could go to the American arm y,” . “Don’t let your mind w ander Uke a lost dog, or someone will take it to the madhouse,” Colln answ ered w ith a smile. The scene had lasted scarcely five m inutes. T he boy and girl set out In the Fayerw eather chaise. On their w ay to her home the young m an told h er th at he would be leaving Boston th a t night, adding: “I am sure th a t before sum m er ends th e king w ill have come to term s.” “Oh, dear!” she exclaimed. “My fa ther says that h—I Is going to move to Cam bridge.” “If it does, we shall not be selfish w ith It. I have quite another fear in my h e a rt’’ “W hat fear?” “Gage's son Is deeply In love w ith you. The commander of the port is a great m an and—well, I have only a few friends to recommend me. I couldn’t blam e you if you gave me up.” “Don’t fear. I love you and I could love no other man. I can alm ost say th at I hate H arry Gage.” T heir lips m et and they parted with tender prom ises and cautions. That slow-footed year of 1775 saw many a like parting a t gate and doorstep. It w as a hard, year for young lovers. The Fayerw eather chaise took Colin through a dark, moonless night to his lodgings. The vehicle had driven away and Colin had entered his gate when a man sprang from the. shelter of a low-boughed tree in the dooryard w here he had been lying, and ap- -proached him saying in a w hisper: “It's Revere. Come under cover with me and tell w hat happened at Gage’s house.” They w ere scarcely seated when they heard footsteps coming on the planlc walk. In half a moment two men halted by the gate. One of them spoke In a low tone to the other. “H e lives here. He’s the bell-wether of the flock—tall, well-dressed and about twenty-four. A fter tonight keep an eye on this house. W hen he leaves it, follow him.” They w ent on. “B ritish guard s!” Revere whispered. Colin gave a brief account of w hat had followed the bell ringing. “Go up to your lodgings and put only a few needed things In your leather cow and we’ll get away. Be careful how ye sneck the door.” Colin hnrried to his room, packed a sm all bag and stealthily made his e x it The tw o set out, following the winding, dusty thoroughfares to the w ater. They had passed one m an who had only stopped and looked at them In the darkness. A t last they entered the gate of Ebenezer Snoach, the fish m erchant H is boats were coming in from the north every week loaded with cod, had dock and other edible fish—now the main support of the B ritish arm y aDd the Inhabitants. He was, however, a secret, steadfast hater of the king whose law s had lim ited his operations and put a tax on every fish be brought to m ark et For fear of losing his busi ness he sm othered his resentm ent and kept his boats on the w ater. But; un der cover, he did everything In his pow er to aid the cause of freedom. Knowing this, the Tankee gunboats., which had captured many a cargo bound for Boston harbor, were not in clined to interfere with Snoach’s com merce. H e had been for them a source of valued inform ation. T he tw o young men had scarcely opened the gate when they heard foot steps less than a hundred yards be hind. B evere drew his companion Into the thicket a hit aw ay from the statred w alk th a t led to the house-door and w hispered: “Don’t speak o r move. W e’ll listen here a m inute.” The footsteps w ere coming near. Noiselessly the gate opened. They heard a voice speaking in a low tone: “This fishmonger is a sneaking rebel. The chief says th at he’s been helping the rebels out of town. W e have tracked suspected men down this road.: They vanish. W e see no more of them . It’s a mystery.” A nother m an spoke: “Fm going to call old Snoach out of bed and see w hat company he’s got there.” They climbed the flight of steps and rapped a t the door. Soon It opened and the hidden men caught the glim m er of a lighted candle. ‘^King’s orficers, an' a t yer sarvice I” Snoach’s voice exclaimed. “W hat ye fishln’ for a t this hour o’ the night? Come in.” Colin heard the men enter and the closing of the door. r “Now follow me,” said Revere as he led his companion on a w inding jour ney through the thicket over a deep carpet of pine-needles. “W e m ust vanish. They are searching the house and they will not be satisfied until they have lighted their lanterns and beat the thicket.” Revere seemed to be able to find his way by feeling the slender tree stems. In a moment he began to feel the ground. “Stand still,” he w hispered as he lifted some heavy object “Now kneel on the ground and feel ahead of you for the edge of the pit. TH step aside so you can let yourself down. It’s only about five feet deep.” Colin lowered him self into the pit, w here he stood on a soft m at th at cov ered Its bottom. R evere followed, saying: “Now set yer heels a m inute.” Then w ith great care he adjusted the cover above his head. “Now ye can set and stretch out yer legs com ftable while I show ye the first stop on the road to W ash ington’s arm y.” H e took from his pocket a box con taining flint and tinder and soon had a short candle burning. Its light re vealed a little cavern some five feet deep and three feet wide and four feet long, sided w ith rived tim bers driven into the ground. Its roof w as a strong iron grating to which a w ater proof m at w as m ade fast by strings. The top of the m at w as covered with pine-needles held In place w ith pitch. “I cannot understand how you found this place In the darkness,” said CoIia “Done it often, and I’ve got eyes In my fingers,” the other whispered. “Ju st above the right spot there’s a little patch o’ sky.” W here they sat, voices and footsteps w ere distinctly. audible in the house. Again R evere w hispered: “We’ll stay here till they come out. Te. could hear a cat’s foot above us.” - : -A small, curtain hung on a side of the p it Revere lifted it and another feature of this strange bit of engi neering was exposed to the newcomer —a round opening large enough to ad m it a man, sheathed w ith straight staves like those of a barrel. There w as a brace across the end of It to which a rope w as tied. Revere held the candle so that Colin could look into the wooden tube slanting upward a t an angle of some thirty degrees. Revere explained: “The young patriots of Boston did all this digging. Snoacli’s cooper working in the cellar above made the barrel in six-foot lengths. We shoved them down as we made room for them. Since the w ar began no suspected man has ever been seen entering or leaving Snoach’s door. D ark nights we take to the bush and stay under cover till he’s ready to move us. When the way is clear we haul ourselves up by th at rope. We call it 'snoaching.' I’ll go first, and when I give the rope a yank you fol low me.” They heard the king’s officers leave the house and com e,dow n the steps and begin to beat about in the thicket. They soon abandoned the hopeless task and went away. The two young men listened to their footsteps receding In the distance. Revere fastened a string to Colin’s bag and wound it on his left w rist. He put out the candle and began his upw ard climb In the barrel w ith the bag in tow. ^olin got the sig nal and followed. In a moment he was up to the feet of his leader. Revere w hispered: “Now feel for a rope on the right side of the barrel. H ave-ye got it?” “Y.es.” “H ang oD to it till I get out and leave the long rope loose.” F or a moment Revere seemed to be undergoing considerable exertion. Then he w hispered: “W ait till I get the candle going.” Presently by its light Colin crept out upon the rock paving of a cellar bottom. Revere covered the opening with a flat slab of stone, some two feet sguare, in the center of which was an iron bolt th at held the climbing rope. Tlie square stone joined the wall and floor in a perfect fit. The sunken bolthead w as covered w ith ce m ent of the exact hue of the stone. It was a cunning door to the house but it w as only one of m any exits. The can dle light w as extinguished a t the top of the cellar stairs. The fish m erchant and his wife had no children. Revere rapped softly a t their bedroom door. Snoach cam e out in thick darkness, saying in a hoarse, complaining w hisper: “You brats don't give me ary bit o’ re s t Is it Revere?" “Xes. And I remind you that W ash ington don’t come every day. Our best soldier is on his way to Cambridge. Colin. Cabot is with me.” “Cabot, I’ve hearn o’ ye, boy,” .said Snoach. “Give me the feel o’ yer hand. I’ll send a boat up the shore w ith ye right away.” So Colin had the novel experience of m eeting a m an utterly hid in dark ness. Snoach’s salting and smoking plant w as near. The fish m erchant dressed hurriedly. ColIn w ent w ith hlnJ through an atm osphere heavy w ith the odor of smoked fish. The large room they entered was in darkness. Snoach groped about until he found an empty barrel. H e led the young m an to its side and asked him to get into, it and not to show bis head above its top when the lantern w as lighted. It w as a large barrel w ith am ple room Inside for Colin and his sm all bag. W hile working with flint and tl*i- der, Snoach said: “I’ll send ye bar reled up with a load o’ smoked fish to M orton’s p’ln t W ith this breeze an’ the floodtide, ye'll git there afore sun up. Oft the p’int the men’ll roll ye overboard an' the river current an’ the tide’ll take ye on to some p art o’ the beach a t W innisim et W hen it touches the shore get out o’ the barrel and put off on the road to M arblehead. There’s a big dead pine at the end o' the road. The light’ll be dim, but ye can’t miss i t At the top o’ the first Hpe o' bluffs is the big WoOden house o’ Israel Woodbridge. Stun chimney an’ half a dozen gables. He’ll take care o’ ye an’ put ye on yer way, sir.” The lantern lighted, Snoach began to move barrels of smoked fish to the head of a long sloping spinw ay down which they rolled to the hands of the loaders a t the end of the wharf. This done, he said to Colin: “There’ll be a guard on the dock, sir. I'll have to roll you down as if ye w as a barrel o’flsh an’ not a hum an bein’. If con- wenient, ye may give me a pound to pay the fiddlers. There’ll be five a- playin’ for this dance.” • Snoach stood over the barrel, as he critically exam ined its head, so th at Colln got a look a t his benefactor—“a . tall brawny sea-god, his. w eatliered face covered w ith a thin, scraggy, blond beard, his great arm s bare to the el bow. A son of the m ighty deep, whose fruits he gathered, he personified a pow er beyond that of arm ies. It may- yet win tho w ar for us.” “H ere are tw o pounds, and my thanks go with them ," said Colin. “M uch oblteged, sir. Ye’re a genfle- inan an’ no m istake an’ good luck to ye, sir. This is the roof o’ yer little cabin. H ere’s a bit o’ rope fast to a ■ staple in its center. Ye hang on to th a t to hold it down In bad w eather. W hen safe on board, ye can give yer lungs an airin’. O ut in the breeze ye can straighten yer legs an' be com ftab le. Afore they roll ye over, the boys’ll pour pitch around the edge o’ the barrel-head to m ake It w ater tig h t Hold her snug till ye touch shore. There is small holes near its center. They’ll give ye air. W hen ye m ake port, take the barrel-head. W itt ye an’ give it to W oodbridge.” (TO B E C O N TIN U ED .) Too Many People “Afraid of Snow” F o o l i s h n e s s N o t C o n f in e d t o t h e I g n o r a n t . From M adrid, in Spain, comes news of great excitement. F o r the first tim e in the lives of m any of the population, it snowed. Among the ignorant there w as fear and trepidation. In the city house m aids refused to go out to buy food. Farm ers thought their countryside w as cursed. A n d _ in El Retiro, M adrid’s chief park, the lions roared w ith indignation as a heavy snowfall drifted in their open cages. For blocks around their m ournful notes could be heard, adding an eerie back ground to the fears of the ignorant T he last need not have been added —for are fears not alw ays o n ' the p art of the ignorant In some way or other? T hat is such blind, unreason ing fear of som ething th at is sus pected simply because It is new and unknown? O f all those so affected by the snow in Madrid, the only sensible and logical ones w ere the Hons. They had som ething tangible and positive to object to—the physical discom fort of the cold w et snow on their bean- tlful coats which had been brought up to expect only sum m er sunshine! They w ere rational beings compared to the hum ans who were afraid of the snow simply because they had never seen it before. And If It seem s fantastic or incom prehensible th at any hum an beings should be so stupid, ju st look around you and see fearful people for whom there Is less excuse than for the Ig norant peasant housemaid who w as afraid of the snow. Think of tbs woman who has all sorts of fears about the girl her son w ants to m ar ry—simply because she does not know her. And the girl who assumes bogles about the fam ily she has not m et? Think of the mothers who work up fears about any- experience or ad venture which their children crave— simply because they are not fam iliar w ith exactly w hat i .5 involved. T hink of the people who are afraid to start anything, to risk or venture any thing, because of nam eless fears, undefined suspicions ot all the things th at “m ight happen.” Ah, no, those ignorant hum ans who feared the snow are not as incomprehensible as a t first thought they m ay seem ! ©. 1933. BoU S yndicate.— W X U service. Dr. Pierce’s Pellets are best for liver, bowels nnd stomach. One little Pellet for a laxative—three for a cathartic.—Adv. Fisheries Stocked The government distributed 7,074,- 000,000 Iish and eggs In 1931. c h a p p e d ' L I P S T o quickly relieve chopping, roughness, cracking, apply soothing, cooling M entholatum . M ENTHOLATUM W. N. U , ATLANTA, NO. 8--1933 D iet Didn’t Do This! Ha p p y little L w ith pep, and tasted a “ tom cl” E very child’s stom ach, liver, and bowels need stim ulating a t tim es, b u t give children som ething you know all about. Follow the advice of th a t famous fam ily physician w ho gave the •world Syrup Pepsin. Stimulale Ihe body’s vital organs. D r. Caldwell’s prescription of pure pepsin, active senna, and fresh herbs is a mild stim ulant th a t keeps th e system from getting sluggish. If your youngsters don’t do well a t school, don’t play as hard or eat as well as other children do, begin this evening w ith D r. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin. This gentle stim ulant will soon right thingsl T he bowels will m ove w ith better regularity and thoroughness. T here won’t be so m any sick spells or colds. You’ll find it ju st as wonderful for adults. too, in larger spoonfulsl G et some Syrup Pepsin; protect your household from those bilious days, frequent headaches, and th at sluggish state of half-health th at m eans th e bowels need stimulating. Keep this preparation in the home to use instead of harsh cathartics th a t cause chronic constipation if taken too often. Y ou can always get D r. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin a t any drug store; they have it all ready in big bottles. COLDSWEAKEN YOUR SYSTEM T h e y L o w e r Y o u r R e s i s t a n c e A g a i n s t S e r i o u s C o m p l i c a t i o n s a n d O f t e n M a k e Y o u a n E a s y V i c t i m F o r E p i d e m i c . D rive O u t Y o u r Cold. Q u icker W ith P E N E TR O f th e D eepest P enetrating, M ost E ffe c tiv e C old Salve E ver D eveloped. DONTT trifle w ith a cold. The more the w inter season advances, the m ore treacherous colds become, the m ore difficult they are to drive out. W ith. Epidemic so, widespread it is ■exceedingly d a n g e ro u s to d e la y k n o ck in g o u t y o u r cold. Serious complications often develop overnight and then your health and even your life are endangered. Thousands and thousands of people in all parts of the countiy are fighting colds successfully with PENETRO, tb e d e e p e s t penetrating, m ost effective co ld salv e ever d ev elo p ed . Because PENETRO h a s -a 'b a s e o f highly refined m utton suet (ordinary cold salves have base's of mineral o il o r petroleum—nothing penetrates like m utton suet) it pene trates deep within to carry its pow erful coId-breaTiing medication di rectly to the seat of cold infection. That’s why it drives ont head, chest colds and breaks up- c o n g e stio n quicker and more effectively than anything y ou e v e r u sed b e fo re . Mothers find P1ENETRO, tbe-m utton suet salve, of real benefit in break ing up congestion, soothing flammation, bringing quick relief to c ro u p y children. PENETRO is c le an an d easy to use. Does -not stain o r so il b ed coverings o r sleeping garments. It con tains costly ingredients of known medical excellence. A sk fo r it b y nam e, PENETRO, 25c a jar. Th* 60c Economy Size contains 3 times as much as the 25c size. The $1 Family Size contains 7 tim es as much as 25c size. Remember'. PENETRO penetrates 4 times deeper to drive out colds q u ic k e r. Don’t compare PENETRO w ith ordinary cold salves. PENETRO stands alone. The chances are you can prevent taking cold altogether by applying PENETRO NOSE and THROAT DROPS night and morning. This clinically tested preparation stops the spread of germs and brings quickest relief from head colds and sinus trouble. PENETRO NOSE and THROAT DROPS {contains ephedrine) is approved by lead ing nose and throat specialists. Generous she bottle 2jf. Larger stee bottle, 50c.: News Review of Current Events the World Over Roosevelt Escapes Assassin’s BuUets but Mayor Cermak Is Wounded—Senate Adopts Dry Repeal Reso lution by Surprisingly Large Majority. By EDWARD W. PICKARD Franklin D. Roosevalt was feared SHOT at five tim es by an anarchist in Miami, President-Elect Frank lin D. Roosevelt narrowly escaped be ing added to the list of America’s illus trious victims of as sassins. Not one of th e bullets struck him, but Mayor An ton Cermak of Chi cago. who was talking with Mr. Roosevelt, was seriously wound ed. Two other men and two women in the throng that w as g a th ered in Bay Front park to welcome the President-Elect a I s o were hit by the as sassin’s bullets and It one of the women would not survive. Mr. Roosevelt had just landed after his fishing cruise, had made a brief talk to the thousands In the pnr.k and was being greeted by personal friends when the anarchist, identified as Giuseppe Zan gara of Hackensack, N. J., fired a t him from a distance of 20 feet. In the great excitem ent nnd turmoil Mr. Roosevelt remained calm and insisted on taking Mr. Cermak to a hospital in his car. He remained over night on the yacht Nonrmahal and visited the wounded mayor next m orning be fore leaving by train for New York. All the world w as shocked by the attem pted assassination and messages of congratulation on his escape poured in on Mr. Roosevelt, one of the first received being from President Hoover. Mrs. Roosevelt beard the news as she returned home from a club where she had made an address. -Her only com ment on learning that her husband w as not injured w as: “I am thank ful.” She did not change her plans, which took her next day to H tica to speak at a home and farm week cele bration. Secret service operatives In Miami said Zangara, the assassin, was a mem ber of an anarchist group of P ater son, N. J., and that he declared he had no accomplices, acting entirely on his own initiative. Im m ediate steps tow ard his trial were taken, but the authorities were careful to avoid any possible charges th at Zangara was be ing “railroaded.” BY TH E rather surprising vote of 63 to 23 the senate adopted the revised Blaine resolution subm itting repeal of the Eighteenth am endm ent to constitutional conventions in the. states. In this form the m easure is alm ost In accord w ith the plank of the Democratic platform . It provides for outright repeal except for federal pro tection for dry states against Uqnor importations. Speaker G arner predicted the reso lution would be speedily accepted by the house. The approval of the Presi dent is not required; but it m ust be ratified by thirty-six states. Voting for the resolution in the sen ate were 33 Democrats, 29 Republicans and I Farm er-Laborite. Against it were 9 Democrats and 14 Republicans. The Illinois senate passed legisla tion wiping out the state prohibition law and the search and seizure a c t Sen. Pittm an WHILE ' Ambassador Sir Ronald Lindsay w as starting back to W ashington with the B ritish proposals for the w ar debt discussion scheduled for M arch, Senator Key Pittm an intro duced a bill that would seem to have some m erit, though our expert financiers may tear it to pieces. The m easure would perm it G reat Britain to make the payment on her debt due in June in silver, and this, according to Mr. Pittm an, wodld oper ate to the advantage of the United States; would enable England to avoid transfer of gold to. m eet the next w ar debt payment and would m ake possible acceptance by G reat Britain of silver in paym ent of a large sum due'from India before the June w ar debt paym ent The Pittm an bill would authorize the acceptance by this government of any sum up to $100,000,000 due from G reat B ritain in silver a t current m ar ket value. Its purpose w as explained as fol lows by Mr. Pittm an: “The government of India owes G reat B ritain approximately $85,000,- 000. It . has been reported with some authority that India desires to pay this debt to G reat B ritain with- silver. The acceptance by the United States of $74,950,000 w orth of silver al the world m arket price of silver of approxim ate ly 25 cents an ounce, which is prob- ■ ably lower than it will ever be again, would not only be profitable to the United States but advantageous to both the United States and G reat B rit ain. / “Under such a settlem ent the Unit ed States would receive 299,800,000 ounces of silver at the present m arket price of around 25 cents an. ounce. Under the provisions of the act our government out of such silver would coin 74,950,000 standard silver dollars. It would deposit them in the treasury and issue and circulate against them $74,950,000 in silver certificates sim ilar to those n o w ' in circulation in the United States. “As it requires only seventy-eight one-hundredths of an ounce of silver in the coinage of standard silver dol lars, there would remain, therefore, in the treasury, in addition to such 74.950.000 standard silver dollars, 241,- 339.000 ounces of silver to be held in the treasury as security for the m ain tenance of the parity of the silver cer tificates so issued.” ONE of the em inent men called on to advise the senate finance com m ittee, Dr. Herman F. Arendtz, a Bos ton economist, condemning any plan for “internationally managed cur rency," such as may be expected to be put forth a t the coming international economic conference^ declared that w hat we need is less credit and more hard cash. Silver is the salvation, in this hard money campaign, he m ain tained. Its remonetization would be the engine priming that would, in six months, enable America to sell to the O rient between 600 and 650 million dollars’ w orth of lumber, wheat, cotton and copper. F irst of the advisers heard by the committee w as B ernard M. Baruch, who is likely to be in the Roosevelt cabinet. He argued vigorously against currency inflation and in favor of a speedy balancing of the budget, and urged the adoption of a beer tax and the repeal of the Eighteenth amend ment. H e also advised the federal leasing of farm acreage to curtail pro duction, and this plan w as indorsed by C. C. Teague, form er member of the farm board. Mr. Teague, asserting th at the collapse of the credit struc ture of the country was the fundam en tal cause of the depression, urged fed eral guarantee of hank deposts, and in this he ha . the full support of Speaker Garner. George N. Peek, a m anufacturer of Moline, 111., set forth his objections to the domestic allotm ent bill, which is doomed to death either in the sen ate or in the W hite House, and pro posed a modification of the plan whereby curtailm ent o f acreage would come after planting and before har vest, since “the variation in yield of all growing crops from year to year depends 75 per cent on w eather and pests, largely beyond human control, and only 25 per cent on the acreage planted.” DESPITE the efforts of Brazil and other South American nations, backed up by our State departm ent, real w ar has broken out between Col ombia and Peru and the form er coun try has severed diplomatic relations and declared that mediation is fin ished. This rupture resulted from an a ir attack by Peru on a Colombian flotilla on the Putum ayo river which w as repulsed by Colombian planes and w as followed by an engagement a t the town of Tarapacal on the Bra zilian border. FIN A N C IA L troubles of the Uuion ‘ Guardian T rust company, an invest m ent concern of Detroit, led Gov. Wil liam A. Comstock of Michigan to take the courageous step of p ro c la im in g an eight-day bank holi day. and his drastic action received the approval and legal sanction of the legis lature. The legisla tors also got busy ai once with the enact rnent of m easures coy ering the situation and bearing retroactive clauses. Except for the up per peninsula., which is separated both geographically and economically from the rem ainder of the state, the banks were abiding by the holiday. order. The upper peninsula is In a different federal reserve bank district and, al though the governor of the Federal Reserve bank of M inneapolis said be was keeping hands off in the situation, most banks above the Straits o f Mack inac were doing business as usual. The Federal Reserve bank of De troit remained open and received mil lions of dollars from Chicago and New York,.and the D etroit Clearing HouSe association made arrangem ents where by $25,000,060 was made available to depositors, the latter being perm itted to withdraw not In excess of 5 per cent of their balances for emergency purposes before the expiration of the holiday.- Several of the biggest De troit corporations announced th at they were continuing to pay their workers -In cash, and all business concerns ex cept the financial houses carried on as usual. The governor held confer ences with Secretary of Commerce Chapin and leading financial authori ties, and air. Comstock said he did not seek to prohibit any, bank from making a sensible arrangem ent to perm it w ithdraw als to meet family necessities or to allow the cashing of pay checks. p p m - r . Gov. Comstock Sen. Couzens WRITING with restraint concern ing the antics of the present congress is difficult. W hat the house-; floes in the way of economy, if any thing, is speedily undone by the sen ate, and vice versa, or else both sides agree on some legislation which they well know will not get by with Presi dent Hoover. Probably all economies that m ight hit the constituencies or the favorites ..of any members will be left for Mr. Roosevelt to put into ef feet through the extraordinary pow ers which the Democrats propose to confer on him. In the language of the street, they are passing the buck. Senator B ratton’s am endm ent to the treasnry-post office supply bill pro viding for a 5 per cent cut In appro priations, and the Navy . depart ment’s plans for m aintaining the fleet efficiency by shutting down the pork barrel shore establishm ents caused a hurried lineup of the congressional supporters of the useless navy yards. But the two propositions put Chair man Carl Vinson of the house uaval affairs committee in a quandary. He announced he would fight the B ratton plan In so far as it concerned the navy, and If it carried, he would fight to have’ the navy yards a t Boston, Charleston and Portsm outh closed down a t once. SOMETHING concrete in the way of unemployment relief was done by the senate' when it voted to add $22,- 000.000 to the W ar departm ent supply bill for 1934 for the purpose of enrolling and training 88,000 homeless and idle young men in year- round citizens’ mili tary training camps. Senator Couzens of Michigan w as the originator of the part of the plan which is designed to provide a home, food and some thing to do for a con siderable part of the 300,000 boys who are said to be tram ping about the country. The clauses providing that the- lads be placed under discipline, required to drill, and lim iting those received to Americans physically and m entally fit for community life were introduced at th> instance of Senator David Reed of Pensylvania. As the bill was drawn, boys between fifteen and twenty-one years old will be admissible provided they can show th at they have been w ithout work for six m onths or more, and provided they can meet the C. M. T. C. entrance requirem ents as to citi zenship nnd health. INVESTIGATION of the election of * John H. Overton as senator from Louisiana by a senate committee that went to New O rleans gave Senator Huey Long opportunity for many char acteristic outbreaks, and though he apologized frequently to the commit tee, Chairm an Howelt threatened him with action .fo r contem pt Long’s brother, now his bitter enemy, and various other w itnesses told of many Instances of alleged corruption, graft and extortion in Louisiana, and the retort of the “Kingfish” in nearly every case w as “You’re a liar”—with profane trim m ings. The charges in volved both Overton and Long. J APAN informed the world th at Its negotiations with the League of N ations in the M anchurian dispute had come to an end. The foreign of fice in 'Tokyo said it would offer no further concessions and would stand firmly by its de term ination to main tain the government of M anchukuo. Yo- suke M atsuoka, Ja pan’s able represent ative a t Geneva, was given instructions to' this effect and told to withdraw from the league and return home as soon as the league adopted the report of the committee of nineteen which reasserts th e . principle of Chi nese sovereignty in M anchuria and de clines to recognize Manchukuo. AU this w as form ulated by the cabinet and approved by the emperor. Dispatches from Tokyo said the gov ernm ent feels that w ithdraw al from the League of Nations will he the turn ing point in the em pire’s history. Be fore the ultim ate decision Is made, it w as announced, there would be an ex traordinary conference of the council of elders, the heads of branches of the Imperial family, all living form er pre m iers and other distinguished person ages. M eanwhile plans for a general Jap anese offensive against the Chinese province of Jehol, which -Japan claims is a p art of M anchukuo, were reported well -under way, and It w as expected a cam paign would soon begin to drive out several hundred thousands o f M ar shal Chang’s troops. If this movement starts before Japan actually quits the League of N ations the league might apply sanctions under Article 16 of the covenant, and the results of this could well involve many nations. Yosuke Matsuoka SO FAR as the courts and prosecu tors of Hawaii are concerned the Massie case has been closed with the dismissal of charges against four Hawaiian youths of mixed blood who had been accused of attacking Mrs. Thomas H, Massie, wife of a naval lieutenant. This action w as taken an recommendation of Public Prose cutor J. C. Kelley, who made public i report of a defective agency on an Investigation of the case made at the tmstance of Gov, Lawrence M. Judd uid A ttorney General H arry H ew itt ©. 1833. W esters N ew epaper Union. - improved ' U N IF O R M IN T E R N A T IO N A L Su n d a y ! ^ „ c H o o L L e s s o n BiaS- “ e“ - In stitu te of C hicago.) ©. 1933. W estern N ew spaper U nion. Lesson for March 5 JESU S GIVING LIFE AND HEALTH LESSON TEXT—MarkGOLDEN TEXT—The Lord hath aonp great things for us; whereof we are glad. Psalm 126:3.PRIMARY TOPIC—Jesus Making a Little Girl Live Again.JUNIOR TOPIC—Jesus Raising J ai m s' Daughter. w wINTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOPIC—Life and Health Through Jesus. YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOP IC—C hristianity and Human Suffering. The accounts of the raising of the damsel and the healing of the woman are so interwoven as alm ost to con stitute one narrative, but since the principles are diverse and the places separate, and the one an interruption of the other, they should be treated separately. I. Jairus’ D aughter Raised From the Dead (vv. 22-24, 35-43). 1. Jairus’ urgent mission (vv. 22, 23). Uis only daughter (Luke 8:42). Perhaps his only child lay dying. In tin's tim e of utter helplessness be cam e to Jesus for he had faith in his abil ity to raise her up. In the providence of God sorrow, sickness and death are often used to bring needy men and women into contact with Jesus. H e showed the proper attitude tow ard Jesus, “lie fell a t his feet" (v. 22). 2. Jesus goes with Jairus (v. 24). Jairus believed th at if Jesus would lay his hand upon his daughter she would live. Such faith alw ays gets a response from Jesus. No one des titute of faith can receive his bless- ing. 8 . News of his daughter’s death (v. 35). This w as a most startling message. The m essenger who brought the news of her death suggested that Jesus should be excused from going further as it w as now too late. 4. .Tairus’ faith strengthened (v. 36). As soon as Jesus heard the word spok en concerning the death of this girl, he said to the father, “Be not afraid, only believe." This is the m essage still to every distressed soul. 5. The m ourners rebuked (vv. 37- 39). He dismissed the crowd and al lowed only three of his disciples and the parents of the damsel to enter this cham ber of death with him. The tu m ultuous wailing showed the despair of the friends. In connection with this death-wail the Lord w as ridiculed, but he declared that the girl could be aw akened from her sleep of death. 6. Jairus’ faith rewarded- (vv. 41- 43). He took the damsel by the hand and commanded her to arise. The ex pression “T alitha cumi” in the Arama ic may be freely translated, “W ake up, little girl." She straightw ay arose and walked and partook of food. H er walking w as proof of the reality of the miracle. T here w as no sign of the w eakness which usually follows a se vere sickness. It. The W oman W ith an Issue of Blood (vv. 25-34). 1. H er helpless condition (w . 25, 26. cf. Luke 8:43). She had been a great sufferer for tw elve long years. In addition to physical suffering her m alady involved cerem onial unclean ness which was perhaps harder to bear than the physical suffering. TTiis cerem onial nncleanness m eant her ex clusion from the places of worship and divorce from her husband, as well as social isolation. 2. H er faith (w . 27, 28). She pos; sessed a real and earnest faith. Hav- ing heard of the fam e of Jesus as a healer, she likely journeyed a consid erable distance. For a poor em aci ated woman after twelve years of suf fering to press her way through a thronging m ultitude, shows th at she possessed a determ ined purpose. The test of the actuality and quality of one’s faith is the determ ined activity which it engenders. H er faith w as so strong that she helieved that contact with the M aster's garm ents would se cure the needed help. 3. H er healing (vv. 29-32), As soon as she touched the hem of his garm ent, she experienced in her body his heal ing power. Jesus was conscious of the outgoing of virtue from himself. 4. H er confession (v. 33, Cf. Lnke S:47). She thought secretly to get the blessing of healing, but Jesus per ceived Ihat virtue had gone out from him and had her m ake a public con fession. 5. Jesus’ w ords of encouragem ent (v. 34). W ith the communication of his healing virtue he spoke m ost gra cious and com forting w ords to: this poor woman. He told her th at it was. her faith, not her touch th at had saved her. Faith does not need to face danger and" to exhaust itself in active endeavor In order to gain C hrist’s blessing. AU th at Is required is a trusting prayer. She obtained the blessing immediately. N e w F e r t i l i z e r t o U s e A m m o n i a , P e a t I), S. G hem fets S ay M anufac tu rin g P rocess Sim ple a n d Inexpensive. tPreowed by the United States Department ' of Agriculture.)—WNU serVlee. Ammoniated peat, a new fertihzer m aterial, has been developed In the laboratories of th e D epartm ent of A griculture. It seem s to combine m any of th e good features of the two fam iliar types of nitrogen-carrying fer tilizers. It if as not been developed commercially yet, but chem ists of the departm ent say th a t th e m anufacturing process is sim ple and relatively inex pensive and th a t tlie commercial pro duction of am m qniated peat offers op portunity for m aterial saving In freight on fertilizers. Sm all scale ex* perim ents w ith plants h a v e . given prom ising results. By heating am m onia and peat un der pressure, about tw o-thirds of the reacting am m onia is changed to chem ical com binations th a t are not soluble in w ater. These form s are generally sim ilar to the nitrogenous fertilizer m aterials in cottonseed meal and ani m al tankage. Roughly a third of the am m onia rem ains in w ater-soluble form s. Depending on tem perature, the p eat m ay be am m obiated to contain up to 20 per cent of nitrogen. A 20 p e r cent product would thus contain in each hundred pounds nearly half as m uch quick-acting nitrogen as 100 pounds of sodium n itrate and would a t the sam e tim e contain about twice as much slow er-acting nitrogen a s 100 pounds of cottonseed meaL In other words, 100 pounds of 20 per cent am- m oniated p eat would be roughly equivalent to 200 pounds" of cotton seed m eal plus 50 pounds of sodium nitrate. The product could be shipped w ith notable savings in freight and w ith notable advantage in combining th e good features of both th e slow- acting and the quick-acting nitrogen carriers. Raw peat is of relatively little value as a nutritive ingredient in fertilizer, but is recognized as a highly desirable elem ent In mixed fer tilizers because, of its value as a conditioner and because it supplies to the soil a desirable form of organic m atter. “Heavenly Vision*’’ "I w as not disobedient to the heav enly vision.” Thrice uhhappy are they who have never had a heavenly vision, I. e., a-vision of something higher and better .than the life they have been leading. It may have come In a ser- mon. a biography, a holy life, a face, a deathbed scene illum inated with the light of another world. How it shamed, rebuked, cast down with In finite regret, then raised to ' a new hope* and determ ination 'A ct, act, in the living present. M ay F in d C om T h at W ill W ith stan d H ea t an d Cold Some strains of yellow dent corn th a t are resistant to cold will also w ithstand m ore heat th an corn th a t Is not cold-resistant, the U nited States D epartm ent of A griculture announces. The resistance to both heat and cold is due to the higher proportion of bound w ater Irt the corn plant, the de partm ent says. The experim enting indicating the beat-resistant quality of core w ere m ade In co-operation w ith the Ilitnois agricultural experim ent station. The corn specialists'give the w ater In the w hite of an egg as an exam ple of bound w ater, w hile th at in a sponge is free w ater. Bound w ater form s a p art of th e plant. P lants high In bound w ater resist heat dam age be cause the heat can not draw so much of the m oisture from the plant and it can thus endure more h e a t In cold w eather ,the cold can not so easily freeze the w ater In the plant into ice crystals, thus breaking up the cell structures. Bound w ater thus ac counts for both heat and cold resist ance. T he experim ents showed th at heat- resistant plants increased their bound w ater capacity w ith successive heat and drought spells. They also found th a t if th e heat cam e on gradually th e corn w as hardened to it and held m ore bound w ater and w ithstood more heat. A lthough the heat-resistance and cold-resistance studies are several steps ahead of the general farm er,'the departm ent points out th a t th e dis covery m eans th a t eventually im proved strains of corn will be pro duced th at will tend to resist heat as w ell as cold. Cow B reaks F a t R ecord Trixy Ormsby B eets, a senior foiir- year-old registered Holstein, bred and owned by R. E. Eddy, Poultney, VL1 is the new national leader for yearly bntterfat production on twice-a-day milking for her age class, according to the H olstein-Friesian A ssociation of America. She is credited w ith a yield o f 819.9 pounds fa t and 24,324.6 pounds milk. This is equal to the yield of 4.5 average dairy eows and her average daily m ilk yield ■ w as SI quarts. W ith tills record “Trixy” dis places K orndyke N etherland S tar De Kol, whose production . w as 781,2 pounds fa t and 19,379.2 pounds milk. The sire of “Trixy” Is Ormsby Sensa tion forty-fifth, w ho has 16 daughters adm itted to Advanced Registry, two of which have topped 800 pounds fa t 4n Class G T rixy H engerveld B eets is h er mother. W aterin g F arm T rees This question 'cannot be answ ered specifically for. all soil types. Au ex am ination of th e soil w ith a soil ange ls th e m ost reliable m ethod to use in determ ining w hen trees should be w a tered. It is advisable to w ater trees before they show signs of m oisture de ficiency.. Applied generally to south ern Idaho, farm woods and w indbreaks thrive best.on from four to seven wa terings. Some woodlots have done well w ithout irrigation w ater after July L -E xtenM en Forester.- ap.j: in Many Anniwersaries of World’s Great in Ijm T he Tim es has been askefl a re th e outstanding anniversaries I th e y ear 1933. T he list would® colum ns. -M ost notable among this! w ho w ould be a hundred J ears V" if they h ad lived till 111;);; , B rahm s, the composer <i,orn‘ M ay); “C hinese” Gordon (.Iunua^, 2 8 ); Nobel, who founded I Ue prizes; Edw in B ooth (in NovenAef,! B urne-Jones (In A ugust), f,r.(| I;.,/ th e composer (in September), seph Priestley, th e discoverer of 0j!! gen, w as born 200 years itgn X M arch, and Sam uel Pepys in K ^ ary of 1633. A. conspicuous anal versary w ill be th a t of the WrlJ1 ^ Q ueen Elizabeth, which oecurreii Septem ber 7 , 1533. M nntaisneeas born in F ebruary o f the same >•*,, and A risoto and C ranm er died iimj coarse of it. If th e calendar recall an event so fa r back as if*- it w ould rem em ber th e birih of V selm .—N ew York Times. F o u n d A H S W E R TOUGLYPiMPlES J S S j S t eished skin was Hurtt1 her popularity she ccJ find nothin? that hel&d —until a friend hicted "constipation” and ad. Vised NR Tablets cS. ture’s Remedy). toned and strength^ the entire eliminative tat —rid her system of pobca. vus wastes thoroughly, 11315. rally. Soon skin blotches Ts3. ished, pale cheeks glowed again, ry this safe, dependable, all. ietable laxative and correctfa A >jf > o ’ T ry this safe, dependable, an.vegetable Iaxati- Jtonight. 'Non* habit-forming.At aIl druggists'—25c. Born of Logic Intuition, in a woman, is just Ioat w orking subconsciously. Eat, Sleep and Feel Stronger M a n y woma in this tom: x well as elsewhere an troubled with moifih- Iy bearing-do M p a in s , weakeniig drains, backache or side ache and nerv ousness, this is Ihe time they should take Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription Mrs. Seward R. Wilcox of 1317 Margaret Sr. Waycross, Ga., says: “I had become rancor: and needed a tonic. Dr. Pierce's Fawria Prescription restored my he Ith to wrmL • Now when I feel that a tonic is necessary I take the ‘Favorite Prescription’ and ran begin to feel like myself again,—not so ctr. 0u3, eat, sleep and feel stronger.” K i d n e y s *= „ b o t h e r y o u . ’ Heed promptly bladder irreg ularities, getting up at night and nagging backache. They m ay warn of some disordered kidney or bladder condition Users ev ery w h ere rely on Doan’s Pills. Praised for more than 50 years by grateful users the country over. Sold by all druggists. DOANS . In a n E p id em ic of" COLDS a n d K i n d r e d A ilm e n ts You can always rely on tte PURITYandQUICK EFFEO T IV E N E S S o f St. Joseph’* Genuine Pure Aspirin. St. Joseph’s is the original, g<*j jfe ume, pure, cellophane*wrapp« ^ aspirin, world’s largest seller at IOt- ★"ask for it by n a m e * S t J o s e GENUlN E' P U R E A S R l W Tbc 60c tiie of St. Joseph'* Aspinn tashj, .educed in price to 70c. This rite coe«-»6j; than S times as many tablets as the 1KiU The 25e size contains three times a s f J l 3 r - " ' ti.a, at IOe size. It's economy to buy the l*rp« BI-CHOLATESrj THE TWIN BILE SAL» Compounded with medicine of origin for the successful treatnv.-j> e: Bladder and Uver troubles, money bach. - Trial 25c. Regular Js treatment one dollar. Free bocsKi _ .. FAIBMOUNT MEDICAL DlSrEVAP^ 43» Peachtree Arcade - LEARN ABOUT SERICEA. plant introduction In 100 years. *er heavy yielding poor-Iand legttj*1^- IdDCAS, Box 1350. Charlotte. >• TltBNv WOMEN, here Is mones* *;■ .ately and every day.You alyv’sj-=.^ commissions due to new periectvu <• , sales plan combined with proZniqtribat' chandfee. Write Dept. I. Nowib 1I151n-. T. ing Club. 486 Broadway. Altapy* Why Don't Ton Make Some UbXi'dresses? Smart. Biggest fc1I t V commissions and bonuses. Fact°/.V,,nie,f's- er.Wrlte today. Beytex Garment*.* Fnstpnof Cabbage and OnionALL VARIETIES SOO-ISe L®?* jj. FARMERS PLANT C O -T G S -* '' RECORD, MOCKSVILLE, N, C. Anniversaries grid’s Great jn 1 9 0, Jnes lias been askea ^ Iitstan d in g .Inniverclri' h,it 11033. T he list « 0» Ss 0f I 31OSt notable anioi,., ?, B|1 id be a hundred vearl 1 “ la id lived till Jtvf3 [th e com poser arp f Innese Gordon n ‘ "> id. who founded the v Jhvin Booth (In Noveni^ tin A ugust), and isei (in September) > dle.v, the discoverer of u born 200 years n.-,,0^ ' Id Sam uel Pepys in pe, IiX!. A conspicuous a'nn; •III be th a t of the Uivlll h I=Kiberh1 which occurred I F '• 3Inntaiene February of the sam c'vJ* iio and C ranm er died in o,' it. If th e calendar I event so fa r back as up, enipm ber th e birth of '• York Tim es. ' ll‘ d ANSW ER PSMPLES J6SjtEDi TTVEN When she - , t I ~ that unsightly blJ? fc'5 - — Ilshed skin was huiSher pOpultmty shefind nalkiisz that HoIm —until a mend hiiJS . fonstjpation and ad vised NR Tablets (Na , turn’s Remedy). Th-J .. t°ned and sUeVstheSg the ralire eliminative tnS —nd her system of pohoa t OUS wastes thoroughtv. tlitul , raUy. Soon skin blotches V2S S 1Shed; Pide cheeks glowed acS JT ry this safe, dependable, Si, Jrgetable larattve and corrective mil Quick relief for add indips. c tion. heartburn. Only 10c. B orn of Logic hn. in a wom an, is just logic uibconscloti sly. I S S e e p a n d F e e l S f r e n g e r 'ANY women • in this town as well as elsewhere are troubled with raonih- Iy _ bearing -down pains, weakening drains, backache or side ache and nerv ousness, this is the time they should take [tree’s Favorite Prescription.a;d R. Wilcox of 131“ Margaret St... Ga., says: '‘I had become rundown lea a tonic. Dr. Pierce's Favorite ■on restored my he Ith to normal. |n I feel that a tonic is necessary I ‘Favorite Prescription’ and mkjo cel like rayself again,«-not so r.erv- s:cep and feel stronger.” M - led prom ptly bladder irreg- !ties, getting up a t night snagging backache. They j w arn of som e disordered Bey or bladder condition. TS everywhere rely on Sn s P ills. Praised for more : 50 years by grateful users country over. Sold by all gists. tjzm m cFOR Y ou can altcays rely on the JR IT Y a n d Q U IC K EFFEO V E N E S S o f S t. Joseph* nutne P u re A spirin. >t. Joseph’s is the original, gt® - pure, ceflophane-wrapP i. world’s largest seller at K F O R IT B Y N A M E * .tie of St. Joseph's Aspirin price to 50c. This sue eonta-J. ^ a a* many tablets as the tafclcta e contains three times as many If5 economy to buy the laretf , SALTS pf ,.!eSftO1J* SSSl-l S* vnluabt*ROUT SERICEA. "5t2s!, JAmlal' vluctlon In 100 year*. J e Wrkat'j ucLion in aw j .17.--,o Jdinp poor-Jand IeffUJp ■„'MT 1359. C h arlo tte . >• ( ... Inulica'* Illl S. hero Is nionc) 1 „every dny.Vou eonsUtPfns due to new Perfecif?rrcd rn^i comM ned w ith Prp-T n |gtrib°*' Write Dent, I. NoeeJSnT >'• T' ■ISO Brnatltvn.v. Albanv =r-sSM to;„n.e,G» I? A m erican G h i e f _ Colora.do Sprincjs, Colo. I By ELMO SCOTT WATSON PEAK of the “V anishing A m erican” and at once you think of “Lo, the Poor Indian." W hile it is true th at the number of Indians in the U nit ed States has greatly decreased since the caravels of Columbus first touched the shores of the New World, yet the presence of nearly a quarter of a million red men within our borders is testim ony to the fact that poor Lo has fa r from reached the vanishing point. But there is another type of In dian that is truly a “Vanishing I American." He is the cigar store Indian, the If sign, symbol and guardian angel of the cigar I store. There was a time when no tobacco shop complete without the figure of a stalw art Ibrare or a plump Indian princess standing In I front of it. But today, w ith but few exceptions, I yon will have to go to a m useum or an antique lshopto find such an aboriginal symbol of trade I In one of the earliest A m erican commodities. Hg And, if by chance, you wish to own one, you’d I better be prepared to pay from $200 up for i t I For the cigar store Indian is now “A m ericana” I and his value is in Inverse ratio to his scarcity. It is one of the paradoxes of history th a t this [“Vanishing American" w as not of Am erican or- Sigin at nil. Tobacco was introduced to th e1 Old JlTorld by a Spanish physician in 155S and in Jpdffi Sir Francis Drake brought the equipm ent Jpsfor smoking to Sir W alter Raleigh who m ade g f the habit fashionable In England. W hen England M lw as Merrie England under Jam es I (1603-1623) '" I there were wooden Indian trade signs In th at [country. When Pocahontas died, in 1617, the P l l Toodetl Indian was no strange sight. Ifh Bnt the early Indians seen in Europe w ere J fanciful figures, made by carvers who had not Iggiseen American Indians. As one w riter, has ob- f served: . j “Early Indians showed th a t Europe had set- P g **ed do’Tn to the belief th a t A m erican Indians a j wore no clothes except a kilt of tobacco leaves Hgl —a wonderful triad of utility when one thinks I of it—at once nether apparel, currency and Rjpjj the makin's, to be drawn upon' up to the lim it Jgl of decency. London types resembled negroes, S g and for 200 years were known as ’black boys.’ ” B a IVhile the Indian figure as a trade sign started j In England, it reached grandeur and true char- t acter in tile United States. A m erican sculptors I knew the Indian, his features and charaeteris- i tics, and the resulting figures w ere astounding. 11'0'17 groups of designs for wooden tobacco I <rade sign figures developed in the United J States—chiefs, squaws, Roman figures and w hite Ig l men. The last named included such figures as ‘"j Unde Sam, W alter Raleigh, policemen, “forty- | oiners” and smoking girls. A plump Pocahontas—the squaw type—w as Ken in Boston as early as 1730. In 1770, when Ginstnpber Demutli opened a little tobacco shop at Lancaster, Pa., a dainty wooden gentlem an • onered a snuff. box instead of the traditional cigars. Baltimore claims to have had cigar re fixtures before 1770. But it was not until shortly before the Civil " ar that hordes of this race of red men appeared on the American scene. According to one chron- cler the wooden Indian w as first introduced to 1IS i°l> as guardian angel of cigar stores by a man named Chichester, about 1S50. The sculptor * these earliest specimens w as Tom M illard. In the first days of the fad some of the more aristocratic chiefs were made o,f m etal cast in molds. This type, however, w as soon abandoned; even R||n> the first most of the figures w ere of wOod. These were all made by hand, generally of vvhite pine, and considerable skill w as re wired in their shaping. Logs were first blocked °ut with an ax for the body, after which the arms were attached and the features m arked °ut with a chisel. Finer carving tools gave the nishing touches. They were then painted and mounted on wheels for delivery. The original sculptors w ere carvers of ship’s Sure heads. With the decay of - A m erican ship- Dng, carvers here, finding their occupation slip- Pmg away from them, m ade the wooden Indian mom than a part-tim e job. They turned to him as their mainstay. One of these carvers, per- aPs the most fam ous of them all, w as Louis ohin of Ste. Anne de B eaupre In Quebec, when Jobin died there a few years ago a t the aSe^of eighty-six he w as given wide publicity "the originator of the cigar-store Indian,” * though it is doubtful if th a t characterisation <an J'mtly be applied to any one man. B ut his Pre-eminence In this field is indicated by the ollowing excerpts from his obituary notices in the newspapers at the tim e of his d e ath : 'Louis Jobin’s fam ily nam e does not rest ex clusively on his bizarre production. He was ’ escribed as the greatest wood carver In the uorld. He carved wood for seventy years, though I' h’te his sight had failed and he had'laid aw ay his chisel. While cigar store Indians are becoming ex- het, those created by Jobin in his early days c h i e f S e m LOHySan Francisco R TheLast CiqarStofeIndian in the industry are in deep dem and by collectors. One of the m asterpieces of S t Nicotine stands today a t the front .door of a tobacconist's shop on the Kue St. Jean, In Quebec city, w here it w as placed fifty years ago. The owner has re fused $500 for it. “Johin was a hum ble artist, who never talked of a rt for art’s sak e /b u t dtd w hatever his hand found to do. W hat w as in dem and sixty and seventy ' years ago w as figureheads for ships. Canada w as a center of the wooden shipbuild ing industry. So the young Jobin, although he w ent for a brief period to New York, found more am ple scope for his talents a t home. “ ‘Forty years I carved for ships,’ Jobin said. “Then the steam ers cam e in and iron had no use for wood. I had iong carved Indians. I also carved the figure of a notary for a notary’s door in M ontreal. B ut for years I. have done mostly angels and apostles and saints.’ “Jobin’s a rt will not altogether die w ith him. H e leaves behind him a nephew. Edouard M ar- cotte, trained in his craft, and Ste. Anne, though the great m aster of wood carving Is no more, will not be deprived of sacred iconography.” W hile ’ some dealers “commissioned” home talen t carvers to “execute” their Indians, the wide demand gave birth to a new trade. Re search has failed to disclose any evidence of a factory for m aking wooden Indians,, but the braves were carried as a line by the “drum m ers” for w holesale tobacco houses and pic tures of Indians graced their catalogues. Edw ard Hen, one of the leaders in the to bacco business in the East, found profit In the propagation of the new Indian race and ad vertised the braves for sale as early as 185(5. In 1871 Hen assem bled In an old five-story building in New York city a congress of wooden Indians, certainly a fearful sig h t H undreds of red men, squaw s and w hite figures, all freshly and daringly painted, lined the walls. Twenty-five dollars , w as the average price for the commonest variety of wooden Indian—often braves which bad been traded for other figures, and repainted. B ut w hat a difference tim e has m ade in the cigar store Indian m arket! It m ight be possible to buy one for $25 in these depressed tim es, but it’s very doubtful. Several years ago the Cleveland Plain D ealer conducted a 4Svooden Indian contest,” which brought to light a num ber of these interesting relics and as a resnlt one of them , “Seneca John,” alias “The- Tiflin Tecumseh,” achieved a lasting place in the annals of American an tiquities when he w as sold by Albinos EIehert, a farm er living near New Riegel, Ohio, for $100 to H enry Ford, who has given the redskin a perm anent home In his museum of ■ American antiques a t Dearborn, Mich. Mr. Ford had had a “squaw” for some time, but desiring a m ate for her, he instituted a search for one which resulted in his acquiring “Seneca John.” A year or so ago M ark Sullivan, w riting In the New York H erald Tribune on the many signs of a rapidly changing America, said “An- . other news item th at makes, vivid the quick pass ing of recently fam iliar features of American life is this in the New York H erald T ribune: “ ’Penn Yan, N. Y.—One of the last members .of a vanishing tribe of wooden Indians has been purchased for $100 by an antique dealer here. A year ago the hand-carved Indian w as sold by a M ontour Falls tobacconist for $10.’ "A 1.000 per cent increase in 'v alu e w ithin a year suggests extrem e rapidity in the process of antiquation. So quickly does change come in "BLACK HAWK,” Galena, 111.* America that before one knows it, an institution or a fam iliar detail of the surface of life be* comes antique.” As a m atter of fact it would seem that both Mr. Ford and the antique dealer in Penn Yan, N. Y„ got real bargains when they [laid only $100 for their wooden Indians. For M. L. Blnm- enthal, w riting in tiie Saturday Evening Post only a short tim e ago, reported finding “a much- battered wooden Indian of the sort w ithout which no cigar store w as considered au fait or even de rigueur twenty-five years ago” in a junk shop and the dealer asked $350 for it, declaring th a t the price was “not out of the way a t all. It’s a m ale Indian—squaw s are cheaper—and it’s a good example of early American carving.” B ut his statem ent that squaws are cheaper is not borne out by the following item which appeared soon afterw ards in the P aris (Mo.) M ercury: “It is not generally known, but cigar Indians, form erly the outdoor sign of cigar stores, have become valuable antiques, and good specim ens bring as high as $500. A firm of deal ers has been negotiating with the Paris Cigar company for the very plump and handsome squaw th at has graced Main street, Paris, now fo r m ore than forty 'years, but Frank Jones, owner and m anager, is a man of sentim ent, and has, it is said, turned down an offer of $300 for her. ‘You see,’ he said, ‘she’s been here so long and never knocked about either the' conversa tion or the w eather, never so much as taken a trip, or changed the cut of her clothes, th at it would be cruel to uproot her and sell her either down the river or up. I have known her since a sm all boy, and am dow nright attached to her. Some things mean m ore than money. My squaw is not for sale. She knows too much about Paris, past and present, to risk out of sight, and In . addition I know of no other man who can boast of th at rarest of all earthly blessings, a wooden squaw who cannot talk. You have no idea how satisfactory she is a t tim es.” ’ Consider also the case of "Chief,” who stands in front of a cigar store In Colorado Springs, Colo. Frank and Clinton Osborn, proprietors of the store, say th at they have had frequent offers ranging all the way from $500 up to $1,000 for this 600-pound m etal w arrior whom they ob tained a t an auction sale of unclaimed goods in a' storage w arehouse in th at city some 20 years ago. B ut they have steadfastly refused all offers for “Chief.” Like the Osborns there are other owners of cigar store Indians who won’t p art w ith their prizes for any price. There’s Bob Parsons, pio neer tobacco dealer a t Ashland, Wis., whose store still is guarded, after 40 years, by fierce eyed Chief Sitting Bull. Parsons is intensely proud of his Indian. Thousands of tourists have visited his store to view the brave. Indians, too, come sometimes, but reverently. "Sitting Bull is an exact model of the great chief who ruled the D akota plains w hen w hite men first pushed beyond the M ississippi river,” says Parsons. “H e w as carved for toe by hand from w hite pine by H erm an Kruske, a wood* w orker at Ashland, half a century ago.” Sitting Bull, a tall, bright yellow figure, dom inates the drab street that is his tribal domain. The black, braided hair, th at holds a single upright feather, fails over the shoulders of his friDged buckskin coat. His left hand grips his tom ahaw k; his right supports the end of a huge cigar. He Is the glorified realization of mem ories of cigar store Indians. Each morning Sitting Bull is rolled to his position before Parson’s shop, which clings to traditions, of the past and sells tobacco only. Each night he’s rolled back into his tepee to keep a vigil over the darkened shop. Parsons has refused several offers for Sit ting Bull and declares he’ll never sell him. He hopes that when he’s gone, the old chief w ill be cared for by the Chequamegon Bay Old Settlers’ association. Chief Semloh, California’s oldest Indian and a veteran of the gold rush, stands before the shop of S. E. Holmes in San Francisco, This wooden brave w as shipped around Cape H orn on a sailing vessel In 1850 from New York, con signed to a pioneer tobacconist in M arysville, Calif. M arysville, 140 m iles from San Francisco, then w as thronged w ith prospectors. Chief Semloh did duty for 60 years in this town. Ten' years ago, new owners irreverently com m itted C hiefS em loh to the basem ent. R esur rected by his present owner, the old chief under w ent surgery a year ago and now is perhaps the m ost m odem Indian in the U nited States. At a cost of several hundred dollars, Chief Semloh w as equipped w ith a speaking voice and the faculty of smoking cigars. Now he puffs away and gives advice to sm okers as he keeps guard before Holmes’ shop. ^ An eighty-two-year vigil before the door of the M altzberger cigar store, in Reading, Pa., ended in 1929 for Old Eagle Eye, a blue-eyed wooden Indian cut from a solid block of wood by a New York carver. He w as purchased by cigar sfore proprietors of the city and placed in the ReadiDg. museum. (© by W estern N ew spaper U nion.) Samoan Islands Formed by Volcanic Upheaval “W hen,” asks w estern Samoa, “are we going to receive our independ ence?” The possibility of another new na tion In the Pacific is of im portance to this country because the nearest neighbor to w estern Samoa, a form er German colony now under New Zea land m andate, is American Samoa, Uncle Sara’s only possession south of the equator. “Of the little cluster of land that lies some 4,200 miles southw est of Snn Francisco, w estern Samoa in cludes the two largest islands, Savaii and Upolu, and six tiny islands. The other portion of the archipelago, which is also known as the Naviga tor islands, is in the possession of the U nited States,” says a communi cation from the N ational Geographic society in W ashington. “Volcanic upheavals in past ages built the islands; the old bprned-out and eroded cones form rigid back bones across the islands, and in Upolu and Savaii the crests rise to the height of from 2,000 to 4,000 feet above the w arm Pacific w aters th at lave their palm-fringed shores. “N ature has dealt bountifully w ith Samoa. A plentiful supply of mois ture spills over the rich volcanic soil during the rainy m onths from Octo ber to April and produces an abun dance of lush tropical growth. Lux u riant foliage covers the m ountain sides. On the slopes of Savaii, espe cially, are forests of hardwood trees used in boat building. In the val leys Re plantations of coconut, rub ber, and fru it trees.” HERE’S QUICKEST, SIMPLEST WAY TO STOP A COLD " FOLLOW DIRECTIONS PICTURED BELOW ■■ Take BayerAspirin according to directions in package. Drink Full Glass of Water ^If throat is sore, crush an&dissolve 3 Bayer Aspirin Tab lets in a' half glass of warm water and gargle according to directions. Almost Instant Relief In This Way If you have a cold—don’t take chances w ith "cold killers” and nostrum s. A cold is too.dangerous to take chances on. The sim ple method pictured , above is the way doctors through out the w orld now treat colds. I t is recognized as the QUICK EST, safest, surest way. F or it w ill check an ordinary cold alm ost as fast as you caught it. T hat is because the real BAYER A spirin embodies certain medical qualities th at strike a t the base of a cold alm ost INSTANTLY. You can combat nearly any cold you get sim ply by taking BAYER A spirin and drinking plenty of w ater every 2 to 4 hours the first day and 3 or 4 tim es daily there after. If throat is sore, gargle w ith 3 BAYER A spirin Tablets crushed and dissolved in a half glass of w arm w ater, repeating every 2 or 3 hours as necessary. SoTe throat eases, this w ay in a few m inutes, incredible as this m ay seem. ^ A sk your doctor about this. And w hen you buy, see th at you get the real BAYER A spirin Tablets. They dissolve alm ost instantly. And thus w ork alm ost instantly when you take them. And for a gargle, Genuine Bayer A spirin Tablets dissolve w ith speed and complete ness, leaving no irritatin g particles or grittiness. Get a box of 12 or hot* „ tie of 24 or 100 a t any drug store. Ask your druggist pbout tlie recent price reduction on the 100 tablet size Bayer Aspirin, / ! \ I B A Y E R i v i y N O TABLETS ARE GENUINE B A Y E R ASPIRIN WITHOUT THIS CROSS I “GEE, MRS. BURNS, MOM'S RIGHT! YOUR CAKES ARE BETTER THAN HERS LATELY!" “YOU TELL HER SHE SHOULDN’T HAVE STARTED USING THAT ORDINARY BAKING POWDER!’ J . AND I ANO TH ER W OM AN CH ANG ES TO L CALUM ET! M o r e and more women a r e discovering th a t th is tried and true baking powder plays an im portant part In their baking success. And after a few experiments with ordinary baking powders, they quickly return to Calumet. For Calumet’s Double-Ac tion gives them lighter cakes . . . fluffier biscuits. . . more evenly-baked muffins. Calu m et acts twice. First In the mixing bowl, and again In the oven. There the marvelous second action continues th e leavening and holds yo u r CALIIMETi I AprodootofGeaeTafFoodaE batter high and feather-light. T hanks to th is efficient Double-Action, CalLimet goes further, too... one teaspoon to a cup of sifted flour is the eco nomical standard proportion. Here’s three-way economy . . . reasonable prices, better baking, and you use less. IBtACTION 2nd ACTION GST PROOF! Sae Calumat a ct twice I Tfaese pictures illustrate the’famous Calumet Double- Action Test. YojirU find full direc tions formating this easy tMtimide every Calumet can. Try.it! See for yourself how Calumet acts twice to make your baking better. THE DOUBLE-ACTING BAKING POWDER / S',;hi I: {\l ! Ii I! ii RECORD, MOCKSVILLE, N. C Her StandingT o K e eByOsbwoeC >rTHE FEATHERHEADS MSS s w a n k 1.S iN.tHERE AMO , coul PN'T' ^ilST ASK F o rT a c k s — 50 ‘ BOUffHT "TWO ,NEW CHAIRS I w e ll! ir sutiB-foO < MiDtI tOMG* feNOUfi-rf} You*© Th/w#< weft^ Buv»w<s- a ^orT Fl»RW«txii OH-WtLL SbU VVAiT H lrE t A MlHUTC.-?t VWAMT -Qp Ij O IKJTHAT FaRNiTLlRe. S T O R E AMO S E T Some tiOHOi-STEfcV' Ta c k s Sb You <;AN p /x T H & BASV CHAlR^ Chow H ow to Conduct HcrsslfFINNEY OF THE FORCE 7 , D i d n ’t HIS W lF B s o jT S i = ,MiiK /*AP OTrtBR1 - - f o F Z lO E A R O U N fD W IT H H lM A N D S H & . STAR-TBB • TCUUINJG- TriE ta.SSBN«BtaS WHBRC -Tto SET OFPJ! H Q HO' ALW AVJ A(!CWV ANSWER. VeZ. HAVE—SAV. W HeRE1-S1 callaman him WHUT USBD T' BE ON TSA M E RUN VlIlT' v e t ? HMMMMi FIRBO ! A m’ how coNie ? VJHUT WUZ. TH Ra AS o n ? HUUO1ROB michols , Ve Oio Scaulvw AS AM’ H o w 'i -M 'STBEBT- CAR COHDUCT'RING- BUS’NISS ? OH H iw t— TsW NbV! Our Pet PeeyeAlong the Concrete $ DQ f M z ? * * (Cap/rictit, w By GEORGE STORMBOBBY TH A T C H ER -T he Smoker HO THAT AIN'T iTHE WAV' T O O O ••••) p a c k t h e p i p e c l e a r p u l i - ___/ ANO THEN T A M P IT OOWM C o o o a h d t ig h t u k b w a s M D o e s - - WHyt U L.V SSES B u tlB R i i , O iO H T K H O W 1 VOU SM O K EO T u e s v m SM ATTER POP—- Naiil Down Things That Come Up To Meet You By C. M. PAYNE vW +) A T-A v j ! T+Je. C o n s a -Rn m a t LCPS AnTj "TBA v j-W -Izf -H'TS V o T s y ' / ^ z L tlT m A h ' P-A K iu 15 A ^ rJb-Art T=1O l* I T ^ O O fitfT I VB U U 3 > O w n/ W A C £ « © The Bdl Syndicate. Inc.) G EO R G E W A SH IN G T O N ’S TRAVELS By James W-. Brook 9 Co*yn*1ul«l> by Juttt « SrveI. AU ki^lr RcmtvcJ HUtohuUy Cemct Sk«teb«*By Calvin fades = 4 Gen Mossw Gem. Lee. L IT T L E ^ PRUCE GUMiioc A s a gum-chewing nation ? ^ I has gone soft, boasts the I vivor of w hat once Wlic> 1 Sii lnspruce gum. TIie Inaiails 5 *1 settlers the-value o£ the .n, th e spruce tree. But WofcrJat M m any years ago to Ilavort,] ilI th a t chew with less csertio- ^ I spruce gum crop in IiiIiniJui to tal 150 tons veu'-Iv Ti w orth 5300,000, Xow,' L,,.. 5'"’"'everharvest am ounts to four to - ! Po this for Your Child in W i i IH How to rid any boy or girl of S|CE or constipation and build a big Jppailt . T he trouble w ith children who n o t eat Is usual stasis. Thesy tom s a re a tongue that’s alB coated, bad breath, poor color j-: eyes th a t a re often a bilious jeJot K o appetite, no ambition—even j* play. H ard to get to sleep, hard ti w ake in th e morning. T here’s ,an absolute remedy f(. th is condition. It gives Hsti^ youngsters the appetite and fna. gies of a young anim al! They T hey g a in ! They keep well!' I t’s not th e stomach, but ti; bowel condition that keeps CltMta from eating. B ut the trouble is a the low er bowel—the colon. Csj. Iornia syrup of figs is the 0Dj, “m edicine” th a t is needed to stis* Jate th e colon muscles. The Tai n e st day, your child is eating fe te r and feeling better. Keep onria th e syrup o f figs a tew days mi yon w ill sea amazing improvemesl In appetite, color, weight and Epiaii A ny drug store has the real ffi fornia syrup of figs, all bottled, Tie directions. N ature never nude nicer acting o r nicer tasting las tive. (It is purely vegetable.) 8* m em ber C alifornia sytup of fc w hen sickness, a cold or any opt has clogged a child’s bowels. W ARNING: Even when it'sm thing. to give children, some Hmi m il try to substitute. So Se sure ft bottle says CALIFOENIi Sjra OT Figs, F la tte r Them, Girb A m an likes to be called IiiateH even If he knows he isn't. S I Don’t Trifle Wi Don’t let- them get a strangle ii Fight germs quickly. Creomulsion csi bines the 7 best helps known to mote science. PcrwerfiiI but harmless. P fe to take. No narcotics. Yourdruggiit^ refund your money if any cough or all no m atter how Jon^ standins fc Iieved by Creomulston. IaW Rleht through your make-opi Ji*;dlllon of your stomach «botiivJ, your complexion. SparfcUn2 *^L fresh, unblemished skto ,coPrJlS rally with a clean, "rcfiuIar i JyCleanse InternatlyxvUh GarmvIt’s pleasant, prompt, har™ , Natnrea’own bcautyald-CA-W^^ SAMPLE FHEEj GartIeIdTea Co..P'0*Brooi^ a natural Iaxaiiye drink"* RELIEF FR O M FO R N O S E A H P SEND NO MONEY „ rt 5Frostproof Cabbage and ODionnjALL VARIETIES 50(M9c STANDARD PLANT CO. [E D AVlE Rl U g e s t C i r c u I a t i o r j a v i e C o u n t y N e j * ITY * * NEW FACTS ABOUT HEflOJCHES, I SLEEPLESSNESS, DEBILin,^;. Acidity is a dangersignal. |I satisfied merely to correct tc n dition in your stomach, y v p ^ tire system is concerned* , GOLD MEDAL £S HAARLEM O il CAP5" 16’ ^ They stimulate your that they free your whom ,03» of more acids, see^ .,1 ,L W relieve a l l your aciditv in) | Insist on gold medal. GSEAt AMEftlCANS WECE MAOE 6V THE ev£R6BidE6 Of WMl f EANCS -MMlWU WHO OOUl-O ATTACH ANOOiSSAOPEAB WITH HSMEN BECAME KNOINN t& TME '6WAMP (b< “ IH fME. SOulHERH ZOME OF FIGHTING OOIN6 THE GtVOLUTlON. GENEOAL MOQGAH THE MlCttCAT CcW/pENS HAD Been known s m c t (us youth a? a fish te r, an o ^k sh t Horse HAtof* le e . m w eu o f ^ TME llXUSTfilOO^ GoBEttr E. LEE AUSO DEMQN5TBATE0 Hl5 OuAUTlES AS MAtJ ANO A SOUOlEB 4t WE06S -iHvEOn: \H VjMlWteHfLO, OOHNCCTlCon \N«WnSToN OmFEEfiED INiTM Poomam.beau ano tw<wu> n«T TBoop5 ano soppmk WECt on their way raa !,L c a UNOEC -PE GOiSSE v-fHS WAS IN MAY IJffl.' FBW TWT TWE ON ^ * 0 » R>,* « h a o to h Become iatwN. ooNCEwnewto on Plans To trad cochwauis at vn m T , Tffi. MCNiMG Of HlS MEN 50lfrHWAB0- IKOiMIEO-1HI5. . « w w aow H either, toen o r women required. N o m oney to be T i^epart. Part time or full time Jbb fo r you If yo* IixeMempl>is' l^jL.PIex Co. D ept 00, I Mrs. H arley W alker I y in W inston-Salem J-r p G arwood, of I la s in town Saturday < J a C. Cornatzer, Ia sin town T hursday |M r. and Mrs. W , EJ larm onv. R- 3. wereI Icitors Friday. ISullivan B ooe 1 ot i s a business visitor It week. ITbe Record editor ia v en SDent W ednesd Irsville on business 1C. E A lexander, ofl Jtak in g treatm ent at Jorium in Statesville. IlIr and Mrs. F. id daughter, of P ino1I Ille visitors Saturday! I E H . Sm ith, of Ird la s in town ThursdaV Junty roads in bad sh |F . R- L akey and d a | Iary Louise, of Faraij I town shopping Satt IM iss O ssie A llison I Bme tim e w ith h er| hinard L eG rand1 at T !M aster Lester M arti as been ill w ith pneul Est two w eeks, is m ul j Miss M innie Koontd bent several days Il Jwn with her sister, lam pbell. [M iss Irene Shore, o | |gton, spent several i ; town w ith her siste( |w iggins. jE sq. T . I. C audell1I iusly ill several days! fuch better, his fr | ad to learn. |M rs. G. G. Daniel j Iiss Pauline, returnel fday from Statesvillf Bent five w eeks. [W A N T E D — T oBl J. H . Wl “ T h e I I If you w ant to petty take a look a | Jlle H ardware Co. Bey, Sr., is som e winij [W A N T E D -M e n roducts nearby rotl Ifter 7 p. m ., old Ca! fresbyterian church.I |ll, B ox 2 5 , M ocksvl Miss M am ie H enaj |f the M ocksville pq pas confined to her I jays last w eek w ith I Jolthouser filled her, gostoffice during her I Mrs. P. J. Johnson ^.ee and Louise StroJ hose from M ocksvill paderewski at the orium in W inston : |vening in a piano c(| Our old friend J. hear Courtney, w as : N ' and brought us ; ocust beer. Since tl iountry has gone wetT |oin the procession af “g. Mr. and M rs. K l pnd fam ily, and M i/ Tneut are m oving th« plem eut farm , ne] function, where MrJ peen engaged in fa] past thrse or four yq Charlie H ege1 of g a s arrested by c ^Friday night, chaij SA lcen^ an aut0£ Carter, som e tit. I fan a half m ile racq P ut came out se_onc Bodged iu jail to an ■nary hearing. Davie county of |tw o w hite m en, Johj !A rthur W hitaker, t l !gallons of w hisky anj Jing car, m inus licel • with only tw o tires [ Itnen vvere captured! !tow nship Friday nia I to ,M oeksville and Iq I a V ^it .trial. . rf^ C . G ow ans, ag I Veteran, rem ains I JJ0Bie in w est M oclil I Peen confined to h isi j two or three w eeks.l [ ° “e pf the few C on f I w t in D avie. H e i i [ j_'age, having joj I W hen , 7 y e ars o{ f I at h.e m ay recovea lsen tilih ess. 95 I - SPR U C E GUM ^ r - . luui-chewing natiou ? ED f so!t' boftSts the Onifttric* Jwhut once Wls sUt. Ku Maine, the itu m . TIie lnai;)nf ' B ot ■the value of the u* t | ’e tPee- » « '»oaen"smt|> |a r s ajro to Havo1J 1 rnftI r 'viUl exertion Juni L-i-oi) in Mailm • ihe |0 tons yearly .ril-5,ea to 1300,000. XowZhcnve1; ^ |am ounts to four to the I _______________________Cotis1 P o th is f o r I Y o u r C h ild in TWO IWilKi rid any boy or girl Of sluggish U tio n and build a big Suble w ith children who w),‘ is usual stasis. The Sv J .re a tongue th at's alwav bad breath, poor color d„n !at a re often a bilious yen#* ietite, no am bition—even f0J Tard to get to sleep, hardto i th e m orning, 'e's an absolute remedy j0P ondition. i t gives Iisties3 cers the appetite and ener a young animal J They eat' a in ! They keep well! ’ not the stomach, but the "ondition that keeps chlldrea ■ating. B ut the trouble is ia Ver bowel—the colon, call- syrup of figs is the only ine” th at is needed to stinm- ie colon muscles. The very ay, your child is eating bet- fl feeling better. Keep on with rup of figs a few days ana ill sea amazing improvement stlte, color, weight and spirits, drug store has the real Caii- syrup of figs, all bottled, with ons. M ature never made a acting or nicer tasting Iaa- (Ir is purely vegetable.) lie- >r California syrup of Jgs sickness, a cold or any upset ogged a child's bowels. RNIXG: E ven w hen it'ssome- to give children, some storct y to substitute. Sob esu retk says C A L IF O R y il Synp is. T H E D A V I E R E C O R D , M O t m T O 1, r . e . F la tte r Them , Girls hn likes to be called liandsoma lie knows he isn’t. ft Trifle With Coiigk ji't let them get a strangle holi I germs quickly. Creomuisioa con* Ithe 7 best helps known to modem le. Poiverftil but harmless. Pleasant je. No narcotics. Your druggist will i your money if any cough or cold fatter how long standing is not re* by Creomulsion. (adr.) Mi r M Rightthrougfc year makc-uptBewn dition of your stomach •your complexion. SparkIjDg «7 *fresh, unblemished ekln coJJ1?_®tetn. Tally with a clean, “regular Cleanse intcrnaflyyvuh GtrJ _7 It’s pleasant, prompt. ^VJrerviju) K* Natures'own beauty ald.( A Bvmple free: GarfieidTea Cfl.,P.O.BrooWyn,"* • \RFIELD Tfkural Iaxaiive drink I m W R O M r c Pj LDi S fllN Q S E s A N D -T H ^ uIissenceoi JM W i h a n d k e r c h ie f AND PIL L O W '.^ C- O- D- _ ion PI®41 [Lr VARIET"lES°'50(M9c Indard p u n t rn - ^ kI T Ya NEW FACTS ABOUT HEADACHES, I I SLEEPLESSNESS, DEBIUTY, I I Bkcidity is a danger signal-^ ^ n-I%-tisfied merely to correct tbe<^ , piiion in your etoinacn.pro Bystem is concerned. j* GOLD MKDflL ,,,egHAARLEM OILlJllJy -C .1„+,V ,Trtlir kidney9 SUiat Wo vrS lieW several P K- l".?P«perie=>«Itlier men or women. ^"on y°u‘ quired. No money to be r1Sh. life-10,110 our ftxt. P a rt tim e o r full tim e. a ijrc;TiTr it*I b fo r you if yow UKo u I*, ''T enn- Jox Co.. B ept 00. McmpW®' * - 0 PAVIE RECORD. L r g e s t c i r c u l a t i o n o f A » y !DavieCounty Newspaper. IlocmTand personal news . a Mrs Harley W alker spent Fri- Iday in" Winston-Salem shopping. I p Garwood, of . Cooleem ee, I J s in t°wn Saturday on business. a 4 C C ornatzer, of Advance, Pff3S’in tovvu Thursday on business. m Mr and -^lrs- W ' E - of iHarmonv. R- 3. were M ocksville gjfvifitors Friday. * Sullivan Booe 1 of W alkertow n1 Iwas a business visitor here one day !last week- M The Record editor and Clarence IpCraven spent W ednesday in T ay- gflorsville on business I CiE Alexander, of Cooleem ee, B is taking treatment at L ong’s. San- latorium in Statesville. I f JIr and Mrs. F. R. M cM ahan land daughter, of Pino, were M ocks- IviIle visitors Saturday. ga E H. Smith, of Iredell county, B was in town Thursday and reports Bcouaty roads in bad shape. » F. R- Lakey and daughter, M iss BiMary Louise, of Farm ington, were Ifjn town shopping Saturday. B Miss Ossie Allison is spending ®Sson]e time with her sister, Mrs iClinard LeGrand1 at M atthews. I MasterLester M artin, Jr., who Shas been ill with pneumonia for the Ipast two weeks, is much better. P Miss Hinuie Koontz, of Kappa, Hspent several days last week in Stown with her sister, Mrs. Prentis llcampbell. a Miss Irene Shore, of near Farm - gington, spent several days last week Iin town with her sister, M rs. Stokes gDwiggins. Esq. T. I. Caudell1 who was ser- Iionslv ill several days last week, is much better, his friends w ill be glad to learn. Mrs G. G. Daniel and daughter. lMiss Pauline, returned hom e Sat- Jnrday from Statesville, where they |spent five weeks. WANTED—To Buv Cedar Logs. J. H . W IL L IA M S, “ The Cedar M an.” If you want to see som ething !pretty take a look at the M ocks Iville Hardware Co. C. F . Mero- iney, Sr., is some window decorator. I WANTED—Men sell R aw leigh !products nearby routes. See me {after 7 p. m., old Call house, back J Presbyterian church. W . L. Sher- I>ill, Box 25, M ocksville, N . C. JIiss Mamie H endrix, a member of the Mocksville postoffice force, was confined to her hom e several days last week with Au. M iss Daisy Holthouser filled her position in the tostoffice during her absence. Mrs. P. J. Johnson, M isses A lice Lee and Louise Stroud were am ong those from Mocksville who heard Paderewski at the Reynolds audi torium in W inston Salem Saturday evening in a piano concert. Our old friend J. Frank Essie, of ! dear Courtney, was in town Thurs day and brought us a gallon of fine locust beer. Since the rest of the country has gone wet we propose to join the procession and go to drink 111E- Mr. and Mrs. K . M. Clem ent and family, and Miss Patsey Cle- [ fflent are moving this week to the I Clement farm, near Cooleemee j Junction, where Mr. Clem ent has been engaged in farm ing for the J past three or four years. Charlie H ege1 of Shady G rove, Jras arrested by county officers Friday night, charged w ith the 'aiceny of an autom obile from G. A, Carter, some tim e ago. H ege ran a half mile race w ith officers but catne out second best. H e was lodged iu jail to await a prelimi naty hearing. Davie county officers captured •wo white men, John Johnson and Arthur W hitaker, together w ith 15 gallons of whisky and a Ford tpur- 'ugcar, minus license plates and "'■th only two tires on same. The m«i were captured in Clarksville townrhip Friday night and brought Mocksville and lodged in jail to aWait trial. S C. Gowans, aged Confederate Veteran, remains quite ill at his home in west M ocksville. H e has een confined to his bed for the past Iw° or three weeks. Mr G oins is ®oe of the few Confederate soldiers j 'n Davie. H e is about 87 years ° , aSe. having joined the army JvJien 17 years of age. AU hope at he may recover from his pre- seW illness. - M A r c h i, 1933 M , I,. Spry, of Cooleem ee, who has been seriously ill for ten days. Is no better, his m any friends w ill regiet t . Ie?rn. Mr. and Mrs. H . B. W ard visit ed Mr. W ard’s parents, Mr. and Mrs M. C. W ard, a* Farm ington one day last w eek. M isses Rebecca BiDkley, Mary W ard Stonestreet and Tneolene and M argaret W ard spent the week-end with friends at Lew isville. Miss Nellie Bennett. M iss N ellie Bennett, 2 3, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. D. D. Bennett died at the hom e ot her parents at Cornatzer Thursday m orning, fol low ing an illness of two vears. Survivors include her parents; six brothers, H . H ., Aaron, R ay m ond, D. R. and E ugene Bennett, of D avie county, Flinchem Bennett, of W inston-Salem ; four sisters, Mrs. W . P. F ry, of Courtney; Mrs. J H . Foster, of Farm ington; M isses K atherine and Druzella Bennett, of Cornatzer. Funeral services were conducted at the hom e Saturday m orning at 10:30 o’clock, follow ed by another service at the N oe Creek Baptist church at 11:30 o’clock, R ev. Mr. F agg, of W inston-Salem , and Rev. Mr. Reid, of W alnut Cove, con ducting the services. T he body was laid to rest in the church yard. To the bereaved parents, brothers and sisters, T he Record extends sym pathy in this hour of sadness. M iss Bennett had m any friends who will be saddened by the new s of her death. Mrs. M artha H aneline visited her daughter, Mrs. John Byerly at K appa last week. Mr and Mrs W . F, Stonestreet went to W inston Salem Sunday af ternoon to visit their niece M iss •Ruth D outhit1 who is a patient at Memorial H ospital. You Need The Goods-We Need The Money-Let’s Get Together. Sweet Clover $4 25 RedCIover $8.00 .Orchard Grass $2.25 Korean Lespedeza 7c Rape IOc .Jarvis Golden Prolific Corn $1.50 Slates Yellow Dent Corn $1.59 Garden Beans -15c Garden Peas 20c - Ooion Sets IOc Seed Sowers $1.85 Mattocks 75c-85c Dietz Lanterns 75c 7, 10. 2 Traces 70c 71-2,10, 2 Traces 75c 71 2, 10, I Traces $1.00 Horse Collars $1.00 to $3.00 Check Lines $2 50, $2.75, $3.75 Heavy Bridles $1.25 to $3.00 SV29 Ga. Galv. Roofing $3.75 Base Best Thread Cotton Rope 20c Cross Cut Saws $2.25 up Boy Dixie Plows $3.00 Gen. Oliver Plows No. 13 _ $14.40 Gen. Oliver Plows No. 19 $15.60 House Paint $1.45 gallon AU Colors Tom Thumb Paint IOc CottonM attresses $3.75 up Simmons Iron Beds $4 50 Goood House Brooms 18c Back Bands 30c 40c, 50c $1 00 Lone Star Hames 90c No. 8 Large Stove $17.5u No. 8 Cast Range $32.50 Milk Bottle Caps 35c per m. EverythingYou Need In Hardware And Seeds A t ‘The Store Cf Today’s Best” Mocksville Hardware Co. Patronize Your Hardware Store Roy Arm sworthy and sisters, ^ rs. Lewis Godby and Mrs Stam' ie Clinard and children, of Thoro- asville, visited their uncle S. F. Binkley the past week. Mrs M. G. Foster, w ife of Re- gister of Deeds Foster, has been quite ill for the past two weeks at Iier home on the Salishury road, but is som ewhat improved. HORSES and MULES For Sale or irade—About 40 Head, AU Young. Be sure to see this shipment. At the Walter Clement Barn. PHARIS & HOW ARD Clean Up And Paint Up There is possibly nothing that puts a better appearance D A I W T 1 in and around the HOME than . i & I To those who wish to Paint their Dwellings or Barns we have just | what you want at a price you can afford to pay. W e will be glad to make a close estim ate of your job with no cost to you. To those who want som ething to make their Floors and Furniture j in the HOME look like new— I GRANITOID Enamel And Stain>■ I will do the job right no m atter how old or worn it is just get a pint or I quart can of GRANITOID and you will have it looking Clean and I I Bright. Don't take any substitutes ask for GRANITOID the old re-j liable Enamel and Stain. Come in and see color card and let us tell j you about it K u r f e e s & W a r d T he Iredell county roads must also be in bad shapa as the Har* m ony consolidated school suspend ed work last week on account of the impassable roads. I Tonics! Tonics!H I After Colds And Fiu I you should have a Real 3 Good Tonic to bring you I back to normal We carry I a full line of Good Tonics H I at reasonable prices. I Come And Let Us Show J You. § Lst Us Serve You tj LeGi and’s Pharmacy I On The Square § Phone 21 Mocksville. N. C. Better Service “THE SEED STORE” FARM AND GARDEN SEEDS Highest Purity And Germination Red Clover W hite Clover Sweet Clover Alfalfa Clove1: Lespedeza Sudan Orchard Grass Herd Grass Ky Blue Grass Rye Grass Lawn Grass D. E. Rape Pasture Grass Seed Corn Garden Seeds Fluwer Seeds Good Seeds Low Iq Price This Year Mocksville Hardware Co. mSx Sss ILLUSION: The Oriental girl reclines on a sheet of plate glass supported by two slaves. The magician waves a white sheet in front of the pretty m aiden. .. pronounces a few magic w ords. .. Presto! She has disappeared in thin air. EXPLANATION: “Disappearing” acts are among the most popu la r in'the repertory of the magician. Dogs, . horses, girls, whole rooms disappear—whisked into wings, dropped through trapdoors, hidden by mirrors. But this “disappearance” is a bit different. One of the “slaves” is a hollow dummy. W hen the magician holds up the sheet the lithe little lady disappears completely—into the con venient figure of the dummyV I t s JF rC W T O M o iB D . . . r r k M O S B f u n t o I t n r o w There is also a trick of cigarette adver tising, whereby a few magic words are used to create the illusion of “Coolness.” EXPLANATION: Coolness is determined by the speed of burning. Fresh cigarettes, retaining their full moisture, burn more slowly...smoke cooler.Parched,dry ciga rettes bum fast.They taste /iof.Thismakes the method of wrapping very important. < C opjil(tt,;i933. B. J. Heynolcls TobKco CamDawr Improperly wrapped cigarettes begin to dry out as. soon as packed. Camels are cooler because they come in the famous Humidor Pack of welded, three-ply, MOISTURE-PROOF cello- phane... and because they contain better tobaccos. A cigarette that is fresh, full of natural moisture, and blended from choice, ripe tobaccos tastes cooler than one that is harsh and acrid. For coolness, choose a fresh cigarette, made from costlier tobaccos. Hgg ag l j It is a fa ct, w ell k now n b y B ® " * le a f to b e cco ex p erts, th a t C am els a r e m a d e from fin er, MORE EXPENSIVE to b a cco s th an a n y o th e r p op u lar b ran d . Try Camels... give your taste a chance to sense the difference. You’ll appreci* ate it! L -J V O TR IC K S . . J U S T COSTLIER TOBACCOS I N A M A T C H I E S S B L E H D I - T fT fig D A V tE R E C O R D . M O C K S V ttX E l R <3. ttA ftcB L iga I i: Bc1 M-' I HI l ;(i$j If;! A Roaring Farce. W e are wondering just what it takes for a man to do to be guilty of violating the election law in North Carolina? Attorney General Rrummitt 1 him self a Democrat, and at the last election on the Democratic state ticket, compiled and presented a 15- page summary of testimony regard ing alleged fraudent acts by certain men in the June 1932 Democratic primary in Surry county and recom mended the indictment of at least six men yet the grand jury comes into court with the report “no true bill” and that nothing more occured in Surry than is to be found in most counties of the state And that’s the rub. Election frauds are practiced in practically every county in the state, they are all tarred with the same stick and one county is afraid to start anything, If it is all right to kill a man in Waka or Iredell counties this of course justifies the same thing in Surry according to the logic and reasoning of the grand jury. The first grand jury to whom the evidence was submitted were such a bunch of ignoramuses that they even refused to read the evidence and said they would know nothing about it if they read it. Rrummitt charged that one of the registers in that primary took money from a candidate for the Legislature to aid him in his campaign This was not denied. He charged that there were many absentee votes for people cast who were never located and there were others for whom ab sentee vote' were cast of whom it was established that they voted in the counties where they lived. Yet this wonderful county jury says there wcs no harm done, no law violated and that Surry did what most other counties are guilty of. What a farce. Representative Hancock has en- d )rsed H. H. Llewellyn, judge of the Mount Airy recorder’s court who was one of the men Brummitt re commended should be indicted for U . S. Marshall in the middle district and Frank Riggs, another man who is charged with irregularities by Brummitt we understand is a deputy sheriff under Thompson the present sherriff of Surrp cuonty. The De mocrats should take care of the other four heroes. Wilmoth, Redmond, Dockery and Stanly. AU six of these esteemed election officials should be provided with good fat office where there is a good salary attached and not much work to do and we sup pose they will. For have they not earned their reward?—Union Repub lican. '___________ Ir the “ underworld” keeps on as it is going, it will soon be the under ground world. Administrator’s Notice. Having qualified as adm inistrator of the estate of Ira J. Wooten, dec’d Iateof Davie county, N. C. Notice is bereby given all persons holding claims against said estate to prasent them to me for paym ent on or before Jan. 21. 1934, or this notice wil Ibe plea-1 in bar of their recovery. AU per sons indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment. This Jan. 21. 3933. MRS. MARY J. BECK Admr. Ira J. Wooten, Dec'd. Presidential Inauguration W ashington, D C , March 4th. Southern Railway System . Is The Right Way To Washington Greatly Reduced Round Trip Train Travel bargain Fares Two Cents Per Mile Each Direction For Individuals One Cent Per Mile Each Direction Parties 25 Or M ire Oo One Ticket Party tickets may be exchanged for in- dividual tickets returning for those de siring to remain longer. Round Trip Individual- Fare From Mocksville $13.6S Party Fares $6.85 Tickets on saie March 1st, 2nd and 3rd. fioal limit March 10th, 1933. Round trip pullman fares one and one half fare for the round trip. A spendid opportunity to visit the pub lie buildings and take in the wonderful sightseeing trips. By special dispensation Mt. Vernon- Home of George; Washington, will be opened Sunday, M arch 5. for inspection of visitors. Customary entrance fee will he charged. For additional information and sleeping car reservations call on ticket agents. R . H . GRAHAM, Division Passenger Agenc . Charlotte, N. C. They Advertise. A heu is not supposed to have Much common sense or tact. Y et every tim e she lays an egg She cackles forth the fact. A rooster hasn’t got a lot O f intellect to show. But none the less more roosters have Enough good sense to crow. The busy little bees they buzz Bulls bellow and cows moo. The watch dog barks, the gander quacks And doves and pigeons coo. T he peacock spreads his tail and struts P igs squeal and robin?sing. And even serpents know enough T o hiss before they stm g. But m an, the greatest m asterpiece That nature could devise W ill often stop and hesitate Before h e’ll advertise.—Swiped. SEMI-PASTE PAINT One Gallon Makes 2 1-2 When Mixed KURFEES & WARD Sale Of Land Under Mortgage. By virtue of the power of sale con tained in a m ortgage deed executed by C.._F. Barnhardt and Maggie Barnhardt, his wife, to J A Sowers, on the last day of June. 1927 as re corded in M ortgage Book No 22, page 267 in the office of the Reg st ar nf Deeds of Davie county N orth Carolina, default having been made in the payment of Drmcipal and interest as provided in the terms of said m ortgage, notice is hereby given that the undersigned will sell at public auction at the Court House door. Mocksviile. N . C.. on MONDAY. MARCH 20, 1933. AT TWELVE O’CLOCK NOON the following described real estate, iocatsd in Jerusalem township. Davie county. North Carolina: BEGINNING at. an elm on the W est Bank of the North Yakin river, Mrs. M. E. Nails Corner and running S 45 degrs. W est with her line. 40 chains to a stone; thence N 86 degrs. W est 45 chains to an elm; thence N 4 degrs. W 23 chains to a stone; thence N 70 degrs. 10 10 chains to a stone; thence South 45 degrs. East 5 72 chains to a stone on Sooth side of bottom road; thence N 52 degrs. East 21 62 chains to a willow on the bank of said river; thence down the river to the beginning, containing 59 1-10 acres more or less. Terms of sale, cash on confirma tion. This the 14t,h day of February 1933 C. FRANK SOWERS, Adminis trator of J. A. Sowers, Deceased, M ortgagee. RAPER & RAPER. A tt’ys. Notice-Sale Of Laml. By virtue of an order made by the Clerk of Davie Superior Court, I as commissioner will sell at the Court house door In Davie couDty, N . C.. on Monday, March 20th, 1933, at 12 o’clock m „ at public outcry to the highesc bidder for cash the lands de scribed below, situated in Shady Grove township, adjoining the lands of Filmore Robertson, Thomas Mas sey, I. E Hendrix and others bound ed as follows: Beginning at a stone and running South 5 chs and 13 links to a stone; thence W est 20 degrs. 39 chs. and 40 links to a stone in Brind- Ies—now Thomas Masseys line; rhence North 90 degrs. E. 5 chs and 13 links to a stone; thence East 20 degrs. South 38 chs. and 68 links to the beginning corner, containing twenty acres (20 acres) more or less, see Deed from E. W Lassiter to A. M. Robertson recorded in Deed Book No 21 page 434 Reg. of Deeds Office DavieCountv N C.. now the proper ty of J. T Robertson -this land is sold to satisfy a judgem ent of foreclosure uuder a m ortgage given by J. T. Robertson to G. L White -default oaving been made in payment of the debt secured-a judgem ent of fore- •losure was obtained in the Superior Iourt, this Feby. 14th 1933. E H- MORRIS, Commissioner Notice—Sale Of Land By Commissioner. By virtue of an order made by Clerk Superior Court, I. as commissioner, will <ell to the highest bidder for cash, at the court house door in Davie county. N." C., >n Monday. March_6th, 193?. .at. 12 o’clock n.; the lot described below’. ' knoi* n as the lharlie Brown Cafe lot near the Depot, iounded as follows: Beginning at a stone OUtheast corner of the original Jesse Cle -ient lot near the’ well, thence N. one :hain to a stake; thence west 50 feet to a tone in R. M Foster’s line; thence South ne.chain to a stone R M. Foster’s corner o side of Depot street; tbence to the be- iinning corner This lot is sold- for parti •.on among the heirs of J W. Martin dec’d. This Jan . 30th. 1933. A. T GRANT. Commissioner. GRANT & MORRIS. Attye. ' Soap Sculpture Party Provides Indoor Entertainment For Young v t '' ( a soap sculpture party is an in- ^ teresting, instructive and am us ing way to entertain a group of children for an afternoon. It is par ticularly effective to keep children from m ischief and boredom on days when w eather conditions m ake it inadvisable for them to play out of doors. The tools for such a party are simple and easily obtainable. They are:A penknife or paring knife (a knife with a thin, pointed, m edium sized blade is best). One or tw o orange sticks (such as are used for the care of finger nails). The stick should have one end pointed and the other end blade shaped. Guest, m edium and large-sized cakes of Ivory Soap should be sup plied by the host or hostess, as all three sizes m ay be needed, depend ing upon the size of the objects to. be carved. E ach child should be asked to bring an apron so th a t clothes m ay be protected. The host or hostess m ay choose subjects for the guests to carve or m ay leave this m atter to their im aginations. As an alternative, mod- • els for the children to copy m ay be I furnished. A tim e lim it should be set within I which m odels are to be completed I Prizes m ay be aw arded for the best : sculpture or for the m ost. original idea. I A soap sculpture party will pro vide good fun and, in addition, its I instructive features may also be ; put to good use. It may provide an I incentive for aspiring young soap ! sculptors to im prove and enter i their sculptures in the soap sculp ture com petitions held in New York 'each year, in which children and grow n-ups from all parts of the world com pete for prizes w ithin various classifications. Last year 83 children of school age won prizes ! ranging from $5 to $200 for carv ings m ade from ordinary w hite soap. The annual com petitions are conducted by the N ational Soap Sculpture Com m ittee and the N inth Com petition, to close on I, i 1933, is now in progress. E ntry blanks and instruction booklets for the N inth Annual Soap I Sculpture Com petition .will be sent I w ithout charge on application to the N ational Soap Sculpture Com m ittee, 80 E ast Ilth Street, New I York, N. Y. ifi <t> <■ <■ ■! i] MR. FARMER! W e a r e i n a b e t t e r p o s i t i o n t o h a n d l e Y o u r C o t t o n T h a n E v e r B e f o r e We Appreciate Your Business FOSTER & GREEN Near Sanford Motor Co. -4* * * •!<•!' O 'I. it.,!"I' ,1' 'I' * * -E 4 'Ii .I. .0 ■!,»»<. j. ^ .I,^»>4 . .I. .I. .I. .I. ,1, .i, j, ,tl~ C. C. YOUNG & SONS Funeral Directors Ambulance Service Day or Night Phone 69 . , , Mocksviile, N . C. SEE US HRST. Let The Record print your Envelopes, Letter Heads Statements, Sale Notices, Cards, Tags, Etc. Prices low. THE DAVIE RECORD. IhW 1» ilolufr >Ii 1I11X1 ili i|h|i 41 »1» if. ,j, iluli.fr » .i. DAVIE CAFE P. K MANOS, PROP.] Next Door to Postofllee and Jusl as Reliable I REGULAR DINNERS 35c ! AU Kinds Of Short Orders At Any Time In The Day | t*».Ji.T.ifciliilnf c «fiifr»Kft 1» *|i» ,J.>1..|i ------- *,f .JmM LET US DO YOUR JOB PRINTING! THIS YEAR. v Our prices |on all kinds of printing is the lowest in many years. We u£e the best inks, the best envelopes, letter heads, statements, etc., jto be had for the price. LetYtalk it over. • t''T T'T 1 Ili,ri'tnliin I IiIiill I, , , USE COOK’S c. c. c. Relieves LaGrippe, Colds, Coughs, Sore Throat and Croup. In Successful Use Over 30 Y ears DR. E. C. CHOATE DENTIST OIficeSecond FIoorFront N ew Sanford Building Office Phone HO Residence Phone 30. M ocksviile. N . C. H " l ..........'ill.................. B E S T IN R A D IO S YOUNG RADIO CO. MOCKSVILLE. N. C. B E ST IN S U P P L IE S S ’ «.................. w i'i 'in '■» » . Send us your subscription and receive a 1933 Blum’s Almanac free. Don’t wait too long. WANTED! W e w a n t t h e im. p o r t a n t n e w s hap. p e n i n g s f r o m eve*, s e c t i o n o f t h e c a u * t y . D r o p u s a c J o r l e t t e r i f a n e w v o , t e r a r r i v e s a t you h o m e ; i f y o u r m o lt, e r - i n - l a w c o m e s 01 a v i s i t o r d i e s ; i f M s o n o r d a u g h t e r getl m a r r i e d o r a n y th in g w o r t h m e n t i o n i n g , Old papers for sale. wuiim»nnwmira»ummn«mnnimnm»mnnin«imnc CAMPBELL - WALKER FUNERAL HOME D istinctive Funeral Service to Every One A M B U L A N C E - - - EMBALMERSjI Main St. Next To M ethodist Church I DavirPhone 4803 Night Phooe 4811 or I0;| ■ «•*- K + - * -X -V * -K-«-r-K-K-X-V-K-It-K-K-K-X-C-X-X-X-RH-V-V-It-*•*-*-V-V-WIC-H-r-H-IHH!*!!! Keeping Davie People Informed of AU H appenings In T h e C ounty I Is TherMission Of Your County Paper The kind of news YOU I want. . things that are of ★ - ’ J. interest to ALL people of ★* j the County, what is going * I on, what has happened? * I where to buy the best for the least money all brought to you each week I forthe nomical charge of $ 1 . 0 0 P e r Y e a r X \ ^OLUM N X X X I V . NEWS OF LO IThat W a* H appening I The Day* o f A utom obiI H ose. f Davie R ecord, Mar 0 . L. W illiam s spe ireensboro. R F . G aither, of St •was in .town M onda Mrs. R. P. A nderso ifnst03Jthis w eek. Albert K elly left isiness trip to W inst B. L . H opkins mad ip to W inston M ond Ray M yers, of W i jmday in town w ith Born, to Mr. and ewart, on Sunday, a r. Miss Johnsie H obso n, spent F riday in t fiives. |j . T . B aitv has go Irchase his spring lods. (Ralph R. R ich, of I C., is the guests of §L. Sbeek. (M rs. Jam es Frost ^ne tim e in Richm o ir. . W . B ailey left tin, w here he h iition in a furniture Sir aiid Mrs. Boon ited relatives and fri ry last w eek. Hiss M abel K urf ie Junction, speyt S aday in tow n w ith JharJ^.W'p.o.dniff;;. bad of tobacco to' ek and reports pri j cense were issued T for the m arriage ywalt and M iss h of near Kappa, iss A lice Saund al, V a., w as in to way to visit relati . H . H endricks, o town M onday. W. L. A llen, of Cl town M onday on Cleve M cBride, w h cers som e tim e ag :overed, W. P. E tchison a Columbia; S. C . ca visit Mr. E ich iso s father has Deen ppe for the past w M cense have been lrriage of J. P . Sea ithia T utterow , o f n W hile driving from I home near- K app »ht, two negroes i °rt to hold up M. Joint near R.; Wr. •nee. One negro • K eller’s - bugge Jmptly knocked ou gro tried to clim b'i tween the w heels, i Jsived tw o blow s e -K urfees dogs, ise, began barking * ran. The- follow ing stu icksville graded Ssing grade .in all st week. E igh th ltnesI m aggie Robe °°re. Louise W illia Money, K obelia H 'Her, M artha Call, •mice W ilson, Abra Wl house r, Kim bro lla M eroney, Ed inth grade —Dorot fances M orris, Ma ^ d eA llison . Jan eH wen, Bonnie Br •Velina M artin, T-yx-rZZ Stew art, Mil fM r s ,B .o . M orrisa IUjMt w eek for N e Pnd som e tim e w ith w i n th e M ardi G r- |W inston, w as visit fire on Feb. IfmertS. Warehouse ,sePl* Whitlow, a W as S v '- ) * ? T l e want the jj. Iant news hap. ngs from eve °f the coup. 0 r o P u s a c a r ,| : t t e r if a ney,Vo- -rrIve* at y0U[ e; if yourmotl. ;Ja aw comes 011 » i t o r d i e S ; i f ^ ^ f> r daughter ?eu Tied or anything J>g jth mentioning, lg^ S L - papers for sale. I iN E R A L H O M E o E re ry O ue e m b a l m e r s st Church N'Sht Phone 4811 or *8 k:k :tnniin 11111111111 msmnta - e People s in Of tews YOU iat are of people of t is going happened? ey . •all It* ■ach week j charge of I * postal Receipts SHOW T H E r e c o r d CfficutAfiON m L a R C e s t In t h e c o u n t y , t h e y b o m lit: “H fltE SHALL TH E PRESS. T H E PEOPLE’S RIGHTS MAINTAIN: ONAW ED BY INFLUENCE AND UNBRIBED BY GAIN.' IwVOhl' U I X X X IV . I * * * * * * * *********** t i*** I* s^NEWS OF LONG AGO. |m W> * w * H appening In D avie Before fheD s- of Automobile* and Rolled > Hose. -Z (Davie Record. March I, 191 1) f j O L Williams spent F riday in fGreensDoro. P j P Gaither, of Statesville, R. ...oo in town Monday. g || \[~ •<. P. Anderson visited in RTlDStQS th‘S week' i Ai5ert Kelly left M onday on a Iusiness trip to W inston M onday 1 B L Hopkins made a business (ip to Winston M onday. : Ray Myers, of W inston, spent Iunday in town with his parents. |;4 Born to Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Itewart. on Sunday, a fine daugh- :er. I Miss Jobnsie Hobson, of Jerusa- |m spent Friday in town w ith re Ittives. I J. T. Baitv has gone north to Iuicbase bis spring and sum m er jjoods. I Ralph R. Rich, of W ashington, I. C-, is the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ii L. Sbeek. I Mrs. James Frost is spending |me time in Richmond w ith her W. Bailey left M onday for |lkin, where he has accepted a bsition in a furniture factory. [Mr and Mrs. Boone Stonestreet isited relatives and friends in Salis- ftiry Iasi week. Miss Mabel Kurfees, of Coolee- ee Junction, speyt Saturday and indayin town with relatives. Diaries Woo.druff,Tpf^R. 5 .carried;! load of tobacco to W inston last feet and reports prices very low. I Li cense were issued last W ednes |yfor the marriage of Joel A . feywalt and Miss Edna W alker, otb of near Kappa. IHiss Alice Saunders, of Fair pal, Va., was in town Friday on Ir way to visit relatives at Court- P-|D. H. Hendricks, of B ixb y, was Itotvn Monday. |W, L. Allen, of Cleveland, was j town Monday on business. I Cleve McBride, who was shot by leers some time ago, has about overed. |W. P. Etchisou and little SODt I Columbia, S. C , came up Sunday visit Mr. Eichison’s parents. |is father has Deen very ill w ith hppe for the past week. |License have been issued for the | arriage of J. P. Seaford to M iss jdhia Tutterow1 of near H ardison. !While driving from Cooleem ee to 1 home near Kappa on Sunday pbht, two negroes made a desperate Jort to hold up M. E . K eller, at point near R. W . K urfees’ res- FCe. One negro clim bed into Keller’s buggey, but was ! onJptly knocked out. T he other Sro tried to clim binto the buggy | tWeen the wheels, and Mr. K eller eIved two blows on the head. | ke Kurfees dogs, hearing the ftse, began barking and the neg- neS ran. |The following students in the gOcksville graded school made i ssinS grade in all their studies ®t week. Eighth grade— G elene SantesI maggie Robertson, Tobitha |°°re, Louise W illiam s, M argaret P 0ney. Kobelia H unt, Carolyn t leJ 1 Martha Call, Jam es Burrus, I rnice Wilson, Abram N ail, Jessie foithouser, Kim brough Sheek, | . a Meroney, Edna Stew art. Jinth Kra(ie -D oroth y G aither, I aPces Morris, Martha Clem ent, f lle Allison, fane H aden G aither, 0 P wen. Bonnie Brown. Tenth I. Jf VelmaM artin, Eaura Clem- 1 w Stewart, M ilton C a ll.. if, .rs- B- 0 . M orrisandson Ralph, ast week for N ew Orleans, * to [. . soJie time w ith relatives and e in the Mardi Gras festivities. MOCKSVILLE. NORTH CAROLINA, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 8, 1933 Lincoln’s Gettsburg Ad Fourscrre and seven years ago our fathers brought forth on this continent a new nation, conceived in liberty, and dedicated to the prop osition that all men are created equal. N ow w e are engaged in a great civil war testing whether that nation, or an nation, so conceive! and so dedicated, can long endure W e are m et on a great bat.lefield of that war. W e have com e to dedicate a portion of that field as a final restiug place for those who here gave their lives that that nation m ight live. It is altogether fitting and proper that w e should do this But, iu a larger sense, we cannot dedicate, we cannot consecrate, we cannot hallow this ground Tbe brave m en, living and dead, who srraSgled here have consecrated it far above our poor power to add or detract. T h e world w ill little note nor long rem em ber what we say here, but it can never lorget w hat they did here. It is rather for us to be here from these honored dead shall not have died in vain, that this na tion under God shall have a new birth of freedom , and that govern m ent of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth. Jtiston was visited by \ $100,- ' ®re on Feb. 24th, when the Lftuer s Warehouse was destoyed sePh Whitlow, a valunteer fire B> was instantly killed. - ^ “Heap Big” Salaries. T h e w ay som e of the leeches bled the Sm oky M ountain Park proposi tion sm ells to high h ea v en .. It nojy c o m e s fo T ig h tT h a t^ ^ T b ^ W a s ^ p a td ' attorneys, all of them Dem ocrats of course, between October 1 , 1928 and Februrary 7 , 1933, in salaries and fees. Even Congressm an Zeb W eaver who has been in Congress from the A sheville district for 16 years draw ing an annuol salary any where from $7 ,500 to $10,000 dur in g the years is listed as being pf id $15 250 in sah ries and fees and all the tim e W eaver was posing r s a p itriot and the big gun in getting th e governm ent to take over the park. M ark Squires, an ofscure law yer, from Lenoir, in som e man ner had a pull and giabbed the chairm anship of the com m ission ahd during the years listed above also grabbed $21,700 in salaries and fees and in addition collection $7,102 for expenses. V erne Rhodes, ex ecutive secretary from A pril 15 1927 . to O ctober 3 1 , 1931, pulled down the m odest sum of $22,674 for his services. W onder w ho is responsible for these men getting this m oney and if there is any way to m ake them disgorge?— E x change. Bold Discrimination. W ith deliberation and the full knowledge that he was com m itting a crime, while at the sam e tim e sitting on the lives and liberties c f other citizens, John H . Harwood, a Demo cratic “ Bevo” judge was convicted and given a prison sentence for tam pering w ith the records in a state office in an effort to shield his daugh ter who was also convicted of enc- b -zzlement and is serving a term in prison, unless she has been paroled and the fact kept under cover. Har wood served his term which to say the least was a very light sentence and in the Legislature Friday a bill was passed restoring him to citizen ship and giving him back his law li cense which was taken from him at the tim e he was convicted, a privi lege denied others until four years elapse. This is an outrage and we agree with R R. Clark, Greensboro N ew s colum nist, who says, "it Is n bald determ ination, anotner and glaring’ instances, becoming more and m ore com mon, of excusing offenders who have influence while those who have ro t are made to pay in full.” W e trust that Harwood will have decency enough to keep him self in the background for awhile j and at least not ask for another ap !■point as judge.—Exchange. . - -S-rii* Wany Married Women Holding State Jobs. Representative Thom pson, of dolum bus county, threw the fat in he fire and received the ever-last ing condem nation of a young arm if office holders living at Raleigh when he introduced a resolution in the legislature requesting the heads >f state departm ents at R aleigh now em ploying married couples to dis barge one or the other before Feburary 20 and so report to the .om m ittee. Indications are that he resolution will pass the H ouse bnt the office holding oligarchy at Raleigh m ay be strong enough to block in the Senate. According to the list attached to the resolution there are a s married couples, with both th e husband and -vife em ployed by the state w ho are receiving more than $71,000 in an nual salaries from the state. There are 41 married women em ployed by the state whose husbands ire at present em ployed, m any of them at substantial salaries, who are now receiving a total of $48,620 a year in salaries f om the state. T he total of salaries received by married couples and married women working for the state am ounts to more than $118,500 a year. In- the list published for som e reason the highest salaried woman working .for the state was left off the list. She is Mrs. W . T . Bost, state welfare com missioner, wiiose salary is reported to be around $4,000 a year and prob ably expenses whose N U M B ER 33 ing a good salary at the state capit- al. M any people were surprised to see in the name of the w ife of A . E. Fletcher com m issioner of labor who holds down a job in the autom obile license department while Flectcher pulled down a fancy salary as labor com missioner. There is an insistent demand oyer the state that this office bolding ring at R aleigh be broken up but whether the present Legislature has the nerve and backbone to do it re mains to be seen.— E x Escapes By Technicality G. D. Britian, one of the state highw ay patrolmen will not have to answer a charge of assault with a deadly weapon at the March term of D avie court it appears from ad vices received from the clerk of the court’s office. A capias was sent to the sheriff of Guilford county to serve on the patrolman but it! ap pears it was issued for G. E. Brit tain and the correct nam e is G . D. Brittain. T h e capias was returned to Davie by the Guilford sheriff with the notation that he could find no person by the name of G . E. Brittian but there w as a member of the highw ay patrol stationed in Greensboro who name was G . D. Brittian and this was evidently the man and if the Davie clerk would change the capias to read G . D. in stead of G.’ E . Brittain he would be glad to serve it. Clerk Hartm an stated he was not clothed w ith the authority to do this and it seem s the March grand jury w ill have to draw another bill w ith the name corrected. Brittian know s he is the man wanted and it is absurd for him to be acting in this m annef on ac count of the grand jury getting bis initials m ixed. P laying for tim e in this manner may cause the interest ■to :lag>in the oharge against him but it will not help the sta te^ jd e patrol in- the estim ation of the ‘citizens of the state. : % v ; Brittain was indicted by the' A u gust, 1932, grand jury for„an al leged assault on Elm er. Sm ith, a negro janitor of a W inston-Salem school, at the M asonic pichic in M ocksviile i n A ugust, 1931.— U nion Republican; ic Masters, Boom Business, By Exposure : !M ahy m agicians, including H oudini, have written bocks de- -Jcribing their clever descriptions. New cigarette “ m agic ads,” based on published revelations, have start ed a new fad in entertainment. Masters of conjuring and slight of;hand alw ays have ■ delighted in exposing the tricks of m agic, ac„ cording to the late great Harry Houdini, Am erica's fam ous magi cian. M any of the celebrated tricks and effects of conjuring and m agic are hundreds of years old. A s each great m agician added some new improvement to the trick he told how he did it, W ith each generation came a larger public. T he explanations only seemed to whet the appetite for more. M any people have wondered a- bout the origin pt the unusual name of "H oudini,” adapted by the great m agician of our own age. It was beceause of his great ad miration for Robert H oudin, the brilliant French wizard of the nine teenth century, that H oudini took the name, m eaning “ L ike H oudin” •—the com plim ent of the gifted dis ciple to an older master. Robert H oudin fascinated the public of his day with published ac cpqnts of his tricks . . . and H ou dini has followed him in desciibing the most fam ous tricks of all time— the.; su sp q nsion ,.^ ?. ' 1 levitation,!’, m ind^ TbaSffi^i-Cafd' tricks, the in exhaustible bottle, disappearances, Iadian fakir tricks ahd m ystifying escapes. T w o of Houdirii’s well known books are “ The Unm asking of Robert-H oudin,’’ a id “ Miracle Mongers and Their M ethods—A Com plete E xp ose.” A m ong other moderns who have drawn the curtain of m ystery, and given us a glim pse of the inside workings of m agic show are Ot- takar Fischer in his “ Illustrated M agic.” Professor Hoffm an in his "M odern M agic.” Evens with his “ H istory of Conjuring and M agic” and’ Albert A . H opkins, whose “ M agic Stage Illusions and Scienti fic Divisions” is a standard work. Howard Thurston, acknowledged the most brilliant performer of to day has written 400 tricks, many of which the am ateur can early learn to perform Current interest in m agic has re ceived new im petus as a result of the new series of Camel cigarette advertisem ents which feature ex planations of m agic deceptions in order to bring out the thought that Camrl cigarettes contain “ N o tricks . . , just costlier tobaccos in match less blend.” T he Camel ads are based on ex planations published by the m agi cians them selves, according to the R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company. Professional m agicians were con sulted before the cam paign was re leased. T hey took the view that “ exposures” from within- the pro fession have always* created a new public follow ing for m agic. H ence a great m any m agicians have heart ily endorsed the new cigarette cam paign. W ith schools reporting great in terest in m agic am ong the children m agic shops doing a flourishing business in m agic apparatus, and publishers finding that sales of ma gic books are rising, the Camel ad vertisem ents are lik el^ to be credit ed with starting a new fad in en tertaihm ent. - The! greatest crime of the age is ignoraee of how to live, ignorace of how to work, ignorance of the value of tim e, the laws of health and of mentfil and spiritual peace. MoBt people attribute their suc cess to their individual efforts and their failure to hard luck. Crop Price Guaranty] Amusing Yet Pitiful Offered To Farmers. Seventy cents a bushel for N o. 2 hard wheat, Chicago, delivery, 45 cents a bushel for N o. 2 yelloa com Chicago, and 8}4 cents a pound for m iddling cotton. New Orleans— these are the basic figure? of International Harvester’s crop price guaranty offer to farmers, ap plying to a substaneial portion of their paym ents made during 1933 on this year’s purchases. The plan has been enlarged over the 1932 plan so as to cover all farm machines except repair parts and motor trucks. T he com pany in announcing its- r933 plan says: “ Tv’e believe that present crop prices w ill show a gra dual improvement, and we also be lieve that if the farmer is assured 1 fair price for his 1933 crops, he purchase the im plem ents which be needs. W e have decided ,-therefore, to give Am erican agriculture again, as we did in 1932, assurance of a fair price for wheat corn and cotton on this year’s purchases of equip ment from us in so far as 7933 pay ments therefore are concerned.” W here the purchase am ounts to $150 or more the farmers note ma turing this year represents not more than 4 0 per cent of the pur chase price, there will be endorsed on the note the equivalent number of bushels of wheat com duted at 70 Cints per bushel, Chicago, for' No. 2 hard wheat. If the average Chi- cagoq u otatL on atm atu rh Y .ofTthe- tioie IsTess than 70 cents per bushel the purchaser will be credited with the price differential m ultiplied by the/num ber of bushels shown on the note, provided the remainder of the note, is paid in cash within ten days of m aturity. W here the purchase am ounts to less than $ 150 and the note repre sents not more than 80 per cent of the price, and the Chicago market wheat price at m aturity of the note is less than 70 cents per bushel, the farmer will be credited w ith one- balf the price differential per bushel multiplied by the number of bushels on the note, provided the remainder of the n°te is paid- in cash within ten days of m aturity. T he wheat price guaranty plan will be generally used throughout the country but in territories where corn or cotton is the principal money crop and practically no wheat is grown, either the corn price guaranty will be applied at 45 eeuts per bushel for N o. 2 yel low, Chicago, or the cotton price guaranty plan at 8 % cents a pound, ^ ew Orleans, for m eddling cotton. T he com pany reserves the right to take delivery at the specified price of any portion of the com m odity involved in any transaction, if available at the tim e of payment. It also reserves the right to with draw the offer 01 to readjust the terms in case of governm ental ac tion m aterially affecting prices of the crops in question. Traded Shoes For Whisky. The past week in Smithfield1 George Britt, white man, was found by officers in an intoxicated con dition and barefooted. On being questioned a? to why he wore no shoes he said he traded them to Roy Solomon, negro, for a pint of liquor. Solomon’s home was searched and the shoes were found there together "with a lot of the ardent. The negro denied the deal and said he bought the shoes outright from Britt and paid him the money for them. H e could not, however explain the presence of the whisky in his house and was sent on to a higher court. The real need of the business world today is som e method to tell when is the last tim e that credit should be extended to a customer. It would be am using if it were tot so pitiful in the manner in which he Mount Airy N ew s seeks to at- erap to explain away the reasou for the non-indictment and prosecut ion of election officers in Surry who ire alleged to have been a law unto .hem selves iu holding a Democratic primary in Surty county in June, 1932 T he N ew s m akes a terrible indictment against every election of- ical in the state when it says that “ any court of investigation could find irregularities in any election ever held in any county if every of ficial were exam ined as was done in tturry.” If this is true and we have the word of a Democratic machine iperated editor for it, then God aelp the state and the Republican party. W e never read of a more open and shut case of election law vio lations than was presented by the Democratic A ttorney General of the state, Dennis G. Brummitt, yet a Surry county grand jury under the m agic spell of a Democratic soli citor, refused to believe anything thing one of their own number, the Attorney General, said and gave the election officials a clean bill of health and later on doubtless these six heroes who w e:e specifically named will be given au office either under the county, state or Roose velt administration. One of them has already received the endorse ment of Frank Hancock for one of the big jobs to be given ou t.— .Umion=RepubBcfin.'..; . . ...... . Condition Not As Bad As Has Been Painted America was described for the Senate finance at W ashington, Fri day, as “ not so hard up” by an ex pert witness who traced past econo mic upheavals and offered sugges tions for improving business. The witness was nome other than a native Tar Heel, D ivid Franklin Houston who was born at Monroe, Union county, and was president of the University of Missouri when he was called to become secretary of agriculture in the cabinet of Presi dent Wilson and later became secrf- tary o f the treasury. He is now president of the Mutual Life In surance Co., of N ew York. With Houston appeared John L. Lewis, president of the United Mine W orkers of America, who advocated a dictatorial board of em ergency control with plenary power to take recovery steps it saw fit and L. J. Taber, master of the National Grange, with other proposals for bringing back prosperity by aiding agriculture. Houston pointed to the country’s wealth as compared with world re sources as indicating it was not so badly off. He saw the roots of the depression in the world war and too- rapid exdustry and governmental costs afterward. To recapture prosperity he recom mended: Maintenance of the federal credit and no tampering with the currency,. and refunding of the public debt at lower interest-wh^-n these were as sured. Revision of tariffs in the interest of trade, with America to get con cessions. with discussion of readjust ment of war debts “ providtion.” Lewis asserted “ the political stabi lity of the republic i3 imperiled” and that setting up an emergency board was justified. Taber said farm prices m ust be lifted, suggested either the domestic allotm ent plan, enualizatinn fee or export debentures plan, or combina tions of the three —Ex It’s a fifty-fifty break you m ight not believe half this newspaper says—but we would bate to print half you dear people say. A man can take money out of his pocket with two fingers faster tban he can put it there with both hands both feet and whatever brains he has. Land posters for sale f H E & A V 1 E R E C O ft!), M O C K S V iL c S , ti. t . m arch I '9 3 * THE DAVIE RECORD. C. FRANK STROUD - - Editor. Member National Farm Grange. TELEPHONE I. Entered atth e Postoffice in Mocks- ville, N . C., as Second-class Mail m atter, March 3,1903. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: ONE YEAR. IN ADVANCE - $100 SIX MONTHS. IN ADVANCE - $ 50 W ell, Mr. Roosevelt was sworn in last week and will no doubt be cussed out this week. It will be a long lim e belore the good people of North Carolina will vote to bring back the booze and the saloon. ___________ There is said to be plenty of money in this countrv, but. to save r,s we don’t know which way to travel to find it. Farmers in the west are unable to pay off m ortgages and taxes. Farmers in Davie county iu the same fix or fixer. W e would suggest that the wives of gentlemen going to Raleigh on business during the session of the legislature, accompany their hus bands. The Lexington Dispatch says this country has h'd sorrier presi dents than Jack Garner rould con trive to be. Piease give us names and addresses of same so that we can check up on this statement. W ell, Davie gets another $4 000 for March and $2.000 for April from the Federal Government to aid the folks who are out of work. Just how much ot this money will be paid out in salaries we do not know, neitheir do we know how much will be spent for gas and oil It has been decided to oostpoue the Davie Fair again next fall on account of the hard tim es. Surely the fair officials don’t think this H oover panic is going to continue through the Roosovelt adm inistra tion. W e are sorry that the fair directors have decided to do away w ith the fair for another year. W hen it came to a showdown our old friend Senator Josigh Bai ley voted along with the rest of the w et lawm akers. W e can rememb er som e thirty or fortv years ago when Mr. Bailev was editor of the Biblical Recorder, the Baptist org an, in North Carolina, and a lead in g member ot the Baptist church. H ow the m ighty have fallen. Hurt By Falling Tree. John W . Ellis, prominent farmer of the Macedonia section, is in a cri tical condition as a result of severe injuries to his back and hips caused by a tree falling on him about noon Wednesday. Mr. Ellis was grubbing up a large mulberry tree and while holding to the body in an attem pt to shake the tree loose the roots sud denly gave way and the tree caught him beneath it. Attending physicians reported the man suffered severe injuries to the spine and hips and internal injuries of an underminable nature. It was thought no bones were broken. Brown Divorce Action Transferred. The divorce action of- H . W. Brown, manager of the Boxwood N ursery, filed in the Alexander county court and due to have been heard recently against Mrs. Mabel V . Brown, has been ordered moved to Davie county, it has been learned here. T he Browns have been living under a deed of separation for some tim e, and the divorce action filed in the A lexander courts by the hus band was not contested by Mrs. Brswn, who, it is understood ap peared before the presiding Judge M ichael Sclienck and requested the case be moved. Banks Are Sound. In an interview with Cashier S M. Call, of T he Bank of Davie, Monday m orning, Mr. Call tells us that the Bank of Davie did not have to restrict their depositors on withdrawals Saturday The local institution is in good shape and would have opened Monday morn ing without any restrictions had it not been for the proclamation issued by President Roosevelt and the Governor of N orth Carolina, de claring a four-day banking holiday. The Bank of Davie has on hand am ple reserves to m eet their de mands, and will be open for busi ness j ust as soon as the Federal and State restrictions are removed. Mr. Call spoke highly ot the confidence that the people of Davie have in their banking houses. Practically all of our people are in an opto.uis- tic mood and feel that conditions will soon be back to normal with all banks doing business as usual. Mayor Cermak Dies. Miami, Fla , Mar. 6 .— Mayor Anton Cermak of Chi:ago, the vic tim of a bullet Guiseppe Zangara fired February 15 an attem pt toas- sanate President Roosevelt, died rn Jackson Memorial hospital here to day at 6:57 a. m Death follow ing a series of com plications against which the Chi cago executive had rallied valiantly tim e after time. T he family and close friends were at the bedside. Double N. C. Closing. Raleigh, N C., Mar. 6.— North Carolina’s banks were closed to- dav under a double order— from President Roosevelt and from Gov ernor Ehringhaus. Before the president's proclama tion declaring a national banking holiday was issued, Governor Eb- ringhaus had already ordered a three day holiday for this state be ginning today and continuing through W ednesday. Fork News Notes. (Too Late For Last W eek) There has been quite a lot of sick ness in our community, flu, and colds, tonsilids, and pneumonia. Hardly a home where some member of the fam ily has not been sick for past two weeks. Mrs. J. M. Livengood has been very sick with tnnsilitis. and is still confined to her bed. Mrs. G. V. Greene is also very sick. The con dition of Mrs. Martha Anderson is a- bout the same as last week, she has been in bed now two weeks with high blood. Dr. L L. Anderson, of Stoneville has been here several visits in past two weeks at the bedside of his mother, Mrs. Martha Anderson. J. Frank Burton went to Winston- Salem last Fridav. Mrs. R. Paul Foster, of near Red- land, visited relatives here this week. Mrs. Clark Shngart, of Lexington, spent a few days here this week, with her mother Mrs. Sarah Davis who is in very feeble health. Mrs K. L Jones, of Atlanta Geor gia, spent Wednesday here with Mr. Mrs. A. M. Foster. Miss Floy Williams, and Fred, and Thomas Williams, of Winston-Salem were pleasant visitors Here Thursday. Mrs. Monroe Monday, has been spending a week in Winston-Salem, with her daughter Mrs. Guy Will- liaros. Miss Pauline Seaford, has been very sick with appendicitis. W . R. Craver carried his son George, to Duke Hospital, at Dur ham last Tuesday, for a treatment. They were accompanied by Rev. W . M. Rathburn. Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Craver, of Winston-Salem, spent Sunday here with their parents. M M. CuihrelI Dies Suddenly. Mr. M atthew M. Cuthrell1 6 6, well-known farmer and citizen of Farm ingtoa township, died sudden ly at his home about two miles from from Farm ington about 6 o’clock last W ednesday morning just as he was preparing to eat breakfast. Mr Cuthrell is surviv ed by his widow and one daughter, Mrs.. W ill McBride, of near W yo. Funeral services were held at W es ley’s Chapel M ethodist church Thursday afternoon at 2 o’clock, conducted bv Rev. M. G . Ervin and W . L. H arkey, and the body laid to rest in the church grave yard. Mr. Cuthrell had m any I friends throughout the county who » I ! j , . rp Iw eresa d d en ed b y th en ew s of his MOCKSVllIe WIUS I WO.! death. H e will be sadly missed in his com munityT he M ocksville H igh cagers took a pair of easy tilts from the Farm- ingtofi boys and girls at the high school gym nasium here on Tues day night. Tbfe girls used second string and midget players for three quarters of the’game and won 31 to t i and the boys by Our creditors are again requested to be patient with us. W’e believe that times will pjck up when the North Caroliua legislature adjourns and Roosevelt gets the M uscle using se- Shoals dam to functioning. Better cond stringjplayers more than half tim es are ahead for all of .us, provid ed we don’t starve to death beforethe time came out on the big end of a 22 to 1t score. Foster and Leagans of Mocks- t^leT ^et Ilere- ville and W alker and Sm oot of ^Farmington led the shooting at- -neighbors find vou out. and tack for thtir respective teams seldom the bill collector does. Roosevelt Calls Bank Holiday. W ashington, March 5 — .A mo dified national bank holiday ex tending through Thursday w as de dared by President Roosevelt in a proclamation tonight. T he effect of President Roose velt’s action was to lay an embar go on exports of gold or other cur rency. Transactions id foreign e x change were banned. H e ordered all banks to suspend paym ents of gold and other forms of currency now on deposit. A spe cial session of Congress has been sum m oned to m eet Thursday noon to consider banking and financial legislation Davie Teams To Hold Bijr Event. T he coaches of the various high schools met on Monday night and arranged the dates and pairings of the fourth annual Davie county high school basket ball tournament. T he tourney will be held at the M ocksville H igh School gym na sium on the follow ing dates: F ri day night the 10th; Tuesday night the 14th.. and the finals will be held on Thursday night the 16th of March Twenty-one team s have beea en tered as follows: V arsity girls and boys from Cocieem ee, M ocksville, Advance, Sm ith G rove and Farm ington. M idget girls and hovs from the above five schools and m idget bovs from the Cana school. The Davie cham pions last year were as fellows: Cooleemee varsity boys; Sm ith Grove varsity girls; Cooleemee m idget boys and Mock's- ville m idget girls. Grange Meeting. AU those in the Davie Academy Section are urged to be present next Wednesday night. March 8 7:30 p. m., at a meeting which is being held at the Davie Academy school house for the purpose of organizing a Grange in this section. At present we have three active Chapters in Davie coun ty: Tbe Pino community Grange at Pino. The Cana Grange at Cana and the Davie Grange at Mocksville. The Grange is a former organization of whieh every farmer in Davie county should be a member. A u attem pt was made by un known parties to burn the hom e of H . C. H unter, at Harm ony, early last Tnesdav m orning. Mrs. H unt er was awaken by the sm ell of kero sene, and found that oil had been poured on the back porch and set on fire. Several m atches had been struck. T he blaze was extinguish before much dam age was done. H unter is a former resident of Clarksville township, this county. Oak Grove Honor Roll. 1st. G radei-G ilm a Angell, Jas. Baker and Nellie Bowles. 2nd. Grade;—Ethel McClamroch, Laura Gray Bowles, Dorothy Clement, Wm. W hitaker, Wm. Summers. Lester Bowles, Ervin Hepler, and Douthit W hitaker. 15 3rd. Grade;—Wm. Baker and Junior McDaniel. ,4th. Grade:—Katherine McCIamrock and Vernon W hitaker. 5th. Grade:—Margaret McClamroch, Hel en Clement. Edgar W hitaker, Thomas Walls, and Ruth McDaniel. 6th. Grade:—Irene Angell. ’ 7th. Grade:—Oscar Saine, Avery Clement Sbeffied News. The roads in our section are ’ver? good now glad to note. - * Rev. Mr. Stackleather held two services at the Pilgrim Holiness church Sunday. Misses Flossie Smith, Ruth Gaither, and Maggie Edwards were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. R- C. Sm ith Sunday. Carl Marlow filled an appointment S at urday night with his friends and loved ones. Robert Lowery, of Greensboro is visiting Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Reavis. Mr. and Mrs. Travis Dyson, of Guilford College spent the week-end with his par ent", Mr. and Mrs. Pink Dyson. Miss M agtie Edwards spent Monday night with Miss Ruth Gaither near Ijames X Road?. Mitses Edna and Mae Parks spent Iait week with relatives and friends near Clarksbury church. Elmer Marlow is getting along just fine his m any friends are glad to learn. Flake Shore, of Burlington, spent the week end here with relatives. Tay Rogers has moved his family tb Jule Cleary’s farm. John Ijames is president -of the rainy day lodge at W. W. Smith Smith store. Charlie Richardson vice president and Mrs: Grady Ijames Sec--Treasurer. The entire community wishes them much success in their meetings. M issCordia Cleary is visiting relatives' in Charlotte. Mocksville Wins. The Mocksville -midget boys and girls won two nice double headers from Smith Grove and Cooleemee last week. OnW ednesday the boys defeated Smith Grove 26 to 13 with “ Senator’’ Grant leading the attack with 18 points to his credit. The girls de feated their opponents 14 to 11 in a hot battle. On Thursday the girls swamped Cooleemee 30 to 10 at the Mocksville gymnasium. Martha Lee Craven with 12 points and D. Craven with 14 led the attack In the boys gam e Grant was the outstanding forward again as he rung up 9 points. The gam e was close at all points and the score tied a number of times, but Mocksville come out 17 to 12 ahead. W e are predicting our m idget boys and girls will give som e Bchool a tight race for the championship next week. ________ Davie Basketball Tour nament. Friday Night, March 10th. Midget Girls—No Games. Midget Boys I Cooieemec vs Sm ith Grove, 2 Farm ington vs Advance. 3 Mocksville vs Cana. Varsity Girls I Cooleemee vs Smith Grove V arsity Boys 1 Mocksville vs Smith Grove 2 Advance vs Farmington , Tuesday Night, March 14th. Midget Girls 1 Cooleemee vs Advance 2 Mocksville vs Smith Grove Midget Boys 4 Winners of I, vs winners of 2. V arsity Girls 2 FarmiDgton vs Smith Grove 3 Mocksville vs winners of I Varsity Boys Coolecmee vs winners I Thursday Night. March I6th, Finals Midget Girls.—W inners of No. I vs win ners of No. 2. Midget Boys—W inners of No. 3 vs win ners of No. 4. Varsity Girls—W inners of No. 2 vs win ners of No. 3. Varsity Boys—W inners of No. 2 vs win ners of No. 3.. W illiam Beam, of Cooleem ee, was given a hearing in Iredell Recorder’s court at Statesville last week, charg ed with transporting w hisky. H e pled quilty and was fined $55 and costs and given a 4 m onths suspend ed road sentence. H is autom obile was ordered forfeited. M o n e u KURFEES & WARD ” .• cr-’-i I S P E C I A L S ! I * J i Listed below are a few of our many Bargains we have j | * * $ to offer you. We can save you money on your needs, j Visit Us Often And Save Money Part Wool Double Blankets Men’s Overalls. Boys’ Gveralls Men’s Caps Men’s Pants Galvanized Tubs 75c Lanterns for . . 5 Gallon Oil Can Laying Mash Sw eet Feed, 90 per cent. Grain Seed Oats, Per Bushel $140 59c to 98c 35c to 50c . 25c to 75c . 59c to 98c 39a to 59: 49a 49: $1.65 to $1.90 . $145 40c Plenty Seed Irish Potatoes I We Carry A Complete Line: Of JOHN DEERE FARM j * - i I IMPLEMENTS. Give us your order for repairs today. ‘ M a r t i n *4 i44 * 5 4 4 i *** * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * Near Depot M ocksville, N. C T H E M O R R I S E T T CO. •LIVE W IRE S T O R E ’ AT OLD IDEAL STAND-TRADE AND EOURTH STREETS WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. STAR VALUES FRIDAY AND SATURDAY W ords fail when w e try to tell you about our beautiful mer- *U se your cash to the best advantage! chandise and wonderful values. AU The New Fabrics 54-inch all-wool Coating, Star value at . 40 inch all silk Crerepes, Star value at Mickey Mouse Sweaters. Star value at 98c 48c 49c Butterfield Fabrics AU new weaves and com binations of lovely colors —plain, plaids, prints—the m ost beautiful collec- j tion w e have ever bad. 39c 49c Application For Parole Of C. G. Call. Application will be made to Ibe Governor of North Carolina for the parole of C G. Call, convicted atth e August. 1932, .Term of Superior Court of Davie county for the crime of manufacturing whiskey, and sen tenced to the roads for a terhi'of six months AU persons who oppose the grant ing of said parole are invited to for- ward their protests to Hon. Tyre CIt is queer how unfailingly th e.Taylor, Executive Counsel. Raleio*' h ow ; N C„ without delay. * This 3rd day of March, 1933, A. D. The Newest and Smartest Coats Dresses Hats Twice as Many Garments as Ever Before DRESSES 300 marvelous Dresses, everything new and, chic—and never such values. $ | 88 $2 -9 8 $ 4 98 $6 95 $ 2 0 9 5 POLO COATS AU Wool—AU Colors $4.98 $5.95 $6.95 $8.95 $10.95 Crepe Dress COATS $6 95 $8.95 $10.95 $14.95 -GUORIOU3 NEW HATS- Smartl Snapp51‘ So different! . AU the new ma- terials—every Spring shade and wonderful values at 69c 98c $1.49 $1.98 $2.95 $3.95 ^fO N D E tlFU L COLLECTION-BRASSIERS, CORSELETTES, CORSETS ' , . ^lave 8® manv lovely things, we want everybody 10 866 THe Very newe8t and last word styles, materials and colors- t THE DAYIE RECORD, MOCKSVILLE. N. C ror Onisldel Iide Use •US* LS! Bargains we have Iney on your needs. 5 Money $140 59c to 9Se 35c to 50c . 25c to 75: . 59e to 9Sc 39c to 59: 49: 49: 81.65 to SI.90 . §145 toes HN DEERE FARM »r for repairs today. ;liers Mocksvil Ie1 N. C * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * URDAY out our beautiful me Fabrics inations of lovely colors e m ost beautiful collec- ic 79c 88c M [TTES, C O R S E T S want everybody 1 ^ iaterials and I * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * S I I I B m m i I Ssis I I I II II1:1 k W H A T T H I S C O U N T R Y N E E D S I S C O N F I D E N C E B U S IN E S S IS N O T D O N E O N C A S H B u t O n C R E D I T A n d C O N F I D E N C E I n O n e A n o t h e r Money is but a medium of exchange, and when used otherwise works a hardship on your neighbor and the entire country. / Most of the banks of the United States are solvent and your deposit is just as safe as before the ,banks closed, and in time the banks will open and function normal ly again. t. W e , t h e u n d e r s i g n e d , s t i l l b e l i e v e i n A m e r i c a a n d s t a n d r e a d y t o s e r v e y o u t o t h e b e s t o f o u r a b i l i t y . C a l l o n u s i f w e c a n s e r v e y o u . 4 * U n t i l f u r t h e r n o t i c e w e w i l l a c c e p t c h e c k s o n o u r l o c a l b a n k i n p a y m e n t f o r m e r c h a n d i s e o r o n a c c o u n t . C. C. Sanford Sons Company LeGrand’s Pharmacy Morris & Sanford Dr. S. A. Harding Hendrix & Martin Tomlinson Motor Company Green Milling Company Campbell-Walker Funeral Home J. Frank Hendrix Horn Service Station Dr. L. P. Martin Home Ice & Fuel Company Sanford Motor Company Kurfees & Ward Allison-Johnson Company F. M. Carter Twin BrookFarm Martin Bros. Mocksville Motor Company W. L. Moore Lumber Company Horn-Johnstone Company R. S. McNeill RECORD, MOCKSVILLE. N. C. Learning's Real Value The young: carpenter into whose Mnds fell a copy of Em erson’s "E s says” and whom it moved to spend iiis life composing “Leaves of G rass,”' and the yonnjt rail-splitter who. hav- inc used the King Jam es version of the f°r his text-book, pro- nonnctid the ‘‘G ettysburg A ddress.” the root of the m atter. W hat is lenrninjr for? L earning. is not merely something to be known.: JiKirning is som ething to be done.— !’,(iston Herald. -if One Sure Way to Eid Coughs and Colds Pcrsisient coughs and colds lead to tenons trouble. You can stop them now m i Oreomulsion, an emulsified creosote that is pleasant to take. Creomulsion is a new- medical discovery with two-fold ac tion; it soothes and Heals the inflamed membranes and inhibits germ growth. Of aC known drugs, creosote is recog nized by high medical authorities as one of the greatest healing agencies for per* tise.it coughs and colds and other forms of throat troubles. Creomulsion contains, in addition to creosote, other healing ele ments which soothe and heal the infected membranes and stop the irritation and in flammation, while the creosottfgoes on to the stomach, is absorbed into the blood, attacks theseat of the trouble and checks the pio'.vlh of the germs. Creomulsion is guaranteed satisfactory in the treatm ent of persistent coughs and colds, bronchial asthma, bronchitis and otlirr forms of respiratory diseases, and is excellent for building up the system after colds or Au. Moneyrefimded if any Ciuigli or cold, no matter of howlongstand- in?, is notrelieved after takingaccording todirections. Askyourdruggist. (Adv.) <3«S M ust B e E n c o u rag ed One can't feci im portant, If Isn't treated as if lie were. Ue M W SHE TOLD WORN-OUT H U S B A N D QHE could have reproached him ^ for his fits of temper—his “all in” complaints. But wisely she saw in his frequent colds, his 4Iagee^ out,” r?on edge” condition the very trouble she herself had whipped. Constipation! Thevery morning af- - «, ter taking N Rt (Nature’s Rem-g& i edy), as she ad-|K / vised, he felt like.ufe ..y himself again—keenly* alert, peppy; cheerful. NR—the safe, dependable, all-. vegetable lasative and correo ' five—works gently, thoroughly, naturally.lt stim tilatosihe eliminative tract to eomptete.rejnilar functioning.Non-habit- forroing. Try a box. 25c —a t ^niggists’. 7T U M S " Mussolini on Capital Capital is no god; it Is an instru- taent.—Benito M ussolini. Are You TIRED, WEAK? WiJH E N you feel rundown, when your blood is thin or stomach gives trou ble, try Dr. Pierce’s Gotden Medical Dis covery. If you are thin-blooded, need to _ — ■__ put on healthy flesh S i/ ' —this is the tonic for you. Read what Mrs. M arie Dean of 209 Perkins St., Augusta, Ga., says: "I had a general breakdown in health, felt weak and tired out, had frequent head> aches and backaches and was very nervous. I bad no desire to eat I had hardly finished one bottle of Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Oiscovery when I felt so much stronger.” to Dr. Pierce** Clinic, Bnffalsv Y., for free medical advice. Query Was there ever a woman who Mayed a mouth organ? [CHAPPED! HANDS T o quickly relieve chapping androughness, apply soothing, cooling M entholatum .. M e n t h o l ATUM WORLD’S : LARGEST I • SFLLER f A L W A Y S '"?.: I f e l l a n d . ^ Joseph’s Aspirin j Protected against the • wtcriorating influences °« m oisture by its moisture-proof cello phane wrap that seals M *e purity and fuB strenS* of each tablet. ___ * ASK F O R IT B Y N A M E * . S t . j o s e p I r ' s / G ENUIN E‘ . S U R E A S P I R I N V# Aspirin has beenred J5^c St. Joseph*# thars pnce to T“,# efee contains more TIf -U tt^c* M lnanT tablets as the IOe size. U Iftt - retains three times as many tablet* ,i:e* « « economy to buy the larger sizes. send n o m oney c . o . d . flPtsJproof Cabbage and Onion PfantsAU. VARIETIES 5«0-49o 1,000-79« JTANDARDPtAWTCO. - TUTON. GA. WILL OPEN GULF WATERWAY IN JUNE Timed as Part of Opening Festivities of Fair. W ashington.—Ju st before he retired <*s secretary of w ar, Patrick J. H ur ley announced th at the Illinois w ater way would be form ally opened next June in connection with the opening of the C entury of Progress exposition. Plans for an earlier official opening w ere abandoned. It w as stated, when it w as found th at delay in the altera tion of railroad bridges spanning the channel would prevent the larger barges from being brought into Chi cago from the lower Illinois river. “One of the m ajor w aterw ay devel- opm ents of the country, providing a link- between the G reat Lakes and the M ississippi valley, is near realization,” said Mr. H urley in his announcement. “The celebration of its completion, scheduled for June, will m ark another great advance in our national program to provide an interconnected w aterw ay transportation system. D etails of Big P roject. •‘In the river and harbor act of July 3,1930, congress authorized completion by the governm ent of the Illinois w aterw ay, which had been partially ’ constructed by the state of Illinois, and authorized the appropriation of not to exceed $7,500,000 for completing the necessary locks and dams, dredg ing and appurtenant works. The arm y engineers undertook this job and lost no tim e in arranging for transfer "of the state w orks to (lie United States and getting the work under way. “This improvement, now in the final stage of construction, in conjunction w ith the Chicago sanitary canal, the Chicago river, and the improvement of the low er reaches of the Illinois river, will afford a through w aterw ay with a navigable depth of 9 feet connecting Lake Michigan at Chicago with the M ississippi river system and the Gulf of Mexico, 1,623 miles distant. The w aterw ay will insure direct navigable connection for w ater borne commerce betw een the great industrial and agri cultural centers as well as with the protected intracoastal w aterw ays along the gulf coast. “From the mouth of the* Illinois river a t G rafton to Utica the river Battlefield of Roman Legions Is Unearthed Berlin.—One of the oldest battle fields in history has been. discovered a t X anten in the Rhineland. Tlie first cam ps of the Roman Le gions, which w ere destroyed by w ar like Germ an tribes in the year o£ 70 A. D. have been excavated by mem bers of the German voluntary labor service. For years excavation work had been carried out a t Xanten. It had to be stopped because of lack ofJunds. Now large num bers of members of the vol untary labor service have been sent to X anten, w here they succeeded in un earthing one of the most interesting relics of ancient times. The cam ps w ere the im portant strongholds of the Fifth and Fifteenth Roman Legions. It w as from here that the Roman soldiers started on th eir frequent expeditions to fight against the rebellious Germans. In the year 70 A. D. the B ata vers, a war like German tribe, destroyed the cam ps and killed most of the soldiers. Quebec Town Is Covered by Eerie Yellow Snow Chicoutimi, P. Q --R esidents of Chi coutimi pinched them selves as yellow ish-gray snow tum bled softly out ,of the sky. W eatlier experts were a t a loss to explain the phenomenon. ' The town had an eerie appearance as a wan w inter sun shone on roof tops and belfries mantled in a grayish- yellow covering of w hat w as undoubt edly ordinary snow in fancy dress. About an inch fell. has been dredged. The locks and dam s a t Kampsville and La Grange, 31.5 and 77.5 miles above the mouth, have been reconditioned. Both proj ects w ere authorized in the act of 1927 with an appropriation of not to exceed 53,500,000 for this lower sec tion of the Illinois river. Between U tica and Lockport. five locks and dams, a t Starved Rock, M arseilles, Dresden Island, Brandon road, and Lockport, have been practically com pleted. The necessary connecting channel ways and river walls where the pools have been raised above street levels, such as at1 Joliet, also have been finished. "To provide the maximum relief to idle men and to.hasten the waterways, the government work has been pushed with all possible speed. The federal expenditures up to January I, 1.933, am ounted to $2,630,000 for the section below Utica, and $5,125,000 for the sec tion above U tica, a total of $7,755,000. D elayed by Bridges. “Seventy-nine railroad or highway bridges, of which 27 are between Graf ton and Lockport, and 52 between Lockport and Lake Michigan and al terations' to them by the owners there of to- perm it suitable navigation, are progressing. W hile there have been many complicated problems, it is an ticipated th at upon the opening of navigation, or soon thereafter, the diffi culties attending this feature of the w aterw ay will be adjusted. Upon completion of alterations, the bridge clearances will be substantially as follows: Mississippi river to Starved Rock: Vertical, 44 feet above extrem e high w ater; horizontal, 118 feet Starved Rock to Lockport: Vertical, 47 feet above standard pool levels; horizontal, HO feet. Lockport to Lake M ichigan: Ver tical, *16% feet above present lake datum ; horizontal 72 feet. “The bridges will be equipped with lift or draw facilities where necessary. “The creation of the waterw ay will climax the dream of the early explor ers, the French Jesuit Father M ar quette and his companion, Louis Joliet. The opening will prove a fitting cele bration in connection with the open ing of the Chicago W orld’s fair, 'A Century of Progress.' ” W a t c h S m u g g l e r s A r e T r a i l e d F a k e D ia l R a c k e t A ls o U n d e r In v e s tig a tio n . New York.—Evidence against deal ers and purchasers of smuggled Swiss w atches is fast being uncovered and action against the purchasers, as well as the traffickers in the contraband, will soon be taken in the attem pt to recover millions of dollars of unpaid duties, A ssistant U nited States A ttor ney Alvin M. Sylvester said in New York city. The ringleader of the watch smugglers was sentenced to a long term in prison, and fe'deral agents are now following the underworld trail of the tim epieces leading to many cities and towns in the United States. Individual citizens who innocently purchase smuggled Swiss watches may be called upon to pay the duties and penalties on their w atches or forfeit them. W atch smuggling has grown to such proportions that it has had alm ost disastrous effect ifpon the.A m erican industry and its workmen. At one tim e there w ere 28 w atch factories in the United S tates; now there are only four. Smuggled watches, m ade by cheap labor and brought into this' country w ithout paying duty, have de pressed prices to an unprofitable level. H undreds of American watch artisans have, been thrown out of employment, for a watch represents tw enty hours of labor; 50,000 smuggled watches mean a loss of 1,000,000 hours of labor to American workmen. A nother watch racket that is per plexing both federal agents and the American w atch industry is the grow ing practice of unscrupulous firms in pasting fake dials sim ulating standard Bituminous Output at New Low Record H arrisburg, Pa.—Pennsylvania’s bitum inous mines produced but 75 ,000,000 net . tons of coal during 1932, the lowest record for any years since 1900, the State D epart m ent of Mines announced. Soft coal production during De cember, 1932, w as estim ated at 6,418,000 tons, a loss of • 1.6 per cent over production for November. Production of anthracite coal in creased 19 per cent during Decem ber, 1932, as compared w ith ,N o vember. Seventy-seven per cent of the 217 anthracite collieries, or i 66 collieries, worked either full or p art tim e last month. Dr. Chevalier Jackson, professor of bronchoscopy at Temple university, • Philadelphia,, w as deconated with the highest honor medal, given by the Italian governm ent In recognition of his services to hum anity through the brancho- scope which he invented. The photograph shows Plo M argotti, Italian consul general a t Philadelphia, presenting D octor .Tackson with the medal ln the nam e of the King of Italy, a t the M itten Memorial hall. Temple university. w atches on. th e ‘Works1 of cheap-and inferior watches; Many of these time pieces with fake dials are sold in small stores, but most of them find their way to the many auction sales which are found in every large city. The auctioneer holds up the wateh bearing a fake dial of a standard watch worth thirty or forty' dollars, and knocks it down to the highest bid der for ten dollars, who for a short tim e thinks he has secured a big bar gain. The best way to avoid smuggled or fake dial watches, pointed out Mr. Sylvester, is to buy from reputable retail stores. R U N S IN A U G U R A L B A L L S ' * © Barrla 6 BwtoR Airs. John Allan Dougherty, chair man of the committee for the official ball for the Roosevelt inaugural whicfr will be the social climax of the in auguration ceremonies. The proceeds of the ball will be given to charity. Build Giant Airplane for Prince of Wales London.—A twin engined all metal monoplane, the fastest of its size in the world, is being built for the prince of W ales. The machine is being constructed on lines sim ilar to those of the air mail planes on the service between Perth and Adelaide, A ustralia. These craft hold the record for the fastest trip ever made over the 1,450 miles of the route, 'm aintaining an average speed of 155 miles an hour with full, load of twelve passengers and mail. The entire m achine will be of metal. It will be powered with two super charged Bristol “Pegasus” motors and is expected to attain 160 miles an hour with a full load range of 530 miles. The cabin, 20 feet long and over'G feet high, is separated from the pilots’ cockpit, which has accommodations for two pilots and is fitted with dnal con trol. The wings of the machine will m easure 70 feet from tip to tip and the total weight, fully loaded, will b« about five and a half tons. Maltese Cat’s Bob-Tail Passed On to Kittens Luray, Va.—Nine years ago when nature conferred a bobtail—about an inch long—on a W ashington M altese cat it perhaps did not think of its ' sim ilarly affected offspring that would later be scattered over Page, county. The cat was given to Mrs. Ethel M. Cave, .of this county, a num ber of years ago by W ashington relatives. Since the feline has been a resident of this county, 'her home being in the Hollow Run neighborhood, she has be come the m other of four litters of kit tens, aggregating one dozen. Of the dozen six were owners of bobtails like their mother. The other half dozen kittens had taiis of regula tion lengCh. * One Pupil, One Teacher ' Keeping School Open Burwell, Neb.—One pupil and one teacher have been having school this w inter In i tiny schoolhouse 32 milfes northeast of Burwell, in D istrict 34 of Garfield county. The pupil is Clair Abbott, son of Mr, and M ra C. B. Abbott, and the teacher, Miss Iva Dell Wood, nineteen, gradu ate of Sargent high school in 1930. ; N either pupil nor teacher has beer absent since beginning of the fall term. COM FORT FO R RANGERS F orest rangers m ay lack certain com forts of less excitingly occupied employees, but they are certain to have plenty of coffee to drink. The forest service, packing rations kits for Uncle Sam’s rangers throughout the W est, has bought three m rloads of coffee, or euough to make 2,500,- 000 cups o f coffee a t an average cost of one-half cent a cup in Ihe com ing year. Included In the rations kits also are candy, tinned bread, tea and canned m eat and vegetables. THEY HAVE FOUND A 3-MINUTE WAY TO RELIEVE SORE THROAT AU Pain And Soreness Eased In Few Minutes This Simple Way ~ T FOLLOW DIRECTIONS PICTURED BELOW 1 Crush and!3 Bayer Aspirin Tablets in Half a Class of Water. -Sf* GARGLE Thor oughly— Throw Your Head Wag Back, Allowing a Little to - Trickle DownYour Throat. Repeal Gargle and Do Not R inse Mouth, Allow Gargle to Remain on Membranes of the Throat for Prolonged Effect. Proves Only Medicine Helps A Sore Throat M odem medical science now throws an entirely new light on sore throat. A w ay th a t eases the pain, rawness and im tation in as little as tw o or three m inutes. Results are _ am ong th e m ost extraordinary in medical science. On doctors’ advice, millions are fol- lowing this w a y . . . discarding old- tim e “washes” and “antiseptics.” For it has been found that only medi cine can help a sore ihroct. Sim ple T o Do. Al) yon do is crush and dissolve three BA Y ER Aspirin Tablets in lialf a glass of water. Gargle w ith it tw ice—as pictured above. If you have any indication of a cold— before gar gling take 2 B ayer Aspirin TaM ets w ith a full glass of w ater. This is to com bat any signs of cold th a t have gone into your system . Keep on taking if cold has a “hold.” F or Genuine B ayer Aspirin will not harm you. Y our doctor will tell you, it does not depress the heart. G et a box of 12 o r a bottle of 24 o r 100 a t any drugstore. Ask your druggist about the recent price redaction on the 100 tablet size Bayer Aspixiiu R ed u ces In fe c tio n , E ases P a ln In sta n tly . G argling w ith Bayer A spirin will do three things: Rdieve soreness a t once. A llay inflamma tion. A N D —reduce infection; which is the im portant thing in lighting a sore throat. I t requires medicine—like BAY E R A SPIR IN — to do these things! T h a t is w hy th ro at specialists throughout Am erica are prescrib ing this B A Y ER gargle in place of old-time ways. R esults are quick and amazing. . Be careful, however, th a t you get real B A Y E R A spirin Tablets for this purpose. F o r they dissolve com pletely enough to gargle with out leaving irritating particles. W atch this when you buy. S T \i B A Y E R iv t y NO TABLETS ARE GENUINE B A Y E R ASPIRIN WITHOUT THIS CROSS I . H E A D Q U A R T E R S f o r I O U T H E R N E R t folks from below the Woson.Dtxoo line ofwoys moke , the Martinique their headquarters In New Yprk. WHhm one block—the Empire Stole Building, the Peimsylvanio MoKon and the largest department stores; wilhin;our four wolls — good rooms, good meols and good friendships. Smgfe Rooms from 42°° OeubJe Rooms from Direcfion AMERICAN HOTELS CORPORATION I. IfSUI KINCAID. . C60ft« WAHlMfUt Mwew B R O A D W A Y A t 1 2 " » S T R E E T O T E L I M lA R TiniQ U f < I 1 E U / .Y O R K ► P A R K E R ’S H A IR B A L S A Mmores DapdtoffjStopi g«iBi_.. Impart* Color and IBeaotrtoCnyAnd Faded Iblii _ GOe and fl.00 At DroniBta. a Hibcox Chan. Wki.. Patcho tme.N.Y. FLORESTON SHAMPOO—Ideal for use in connection with Parfegg’ggalyPfllaam-MftlMMi the hair soft and JInify. 60 cents by mail or atdrogy gists. Hisooz Ch rmfca I WorkBt Patcbogce, N.1T. A T T H E F IR S T S N E E Z Euse M istoL NIGHT ANO ^ M O R N IN G i AND 1 PUT EssenceefM iStai , ON YOUR HANDKERCHIEF AND PILLOW _IT’S NEW W DYNAFILTER c « , . $ 1 . 5 0 Boldsucceesfaliy for&yeaxs ^ MailD _ .Qlml nates In-________ terfcrenco. Separates' stations. Adds greater power. _ Saves current aod tabes. Improree selectivity. Simple and quickly attached to antenna pon on any Battery o r Electric set. Fall directions. Setiafactlon guaranteed. Uoll O rden Filled. Check, Koney order or Bent 0 . Ot J>.THE RANCO COMPANY 1 6 B ecket S treet - D orchester, QKass* S o u th ’s O ld e s t P R O D U C E R O P B A B X C H IC K S A l! n eavy breeds. L oghorng a n d A nconas. S pecial flocks w ith egj? reco rd 200 efrcrs op. E v ery b ird hloodtested. Blif disco u n ts on o rd e rs received before M arch IO tb. fo r p ro m p t o r d eferred shipm ent. H . B . S P R IN G E R S ac. N orm an H atcheries* K noxville. T e»n. JJ your bladder is irritated. Ciiherl ^ because.your urine ia too ad d or * ■ because o f inflammation, just try | ■ GOLD MEOAW '1 HAARLEM OIL CAPSULES I This fine, old preparation has been I ■ used fo r this purpose for 237 years. | T hat its popularity continues is I the best proof that it works. But • I be sine you get gold medal . A o | _ cept no substitute. 35^.M mm' tm m ! Gaeb quickly advanced on diamonds, watcbcs, stocks and bonds, strictly— — ^ oouidentlal.soqoestionsa8ked.lowInterest ratea. Satisfaction goaranteedoryoar articles returned postpaid. We also buy for casn diamonds. OldgOliUetce Sjafe. Dependable. RELIABLE (?AWM> BROKEitSCO** P . C .B < n 4 6 6 , B trm tash»7A te. C .O . D. Frostproof Cabbage and Onion PlantsALL VARIETIES SOO-ISo I,OOO-TSe f ARMERS PLANT CO. - TUTON. GA. B aiId IJp T o o r Income w ith th e g re a te st p ro fit-sh arin g sales p lan ev er devised. U n lim ited possibilities. A ddress P . O . B O X 448. M ACON. G A ., fo r details. M ost W onderfal B ook ■ o f th e A ce. tells how to cu re y ourself a n d o th ers by au to suggestion. P rice 50c. L . H E T R IC K . P w - cholojnst.345 S. A tla n tic A v e ..P ittsb n reh .F a. A G EN TS W A N T E D E V E R Y W H E R E to s e ll'W avine H a ir D ressln s an d o th e r to ilet goods. N ationally ad v ertised . B lg profits. B oyd M f*. Co» D ep t. T . B irm in g h am . A la. W . N. a , A TLA N TA , NO. 9-1933 RECORD, MOCKSVIIiLE, N. C. W n n t W v ™* Tt>s i n t h e G r a i n ’THE FEATHERHEADS HOW CAfJ You s * *SHAT? HES KievBR HEtP OFFICE- . BgFORS J -V ^ HAO ^ O MUCH T o B O A H o "TALK. ABOUT— PO V o u KWOW DAVE E . SAvftfeRf O JlR C C tiS EW OOftSEO KlM A S REFO RM C A H P lO A T e FOR COUHCIi-MAM Be c a u s e h e 's a b is (Sraf Te r ! A U . TriE.U U SHTEfti rillRR’i’ RBRPftM CAMDiDATP.' THAT'S A HOT O N E c HAj HAj M BarlHnR His Shins ■? 'i PF I N N E Y O F T H E F O R C E W S f i s e s MAY Oi B e SO INQtiiSiIWE: AS T'ASK VlHY YB2. BE HOLDlNt OW TO FRIEND^ S 6 iHCSHT FER f Ho! HO I VlHUT A FOIN& LOO«1N* PAlt^!J US1T VioM JOIN SMAKtyj Along the ConcreteOur Pet Peeve ill n o r let them KNOVJ 'HT COW1IN6 ILL WSWE THE « M $ A(.ICENSE IKce t> Out f tB CHRISTENED[Cnpyriehr, W. u. UjICofjrlfiht. tV. K UJ B O B B Y T H A T C H E R - M a I D e M e r By GEORGE STORM © M jri AOPFagCiATiOri ^ o f w a s h BUMDy^ a s s i s t a n c e IH R E C O V B F S lriG A P O R T IO ft O F T K E T R E A S U R E F R O M T H E C A V E R ri/T H E B O Y S C A C U E O A T H IS H O U S E B O A T W ITH A C IF T O F P IP E S A f tO T O B A C C O .. V IH iU E A W A IT IN G B U H D Y iS A R R IV A L . A O E C IS IO ri W A S R E A C H E D T O P L E A S E H IM F U R T H E R BV Br e a k i n g IN THE P IP E S ... W ISH B U O F R IT H A f tO D O U G H -H E A D N* B O T C H c o u l d s e e u s HOW o o f t V B E U ISV E I I a S M O K E AN Y M O R E R iC H T M OV/. I'L L G O O U T O H TH E PO R C H N1 G E T S O M E MtOOD F O R S T O v E O O f tT B E P o ftift’ a n y M O R E W O O O Ift T H A T STOVE IfiS T O O h o t IN h e r e m o w . BELIEVE I'LL. JUST SST THIS PIPE OK HIS SHELF*** IT*S‘-SROKE IN ENOUGH FOR AftVBOOy MOW C O O K IT, T H A T C H E R T W O R IU G S O U O H S P U F A B E L IE V E I'LL. S M O K E A P I P E F R © A \ N O W O N 1 IgprnttCJjjLjy n» Bal SyMKawTfacj S tM A T I 1E R P O P — T r e a t u i g A S c r a p C o l l e c t i v e l y By C. M. PAYNE "Trf-]IKJ A1tOUW*b E-T^EI-Qtej6 T tf A L L C** u s , CO LU eCU SJELV ZPo k i S L-a*r m e -+Jsats . " Y o u S A W M 1I M S - tA ^ AiTf Lu W * T 5 A W*P©1> m © The 8dl Syodwm. lot.) G E O R G E W A S H IN G T O N ’S T R A V E L S » W . B ro o k s 0 Count OeGbasse . AfTeii. WASHINGTON HAD MAOE PLANS RilS TRAPPING . COSNWAWS Af YOBKfOWN, HIS EXECUTION WAS SWIFT. Orit PACT OF TH f BHtTeH ARMY WAS IiEPT IH HEW YOWA WHILE. THE OTHER. WAS SKILLFULLY UUBEO W YOBtiTOWN. ONCE THEBE WC BBlTeH WERE SUBP05EO TO FINtV-YHEM- SELVES SURROUNDED,ANO YHE FRENCH FLEET UNDER. 0E6RAS5E ANCHOREO tN THE BAY. SEVERAL YEABS PREVIOUS THE ENOUSH HAD WASHtNGToNS ABMY IN PRACTICALLY THE SAME TRAP oH Lono island , but the Revolutionary leader , escapeo from Hts preoicameivt . F5itE., - PERHAPS ANGRY WlTH THE BRITISH FOR NOT IMPROVING THEIR. EARLY OPPORTDNttY.. PROVlO^? NO CHANCE FOR ESCAPE TiHS YtME. Cenrrifti 193« fcy Juau .W. Brecb AS Xeetmi BleterieaUy Cerreet Sketehee By CALYIK PAPER F o r f o u r , d a y s a n d n i g h t s t h e t w o a rm ie s h a m m e re d aw ay AT EACH OTHER, A tIO T tte K - o n OCTOBER. XI, 1781 FIRING WAS S foP P E O BY THE ROLLING O F A DRUM ANO THE RABtNG OF A W HlTE FLAG, W h a t MUST HAVE BEEN THE- FEELINGS IN THe HEARTS C F THE AMERICAN S oldiers on tHaT pay / YoftviTovvN mOKu WEnT English Farmers D e fy . Collectors o f T ift, To defend them selves ngaiustZi o re of. stock following Honl,jlv, ^ of titles, several hundred t';ii-,m,J. the: K ent district of England Iiaye ganized them selves into an They a re w orking along Win. V * and w hen three large trucks tJ 5, sen t recently to collect at teu" f.,J* th e representatives of the In routed w ithout any of the IUVfnrijj "ere •V.i sought. A body of men is kv.t farm s w here seizures may |,e ? tem pted, and a sm all army js s““ tioned in th e village square ry,|.jy * hasten to any farm when I he th e firing of rockets, is «|v* 1 JIontreal H erald. " ~ D r. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets arc ti,» „ • inal little liver pills put up 60 vear-T s' They regulate liver and bo«-'c|3.^ j|' M ajority’s Drawback T he m ajority js usually wrung rot a long tim e before it’s right. How Doctors Treat Colds and Coughs To break up a cold overnight and relieve the congestion that makes v™ cough thousands of physicians «. now recommending Calotahs, iL nausealess calomel compound tabu that give you the effects of calomel aid salts without the unpleasant Cfrecls o f either. tine or two Calotabs at bedtime Kisk a glas9 of sweet milk or water. Kea morning your cold has vanished, yoBeentom {a tknrmiolilw TMi*iCn, l I —------------- — J what you widi,J no danger. Calotabs are sold in IOc and 3j. packages at drug, stores. (AjrJ “It’s the FSeosS1 M ostE fM k l Qold Sake I’ve Ever W ■ J T hat’s an e x p re ssio n frequently used in describing Penctro, the ml- 1 ton suet salve, the deepest pcndral- ing, m ost effective cold salve net developed. One person is telling an other about Penetro and this enthu siastic endorsem ent of thousands 01 satisfied users has swept this vastly superior cold salve to a position 01 undisputed leadership. ( P e n e tr a te s 4 T im e s Deeper t o D riv e O u t C o ld s Quicksr Because P e n e tro has a base/ highly refined mutton suet (nothin! penetrates lilte m utton suet) it pene trates deep within, carrying its powerful cold-breaking medication Br . rectly to the center of cold infection. That’s w hy Penetro, the mutton suet salve, drives out head, chest cm and breaks up congestion before ordi nary salves and methods get starlet It’s stainless and snow-white, uoei I not soil or SlW I bed coverings or sleeping fcrraenlJ- I AsU foritbynaine. Penetro, 25c a ja»- The 50c Ecodob? size contains a times as mu® *J the 25c size. The H F am ily size con tains 7 tiroes," much as 2oc Si®- PEN ETM T H E M U T T O N SU ET SALVE A t the first sneeze or sniffle apply PEPIETRO NOSE and T H R O A T DROPS. Save tune, discomfort and expense by aris ing out your head cold be- fore it can really get started, PENETRO NOSE ted T H R O A T D RO PS {contains epkedrine) Slol1 spread a) germs, soothes inflations- lion, opens op cold- tlogged nasal pas sages and IinirtSl ..quickest relief to head colds an sinus trouble. Gen erous size bottle Zic- Larger size, 5af- is all , yOtt fit & a i& $ Z ::TtiIet ilSJiliSVouri^S I T h e By Irving Sa< C opyrtsht 19J2, b y Irvins W NC Service I SYNOPSIS At Boston, in the fateful 1775, CoB h Cabot, ardent liberty, bids sood-by to his , Jfenee “P at” Fayerweather, ] stanch loyalist but ’j & s f e sdear. softVSjjSf and white, y°urh%Zuf ■ B t i h S i c f e ' r ^ Shampoo use - G l e i i B 9S S u l p h u r S o ® ? . Cmata3314% FBeMrfo- Is*®* A L BohlamPfl Styptic Cotton. CHAPTER I-C — 2— I The gay young patrio the spinw ay like a b arr Was tumbled aboard a: deck right end up w ith I merchandise. H e rode a hour or so standing erec iness. Then he had to Itr jie cover down, Its edge with pitch. The b a rre l! -nnwale, fell into the bl pts tossing.journey i n f tide-He w as riding In the iot more than tw entj reckoned, although the Imprisonment seem ed 1 the air w as close and h from com fortable. A t it] the sand in th e sliallov n e t He heard tw o voic [gentle voices. They w Some person w as out i n-ater trying to roll the 1 stick. Im patient to MDolin decided to take !showing him self. H e pi prom its place and with chimes shot out of the I shallows. A boy and !younger than he stood n [costumes. D aylight was “The girl had a face asfly forgotten,” Colin .hough the light w as d clearly after the darkm jrel and the first thing I hapely, beautiful girl:’ "Are you bound for C: tboy asked w ith a friend 1 “Yes.” “I am Em ory W oodbriI my sister N ancy. YVe c j Bay at ftood-tide for a s | many tide-riders. O ur I Jon the hill. Go through Ko the road. Jly fatheij j’ll take care of the ba The boy rolled the i>J water as Colin w ith h i Sor the road, w ondering! pater-wisdom of E b e| YVoodbridge welc jjmt him to bed abov Slept until he w as call o'clock for dinner, a t I Jbeside the plump, bla fi’ancy. “I know all about You are a g reat love! Mend, P at i-ayerw eath| he story.” "Oh, that sto ry !’’ linking of it kept m l arrel. It would put Iif N b. It w as a barrelfij hat landed near your They had a m erry heme w as m ostly P a t.| H e rode aw ay w ith I poon after dark and ha his home he m ade thij [diary; “Nancy W oodbridge i !•~y and som e young -enoaehed’ out of Bost<| [to fall In love w ith he When the young mar] Nancy YVoodbridge said F1YVhat a big, gentle, I my! I could love him I Young C abot spent . Hs family, and “rid his An airing every day.” his bay m are, he p ro ! Jbridge w ith his sw orj pistol. H e w ent fir. sldent Sam uel L a n l nous college, who gavl JfatheC s welcome, sayiij Jth a t you have come to I “Yes, sir, and I hn Vashington.” “I w ill go w ith you.j Im m ediately they headquarters of the Jaquare mansion, long I U ect. W ashington wa |T h e president of the Jduced the young man, Jw arm w ords his histo J as Jf conferring an hoi “A good student, of : Position, a bora a tll Jw restler, th e best fe n j in n er of his tim e a t ; Jw ere the phrases he e* Jtngton listened with benevolent sm ile. In a nother is this descrip *nn of th e Com m ander “ ‘George W ashingtc Those w ords have bee “ ew England since . Adams returned fron Who has not heard o f! Tioble spirit,’ his mode" torn to rags by bullet! ^ e re shot beneath him ) wIth Braddock ? I feaj t&e talk w e have hearl birthday- and w as p rl Appointment. B ut h e f ***•■ I am like a m[ «nnned who is trying happened. “He is a big man— ™ *es taller th an I—b •nd shoulders. Looks : aYes* B ig bones, big > J«ng arm*, rath er slel one of his size. Yet fm allest p a rt of him. I better shaped than 0 ®eeit Boston, but I 6Ver seen one so w< 0001155273 640751 [Farmers Defy jCoIlectors of TUlSkI Hieinselves a --n;,, ltn e S lick following no,,,,. I seiz' '"lIK ll-o,] fni-m 0ut IW rlct of Englaiul , in icm selves into -Ui or- ' - J "T rkhlff nlon« ''n r T 1"5'-H three '"i-ge hnH-I;, Ules- DMKflJtly t0 collect at Io n V verii T s e n la tives of the i.,... artoS Il lum t any of t)u, ’ s |v Iioiiy of m en is i;' °ts Jjti-Q seizures ni-n- V1'1 0,1 * i» » M jan d a sm all army T at‘ ■the village square ,-Oiul. 1"' I any farm when the s 0 Ir of rockets is J ^ ■H erald. ' RECORD, MOCKSVILLE, N. C. I T h e M a s te r o f C h a o s Is Pleasant Pellets are tl,„ . liv er pills put up GD VeT eoriS- Ila te liver and b o w ife ^ g ' ja jo rity ’a D raw back Ijo rity is usually wron.. r» Jne before it’s right 0 r D o c to r s Treat" |ld s and Conghs Bak np a cold overnight ami Se congestion that make, pousands of physicians a°" Commending Calotab= |s calomel compound W u %ou the effects of calomel and -h0ut the unpleasant effects two Calotahs at bedtime aid, jl sweet milk or water. JdeZ, Iyour cold has vanished yon, I thoroughly purified and T(ra Itg fine with a hearty a p p ^ M ast. Eat what you wish — Ir. ’ Is are sold in IOc and 35c J at drug stores. (Adv.) 's tli© Fiessi ist Effective, a ' - Si Cl . K > -eTfeW fs an e x p re s s io n frequently p describing Penetro, the mut* Et salve, the deepest penctrat* Most effective cold sa*ve ever ped. One person is telling an- about Penetro and this enthu- J endorsem ent of thousands oi fed users has swept this vastly i r cold salve to a position of Huted leadership. c r a te s 4 T im e s D eeper 9 D riv e O u t C o ld s Q uicker ,use P e n e tro has a base of ■ refined m utton suet (nothing ates like m utton suet) it Peno" deep w ithin, carrying its P0"" cold-breaking medicalioD in to the center of cold infection, why Penetro, the mutton suet drives out head, chest cows eaks up congestion before 0™- :alves and m ethods get started. It’s stainless and snow-white, does not soil or stain b e d coverings 01 sleeping garments.Ask f o r it by name, Penetro, 25c a jar.- The 50c Economy size contains » .tim es as much » Ith e 25c size. The Cl ' F a m ily size con tains 7 times.*? much as 2ac sue. V lU TTO N S U E T S A lV ^ he first sneeze or sniff!' PENETRO A!OSE and •AT DROPS. Save tm'>fort and expense by dno- t yo u r h ead cold 0 can really 9 « « * * % ETRO NOSE and I A T D R O P S [contains ephedrine) stop spread of soothes inflamma lion, opens up cold tlogged f sages and bring quickest relief head colds sinus Ifnuble-Jdctterousstze bottle-5 Larger stzt> 5 yfaneod Keep gy Srving Baclieller CoBJTlsm 1932, b y Irv in e BacheUer W NU S ervice SYNOPSIS At Boston. In the fateful month of July, 1775 CoIin Cabot, ardent young lover of ' bid, good-by to his sweetheart, Pa- I' ’“Pat” Fayerweather; daughter of a ,tanch loyalist but herself a t heart r . '-rebel.’’ S fi& 3 £ 3 ! C H A P T E R I— C o n tin u e d — 2— « Tlic gay young patriot rolled down Jlie stiimvay like a barrel of fish and wl3~ tum bled ab o a rd and stored on deck right en d up with less im portant merchandise. He rode a t ease half an Jipor or so standing erect in the dark- 0C!S. Tlien he had to low er his head. Tlie cover dow n, its edges were served with pitcli. The barrel, lifted to the imnivalc. fell into the bay and began Hs tossing journey in the Im rryin- tiilc.He whs riding In the curious craft not more tiian tw enty m inutes, he reckoned, although the term of his imprisonment seemed very long, for jlio air w as close and his posture fa r from com fortable. A t last he bumped tlie sand in the shallows a t W innisi- meL lie liearil two voices-^young and gentle voices. They were near him. -tome person was out in the shallow water trying to roll the barrel In w ith a stick. Impatient to be released, folin decided to take the chance of showing him self. H e pushed the head from its place and with hands on the fhimcs shot out of the barrel into the shallows. A boy and girl a little vooncer than he stood near, in bathing costumes. Daylight w as coming. -The girl had a face and form not easily forgotten,” Colin w rites “Al though the light was dim I could see clearly after the darkness of th e bar rel and the first thing I saw w as that shapely, lieautiful girl:” "Are you liound for Cam bridge?” the hoy asked with a friendly smile. "Yes.” “I am Em ory Woodbridge and this is my sister Nancy. We come here every day at tiood-tiile for a swim. W e meet many tide-riders. Our house is yonder i on die hill. Oo through the pine bush I to the road. JIy father will help you. ! i'll take care of the barrel-head.” j The hoy roiled the Iiarrel into deep [water as Colin with his bag set out I for the road, wondering a t the strange J watcr-wisdom of Ebenezer Snoach. I Mr. Woodhridge welcomed him and put him to bed aborestairs w here he slept until he was called about two o'clock for dinner, a t which he sat beside the plump, blond, dark-eyed A'.incy. “I know ail about you," she said. I “Yon are a great lover. My school | friend, Pat Fayerw eather. has told me I the story." ; “Oh. that story!” he exclaimed. “Thinking of it kept m e happy In the barrel. It would put life in a smoked fish. It was a barrelful of happiness that landed near your pretty feet.” They had a merry visit and their theme was mostly Pat. He rode away with Mr. W oodbridge toon after dark and having arrived a t his home he made this entry in his diary: “Nancy Woodbridge is a vivid mem- ■7 and some young fellow who is ‘suoached’ out of Boston will be sure to fall in love with her.” When the young man had left them Kancy Woodbridge said to her mother, ‘What a big, gentle, m erry-m outhed boy! I could love him myself.” Ionng Cabot spent three days w ith his family, and “rid his m other out for ■in airing every day." Then m ounting his hay mare, he proceeded to Cam bridge with his sword, firelock and Pistol He went first to. his friend, President Samuel Langdon of the fa mous college, who gave him alm ost a father’s welcome, saying: “I suppose ihat you have come to enlist?” "Yes, sir, and I have- a letter to Washington.” “I will go with you.” Immediately they set out for the headquarters of the arm y in the big square mansion, long a fam iliar ob- Ieot Washington w as a t his desk. The president of the college intro- Hneed the young man, summing up in warm words his history a t H arvard, Es if conferring an honorary degree. “A good student, of an excellent dis position, a born athlete, the best wrestler, the best fencer, the fleetest funner of his time a t H arvard.” These were the phrases he employed. W ash ington listened with dignity and a Poaevolent smile. In a letter to Colin’s mother is this description of th e per- 10P of the Commander in C hief: "George W ashington of Virginia.' Those words have been flying around sV F'ri8land since John and Sam Adams returned from Philadelphia. nho has not heard of his wisdom, his ™oie spirit,’ his modesty, of his coat ora to rags by bullets, w hile horses "Tc slu,t lieneatI1 Ilim when he fought with Braddock? I feared it w as like jho tall; we have heard on the king’s irthday and was prepared for dis- Ppolntnient. But he has conquered ®e. I am like a m an throw n and tunned who Is trying to think how it huppened. He is a big man—a t a guess two riles taller than I—broad a t the hip Pu shoulders. Looks straight in your p,is bones, big hands, big feet, ®g arms, rather slender w aist for oae ®f his size. Yet all this is the h»t part of him- H is head is no her shaped than others you have es In Boston, but I sw ear I have 6Ter Peen one so well s e t dered why I felt a kind of aw e In his presence. I know now. The big thing is inside of him. It reaches out and touches you when you look in his eyes and w hen he moves his hands. It hits you again when you hear his gentle voice. T here are three w ords th at come to m e as I think of him. They are Power, Vitality, Kindness. I t h i n k th a t he has a mind as strong as our best pair of oxen and th at God is driv ing i t He said little and our m inister could have said it as well as he did. H e has a good-natured face, a bit w eathered, with a pock m ark Iiere and there—not handsome. His ■ straight • nose is a shade thick and large. His deep-set, blue-gray eyes are wide apart and they look down into. you. His brow nish hair, brushed back and pow dered and falling in a queue, w as a comely detail. H is mouth is a trifle too large and very firm when closed. Yet when he stood up, straight as an arrow , and walked proud as a king to the window, he w as magnificent. It’s a big full w ord not carelessly chosen, H e w ore his riding boots. H is blue- and-buff uniform with golden epau lettes, and buttons, w as spotless and w ell fitted. A broad blue sash spanned his breast from w aist to shoulder. From shoe to ruffles every detail in his dress w as adm irable. Still it was not his look nor his m anners, genteel as they were, th a t reduced me to a sense of sm allness. It w as the man under it all. I felt as I did the day I looked up a t the big m ountain In New H am pshire, uncom fortably little. H e has doubled my faith in our cause.” T he prelim inaries being over, the learned president sa id : “General, you have had tim e to sur vey the arm y. M ay I ask for your im pression of it?" v “I t is a disorganized mass of ill-clad, poorly arm ed soldiers w ithout a na tional spirit and w ith no knowl edge of w hat is expected of fighting men. M any of them do not know the difference betw een an officer and a broom stick. The New England troops feel th a t all men are equal even in a regim ent, th at a uniform cannot create a caste. So there is Tittle order, gov ernm ent, or discipline am ong them. W e have only raw m aterial—a mound of ore to be fused and slagged and shaped into useful iron.” T urning to Colin he added: “I am glad to welcome young men like you to th e arm y. You will, I trust, bend your m ind to its problems. I wish you first to go down among the men in the line and get tlie feel of it. My orderly will now conduct you to the m uster m aster. For the present I will send your horse to my stable." Colin w as m ustered into the com pany of C ap t Amos Farnsw orth from Groton. It w as quartered in lodges m ade of hewn tim ber, rough boards and sail-cloth. The regim ent w as in a long row of like lodges, some built of fence-rails clinked w ith tu rf and roofed w ith hay heaped on slanting timbers. T heir doors and windows were mostly m ade of woven withes. Only ten m en in the company were In uniform s and they w ere of varying colors—red, blue and. gray to suit the fam ily taste. The m ost were In shab by farm clothing. T here were also ragged m en in tom boots. Some were unarm ed. A num ber of the boys had old fowling-pieces and “Queen Anne* . m uskets. One had a straightened scythe blade bound to the top of a ' pole fo r his weapon. The Rhode Island regim ent—the sm artest-looking body of men in the arm y and well uni form ed—w ere in tents opposite the rude quarters of the AIassachusettB boys. C aptain Farnsw orth gavenhis fellow tow nsm an a hearty welcome. His left, arm , broken and slashed at B unker H ill, w as In a sling. Colin remem bered th e tall, lean, bony, brown- bearded farm er, so often rightly wor ried as to the condition of his soul. T here w as a noticeable lack of co ordination betw een his brain and the incorporeal p art of him. T he'hum an soul-w as- a troublesome asset in New England. It w as men aced, frig h te n e d persecuted by the ablest m en schooled in the arts of the orator, t It w as yelled at, berated and cowed by ignorant, well-meaning pulpiteers in the back country. The inner, and the outer m an were often in a quarrel w ith each other. Amos Farnsw orth alw ays loked seri ous even w hen other men w ere laugh ing. H is sad expression w as relieved only by a quizzical look In his gray eyes. M ental activity produced a sin gular effect upon his countenance. The skin on his brow rolled into deep wrin-’ kies. H e -had a m arked fondness for the word “which,” often misplaced In his conversation. H e w as a widower about forty years of age. “H ow are you?” Colin asked. “Anxious as a painter in a tree w ith th e dogs barkin’, which the fact is I’m on the run w ith Satan hold o’, my coat tail,” the captain answered. H e surveyed Colin from head to foot adding: “Say. yaK’re a m ortal stout- lookin’ m an which I’m glad you’ve, come. There’s goto’ to be a big w res tle here—an all-flred w restle between th e R hode-Islanders and our rigam ent You’re a ' Big, bonjr;- hard-m eated cnss an’ Fm a gram m istrustful o’ them fellers. W e’ll need ye." T he captain took a bite from a plug of tobacco which h e . called a “Vir ginia cake” and introduced the young m an to v ario u s. officers in the regi m ent, a fte r wtiich they w ent for a w alk together through the big camp. An im portant recruit w as often thus favored. ..The spirit of Farnsw orth’s company w as fo r friendship, not for w ar. Stern discipline excited a degree of resent ment. The men addressed their offi cers as if they were all having a noon- hour in the hay field. Even the cap tain w as “Amos” to every private. It w as then probably the most re m arkable arm y the w orld has seen—a fa ir of good-natured, gossiping, home sick, peaee-loving pioneers quartered in lines of tents and lodges and In public buildings. O utside the tents and lodges they saw num bers of women at work wash ing, som e with young children playing around the tubs. They had come to look after their husbands, to see that they were fed and kept decently clean, and nursed if wounded. They had lodgings in the village and cam e daily into camp. VVhat a contrast were these to the half-world women who w ere wont to infest an arm y! There were fourteen thousand two hundred men In this great jolly fair, of new- w orld pioneers. The churches and:the college halls w ere tilled with them. Officers not properly uniformed were distinguished from privates by ribbons on their caps. It w as early July and the dress was mainly like th at of the hay field and barnyard. There were even men wear ing one suspender, an undershirt and ragged trousers over bare feet. There w ere beards of many shapes and colors. “I didn’t know there was so much hair in the world,” Colin said to 1T Know AU About Y ou” She Said. “You Are a G reat Lover.” Amos. “The poorer the man, the richer the crop." “Weil, it taktes tim e an’ money to keep ’em mowed off. So. they let ’em slide,” Amos answered. “And they .slide in all directions,, up, down, sidew ays and' straight ahead.” At a point near the enemy they saw cannon balls from the B ritish batteries thum p the side of Prospect hill, throw ing dust into the air and ricochetting down the slope, bounding over rocks and'slow ing to a long roll. “Ain’t that a caution?" said Farns w orth. “Don’t am ount to m uch; they ju st shoot a t America an’ ye know it’s a m ortal sight bigger’n the army. Don’t hurt a hill to be wownded. Boys used to chase them balls till they found out how mean they was, which ye know 'they can-kick a leg off ye, when ye think ’em harm less.” There were places in each brigade w here spirits "and cider w ere sold. Soon they cam e upon a m an riding the wooden horse for drunkenness and for striking an officer. The back of the horse w as a small, steep-slanting board roof with a sharp peak above its four legs. This the prisoner had been com pelled to mount. Then weights had been tied to his feet. FO,, a moment they joined tlie crowd who were w atch ing the distress of this poor man, in a silence broken only by his groans. As they turned aw ay Amos ex claim ed: “Oh, th at men would con sider their latter end and seek the grace o’ God!" “Well, I think th at man will be con sidering his latter end for some time,” said Colin. “W hich he’ll know he’s got one," Amos w ent on w ithout relaxing his face.- “W hat I’ve seen an’ been through an’ suffered makes me grab hold o’ sperital things an’ hang on fer the love o’ God.” They crept behind a broad stone w all on the side of W inter hill w here a hole had ben prepared for observation. Amos took a small telescopic spy-glass from his pocket and peered through the hole a t the B ritish line on Bunker hllL “There, take a peek," he said to Colin. “The B ritish ain’t more’n a mile off. Ye kin. see the redcoats over thar. W e call ’em lobsters.” . “Lobsters?”- “Dh, huh. In our gab, them red-boys are all lobsters,” Amos went on seri ously. On their way back they stopped at the parade ground to w atch the drill ing squads. The air was full- of the shouted o rders: “Half-cock your firelocks. “H andle your cartridge. “Prim e your cartridge. “Shut your pans. . “R eturn your ram m ers. ’ “Poise your firelocks. * “Cock your firelocks. “Present, your firelocks.” Eighteen- ,motions w ere needed in loading, aim ing and discharging this weapon. ' • “It’s got the power o’ seven devils,” said Amos. “W e load the ca’tridge w ith a ball an’ a few buckshot an’ all the powder the gun’ll stand an’ hold together. W e bu’st ’em freq u en t The stock is like the heels o’ my roan hos which ye got to look out or it’ll crack ye open. They hit severe. W hen they hit, ye don’t w ant no a ir ’tw ixt them an’ you. They jum p back’ards spry as a panther which they can cuff ye shameful. T’other day a man’s gun went off unbeknownst when he w as a holdin’ of it loose, like ye would a baby. I tell ye, boy, it got even w ith him right then and fhar. Busted his jaw an’ floored ,him senseless which he won’t never be the same. It’s a frac tious critter, son, m eaner than a cat In a granary. Ay uh! It is.” "I’ve heard our guns were deadly on Breed’s hill and B unker hill,” said Colin. “Uh Iiuh I They was.” H is graphic description of the fight began w ith a little assenting grunt full of good na ture. “Like the w rath o’ G od! Ye see we didn’t fire till them lobsters was close, up. ’bout seventy feet"off, which ye could alm ost shake hands with ’em. They Imd emptied their guns. Only a few hit us. A fog o’smoke tw ixt them an’ us. Aimed too high! They stood loadin’ their firelocks. ■ Guess they didn’t think we farm ers knowed enough to shoot straight, which I sw ear there w asn’t a man in our line who couldn’t trim yer hair with bul lets an’ never a drop o’ blood. W hen we let go, Goda’m ighty! How they w ent down! Tlm t blast o’ lead was like a long sword, which It stabbed with the power o’ God at their bellies. It cut ’em in two. It tore ’em into bloody rags. In a minute, I tell ye, boy, th ar was Hies on their livers.” Amos was angry and excited. The rage of the battle had come back to him. His eyes glowed as he went on: “Them that w asn’t aimed at run like a nigger that’s seed a ghost. They formed an’ come back in platoons. They was brave, no m istake, which I give ’em credit. They behaved proper. Ag’in we mowed ’em down. They kep’ a-cominh. They w as stream in' our way —flank an’ middle—like a red river runnin’ up hill, by G—d! At last they w as so dam’ many we couldn’t snuff ’em out. They charged with their bayonets which they was that nigh we didn’t have tim e to reload afore they was on us an’ shovin’ the cold iron into our guts. Them th at hadn’t bay onets fit like h—I with gun stocks an’ heavy stuns which a many wilted down an’ died right thar. By tlie Heavenly King! I tell ye the rest on us run. W e did. We w ent fast. I had a busted arm . Them that w asn’t rammed through was nicked con- sid'able which the firelock is yer friend when it’s loaded, hut the world can come to an end while yer a loadin’ of it. Tlien w har be ye? In Heaven er h—I. T har’s where you be. Uh huh!” In his fervor Amos had entirely lost his hold on “sperital things.” No his torian would report all of his profan ity. The thought of it worried him as they headed for their own quarters. His left cheek rose in a rueful squint .that affected the setting of one eye. “Seems so when I git mad it's as nat’ral fer me to sw ear as it is fer a bird to sing," said he. “Alwns do it when I think o’ that day which the fact is Pve got a backsliilin’ heart, an’ thar’s tim es when I fergit to put on the brakes.” t Amos shook his head and blew and sighed and brushed his hands and added: “A las! I wislit somebody would make up some words that would feel as good as sw earin’ when a man is mad which it would save me a lot o’ suf ferin’. Ay es! It would.” Colin w ent on grass duty with graz ing horses until ten o'clock. H e had three days of service as a private un der C aptain Farnsw orth a t grass, wood and w ater duty, sleeping rolled in his blanket on a bed of straw under a tree near the captain’s lodge a t night. H e had m et many officers and men in and out of the regiment. He had easily throw n his competitors in the w restling bout with the Rhode Island boys witnessed by tlie Commander in Chief, a p art of his staff and a large crowd of the idle soldiery. When’ the last sturdy Rhode Islander in Cabot’s hands w ent down there w as great cheering and Amos let out a yell that was heard a mile away. Colin had be come popular in the regiment. Amos patted his shoulder saying: “T hat w as a cordy man. It was snug work to heave him but you done it.” The third m orning he w as awakened as u sual'by the fife and drum corps m archieg through the camp soon after daylight. Colin found Amos building a fire In front of his lodge. H e had a solemn face. “The big Chief was here ’bout ten minutes ago,” he said. "Do you mean General W ashing ton?” “Yes, sir. He an’ a squad o’ cav alry. Been ridin’ round the camp which he w ants ye to come to head quarters fer breakfast a t seven. My G—d, sir! He’s colder than an iron bar on a w inter mornin’—like most o’ the southern officers. Been shiverin’ ever since be w as here.” “And now you’re sliding." “So I be—an’ may God take the flint out o’ me. It’s the plague o’ my heart, I was kind o’ riled. Spoke to him friendly like—not thinkin’, same as if I w as to hum. Forgot I was In, the arm y. ‘Nice mornin’,’ says I. “ ‘Salute, sir,’ says he, cross as a bear,'an’ me gittin’ no pay since I got here, by G— d! An’ my hay uncut. Td like to be hum an’ I orto be. Two o* my men have deserted an’ when ye think It over ye can’t blame ’em much.” T here .was a moment of silence while Amos bent and blew on the coals. "H ey ho! Tve slipped ag’in,” he mut- tered. “An’ may the Lord fergive me. This -place is about as slippery as a side hill In midwinter. Ufc h u h !” Amos had voiced alm ost a common spirit among those home-loving, pea,CQ?.- ful, industrious men assembled in the camp a t Cambridge. Ctolin w ent into one of the lodges and bathed him self as best be could with soap and a basis of w ater and put on fresh clothing. (TO BE CONTINUED.) Glenn- & hilpliiirSo®P Cenlains 33ft% srfPte „cC Eohlaodto Styptic Cotto* ^ EXPERT LAYS DOWN RULES FOR HUMOR Definition of Just What Is Funny, and Why. A funny story is -a test in logic, humorous as it m ay seem. The jok er is that, after deceiving our m inds into hunting for probable endings, it snaps os np short w ith a ridiculous conclusion. And improbable as the final point may seem under usual circumstances, it m ust seem logical enough to-fit the facts of the anecdote. This, says R. F. M aier of the Uni versity of Michigan psychology de partm ent, is w hat psychology finds when it exam ines our thinking dur ing the progress of an after-dinner speaker’s tales. To quote a recent news-bulletin of the university: “W hen the comedy hero in the m ovies-is (brown through a window by the villain, w e laugh because it is an unexpected solution from any we m ight have been subconsciously working out ourselves. At the same tim e we see it as perfectly logical, so far as the villain is concerned, ac cording to D octor M aier’s lheory. As tlie humorous experience is w ithout emotion, the Iiumorous situation m ust not arouse our tender feelings. “Authors and tellers of stories in tended to arouse hilarity will be m ore sure of hoped-for results if they will m ake sure of the following points,” says Doctor M aier. “Tlie lis tener’s mind lias been subconsciously busy looking for a conclusion, so no hint must be given If he is to ba properly astonished; ' second, th e final humorous shock m ust appear suddenly and bring w ith it a re-ar rangem ent of the facts of the story in an unexpected w ay; third, the ‘point’ m ust be experienced momen tarily as disconnected w ith the sonal experience of the listener, lest it bring up emotional m em ories that m ight spoil the hum or; fourth, the final ‘kick.’ though unexpected, m ust still grow logically out of the -facts in the story and explain them ; and last, it m ust have the characteristics of the ridiculous in that its logic is lim ited only to the facts of the story.”—Literary Digest. Learned Man Derides Groundhog as Prophet The groundhog or woodchuck, like many another legendary figure bos been debunked. - A fter years of experim ents with woodchucks and other hibernating anim als tlie sum of conclusions, of Dr. George R Johnson of the zoology departm ent of the K ansas State col lege, is that these anim als are likely to wake up, yawn and perhaps step out for a breath of fresh air any tim e before or after February 2, known as groundhog day. . If a warm spell lias driven the frost from the ground he is likely to go out for a little while. If not", he shakes himself, curls np again and goes back to sleep without probably bothering even to look for bis shadow. All of which, says Doctor Johnson, makes him hardly a dependable w eather prophet. Stronger than He Was at Twenty K M M1 1 0 1 1 # m h h C 1IFT Y -FrV E years old, and still A going strong! D o you w ant th e secret of such • vitality? I t isn’t w hat you eat, or any tonic you take. It’s something anyone can do—som ething you can start today and see results in a week! AU you do is give your vital organs the right stim ulant. A famous doctor discovered-the w ay to stim ulate a sluggish system to new energy. I t brings fresh vigor to every organ. B eing a physician’s prescription, it’s quite harmless. Tell your druggist you w ant a bottle of D r. Caldwell’s syrup pepsin. G et th e benefit of its fresh laxative herbs, active senna, and th a t pure pepsin. G e tth a t lazy liver to work, those stagnant bowels into action. G et rid o f w aste m atter th a t is slow poison so long as it is perm itted to rem ain in the system . \ The new energy men and women ted before one bottle of Dr. Caldwelts syrup pepsin has been used up is proof of how much the system needs this help. G et a bottle ef this delicious ’ syrup and let it end th a t constant w orry about th e condition of the bowels. Spare the children those bilious days th a t m ake them miser able. Save your household from the use of cathartics which lead to chronic constipation. And guard . against auto-intoxication as you grow older. D r. Caldwell’s syrup pepsin is such a well known preparation you can get it wherever drugs are sold and it isn’t expensive. [“LOOK AT TOM GO FOR YOUR WAFFLES, ANN! HFS BEEN TURN-1 !NGUPHiS NOSE AT I MINE LATELY” I “MAYBE YOU HAVENT BEEN MAKING THEM WITH MY KINO OF BAKING POWDER” M H ow foolish to use any but a tried.&nd true baking powder! Saving a few pennies a t the grocer’s, but losing a reputa tion as a good cook! A lter a m an has once en joyed the light, fluffy waffles, ddidous cakes and Iriscuits th a t C alum et m akes, it ’s ' pretty hard to get him used to etfrtinaiy lwlfing. • Any way you look a t it, Calumet is'th e zeal baking powder bargain! Reasonable price— perfect results— mid you Hss Jess/ Only one tea- CALUMET Apeodmtot GotataIFoodai I** spoon to a cup of rifted flour— that’s the thrifty standard proportion with Calumet. T his sm all proportion is m ade possible by Calumet’s efficient Double-Action. For Calumet acts twice—first in the mixing bowl—and then in the oven. And it is this mar velous second action which holds your batter bigh and light sit through the baking. tit ACTION 2nd ACTION GET PROO F! S e e Calumet a ct tw ice! Thae pictures illustrate the famous Calumet Double- ActionTesbYoulUSndfundinc= Uomformakingthiseasytestumde every Calumet can. Try it! See far yourself how Calumet acts twice to make your baking better. THE DOUBLE-ACTING BAKING POWDER RECORD, MOCKSVILLE, N. C. N ew s R e v ie w o f C u rre n t E v e n ts th e W o rld O v e r Bull and Woodin Head the Roosevelt Cabinet- -Congress Pats Prolubition Repeal Up to the States— Japan Invades Jehol. By EDWARD W. PICKARD Cordell Hull SO THAT his adm inistration might get a running start in the nego tiations concerning w ar debts, world economics and other related m atters that are worrying the nations, P r e s i d e n t - Elect Roosevelt made public two of his se lections for his cab inet. These were Sen ator Cordell Hull of Tennessee as secretary of state and W illiam H. Woodin, New Torfc capitalist, as secre tary of the treasury. These gentlemen, who, Jlr. Roosevelt qiid, w ere“drafted” against their will; were a t once associated with him in the prelim inaries of de term ining the policies of the incoming adm inistration in its relations with foreign powers. They became mem bers of what Mr. Roosevelt has called his “unofficial” committee to advise him on world economic problems, and m et with that group, which includes B ernard Baruch, Prof. Raymond Moley and others. Mr. Hull, long considered'one of the ablest men in the Democratic party, is not an orator or an accomplished debater but is studious, resourceful and has served his country ably for many years in the house and the sen ate. Before entering congress he was In the Tennessee legislature, and he served in the Spanish-American w ar as a captain of volunteer infantry. H e is devoted to the policy of tariffs for revenue only, and beliieves that one of the basic causes of the business depression has been nationalist isola tion, started by the Dnited States in 1920 with the erection of tariff walls which other nations were quick to copy. Prohibitive tariffs, he holds, have helped stagnate trade by creat ing a productivo capacity in excess of domestic demand. Senator C arter Glass of Virginia w as Mr. Roosevelt’s first choice for secretary of the treasury but he de clined the post solely because he be lieves he can better . serve the country in the senate. So the President-Elect p e r suaded his close perv sonal frieud. W illiam H. Woodin, to accept the p o r t f o l i o . Mr. Woodin form erly was a Republican, but he I joined, the Roofeevelt [ camp before last sum- L *. .. , mer’s convention and afterw ard was treas- W illiam H. urer of a special fi- Woodin nance committee that raised a large fund for the Democrat ic party. He has an international rep utation as a m anufacturer of railw ay equipment and as a banker and is now president of the American Car and Foundry company. His interests are not all in business, for he is an accomplished musician and composer, a num ism atist and an a rt collector. H e is sixty-five years old, m arried and has four children. UNOFFICIALIjY, the other members of the Roosevelt cabinet were an nounced to be these: W ar—George: H. Dern of Dtah. Attorney general—Thom as J. W alsh of Montana. Postm aster general—Jam es A. Far ley of New York. Navy—Claude A. Swanson of Vir ginia. ' Interior—Harold U Ickes of Illinois. Agriculture—Henry A. W allace of Iowa. * Commerce—Daniei C. Roper of South Carolina. la b o r—Frances Perkins of New York. Giu s e p p e z a n g a r a . the brick- m aker im m igrant' who tried in vain to assassinate, the President- Elect fn Miami, m ust spend 80 years in prison a t hard labor, if he lives so long. He pleaded guilty to deadly assault on Mr. Roosevelt and on three others whom h is. bullets reached, and w as sentenced by Judge E. C. Collins. Two of the victims of his mad deed. M ayor Cermak of Chicago and Mrs. Joseph H. .Gill of Miami, w ere still lying in the hospital severe ly wounded, and. so there was a chance th at Zingara. should the vic tim s of his mad act die, would be put on trial for: murder. 'M r. Roosevelt w rote a graceful let te r of appreciation to Mrs. W. F. Cross of Miami, who probably saved his life by seizing Zingara’s arm as he w as shooting; and Representative Green of Florida Introduced a resolu tion to have congress vote a gold medal of honor to the courageous woman.... ., Government agents iri W ashington were investigating a second appar ent attem pt on the life of the Presi dent-Elect, following the discovery of a package addressed to him contain ing a crudely wrapped shotgun shell. I t w as mailed from W atertow n,•$. Y., and was fo.und in the W ashington post, office. Postal inspectors thought it w as the work of a crank but said the shell w as wired to explode if jarred or struck and might have resulted fatally. SIR RONALD LINDSAY, B ritish am bassador, immediately after his return from London Iield conferences with Mr. Roosevelt—Secretary of State Stimson approving—and report ed to Sir John Simon, foreign secre tary, that the conversations had been “useful.” W hat w as said was not re vealed, but Sir John said: “The conversations are, of course, a t present in a wholly prelim inary stage and of an entirely general char acter, but it is not too soon to say that we believe that by a frank and iDtimate interchange of views be tween ourselves and the United States over the whole field of current economic problems, the way will be best prepared for the effort which the countries of the world m ust m ake to gether to assist in promoting world recovery.” Mr. Roosevelt also conferred at length with Paul Claudel, the French am bassador, and W illiam Duncan Her- ridge. the m inister from Canada. In Paris Foreign M inister Paul-Boncour said w ar debt negotiations between France and the United States would be resum ed after the inauguration of Mr. Roosevelt, but did not explain w hat form the negotiations would take. REPEAL of the Eighteenth amend m ent is now up to the states, for the senate's Blaine resolution subm it ting the action to state conventions was' passed by the house by a vote of 289 to '121. or 15 in excess of the required two- thirds of those pres ent and voting. For the repealer were IOS Republicans, 180 Dem- „ ocrats, and I Farm er- Laborite. Against it A u _ were 89 Republicans and 32 Democrats. The action of the house was a reversal of its Rep. Raine> attitude of the first day of >the session, when a resolution to subm it unqualified repeal failed of adoption by 6 votes. It was in a ‘way a personal victory for Representative Henry T. Rainey of. Illinois, Democrat ic leader, who moved the adoption of the senate resolution and argued warmly and effectively in its behalf. Though immediate steps toward the calling of conventions were taken in many of the states, the battle, for re peal'w as by no means won when the submission resolution w as adopted. Ratification by thirty-six states Is nec essary. and if this is not obtained within seven years the whole m atter lapses and prohibition . remains. Of course the wets are confident that re peal will win In the required number of states within a t the most four years and possibly in much less time, and it m ay be they are rig h t W et leaders assert that only Kansas, M ississippi, Oklahoma, A rkansas and N ebraska can be counted on as certainly dry, and Alabama, Vermont, Idaho and Maine as doubtful. On the other hand Bishop Ju n es Cannon, Jr., asserts that thirty tothirty-three states will refuse to val idate the Blaine amendment. Disagreem ent as to the method by which states' conventions may be set up may delay the functioning of the m achinery of ratification. Some con gressmen thought congress should pre scribe the procedure, • but Senator W alsh of Idaho held that all connec tion which congress has with prohibi tion repeal ended with submission of the new am endm ent to the states. This view also w as,taken by Representative Jam es Beck of Pennsylvania, who, like Senator Walsh, is an eminent constitu tional authority. FOLLOWING a demand on C hina.to witHdraw its. tro6ps voluntarily from Jehol, actually by Japan • but nominally by"the government of the puppet state of M anchukuol the main body of the Japanese army in Manchu- kuo crossed the hordei* of the prov ince and advanced rapidly toward Ohaoyang. second largest city of Jehol. The opposing filjinese were reported to have, fled, but immediately there after regular. Chinese troops crossed into M anchukuo ,to join .irregulars in an attack on the Japanese positions a t Tungliao. The Japanese high com mand In M anchuria announced that it w as determined to “annihilate” the 100.000 regular troops in the arm y of .Marshal Chang Hsiieh-Iiangi and that itr m ight become necessary to occupy Pelplng and Tientsin. As is its cus tom, the Japanese foreign office de clared that Japan regarded the Jehol invasion as purely a local affair. The Japanese delegation in . Geneva; m aintained its uncompromising a tti tude as the assembly of the .Ledgua of Nations began general discussion of the report of the committee of nine teen on .M anchuria. This report is in most respects at utter variance with the claims of Japan, and the* Tokyo delegates warned 'the, League that a grave.situation would arise if- it were adopted by the assembly. Siich action, they suggested/ might, upset ••friendly relations between nations, upon which peace deoands." p resid e n t Hoover PRESIDENT HOOVER, rather neg lected in the new s-of late,’ sur prised-congress by sending. In a spe cial message urging action on eight subjects of legislation which he t h o u g h t would aid in economic recovery. He asked that the present con gress pass the bank ruptcy bill, the Glass hanking bill, a1 meas ure- to increase the am ount of Reconstruc-. tion Finance corpora tion funds for state relief loans, a federal farm lease bill and the repeal of the public ity clause in the R. F. 0. act. The President also advised the ratification of the St. Lawrence waterw ay treaty, the adoption of the arm s embargo resolution and the starting of study looking to the es; pansion of the home loan banks Into a general mortgage discount system. Mr, Hoover advocated the Hyde farm leasing plan as a substitute for the domestic allotm ent scheme, declaring the latter seemed “wholly unwork able” and calculated to do far greater harm than good to agriculture. The senate did take up the bank ruptcy bill, which had passed the house, and it also passed the W agner relief bill, which increases the R. F. C. funds for state relief and goes farther than the President contem plated. It w as generally agreed that his other recommendations would meet with no response during the short session. SPEAKER. GARNER dropped his plan to make Roosevelt a constitu tional dictator for two years, and the house accepted the senate provision of the treasury and post office appro priation bill conferring limited auto cratic power on the 'incoming Presi dent to reorganize the adm inistrative branch of the federal government. By its term s he may consolidate or abol ish any adm inistrative agencies and their functions, but may not abolish or consolidate entire departm ents. The house rejected the senate am endm ent directing the head of each departm ent and independent estab lishm ent to effect a 5 per cent reduc tion in expenditures from appropria tions for the fiscal year 1934. W ithout debate the house accepted the “Buy American” am endm ent spon sored by Senator Johnson of Cali fornia. It provides th at the heads of all government departm ents m ust buy for government use only goods made or produced in the United States or substantially composed of domestic m aterial. Every contract for construc tion, alteration or repair of public buildings or public works m ust con tain a clause requiring the contractor to abide by the “Buy American” policy. FOR the first tim e the navy now hfia a vessel designed and built as a!n aircraft carrier. It w as launched at Newport News, Va., and Mrs. H erbert Hoover christened it Ranger In honor of the ship of the same name that w as -com manded by John Paui Jones. Our other air p l a n e carriers, the Langley, S a r a t o g a and Lexington, were designed for o t h e r uses and were con verted. The author ized design intended the Ranger to be of Mrs. Hooover the “flush deck” type, but the navy is now trying to get a bill passed through congress to au thorize a change in the plans to: con* struct with an “island deck.” In the first type of construction no super structure is provided except a smoke stack which swings out of the way so that the" entire deck js available . :fi»r taking off and landing. The “island deck” type has a super structure a t the extrem e side of the vessel, leaving practically the entire deck free for the use of. the airplanes. The change, if authorized by congress, would entail an extra expenditure of $2,000,000. AtfSTRIA w as greatly disturbed by a request from France and G^eat B ritain that a shipm ent Qf 50.000 rifles and 200 machine guns shipped there from Italy be returned or destroyed, but after some Indlgnaut protests Chancellor* Engelbert Dollfuss an nounced his government would com ply with the demand and the arm s re turned. Sir John Simon told the, house of commons that he hoped the m atter might be considered a closed incident The guns, or at least a part of them, were believed to be destined for Hungary, and the French and Eng lish were inclined to hold M ussolini responsible for the seeming violation of the peace treaty. The Italian ver sion was that the arm s were sent- to A ustria by private citizens merely to be repaired and returned. MORE woe for President Machado of Cuba is a t hand, for. the ex pected revolt against his rule- has broken but In many widely separated p arts of the island. Skirmishes’ be tw een the ,re b e ls 'a n d governm ent troops were reported a t various points and there were some fatalities. G roups of arm ed men were said to be starting fires in the sugar cane fields and driving away the Workers. 'D BOENT deaths, included those -or 1 X Jam es J. Corbett, form er heavy weight champion, and Maj. Gen. W il liam H. Johnston, an American -^com m ander in the World war, who. won fame and decorations for his “extraor dinary heroism in action.” "* 1933; Western Newspaper Onion, im pr o v ed ' UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL SUNDAyl ^ c H o o L L - e s s o n ■«» REbVeVPofBr aP= « o E^ of S - Mem' in s titu te o f C hIcagor)©. 1923, W estern N ew spaper O nion. Lesson for Match 12 JE SU S' M INISTERING TO TH E M ULTITUDE LESSON T E X T -M ark 6:30-44, - GOLDEN T E X T -E ven as the Son OT man came not to be ministered un ^ but to minister, and to Sive bis lit* a ransom for many. M atthew _PRIMARY TOPIC—Jesus Helping H JUNK)Re°TOPIC—Jesus Feeding a H INTERM EDIATE AND SENIOR TOPIC—Meeting Everyday Needs W itn je TOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOP IC—Jesus M inIsterIne to Human Neea. I. The Apostles iMaking Report to Jesus (v. 30). They had just returned from a most strenuous campaign of preaching and healing. Tlieir m inistry had occa sioned a great stir. This w as ac centuated by the continued m inistry of Jesus. They reported to Jesus w hat they had taught and what they had wrought. II. Jesus Alone W ith the Apostles (vv. 31, 32). The result of the combined min istries of Jesus and the apostles w as such a commotion, with the people coming and going, that there w as no opportunity for resting or eating. In this tim e of stress and strain Jesus invited the disciples to ietire from the crowd and rest. Periods of w ith draw al from, the crowds In fellowship with the T,ord are frequently desirable and necessary. -The benefits of such retreats are: 1. Physical recuperation. We have this treasure In earthen vessels. It Is absolutely Imperative , that there be periodical retirem ent for physical, recuperation. 2. Spiritual '■ refreshm ent. Even those who are engaged in w itnessing for C hrist need constant renew al of their spirits by personal contact with the .Lord. 3. To get one’s eyes off of self in case of either success or failure and fixed upon Jesus Christ. III. Jesus Teaching the Ignorant M ultitude (vv. 33. .M). I. Thronged by the people (v. 30). The wonderful words and w orks of the I.ord and the disciplcs, brought the m ultitudes to them. To escape the throng they took departure to a desert place (v. 32). Seeing the I,ord and his disciples leaving, the people from the Surrounding cities anticipated their landing place so that upon the arrival of the. ship they were already J h e re ;/f 2; Jesus moved with compassiofa (v. 34). Instead of becoming IrrIv tated by the intrusion of the crowd, his. personal Interests were forgotten as the needs of the shepherdless sheep pressed upon his notice. Therefore, he began to leach them many things. IV. Jeaus Feeding the Hungry Mul titude (vv. 33-44). 1. Conference with Ihe disciples (vv. 85-88). a. The disciples requested that the m ultitude be sent to the surrounding villages to buy bread (v. 36). Accord ing to M atthew Jesus made the propo sition that the m ultitude be fed (M att. 14:16). h. Jtsu s commanded them to feed the m ultitude (v. 37). c. The disciples' perplexity (v. 37). T heir perplexity was due to the fact th at they w ere depending upon their own resources instead of C h rist To come face to face with the hum aniy Impossible has a threefold benefit: ; (I) It makes us realize our de pendence upon C hrist (2.) It drives us to him for help. (3) It leads us to give him the glory for the results. Though our ability to teach, preach, or to give he meager, when coupled with the Lord’s ability. It is equal ,to any demand which may he made. , 2. Jesus’ method In feeding the m ultitude (vv. 30-44). ,a. The Lord’s part. This w as to give ,instruction as to the m ethod of procedure and to create the provision. H e so increased five loaves and tw o. fishes, that the need of the hungry m ultitude w as met. ' • b. The disciples’ p a rt They were to have the people sit down In com panies so as to facilitate distribution. They then took that which the M aster had blessed and distributed It. The disciples’ responsibility w as not for the creation of the provision, but for its distribution to the people. c. The peoples’ part. Their, p art was not to -create, nor to distribute, but to ipartake of the provision. Unless peo-. •pie receive Jesns Christ and the salva tion -which he has provided, they will eternally starve. Stands Forever T he’grass w ithereth.-the flower fad- etb; but the word, of our God shall stand forever.vlsaiah 40:8. * 'W a it' U poa .God That life is most holy in which there I? least of petition and desire, and most of w aiting upon God. that In which petition most often passes into thanksgiving. Pray till prayer makes you forget your w ish,'and leave it or merge, it. in God’s will.—p.' w . Rob ertson. F urnace, of Affliction The furnace of affiction refines us «rom earthly' drossness and. softens.us for the impression of God's own stam p. N ew York’s Porkers Make Good SKowink H o g R a i s i n g A ia o n g I m p o r t a n t I n d u s t r i e s o f S t a t e . i gross income of $7,849,000 from Uogs places the porker am ong th e im- portant farm industries of New Tork state. Census totals for January, « show 231,000 hogs on New York state farm s, but June figures, which won d include the spring crop of pigs would increase the total, he says. New York state farm ers m arket large am ounts of grain, hay,, and pas ture through hogs. An acre of al falfa, clover, or rape saves m ore than 1,100 pounds of com , and about 460. pounds-of tankage when grazed by growing pigs. • In the dry lot 350 to 400 pounds of grain and concentrates, make about 100 pounds of pork. A 400-pound brood sow eats about 2,000 pounds of grain when she raises tw o litters, and I 1SOO to 1,900 pounds when she raises one litter a year. Most of the 1,500 pure-bred hogs In New York state are in herds of from three to five sows. C hester W hite is the most popular breed, followed b y : B erkshire, Duroc Jersey, Poland China, and H am pshire. M ost of the grade cross-bred pigs are sold a t weaning tim e to buyers who fatten one, two, or three pigs for home-killing. A few feeders feed from 100 to 200 pigs a y e ar; they m ake a business • of collecting garbage in cities which do not have disposal plants. Commercial pork production is not considered profitable in New York state, but. a few pigs can be fed largely on gar bage th at is w asted, with som e addi tional grain. M ic e a n d R a b b i t s D a m a g e F r u i t T r e e s D u r i n g S n o w The deep snows of w inter,'beneficial as they are In restoring to the subsoil some of the reserve of m oisture w hich w as depleted during the long drought period, nevertheless have brought about a condition injurious to the fruit belt In the eastern states, says the W ashington Star. 'Field mice and rabbits, unable to reach their norm al food supplies, turn to fru it trees, especially apple trees, for food. They gnaw through the outer bark to reach the cam bium layer and inner bark and often circle the entire trunk In their search for food. W hen this occurs it becomes vital that the trees be. bridge-grafted, else the trees will die. Trees which mu9^ ^e so treated need prom pt attention. ' Scions to be used in the grafting should be cut and held In cold storage until spring when the grafting should be started a t the first ;in<Jic!itions th at the sap is rising. In .ihesineantinfe, dirt m ust be piled up 'over the wound in the tree to prevent drm’ug. U s e t f o r D a i r y B y - P r o d u c t ? The new method of m anufacturing casein th at originated in the bureau of dairy industry has been adopted by seven New England factories, ac cording to the report by Chief Reed to the secretary of agriculture.. Two of the factories using the new grain- curd method of m aking > casein re ceived 1% cents more per pound than factories using the older and more common method of making sulphuris casein. Through co-operation w ith other agencies the bureau of dairy In dustry has found two new possible out lets for lactose, or milk sugar. One is in the m anufacture of certain types of confectionery; the other In the m anufacture of explosives. T r a p p i n g J a p a n e s e B e e t l e The bureau of plant" quarantine, vhich enforces the \Japanese beetle quarantine, put ont nearly, 60,000 traps last year. Covering territory from Florida and Ohio to New England, the traps w ere moved gradually north w ard, as the season advanced. They were placed in traffic centers, so th at the first appearance of the insects In an uninfested region maV be noted. In this way -plant quarantine officials re ceive tim ely w arning of. a threatened outbreak. . In certain.sections, like the D istrict of Columbia, w here 3,000' w ere in stalled this year, trap s give vegetation some protection by luring Japanese beetles from the flowers and foliage on which they feed. These traps are em ptied once a day. S h e e p R a i s e r e P r o s p e r The wool raiser am ong th e agricul turists, a t least, sees daylight out of the economic storm which Involved all agriculture. • -Prices for wool have been steady.- with the. Increased consump tion w ith the resum ption of woolen and w orsted m anufactures. In fart, so great w as th e dem and for raw wool for th e sam e period, the purchase ex ceeded by 3,000,000 pounds the aver age consumption of the past five years.—'W ashington Star. • -f" ' - - - ' 9 Agricultural Chaff Sweet clover is a good soil builder • • • Ohio’s roadside m arkets w ere 94 per cent farm er-ow ned In 1932. Demand for boys to work on farm s in "New. Zealand is exceeding the sup ply. - - ." *• * • Three hundred: and seventy million tons of farm w aste may be used In the m anufacture of drugs, perfum ef ana ,explosives December Toofe Reco^ flS -.Y e a r.s L «ong^ii\ D ecem ber 22 is, str.m-» , iJi th e “longest” day of the ™ J not th e shortest, thus Iukin.,? iII ord fo r length from June of ! ' day of sum m er. Hero is'th nation o f this apparentlv '■ tory staie of affairs, C. C. W yiie, associate ProfcJ ytlI astronom y a t the University 0f i * “B ecause of the fact thai * thanm ean tim e rather %tim e, sun -noon is later from day by th irty seconds near th of th e w inter solstice. in ' . vem ber, fo r those living „ standard m eridian, sun How1 about s a te e n minutes before v> w hile in February it Occnrs fourteen m inutes after VJ:0ti “W hen sun noon is fVilliti- from day to day by a clock m il oit m ean, o r average, time the M o f day defined as the Interval (I sun noon to stm noon is M0rel!!4 tw enty-four hours. In this Sen^ longest day. last year was L ast June 21, the first ’layoff m er astronom ers point out,’ longest day of the year in the I ber o f hours of daylight, ^ D ecem ber 22, when mensural ;•,■ noon to noon, had just at» anij"^ hundredths seconds more Iliail ; hours. A very close race I101 ^ cem ber 22 stretched ahead Iilr- enough to win the title oE “the 1 longest day.” To improve Any child's A sluggish appetite means a Sb I gish colon. C orrect this Confiie I called stasis, and see how quicMjij listless, drooping boy or girl tea to eat—and gain I The only cine” such children need is pa> unadulterated fig syrup. C alifornia syrup of figs is j.fe w onderful things for ailing, siijl children all over th e United Xf your baby, boy or girl, IsbiHnI —pale-faced and dull-eyed eg constipation—breath bad loorninjl tongue coated all the time-ai| give cathartics th a t weaken fe e t o f bow els! In stead, a Bi syrup of figs th a t doesn’t (Mn either stom ach o r bowels, M te a c t .on th e low er colon—whcrt 6 trouble lies. N ature never has made a fcl laxative for children; they allb[ th e wholesome, fruity flavor oi I -real C alifornia syrup of figs. I .purely !vegetable, b ut every drug Alias' it ‘-all- ISrttled,' with di recite B egin w ith it a t once. Tonr w ill soon be eating better and M Ing better. K eep on with tie W of figs a few days and see ansi! im provem ent in appetite, cob w eight, and spirits. C hildren who get sjtup off? now and then, keep well and colds. NOTICE: The bottlers of nia Syrup of Figs respectfully mothers that the promises mS here apply only to the genuinefi wst in bottles plainly marked & IFORNIA. QftihdtenyfeA C l l t i c i I K l To k e e p «lrin a n d scalp and ,healthy, and to lavOUU ,UCOlUlJFf OUU w * foundation for skin he; later life. The Soap prole® as well as cleanses, the m&nt soothes and heals raslft itchings and irritations. Soap 25c. Ointment 25 and 50c. Proprietors: Potter Drug & Chytit* Corporation, Malden, Mass. A a k e ilm I lFatfc in laxatives may come and ' go, t u t Grandm a knows I® «Blickest, gentlest way to a * * ® system is with a natura* Ia»“ i m a m A nagging backache, wit bladder irre g u la ritie s a» a tired, nervous, dePre5??, feeling .may warn of Some "; ordered kidney or bladder to ditlon. U sers everywhere re j c« Doan's PiJk Pwised 15more than 50 years by Srai1itefol users the country over, all druggists. D d a n .SoldW i e p a v i e R l rg e s t C ircu latio n ID a v ie C o u n ty N e I J r. P. M artin and G J L de a business tripj phursday. , Mrs- D. P- fo rd , ofl In, visited relatives o f [‘days last week. I ivlarch came in like Jnd here’s hoping she | Ike a gentle lamb. I Federal, agent Fred I ireensboro, was in tol 1st week on business. ] Despite the shortagd focksville all our folk1 i a good humor. [ John L. Foster, o f ' Aas In town Wednes lauds with old friendd . Harry Stroud, of Bi Iucday in town with I and Mrs. C. F Si G. Leagans, of nea j town Wednesday ol Jtatesville on a businf M issVirginia Byerl kn Salem, spent one f feeb in town with fri| William Howard, Iigh Point College leek-end here with Miss K athryn Bro^ Ifthe Greensboro ent the week end i| Ier parents. I G. C. Hendricks, bewey Martin and Icks made a busines liage Fiday. Clarence Elam nnd !ration for appendicitj Iille hospital last wee |ition is reported favij J. H. Eidson, of pent Wednesday an< own on business am Itiu with us. Come Miss K athiyn Mer |ome last week from j where she spent pith her sister, Mrs. Rev. and Mrs. G Iiss Louise StroudI J/oman’s Missionary Japtist Church at (everal days last weel David Stroud, of ^ho has been spei seeks with his broth* pounty Line, left Wt poon for the city of ] The Mocksville Iigh cage teams spll bill at the Mocksvill Friday night, ginning 33 to <3 in a I Ind the visising bojj pn the big end of a 33 Miss Loraine Bov bf Mr. and Mrs. H. 2, a student at ireensboro, was ond padies who made thel {season. Miss BowdI bf the Sophomore cla |ng the home econorj Bother with her otha SALESMEN W A n { pffs, w ag e c a ts o r Ir 'H eb erlin g , Dealers] stead y -y ear a ro u n d sell d n e c t to fa rm hom e re m e d ie s an d ducts. Many make Jor m ore. W rite qui C. H EBERW N Oept.. 1797 Bloomi B. R. Bailey and s Jr., of Advance, v visitors one day la was Mr. Bailey’s I Mocksville'since he! fice in December, °ue of Davie’s coun. ers fo r several yean has many, friends in j ate always glad to i Davie county offiJ jarge moonshine fad ■ngton township nea “ue late Wednestf1 Thursday morning, stills was a complete of large capacity, anl a large steam tyjf operators were not \ raid was made. Th *ar apart. F r y , : ° r plaeed under -a $1 Thhrsaay for his f ^ansbury court yesj I possession at Uquor.; Fry was vofiBatzer Thursda Ueputy Marshal C.i Deputy sheriff Davij Y-8 Ford car a| Wliisky were confisq g u i l t y . 1 ^ b e r T o o k R e « Y e a t»s L o n J . , T R E P a v i E R E C O R D , M O t K S V t T O , f t . e . M A R C H 8. XQ33 -2 is, str. ‘Ses ll^ t - day of to st, thus J°ar, . ■|»e shortest, thus tai’l " Tr lenSth fromIif summer. Hprn ~*'tl>. L ... .. . nerO is the of tlIls nPParentiv P ^ :uc of affairs, !ls L tua^ - iVylie. associate p*.''* llS b,' iomy at the UniverLv ^sioSi !cause of the fact ,SLefH -. 1 time rather th,,,, "* , iou is later frn, -«i Iiy thirty seconds ne-l r ^ '« Je winter soIsUce. " -W I * Liier than .» sun noou is later fpn y thirtv s, . roiu (la, Ilrthe^er. for those liv i mW-Xi Jaru meridian, sun no "&lr . * sateen minutes Ileforn0t^ In February it (1^ Ieen minutes after v’-na 0,11 Ihen sun noon is fVir I day to day bv a c\x-l-'nS 'al® lean or average, time ,LrIntillS JV Alined as the InterI ' ^ . Iioon to sun noon ia , " mIi i § .v-four hours. In this Li, u r d ay iast^ i r " '- ^ I .Tune 21. the first ,Iavofsn astronomers point out JL^I sun. Ml, Iif Imurs of dliyiightL... — » Mieresjnber «2. W henm ^tu I to noon, had just an(,'m« IreUt Iw seconds more L - ' Z t ^ 1 st d a ? " a e t i t l e o t ^ w l i m p r o v e A n y child's JuggIsh appetite means a sin colon. Correct this conditioi bd stasis, and see how quickly a jess, drooping boy or girl begins iat—and gain! The only “medi- | ” such children need is pure, dulterated fig syrup. Jilifonm syrup of figs is doing Jdorful things for ailing, sickly liren all over the United States. J your baby, boy or girl, is bilious pie-faced and duil-eyed ifoa Etipation—breath bad morning,, Jue coated all the time—don’t cathartics that weaken twenty of bowels! Instead, a little gin of figs that doesn't disturb it r stomach or bowels, but does Jon the lower colon—where fie.' Ible lies. Iature never has made a fioer- Itive for children; they all Iw I wholesome, fruity flavor of th California syrup of figs. lfi. bly vegetable, but every druggist it all bottled,' with directicw.; [in with it at once. Tour cMd soon be eating better and fed- j better. Keep on with the syrup gs a few days and see amariug Jrovement in appetite, color, ght, and spirits. Shildren who get syrup of figs, and then, keep well and avoid Jls. IOTICE: The bottlers of Coiilor- I Syrup of Figs respectfully van Ihers that the promises note Je apply only to the genuine prod- bottles plainly marked Cilr iEXIA. i f y e e d k e e p s k in a n d scalp clean h e a lth y , a n d to lay the id a tio n f o r sk in health in I e r life . T h e S o a p protects I w ell as c le an se s, th e Oio** l e n t so o th es a n d h eals rashes, th in g s a n d irrita tio n s. J Soap 25c. Ointment 25 and 50c. ^ Jprietors: Potter Drog & Chennai Corporation, Malden, Mass. eooi ho, <but Grandma knows the Quickest, gentlest way to cleanse System is with a natural lava like Garfield Tea. TryJt and I ivfiy. Ton-Iithankos! You IJ Orim- 1 rraodma. fAt. AUDrusststt/•- «,.§.E F0EE: CarileldTeaCo^P-O-BrooKmeflssJj I A nagging backache, with b ladder ir r e g u la r itie s ft tired, nervous, depre5,. Keeling m ay w arn of son]ie irdered kidney or bladder lition. U sers everyw here bn D oan’s Pitts. P raisedtefS Smore than 50 V earsbygrate jjusers the country over, so all druggists. !D A N S \ A DnMETJC I J iO Ji • \7m m N E T S IflE DAVlE RECORD. j^Tgest C irculation of A ny pavie County N ew spaper. jjjjcA L A N D P E R S O N A L N EW S R p. Martin and G. C. Hendricks Lade a business trip to Raleigh Iriiursday- \i,s D. P- Ford, of Winton-Sa- ’i-:ited relatives on R. 4 sever- T davol^w eek. JIarrli came in like a yonhg lion, Send here’s hoping she will go out lke a geutle lamb. Federal agent Fred Ratledge, of MGreeniboro, was in town one day !last week on business. Desmie th e sh o rta g e o f c ash in I Jlocksville all o u r folks seem to he I jn a good hum or. I John L. Foster, of County Line, Iwasin town Wednesday shaking !hands with old friends. Harry Stroud, of Brevard, speut Isunday in town with his parents, gjlr. and Mrs. C. F Stroud. G- L eagans, of n e a r C an a , w as g in town W ednesday on h is w ay to !Statesville on a b u sin ess trip . MissVirginia Byerly, of Wins- Kton Salem, spent one afternoon last gireek in town with friends. H William Howard, a student at IHigh Point College, spent the !week-end here with his parents. , Miss K a th ry n B row n, a m em b er Io fth e G reensboro school fa c u lty , ispeot the w eek end in to w n w ith |ber parents. G. C. Hendricks, C. B., Moonev. IDewey M artin and D. H. Hend- iricks made a business trip to Car- Utliage Fiday. Clarence Elam underwent an op- lljerauon for appendicitis at a States- ®ville hospital last week. His con- lidition is reported favorable. - J. H. Eidson, of Narberth, Pa., !spent Wednesday and Thursday in Itown on business ann left a frog Jskiu with us. Come again, Hub MissKathiyn Meroney returned Ibome last week from Columbia, S. I c , where she spent several days fwith her sister, Mrs, 'Hilton Ruth. Rev. and Mrs. G T Proctor and Miss Louise Stroud attended the Woman’s Missionary Union of the " j Baptist Church at W instonSalem ' f several days last week. ji David Stroud, of Philadelphia, ! svho has been spending sevetal weeks with his brother Robert, near i County Line, left Wednesday after- j r.oon for the cffy of Brotherly Love. -I, -IiiH i 11 1» P t * * * * -I11I- Il 1 -I- ‘I- ♦ ♦ ♦ ■» ■»» !Spring M erchandise Now Arriving Daily iWe Are Now Showing AU The Latest Styles In Ladies, M isses and C hildren’s Spring Footwear A t N ew 1933 Low Prices Big Lot Men’s Footwear a t E xtrem ely Low Prices ;Shoes For The Entire Family Visit Our Store When You Come To Town C. C. Sanford Sons Co. “Everything For Everybody” | SE E D OATS! W e have 100 bushels gocd seed cats w hich w e a re selling at 45 cents per bushei. W e carry a big line of Feeds, Flour and M eal. W hy not patronize D avie county mills and keep your m oney a t hom e. W e are still buying cotton and paying highest m arket prices for sam e. W e w ant you to call an d see us w hen you com e to tow n. W e will alw ays tre a t you right. Green Milling Co. F . K . B E N SO N , M anager N e a r S o u th ern D ep o t! Mocksville, N. C. HORSES and MULES F or Sale or T rad e-A b o u t 4 0 H ead, AU Y oung. Be sure to see this shipm ent. A t th e W alter C lem ent B arn. PHARIS & HOWARD Q The residence of James H. Mul- lis, at Harmony, was destroyed ty fi-e last Wednesday afternoon. Nothing was saved from the burn ing building. R I SPRING TIME I Is N early H ere. S G et your Stock and Poul-I* 3 try iii good condition by 3 Feeding G ood Tonics. ? $ W e C arry I Dr. Hess’ I and I Dr. LeGears’ I Tw o O f T he Best. 1 L e t U s Serve Y ou j! L eG iand’s P harm acy S On T he S quare 2 P hone 21 M ocksville, N . C. H “T H E SEED STO R E” FARM AND GARDEN SEEDS Highest Purity And Germination Red Clover' W hite Clover Sweet Clover Alfalfa Clover Lespedeza Sudan Orchard Grass Herd Grass Ky Blue Grass Rye Grass Lawn Grass D. E. Rape Pasture Grass Seed Corn Garden Seeds Flower Seeds Good Seeds Low In Price This Year M ocksville H ardw are Co. Hf T r S The Mocksville and Advance High cage teams split a hot double bill at Ihe Mocksville gymnasium on Friday night, the local girls winning 33 to 9 in a onesided battle 1 no the visising boys coming out on the big end of a 32 to 17 victory. Miss Loraine Bowden, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. F. Bowden, of R 2, a student at N. C. C. W., Greensboro, was one of the yonng ladies who made the hono! roll this season. Miss Bowden is a member of the Sophomore class, and is tak ing the home economics course to gether with her other studies. [ SALESMEN W ANTED—No Iay- 08s, wage cuts or hard times for Heberling . Dealers. We offer steady-year around employment i sell duect to farm trade full line home remedies and household pro ducts. Many make $40.00 weekly or more. Write quickly. G C. HEBER-LING COMPANY Dept, ijgj Bloomington. 111 . B. R. Baileyand son B. R. Bailey, Jr-, of Advance, were Mocksville visitors one day last week. This tvas Mr. Eailey’s first visit to Mocksville "since he went out of of fice in December, 1930. He was one of Davie’s county commission 's lot several years. Mr. Bailey has many friends in Mocksville who ate always glad to see him. Davle county officers seized two large moonshine factories in Farm- 'pgton township near Shady Grove hue late Wednesday and early Thursday morning. One of the stills was a complete copper outfit of large capacity, and the other was a large steam type plant. The operators were not present when the raid was made. The stills were not far apart. * W, P. Fry,: oT Cornatzer1 was placed under a $500 bond here Thhrsday for his appearance in Salisbury court yesterday, charged with possession and transporting liquor. Fry was arrested near Corpatzer Thursday morning by Deputy Marshal C. W. Hall, and DeputysheriffDavidGraham. His new V-8 Ford car and 39 gallons of' whisky werq.confiscated by Rowan county. O t ILLUSION: In India, the fakirs present a spectacle to tourists. Tw o lovely performers break bottles and lamp chimneys before the eyes of the audlence,and throw the jagged pieces into a box already filled with broken glass. They step barefooted into the box and do an Oriental dance in the glass without in jury. EXPLANATION: The performers toughen their feet in a strong so lution of alum w ater and thoroughly rub them with pulverized resin before they appear. They throw the freshly broken glass around the edges of the platform. The glass on which they actually do dance is very thick, heavy, and filed or ground sd that the sharp edges are rounded off. The girls just pretend*o dance on the sharp glass. Source: “Magic Stage Illusions and Scientific Diversions” by Albert A. Hopkins, Munn & Co., New York. Z t ’s F U jV T O B -E J tO O Z E B ... r r k m o r e f u n t o I n o w One of the tricks of cigarette advertis ing is to pretend that“H eatT reatm ent” is an exclusive process, making one cig arette better than any other. EXPLANATION s A Il cigarette m anu facturers use heat treatm ent. It is a routine process of m anufacture. T he first Cam el cigarette ever made was m anufactured under the heat-treating S Cop;ri£bt, 1033, It. J. Beynolds Tobaoco Company C A M C L S process. Every one of the billions of Camels produced since has received the necessary heat treatm ent. H arsh, raw tobaccos require inten sive processing under high tem pera tures. T he m ore expensive tobaccos, which are naturally mild, call for only a m oderate application of heat. H eat treatm ent never can m ake cheap, in ferior tobacco good. It is a fact, well known by Er*** |eof tobacco experts, th at C am els a re m ad e from finer, MORE EXPENSIVE tobaccos th an any other popular brand. This is the most im portant statem ent ever m ade in a cigarette advertisem ent. W eigh its words. C onsider w hat it means. T hen try Camels. Camels are fresh ... in the air-tight, welded H um idor Pack. N O T R IC K S . . J C S T COSTLIER TO BAC CO S A M A TC H LESS BLEND m , DA Vii i i e e m M a e K g v m a e. March 3. Fish Tale Is One For The Book. When bigger and better carp are caught in the Yadkin River, Albert Branch, of Elkin, will catch them. Mr. Burch went fishing last Fri day. Icisnotknow n what he was firshing for, but anyway after a few minutes he got a bite. And that’s where the fish tale begins. It is said that when the fish was pulled to the surface, it was so big that Burch took one look—and faint ed. According to the law of something or other, when Burch fainted the fish should have made its getaway and gone down in history “as the big one that got away.” But this didn’t happen. For the fish, in its glee at seeing the fisherman faint dead away, was so delighted that it started splash ing around and in doing so accident ally splashed the cool river water in to the unconscious man’s face. And that spelled the fish’s doom Because Burch revived, grabbed the line and after a tussle, pulled Mr. Fish out upon the bank. The carp was said to have weigh ed 23 pounds. It was 37 and one- half inches long and 22 inches a- round the middle at the largest point.—E'kin Tribune The Repeal Measure. We are now to have the same op portunity to vote out'prohibition that we had to vote it in In the minds of those who have their finger on the pulse of our people there is little doubt that the voting out process will succeed. Regardless of bow we feel about it here in North Carolina, the indications are that the necessary three-fourths of the states will ap prove the repealer. But thirsty ones face many Im patient days yet before the oasis in in tl*e desert is reached. The time limit for ratification by three-fourths of the states is seven years, but there will be a definite yes or no, long be fore that time. Congress will pro vide the machinery for calling con ventions, and legislatures of the various states will have to act. In the Senate, as was to have been expecsed, Robert R. Reynolds, junior senator, who had been elected on bis own wet platform, voted an emphatic aye, while Senator Josiah W. Bailey voiced his approval only because the platform of his party called for re peal. When North Carolina come to her decision about repeal, there will be many surprises one way and another. There is no discounting tbe fact that public sentiment in this state as ex pressed at the polls last November, indicate an about-face on the liquor question, but when it comes to make final decision for repeal, hesitating ones may feel the urge to free their. Ehoulders of the responsibility of bringing liquor back to the open, Carter Glass, one of the outstand ing members of the Senate, voted a- gainst the measure, for the good and sufficient reason that his colleagues failed to provide the Federal govern n e n t with specific outlaw of the sa loon. Hisparty platform may not have been so implicit, but from every ^ stump Democratic leaders pledged themselves against the re turn of the saloon, it would seem that there is no inconsistency in put ting it down in black ard white — Elkiu Tribune. Cheating Privileges. . Some of the legislators are making gestures to the tightening o f the election laws. One proposition would about abolish the absentee ballot, which should be abolished entirely. It would also leave the markers little standing room. AU of. which would be welcome. But those who may 'hope for changes in election laws looking to honesty in elections must remember that many continne to apt pear in legislative halls who have in herited the theory coming down through the years, very much in practice in most localities, that an election isn’t really an election un less there is cheating, unless advan tage is taken of all opportunities to cast and count as many illegal votes as possible. There has been much improvement in the public attitude in our State but when it comes to enactments that will remove mahy of the opportunities to cheat and im pose penalties that will make the cheating rather risky, always there is fear among those who have profit ed by the cheating that “this thing may go too far.”—Statesville Daily. “ Easy psyments” is the rock upon whic’i many a good ship "Credit-* has been wrecked. We regret that we were born 50 years too soon. We would like to live to see what a man’s place is 50 years hence. It is bard work now to find a wife who will do much for a husband; 50 years hence, we fig ure that roan will be a mere figure bead in bis own house, possibly the race will run out, we don’t know. He who keeps to many irons in the fire gets burned: The great China question, as. seen in most of our homes, is, “Who will wash the dishes?” SEMI-PASTE PAINT One Gallon Makes 2 1-2 When Mixed K U R F E E S & W A R D Administrator’s Notice. Having qualified as adm inistrator of the estate of Ira J. Wooten, dec'd Jate of Davie county, N. 0. Notice is hereby given all persons holding claims against said estate to prasent them to me for payment on or before Jan. 21, 1934. or this notice wil Ibe plea-* in bar of their recovery. AU ner- sons indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment. This Jan. 21, 1933.MRS. MARY J. BECK Admr. Ira J. Wooten, Dec'd. Sale Of Land Under Mortgage. By virtue of the power of sale con tained in a mortgage deed executed by C. F. Barnhardt and Maggie Barnhardt, his wife, to J A Sowers, on the last day of June. 1927 as re corded in Mortgage Book No. 22 , page 267. in the office of the Reg st- •>r of Deeds of Davie county North Carolina, default having been made in the payment of principal and interest as provided in the terms of said mortgage, notice is hereby given that the undersigned will sell At public auction at the Court House door, Mocksville, N. C., on MONDAY. MARCH 20,1933, AT TWELVE O’CLOCK NOON the following described real estate, iocated in Jerusalem township, Davie county. North Carolina: BEGINNING at. an elm on the West Bank of the North Yakin river. Mrs. M. E. Nails Corner and running S 45 degrs. West with her line. 40 chains to a stone; thence N 86 degrs. West 45 chains to an elm; thence N 4 degrs. W 23 chains to a stone; thence N 70 degrs. 10 10 chains to a stone; thence South 45 degrs. East 5 72 chains to a Btone on South side of bottom road; thence N 52 degrs. East 21 62 chains to a willow on the bank of said river; thence down the river to the beginning, containing 59 1-10 acres more or less. Terms of sale, cash on confirms' tion. This the 14th day of February 1933 C. FRANK SOWERS, Adminis- trator of J. A. Sowers, Deceased, Mortgagee RAPER & RA PER, A tt’ys. Notice-Sale Of Land. By virtue of an order made by the Clerk of Davie Superior Court, I as commissioner will sell at the Court house door In Davie county, N. C., on Monday, March 20th, 1933, at 12 o’clock m., at public outcry to the highest bidder for cash the lands de scribed below, situated in Shady Grove township, adjoining the lands of FiImore Robertson, Thomas Mas sey, I. E Hendrix and others bound ed as follows: Beginning at a stone and running South 5 chs and 13 links to a stone; thence West 20. degrs. 39 chs. and 40 links to a stoneTn Brind- les—now Thomas Masseys line; thence North 90 degrs. E. 5 chs and 13 links to a stone; thence East 20 degrs. South 38 chs. and 68 links to the beginning corner, containing twenty acres (20 acres) more or less, see Deed from E. W. Lassiter to A. fit. Robertson recorded in Deed Book No 21 page 434 Reg. of Deeds Office DavieCountv N C.. now the proper ty of J. T. Robertson -this land is sold to satisfy a judgement of foreclosure uuder a mortgage given by J. T. Robertson to G. L White -default having been made in payment of the debt secured-a judgement of fore closure was obtained in the Superior Court, this Feby. 14th. 1933. E H MORRIS, Commissioner Notice—Sale Of’Land By Commissioner. By virtue of an order m ade by Clerk Superior Court* I. as commissioner, will sell to the highest bidder for cash, at the court house door in Davie cpunty. N. C., on Monday, March 6th, 1933,'at 12 o'clock m., the lot described below, known as the Charlie Brown Cafe lot near the Depot, bounded as follows: Beginning at a stone Southeast comer of the original Jesse Cle ment lot near the well, thence N. one chain to a stake; thence west 50 feet to a stone in R.-M Foster’s line; thence South one chain to a stone R. M. Foster’s corner in side of Depot street; thence to the be ginning corner. This lot is sold for parti tion among the heirs of J. W. Martin dec’d. This Jan. 30th. 1933. Al T. GRANT. Commissioner. GRANT & MORRIS, Attys. Soap Sculpture Boon to Invalid C O A P sculpture has proved to be a great boon to invalids and shut-ins. Pictured above is A nthony Rogers, a patient a t the Olive View Sanitorium , Olive View, California. Rogers, who has been confined in bed for m ore than three years, ha3 found soap carving an interesting and am using pastim e. The inset shows a .statu e he com pleted, “China, the Captive.” This w ork won an honorable m ention which carried w ith it a cash prize of $25 in the E ighth A nnual Soap Sculpture Com petition, held in New York. In a letter to the N ational Soap Sculpture Com m ittee w hich spon sors the com petitions, Dr. W. H. Bucher. Superintendent of the Olive View Sanitorium , w here Rogers is a patient, wrote: “I should like to express my adm iration for the ad vantages this contest offers pa tients so situated as a m eans of stim ulating their creative im agina tions and the excellent effect it has on their m ental state, as well as the possibilities it offers to Occupa tional Therapy in general.” G tA iu e use Oi w liue soap as a i..e dium for sculpture has grow n ie- m arkably in the past few years Every year thousands of entries from all parts of the United States, and from foreign countries as well, are entered In the annual com peti tions for the P rocter & Gamble prizes, conducted by the N ational Soap Sculpture Committee. The N inth Competition, closing on May I, 1933, is now in progress. E ntry blanks and instruction booklets for the N inth A nnual Soap Sculpture Com petition will be sent w ithout charge on application to the N ational Soap Sculpture Com m ittee, 80 E ast U th Street, New York, N. Y. H hMhI 4 « * » M R. FARMER! W e are in a better position to handle] Y our C otton T han Ever Before We Appreciate Your-Business FOSTER & GREEN Near Sanford Motor Co. < .1. * fr .p -I. .I. >!■ .Ii .I. ft * »Ii .I. ft -I. *1« * >E * »_fc >1«»>? * * * * * fr * ■* * * * * * * * * * * *■ ♦ C. G YOUNG & SONS Funeral Directors Ambulance Service Phone 69 Day or Night Mocksville, N. C* SEE US FIRST. Let The Record print your Envelopes, Letter Heads Statements, Sale Notices, Cards, Tags,' Etc. Prices low. THE DAVIE RECORD. DAVIE CAFE P. K M A N O S, P R O P.I Next Door to Postoffice and 'Just as Reliable I REGULAR DINNERS 35c | AU Kinds Of Short Orders At Any Time In The Day’ I LET US DO YOUK JOB PRINTING THIS YEAR. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * , Our prices on all kinds of printing is the lowest in many years. We use the best inks, the best envelopes, letter heads, statements, etc., to be had, for the price. Let’s talk it over. THE DAVlE RECORD. USE COOK’s C. C C Relieves LaGrippe, Colds. Coughs, Sore Throat and Croup. In Successful Use Over 30 Years DR. E.C. CHOATE DENTIST Office Second Floor Front New Sanford Building Office Phone 110 Residence Phone .30. Mocksville. N. C. tHTt ......... n n tm iu u iiim sstg BRS T 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. W e w ant the im. p o rtan t news hap. penings from every section of the coun. ty. Dropusacard or le tte rifa newvo. te r arrives at your hom e; if your moth. er-in-Iaw comes on a visit or dies; if the son or daughter gets m arried or anything w orth mentioning, Old papers for sale. ttiniiiuKtun»nimi«mKnri»n»intnnmnainimi»nnmtni CAMPBELL - WALKER FUNERAL HOME Distinctive Funeral Service to Every One AMBULANCE - > - EMBALMERSj Main St. Next To Metbodist Church Day Phone Night Phone 4811 or 163 ♦ - - 'I Keeping Davie Peopl i * I Informed of ¥ ’ . J I AU Happenings In I T h eC o u n ty *¥ I Is The Mission Of You The kind of news YOU I want. . things that are o I interest to ALL people o the County, what is goin on, what has happenec where to buy the best £o the least money . * a brought to you each wee for the nomical charge o $1.00 Per Year t '★iti {* 5 * ■ I ' ... « r • •’ - - *« A;: I e w a n t th e im. | n t n e w s hap. f g s f r o m every on of the conn. J D r o p u s a card J t e r i f a n e w v o . Jrrives a t y 0Ur if your moth. I-Ia w c o m e s on I t o r d ie s; if the Ir d a u g h t e r gets J ie d o r an yth in g m e n tio n in g . sapers for sale. s m m n o a ^ERAL HOME J Ek’ery O ne EMBALMERS I Church Night Phone 4811 or 163 * ★ ★Ki * ★ ★ * * * * ★ ★ * * * Ii * * * * * * ★ * * * ********★***** ***** m s Y O U I Lt are people is iappen best ed, a Lch week charge 0 Year ** I**************** * %*** f; \ f' v :b >; JU C #J$Z POSTAL RECEiMS SHOW THE KECORD CtRCULATioit THE LARetsf IN THE COUNTY. THEV DONiT LIE; M l "HERE SHALL THE PRESS. THE PEOPLE'S RIGHTS M A IN ^ N , UNAWED BY INFLUENCE AND UNBRIBED BY GAIN. § § VOLUM N X X X IV .M OCKSVILLE, N ORTH C A R O L l|^ , W EDNESDAY. MARCH 15, 1933 NEWS OF LONG AGO. WbIt Was Happening In Davie Before Tlie Days of Automobile* and Rolled Hose. : (Cavie Record, March 9, 1910 ) H P. Williams and Miss Lula Barnevcastle were married at Ad v a n c e Feb. 27th. .; ItJrs w. T. Woodruff returned S last week from a visit to relatives IS > in W inston. I***************** Mrs. W. T. Stroud, of Statesville. , is \i;iiing relatives in town. G. A. Slieek made a busines trip g to Salisbury last week. Misses Marie and Helen Allison " Spent Thursday in Winston shop- fi| pi»e-Dr. W. C Martin returned home ! Monday from a visit to his father If at East Bend. Mrs. J- B Whitley remains ser- ! iouslv ill at her home in this city. : Miss Mary Mingers, of Winston, i spent Sunday in town the guest of i Miss Mary Hunt. I Mrs. E. H. Pass returned home K last week from an extended visit to Ifher daughter Mrs. Douschka SI Adams, in South Carolina. I C. V. Walker, of near Center, is Jg seriously ill and not expected to live. i!! Albert Green left Monday morn- i l l ing for Canada. We are sorry to lose Mr. Green. Roy Holthouser is spending a Jfew days vacation with relatives and friends among the mosquitoes in the wilds of South Carolina. R. H. Roliins1 one of our mer- "] chants, has purchased a 96-acre I farm near Ijames, JX-Roads from G, 1W. Green. J. T. Baity returned home Wed- I Besday from the North where he I purchased goods for his mammoth I store here.I C. C. Craven, of R. 2, moved fa| into the Saunders house on San- ford avenue Monday. S | Mrs, Cornelia Brown, 86, died B Pi Monday at her home in Cooleemee, Ip j after a lingering illness. She leaves | | several sons, among them being C. ^ S. and M. D. Brown, of this city. IP License have been issued for the Jg marriage of F. A. Smith to Miss IpJ Lessie Miller; Ed. 'Weaver to Miss |f§ Blanche Laird. • Jacob Cornatzer, 85. died at his i p home near Cornatzer Sunday, fol- Spl lowing a long illness. Kgj Ground is being broken for a Igl new wood business house, 36x40 feet, which is being erected by W. A. Weant, on his lot on Depot street. The building will be used for a store and harness shop. T. L. Holton will run the harness shop and R M. Ijames will put in jpl a stock of groceries. W A. Ellis and C. A. Hartman, | | of Farmington, were in town Mon day on business. U- C. Grubb, of Cana, was mar ried to a Miss Blaylock, of near Statesville, last Wednesday. Cotton is 14^ cents a pound and eEKs are only bringing 18 cents per dozen. Misses Flora Harding and Kate McMahan, who have been teaching Dear Hickory, were in town Thurs day on the way to their home near The following jurors have been drawn for the spring term of JDavie Superior court: J. D. Furches1 J. P- Foster, L. B. Walker, W. L. Crews, W. H. Foote, C. D. Lefler1 F. H. Bahnson, Milton G. Hendrix, J- W. Felker, J. R. McClamroch, B. Stonestreet, J. D Collette, W. H. LeGrand, J. B. Johnstone, W. C. White, L. M. Smith, F. G. Whitley, H. T. Brenegar, J. L. Glasscock, C. L. McClamroch, W. Barneycastle1 W. H Aaron, G. A. Koontz1 Robert Safriet, F. E- fanner. S. V. Furches, E. E. Vog- > J- H. Seats, W. A. Owen, J. A- Blackweider, G. A. Everhardt, I, Lowery, J. M. Richardson, Richardson. W. A. Griffin, T. M. piaish, David;-Myere.--- r- Enter Into Roosevelts “Promised Land.” (From The Yellow Jacket) N ext issue of The Yellow Jacket btings the United States into the borders of the much-talked-of ‘"Promised Land” of Employment, Prosperity, Repeal of the 18th A mendment, with Beer and Booze, and Lucrative “jobs” for Every body, Glorious D ay! Graod Oppor tunity! Matchless Panacca! As Moses led the Children of Is rael out of Egyptian bondage and oppression thru the Red Sea toward ward the Land of Canaan, so would Franklin D. Roosevelt, the ‘ miracle man” lead the United States, with its millions of jobless, its morigaged homes, its oppressive taxes, its staggering debts right out thru Muscle Shoals and other dam projects into the American Canaan of employment, cancelled debts, prosperous farming, lower cost of government and cheap light and power. These things will be ex pected by the people because the Democrats, thru spellbinders, news papers, and candidates, last year, taithfully promised the voters that if fleeted they would do all the a- bove mentioned things and more, and the voters, in the midst of their awful dilemna, marched to the polls and endowed them with full con trol of everything. But regardless of Roosevelt’s optimism, John Garner’s gall, or the Democratic-National Commit tee’s poison press bureau that work-, ed overtime try ip.g.,to m s fe iit Vap- pear ^ihat “5ld - Hoover’’-'^was 'tb’ blame for the depression and that the Democrats could set things go ing P. D. Q , every well informed person knew then and knows now that there is no sure quick cure for the deplorable mess that we got in to during the World War, and they know that but for the staying hand of President Hoover, conditions in this country would have been worse than they are. But about five mil lion Republicans became hyponotiz- ed by the sugarcoated sophistery of Tammany Hall politicians, joined the Democratic House and Senate. And now what do we behold? Here we are only a few days irom March 4th, with these same Demo cratic “saviors” developing cold feet. Confronted with the fact that they made a mess of cutting gov ernment expenses, they are now proposing to shift all responsibility upon the shoulders of Roosevelt and make him sole “ dictator” - of the United States. Every rule of rea son and common sense suggests that Congress, with its Democratic maj ority, should have gone ahead with expense cutting as advocated by President Hoover. But here is a Congress, in the language of the Democratic Baltimore Sun1 “ Ex hibiting itself as leaderless, listless, confused and inert, incapable of facing one vital problem that con fronts it, bogging down in tne ditch, driving its better grade men into open attack on their party’s incapa city.” And the Sun goes one: “ And there should be some reason for so amazing a spectacle—and there is. A t the bottom, the reason is a narrow partisanship from which the D em o cratic leaders seem unable to free themselves.” And then listen to this from the lips of Senator King, D em o crat, of Utah: “ We D em o crats have not the courage to put thru a real economy plan.” And there you are, fellow citizens. Just leave it all to R oosevelt. And then if R o o sev elt falls down on the job pack it all on R oo sev elt and ask the people to give them another chance. Wtis such political cow ardice ever before exhibited? And why pin hope on R oosevelt? If, throughout his record as Governor of New York for t at past four )^ears,-be-ever seperated from the DUMBER 34 Negroes Outrun Ghost. Believing they came almost face; to face to face with ghost, two tie-; gro youths, George James audi Stephens Dickensr almost rant themselves to death near Oak City, Martin county, a few nights ago;: The two youths traveling along the? highway declared they saw a white; object fall from a tree about three miles out from Oak City. When it; started rolling toward them, they? started a race of their owe. Stephen’ was leading a while and then' George would take his place. When they reached Oak City they had! run out of their shoes and were11 just about out of breath. They: fell exhausted in front of the drug store there, and a doctor was call :: ed to attend them. f As the two covered the three- miles in a very few minutes they yelled as they passed the homes a- Iong the road, daring not to stop: at any of them for fear their im-: agined ghost would overtake them.: Alarmed at the actions of the two: men. residents along the road, fif teen or more, are said to have fol • lowed into town to learn what it was all about. Fodder. Repeal Never Says Bishop Moore. Bishop Jobn Moore, of Dallas,' Texas, of the Southern MethodiBt church, declared in a statement . at Memphis, the past week, that sup porters of the eighteenth amend? ment “have no idea of allowingCi# is the most successful law 'ever. put. on the statute books.” Tbe talk of the wet cause becom ing stronger was denounced by the bishop as "merely their propagan da.” “The moral and religious leader ship of the country is againt repeal.” “The moral and religious leader ship of the country is against re peal,” Do you think the country will turn them down? Certainly not, or not the South, anyway. The Methodist, Baptist, Presbyterian and Disciple preaching are 100 per cent against re-establishing the curse of liquor.” Merchants Again Bun- Life may be one longsweet song, but the trouble is most of us have ^.Iot of trouble with out note. HJAdd to the list of caes: the fel |8w who borrows money from a Florida bank to buy real estate in ^California ' If and when the Leas come to spect our state prison, profession courtesy will prompt the news papers to refer to them as house guests rather than in mates Our legislators may regard mar riage as a union, but they are fix- ,.ng to do things to it that will Imake it open shop._ Now that summer time is almost here, we can curtail our electric |iil bygoingoutinto the yard a pong the fireflies to read the news- fapers. Any town that can produce a gangster willing to put another man on the spot in a racketeer is due the entitlement of a city. Looks like Charlotte doesn’t ;|ihy longer need to refer to census lgures to establish her superiority bver other towns in the state. f/'News item tells of a New Merico ^abv born with teeth We shall How disconnect our radio, until the i*dth paste crowd comes to a de- iision as to which dentrifiee work ed the wonder.—Statesville Record, i'-;: -------------------------- I: coed. Last week a guy solicited advertis ing from the merchants and business men of Monroe—and stung 'em as per usual. — The man carried a writing pad upon upon the cover of which a num ber of advertisements were to be printed and the writing material de livered to the Ellen Fitzgerald hos pital and which would be used by the patients whatever to do with the scheme, but the fellow made his prospective “advertisers” believe the doctor sponsored it. Theguy told his ‘advertisers” that he would print and deliver his 150 pads. Hedelivered only 50 to the hospital. We constantly hear the old gag “advertising pays.” Itdoes pay when properly and intelligently done, but money spent for some forms of advertising is entirely wasted. Verily a stranger viseteth us and tooketh us in.—The Monroe Enquirer Some boys are small for their age so are some men... payroll one Democrat for economy’s sake, we’d just like for some DemO' crat to give his name and his salary.- So you. people who are expecting to ssatt on the “ March” to the ‘ Promised Landff instafltef,' had better be well prepared for the oc casion, as there are . many dem o cratic slime pits on the way and the Red Sea lies ahead and Frank Iin D. Roosevelt as "Dictator” may decide that it is safer not to try to cross. Alfeady he has said it may take from three to five years to get across. Illinois Boy Giant. ■ Robert Wadlow, schoolboy giant »f, Alton, IU., celebrated his fifteen ..hbirthday Thursday and noted he ' ad grown considerably during the feet"S'in'Aes'tair&ia weighed >bMt> 301'pounds. Today he is 7 feet 8 I 2 inches tall and weighs 3 4 0 pounds; Last year he wore a size 31 shoe, but now he has to have size 34 made especially for him. The schoolboy, whose abnormal, but symmetrical growth is attribut ed to overactivity of the pituitary gland is studying elocution in his junior year at high school and wants to become a lawyer. A Hard Job. In trying to bring relief to a mul titude of people who are in need, cri ticism is certain and to be expected. The Master encounted criticism at every turn, and yet He was perfect. We have the utmost sympathy for those in charge of the administra tion of the relief funds provided by the government. They are damned if they don’t. Whenever the wage they draw for their work is not com pensation enough for thd worry of it all. Doubtless they have made many errors; aid many have been given to those who didn’t deserve it, and many may have been overlooked who did. That is the fault of a system hurriedly outlined for an emergency Therefore criticism of the admin istration of these funds is all wronsr, but there is pienty room for criticism of the principle of the dole. When it is all over we will have a lot to lie down. We will have created men dicants. graduated from our teach ing dependance on government, beg gars with less incentive to provide for the themselves when conditions allow. Except in dire disaster, a commu nity that cannot or will not provide tor its own needy, does not deserve to exist. It would be hard to take care of the want existing here right now. but the hardship would build character into those who give and those who receive. Neighbors'all. the giving and taking of charity would be placed on a higher and more significant plane. ■ -But with a slice 1Sf money from the government it is different. Those benefiting from it accept it as matter of course, and those who watch it dispensed unwittinfily lapse into that dependence on government wLich more than any other one thing is undermining our economics. We forget too, that when the govern ment gives; it always takes —States ville Record, That’s Fit To Print” A. country exchange carries the slogan: “ All the news that’s fit to print.” Well, the Varerian prints all the news whether it’s fit to print or not. When we get our eye on 1 newspaper item, does anj'one imagine for a moment that we start in looking it over for fallen arches, rheumatism or bone spayin. to de termine whether orliot it’TfiT?~Not >ve. We put it in cold type and ■send it broadcast to an eager, an xious world. When an item comes in by mail or telephone, do we start thumping its chest, sticking spoons six or eight inches down its throat and then command it to say “ ah” ? Far from it. We leap upon it with avidity of a squirrel scaling a nig- gertoe tree, and it is as good as printed right there. When a country editor starts lying awake nights, or even just lying, trying to determine whether or not an item about Flick or Jones or an extra big rutabaga is “ fit to print,” he soon wears himself down to a mere skeleton and the under taker begids greeting him without worrying himself sick over the spirit tenth of a degree of fitness any news item may contain. So, if you have a news item, bring it in, phone it in or send it in, and if it isn’t “fit to print” we will find a place where it will fit and print it anyway. Here the old, old rule is reversed: Any news is good news.—Valier (M qnt.) Valerian. ey Foolishly. In an address before a civic club at Southern Pines, the past week. Struthers Burt, Sand Hills author, severely criticiz jd Fred W. Morri son, of Raleigh, director of the North Carolina relief department for the lavish waste of public money for the relief of the unemployed on pro jects which in reality means nothing more than the digging of holes and covering them up again for the pur pose of giving work to the unem ployed. Burt told the club that he had made an extensive study of the way funds are being spent in North Ca rolina and to his knowledge only five towns were using the funds on pro jects of a permanent nature. He re ferred to one town as using the funds for patching dirt sidewalks, others are using the funds for noth ing more than to . clean back yards and vacant lots which will soon grow up again. He surther stated he haid called on the state highway department in the past in reference -to a planting scheme for the state highways, and he was given answer by Chairman JefFress that there were .no funds a- vailable for this work. Now the state has, through the reconstruc tion finance corporation, funds to be used for the relief of the unemploy ed on projects of a-public nature, he said. He pointed out that a multi tude of towns over North Carolina are writing the office of Morrison for instructions as to how the funds shall be spent. In the 20 or more instruc tions laid down by Morrison and tne relief department little emphasis have been mentioned as to the im portance of beautification of our state highways, he said, but instead the money is being spent foolishly on projects that have no permanent nature whatsoever. Billy Sunday StiH III. Billy Sunday, noted evangelist who had plauned to conduct a revival at EUzabeth City in the spring wiil be unable to fill his engagement on ac count of illness. . He suffered a breaddown in Des Moines. Iowa, re cently and has been carried to Cali- fornia to recuperate. , If his health permits Mr. Sunday will be asked to fill his Elizabeth City engage ment in the fall; Recognized At Last. Soon after Richmond Pearson Hob son, then a lieutenant in the United States navy, attempted to bottle the Spanish fleet in the harbor of Santi ago, Cuba, June-3,1898, by sinking the partially dismantled collier Mer- rimac in the channel, he made a visit to Statesville to his aunt, Mrs Marv Pearson Davis. Lieut. Hobson w< s then the hero of the Spanish-Amer- can war. Hi3 adventure was a dar ing one. the sinking of the Merri- mae being carried out under the fire of the Spanish fleet and the fortifi cations on shore. InLidentaIly the Spanish fleet wasn’t blottled. after ward making a dash and being de stroyed by warships of our navv. but this did not impair the courage of the adventure undertaken by Lieut. Hobson and his party. Afterward Lieut. Hobson resigned from the navy and was elected to Congress from Alabama. He is now living in Los Angeles. A few days ago Con gress voted him the Congress voted him the congressional medal of honor for the Merrimac adventure. It is near 35 years since Hobson and his party risked their lives under gun fire and took the additional chance of a grave in the water. Congress took its own time to give him recog nition but his North Carolina kind red and friends will be glad to learn that recognition came while he is living.—Statesville Daily. Newspaper Space Saved Kim. Harvey S Firestone/ noted tire manufacturer, returning from a trip to Europe, found himself in debt :to?theil 5anks' tqihe ^.une-of: #45,000 ■ .000 and business in the dumps ” * “ I told my sales manager to go on a vacation,” he said, “and then I placed full page newspaper ad vertising iu every city in the United States. Within two months I sold 18,000.000 tires and reduced my indebtedness to $32,000,000.” Mr. Firestone is willing to give due credit to newspaper advertising, and he out voices the experience of others who have employed news paper space consistently and in telligently There are businesses, in nation and community, that are uncon sciously advertising their deaduess in their absence from the newspaper page. We of the older days won • der why the children no longer cry for Castoria—lack of advertising is the answer.—Ex. Too Much Speed. Every time the automobile manu facturers bring out new car models they refer with pride to their in • creased speed. Instead of 'being something to brag about, excessive speed is rather a disadvantage. No body has any business tearing ov^r the country at the rate of eightv miles an hour. Half that rate of speed is fast enough for most people and especially for those who have nothing to do after they get to where ever they are going. A large part of the motor car accidents are caur- ed by unnecessarily fast driving. Less speed is needed instead of more. —Ex. The Really Vital Question. Will Congress take time off from beer and decide the proper amount of alcohol for a small car?—Omaha Evening World-HeraId. A Common Taste. An Atchison minister politely in forms the Atchison Globe that he Iikesshort editorials And the Globe not to be outdone, informs the min ister, with equal politeness that it admires short sermons.—Kansas City Star. A poet sent an editor a contribu tion entitled “ Why Do I Live?" The editor answered, “ Because you sent your contribution by mail in stead of bringing it.” S ifil IHv I i 'f: ■;:i i ■I i ; w ; i' 11 III m m . ■ m : W S tf ; J. :.?'■*£ IS ^iii !ijIiidi i;^4:W5 ;isl !» S t f g mm :h'..V' y$,:'r :?■}[[$ il f-; :^;v.'- J-., <-V. * I 3 .x iiv U Ir:!! ' ill-U- ;:••• I« #i i' c,f# B im ipi! -A:' I l I S i •-§ I-U ;# ! ij: ; te p f m mI HS 4iIl « SB Sifl I Pl I I 2?*> ' [tea N ! W1J I I t H t D A vm Kzcom. U 6 cm\im, n.fclARCH f|. *93$ ^ T m s o m w d avie c o u n t s “scrip.- THE DAVIE RECORD. C. FRANK STROUD - • Editor. Member National Farm Grange. TELEPHONE Entered atthePostoffice in Mocks- yille, N. C.. as Second-class Mall matter, March 3.1903. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: ONE YEAR. IN ADVANCE - $ I 00 SIX MONTHS. IN ADVANCE - $ 50 Things are never so bad but what they could be worse. It doesn’t cast anv more to smile than it does to frown. Sa smile, darn it smile. ;_________ Folks found put last week that they could live on a mighty little cash if it was absolutely necessary. Sometimes folks get what they vote, for and sometimes they don’t. It is mighty hard to please every body. Our democratic friends promised us a "new deal” when President Roosevelt was- inaugurated—and we got it. The mail carriers and other gov ernment employees had the laugh on the rest of us last week. Thiey were the only ones whose pay checks were worth anything. Some of our democratic friends tell ns that Franklin Roosevelt is a second Moses sent to lead us out'of the wilderness.. Here’s hoping it won’t take Franklin forty years' to get us out. Senator Bob Reynolds says .he will not introduce a bill during his six years in Washington. Ifall.of the other Senatprs would follow in Bob’s footsteps maybe this country would be able to get on its feet a- gain. ______________ W hat this country needs is con fidence in the government as well as plenty of money. Everybody should pull together and boost Brighter days are ahead of us. The darkest hour is just before the dawn. It was said by the jokers before the inauguration that all the banks in this country would close their doors just four months after Mr. Roosevelt took his seat as presidents The jokers were wrong—the banks closed the day he was inaugurated. The 40 days of groundhog weath er came to an end yesterday. The hog was on his job most of the time. Our coal bin has had to be replenished five times this winter, and we are glad that the coal dealer had a heart. Former sheriff McSwain wants to be U. S. Deputy Marshal, and Robert McNeill wants to be assist ant attorney. Well, the boys may land these jobs, but if there are. as many hungry democrats after them as we think, their chances will be slim. Carl Gersh, Raleigh newspaper reporter, gets off some good puns every little while. H e remark ed one day last week that his check used to be returned to him stamped "no funds,” but now they are returned with "no banks" stamped on them. Too many directors, welfare workers assistant workers, super visors, etc., are required to handle relief funds, remarked a gentleman to us the other day. Well, as many hungry pie hunters as there are a- broad in the land, something has to be done to keep them at the pie counter. We were promised peace, pros perity, plenty of wine and beer as soon as Mr. RopseveIt was elected president. He has been elected and inaugurated, but up to this good h rnr not a single promise has been fulfilled. We want the prosperity ancj the peace, but can get along without the booze. *; The folks who have it in thfcir heads that the Federal Government is giving North Carolina all this Federal aid money, are badly mis taken. The money that is being given out in salaries and for IaboV is going to be paid back to Uncle Sam by the taxpayers of North Ca iolina, and don't you forget It. Many Important Cases. The spring term of Davie Super ior Court opens on Monday morn ing with his honor Judge Michael Schenck on the bench and Solicitor John R. Jones, of North Wilkes- boro prosecuting. There are a total of 75 cases .docked 5 of which are for murder. It is understood the Scott murder case will be tried on Wednesday and a large crowd is expected" for this trial as it appears to be one of the most sensational ever tried in this county. Scott is charged with the murder of his girl wife in the United Variety Store in October 1931. Mrs. Scot! was the daughter of the Rev. and Mrs. L- L. Smith a Methodist Minister ot Taylorsville who was formerly a pastor in Davie county. John H . Hanser is due to be tried for murder of his son in-law Fred Styers but the defendent is a patient at the Baptist hospital Win ston Salem and his case is not ex pected to be tried this time. O. B. Koontz and Charlie Jor dan are in jail charged with the murder of George Tucker of near Advance last October. Other murd er cases are McKinley Dulin, color ed for killing another negro in an automobile wreck and Willie H ar bin of near Harmony for killing Tom Smith an aged negro of near Redland in an automobile accident. Harbin has not been taken. At the last term of court it was ordered that the 4 election law vio lation cases be peremtorily set for the opening day of court. The men charged with violation of the election laws are: G. H. C. Shutt, 2 counts, Sam Burton and Clyde Burton. Drinking, selling, transporting, driving drunk and other violations of the prohibition laws seem to be on the wane as there are only 11 Ii quor cases on the docket, compar ed with 50 or more at previous terms of court. Atsummary of other cases fol low: A. w. d. w. 6, larceny 5, se duction 1, assault on female 1, a- bandonment 2, assault on officers, I, periury 1, c. c. w. 4, nonsup port 1 Last Confederate Re union. The North Caiolina Confederate Veterans whose ranks are rapidly being thinned by death will meet in their state reunion probably for the last time sometime in May or June at Monroe, Union county, that city having extended an invitation for the meeting. General W. A. Smith, of Anson county, is state commander. There will probably be less than 100 vet erans in attendance as the youngest veteran now is 85 and the majority of them living are in their nineties. Spring Vacation April I Greensboro, March 16.—April 1 is the date set for the beginning of the spring vacation at the Woman’s collegr of the University of North Carolina. The state institution’s 1,670 residents have permission to leave for their homes at noon Satur day, April 1. They will return to work Monday morning at 8:15 o’clock, April 10________ Mail Order Bride. J. Henry Tharpe1 aged Elkin citizen was married Saturday to Mrs. Ida Kinder McClain, of Illi nois, who came to Elkin to wed her aged bridegroom. Thebrideis a native of North Carolina but has been living in Illinois more than 25 years She met her husband three years ago while on a visit to her mother at Statesville. Tnrrentine News. Mr. and Mrs. E C Laerle spent one night last week with Mrs. T. P. Foster, of Moeksville. - The. many friends of Mrs.^Foster will be glad to know that she is improving at this writing. Mr. and Mrf. Wade Nail and daughter, of Augusta spent the past week-end with Mr. and Mrs. C A Nail. Mrs. Wi’e? Howard and two A Broke Crowd. The court house boys, together with the editor and many other Mocksville citizens were broke last week. Clerk of Court Hartman vowed he'bad but six cents. The Record man had 16 cents and one of the welfare officers had 32 cents. Register Geruer Foster said he was broke and would be until he could get his salary check cashed. Sheriff Smoot didn’t sav he was broke but acted like it. He was prevailed upon to cash a small check for one of the broke crowd but turned him down cold. Financial Agent Ro- - coe Stroud had plenty ot cash but said he had received instructions from higher up not to cash checks for anybody. Deputy Miller de clared that he was worse than broke and was waiting patiently for the bank to open so he could get a check cashed. When inter viewed Esq. Caudell refused to say how he stood financially. Only one ot the county commissioners was in town and he was too busy selling goods tO be interviewed. The other commissioners were out of town and perhaps did not have enough gas in their tanks to drive in town and console with the other couuty officers. Rev. W. I. Howell, when interviewed, reported that his total cash assets had been reduced to 15 cents. As this article is put into type the aforementioned fellows are still broke but are hoping that better times will soon be here. Holton Supervisor. We accidentally heard Monday that I. L- Holton had been appoint ed tax supervisor for Davie county by the county commissioners at their meetiug ou March 6th. We had understood that thn appoint ment was not made the first Mon day. We don’t know who the tax listers will be, or whether they have been selected yet We try to print the news when we can get it, but sometimes we can’t. Some Banks Open. Seven or eight banks ia Ndrth Carolina opened for business yester day, among them the Wachovia at Raleigh and Winstou-Salem, American Trust Co., and three other Chrlotte banks. Other banks in the state will open today. It is not known when the Davie banks will open for business Mrs. G. C. McCiamroch Faneral services for Mrs. G. C. McCiamroch, who died at Asheville- Monday, were held at Oak Grove Methodist church yesterday morn ing at Jl o’clock, and the body laid to rest in the church graveyard. Mrs. McCiamroch was Miss Mattie Boger, of Oavie County before marriage. Her husband died in Asheville a short time ago and his body was brought here for burial. Onedaughter sur vives. NO. WILL PAY TO THE ORDER OF- MOCKSVILLE. N. C.— — COUNTY OF DAVIE NORTH CAROLINA -193_ THIS CHECK IS ISSUED AGAINST FUNDS ON DEPOSIT AND WILL BE REDEEMED AT PAR WITHIN 90 DAYS BY THE FINANCIAL AGENT OF DAVIE COUNTY. DOLLARS FINANCIAL AGENT DAVlE COUNTY The R « .,d force k«p. tO T S .m rd .y »o,oi»S « * «H P „ so „ « know. This « i p was used Saturdsy iu pay.u® oS the federal relief worker., U I, ,,, , U « d by D. R. Stroud, County Ft— A * * »1 1 - »• * J l p U redeemable within go d.ys of issue. It i, not known how long the eonuty *11 be forced to » sen p. Fork News Notes. Mrs. J. M. Livengood is able now to be out again, after having a severe attack of tonsilitis and Au. The con dition of Mrs. M. M. Anderson, is a- bout like it has been for a month she is-still sonfined to her bed, George A. Carter, is quite sick with pneu monia. Mr. and Mrs. John Stewart are re joicing over the arrival of a fine.8 lb. daughter, Betty-Jo. Mr. and Mrs. R.- K. Williams, of Guurchland, visited their relatives hero Saturday. Mrs. F. M Carter, of Moeksville. spent a few days here this week with her sister, Mrs. W. D. Hodges. Mrs. Arch Livengood, and Miss Elouise Bailey spent Thursday in Moeksville. - Mrs. J. Frank Burton spent Mon day in Moeksville having some dental work done. Mrs. Travis Barton spent tte week-end in Winston-Salem with re latives. Miss Noro Carter, is now in Wint- ton-Salem visiting her sister, Mrs. Lee Walser. Mrs Eliza Sheets, of Lexington, spent a week here at the bedside of her sister Mrs Anderson. Mrs. C. L. Aaron, and Mrs. D. M. Bailey visited in Moeksville Thursday Lenten services are being held each week now at Ascension Episco pal church on Wednesday afternoon?. Our community is pround of the improvement that has been made on church grounds, and cemetery. M. L. Spry Passes Mr. M- L. Spry, 61 . died at his home in Cooleemee Monday night following a long illness. Funeral ser vices will be held at Turrentine Bap tist church this afternoon at 2:30 o’clock, conducted by his pastor, Re?. A. J. Stoudemire, and the body laid to rest in the church gra- eyard. Mr. Spry is survived by his widow and a number of sons and daughters, among them Mrs, F. R, Leagans, of Moeksville;______________ You Can Join Marines. For the first time since last fall the acceptance of applicants for original enlistment in the Marine Corps has been resumed according to an announcement made by Major E. M. Reno, Officer iu Charge, Marine Corps Recruiting Station, Post Office Building, Savannah, Ga. During the lull in recruiting a number of vacancies in the Corps have occured and the Savannah District which comprises the States of Virginia, North and South Caro lina, Florida, and the eastern p a rt;§§ of Georgia has been assigned a ' H limited number ot these vacancies.' 3 Y oungm enin this vicinity be- §§ tween the ages of 18 aud 30 who S j are at least 68 inches in height and ‘ Hj§ have completed high school who' desire service in the Marine Corps should apply or write to the above address. Honor Roll For The 1st Four Months OakGrove 1st Grade —Gilma Angell. 2nd Grade—Laura Gray Bowles, Dorothy Clement, Wm. W hitaker, Douthit W hitaker, Wm. Summers, aud‘Ervin Hepler. 3rd Grade—Junior McCiamroch. 4th C rade-M argaret McCiam roch, Helen Clement, Rnth Mc Daniel and Edgar W hitaker. 6th Grade —Irene Angell. Ijames X Roads News. Miss Bessie Chaffin s p e n t Saturday evening with Mrs. Pink Chaffin. _ Born to Mr. and Mrs. Burtin Tri- vette a 4 1-2 pound daughter last Sunday. . , ,Miss Susie Peoples visited Mr. and Mrs Alonzo PeoDles Sundav. _ Mr. and Mrs. Corman White, of Winston-Salem visited Alonzo Peo ples Sunday.Mrs. J S. Holland was at the home home of Mrs. W. V. Gobbles Tues- d8Miss Mable Chaffin spent the week end with her parents. John BIaekwelderspent last Sun day afternoon with F. H Lanier. Barn Peoples, of Cana and Richard Spry, of Salisbury was the visitors of Miss Susie Peoples Saturday night. Concord News. Rev. J. 0. Banks filled his regular appointment here Sunday at 10:00 a. m Miss Rath Lagle. of Turrentine spent Sunday with Misses M argaret and BelIe Daniels. Mr. and Mrs Ray Graves of Ken- ersville spent Sunday in our commu nity visitintr relatives. Mr. and Mrs-. Robert Foster and son, Bobby Mack, spent the past two weeks with the formers parents M r.' come, and Mrs. Bob Foster of R. 1. Miss Elsie Foster who is he keeping for Mr. and M rs-Hfti'' Barnhardt of near Spsncer s» S Sundav with her parents, Mr ■ Mrs D. C1 Foster. Mr. Phillip Jackson and u- daughters, Messrs. John and Wife Jackson of New York spent tf>' week-end with Mr. and Mrs. J. 5 Jackson. Mrs. Phillip Jackson ttj children remained for a few week The Sunday guests of Mr. ®] Mrs I.C Berrier were Mr. and Mr J. C. McCulIoh and daughter, 1! Moeksville and Mr. and Mrs. Ci Massey and son of Lexington. Miss Pauline Lakey spent a fa days the past week with her siits Mrs. John Stewart, of Fulton. Little Misses Hilda and Fai Ratledge daughters of Mr. and ... Abe Katledge1 of Winston Salem 1; turned home Saturday after speij. ing about four weeks with Ike grandparents. Mr. and Mrs. H. i Deadmon. Mr. Ratledge whots operated on for appendicitis b turned to her home. Mrs. G. L Lakey is visiting k daughter Mrs. John Stewart of Ful ton: Mrs. Stewart is on the sick Is It frequently requires moreab® and managership to live withinoiii § income than it does to earn the e- » TrinTT"” '” » 'i'in " " " " n m n iiiiiin iin iT iiin iiin im irn iiiin iiiiiiiiniiiinTn STILL S A L E GOING ON Our Big Sale is still going strong. We are offeriw wonderful bargains in Dry Goods, Notions, Clothing,: | Sweaters, Uaderw ear, Shoes, Hosiery, Etc. Big gains in Groceries, Hardware and Furniture. You can afford to buy now, even though money is scarce. No such bargains will be offered again soon. Call and look: | over our big stock before you buy. We are always f to see you. FRANK HENDRIXJ B u s 1 n e s s W eV e D oing A s U S U Every department is filled with merchandise that you need, and you wiH find the price tags are marked right. Let us keep business on the move. This is the best time to buy since the World War. Let us all have the “Buy American” spirit, and carry on. Soon business tions will become normal again. condi- The last scrip used in this section ot the country was in 1907-1908, during tfie administration of Theo- d ire. Roosevelt. The script now daughters, Elva and Ruth, of Betnei b :ing used is under the administrat spent one afternoon the past week • „ Cratlt u„ D with Mrs. E C Lagle and Mrs. A. I,on of F ra—lln Roosevelt Seems C N ail.like the Roosevelt’s believe in script. v. W e Are Receiving New Shipments In Spring Millinery, Ready-to-Wear, Shoes and Piece Goods. We invite .you to come in and see these new spring creations. j! C. C. Sanford I “Everything For Everybody” Sons Co. Moeksville, N. C* o f P o r tr a it ofl i m *A Crow I By ELMO sd JOCENT cxl.l drawings, [ P lesjOf ha o flh e con to revive I of the U nl inhabitant N orth An have also I ices of a doServes tial ObIiMl These arc Indians t<| for most about the red man w l tively untouched by til Jfluences of the ivhitel Forem ost am ong til Ils that of George CsT Ifls singularly ap proprj Bit was ju st 100 years i Bon his w o rt of record^ Blife and custom s of tH Isissippi W est. C atiil IP a., in 1796 and in a a ■wishes studied for th j |h e began practicing Ilng fond of excitemen li t difficult to stick td I voted alm ost as muctj !draw ing and paintintj j taught, as he did to One day In 1830 a L “F ar W est” who w erl JcU with the G reat W l I stopped over In P h ili Jon the streets and w | (fine form s and noble Ito give up his law p i 1 1° m aking a collectiq I which w ould show, _ (they looked and how The result w as his I I country in 1832 and I devoted him self to th l !thousands of m iles b] (am ong tribes which . I tamed as they had bI I and he found plentv <T danger in his w ork.] [w here, portraits of - j Ings of the scenery on I falo, of hunting IiM j JJionies, social custorl I Illustrate the life an d l j of th e W est M ore t!| I of old* trading posts! npon w hose sites now cities, so th a t even I valuable record of . ^alue of this other p i j ®reat enough to placq [ debt of gratitude to I C atlin not only pai! but he m ade a big c l [ ^ress1 w eapons, seal articles of clothing, I j of these he m ade a tl I “ is collections in th l w^ere attracting la rg l I t seem s unfo rtu n i ; *>ave profited m ore fr<| [ *or In his age Jle M built up, became all he had left w as « lnOre of his Indian pail Seil but gave them tl won for safekeeping F his life w ork and of them w ere destroys swept the institution! 482323484823234848235348482353 RECORD, MOCKSVILLE. N. C. S “SCRIP.” -193_ d o l l a r s Jl a g e n t d a v ie county ■ ever issued by Davie ^ belief w orkers. I1 is ' Js of th e federal payroll. This J n ty w ill be forced to Usethis ts . B ob F o ste r of R i I E lsie F o s te r w ho is I1mic k fo r M r. and M rs! & near Speneer 5 K a r i cirem'' 3 P h illip Jack so n and Iters M essrs. John and WiIH I n , “ f. Y o5k s^ n t th |n d " n th M r. and Mrs J w In . M rs. P h illip Jackson'm» pn re m a in e d fo r a few week= I S unday g u e sts of Mr. aiirf 9. C B e rrie r w e re M r. and Mrt I M cC uIloh a n d daughter if Iv iile a n d M r. and Mrs. Catl ■y an d so n o f Lexington. s P a u lin e L ak ey spent a fa Ih e p a st w eek w ith her sister S o h n S te w a rt, o f Fulton. lie M isses H ild a and Pauline W ge d a u g h te rs o f M r. and Ura K atledge1 o f W inston Salem re Ii ho m e S a tu rd a y after spend. J b o u t fo u r w eeks with their ■ p aren ts. M r and Mrs. H. M. [non. M r. R atled g e who mj |ted on fo r appendicitis has re I to h e r h om e. C . L L akey is visiting her I te r M rs. Jo h n S tew art of Fu|. I M rs. S te w a rt is on the sick list J re q u e n tly re q u ire s more ability Ilfjla D a g e rs h ip to live within one’s Ie th a n it d o es to earn the in- L E IG ON W e a re offeriim Ids, N otions, Clothing) Dsiery, E tc. Big bar- jd F u rn itu re . You can Jm oney is scarce. No iin soon. Call and look W e a re always glad IENDRIX H in n n o s I eed, and you will business on the Far. Let us all business condi- Lo. r r I j c k s v iile , N* * I 5 S o f +Vi a r l y P a i n t e r s } A m e r i c a n I n d i a n M ft f W 7 In d ia n s o f th e N o r th e r n P la in s by C arl B odrnef (From Vale Vntversitu Press - Pageant of A/nericd’Vb Portrait of Geoirqe Catlin t J1 6 p a ISSlls E x p lo rer, T e a s tin q W ith C hief M ah-to-fcoh-pa o f t h e M a n d a n T r i b e - Fmm Cotltn’o dm Sketch made dbcjt !834 M K m —.sstm■IST i l l NI ix 5 t* a r,le u(16IA -I872) C ro w H u n tin q C a m p nby william de Ia M. Caty 3 a d { l i ) d s . W e in v ite J By ELMO SCOTT WATSON !CCEXT exhibitions of native art— drawings, paintings and other exam ples of handicraft—in various parts of ihe country have not only served to revive tile interest of the people of the U nited States in the original inhabitants of this continent, the Xorth American Indians, but they Iiave also served to recall the serv ices of a group of men whose w ork deserves a better fate than the par tial oblition which has been theirs. These are the early painters of the Indians to whom w e are indebted for most of our pictorial evidence about the red man w hile he w as still com para tively untouched by the so-called "civilizing' fluences of the w hite man. Foremost among the nam es of these artists Is that of George C atlin and m ention of him Is singularly appropriate a t this tim e because It was Just 100 years ago th at C atlin had started on his work of recording the appearance, social Iite and customs of the tribes of the trans-M is- Eissippi W est Catlin w as born in W yoming, Pa., in 1706 and in accordance w ith his father’s vishes studied for the profession of law, which he began practicing in Philadelphia. B ut, be ing fond of excitement and adventure, he found It difficult to stick to his business and he de moted almost as much tim e to his avocation of drawing and painting, in which he w as self- taught, as he did to his vocation of law. One day In 1830 a party of Indians from the ‘Far West” who w ere on their w ay .to a coun cil with the G reat W hite F ather in W ashington Etopped over In Philadelphia. C atlin saw them on the streets and w as so delighted w ith their hne forms and noble bearing th at he determ ined to give up his law practice and devote his life to making a collection of paintings of Indians which would show, after they w ere gone, how they looked and how they lived. The result was his first Journey to the Indian country in 1832 and for the next eight years he devoted himself to the work. H e traveled m any thousands of m iles by canoe and on horseback umong tribes which w ere still as wild and un tamed as they had been in pre-Columbian days atid he found plenty of excitem ent, difficulty and danger in his work. H e m ade paintings every- 1Cbere, portraits of chiefs and w arriors, paint- ItteS of the scenery of the W est, of herds of buf falo, of hunting life, of Indian games, cere monies, social customs—everything th at would Illustrate the life and country of the wild tribes of the West. More than that, he painted scenes of old trading posts and United States forts, hpon whose sites now stand im portant American cities, so that even if he had not left an in valuable record of the Indian, the historical value of this other phase of his w ork would be Peat enough to place Americans under a heavy debt of gratitude to him. Catlin not only painted hundreds of pictures but he made a big collection of Indian objects —dress, weapons, scalps, objects used in games, articles of clothing, ornam ents, etc. W ith all ef these he made a tour of the East, exhibiting bis collections In the larger cities and every where attracting large crowds. ft seems unfortunate th a t C atlin could not bave profited more from his w ork w hile he lived, 'o r in his old age he lost the fortune which he bad built up, became a bankrupt, in fact, until dll he had left w as his gallery of some 500 or more of his Indian paintings. These he would not ball but gave them to the Smithsonian institu tion for safekeeping as an im perishable record of bis life work and of a vanishing race. Some of them were destroyed or injured in a fire which E,vept the institution in January, 1805, but the r A n O s s q e S c a l p D a n c e ” rem ainder which are still preserved in the Smith sonian are valued at not less than $1,000,000, which, if anything, is an undervaluation, con sidering their im portance. Catlin died in 1872 a t the age of seventy-six. The sam e fate overtook m ost of the paintings of another fam ous artist’ John Mix Stanley. For the sam e fire in the Smithsonian destroyed all but five of Stanley’s collection of more than 150 paintings which represented 10 years of work among 43 different tribes on the southw estern prairies, in New Mexico, California and Oregon. Stanley w as bom In Canadaigua, N. T., In 1814 and died in D etroit the same year th at saw the death of Catlin—1872. At the age of four teen he became an orphan and w as apprenticed to a wagon m aker in Naples, N. T., w here he spent his boyhood. In 1834 he moved to De troit and the next year his latent genius be gan to show itself in a series of portraits and landscapes. In 1838-39 he made his home in Chicago and Galena, the fam ous lead m ining center in Illinois, and a t this tim e he first be cam e interested In Indians, making trips to F ort Snelling, Minn., to paint them . From 1839 to 1842 he made his home again in the E ast and continued w ith his painting. H is first im portant w ork among the Indians w as done in 1842 when he visited the Indian country in A rkansas and New Mexico and made many pictures of Indians and Indian scenes. The next year he w as In w hat is now Okla homa, painting am ong the Cherokees, the Creeks, and the D elaw ares as well as some of the tribes in Texas. The year 1845 found him again In New Mexico and by this tim e he had painted 83 canvases which he. exhibited in Cincinnati and Louisville. In May, 1846, Stanley returned to the W est and painted the fam ous Sac chief, Keokuk, the wife of Black H awk and other notables of th at tribe. In O ctober of th at year he visited Santa F e to paint some more pictures but instead he joined the fam ous m arch of General K earney and his dragoons from Santa Fe to San Diego, taking p art in several engagem ents which m arked the ! phase of the M exican w ar th at w as fought In California. Going north the next year Stanley found some more excitem ent aw aiting him, for he narrow ly escaped being in the W hitm an m assacre when . th a t fam ous m issionary, his wife and 11 others w ere killed by m alcontents of the Cayuse tribe. H e had another narrow escape from death a short tim e later when he returned to San Fran cisco to take a certain ship for the return to New Tork via Cape Horn. H e barely missed the ship before it sailed and it w as lost a t sea and never heard of again. Next Stanley went to H aw aii w here he painted the portraits of the fam ous King Kam aham eha III and his queen, by John Mix Stsnley-ISItS which now hang in the governm ent museum, form erly the royal palace, in Honolulu. B eturning to this country in 1850 Stanley ex hibited his pictures in various eastern cities and in 1853 he was appointed artist to the ex pedition sent by the governm ent to explore a route for a Pacific railroad from S t Paul to Puget sound. Before starting on this expedi tion he deposited his collection of Indian paint ings in the Smithsonian institution. Various at tem pts w ere made to have congress purchase the collection for the nation but nothing cam e of them. The pictures rem ained the property of the artist, so when all of them except five w ere destroyed in the January, 1865, fire in the Smith sonian, Stanley suffered a great personal loss. A. list of early painters of the Indians would not be complete w ithout including In it the name of Carl Bodmer, a Swiss artist who accompanied Prince M aximilian of Wied-Neuwied. when th at distinguished German scientist made his journey up the M issouri in 1832-34. Bodmer not only "left posterity a priceless heritage of Indian por traits and pictures” but he also, like Catlin; ‘ made draw ings of forts, fu r trading posts, bat tle scenes, etc., which are invaluable historical records. In the picture by Bodmer which is re produced above are shown three typical w ar riors of the plains (from left to right) a Mis souri, an Oto and a Ponca. Until a few years ago there was living in New York city another early painter of the Indian whose work takes rank with th at of the artists previously mentioned. H e w as W illiam De La M ontagne Cary, a New Torker who in 1861 with two companions m ade his way up the M issouri river from S t Louis and during the next 13 years put down on canvas scenes from the fast- vanishing frontier which are among the m ost valuable records of life in those days which we have. O thers who m ight be listed, even if lack of space prevents discussion of their contributions, are: C ap t Seth Eastm an, a teacher of draw ing a t the United States M ilitary academy a t W est P o in t who saw service "in the Indian country and was chosen to illustrate “H istorical and Statistical Inform ation Kespecting the History, Condition and Future Prospects of the Indian Tribes of the United States,” issued by the gov ernm ent in 1850; Carl W lmar, a German artist who lived among the Indians for six m onths in 1857 and some of whose paintings are preserved in his adopted city, St. Louis; F. 0. C. Darley, the leading illustrator of books and magazine articles three quarters of a century ago; and George D eForest Brush, who is still living and whose "studies of the Indian have helped to es tablish the redskin in an im portant place in the art history of America.” (© by W estern N ew spaper U nion.! Q uotations T h at Show H ow H istory “R epeats” One of the pleasantest occupations in the world is looking back a t the past w ith a superior smile. The Golden Book M agazine recently had an am using collection of perennial quotations for you to throw a t the heads of the prophets of doom: It’s strange th at my m int hath not gone this eight or nine years; but I think the fault of the want of money is the uneven balancing of trade.— Jam es I of England to his Parlia m ent' (1620). There are tim es when we cannot see. one step ahead o f us, but five years later we are eating and sleep ing somewhere.—Clirisis, “The Wom an of Andros.” Money is of very uncertain value, and sometimes has no value a t all and even less.—Thom as Carlyle. It w as jis true as taxes is. And nothing's tru er than them.—“Mr. B arkis.” HOW TO STOP A COLD . AS YOU CAUGHT IT A N e w M effio d Doctors Everywhere Are Advising ‘ FOLLOW DIRECTIONS PICTURED BELOW ~ Take BayerAspirin according to direc tions in package. Dnnk Fuu Glass of Water, If throat is sore, crushand&issolve S Bayer A spirin Tablets in a half glass of warm water and gargle according to directions. Almost Instant Relief In This Way It you have a cold—don’t take chances vWith “cold killers” and nostrum s. A cold is too dangerous to take chances on. The simple m ethod pictured above is the way doctors through out the w orld now treat colds. I t is recognized as the QUICK EST, safest, surest way. For Jtw ilI check an ordinary cold alm ost as fast as you caught it. T hat is because the real BAYER A spirin embodies certain medical qualities th at strike a t the base of a cold alm ost INSTANTLY. You can combat nearly any cold you get sim ply by taking BAYER A spirin and drinking plenty of w ater every 2 to 4 hours the first day .and .3 or 4 tim es .daily, there-; after. If thro at is sore, gargle w ith 3 BAYER A spirin Tablets crushed and dissolved In a half glass of w arm w ater, repeating every 2 or, 3 hours as necessary. Sore throat eases this w ay in a few m inutes, incredible as this m ay seem. A sk your doctor about this. And w hen you buy, see th a t you get the real BAYER A spirin Tablets. They dissolve alm ost instantly. And thus work alm ost instantly w hen you take them . And for a gargle. Genuine B ayer A spirin Tablets dissolve w ith speed and complete ness, leaving no irritating particles or grittiness. G etab o x o f 12 o r bot tle of 24 o r 100 a t any drug store. Ask your druggist about the recent price redaction ^ n the XOO tablet size Bayer Aspirin. S T \MO TABLETS ARE GENUINE BAYER ASPIRIN WITHOUT THIS CROSS I S o o t h e s W h i l e Y o u S l m v e Only C n t i c n r a S h a v in g C re a m contains the emollient properties of C n tie n r a which soothe and heal the skin while yon shave, doing away with the necessity of using lotions. And what a wonderful after-shave feeling! A skin that is smooth, cool, refreshed and invigorated. At your dealers or sent postpaid on receipt of 35c. Address: Caticara Laboratories. Malden. H er Cold is Leaving as She Enjoys a Qood NightfS Rest Sbe has a very bad cold . . . yet she's sleeping sound as a log . . . get ting the blessed rest her body needs . . . and all the while her cold is leaving. She applied Penetro before she retired, and Penetro is dealing that cold a knock-out blow. Penetro, th e m u tto n snet salve, stops colds quicker because it penetrates four tim es deeper than ordinary cold salves. Penetro, with its base of highly refined m utton suet, goes deep within . . . where it breaks up congestion and quickly drives out that cold before ordinary salves and methods get started. Penetro does not stain or soil bed clothes and sleeping garments, be cause it’s stainless and snow-white. A sk f o r i t b y name: Penetro,25c a jar. The 50c economy size contains th re e tim e s as m u c h as the 25c size. The $1 family I size contains seyen 1 times as much as the 25c size. ASK FOR IT BY NAME P E N E T R O TH E MUTTON SUET SALVE Prevent and relieve stuffy head colds with Penetko Nose and T hoat Drops (contains ephedritte). Clinically tested and approved by leading nose and throat specialists. Brings instant relief front sinus trouble. Penetro Nose and T hroat Drops, generous she bottle, 35c. Large bottle, joc. Orpr 100.000 Jobs Onenlnff. information difficult -to obtain. SenU SI for list of thousands; how to apply. WALTER SMITH. HENDERSONVILLE. N. C. WE BDV DOMESTIC RABBIT _ SKINS. Write • for Information. I.ONf, ISLAND FABM PRODUCTS. 117-81 M. nook Creek Blvd.. Rosetlale. L I.. Netv York. 01 14572514 RECORD, MOCKSVILLE, N. C. I f ... r r ■. :L -L "Ml IjS-v!til ■IS li.ii !g Wi- 111 if W a s H i s F a c e R e d ? By OsborneTHE FEATHERHEADS S o V o u V E B E E fI W AM TlNS- T o R E A D .O 'H B lO R Y ' f C O M E V o u V E N EW ER RBAO •T H IS C O M P L E T E S E T D E H ,S t h a t Vo u e o u f f H T , T E N VEARS A < = 0 fr i t s Th e c o m p l e t e w o r k s O P O 'H E U R Y ALL IN O U E VOLUM E— -t'TE E E E V WAN TlM i f To REA D H lS SILlPP FOR A L O N E - TiM E I WAUT 1Tou T o UWDER.STAMD THAT TH A T ism T SUM Kl h a t > s r e a l READiMG-N M o re -J u h k Y E o o k s I a m p w i t h a lC t h e G ood Li TeRATuRE WE HAVE SHAT YouV E NEVER. READ HMMM! S T E P OVER. H E R B . A M OM ENT!! MOW, TO ALL SET Fo r . a FLOCK O F G o o O READlMG-!P O Z 2571111 urn Pooch PunningByTed O’LonghlmO Vntcn Kmv>r«FINNEY OF THE FORCE A U . HOW, SM A R T Y - W H A T A R B T JO S -S ' P A N T S M A D B O P ? STtU R e N O W AN Vslwy DOBS HEi N B E D A B LA N K E T? HASN'T H BBNOUSH CLOTHES NOW ? Y J E L L - N O vJ M B B B B -T H B Y C O U L D B E M A CEi O F A M lW D A UCSHT B A R K D oU Y Y e R . THINK. Th is i s l o v e l y ? IT S A BLANKE-T I M A D E F o r M V N EW D O S ' X ON Y B E . S IL L Y ! — W HAT D O W E L L - HOW 'B O U T H IS P A N T S ?You MEAN a c l o t h e s t % O Along the Concrete UTlJEP Eff- W CHRISTBNED (Copyright. W. N. 03 □ D I Our Pet Peeve O -IfiAt WILL SEEM *, 5AVE60/H6 , TOlHOtP (Copyright. W. K lf.> t k M BOBBY THATCHER-Guest Of Honor V H O U O By GEORGE STORM M I h e b o y s ’ ^•^BNTHOSiASM FO R P IP E SMOKING W A H e o A S YHEV S A T FACING SACH OTHER IN s i l e n c e WITrt C u r io u s l y DRAWM P A C E S , LAYING THE" P IP E S A S iO E ON OHE PRETEXT A NO A U O T U H R . H O L O I a i n Y .. C O M E IN O F P T H E P O R C H Q U IC K A H O T U B S V fe H E A D .......... F E E U M ' S O G O O O M Y S E L F . TH A T W A S F lN S O F VOU L A O S T O B U / ^lffHIIHIIItlW T O B A C C O F O R O u O W ASH, A n O I'M _____________. AA iGHTV G L A D YOU O O T THEAA P iP E S B R O K E INI T O SHOW AliY A PPR EC IA TIO N I'LL AAAteE* .--------------- S O M E C O R N 6 R E A O A N O F R V U P A ) O H , N O , O F C A T F IS H F O R Y O U - J f W E G O T T A ■23 --------B S G O iN ' H O M E P R S T T v q u i c k , THAT IS . I O O ;ht. 1932. by The Bell Syndicttc. Inc.) I a i n V h u n g r y ®kl b i t h e r . StMATTER POP— So, William Revised His Estimate I F ] -Ha t i t w o -A F P l e s A m j Y o u •AS Y E -H M E .F O T 5 OKI E- -tjov-V Wl A MV W o u l ’j) I -H a v e . l b F t ? J W \ . V j i u u i A n j i By C. M, PAYNE i f _© The BeU Syndicate. lnc.1 t 9 f j G E O R G E W A S H I N G T O N 'S T R A V E L S 56 By James W . Brooks Jkx L o ao C o cn w a llis AFtEfo 0N5DCESSF0U.Y TWIN© TO G E f AWAY FOlM YORfc- Toiim c o m m a r i a u i e p th a t s u rre n d e r. ikejiTable. AMEEVtSB OACE- WAS SUG6E5ItD AT THE WIDOW MOORES House , s r t a standing , a n d here, the so r ren o er t e r m s WERE AGREEOOpOrt SE-(W EENREPRESENrAtiueoFri)ETto ARMIES. NOT FAC. OlSttNT STANDS A GRANrtfc StbN tt MARKING THE EXACT S M T UPON WHICH THE SCEPtER. OF RULE IN TtlE NEW WORLD WAS tRANSFERCEO FEWI ViING T O C trttE H . Cepyrijtrf Iftt hy Junta W. Bmtt AU Bl|bf« BMenrcd Rislerieslly Cerreel Sketehtt Br CALVIM TAPER >. ' v w m w t i A ho so on octobec w ,nsi the ecm srt surrenoereo . - CbRNWALUS CLAIMING ILLNESS OFFERED HIS SWORO TiIBJUGH GENERAL OHARA. WASHINSlbM REFUSED Xo "ACCEPT lTFRoM AN OFFICER, in f e rio r . IN RANH. AND NAMED GENERAL LINCOLN TO R eceive t h e s w o rd . As t h e D efeaT ed s o l d i e r s s ta c v ie o ARMS KlEIR BAND PLA V Ep/-m e WORLD IS OPSIDE DOWN' T ltE AMERICANS STfiOoii o p YANREE DOODLE* AND WASftNGTbN STANDING NEARBY CE MARRED AS IF TO HIMSELF, Y riE WORK IS — CONE AND W E q PO N E . BRING ME MY HORSE." K NOW LEDGE AND PFiSeparate tlie tiling .. , lieP the thfngs you b elieve'i Iu tw o heaps. ' ' llleUsj RUNDOWN, M:, . . , With monthly0^ r * H R -J o w n ^ aV4u weakening backache or s|j 3 and nvrvi is, *h* t i i l ? Prescription. Miss Mav BHk S rilt of 1677 R ailroad St., Ay«V<ta pains in m y stomach, S 5: “Uh--------------- Y a d Ci,;my meals and became ,»able to get a good Ui8EtVrt^ j K.. ?»& I ..............................fouFd H . i ^ i i I &U the tim e and ,UUmj hom e about half the time I 50 Favorite Prescription anti Ofric-V z S ftSi provem ent soon after start;.-.* fclSfe In perfect health today.” 81 ,l* I c; Write to Dr. Pierce’s C|!f,t. «. N. Y„ fo r free medical a,ivift. Learned by Experience H e knows the water best Fhj1, w aded through It. ^ COLOS-HUNG OH HtHD TjF ' * ■x r ___________ju idI J E w as a n easy victim to Cold5- M jJ ' a,= .2 EP fF1nZ -uSld she St^ssLrfliH « W R tablets. H e seldom catclhs col* n, W hen he does th ey are quietly broteum m safe, dependable, all-vegetable corecS-,- N a tu re 8 R em ed y —strengthens and rtrcbv, bow el action as n o other lasative caa-£S aw ay poisonous w astes which iw>k» yen sm^ tib le to colds, dizzy spells, hcadacbcTh* o u sn ess. W o rk s ~(Ie a s a n tly t Ioo.N o griping. T ry a box. 25c—a t yourdruggist’s ._______________________ / / m I i N f ^ Q uick relief for acid I U v V l d tion, heartburn. Only I t P arad o x ical, but True H e th a t has most time lw« to lose. N A S A R elieve all dryness and irrita tio n by applying M entholatum mght and morning MENTHOLATUM W A N TED SALESMEN AND DISTRIBUTORSLarge established candy mamuactue has several good territories opes fc Georgia, Florida, North Carolina. Sontli Carolina, and Tennessee. Car and I. required. For details Address HUGGINS CANDY CO. NashviHaTen BRACE UP! . D ry this "niglitcaf) ——J —. Lazy m uscles mean that p o is o n o u s intesbns w astes are sapping»«® F 'sp't ' T e n e rg y . Why continu* I L i I fe e lin g run-down art slossish?A “nightcap”*f HSS GaHieId Tea, for sowdHE weeks will piit you -on yaa' EH feet.” <At all druggets). B i SAMPtE PRCEt CarfietdTeaCo., p. o. r “HG/ I j LK ____________r « .T" fT w GARFIELD#? [ dN tdu^JaxtduxVJiatt WHILE THEY LAST 3-4 WEEKS OI.U CIlUI B lo o d testcd , P u reb red Iiects, iWfi O., to n s, W h ite R ocks, Lcsboffl- ««i500........................$55 60 . . . *100........................ 12 25 ... *AU b re ed s of d a y old chicks.H. B. Sprimrer, (Sue. Nonnaii IInUMf* ____________K N O X V IL L E . TL.NN. ^ M m w T g iil P 1V H E R E is positiveljno •H. aspirin y o u c a n buy.r*" gardless o f higher price, I"41 dissolves more quickly or brinp more prom pt relief from pa* a n d colds than S t. Josep■ ,, Genuine Pure Aspirin. ASK FOR IT BY NflMfj The 60e size of St. Joseph • A v-:0 reduced In pnce to 50c. The 5C< more than 8 times as many tablets ,,,i nrflf The o aken of St. Joseph’s A--^iru3Ive mend Penetro, the mutton su«t w-1- * . rvj. PenetroNose andTluoat Drops. 2 Jc and _ If you are one of the m ilhon4. u >■ must get up several tmiea a as . ■ your trouble is probably Juo foea _ irritation of the bladder o..E acidity of die urine. Then ju-t GOLD MEDAL , HAASLEM OIL C A P SO I** I years this line old pirt" j 'ucd millions. I®- 35/. I m e. fr '.KWVl S Y N O P S I S I At Boston, In the fateful I 1 ,-« Colin Cabot, ardent I L herly, bids good-by to his I C ." e -Pat” Fayerweather,! Irtanch IoyaUst but herael| “ Li.- He goes to join IJT m m r at Cambridge. A. * -pjet, to the ContuientalJ J he is mustered into tl ,Jt. Amos Farnsworth. C H A P T E I ^ — 3— a W hich Colin C abot W ith the Cam p and Ii and Falls In to a B; j| \\ shington and Gem Bliodc Island, a big, illndlv, gray-eyed m an voice w ere sitting t| Billy the m ulatto Slav. Jmander In Chief, who Ifciro at M ount Vernon, Into the office. Genet shook the young m an’s Jng presented him to member of his staff sa s JIv boy, I hope thni Interested you.” It has set m e to I Of w hat?” the Gem 4 Colin, overaw ed in t| fhcse great men, blusln rassment. “I—I am thinking is of sm all m fS The G eneral smiled, in p s I shall be a bel Ilian you.” -e Roassured but stiill yoiin i m an said : I I iiave seen the bai lia^edness, the rags- ^Displaced dem ocracy Jiave sensed a growingl J think th a t I know wr I Lriciously, as 'tyes of th e boy, Gene| jjaid “You a re a New r j am told th a t you ar. perception. I shall * your opinions.” Colin began w ith a er, sir, if I shall e Igain, as I am now. now nothing of real bad a few skirmishi nen, but th at is not prations behind them note from Its exactioi So they are unlike an; the world. T heir Btrong. M ost of them Iu ,,neighbors. T here are ^ n d women on th e fi ^ o whom the w ords w| ither. sister, brother, nuch. They a re as 3rcn. T heir i.idigna nent have abated, gcrops are going to wi P y is In need, he foi Jerty and thinks of land wool. H e has n |tlie British. They a !starvation and freezi Icold months. H e mi I supply of ammiinitioi Iciothing—or die. Oi imostly poor and many fpaid. with needy fam| J My boy.” said the J discovered our great -^fthe need of money. r,j5a part of the line t ■M may be some slight ! you would like to go Colin w as express! |privilege w hen they I to break fast It w as f hoe-cake, tea, pres [peaches, beefsteak. I toes. A s they sat [ said: “My own brealcfai cake and tea. Whei is here, the cook th to cut a figure.” Encouraged by thi continue his com m a sym pathetic and am his company comman both laughed. Greene sa id : "Ge* this boy can be mor tongue and his pen t and a m usket.” "T hat m ay be," swered. “I have pj him.” H e asked the bos as to his m ilitary I riven an account of| Eoston G renadiers, been field work. O-, returning to Ington' dism issed w ords: • “You will please half an hour In ridi your sw ord and pii H e w ent out into young m an and thei confidential to n e: Pounds. W ill you lnS It to Farnsworl him know th at It will see th a t he gets Farnsw orth. H e cel>nt soldier." C aptain Farnswoi arm s w ith a squad Colin returned. RECORD, MOCKSVILLE. N. C. Io W L E D G E AND Be . S raie the things you w In s s you believe, » S lieaps. ‘hie tw P O W N , NERVous M « v J hivwith E i / E S S V '> i:i J K L P j rption. Miss May Bell? Ir ?rito I Railroad St., Aumista ntMhetv,I :»>• stomMh. cS?i S,ys: VI tiIih and became yen,- we cj“ a"d Cnj0J I set a good Bight’s P , , , 1 Ua Jtime and found it uw. littS on," Ibout half the time. I loot Tiry » s2 It Prescription and nouP r’fict« > Jmt soon after starting 1 1 biE m let health today.'1 10 u* U. Be to De. Pierce’# Cl;., Ifor free medical IdviTe. ' B“Hi, Learned by Experience I ciunyS the w ater best wi,„ , I through it. 'laI COtOSHUNC OH P*6 & m I C olds Quick las an easy victim to colds-and th£ ■s On so long-until she suggested XriS Haclets. He seldom catches coldsrS Be dots they are quickly broken S tv’ Iependable, aU-?egctaW I s Rcmedy-strengthens and rertfe Sctioo as no other laxative can-IS!? Sr,sonous wastes which make you222 Y WldSs dizzy spells, hcadach<^b| Iilyt too at your IlV IS w 9-uick. rclie^ffora^d,in'1's«'tion, heartburn. Only 10c. I P aradoxical, b u t True J tlu t has m ost time has done Re. IM T A T iO fI I R elieve a ll dryness and \ irrita tio n by applying M entholatum night and m orning. W A N T E D :SMEN AND DISTRIBUTORS e ust&bUshed candy manufacturer several good territories open h a, Florida, North Carolina. South ia, and Tennessee. Car and 1200 red. For details address SlNS CANDY CO. NashviHetTenn. r B V k n a W I e r ij -this "n ig fd c a p ' Lazy m u scles mean that p o is o n o u s intestinal w a s te s a re sapping your en erg y * W hy continue fe e lin g run-dow n and slu g g ish ? AMn!gMcapMof G arfield T ea, for several w eeks w ill p u t yo u ‘ on.yow fe e t/* (A t a ll druggists)* SAMPLE FREE: CaHIeIdTca Co.. P. 0. Brooklyn, H, Y. iA R F I E L D M ^M alukid.Jwadivefyuxh WHILE THEY LAST WEEKS OLD ('Iiuiusn,.,... o.-iU-d, Purebred Reds. BuffOrp' 8 Mtons, White Rocks, Leghorns. ^ I .................?55 60 •; iHi Jeds of'day old ciijcks.ISprineer. (S ac. Norman Hntcne™=' I iiS'OXVlLLE. TEN>. R flS V T H ll I H E R E is p o s itiv e ly gp aspirin y o u c o n buy* *** lrdiess o f h igher price, l«* wolves m ore quickly or bring >re prom pt relief from PJi d colds Uian S t. Jo S O P b nuine P ure A spirin. ^oiWs Eatgest SeUerat K F O R IT BV N A M J, I 60c size of St. Joseph’• Asp:nD ^Qtaini b in price to 50c. Th* TOci eg * ^ Kan 8 times as many tablets a^ i iiillM _ maker* of St. Joseph s AjP, J tfe jpd 9 Penetro. the mutton suet cow ^ics, Bo Nose and Throat Drops, 2Sc an —*■ -JT - , 'At N lghnI you are one of the Ilust get up several tiroes » , fcur trouble is probably ^ boces3 * Eitation of (he Hiujder oT fc try I giidity of the urine. Tbcn J ^ T GOLD MEDAL 5 - haaruem o n . CAPSUi urm , Jitioa _ i Gold JY H E MASTER OF- 1 CHAOS j|Irvinq B achelletv r$JZ. Br Bsctolln-^ SYNOPSIS At Boston. In the fateful month of July, ..,5 Colin Cabot, ardent young lover of Lrtr bids good-by to his sweetheart, Pa- 5 L 11Paf Fayerweather. daughter of a I ncA loyalist but herself at heart a ^IjL" Ho goes to join the Revolutlon- iry army at Cambridge. After paying his respects to the Continental idol, Washing ton, be is mustered into the company of dpt. Amos Farnsworth. CHAPTER II — 3— 3 jn which Colin Cabot G ets Acquainted VVith the Camp and Its Com m anders and Fails Into a B ritish Snare. Washington and General G reene of IplAode Island, a big, smooth-faced, I tindly, gray-eyed man w ith a deep Itoioe. were sitting together when Ijtilly the mulatto slave of th e Com- Inmndcr in Chief, who had long served lhiin at Monnt Vernon, ushered Colin Ilnto the office. General W ashington I shook the young man’s hand and hav- I jug presented him to the m ost trusted !member of his staff said: I 1My boy, I hope th at the cam p has llnterested you.” “It lias set me to thinking.” "Of what?” the General asked. Colin, overawed In the presence of I these great men, blushed w ith em bar- jrassment. tT - I am young, sir. M y !thinking is of small account” Tne General smiled, saying: “Per- | haps I shah he a better judge of It ] than you." Keassured but still abashed, th e Iyouag man said: ' I have seen the bare feet, the semi- f nakedness, the ragged clothing, the [ misplaced democracy of spirit. I j have sensed a growing discontent and II think that I know w hat is under it,” Graciously, as he looked Into the I eyes of the boy. General W ashington said, "You are a New E nglander and [ I am told that you are a m an of keen I perception. I shall be glad to hear j your opinions.” ColiD began with a sm ile: "I won- | der, sir, if I shall ever be as brave I egaiQ as I am now. These people j know nothing of real war. T hey have I had a few skirmishes w ith th e red men, but that is not w ar. Five gen- I orations behind them have lived re- [ mote from Its exactions and penalties. [ So they are unlike any other people, in i the world. Their fam ily ties are i strong. Most of them have lived farfrom j neighbors. There are perhaps no men I and women on the face of the earth to whom the words wife, husband, fa ther, sister, brother, m ean quite so much. They are as sensitive as chil- I dren. Their indignation and excite ment have abated. W hen a m an’s crops are going to w aste and his fam ily Is in need, he forgets hum an lib erty and thinks of bread and butter and wool. He has nearer enem ies than the British. They are the danger of slarvation and freezing in the long cold months. He m nst keep up his supply of ammunition—wood, food and clothing—or die. O ur soldiers are mostly poor and many of them are un paid. witli needy fam ilies a t home.” “My boy,” said the Chief, ‘‘you have discovered our great w eakness. It is the need of money. We are going to < part of the line today w here there may be some slight activity. Perhaps you would like to go w ith us.” Colin was expressing his joy in the Privilege wnen they w ere summoned to breakfast. It was a sim ple m eal of hoe-cake, tea, preserved berries and Peaches, beefsteak, and baked pota toes- As they sat down the Chief said: “My own breakfast is alw ays hoe- cake and tea. When G eneral G reene is here, the cook thinks it necessary to cut a figure.” Encouraged by these great m en to continue his comments. Colin gave a sympathetic and am using picture of ms company commander, a t which they both laughed. Creene said: “General, I think th a t this boy can be more useful w ith his 'obfiue and his pen than w ith a sword ■mu a musket.” That may be.” W ashington an- Idm"*1- "I have plans in mind for Ho asked the boy for inform ation give° his njEitary training and w as an account of his w ork in the Eoston Grenadiers. Much of it had Oou field work. On returning to the office, W ash- Ppon dismissed Colin w ith theseWords: Eou will please return to us In an hour in riding boots and w ith ’ “r swnrd and pistol.” «0 went out into the hall w ith the ' ubE nian and there said to him in a “ niidcntial tone: “H ere are five ini if” 'Vil1 you oblige me by Iend- J1," J t0 Farnsworth and do not let win °'v t^at It comes from me? I Fnre8ee tll;,t lle sets a furlough. I like «.ii stvnrPh. He will make aD ex- wWat soldier.” - aEtain Farnsworth was cleaning PfjlJt wlth a squad of his men when “ returned. Calling the captain W .W .U . S E R V IC E. aside he gave him the money. ■ Amos w as overjoyed. His face glowed when th e young m an told him th at W ash ington had heard of his valor a t Bun ker hill and had a high opinion of him. “T hat puts my heels In the air proper.” said Amos. ‘T m floored. I could kiss his boots.” “W hen we understand the big Chief, w e shall all love him,” ColIn began. “H e’s trying to build up an arm y, and an arm y is impossible w ith out a respect for officers. T heir word m ust be law. If we were to argue about commands, we’d be a congress and not an arm y. Every man must learn to obey w ithout question or a brigade of women arm ed w ith rolling- pins could drive us out of camp. You’re the big chief in this company and you m ust keep us in mind of it. You m ight have to put me on the wooden horse some day and you couldn’t do it if I called you ’Amos.” ’ From end to end of the big camp th e sowing of this seed had begun. “W hich I’ve thought o’ th at fre quent," Amos answ ered. W hen I git back there’s goin’ to be a new leaf turned over. I’m a-goin’ to straighten my neck an’ talk severe. T here’s too m uch Amos'in’ all over this arm y.” D ressed for his ride, Colin returned to general headquarters. A dozen horses and grooms w ere in the door- yard. G eneral W ashington and mem bers of his staff stood in front of the house. H e presented Colin to the G enerals M ontgomery, Schuyler, Thom as and H eath. T h ey w ere soon mount ed and oft a t a gallop, a squad of groom s following. W ashington rode a splendid w hite horse. In the diary of th e young m an is this e n try : “W ashington is a grand figure in the saddle. From his big, plum ed hat to his spurs he seem s to be as much a p art of the horse as the w aving mane and tail. I have never seen a man who sat a horse so perfectly. Since he w as a boy a good p art of his life has been spent In the saddle. H e Is as much a t hom e there as a bird In a bush. T he year he w as tw enty-one he m ade a journey of six hundred miles on a horse's back.” T hey had a sw ift ride tow ard the M ystic river. The sound of lively can nonading caused them to halt about a quarter of a mile from the line. Leav ing their horses w ith the grooms they w ent on a fo o t Colin w alked with the C hief and Greene. “T here’s a slight disturbance on the front caused by' some' changes we are making,” said the Chief. “Now we shall see the old hero,” G eneral G reene said to Colin. “W ho is the hero?” “M any call him ‘Old P u t’ Of course you’ve heard of him ?” “Oh, certainly! Old Put has been In every m an's m outh and It’s apt to slip out w ith an oath when the boys discuss his bravery a t B unker hill.” . The w ork w as In charge of General Putnam , who cam e to welcome them. H e w as a short stout man, w ith a large head, a fat ruddy face, and hair alm ost w hite. H e had a touch of the back-country dialect. “You are m aking good progress, gen eral,” the Commander In Chief re m arked. “W e be, sartin,” the old m an an sw ered. “I guess we can plague ’em cruel if they try to push by.” T he rugged Old P u t was as cheerful and buoyant as any youth in camp. F or days a t this point the Americans had been under a fall of iron from the B ritish batteries on B unker hill unan sw ered because of the scarcity of pow d er In W ashington’s camp. The Chief left his companions and w alked along the line of new defenses with Old Put. In th e hour or so spent on the line m any shots cam e over from the B rit ish cannon. Only one American w as injured by flying splinters and he but slightly. These soldiers of W ashing ton had acquired skill In the a rt of dodging cannon balls. Now and then a new contrivance called a “bomb shell" cam e down. It -was easy to get out of Its way, for its action w as de liberate and obliging. O ften daring m en quenched the fuse after It landed. The party returned in good tim e for dinner. T he brigadiers had gone to th eir commands. Colin dined w ith the Cihief and his m ajor generals, each of whom drank a pint o fc ia re t with his fish, roast beef and potatoes. The sum ject of th eir talk w as the crying need of powderj T he dinner over, each guest w ent J 0 his own task. The Chief invited Colin to go w ith him to the office and there directed him to sit down a t a desk and w rite a short letter the substance of which w as briefly Indicated. For a few m inutes the boy was alone with hi8H ^ d put it aside when Billy came in. to say th a t Paul Revere w as looking f0 R ^ e r e w a s ' in the secret service of t h f Im erican army.- The confldent ease w ith which he penetrated the British Unes w as the subject of much whispered gossip am ong his intim ates 'n camp. He brought a letter to Colin from Pat Fayerw eather. This is the letter: “My beloved O ne: August fifteenth I am going to visit the D orsets near Roxbury on the River road. My school friend Elizabeth D orset is to be m ar ried that evening. The process may give us unexpected courage. They live beyond the B ritish lines, so I shall need a pass to the free land. The Dorsets will m eet me near the Neck. They are loyalists, but they are dear friends. I am sure th at General W ash ington will give you a little tim e 'for your private affairs and do w hat he can to further our wishes. Now that I think of this chance of seeing you, I breathe quicker and my heart beats so rapidly it stops my pen for a mo m ent The great Virginian is said to be fond of ladies. My friend Mrs. Sherm an, who lost her heart to him long ago, has told us of his devoted love for M iss Fairfax when they were both of our age. H e m ust give m e a look a t you. I am sorely in need of it. I am sure th at he will not regard our desires w ith a cold h e art My father and m other have been shocked by ‘the moral torpor’ of the B ritish arm y. Few of them show any interest in religion. M any of the officers have mistresses. They are called ‘neces sary women.’ Think of that. The sacred atm osphere of New England Is smoky with contam ination. W orld ly thoughts have even entered the mind of Aunt Betsy. You can imagine the am using talk among the deserted women of Boston. “H arry Gage has presented himself as a' candidate for your place. He will not let me alone. He turns up w herever I go. I begin to hate him. He annoys me. I get sym pathy only I l The Chief Left His Companions and W alked Along the Line of New Defenses W ith Old Put. from ~my mother. My father and brother are still bitter against you and you—you are the only m an neces sary to my happiness. I pray th at the w ar may soon end. U ntil we meet I am “Your faithful,-affectionate and de voted. P a t” "P. S. I shall cross the Neck on Lady Belle’s back. I am sure that you will be glad to see her.” These words related to P at’s beau tiful m are—w ith blazed face and two w hite stockings th at rose evenly half way to her knees—which she had rid den on many a journey w ith her lover. T he young m an was pleased and w orried by the letter. H is face was flushed, his brain busy. Of course, he would go to see her. He m ust find a way to do th a t H e began to suspect th at the girl had in mind a double wedding a t the home of the Dorsets. It would be a happy w ay of putting an end tot their troubles. General W ashington returned to his office,-where Colin aw aited him. The Chief read the letter which the young m an had w ritten and gave him a word of approval. “It is well done. I shall be glad to have you In my official fam ily here as a secretary If you think th at the work would be to your liking.” "It will be an honor and a pleasure to serve you, sir, If I am equal to the task.” The General smiled and nodded, say ing: ‘T shall ask Billy to show you to'' your room and to move your posses sions. W hen th at Is done I will ad vise you of the work to which you. may address yourself.” “B efore it begins, sir. I regret to have to ask a favor. On the fifteenth of August I wish to go to Roxbury to be absent for a day. It Is a personal m atter.” The General smiled. He had read correctly the look In the boy’s face. “A m atter of the h e art? ’ "Yes, sir.” The big Virginian arose from his chair still smiling and changed a little the arrangem ent of the papers on his desk. H is face turned grave. He spoke in a low, rum inating tone as if the trifling incident had stirred old memories. “Of course she is beautiful and all other things seem little when com pared to her.” - “You read my mind, sir. She is beautiful. She Is coming out of Bos ton to the wedding of a Schooli frien d , In Roxbury. She will need a. pass through our line.” The General, looking downward, had been pacing slowly between his desk and the garden window. There w as a touch of sadness In his face. R eturning to his desk, he said, "W e shall try to get a pass for her and, unless som ething unforeseen should happen, you m ay go. ,and you shall have an escort and my best wishes.” “Thank yon, sir.” At once the General set the young man to w riting letters, the substance of each being suggested in a sentence. ■For nearly two weeks CoIin was en gaged In th at service. M eanwhile h< was given the rank of first lieutenant and I a uniform. Colin worked hard, as did every one a t headquarters. The Commander in Chief was often w riting letters or con ferring w-ith his staff until midnight and was alw ays up at reveille and being shaved or having his hair ar ranged by the faithful Billy. Colin sent a pass to his sw eetheart by the underground road and a letter filled with fervid assurance and new discoveries in the personality of the Chief. He would meet her? Of course he would meet her. unless he should die of astonishm ent at finding the B rit ish in a mood to fight. W hen Revere called again the letter was put in his hands. Its illum inating details are here presented: “The Chief is the m ost perfect gen tlem an I have known. He is a Chris tian gentlem an of delightful manners. He considers the feelings of the other fellow when most men would not think it necessary. His dignity creates an atm osphere around him w herever he is. B ut he is as hum an as the rest of us. He can he provoked. If it went far enough. > suppose that he would not lack the iV 'quent words th at go with extrem e itritation. H e enjoys a good joke. He loves children and the companionship of handsome women and there is no one who can speak a more graceful compliment. TJie pretty wfife of one of the officers called with a child three years old to see him one day. “The sweet face of the child won the heart of the big Chief. He took it on his knee and chanted the old nur sery rhym e beginning, • ’There was an old man And there was an old woman They lived In a vinegar bottle togethe? Sheltered from wind and all kinds o’ weather, They lived in a vinegar bottle to gether.' "No lady is perm itted to tarry long in the office, for a fter a little tim e the Chief rises and says, ‘Lieutenant Cabot will now show you our delightful garden.’ “My trips to the garden have become a jest a t headquarters. “He is fond of dancing and is a model of grace and gallantry on the floor. Now and then the wives of the staff officers and other fine ladies here in Cambridge come to usc of an eve ning. We have music and a pleasant party. Mrs. W ashington is expected the day after tomorrow. A squad of cavalry has gone out to m eet her.” C aptain Farnsw orth had returned full of zeal for the service of God and his country. Some neighbors too old for m ilitary service w ere to help his young boys with -the harvesting. The, Commander in Cliief planned an offensive movement with the double purpose of driving the B ritish out of Boston and reviving the spirit of his troops and that of the people behind them. His staff sat a day con sidering it and decided to delay action for a more favorable time. The Chief bowed to their decision. Knowing thq background, and spirit of the Colonies, he saw the im perative need to avoid arrogant or arbitrary action. In all plans Involving risk he consulted the staff. He w as wont to say, “I am only a servant of the people who have sent me here and my staff are their repre sentatives.” No pay was arriving for officer or men. D iscontent w as. growing. De sertions were frequent. • The m ilitary chest w as empty. The paym aster had not a dollar in hand. The commissary general had strained his own credit to keep the arm y alive. R ecruits were hard to get. The term s of most of those in camp would expire in De cem ber and January. It looked as if the arm y would dissolve at the year’s end. 'W in ter was ahead with no sup p ly of clothing and blankets suited to its rigors. Coast settlem ents w ere be ing raided by the B ritish and were dem anding detachm ents to protect them . Every day. was filled with w orry and annoyance. A t this tim e we find In the notes of the young man the first intim ation of a great dis covery. “H ere is a mystery. The arm y suf fers Injustice, neglect, broken faith, homesickness, days w ithout bread, days w ithout meat, m onths w ithout pay. Some of us have feared that we might aw ake some day and find the camp breaking. It stays. W hy? Discipline is Improving. T here are some of ns here who feel W ashington’s spirit. We get his vision and share his faith. Every evening we carry his inspiration to the brigades.” For a stirring address to one of the M assachusetts brigades the young man was commended in a general order and promoted to the rank of captain. Mrs. W ashington arrived with her young son and his wife In a coach draw n by four horses with a splendid postilion dressed in blue aDd white. - “W e all like her,” Colin writes- “A miable! Charming m anners! Short and plum p! H a irtu rn in g g ra y lD a rk eyes! Olive skin! 'E very day she w ears a plain gown of homespun stuff, neat cap and w hite neckerchief, all made in America. She sets a good ex am ple to 'th e other women. Sits in a speckled apron knitting socks even w hile she visits. Tabes a motherly in terest in my personal affairs. Is eager to see P a t Tells me that she w as called Patsy when she w as a maiden. Suggests th at there are snug fur nished houses here to be had a t a sm all rental. She is a dear and gentle hum an . being. W e call her tLady W ashington.’ ” . {TO BE CONTINUED.) IMPROVED UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL SUNDAYI c H o o L L e s s o n (By REV. P. B. FITZWATER, D. D.t Uem-* ber ot Faculty, Uoody Bible Iostltute or Chicago.)1933. Western Newspaper Union. L e s s o n f o r M a r c h 1 9 TH E EFFECTS OF ALCOHOLIC DRINKS LESSON TEXT—Proverbs 23:25-32; Isaiah 23:1-4; Daniel 5:1-4. GOLDEN T E X T -A t the last it blt- etb like, a serpent, and- stingeth like an adder. Proverbs 23:32.PRIMARY TOPIC—The House I Live In. JUNIOR TOPIC—A Boy Who Ruled Himself.INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOPIC—A Dangerous Enemy. YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOP IC—The Curse of Intemperance. I. The Effect of Alcohol Upon the Individual (Prov. 23:29-32). 1. Woes of those who indulge In wine (w . 29. 30). No more graphic description of the evils of the wine- bibber has ever been given. It por trays in the m ost im pressive m anner the m iseries th at m ark the drunkard's life. T here are six of them. a. Awful pain,—causing them to cry out. Ii. B itter remorse. M any are the expressions of bitter regret upon the lips of the drunkard. c. Strife and quarreling. The drunk en man is alw ays ready for a fight. He takes offense as well as gives it. d. Complaining. The wineblbber complains of everything, ill luck, bro ken fortune, ruined health, loss of friends, and even of God. e. W ounds w ithout cause. H e has many wounds which m ight have been avoided—from fights in wbicb a sober man would not have been engaged and from accidents which result from intoxication. f. KedneSS of eyes, the bloodshot eyes of the tippler. 2. The drunkard’s bitter end (w . 32-35). a. A cute miseries (v. 32.) “It biteth like a serpent, and stingetb like an adder.” Strong drink, like the poison of the serpent, perm eates the whole being, causing suffering and death. b. Perversion of the m oral senses (v. 33.) This excitem ent rauses the eyes to behold strange things, fantas tic images which are produced on the brain of the drunkard. The heart also utters perverse things. c.. He is insensible to danger. • The .drunkard is foolhardy In his acts. d. He is insensible to pain (v. 35). He has many bruises and wounds for which he cannot account e. He is in abject bondage (r, 35). He Is a bond slave to the w ays of Sin." 'I f. Hell a t last, for no drunkard shall enter the kingdom of heaven (I Cor. 8:10). 3. The attitude enjoined (v. 31). It is “look not a t it.” Total abstinence is the only safe attitude tow ard strong drink. II. Effect of Alcohol Upon the Na tion (Isa. 28:1-4). Ju st as indulgence in intoxicating drinks brings ruin to the individual, so It destroys the nation. God pro nounced judgm ent upon Israel because of the sin of drunkenness (v .' I). Sam aria w as the capital city, there fore stands for the nation. D runken ness seem s to have been a national sin at this tim e (Isa. 5:11, 12; 7 :5 ; Amos 2:8. 8. 12; 4 :1 ; 6:6). Sam aria’s position w as an enviable one; the whole nation w as proud of her. The crown of pride whose beauty had been so m arked w as now fading through the blighting effects of drunkenness. Even a s ruin cam e upon Israel, so will God visit judgm ent upon America for Its drunkenness. The instrum ent by which the punishm ent of Israel w as effected w as the A ssyrian (v. 2). The Imagery of this verse shows th at destruction w as sudden, swift, and ir resistible. III. The Effect of Alcohol Upon Na tional R ulers (Daniel 5:1-4). Belshazzar’s im pious feast is an outstanding exam ple of th e effect of alcohol upon rulers. Note— 1. The attendants a t the feast (w . I. 2). T here were present Belshazzar the king, his w ife and concubines, and a thousand of bis lords. 2. T heir behavior (w . 3, 4). a. They drank wine. b. They committed sacrilege. They drank wine out of sacred vessels which had been taken out of the Tem ple, the house of God a t Jerusalem . c. They worshiped Idols. They prayed to gods of gold and silver, of brass, or iron.’ wood, and stone, and chal lenged (lie rule of the living God. W ith the repeal of the Eighteenth am endm ent will come not only nation al disgrace but the loss of th at high standard which has as a rule charac terized American rulership from the President to the hum blest civil officer. One shrinks from the'contem plation of w hat aw aits our nation In Its de term ination to legalize the intoxicab Ing cup. W O R D S O F W IS D O M The greatest firmness Is the greatest mercy.—Longfellow. W e cannot be ju st unless w e are kind-hearted.—V auvensrgues. O heaven I were m an but constant, he were perfect—Shakespeare. How few. like Daniel, have God and gold together.-rG eorge VilIIers. ■ T rust reposed In noble n atu re s. obliges them the more.—Dryden. Fam e! It Is the flower of a day, th at flies when the next sun rises.—Ouida. ST IFF QUALIFICATIONS The qualifications of a flying hostess on passenger air lines in the United States are th a t she should be a college graduate, single, not over twenty-five years of age, slender, have a pleasing personality and the ability to converse intelligeutly and pleas antly w ith all types of people. She m ust also play bridge. Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription makes weak women strong. No alcohol. Sold by druggists in tablets or liquid.—Adv. , U nw orthy Hum ans Some do good, in order that they may do evil w ith impunity. The little Girl who wouldn’t EAT N ature knows best! Never coax a child to eat! R em ovethe cause of a youngster’s poor appetite—get rid of stasis. Children who don’t eat are sluggish. N ot to correct this is inexcusable. I t is so easy to do, if you wiU only use th e “California treatm ent” R ead w hat it is doing fo r listless children in every part of th e country! W hen appetite fails, tongue is coated white, eyes are a bilious yel low, don’t give smaU children any constipating cathartic th at drains the system and w eakens tw enty feet of tender bow els! California syrup of figs is th e only “medicine” they need! T hat girl or boy w ith a furry tongue and a bad breath should not be dosed w ith salts! CaUfornia syrnp of figs w ill gently stim ulate th e colon muscles—and the 'chUd yon used to coax to eat w ill fairly devour his food, digest it, gain weight. a T ry the C alifornia treatm ent! B e gin tonight, w ith enough of th e pure syrup of figs to cleanse th e colon thoroughly. Give less tomorrow, then ejrery other day, or tw ice a week qntll the child’s appetite, di gestion, weight, complexion, tell you the stasis is gone. B e sure to get the real California syrup of figs. Any druggist has It, 1 all bottled, w ith directions. It’s a natural, vegetable laxative. Ju st as good fo r babes of tw o years as boys of ten. They, all love its taste! There are imitations of California Eyrup of Figs and those who would sell you some substitute even when a child’s health is concerned. Don’t ever take any bottle that is not plainly labeled CALIFORNIA. End Serious Coughs With Creomulsion Don’t let them get a strangle hold Jight germs quickly. Creomulsion com. bines the 7 best helps known to modem science. Powerful but harmless. Pleasant to take. No narcotics. Your druggist will refhnd your money if any cough or cold no matter how long standing is not re* lieved by Creomulsion. (adv.) HavetoGetUp at N ight? D eal Prom ptly w ith B ladder / Irre g tila ritie s Axe you bothered with blad der irregularities; burning, scanty or too frequent passage and getting up at night? Heed prom ptly these symptoms. They may warn of some dis ordered kidney or bladder con-. dition. Users everywhere rely on Doan's Pills. Recommended 50 years. Sold everywhere. Doaijjs ►ills STAMP COLLECTING Ubom, Belgian air mall, 40 stamps-5e to aprwQvai applicants. Free list. GLENDALB STAMFCO. 1342D LiBden. Glendale. Calif. W. N. U., ATLANTA, NO. 10-1933 A Diuretic for the RECORD, TVforKSVILLE, N- C. iI i Iiirr' lifcj1 Si I® J¥/?); i‘?!| . H i i s ; News Review of Current Events the World Over F ranklin D . R oosevelt Inaugurated P resident— Thom as J. W alsh D ies Suddenly— Japan P ushing C hina O ut o f Jehol— T urm oil in G erm any. By EDWARD W. PICKARD H reiiaent Roosevelt TAKING the o a th 'o f office admin istered by Chief Justice Hughes of th e Supreme court and bowing his het.1 to kiss a three-hundred-year-old Dutch Bible, Franklin Delano Roosevelt be came the thirty-sec ond President of the United States. H islips were pressed on the open page where was Paul’s admonition to the Corinthians clos ing: “And now abid- eth faith, hope and charity, these th ree; but the greatest of these Is charity." Turning then to face the cheering thousands of his fellow citizens, mostly Democrats, Mr. Roose velt told them briefly why he had faith and hope in his plans for the “new deal” that he had promised the country. The charity th at “never faileth” will combine with the trust of th e people in their new Chief Execu tive in the movement upward from the depths. In his demeanor and words the new President showed how deeply he was affected by the sudden death of the m an he had named as his attorney general—Thomas J. W alsh, the vet eran senator from M ontana. Though fairly colorful, the in augural ceremonies were somewhat re stricted by Mr. Roosevelt’s determ ina tion that economy should be prac ticed. The parade, for instance, was kept down so that it passed the re viewing stand in about tjvo hours. B ut it w as a fine procession, led by General M acArthur, chief of staff, as grand m arshal. He acted in th at ca pacity because General Pershing was kept in Arizona by illness. In the evening the inaugural ball, m ain social event though unofficial, w as a gorgeous affair. It w as man aged by Mrs. John J. D ougherty and the large proceeds w ere turned over to charity. President Roosevelt was not present, but his wife and daugh te r Anna graced the occasion. Mr. Hoover and Mr. Roosevelt drove together from the W hite House to the Capitol in an open car for the inaugu ration, and their Wives followed in an other machine. The first event was the swearing in of John Nance G arner a s Vice President, this taking place in the senate chamber. Then everybody w ent out to the stands in front of the Capitol where Mr. Roosevelt took the oath of office. When this was over,’ Mr. and Mrs. Hoover drove quickly to the Union station and took train for New York. PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT’S cabinet w as invaded by death even before It entered upon its duties. Tliomas J. W alsh of M ontana, who had. ju st re signed as senator to become the new attorney general, passed aw ay on an A tlantic Coast line train near V ilson, N. C., as he w as on his way from Flor ida to W ashington. H is death w as sudden and w as a great shock to his official associates and his multitude of friends. H e w as m arried only a few days before in H avana. Cuba, to Senora Nieves Chaum ont de. TrufBn, a w ealthy widow, and she was with him a t the tim e of bis demise. - Senator W alsh, who was seventy- three years old, w as born in Two Riv ers, Wis. W hen he resigned he was serving his fourth term in the senate, In which body be served his country ably and faithfully. He was consid ered one of the leading authorities on the Constitution. W alsh was perm a nent chairm an of the Democratic na tional conventions of 1924 and 1932. MOST immediate of the problems before Secretary of S tate Cordell H ull is the Sino-Japanese embroglio, ■which now is really a war. With his lu ll approval the State departm ent a lre a d y had sent a note to G e n e v a expressing ‘■general accord” with the League of Na tions’ action In con demning the Japanese m ilitary policy In Man churia. Though this action w as profound ly disturbing to t|ie T o k y o government, T Yu-Iin Japan w ent r i g h t ® ahead w ith its campaign for the con quest of the Chinese province of Jehol. The governor of the province, Tang Yu-lin, m ustered all available forces for defense but his troops were stead ily driven back by the thoroughly trained and equipped'Japanese col um ns that w ere advancing on three lines tow ard th e city of Jehol. G reat B ritain followed up the action of the League of N ations by declaring an arm s embargo against both Japan and China, Foreign Secretary Sir John Simon explaining that bis gov ernm ent would under no circum stances be draw n into the conflict and did not favor one against the other. Both China and Japan resented this, though it-w as apparent to every one th at, as Senator Borah said, "to put an arm s embargo on China and Japan is to take sides with Japan under the conditions and circumstances th at ex is t” TIie British openly hoped th at the United States would join in the embargo policy, but there is strong opposition to this among the members of congress. Senator Jam es Hamilton Lewis of Illinois voiced this opposition in a speech in the senate, warning the nation that application of an embargo against both China and Japan or against Japan alone m ight involve us in another disastrous foreign war. He told his colleagues that “B ritain already has sold all the arm s to both nations they can pay for, and in ad dition has sold them the machinery with which munitions can be m anu factured.” One of the peculiar angles of the Japanese invasion of Jehol is th at if it succeeds it may prove disastrous to the cause of Communism in China. It would threaten Russia’s last impor tan t channel of transport and com munication with China and virtually close the Communist Internationale’s connections with the Chinese Reds. Dispatches from Latvia say the Rus sian munition plants a t Leningrad are w orking day and night to produce guns and munitions for the Chinese government. SEVERAL days before the inaugura tion Mr. Roosevelt form ally com pleted his cabinet, the appointm ents being as given in this column previous ly. ; Tbe last names given out were those.of Daniel C. Roper as secretary of commerce and Frances Perkins as secretary of labor. Miss Perkins, who in private life is Mrs. Paul Wilson, is the first woman to be a member of an American cabinet, but Mr. Roosevelt in selecting her w as not bidding for fem inine political support, according to his friends. He regards her as he would a man, highly capable for the p o st Some tim e ago W illiam Green, president of the American Federation of Labor, said th a t organization w as deeply disappointed by Mr. Roosevelts selection of M iss Perkins. Cordell Hull, secretary of state, resigned his seat In the senate. Governor M cAllister of Tennessee ap pointed N athan L. Bachman of C h at tanooga to succeed H plO iftohiB ap was formerly justice of the 'Tennessee Supreme court T IN C LE SAM has been for months ^ investigating the collapse of the Insiill public utilities concerns, and finnllv Hio federal grand jury In Chi cago indicted Samuel Insull. his son Samuel, ,his brother M artin, and sixteen others. The latter Include Stanley Field, banker and president of the Field m useum ; H ar old h. Stuart, presi dent of H alsey, Stuart & Co., Internationally known bond house, and Edw ard J. Doyle, president of the Com monwealth Edison company. Mr. Field was a director of the Corporation Se curities company, one of the Insull concerns. The defendants are charged with using the m ails to defraud. The in dictm ent is based on alleged “false pretenses, representations and prom ises” made to prospective Investors in the common stock of the Corporation Securities company. The defendants engaged in a nation-wide cam paign of selling this stock through Halsey, Stuart & Co., U tility Securities com pany, Insull, Son & Co., Corporation Syndicate company and others, the in dictm ent charges. It is charged that the defendants represented to investors th at they would find a safety of principal in their investm ent because of the great physical properties of th e company when, in fact, there were no great physical properties and the security back of the common stock was w orth less. The investors were . told, according to the true bill, that the yield on the stock would be 6 per cent or more when, In fact, there could be no in come on the stock “by reason of the fact th at the company operated a t a loss throughout its existence.” “This Indictm ent is only the begin ning,” said United States A ttorney Dwight H. Green. “I propose to inves tigate fully all the ramifications of the so-called Insull empire, its crea tors and sponsors.” T here were rum ors in the federal building In Chicago th at Samuel In- suil would return voluntarily from Greece and stand trial rather than perm it the blame for the crash of the utilities concerns to be placed' 'Upon his son. HIS testimony before the senate committee on banking and cur rency resulted in the resignation of Charles E. Mitchell- as chairm an of the board of the National City bank of New York, the world’s second larg est bank, and the National City com pany. Its subsidiary. H e bad been sh arp ly criticized for the financial acts he testified to a t the hearing. Menry Ford Sam Insult FOLLOWING Michigan’s bank trou bles an epidemic of financial woes broke out in many parts of the coun try. ThA state authorities, however, were on the alert and steps . to save the banks and their de positors w ere taken quickly. Bank holi days were declared by. the governors of several states of the Middle W est, and in Ohio, Indiana and elsewhere many banks placed restrictions on withdrawals, P e n n - sylvania and W est: Virginia also were affected but the legislatures got busy with rem edial m easures. W hile Governor Comstock w as try ing to speed up the M ichigan legisla ture, H enry Ford and his son Edsel cam e to the rescue of the F irst Na tional and Guardian National banks of D etroit with a plan to put up 88,- 250,000 of their private funds and create two new banks th at would take over the two mentioned, enabling their depositors to receive im m ediately 30 per cent of their deposits. It w as ex pected that New York bankers would grant a loan of $20,000,000 to the F irst National and th at thereupon it would receive $54,000,000 from the Re construction Finance corporation.' B ut the New Yorkers—who never did like Ford—held back and the result was that the plan w as delayed in execu tion and m aterial changes w ere neces sary. The two new banks were given the nam es of People’s N ational and M anufacturers’ National. PLANS for recapturing control of congress in 1934 were laid by the executive committee of the Republican national committee a t a m eeting in W ashington, and H erbert Hoover was told that his party would continue to look to him for leadership in the days to come. As the meeting was held be fore Mr.. Hoover retired from the W hite House there was no attem pt to m ake anyone else leader or to displace C hairm an-E verett Sanders. The op ponents of those two gentlemen in the national committee, however, m ay be expected to get into action later. In a message to the com m ittee Mr. Hoover outlined the fundam ental pol icies which he asserted Republicans as well as Democrats should follow. These included a dem and for economy in governm ent and protection for gov ernm ent obligations. H e urged tfie necessity ,of m aintaining sound cur rencies and sound national credit. FIVE representatives w ere named to prosecute the im peachm ent of Federal Judge H arold K. Louderbaiik of San Francisco, which w as'voted .by the house recently. They w ere all mem- A ers of the judiciary ,com m ittee in the con gress th at -is now dead and gone, i Two of them, La Guardia of N ew York and Sparks of K a n s a s , were lame ducks, so their places will be filled by others. The r e s t a r e G o r d o n Browning of Tennes see, Malcolm T arver of Georgia and H. W. Summers of Texas, all Democrats. ■£. Judge Louderback w as impeached for distributing lucrative receiverships and attorneyships in bankruptcy cases' under him to friends and political Al lies. H e will be tried by the senate during the special session. Judge H. Louderback GERMANY moved back to the first page again ' when some Commu nists tried to burn down th e litige reichstag building In Berlin and did succeed in ruining the m ain session hall and the glass and gold cupola. One young Dutch Red w as.arrested and confessed to setting the biaze. The occurrence w as seized upoa by Chancellor H itler and his governm ent as an opportunity to destroy the Cota- m unist party, and action w as sw ift and drastic. C ap t W illiam Goering, Nazi m inister w ithout portfolio and virtual ruler of Prussia, first ordered the ar rest of one hundred Red members of the reichstag and suppressed the en tire Leftist press. Then, as rum ors of a Communist plot to overthrow the government spread. President Von Hin- denburg issued a decree annulling all constitutional liberties of private citi zens, including free speech and free press, the right of assembly and the secrecy of postal, telegraphic and tele phonic communications. The decree empowered the federal -government to take over- executive power in states that fail to enforce law and order; and che death penalty w as ordered for attem pts on the lives of the President and members of the federal and state cabinets, carrying arm s during rioting, political kidnap ing, high treason, poisoning, arson, ex plosions damaging railw ays and plun dering. A government spokesman said that the decree w as drafted after police had discovered evidence in the cellars of the Karl Liebknecht house. Commu nist headquarters In Berlin, anil In other raids th at the Reds were plan ning wholesale assassinations of mem bers of H itler's government, besides intending to kidnap w om en'and chil dren as’hostages for political purposes and to poison wells and food. PRESIDENT MACHADO of Guba, whose regime is threatened by a new outbreak, of rebellion, ordered the immediate mobilization of al) the arm ed forces of the republic. ■ The revolutionists were expectingJtwo ex peditions-froin Mexico and Honduras to help them. . .. 1333. Western Newspaper Union, : Our Government — How It O perates By William Bruckart T R E A T Y N E G O T IA T IO N S THE United States and . Canada have just lately concluded a treaty that represents an agreem ent between our governm ent and th at of our neigh bor on the north whereby a deep wa terw ay will be constructed connecting the G reat Lakes and the A tlantic ocean. It is a gigantic engineering project that is contem plated; it has vast potentialities for our people and their commerce, and it will stand through the years as a m onument to the genius of two peoples who desire to see opportunities utilized for the good of all. ’ But behind the form al signing of that treaty which took place in the Departm ent of State here in the Capi tal city lies many ram ifications and maneuvers. They are called "negoti ations” at the end, and they repre sent as well as any in history the processes through which nations must go in reaching agreem ent on the term s of a contract, for a treaty, after all,, is only a contract. T reaty negotia tions, however, are not unlike swap ping of horses in the old days. It is a m atter of give and-take, and eacb; fellow looks out for himself. It seldom takes as much tim e to ac complish an understanding respecting treaty term s as has elapsed since the deep w aterw ay proposal first w as ad vanced more than fifty years ago. Commercial Interests saw the need of it long before our governm ent could he Interested in the pro ject The same w as true among the Canadians, except that they did not regard devel opment of the w aterw ay as im portant nntil recent years because their com merce .began expanding later than ours. Tet through all of those years, two peoples were slowly but surely moving to the point w here their governm ents could agree as to w hat was necessary in a treaty under which the channel could be constructed. T here had to be a treaty, of course, because the rights of each nation were involved and each nation h id to give up some of those rights when the contract was made. Active movements by our govern ment, looking to the treaty and the w aterw ay project to be bnilt under its term s, were instituted alm ost ten years ago. At that time, however, some of the statesm en at the head of the. Dominion governm ent w ere not friendly to the idea. There w as oppo sition as well among certain interests Iln this;; country. For exam ple, many of the railroads serving the. northern half of the United States and draw -; Jng traffic from the regions around; ■and w est of the G reat Lakes are op posed’ to the w aterw ay for the very obvious reason that they fear it will, take aw ay some of their traffic. And so It goes. Opposition and support for - the plan may be found every w here'In areas affected by i t From this it is easily deduced th at a considerable am ount of prelim inary work had to be done to acquaint .the peoples of tbe m erit of the pro ject It has now been form ally signed be cause’ the ruling political group In Canada believe it Is practicable and valuable, and the adm inistration of our government has fostered the idea throughout. But the treaty is not yet operative. It has another stage to pass here and another a t O ttaw a. W hile its accept ance by the Dominion governm ent la little more than a form ality, ratifica tion of the agreem ent by th e senate of the United. States Is another m at ter. The C onstitution provides for ne-: gotlation of the treaty by the Presi dent, by and with the advice and con sent of the senate. So it has to take a hurdle of some consquence before It becomes a binding agreem ent and one that Is fully operative. W hen the President transm its the S t Law rence w aterw ay treaty to the senate for its consideration, he will send with It a letterifrom the secre tary of state explaining the benefits hoped to he derived. B ut th e senate will not be content with th a t It w in turn the treaty over to Its com m ittee on foreign relations, and th at group will hold hearings to which It will In vite spokesmen for the various groups interested in Its ratification or rejec tion. It will listen to both sides. In addition, it will Invite the secre tary of state and the American m inis ter to O ttaw a and experts who partici pated in the actual w riting of the doc um ent to come before it and tell w hat the treaty does. These men probably will testify in private, how ever,-for It m ust be rem em bered that all Interna tional negotiations are carried on largely in secrecy. T hat is necessary because it is frequently inadvisable to m ake public the basis of horse swapping. Some people will think their governm ent gave too much and tL«> t#ill complain. If a m ajdrity of th e ’ com m ittee fa. vor ratification, they w ill vote to sub- m it it to the senate w ith that recom m endation, and eventually action to had there, leaving then only the aet of notifying the other governm ent, to be performed. In outlining the course of the wa terw ay treaty, I have attem pted to picture the usual processes. They are much the sam e In all treaties,, except ing those ending a war,’ W ith th a t ^ kind of a treaty, It Is unnecessary to d?a1. for the victor dictates the term s and the loser signs. . ©. 1932, Western Newspaper Unloa. U . S . Farm Exports Boosted by Cotton Volume of Products Leaving Country Is 120. Per Ct. Pre-War Record. The index of the volume of exports of American farm products In Kg vem ber w as 120 per cent of pre-wcu, reports tbe bureau of agriculture economics. U nited S tates D epartm ent of A griculture. Cotton exports con tinued to bolster the exports index, since if this commodity is om itted the index of exports would be only &> per cent of pre-war. . T he index of all farm products ex to rte d in November, 1931, w as 137 per cent of pre-w ar,, and w ith cotton om it ted the index w as 114 per cent of pre w ar A s m a lle rv o lu m e o fn e a rly a ll agricultural products w as exported In November, 1932, than in the preceding m onth when the index of exports w as 126 per cent of pre-w ar. : F ruit exports In November w ere m volume 423 per cent of pre-w ar, cotton •147 per c e n t and unm anufactured to bacco 144 per cent of pre-w ar. All other commodities w ere exported In sm aller volume than pre-w ar, viz: G rains and products. 73 per c e n t; ani mal products, 63 per cent;-dairy prod ucts and eggs, 68 per cen t; w heat and flour, 67 per cent; ham s and bacon, 27 per cent; and lard, 91 per c e n t Cotton exports for the five m onths ended November 30, 1932, totaled 3,873.000 bales com pared w ith 3,287,- 000 bales for the corresponding period o f 1931. Total exports of w heat and flonr in the five m onths ended Novem ber 30, last, w ere 25,087,000 bushels, which w as a decrease of 64 per cent from the exports for the correspond ing period in 1931. Although exports of unm anufactured leaf tobacco w ere 144 per cent of pre-w ar In November, the bureau says th a t the volume ex ported in th a t month w as sm aller than in any corresponding month since 1924 World Wheat Bins Groan ; Shipments May Be Larger The world w heat m arket is bur dened by heavy stocks which are large ly the result of restricted dem and In Im porting countries, says th e bureau of - agricultural economics, U nited States D epartm ent, of A griculture, In Its report on w orld w heat prospects. Shipm ents of w heat and flour from July through mid-December, from th e principal exporting countries, have totaled 261,000,000 bushels as com pared w ith 355,000,000 bushels in the corresponding period last season. This low level of shipm ents, tb e bu reau, continue?, has left the principal exporting .. countries with som ew hat largier Stocks of w heat as of D ecem ber 1,1932, than on Decem ber 1,1931. Total stock's, available for export and carry over from the old crop In the U nited States. Canada, A ustralia and Argen tina are estim ated to have been about 745,000,000 bushels on Decem ber I compared w ith 708,000,000 bushels on D ecem ber I last year. Also, the new crop of both A rgentina and A ustralia Is estim ated to be som ew hat larger than last year. W orld shipm ents, it is expected, will be larger during th e second half of the crop year because supplies of w heat from the large European crops In 1932 are. being reduced, and al though some countries have such large crops a s to m ake it unlikely th a t they will im port significant quantities, other countries, says the bureau, will have to depend m ore largely upon supplies of foreign w heat.—M issoari Farm er. Apples, Red Ripe to Core You have no dqubt heard Hie w ater melon peddler yelling his wares. “W a term elon, red ripe to the rind.” B ut did you ever hear of an apple, or see one, red ripe all the way to the core? A fter 12 years of experim enting in his back yard, F. H. Shoem aker of M innesota, who resides a t Red Wing, has produced such an apple. It Is a russet apple w ith red pulp. T he am a teu r B urbank pro'duced his' red apple by crossing several species. H orti culturists of the state agriculture col lege are planning to m ake further ex perim ents w ith it in an effort to Im prove its quality.—Pathfindeir M aga zine. wan Heroines B y LOUISE M. COMSTOCK B e lle B oyd L SUNBONNKT, cnn„iine ilM, Can Destroy Moths Now , The w inter m onths offer apple grow ers an opportunity to 'strik e a blow a t their w orst insect pest, says Leonard 'H asem an, chairm an of th e entomology departm ent of the M issouri College of Agriculture, Jn discussing th e ravages of the codling moth o r apple worm.'; 'M uch can be done to com bat th 's pest right now by going through the or chard' and.rem oving an tree bands, scraping th e scaly bark from all bear ing trees, and collecting and destroy ing the bark scales and the worm s round; In their w inter cocoons under the bark. Pig Crop Larger ; The 1932 fan pig crop In Indiana was 21 per cent larger than in the fall of 1931, according to Purdue univer sity.; PraeU cally all of th e Increase w as due to a/ larger num ber of pigs saved ,per litter. F or the corn b e lt th® Increase w as slightly less than 4 per cent, but w hen considering both the. sprint; and fall pig crops through- ,out th e country, the farrow ing in l 932 w as about 4 per cent less than In 1931, according to the agricultural statistician.—Indiana Farm er. - - w hite apron were the Unwm: 1L w hich Belle Boyd fou;;)lt ,. nH w ar. H er w its and Iier dashing young Dnion officers J ^ weapons. Yet she fouKhi to a p pose that ‘.‘Stonewall” .IackJL self w rote her in Slay, is;>. ',,, Jfci you, for myself and'for t.ie atl! th e im m ense service that yrTT1 rendered your country today.’- In th e spring of 1802 Belle eighteen year-old beautv who fo r one visit to VVashinston had dom been outside her aat|ve 0 ^ Jiartinsburgh, W. Va. Suddenijt Union troops set ahoui, .Irivinsrr era! Jackson out of the Shenatfc valley and th e Civil war d esS upon her. H er own undc-’s hoii^t neighboring Front n<,yal Dnion headquarters and Iieiie V-T' there, won full run of the tioiise |i her charm ing ways and came into fe ot valuable information. She tow toM of listening in on a council of £ through a bole bored In the IIok J a cioset ju st above the council *> ber, and o f carrying the news hi, C onfederate lines, ridmp horsete through challenging sentries and OCt a t least one bullet. She told of»: ning passes through tile Iinea ^ bouquets, of securing confidente sm iles. But Belle’s chief feat of daiini,^, which is corroborated by other soke occurred on May 23, when she Ieatts th at the Yankees, expecting n Co*. erate attack on Front Uoyal. I61 planning to retreat, burning brfe behind them , so that the sointeo troops would be trapped in Iheiori T ying on her sunbonnet, Belle slipg past tbe m arching troops, ontofte and into the open country toward it; approaching Confederates. Vans8 pickets opened fire on her. At fe sam e tim e tbe bullets of the attai ing troops sped past her. Her rir? apron shone out like a target, fe her courage kept her on till she b! delivered her message. As a rest the C onfederates reached Front Ityi before th e bridges Were burned a! w on a t least th is skirmish and pis W inchester, ju st beyond. It rafe th is deed th a t General Jackson s B elle his personal thanks. Belle subsequently was imprlsot-l b y th e N orth a t WashinKtoa Eil w hen the w ar w as over she marrieJ-J a Y ankee lieutenant Her second Iitf band w ag 'a Yankee colonel. In., she m arried a third Yankee and re to live in K ilbourn, Wis., where Si w rote her m em oirs and died IaIS H er grave the Grand Armr of fe R apublic annually decorated in trfe to a “gallant enemy.” In 1929, to* ever, the D aughters of the Confefe- acy claim ed their own, removed te rem ains to M artinsburgh, and ere®1 a m onum ent there. Anna McNeill Whistler TH E little old lady who sits as renely in Jam es McNeill Whlstlml fam ous portrait popularly known e J “M other,” is fam iliar to most of b I B ut few of us perhaps know that B | to have been the artist’s own: or understand how well she weriteJ I th e im m ortality her son thus won ts | her. Jem m ie w as Anna Whistler’s son. As a boy he w as slender and !ici ly. Always, It seemed to Mrs. Whlstla he w as In need of his mother. At Sis Jam es thought he would be a a s his fath er bad been before him, t*l bis. grandfather, the Capt. John MN tie r w ho had founded Fort DeirW at Chicago. At the end of two MWi py years a t W est Point, however, ij decided to be a painter instead | set off for P aris to study. D uring all these years Mrs. Wi!**' stayed close to her son, to be on Wi If needed. In 1860, however, Jeowi- returned to P aris for more study w M rs. W histler crossed to this com® fo r a last visit with her famW0 South C arolina before settling PCrt3' nently w here her son., wished to I® In London. T he year ISfiO saw Wp lea plunged Into civil war. CM** nication betw een m other and sod cam e m ore and more diflienlt. Iy cam e w ord th at the artist IndJ^ turned to. London. Mrs. WhistIer cam e restless. H er Jemniie her. She m nst be off to join K® A t th is tim e, 1864, a Unioo bloc53® m ade It unsafe for any ship to is* a C onfederate p o rt Friends pol8,‘ out to M rs. W histler that to attflg* a trip to Europe w as almost saM B ut she. w as determined. She s* ^ f*pm W ilm ington on the Adriin* ^ blockade runner bound for En^L. . w ith 2.000 bales o f cotton aboard. > | ship steam ed cautiously out of trusting -the darkness to hirie It th e ., 150: Union ships marshaled side. ■ A stidden flash of light >’ [>ii i**v .> ijit ■corf®1 ,rtiw"- heavy guns from Fort Fisher I a U n lo a gunboat revealed its Poa‘L how ever. Im m ediately the e ^ Uirfon fleet opened fire on the • vance. And throughout that bom bardm ent M rs. Whistler, fin to one of the crew, stood b.v a porl and even a s a shell- burst In We fi glng, she smiled, confident thPJ “Goin’ to get through all r'?M^ her i fam ous son, and lived to be the c lug old lady of the portrait. ., ©. 1982, Wesucn NewspaPer uo . Somehow the Advance through, th e 'm o th e r jo in e O " ^ . jfflE DAYlE UrgMt Circuht pavie County Y jr. B ailey , of - | own last week on b l June Meroney, ofj Sunday in town-witf S.Ttf. Call and CeJ Wednesday in Chaif I ‘ ' - ‘bess; , Mrs. E. C. Choatj Ifternoon in Winsto |in g . Mrs. Ida G. Nail if I im e w ith h e r s o n ‘ J ic k o ry . When you come jjLeek made The RetJ headquarters. p. G. McSwain Ipent several idays Isj | Dg through Florida1 j F. F- W alker and LfSouth Carollna.J Iisitor here Wedne Misses Louise Sm j J Ig L d Ruth Angell sp B i i e Twin City shop B ilJ Will pay 4 5 cents I Itor yellow corn^ j. J. Larew retur Ki|jay Jrom a busines I other points in j Mrs J. M. Dowr Ipent Sunday in lister, Mrs. C. F. Mrs. R. B. Sat Cecil Morris spec |week in W inston-S| Mr. and Mrs. 3igh Point, were j klrs. C. F. Meroney Rev. W . I. HowB Iiays last week w itl ffriends in Richmonl lord. I Mr. and Mrs. Fll nounce the arrival j Jter at their home or Ii 2 th. _ Mrs. J. B. W hi| Hgigljvnie, spent Wedne day in town with H iL . Walker. Mr. and Mrs. J.l !Salisbury, spent t| itown the guests of pA. I. Lagle. B I C. G. Woodruff) lidence on WHkea Jmodeled and the it gftil^jthroughout. Mr. and Mrs.. F | Ithe proud parent) !which arrived at |Tuesday, March Mr. and Mrs. {Harmony. R. 3| !Thursday on their I Smith’s brother, I at Salisbury. Miss Hazel Bait a course in libra State U niversity,' the week-end in tc ents, Mr. and Mrs Five hundred o who are due us £re urged to call attending court nJ vide their cash wij J> T. Hanes, rested Saturday vance, charged wj prass. He was bj ville Sunday nigt jail to await trial Mrs. W . A. All Wou the prize forf ptou bridge playe during the month prize was award< Packing Co., of packages < 'vicfees. • ^A jLBSM EliW i wage cuts o l HebetHng D eaJ steady^year arot sell ditect to- farij home remedies ad clWctsIss Many mal ®r Wore. W n tel £ C. H EB ER LI jjePt- 1797 Bloo ■ .merican e r o in e s B y IujSE M. COMsx0ry B elle E o y j IJn iio x . \ KT, Crinoune P 'te apron w ere n,- « h “"e Boyd Co,, ',u 1Ier w its and I1^ r „Ule Citil THE DAVlE RECORD, M OQgm E, R 6 . m a r c h 15,*933 .voims Union Mth Js- Vet she fought t« ere bet Jlltlt "Stonew all” T-n 1SUCh P*11- Io te Her in M ar % J r m yself and f o ,- ^ ' ‘‘ tH ^iiiense service tin t I ®r' f#t j<1 .vonr country to d - ,^ ^J e sIirillS or ISG2 Eeiip In .ve.-ir-old beautv win s" I visit to Washington 'Jd Ieen outside Uer d eH-Jslmrgli. w. Va set «ho«t. d r i v i n g Iickson out of the S he^L ja n d the Civil , antlllJIi 1 « . H er own „ n ‘lG.s ?*** "StU h Jwon fun r u ™ { g ^ g d , . I Hstenins in on a C01^ 1 ^ |i a hole bored in the Ha j u u s i above the council X ? Id of carrym g the news to a pi a te lines, rid iu , h0r3eb“ I challenging sentries and U„ I one bullet. She I l ssesf th ro u S *1 the Iines nh P ° f 8ecnrm* «>»naence *it{ f i l e 's chief feat of Uarlna „oe i s corroborated by other soar® T 3 “ -)Iny 2S- she learned Jw iankees. expecting a Confai. Iittack on front Koval, wetf ,a to retreat, burning bridges them, so that the southern ■ would be trapped in the to*n |>n her sunbonnet, Belle slipped |e raarchinp troops, ant of tm S0 the 0Pen country toward tie T llin? Confederates. Yantee opened tire on her. At the lime the bullets of the attack- I ’ps sped past her. Her white iPhone out like a target. But I lraSe kept her on till she had J;d her message. As a result lifederates reached Front Eoral Irlie bridges were burned and I least this skirmish and gained Jsrer. just beyond. It was for Hod that General Jackson sent Iis personal thanks, subsequently was imprisoned ■ North at Washington, But lie war was over she married— I *’ lieutenant. H er second liiif a Y ankee colonel. In 180 In ied a third Yankee and went I in K ilbonrn, Wis.. where she Iip r m em oirs and died in 1900. rave the G rand Army of the Ie annually decorated in tribnte Jrailant enem y.” In 1929, h«w- J'.e O aughters of the Confeder- Iim ed their own, removed her to .M artinsburgh, and erettei? Inient there. na M cN eill W histler little old lady who sits so se- Iy in Jam es McNeill Whistler's portrait popularly known as ” is fam iliar to most of os. of us perhaps know that lady been the a rtist’s own mother, jrstand how well she merited nortality her son thus won f« He w as A nna W histler’s eldest a boy he w as slender and sick- ys, it seem ed to Mrs. Whistler, in need of his mother. At first thought he would be a soldier, ather had been before him, Md idfather. the Capt. John WHS- 0 had founded Fort Dearborn ijto. At th e end of two uotep- ■s at W est Point, however, Se to he a painter instead sn» for P aris to study. s all these years Mrs. Whlsf-Itf :lnse to her son, to be on Haol1 ;d. In 1S60. however, .TMimif 1 to P aris for m ore study and histler crossed to this country ast visit w ith her family in 'nrollna before settling pe"®11' here her s o n ..wished to Kfc- on. T he year I860 saw AmW nged into civil war. CoDOTil betw een m other and son M- ore and m ore difficult, word th a t the artist had ^ to London. M rs. W histler f estless. H er Jem m ie ne^de ie m ust be off Co join 1 time, 1864, a Onion blocKa^ unsafe for any ship to Issve !derate port. Friends Poln Mrs. W histler th at to att«»P 0 Europe w as alm ost suicI • was determ ined. She SM ilm ington on the Advance, runner bound for EnS- bales o f cotton aboard. • ■amed cautiously out or P the darkness to hide tt Uniom ships mar: sudden flash of light a uns from F o rt Fisber Are gunboat revealed Its P1iosirt011' Im m ediately W:e e Ieet opened fire on toe ( And throughout that frl" Iment Mrs. W histler, " ccorJole, f the crew , stood by n Por j„. n as a shell' burst In t e smiled, confident tlMV 0 get through all rigl't- row the A dvance n„* . the mother joined ne son, and lived to be the c lady of the portrait. 932, Western Newspaper Unl THE DAVIE RECORD. Largest Circulati°n of Any DavieCounty Newspaper. Born, to Mr. and Herseyl on Sunday, a son. Mrs. Harvey March 12th, [local and per sonal news. T. F. Bailey1 of Advance, was in I town last week on business. June Meroney, of Lenoir, spent Sunday in town with home folks. S. JI. Call and Cecil Morris spent W ednesday in Charlotte on busi ness Mrs. E. C. Choate spent Friday afternoon in Winston-Salem shop ping- Mrs. Ida G. Nail is spending some time with her son A. M. Nail, at Hickory. When you come to court next week made The Record office your headquarters. F. G. McSwain and P. K. Manos spent several days last week motor ing through Florida. F. F. Walker and L. B. Forrest, of South Carolina, were business visitor here Wednesday. Misses Louise Smith, Ethel Boger and Rutli Angell spent Friday in the Twin City shopping. Will pay 45 cents per bushel cash for yellow corn. W. M. CROTTS. J. J. Larew returned home Thurs day trom a business trip to Atlanta and other points in Georgia. Mrs J. M. Downum, of Lenoir, spent Sunday in town with ber sister, Mrs. C. F. Meroney. Mrs. R. B. Sanford and Mrs. Jl Cecil Morris spent one day last |:j Week in Winston-Salem shopping. Mr. and Mrs. Silas McBee1 of High Point, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Meroney early last week. Rev. W. I. Howell speut several days last week with relatives and friends in Richmond, Va., and Ox. ford. Mr. and Mrs. Fletcher Click an nounce the arrival of a fine daugh ter at their home on Sunday, March 12th. Mrs. J. B. W hitlSy, of States- ville, spent Wednesday and Thurs day in townwith her brother, R. L. Walker. Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Harrison, of Salisbury, spent the week-end in town the guests of Mr. and Mrs. A. I. Lagle. ' C, G. Woodruff has had his res idence on Wilkesboro street re modeled and the interior repainted throughout. Mr. and Mrs, Floyd Naylor are the proud parents of a fine son which arrived at their home on Tuesday, March 7th. Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Smith, of Harmony, R. 3, were in town Thursday on their way to visit Mr. Smith’s brother, Chas. M. Smith, at Salisbury. Miss Hazel Baity who is taking a course in library work at the State University, Chapel Hill, spent the week-end in town with her par ents, Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Baity. Five hundred of our subscribers who are due us on subscription are urged to call and see - us wtkile attending court next week and di vide their casfcwith us. J. T. Hanes, colored, was ar te ited Saturday night near Ad vance, charged with forcible . tres prass. He was brought to Mocks- ville Sunday flight and lodged iu jail to await trial next week. Mrs. W . A. Allison, of this city, won the prize for beiing the cham pion bridge player in Daivie county during the month of February. The prize was awarded by the Lance Packing Co., of Charlotte, which Was' 32 packages of assorted sand wiches. • SALESMEN W ANTED—No lay- offs, wage cuts ’ or hard times for Heberling Dealers. We offer stead y-year around employment- sell diiect to - farm trade full line home remedies and household pro ducts.-^ Many make $40.00 weekly or more. W rite quickly. G C. HEBERLING COMPANY Dept. 1797 Bloomington, 111 . Mrs W. H Foote, of Crewe, Va., i° spent iun -.ome time in town with her sister, Mrs. S. C. Stouestreet. Miss M. E. Hauser, 86, died at her home four miles north of Farm ington Monday morning, .following- an extended illness Funeral serv ices were held at Mt. Zion church, at Huntsville, at 2 o’clock yesterday afternoon, conducted by Rev. M G. Ervin. Miss Hauser is survived by one br.other, M. A. Hauser, of near Farmington. J. K. Anderson, of Gastonia,, was given a hearing before Esq. T. I. Caudell Sunday woruiag and placed under a $200 bond for his appearance at Davie Superior court next week to answer a charge of being drunk in a car and having whiskey in his possession. A num ber of local citizens signed his bond. -------------------.JS______ Brmgiog In Gold. Cashier Call, of the Bank of Davie, tells us that a number of people are bringing gold to the bank and exchanging it for currency. There is a Federal law against hoarding gold, which carries a pen alty of ten years in penitentiary and a fine of $10,000. The quicker the gold is returned to the banks the soonet the country will be put on a sound money basis. When gold is exchanged for currency at a loc; I bank the gold is sent immediately' to a Federal. Reserve bank. For every $5 gold piece in the Federal Reserve banks the sum of $50 in currency can be issued, we have been informed. Mrs. Beulah Barney. Mrs. Beulah Foster Barney, 73, died at her home ill CooIeemee Sat urday night, folioiving an extended illness. Funeral and burial services were held at Cornatzer .,Monday afternoon. Rev. W. M. Rathburn, of Advance; officiating.. Survivng is the husband; two. sons, two daughters, three brothers and. two sisters. Rediand News. Mr. George Smith’s friends and re- lat.vas gathered at the home of his oldest son Bryant, Sunday March 5th in honor of his 60th birthday. AU present had a very pleasant time, es pecially around the table which was loaded with all kinds of good things to eat. We sincerely wish Mr. Smith many more happy birthdays. Mr and Mrs. Robert Smith and children, of Mocksville, were the Sunday guests of Mrs. Annie Gre gory and daughter Cora. Mrs. J. T. Miller who has been seriously ill for the past month is Basketball Results. |H. B. Womack Drops Dead.niceA full house. witnessed; 6 cage games at the Mocksville gym Friday night in the preliminaries of. - Mr. H. B. Womack, 75, drop' the fourth annual Davie county; ped dead Sunday morning at the cage tournament. The results fol- home of Charlie Coon, near Hol- A bore is that man who, when you ask him how he feels, tells you. low: Midget Boys. Cooleemee 22 vs Smith Grove 7. Farmington ir vs Advance 10 Mocksville 26 vs Cana 14 Varsity Girls Cooleemee 44 vs Advance 19 Varsity Boys. Smith Grove 33 vs Mocksvilld 15 Advance vs Farmington 13 «*■ AU losing teams were eleminated. Davie Man Given 10 Months. W. P. Frye young white man of the Cornatzer section was given ten months on theroads in Rowancoun ty court Friday when lried and by 39 hisby note*0 a^a*R’ We are charges on possession of whisky for Roy Hendrix who has been confin ed to his room for the past three weeks from a cut foot is now able to walk around on crutches, hia friends will be glad to hear. Mr. J. W. Ellis who was seriously hurt by a falling tree remains very ill at this present writing, his many friends will be sorry to hear. Mr. and Mrs Frank Laird . and little daughter, Thelma, of MockE- ville, R. 4. visited the Iatters parents Mr. and Mrs. Asbury Riddlethepast week. MissG adysDucn visited friends in Clemmons Friday. ' Miss Magdolene Beauchamp and Mr. Arthur Laird, were the rocei t guests of Miss Georgia Smith, purpose of sale, transporting aiding and abetting. Frye was captured last week county and federal officers with gallons of “ mountaiu dew” on new car which was confiscated the courts. The ten-month sentence was su spended provided the defendant pay a fine of $150 and the costs it was learned. • - ' Miss Grover Nellie Dwiggins1 of Davie Academy, was the guest of Miss Louise Smith Friday, night. ■ Temperatures dropped- down to 24 degrees above zero Saturday morning. Much damage is thought to have been done to the peach, plum and apricot crop. A heavy frost covered the ground Sat urday morning. man’s, while preparing to eat break fast. I4r. Womack suffered a stroke of paralysis about four year ag,o. surviving is the- widow and one daughter, Mrs. Carl Kestler, and two sous, Phife and Kemp, of Ala bama. Burial took place Monday and the body laid to rest in Jopf a graveyard. Rev. J. A. J. Farring ton, of Cooleemee services. conducting tl e Chas. L. Granger. Mr. Chas. L. Granger, 54, died at his home in Charlotte Sunday morning following a long illness. Funeral and burial took place in Charlotte Monday afternoon at 4 o’clock. Mr. Granger is survived by his widow, two sons and one daughter, of Charlotte, and his parents, Mr. and Mrs. D. W. Granger of this city. One brother Augustus, of Hickory, also sur vives. Mr. Granger moved from this city to Charlotte about 30 years ago. At one time he held a posi tion with The Davie Times. Mr. Granger had many friends in Mocksville and Davie county wfco were saddened by the news of bis death. He was a member of the Methodist church. The reason the small town is a failure is the lack cf co-operation. SPRING TIME Is Nearly Here. Get your Stock and Poul try in good condition by Feeding Good Tonics. We Carry Dr. Hess’ and Dr. LeGears’ I Two Of The Best. Let Us Serve You LeGiand’s Pharmacy On The Square Phone 21 Mocksville, N. C. Modern married life should be a fifty-fifty proposition. The wife should bak'i the biscuits and the hus band should furnish the dough. “THE SEED STORE” FARM AND GARDEN SEEDS Highest Purity And Germination Ky Blue Grass Rve Grass Lawn Grass D. E. Rape Pasture Grass Seed Com Garden Seeds Fluwer Seeds Red Clover W hite Clover Sweet Clover Alfalfa Clover Lespedeza Sudan Orchard Grass Herd Grass Good Seeds Low In Price This Year Mocksville Hardware C 0 s # I h f MtfO 1 $ ILLU SIO N : A large packing case is exhibited on a raised pla*~ form. A young woman climbs into the box; Head,.-- hands and feet protrude, and are held by specta tors while the magician takes a crosscut saw and, •with the help of an assistant, saws through the center of the box and apparently through the Wor n an . EXPLANATION: There are many explanations for this illusion. One method of performing this illusion requires the presence of two' girls in the box. One girl curls up Sn the left half of the box with her head and hands protruding, giving the effect you see illustrated above. The other girl is doubled up in the right half of the box, w ith only her feet showing. Nobody is sawed in half. e 9 f y t i t o b e f o o l e d . i t ’s m o r e f u n t o K N O W C ig arette advertising, too, has its tricks. Consider the illusion that “Flavor” can be achieved by some kind of magical hocus- pocus in manufacturing. EXPLANATION: Ju st three factors control the flavor of a cigarette. T he addition of arti ficial flavoring. T he blending of various to baccos. A nd the quality of the tobaccos them- KEPT FM SH IN THE S i fcB§2 HUMIDOR P ack a * 5 8 IfirrW-Vifo 1 : Copjiim . 1933, B iI. N O T ltI C K S - - J l l S T C O S f t I E R T O B A jC C O S INA MATCH WES S BUENP selves. Quality Is by far the most im portant. Dom estic cigarette tobaccos vary in price from 5f* a pound up to 4(¥ a pound. Im ported tobaccos vary from 50^ a pound to $1 .15. N o w onder, then, that cigarettes differ in taste—since distinctive, pleasing flavor de pends so largely upon the blending of the cost lier tobaccos. it is a fact, w ell known by leaf to b acco e x p e rts, th a t C am els a re m ade from finer, MORE EXPENSIVE tobaccos than an y other popular brand- T ry Cam els. G ive your taste a chance to sense the subtle difference that lies in costlier to baccos . . . a difference that m eans all the w orld in smoking pleasure. . . in pure, un alloyed satisfaction. A l f l € l * S I: K-mssB Siii=: 3iE*i Ihftjffl fe';!i95l}iiii: !jiiiih '“ ‘Si! Iii 33' III f H E D A V IE ftE C O R B , W ES, N . e . MARCH 15. »933 Dulin’s News. (Too Late For Last Week.) Rev. G. B. Ferree filled his regular appointment Sunday e ening. A goodly number was present, and everyone enjoyed tb*= sermon. Mr. and Mrs. P. Ii- Howard spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Smith. Mrs. Hermon Boger, of Clemmon’s spent the week-end with her parents Mr. and Mrs. W. T. [Haneline. Mr. and Mrs. McAuther, of High Point was the pleasant visitors of Mr. and Mrs. T. A Plott Sunday. Miss Ruby Cirter spent Saturday with Miss Sallie Haneline. Mr. and Mrs. Conard Phelps spent Sunday with his sister Mrs. Taylor Call. Mrs. P. H. Howard and Mrs. W. T. Haneline and Miss Sallie Honeline were in Mocksville shopping Satur day. The infant baby of Mr. and Mrs. George Carter died Sunday morn ing and wa3 laid to rest Sunday e ven- ing at No Creek. Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Gobble spent Sunday with the latter’s parents Mr. and Mrs. G. B. McDaniel. Center News (Too Late For Last Week) Mrs. J. H. B. Dwiggins and Maudie Myers spent one day last week with Mr. and Mrs. Simieon Goins in Mocksville. Mrs. George Evans of Advance was the guest of Mrs. C. A McAllister Toesday N. B. Dyson and family and Edna Tutterow attended a birthday at the home of Totn Giither at Sheffield Sunday. W. F. Anderson of Winston-Silem wa3 a visitor here Thursday. Mrs. S F. Tutterow and son; JefE of Winston-Salem spent the week end with Mrs. H. F. Tutterow. Mr. and Mrs. 0. O Tutterow of Salisbury were week end guests of L1 M. Tutterow and family. Miss Vera Garrett of Pocahuntas Virginia was a recenr guest of her brother B. P. Garrett. OraTutterow of Greensboro spent the week-end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. T. W. Tutterow. Mrs. W. F. Anderson and daugh ters, Louise Janet, and Doris of Winston-Salem are visiting her parents Mr. and Mrs. R. S. Powell. Mr. and Mrs. Marsh Dwiggins and children of Mocksville were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Tut terow. Miss Viola Trevette of Hampton- ville is visiting Mrs. T. W Dwiggins. Among the Sunday visitors in this community; were Mr. and Mrs. Fred Walker and Myrtle Anderson of High 'Point, Mrs. Roy Shelton and Law- erence Walkerof Elkin, Mr. and Mrs.- Calvin Walker of High Point and Mr. and Mrs. Horace Deaton of Thomas- ville. The service conducted by Rev, Jim Green and quartet of Greensboro Was enjoved by a large crowd from Center, Oak Grove, Liberty, Mocks- VilIe and other points in Davie Coun ty. _____________ Kappa News. (Too Late For Last Week) Mrs. Florence Smoot condition is much improved glad to note- Mr. and Mrs. Frank Sofiey visited Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Keller Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Smith, Mr. and Mrs. M. T. Daywalt spent Sun day in Cooleemee with Mrs. Smith parents Mr. and Mrs. C. H, Byerly. John L. Foster and daughter Miss Mary spent Saturday afternoon with Mrs. Florence Smoot. Miss Lois Smoot spent Saturday night with Miss Mary and Blandina Daywalt. Mr. and Mrs. W. M Powell and little son Jimmev visited Mr. and Mrs.-June Safriet Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Anderson and children, also West Gobble, Mrs. Fannie McCulIoh and Mrs. Bonnie Gobble spent "last Wednesday with Mr. and Mrs. F. F. Walker. Glenn Boger and children spent a few days the past week with Mrs.. Bogers parent’s Mr. and Mrs. Louis Forrest. Mrs. Claudia Gant and children spent one day the past week with Mrs. Gant’s parent’s Mr. and Mrs. Louis Forrest. Mr. and Mrs." Charlie Rowdan of High Point soent Saturday with Mr. and Mrs Garland Smith. Mrs. Sallie Smoot spent Sunday afternoon with Mrs S. F. Smoot. We wish that the inventor of n tn had made it possible to scratch his own back without so much eff-it an I ungraceful movements. Deed of Separation Filed. A deed of separation has been filed in the register of deeds office between W. C. Hendrix and Am anda Hendrix of the RedIand sect ion It is mentioned in the sep aration agreement that the parties were married in Davie county, on Mav 13. 1920. It is designated in the contract that the husband shall pay the wife j five dollars per week, give her cus- ' tody of the three children, WeDb Lee. age 11,- Zelma Rae. age 8 , and Willie Mae, age 5. An automobile and all the household and kitchen furniture are alse given to Mrs. Hendricks. m m ............................. Application For Parole Of C. G. Call. Application will be made to the Governor of North Carolina for the parole of C G. Call, convicted at the August. 1932, Term of Superior Court of Davie county for the crime of manufacturing whiskey, and sen tenced to the roads for a term of six months AU persons who oppose the grant ing of said parole are invited to for ward their protests to Hon, Tyre C. Taylor, Executive Counsel, Raleigh, N C., without delay. This 3rd day of March, 1933, A. D. S E E D O A TS! We have 100 bushels good seed oats which’ we are selling at 45 cents per bushel. We carry a big line of Feeds, Flour and Meal. Why not patronize Davie county mills and keep your money at home. We are still buying cotton and paying highest market prices for same. We want you to call and see us when you come to town. We will always treat you right. Green Milling Co. F. K. BENSON, Manager Near Southern Depot" Mocksville, N. C. [11» igi ill ill »3 <1 ill & *1 S E M I -P A S T E P A I N T One Gallon Makes 2 12 When Mixed^ K U R F E E S & W A R D Administrator’s Notice. Having qualified as adm inistrator of the ostate of Ira J. Wooten, dec’d IateofD avie county, N. C. Notice is hereby given all persons holding claims against said estate to prasent them to me for paym ent on or before Jan. 21, 1934, or this notice wil Ibe plea-* in bar of their recovery. AU per sons indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment. This Jan. 21, 1933. MRS. MARY J. BECK Admr. Ira J. Wooten, Dec’d. Sale Of Land Under Mortgage. By virtue of the power of sale con tained in a mortgage deed executed by C. F. Barnharat and Maggie Barnhardt, his wife, to J A. Sowers, on the last day of June, 192L as re corded in'M ortgage Book No. 22, page 267 . in the office of the Reg st- er of Deeds of Davie county North Carolina, default having been made in the payment of. principal and interest as proyided in the terms of said mortgage, notice is hereby given that the undersigned will sell at public auction at the Court House door, Mocksville. N. C.. on MONDAY, MARCH 20, 1933, AT TWELVE O’CLOCK NOON the following described real estate, "located in Jerusalem township, Davie county. North Carolina: BEGINNING at. an elm on the We3t Bank of the North Yakin river, Mrs. M. E NaiIsCornerandrunninp S 45 degrs. West with her line. 40 chains to a stone; thence N 86 degrs. W'est 45 chains to an elm; thence N4 degrs. W 23 chains to a stone; thence N 70 degrs. 10.10 chains to a stone; thence South 45 degrs. East5 72 chains to a stone on South side of bottom road; thence N 52 degrs. East 21 62 chains to a willow on the bank of said, river; thence down the river to the beginning, containing 59 1-10 acres more or less. Terms of sale, cash on confirma tion. This the 14th day of February 1933 C. FRANK SOWERS, Adminis trator of J. A. Sowers, Deceased, Mortgagee. RAPER & RAPER. Att’ys. j M R. FARMER! i I We are in a better position to handle! Your Cotton Than Ever Before We Appreciate' Your Business FOSTER & GREEN I Near Sanford Motor Co. !■ 4 ‘I* 4» 4 »1« ‘I* ■!» 1S »1» 4 4 4 »1« 4 >1* >I< >1* ifr »1» >1« >I< »!■ »1» 4 4 4 & 4 4 4 4 4» 4 44 4 4 4 4 C. C. YOUNG & SONS Funeral Directors Ambulance Service Dayor Night Phone 69 j - ; Mocksville, N. C SEE US FIRST. Let The Record print your Envelopes, Letter Heads, Statements, Sale Notices, Cards, Tags, Etc. Prices low. THE DAVIE RECORD. »4444 444 ‘] D AVIE CAFE P. K MAN OS, PROP. Next Door to PostoCBce and Jusl as Reliable REGULAR DINNERS 35c AlLKinds Of Short Orders At Any Time In The Day *■!„!, .|„I„I„I 'I M In mi, „ I iL L a. JwhOi .*■ ■■■ .h ,I, ,Ti ,1 , , l r I r, I1H1I J llli ,Jlllllll , t * LET US DO YOUR JOB Notice-Sale Of Land. By virtue of an order made by the Clerk of Davie Superior Court, I as commissioner will sell at the Court house door In Davie county, N. C., on Monday, March 20th, 1933, at 12 o’clock m., at public outcry to the highesc bidder for cash the lands de scribed below, situated in Shady Crnve township, adjoining.the lands of Filmore Robertson, Thomas Mas gey, I. E Hendrix and others bound ed a3 follows: Beginning at a stone and running South 5 chs and 13 links to a stone; thence West 20 degrs. 39 chs. and 40 links to a stone in Brind- Ies—now Thomas Masseys line; 'hence North 90 degrs. E. 5 chs. and 13 links to a stone; thence East 20 degrs. South 38 chs. and 68 Jinks to the beginning corner, containing twenty acres (20 acres) more or less, see Deed from E. W. Lassiter to A. M Robertson recorded in Deed Book No 21 page 434 Reg. of Deeds Office DavieCountv N C.. now-the proper ty of J. T. Robertson -this land is.sold to.satisfy a judgement of foreclosure uuder a mortgage" given by-J. T. Robertson to G. L White -default having been made in payment of the debt secured-a judgement of "fore closure was obtained in the Superior Court, this Feby. 14th 1933. E H MORRIS. Commissioner. Our prices on all kinds of printing is the lowest in many years. We use the best ink. the best envelopes, letter heads, statements, etc., to be had for the price. L^t’s talk it USE COOK’s e . C O. Relieves LaGrippe, Colds. Coughs. Sore Throat and Croup. In Successful Use Over 30 Y ears DR. E. C. CHOATE DENTIST OfficeSecond FloorFront New Sanford Building Office Phone HO Residence Phone .30. • Mocksville. N. C. iiiniiiiiTTTUiuiiimitr. BES-T 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. W e want the portant news haB penings from eye section of the con ty. Dropusa or letter ifa new J ter arrives at y^i home; if your me er-in-Iaw comes a visit or dies; if | son or daughter $ married or anythin worth mentioning,! Old papers for sale. TmmmHHinmiinimE CAMPBELL - WALKER FUNERAL HOME Distinctive Funeral Service to Every One AMBULANCE - - - embalmers I Main St. Next To Methodist Church Day Phone 4803 Night Phone 4811 or Uljl iimmmnmmiiiinmirimmmnmwiminnmmtiMnn'jfc » WK-K-X-X-*-*-XK-K-KK-K-K-K-K K-K-K-K-K-K-K*-K-X-K-X-X-X-K-K-K-K-K-K-X-K-K-K-K over. ****** ***********♦ I* t I**♦*♦ I $ I I** * I * I♦ **** ** I***" $** $**** $★★★★ ' ★ i★***■***. *★* i★*****■***.*** *-**.**Tr*Tr'*★It**- * ■ ** $*** ■* ** Keeping Davie People Informedof • .f .... I AU Happenmgs In The County Is The Mission Of Your County Paper The kind of news YOU want. . things that are interest to ALL. people the County, what is going j . ; j on, what has happened j where to buy the best for j i the least money . . all i ' - • ; brought to you each week I . ' * ■ ; Si for the homical charge of if ■ i'S 'W r - ' v- fOLUMN X X X | ItEiToF bat W as Happen TheDayt of Autoij (D a v ie R e c o rd , H, T. Kelly, of| In town Friday. Foster Clementl ,( W inston, were! Rev. S. W . Half ras in town SatuJ Mr. and Mrs. ,f Winston, spent| ith borne folks. Mis. B F. laughter are spej Itb relativss at D A. Parnell] iamily-into one oj iges on Wilkesh AVM- McGlai !barlotte last we reatment for rhej Mr. and Mrs. Int Sunday and ;oii with friends P. H . Hanes, town Tuesday on I Miss Minnie Fe '!sited in this citj test of her sis ianiel. Miss Mary udent at the Stal rreensdoro, sped ith her parents I It snows every| loo. Saturday 'eatber, A sma itfw o o’clock, iccompanied it. ihine, snow aij Mrs. Lizzie ..week into th | fecently purcha lradley, on Chuj Mr. and Mrs. [ itesyille, are sj 'ith relatives in | Miss Frankie tomorrow from to her-sister, at Winston, ind'babe will ac George Tbar tyening for-State icceptad a posits ierial Furniture [ R. H> Rollit [was in town T ht Mr. and Mrs. left W ednesday: [they will make tl Mocksville tod [nine mules Satut Iused fin ro ad 'b f iundied dollar, i Capt. R. Ww fille, Tenn., ipend a few we C. Gowan, G ow anhast police, force for I He is native of federate soldier.# visit bere in 22 j “The new 'been chartered.! ^granted Thurs $50,000 with IThe name o f ; Merchant’s & i WiU= Jhe ready! months. George W. Iionaire of.Baltj ingron' March operation. Kimbrough' ed home Tue Flprida. Misses Annii of Advance, ^4w,C, Gornl spenijtpgsomj tgi$wfith W .f tiriues.yery il ‘ -John CasbfI mg= some tin Mrs, G. j, Ca left Monday ’ ^ , w b e w l ''■TV-': ' ,S V . w § * w ^ w an t ‘He im. t news hap. s from every of the coup. 0P us a card k if a new vo. jives a t youy if your moth. Vw comes on |or dies; if the laughter gets or anything mentioning. pers for sale. r TTTTn-TiiiiiiiiiiIIIIiillll kL HOME jiry One EM BALM ERS I lrch Night Phone 4811 or 1631 pm T iitfiiiiiiiiiiim n Tmttg * * * * ★ • * ***5r * Peopl i f ..... igs In i t y If Your ier rS Y O U are of ★* }***** i I i★★★★ I**** ? %* i t I %* **** sople of I going ppened, »est for . . all Ii week (arge of ear I I 1 I**. i* $ t $ ? I \ % I ^ y § ; : a postal receipts- show the recorp Circulation the largest in the county , they pont lie: W -HERE SHALL THE PRESS. THE PEOPLE’S RIGHTS MAttiTAIN: UNAWED BY INFLUENCE AND UNBRIBED BY GAIN.'-’ VOLUMN X XXIV.M OCKSVILLE, N O RTH CAROLINA, W EDNESDAYr MARCH 1933 news of long ago . Whal Was Happenlne In Davio Before TheDays of Automobilea and Rolled Hose. (DavieRecord, March it, 1914 ) g, T. Kelly, of Taylorsville, was in town Friday. • Foster Clement and Jatk Allison, of W inston, were in town Sunday. Rev. S. W- Hall, of Fork Church ffas in tow n Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Swicegood, of W inston, spent last week m town with borne folks. Mis. B F. Rollins and little daughter are spending some time with relativss at Elkin. D A. Parnell has moved his family into one of the Gaither cot tages on Wilkeshoro street. 1 A. M. McGlatnerv returned to Charlotte last week to continue his ,jftreatment for rheumatism. Mr. and Mrs. R. M. Holthouser spent Sunday and Monday in Wins toil w ith friends and relatives. P. H. Hanes, of Winston, was in town Tuesday on bnsmess. Miss Minnie Fowler, of Winston, visited in this city last week, the guest of her sister. Mrs. G. G. Daniel. Miss Mary Nell Hartman, a • student at the State Normal College, Greensdoro, spent the week end with her parents at Farmington. It snows every day and Sunday too. Saturday we, had all kinds of weather. A small blizzard hit us at two o’clock. A little thunder accompanied it. Sunday we. had sunshine, snow and cloudy weather Mrs. Lizzie Tpmlinsoh moved lastweek into ihehouse-whioh she. recently purchased from Rev. E. P. Bradley, on Church street. Mr. and Mrs. C, B; Leonard, of Statesville, are spending a few days with relatives in and around town. MissFrankie Wilson will return tomorrow from a two week’s visit to her sister, Mrs. J. P. Cloaning- er, at Winston. Mrs. Cloaninger and-babe will acconpany her. George Tharpe left Saturday evening forStatesville where he has acceptad a position with the Im perial Furniture Co. R. H, Rollins, of State ,Road, was in town Thursday on business! Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Kimbrough left Wednesday for Raleigh where they will make their future home.' Moeksville township purchased nine mules Saturday which will be Used .in road !'building. Nineteen hundied dollar was the sale price. Capt. R. W- Gowan, of K nox ville, Tenn., arrived Saturday to spend a few weeks with his brother', S, C. Gowap, .near Center. Mr. Gowan ha% been on the Knoxville police force for the past 24 years. He isnativeof Davie and a Con federate soldier. This is his first visit here in 22.years. The new bank for Mocksville has been chartered. The charter IvaS granted Thursday. -The capital is’ $50,000 with .$10,000 subscribed. The name of the new -bank’: is Merchant’s & Farmers. TheLank wdl be ready ,for business • next months. V . George W. Wanderbilt1 52,/ mil Jfonaire of Baltimore, died at Wash- 'URton', March- 6th, following an operation. Kimbrough'McClamroeh--return ed home Tuesday from a trip .to Florida. - M issesAnnieandGrace Eaircloth of A-dvauce, visited in Mocksville: Usf/week. ■ ; --V : • 4A-C. Cornatzer, of Advance, is spending some time at Black Moun- ‘I'n with W.' A. Bailey, who ,con dones .very ill. , J°hn. Csjsii, who. has been’ spend- l“* S0Ine time with b is. mother, rs. G. J. Cash, at Smith Grove, ‘tit Monday s- *nd-> W herehejte^ A Wasteful Custom. ■ The Yorkville Enquirer states that it. does not wish 10 be charged with being hard-hearted or unap preciative of the good intentions of friends and relatives, but for a long time we have had thrust upon - us the fact of the Terrible waste all over this land, incident to the send ing of floral wreaths and flowers cn the occasipn of the death of loved ones. To be sure, wheg one of our rela tives and friends pass on, and other living friends as tokens, of esteem and love send flowers and wreaths to .be pla.ed on the graves of- the deceased,- we are quite naturally and rightfully thankful and appre Ciative, But cold bloodedly, what does it amount to? The flowers and wreaths are beautiful for a day ,or two and then they are gone—taken awav from the graves they- have made look beautiful. The person over whom these dowers were piled knows nothing about it; the family of the deceased recalls the beauty of tne flowers, the tokens of friends and that ends it. In Sweden flowers are not put on graves any more. Instehd friends of the deceased and their families contribute whatever sum of money they would put In flowers to a fund to build permanent memorial-homes for the less fortunate. Notices of funeral hours ofter bear these words: ‘‘No flowers oy request. Remember. Remembertfae-Flower Fund.” How much better it -would be, it seems to The Enquirer, if friends, andv-Telatives would’ ddnatb*vthh money, they would put in flowers" t 6 a permanent fund to go to the com mi.ttee in charge of a cemetery, ’ the money to be used in the planting of flowers of all kinds in the ceme tery and in surroundings/ to! make the city of the dead a more beauti ful place. In time, if the fund be large enough, a greenhouse could be established and flowers cultivat ed and in time there would. be plenty of flowers and shrubby grpw- ingipg there, to furnish ample grave flowers and wreaths at practically no cost, to supply every need. His Mind? Nothing To Brag Aboht The New York Daily News says that an autograph sale there the signature of G reta ! Garbo sold . for ten times the price brought by Woodrow. Wilson’s autograph and twice as much as that of Abraham Lincoln. jW hichis a pretty commentrry on. the way things have gone to rack in this country. W hen the sensuous .scribble of an alien Swedish body-contorting come-along-hither.screen star- who perhaps bathes b pryoxy is ap praised as of more intrinsic worth than the immortal penmanship of Democracy’s foremost leader and the country’s martyred saviour and emancipator, we think it is time to shut up shop and meander merrily to the demnition dogs for fair.-^- Yeilow Jacket. Some good authorities notuetbat the .battle is not to the. strong, .nor the race to 'the sWift, but no ,'one anywhere has ever said that.;the rewards do not come to the efficient. several years ; ; "!‘!‘?. Mr H . L. W hite, of Clarksville, died: Saturday , night, following a short illness of pneumonia, He was. 70 years of aige and. is. sufcyfyed ' relatives.-by his widow and many The body was laid to rest at- Bear Creek Monday. . A mad dog passhd'through Cana last week and bit a lot of pther dogs. tiCorav the little daughter of- Mr. and Mrs. G11W. Minor, near Fork : W. O. Saunders, editor oh.the Independent, published at ElizabfjJb City, may be wrong in his conclu sions.- but he has a national reputh- tion for speaking his mipd so that his readers have no trouble touh-• J derstand what he is driving at.vFor instance, read this. » "T he members of the General Assembly of North Carolina now! in session were elected with- one supreme, mandate from the people: to reduce-taxes. : And they seem to! have been chiefly concerned -.with; wavs and means.to find taxed since! they gathered in Raleigh early Sm January. ^ "They now propose to raise more taxes by either a sales or luxury tax; so long as the people have* a. dollar to spend the State will con/ tinue to grab a greater and greater- share.of that dollar. . : ?, ! They must have six or eight miU! Iion uollars that a sales tax will provide, taxing the bread and but ter or the pleasures of the poor**- take your choice. They would; bankrupt every, merchant, whose margin of net profit .is already less than the sales tax -it is proposed to levy. .. ■ “ Why resort to a sales or luxurjjf tax? Why add to the crushing tax, burden of the people and why drive thousand of struggling. m erchant to the wall?- - "W hy not do the simple, sensible expedient thing and cut-, the State budget-another six or eight million dollars. Why persist in spenuin money we j haven’t- got, pursuin; the^foljy and madness 'of. diggin oui^elyes^^ we can never climb out. •' -. : “ By the simple process of lopping two, three or even four ,mqfatlis off the public school term .-in North Carolina for the next two years, the, tax payers Can savesix/miilions, eight millions or twelve millions a year for the next two ,years. The General Assembly can balance the State budget over night ’ and go home. ■ "Away with all the.! talk about the sanctity ot education "and the future of onr children! Nothing is more sacred than the preservation of the home and' the. conservation oi public health.' The children of the masses in North Carolina—and their parents!—are in want for the clothes for their bellies. And we would jeopardize all private proper ty and impoverish our people in the interest of mass education. “ It is all so obviously simple. Reduce the school term in N orth Caroline that is costing 24 million dollars a years for .maintenance -a- Ione.; reduce if to ; the number of months we can afford to pay for: Balance the budged without resort to additional taxes and go home, Mr. Legislator, go hopiel” ‘ It is quite clear that Mr. Saund ers w'o.uld have,the schools bear the brunt of the wfaolq. thing. ,A s a matter of fact they, heed need- not dp.so. Apply the same rule o.f sub trdction to., all agencies alike; bring them all within the scope of the present income on equal .!footing and -then let them make the- most qf the funds in band. T hat would balance the budget, and !then; the legislators could “ go.?hpine.” That is1’ what the individual,is. having to do: he is patterning hisshirt' jfight now to cover as- much nakedness as possible. IFs .embra&sing, some times,, but-iit’s the best he han do,- Governmental.'agencies sbp.uld take their cue, TrontjU h e.- In ^ J d uaL-T Statesville Recqfd;,; ‘ ’ I/!/!! > :!: ! ^ / ' tV I f agoldenCalf 1 were erecfed¥no w* it womd take air extra-police-force to keep\^t from being stolen;. NUMBER 35 WOl Have To Wait. Newspapers are having a hard time-keeping the folks of the stale informed of what the Legislature is doing, down at Raleigh, In the case of local bills the papers are able to public news. But when it comes to statewide measure, the press finds itself unable to tell what ’ has bei n done or to predict any degree of as surance: what will be done. A bill may start through one of the houses with promise of sweeping to passage -and suddenly check up and:turned to full retreat. Orjf it passes one house it is likely to be r< - called next day on a vote and sent back to a committee to take another North Carolina readers of T ie Yellow Jacket may wellhe- astounr’ ed at the - perilous 'predicament of this state after more than twen’y years of., uninterrupted Democratic rule. For.all this time the leaders of Democracy have proclaimed fn m the stump and thru the press nf. Democracy ’8 wonderful admimstrc tions of “ wisdom” and economy.' And the voters seemed-to believe this stuff and kept piling up bigger and bigger Democratic majorities from vear to year. But the day of reckon ing has come. AU this “ wisdom” and “economy” stuff has been blown , to the winas The truth has at lastrunning start, or die from exhaus- brokeD upon the |e Even the Etion or suffocation. - ,Consequently the folks will simply have to- wait uniii about the time the majority of the members of the Legislature decide they are going to quit for the session. Some legisla tion will be definitely, passed then, and it would not be surprising if things should whirl through the necessary process with confusing -The members of - tLe Legislature bave evidently become afflicted with tbe-same state of mind as posses the folkB back home. They have been overwhelmed with testimony that all the present taxes are destructive and that any new kind would simply mean annihilation.- They have - been told with almost unanimous voice that.they must reduce the expenses of-government, but the unanimity has ended when details are called for. It might not be so hard for the -legislators to go ahead and do some things on a positive scale, but when it’comes to undoing the things that ayeitbere is trouble. O- / / lize'that there are- bears, id’ ev&ry' road'and: those that will eat if you don’t move, and the papers can r< - cord what has beea ddiie.H^The DiE- patch. ■’ '>v ' ’ No Medical Liquor. IL theJegislative attitude as to li quor on prescription is an indication of the Nqrth Carolina settlement to ward the sale of liquor jgenerahy. the State will remain prohibition, notwithstanding the vote for Bob Reynolds, avowed wet. The bill per- mitted one pint of liquor per monts on physicians prescription and tie doctor prescribing the liquor was re - quired to certify that he was famil iar wtth whom the liquor was pre scribed and.that-it was needed. A tax of .$200 was levied on drug stores 8 elling theJiquor. Notwithstanding there are prohibitionists Wbo hold that a doctor should be allowed Io prescribe liquor as medinine for pa tients and that provision should be •madefor filling-the prescription, the bill was defeated, 19 to 75 . Doctors and druggists had appeared in oppo sition to the bill and none. had ap peared for it. ,Druggists declared that it would - be impossible to pay the tax and come out on liquor sales if the law was strictly followed and the idea that many doctors, and es pecially druggists, would not comply with the spirit of the law, no doubt had much to do with the heavy ma- jbrity against the bill. _; : Under the Volstead act.liquor may be sold for medicine on doctors’ pre scriptions but it is for the States to say whether liquor mayfae sold that way. Twenty-eight States permit t ie sale:of liquor on .prescription. In twenty States they get along with out that form of medicine, or at least they are denied. that privilege of getting it through the doctors and drug/stores.—Statesville Daily. - , :; S om b fo lk s W ould be h a p p ie r- if th e y d id n o t h a v e a n y ,,n eig h b o rs. T ry in g to k e e y tip w ith th e n eig h - iJjhrs tjk e s a ll th ft j^.ctg Ji..o f life for t |e m . | - W h a t ttie* n e ig h b o rs :h ave jth a t th ese fo o lish o n es'd o ; n o t b a v e, !w orries’th e m rnore th a n c o m fo rtsfi a h d .possessions th e y ;: th em selv es ing. L ,^W e hear a lot about married wo^ men -holding state jobs Personal ly, we can see no gocd reason why an efficient married woman should not be as much;entitled tb a job as anybody. Any just -thljik, if fwe teop all the Jnarrjed Nom from Working, whslt isigoiug to come ,of this 1 crowd of wife fed jhusbands?. . W e k n o w o i no reaso n -w h y effi ciency sh o u ld sh o u ld h o tjb e recog-? riizee w h e re v er fo u n d ;’ Gf coiirsey A mamjs btit/a • Worm out: of the -Wbaf a lot. of ,folks; there arhw we!can 5^ ^ ^ : , # ^ ; ^ / ^ ] ^ dust—he come, wiggles about a- want skim off allthe cream when family should notbe Pu‘ °“ a S°Vn ,.'-!-Ji:;-;*;--■. '..‘-j ., - • -.y.I - -AfnmBnl- -na-n hottle.-^-.W llliamstOtt Democratic editors have come right out with the declaration that these tax wasters have well nigh ruined North Carolina. And this wanton waste of the people’s money has per- vided nearly every department of. the state government. A perfect swarm of useless officers drawing fat salaries from the State, till a de ficit of some fifteen million dollars stares North Carolina in the face. If you don’t believe what -Tbe Yellow Jacket is saving about it, then read- the following warning from Jullian S. Miller, associate editor: of the Cnarlotte (N. C.) Observer; one of the foremost Democratic dailies -in North Carolina: ‘The total cost of government in North Carolina 20 years ago was a third less than is required today to pay interest -and retire ',annually maturing bonds of the state’s indebt-, edness That shows you what has been happening in the matter of mounting cost of government. ‘In 1913,; the state’srtotal tax bill was^FLBOp/IKKlstate. /coim miin- ita/!., - ' !- “Today the same tax bill is $95t- OOO OOO or $30 per capita. "Government in North ' Carolina costs six times as ifauch today as it did, 20 years ago and the state is at least, six times less able to stand/this pun ishment than it Was even then. “What must be done may not be very pleasant to contemplate, but it' is a m atter of Iifeand death. "You don’t run into ecstasy at the! thought of having to get a( surgeon to cut you ail to pieces, but if it milst be done, you steel yourself for the ordeal—and live. North Carolina finds itself in that; very ‘picklement’.’’—Yell.ow Jacket- Broken Promises. ■ Well, when Roosevelt was elected last November the crv went forward that We would Iiave beer by Christ*- mas. We didn’t. Then the date was moved up and it was said We would' have it by the lime Congress ad journed, the Democratic House would pass the bill and the Demo-! crats and their Republican allies in the Senate would do IikeWisev Well, they didn’t and we haven’t any beef, yet. Now the white-haired Rainey; the new Democratic Speaker says we are going to have beer right' away/ probably by March'20. While the people are asking for bread,•? banks ciased up: and the economic condili lion of the country generally in -a terrible fix, all this Rainey and a few. other beer guzzlers seem to. study a- bout it gives the people beer.—Union Repubiican. !;j,! ’ 1. , • - i Much Ado About; Nolh> !own Difference Only In Name. When the Legislative did away with.the office of Executive Counsel, people rejoiced that a saving had been effected. However, it develop- ed that a parole commissioner had been advocated by somebody and so - that office was created. The point that would be amusing, if the m atter .was not so serious, is that the amount saved by doing s- way with the office of Executive Counsel was $5,560 and the amount added by the creation of the office of parole commissioner. 13 $5,560. There is a difference only in name and this, we submit, is not a saving to the texpayers. Here is how the Raleigh News and Observer tells the story: "Governor Ehrmghaus recom mended it. -Thereorganizationcom- mittee recommended it. The Legis lature did it. > The people aoplauded the abolishing of the office of Ex ecutive Counsel as evidence that the people at Raleigh were doing things to save taxpayers’* maney instead of just talking about it. The joint ap propriations committee solemnly voted to - strike out the appropns- tions-for the abolished office. Mem. bers smiled. They had saved the taxpayers $5,560 a year. Then some body remarked that the house had passed a bill creating the office of parole office. Having just saved the taxpayers $5 560 a year, there was little opposition to making a new ap propriation. Itw asfixedat exactly $5,560 a year.”—Wilkes Journal. j Too Late. < A New Ym k-paper tells the story : %'¥<lteig^il'L-wbo. for.-.oae ,reason 'VhehRSfceqsJieajrt of a mother. A svmpathetic-neppjjer. reached Sqwir ' in his pocket and-.paid for a small ad vertisem entinbispa per/begging the girl, if she read the. ad to come back-home, no matter what the trouble-was. .; * * * . . Two years later another adver tisement was inserted. This time it told of the mother’s death, and the girl came back to the funeral. Tbe doctors said -that- the woman died of a broken heart.. The girl’s return .didn’t matter to her then. Ir.W.a|':the' weary days before .the’, mother closed.: -her Cyes that ,she heeded: her daughter: days iq which she sat and worried and wondered and wept over her missing little girl that her presence would have helped. * * * Many of us wait unth it is ,too late: we are shaken from .our self ishness, our, petty, spites’ and hurts only by the mystery of death. You and I are Juckier-than this little girl if."we still have time to answer the-plea of some loving heart that faasAbeen :;ileglected,-*rStatesville . Record. -- s One of the changes of extrava gance leveled during the campaign against Herbert Hubver was’ that he had three secretaries of the White House where before only one or two had been' employed. : Well bless your soul- ff President Roosevelt hasn’t . ; gone and done the same /thing, em- - ployed, three secretaries, Louis’ M. Howiei of Massachusetts, who will be the !head boss; Marvin H. Mc- Intrre. of Kentucky, who will stay out-in front :and. receive -the office seekers and Stephen T; Early, of , Virginia, who will be -in charge of public relations and trafel And in addition1 tothese Mr. Rjosevelt has an "ecqhomic” expert of some kind : and one or two others listed as help ers. !Of: Course it is all right for Mr. : Roosevelt to have this big staff of Mlbite ,House, workers but it .was poisra'for-Mr.iHoover to think of / such ja thing much leiss do it.-r-Ex. Everythingbasgopd, points; ing.&:gbod deep !breatb for a long : ? K'MMveSsS - SigflGWi M ii-- THE DAVIE RECORD. C. FRANK STKpiTO ■ - £&«■ Member Nalioiial Farm Grange. T E lfEPHONE Entered a t the Postoffice in Mocks- vllle, N. C., as Second-class Miul m atter. M arch 3 .1903. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: ONE YE/VR. IN ADVANCE - $ I OO SIX MONTHS. IN ADVANCE - J SO Scrip is all right as far as it goes, but it doesn’t g$ far enough. For once in a;life time our checks were as good as'those signed by a millionaire. j We wonder what Senator Josiah Bailey thinks ot! President Roose velt’s beer procljamation? - Plenty of people in Mocksville this week counting, but most of them appear to be broke, even under the "new deal ” Theeditor of The-Record will never be arrestek for hoarding gold, silver, nickel or copper. We can’t get enough of these metals to pay our bills. i The folks who voted for Robert Revnolds knew: who and what they were voting fob. Some of them seem to have repented in sackcloth and ashes. i Our old friend Josephus paniels, editor of the Raleigh "Nuisance and Corrupter;” as some papers once called his newspaper, ht s been appointed ambassador to Mexico. Editor Daniels [will have his bands lull if he lives' up to the record made by the late Senator Dwight Morrow. Bob Reynolds, North Carolii a Senator, has been hearing from the folks back home. Bob made a lot of campaign promises and he seems to be between .< the devil and the deep blue sea. When running for office politicians should abstain from making promises they cannot carryout. Many North: Carolina state and national banks-have reopened ’for bu ir ess in T he’past week. There are a number of banks that have not yet been authorized to do an 'Unrestricted business. The banks are being opened as fast as- the state authorities can make the pro per investigations and give them authority. We hope that they will all be open for business before the end of the week. Court In Session.» The March term of Davie Su perior court opened shortly after, 10 o’clock Monday morning with his Honor Judge Michael Schenck von the bench andj Solicitor John ?R. Jones prosecuting. Despite the in clement weathef Monday a fairly large crowd was in attendance Many important cases are scheduled to be tried this', week, among them being several inurder cases. The full court proceedings will appear in our next issue. B. C. Clement is foreman of ,- the grand jury. The Scott murder case is scheduled for trial today.. Herbert Hoover Killed. ■ The editor w,as shocked Saturday shortly after !noon when Robert Woodruff camej to him on the streets and reported tbat - Herbert Hoover had been ktlleij by an automobile running over him. A fterasking for further particulars Mr. Woodruff . stated that it | wasn’t the forther president tbat Was killed, but his house cat, with the same name. An auto ran over;the cat Thursday night with fatal results. Herbert had bad luck sometime ago when he lost one foot in a steel trap. H e is now out ot his misierv. MuchCashTurned- -' • - • Loose.. : ' More than J5i!o,ooo in cash was turned loose at Cooleemee last Tues day afternoon v|hen theweekly-pay roll'of the Erwln Cotton Mills -for the week ending March 4th. ipsa met. This wds the first . payless week in the mill’s 32' years, operat ion. The nay roll was only delay- • ed one week on account of the bank holiday. j Miss Ruby l^anin,’a student at; High: Point'.'College, spent: the week end m town with her parents. TH! DAVlI ftia m MOeKSVtlfcE, M ARCH *4; Basketball Scores. The semi-finals in the fourth an- nual Dpvie county high school basketball tournament were played at the Mocksville gym Tuesday night. v ‘ "V- '■ . T heSm ithG fove boys downed the Cooleemee 'champions. of four years standibg by a score of !03 t0 19. ■' The Mocksville'girls put the Cool eemee girls out of the racje 12 to 10 in one of the best games ever play ed here: Smith Grove girls defeated Farm ington 44 to 11. Midget gitls from Cooleemee defeated; Advanceuoto ,v Mocksville midget girls defeated Smith Grove midget girls 15 to 14, in a hotly contested game. Cooleemee midget boys defeated Farmington midgets 23 to 13. • The fourth annual Davie coun ty high school .basketball tourna ment finals were held at the gym nasium here on T hursday night with four very interesting and hot ly contested games witnessed. The Smith Grove boys won the county championship by defeating the Ad vance boys 30 to 24. The Mocks- ville girls took the county title a way from Smith Grove, champions for the past two years'23 to 21- in what was one of-.the star attrac tions of the night. Something unusual In a basket ball game was witnessed when the Mocksville and' GooleemeeJimidget boys after playing three extra periods were unable to break,^the 19 all tie whijb existed at the end of regular lime and the coaches of the two teams agreed to call, it a co-championship. The M ocksville m id g et g irls to o k th e c o u n tv title in th e o p etttn g gam e by d e fe a tin g the, C ooleem ee lassies. 18 to 13. All games were close and greater interest with larger crowds than ever featured the tournament which opened on the]loth with the elimi nation contests ' and wound up Tliursday-night. . _ , Baxter MoOse of the Reeds high school faculty in Davidson county was the tournament referee. Kappa News. Misses Lois Smoot and Bloodina Day- walt spent the w eekend with their aunt MrS. W. M. Powell, of Calahaln. J Mr. and Mrs. D. W. Smith and- children and Mr. and Mrs. M. T. Daywalt were the Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. A. L Sm ith.’ Mrs. Luey Evans returned home Wed nesday after spending five week’s with her parent’s Mr. and Mrs. June SafrieL Mr. and Mrs. Albert Gant and children and Miss Myrtle Gant spent Sunday after noon with Mrs. Gant’s parents Mr: and Mrs. L. B. Forest. Sheriff C. C. Smoot and family visited their son C: A. Smoot Sunday afternoon. Miss FaDces Jones SpeDt the week-end at Cool Springs the guest of Miss K ath erine Summers. Ralph Forrest spent a few day’s the past week on business at Spencer. Mrs. W alter CtendeoIn and son Jack, of Greensboro spent one day the past week with Mifs. v Q endenin father Mr. .1J. M. Stroud, of neat- County Line. ' W alter Walker, of High Point is spend ing awhile with his parent’s Mr. and Mrs. W. S, W alker^. ■ --y ■ - y Center.News > Mr. .and Mrs. C. E. Xnderson and daugh ter,’Betty’ Lou. of WihstOh Salem were here Sunday afternoon.;' •' ‘.; LCbrAhderson. of !Calahaln an d ..Miss Nell Gant,'of Iredell county; were m arped Sattirdaybight. T heir m any friends-htre wish them much happiness.. Ambng the Sunday Visitors here.w ere: Spender Dwiggios, of W insfon-SalenjtSFfed Walker. F. S.'Ijam es. and Mr. and ;Mre: Calvin Walker, of High Point; and Mrs. C. W. Tutterow, of Kannapolis. Mra Kate Dwlgginsis making a n ex tended visit w ith relatives in Greensboro. ■ The: body of Cravyford W alker who form erly lived here and later, of- W inston-St- Iem was laid,to rest here.Sunday after noon!’ A large crowd; from numerous places attenJed. '.Much sym pathy is felt for the bereaved ones. ^ There will be preaehing at Mt. -Tabor Holiness church Sunday morning and also Sunday.night. V Hauser Case .Postponed T h e JohU Henry? HauseV murder case has been continued:until the August term of court. Attorney B. C. Brock is con nected w ith the case and his duties at Raleigh was said to be the cause of the continuance. vslNg.-}-. JUST OUT! A n d D e s i g n e d f o r Y o u r I n f o r m a t i o n a n d U s e ! KITCHENMIXERELECTRIC PERCOLATO VACUUM CLEANERELECTRIC TOASTER 7 WAFFLE FLECIorHEATERIRONHEATING PAD ELECTRIC WATERHEATER ELECTRIC IRON ELECTRIC FRIGERA ELECTRIC RANGE ELECTRILIGHTSELECTRIC RADIO B ''Gives so much Fov so little // / SO U T H E R N P U B L IC U T IL IT IE S C O M P A N Y , This interesting Booklet has just been pubiished-.:and: Containsfnot only cp?’- ■ plete instructions on how, to-read;your meter but ether:useful, infqnnatiqn ,.a , electpc service. By followmg-the simple, instructions-given, you will; be: ■ able to estimate the aijiount and- cost of elessricitv used ,fronj\diiy4q day. or, the cost of operating any. appliance for any period of-tim e .onwouf new lowv, rates. ^ S ’ V It is an entirely new publication— up-to-the-minute and .intere|Jtin£.. We will glad'y send one to any customer on request, Just phone— or-write us. We want to urge all of -our customers to learn to read their rne^r. This booklet will enable you to do this. - ' f*- Get Yours Today—It’s Free „ Cf r*»-“ "T.t-------------------- E le c tr ic ity Is C heags- 5 U f e It F reely jListen;* P r p g r a ^ & t ' Monday and" Friday' ’ S o u t h e r n P u b iic U t i l i t i e s C o ; Phone 1900 John Wesley EjKs. Jobn W esley'Ellis, 78, passed a- wav last Tuesday night a t. 6:30 o’clock at his home in Farm ing ton township. Advance, Route 1. from in ju rie s sustained. March 1, .when a tree fell on him. • :: v - /;■; Mr. Eilis-; wds near His home when a massive tree fell across him, pinning his - body to the ground. H e bad been confined to his bed in a critical coudition since the ac cident,'.'. " .' -I V, •■ He was born in Davie county De cember 20, 1854. a son of the late CSleb G. and Mary Stew art. Elhs. Hfespent his entire life in the coun ty and was. married to Miss Mary BftHoward;: on . January 5, 1877. He bad been a member of Bethle- Win M F,. Clhurch for 52 years, ! 'Surviving are six. sons, T. E arid S. M. Ellis, of Benkleman, Nribr. . S. W: Ellis, of Parks, Nebr,, j.’D. Ellist of Davie county; W, A. Eiiis of Davie county, and J . F. Ellis, of Stokes county; four daugh teirs, Mrs. J. F r Cope and Mrs. A J.!Cope, of Davie county, and Miss es Maggie and Ida Ellis, of Davie eoiunty; three sisters. Mrs; Tom W alker and Mrs O. M March, of Advauce, and Mrs. George Stewart, of: Winstou-Salem; 47 grandchild ren and ten great-grandchildi eu. Funeral services will be held Fri day afternoon at 2:30 at the home, and at 3 o’clock at Bethlehem Methodist church. Rev. M. G. Ervin and Rev. G. C- Brewer conducted the services. Interment followed in the church cemetery In the death of Mr. Ellis the ed, 1 tor of Tbe Record loses a personal friend. ■ We will miss his pleasant visits to-our office, He has been a reader of The Record for more than a quarter of a century. Ijames X Roads News. T. B. Nance, wife and children, of Willamore Springs springs spent the week-end with Mrs. Nance’s brother W. V. Gobble. Mrs John Peoples and Miss Susie Peoples were in Yadkinvilie Saturday visiting Mr, and Mrs. Harvey Peoples Richa- d Spry, and family, of Salis bury, were in the community visit ing relatives: Saturday. Miss Susie Peoples speit the weel - end in Salisbury. - Miss Freddie Lee Lanier is spend ing a few" weeks in .WmstonSalem with her sister Mrs. Csrman -White.' Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Holland made a visit last Sunday morning to see] tbfe new nine pound son of Mr. and Mrs, Charlie Blackwelder. Willis and Howard Gobble spent Saturday night with Mr. and Mrs, John Peoples. ,PauI White fiIIed his regular at- pointment Sunday. - A. C. Chaffin, spent , last Sunday I afternoon with'Mr. and Mrs W.: V. I Gobble. -, Davie Bill Killed. Raleigh, March i5. - Kep tive Burr Brock’s bill for the 1 of Roy G. Walker, former sVf of Davie county, authorizing, J to,collect back ; taxes, received ^ unfavorable]report from the Sen? committee -oOlfinance- after it 1 8 been passed by the House and w to the unfavorable calendar-.0* graveyard,' - Unless which is unlikely!resurrect^; AttentionGraDgers. Deaii Vivian’s ' Illustrated Lecture, ! Grange Ritualfain and Degree workwillu Biyen for all fourth degree Granite X bers a t the Mocksville Graded school !Z M onday night,-March 2'/th, at 7-30 n Every Grange member in Davierau;;,*' urged to be present. n M Fanners Can Borrow! Money. Agents of the Secretary of Agri, culture are now making app!jci' tions in Mocksville for Davie farm, ers, for loans to be used for %• purchase of fertilizer and seeds Iot 1933 crops? I The government takes a fhsf mortage on. a ll'1933 crops Tlti interest rate is StA per cent, and ail notes are due October 31, 1933, This money is loaned to the lam. ers expressly, for the purpose ot producing’their crops and must not be used for any other puipose. The borrower mast apply all pro. ceeds from the sale of bis crops 00 bis loan until it is paid in full. Landlords must sign a waiver (or his interest of crops, and the In. ant must sign a waiver for ]his in. terest of crops. T hrre will be a notary fee of joe and a charge of 70c for recording the mortgage. TheseamountsmisJ be paid by the borrower. Daniels Lands Pie. W ashington, March 13.—Jo*. I pbus Daniels. Raliegh publisher, was nominated by President Roose velt to be United States ambassador | to Mexico City. Notice! Re-Sale Of LoL By v irtu e-o f an order made by fc Clerk of the Superior Court. I as con* siouer will resell to the highest bidder the court house door id Davie count?, k cosh, a t !2 o’clock 01 , on Monday, Ad 3rd 1933 the-propert; described belor; I ten per cent, bid having been placed^ sam e; this is known as the Charlie Ilnn cafe lot. and -is bounded as follows; Un- 1 ed near the.Depot. beginning at a SM Southeast corner of the original JesseHs m ent lot near the old well, thence N. «* chain to a stake; thence West 50 feel toi stone in R. M, Foster line; thence Sosa one chain to a stone. R. M. Fosterscewi in side of Depot street; thence to the «• ginning corner.' This lot is sold for PW | tion among :..the heirs of J. W,- dec’d. This March 18th 19”3. .A'-'T. GRANT, Commissiwtt; GRANT & MORRIS. Attys. Come To See Us For Youf Garden Tools A successful garden, and beautiful lawn depend* * great deal on having the right tools to work with We Have Just What You Need For Every Use. Hoes Rakes Spades Shears Lawn Mowers . ; T ' G a r d e n Plows And Many household items that you will probabfr need in fixing up around the home- Our prices are right for good dependable' qualify. C C. Sanford Sons Co. r , * t s • ' “Everything Fo^ E very body’J HOWS AND WI RAISING Questions and. Clover Many By H. H. ALP. PoultryCkillege of AgrlculturJ of lUinoIa.—WNU| Tw enty-four question cover ’ m ost of the which Illinois fanner clear iff the successful feeding of chicks th is] Samples o f the que ewers placed In the hail ty farm advisers, a re : | q . W hat are the m ents for successful re A. H ealthy, vigoroi] clean ventilated hous' range, not - overcrow dJ plenty of feeder space " use of good common Q. How much floor | chick have? A. T here should square foot"O f floor three Chicks. Q. W hat should th e l tore o f the brooder hod A. G enerally the roq of th e ■brooder house what- with the age of the brooder stove meth there should 'b e little room tem perature to 75 to 80 degrees. Toh houses are kept too hd perature " recom m endal mean room tem p eratu rl Q.., W hen should clilq first feeding? A. As soon as they] brooder house. Long is likely to be followeds Q. W hat'are the m of takes m ade by the flocl ing chicks? A. Not providing space, keeping the brol hot - and losing in tfi chicks are six. w eeks ol Cost Sheet Show Profits in Every poultry flock cost records for the p< office a t N orth Caroiin during the year 1932 above feed cost of $1.2' ing to figures sn b m itt| ers and recently tabu Maupin, poultry special T here w ere 214-, floi " kept; these-' recordsnth and m ade a careful n month or the results The average fot-'rittch n . 358 birds fra&vS^lilcl secured.. U iisj^tfajan birds; fo r eacblfiirm f Ih-.-p|feiber, the' numb' farifeiCeaChed '233 and fii .^t^& st when record fcoinjJ§7 birds per fa cdiesv that some carel done; and-th at the ave • had been' reduced mo cent iD the first eleven . year. The gross income fr ...ceived fjroro the flocks ' am ounted to $102,281.: farm. The gross vali each bird w as $2.53. price received for eggs a dozen and the av eraj each doze'> eggs was WhatPullet Records on 4G,121 pi Ing a period of three y ing poultry producing ( fornia. give' the net ca ing , pullets to six montr ecnts. Wifen labor, dJ interest on Ibvestm eti the uet. cost of -raisil increased to :99 cents, w as $1.36. hut there w; 33 cents from sale of pullets, of three cent eggs, and a : m iscelian one cent. These Iiguri I* D. Sanborn, assists in Los^AngeIes countv by the: agricultural esf of the U niversity of Angeles Times. Kind , of Chlcksl T h e . chicks th a t g j check from .hatching those th a t pay best.. . ness of any lot of cn Peuds.on how many s IL W hen the parent 0 fully., selected for typ and any w eakly look Siiled-When tafeen front growing good, healthy] 'rely a m atter of pil considerate feeding a t] growth.-' - 1 Many Lihe TurkJ .. W hen ..the revival. of] key grow ing began s tl jrec, authorities on pou| «; a: passing fac fk® 6- So fa r events n ‘J!?*?. JudgmenL Rich L H up have not tired o | W ctedr and their sued ■ to grow tu rk ey s! ^ g e n e r a lly find a cerl ufcout th e birds—In m a| ^ ent from other Herald; ' .,V *1 r 1 l5- ^epresenta H 1Vor ,he *£I form er sheriff I a U th 0 riz in it hjm fa x e s , received au | n from the Senate - I r cK after u ^Ih e H o u s e a n d TOent f able caIendar- its P ss resurrected | y Grangers. Ilustrated Lectm-,. In d Degree W0 k ^ i l ?'' !d e g re e Grange ' be iille Graded school n®' ic h 27th. at 7?30 ' ne*1 H in Davie county ij -an Borrow )ney. [S ecretary of Agti- > m aking appiica. I llle for Davie farm- P be used for the I 1Iizer and seeds for pent takes a first I 1933 crops The JH per cent, and ail ic to b e r 3 1 , 1933, P loaned to the farm. Sor th e purpose of 7 crops and must not oth er put pose, r m ust apply all pro. Isale of his crops on . is paid in full. Just sign a waiver for |ro p s, and the ten- w aiver for [his in. a n o ta ry fee of 50c Voc for recording !T h e s e am ounts must !b o rro w e r. Lands Pie. M arch 13.—Jose- R a lie g h publisher, b y P resid en t Roose- bd S ta te s ambassador !-Sale Of Lot hn order made by the iio r Court. I as cominis* So the highest bidder st par in Davie county, for Jk m , on Monday. Aoril Sperty described below; a paving been placed upon Jwn as the Charlie Brown bunded as follows: Locat- Jc- beginning at a stone, Sof the original Jesse Cle ft old well, thence N. one Ithence W est 50 feet to a Jster line; thence South Jone. R. M. Foster's corner ttree t; thence to the be- [This lot is sold for parti; Iheirs of J- W- Martin. Lh 18 th 19°3. JjRa NT- Commissioner. |IS , Attys. >r Y our >ols w n depends a 0 w ork with. Every Use- Lawn lowers Plows w ill probably lO u r prices are Iris Co. r b o d y ” u m RECORD, MOCKSVILLE. N. C. HOWS AND WHYS IN RAISING CHICKENS Questions and Answers That Cover Many Points. Ov H. H. ALP, P oultry E xteuafon SpecIaItsL ColIeec of A griculture. U niversity of Illinois.— W NU Service. T w e n ty -fo u r questions and answ ers cover roust of the stum hling blocks which Illinois farm ers will have to clear in the successful brooding and feeding of chicks this spring; . Samples of the questions nnd an- ewers placed in the hands of all coun ty form advisers, a re : q . What are the essential require ments for successful rearing of chicks? A. H ealthy, v ig o ro u s ch ick s in a clean ventilated h o u se o n a clean range, not ov ercro w ded, good feed , plenty of feed er sp a c e a n d th e lib e ra l use of good com m on sen se. q How much floor space Should a chick have? A. There should be at least o n e square foot of floor space for every (hree chicks. Q. What should the room tem pera ture of the brooder house be? A. Generally the room tem perature of the brooder house will vary some what with the age of the chicks. For the brooder stove method of brooding there should be little reason for the room temperature to be higher than 75 to SO degrees. Too many brooder houses are kept too hot. Hover tern pernture recommendations do not mean room temperatures. q . When should chicks receive their first feeding? A. As sooo as they are put in the brooder house. Long delayed feeding is likely to be followed by bad results. Q. What are the most common mis takes made by the flock owner In rear ing chicks? A. Not providing enough hopper space, keeping the brooder house too hot and losing interest after the chicks are six w eeks old. Cost Sheet Shows Egg Profits in Year 1932 Every poultry flock owner keeping cost records for the poultry extension office at North Carolina State college dnring the year 1932 made a profit above feed cost of SI.27 a bird, accord ing to figures submitted by the own ers and recently tabulated by C. J. Maupin, poultry specialist. There were 214 . flock owners who kept these records..through- th e -year and made a careful report month by month of the results being secured; The average for each month shows 40,? 35S birds fro m -isdiich records .were secured. Tills’ wasJari average: 'ofrlSS birds for each faiin for each m qhthi In October, the number of birds: per farm reached 233 and the lowest was In Augiist when records were received from 137 birds per farm. This indi cates that some careful culling was done and that the average farm flock had been reduced more than 40 per cent in the first eleven m onths of the year. Tlie gross income from the eggs re ceived front the flocks ."reported upon amounted to $102,281.20 or $477.94 a farm. The gross value of eggs for each bird was $2.53. The average price received for eggs w as 19.9 cents u dozen and the average feed cost for each doze- eggs was about 10 cents What Pullets Cost Records on 4G.121 pullets, kept dur ing a period of three years in six lead ing poultry producing counties in Cali fornia. give the net cash cost of rais ing pullets to six months of age as 70 cents. Wlien labor, depreciation, and Interest on investment were added, the net cost of raising each pullet hicieased to 99 cents. The total cost "as $1.36. hut there was an income of 83 cents from sale of cockerels and pullets, of three cents from sale of eggs, and a miscellaneous income of one cent. These figures: according to L D. Snnhorn. assistant farm adytser In Los Angeles countv. were gathered h.v the agricultural extension service ofthe University of Californi;!.—Los Angeles T im es................... Lost Spud Find May: Bring Growers Gold Early Development of Peach - blow Colorado’s Hope. Kind of Chicks That Pay The chicks that grow without a chtik rrum .hatching to m aturity are those that pay best- The profitable ness of any lot of chicks raised fie-. Peudk on how mnny such there are In R- I' hen the parent stock is all care fully selected for type nnd vitality. JBd .my weakly looking chicks are killed when taken from the incubator, ?rovlog good, healthy chickens is en-‘ r°l.v a m atter of p ro p er'care and- considerate feeding at every stage of growl Il Many Like Turkey-Growing "hen the revival.of interest In tar- eS growing began shortly after the Ar, authorities on.poultry agreed that was a passing fad—a- rich mdn’s th * ^ar evenIs have discredited cir Judgment. Rich men w h o -to o k up have not tired o f it as was ex-. (iUhtC<1, 811(1 fhelr success encourages ers to grow turkeys. Turkey grow? , gcnerUlIy find a certain fascination ui the birds—in many-ways so dlf- HeM fr°m otller Poultry.—Boston- By C. H. Metzger, Associate Horticulturist Colorado 'Agricultural College. Colorado potato -grow ers may In crease-their incomes at least $100,000 yearly w ithin: three or four years -as the result of the finding and develop m ent of an alm ost extinct strain of potatoes know as dark red.1 Peach- blow . or Red McClure. ‘ The lost ,stnun that is believed to have originated 30 years- ago 'w as located on the McClure farm at Car" bondale, from which it took its name. It was a sport or seedling of the Peachblow- potato. Although this potato was pioduced In 1908 at a farm .near Oarbondale, all trace of it disappeared until 1927 when the college in connection with .its po tato improvement program, collected 250 varieties of potatoes for com para tive tests. In this collection was the dark red Peachblow. It had been ob tained from a Teller county rancher.' Later the sam e strain of potatoes, which commands a premium of 10 to 15 cents a IOO pounds on the m arket because of its attractive color, was found on a farm in El Paso county and a ranch in Teller county. Farmers’ Institutes Are ... Crowd Bringers in Ohio Although community, funds for farm ers' institutes have shrunk from $38,000 to $23,000, or 40 p e r cent, the total attendance or num ber of persons served has continued to increase, a rise o f'1 4 per cent in the last two years, according to J. P. Schmidt, su pervisor of farm ers’ institutes for th e agricultural extension service of the Ohio State university. Funds, he says, have decreased but requests for help are greatly increas ing. Costs averaged about 8.3 cents per person attending in. 1931-32, of, which the state paid 2.3 cents. The, total attendance, w as 709.395. ■ Institutes, which., are open to any citizen in the community and which have been publicly supported since 18S0, were held in all SS Ohio coun ties. W ayne county, home of the Ohio agricultural experim ent station, had the largest num ber of institutes and highest attendance in 1932, 16 In stitutes with a total attendance, of 37,- 700. Eighty-four per ceut of the 89 mem bers of the present regular farm ers’ institute staff, Schmidt pointed out, are farm ers. The average person In this group rates as successful In some farm enterprise, college trained,, or. a m aster farm er or m aster homemaker. Twenty co-operating state . agencies furnish some talent at no cost or”-(or expenses only. Among these are- the state departm ent of agriculture, the Ohio agricultural experim ent station, farm organizations, state departm ent of education, Ohio B ankers’ associa tion, state departm ent of health. Com modity M arketing • associations, and the; Ohio Council of Churches. Spray While You Prune The home fruit "grower can. do much w hile he is pruning' his trees toward lessening the num ber of injurious, in sects he will have to com bat during the succeeding grow ing season, says a w riter in the Rural New Yorker. The close inspection of individual 'tre e s necessary for this work makes it im practical for the commercial prchard- tst, but it is a tim e and labor saver for the home grow er with a few trees and little spraying equipm ent W hile pruning keep a sharp lookout for egg masses, larvae and cocoons Among the many things to look for. the fol lowing may be m entioned: The gel atin-like m asses of eggs of the tent- caterpillar, which are usually, placed on sm all tw igs; frothy egg-masses of the tussock-m oth; the ^cocoons of. the codling-motli w hich w ill'be found under the loose bark of the tree tru n k ; pear psylla, m inute insects.-which often hi bernate under the rough bark on the tru n k s; twig-girdlers may be con trolled bv burning all twigs found on the ground. • - Hdme-Made Brush Burnei A homemade brush burner, which will burn orchard prunings as fast as three men. can pile them In, solves one ■common; orchard problem for. Clifton and E verett Derby of N orth Leomin ster, Mass: The burner Is merely a large box, 10 feet by 6 feet by 3, feet deep, made of. scrap Iro m -salvaged from old Iron: drum s .and sheet roofing, the pieces fastened (together with stove bolts. Ventilation, which w as found n e c e ssa ry to -keep the - brush -burning,- .was-provided, by- chopping ,a. few holes In the, sides: with a p - ax.. The box; is mounted on- skids and la pulled through the orchard a t the end of the pruning, season by a tractor or team, w hile men pick up th'e pruned branches from under -the, trees and pile them In the box. ^ --------------------------- I Agricultural Jottings Portugal’s w heat crop. ln-,1932 broke all records. _ - ■.... « • A good horse deserxes his own col-, tar- and it should be one that fits. * * * - Coal ashes have UOr fertilizing Valuei but can be used to m ake the soil more friable • • * - W isconsin, farm bulletins a r t used regularly for. educational- work a t.th e slate prison a t . 'Vaupim. .. Our Government —How It O perates By William Bruckart OUR FOREIGN SERVICE i D D B LIC ISTS and teachers and Iead- ers everyw here agree, I - believe, that , the demand of our age E s-for the specialist The farm er, has to be a specialist In. the several lines he follow s; the professional man or woman can hardly rise above a mini mum level w ithout concentrating on a particular subject, and the Indus trialist who does not understand'all phases of the business that vIs h is finds, the road full of ruts. Our governm ent Is a leader, in this field of specialization. It has experts here, there a n d . everyw here and for this and that and the other subjecc, but I believe few of them receive more thorough training than do those, who - are classified ..as foreign service officers. I do not mean that: they have the technical training re-, quired of the scientist, or the legal learning of the law divisions, or the skill a n d . training of the type who- d raft plans for a battleship or a great post office building. It is another’ type of training, but ju st as intensive.- It. has been* less than a score of years since congress finally was will ing to enact legislation to m ake our foreign service one of a, career Ifype,. a service in which capable Individ-, tials might . properly expect promo tion. T hat has been done and. now . only' our am bassadors and, m inisters to foreign capitals rem ain as polit ical plums to be picked by the vic torious... party ' each four years. It seem s to me that they, too, ought-to be “career" men, but it has not hap pened. Some of. the foreign nation^, m aintain their am bassadors and inih;; Isters in that classification and It- has hing been the conviction of students; of ithe subject (hat such diplom ats a re among- the best to be found in the; corps at. W ashington,. - . T o -g e t into the -foreign service , now, it is first necessary for the ap plicant to pass a stiff exam ination. It is not . a test of grade school , na ture, T he applicant has to know one or Jm ore foreign languages; he has to .have a rather broad acquaintance with business and finance and he has to [satisfy' a .beard of exam iners tkht; he knows how to conduct him self when he m eets people .whether on the' business of his governm ent or in a social way. .M A fter he has done all' .o f these- things satisfactorily, (hie; :starts to., “school’’ under, guidance [of the DC{t. partm ent of S tate whiclvfhas a ^ronp| of-m en who have beenjjthrpugh t h ^ : experience necessaryto^eriffble the»M to} teach the newcomei-sj'whnt to do. The course of study entails not only Study but work In tiih i various di visions of the d ep artm en t’w here T he’ applicant can: see what: is.:done and • how and why it is donfe [He learns , there all of the questions that- have arisen between - his‘ governm ent and; others; he learns how- they ‘were handled and the results, and he Is, informed of how pending m atters are viewed. •'• In: other words, file course. provides a _ perspective, ofr American’, policy respecting international af fairs. and If he is good; tim ber, the'- training he has received fits him to.- Start Ihaping policy oil'his. own initi ative once he is assigned-to a post In/ a foreign land. . He has become a ' diplom at, equipped to look after th e . Interests of his governm ent and pro mote good will. The young diplom at who goes' abroad enters on his duties w ith spe cial Instructions concerning questions concerning the' particular peoples and governm ent w here he is detailed. It Is obvious - th at there are different questions to be considered. In w estern E urope th a n , in LatinrAmerica. Like wise, they are different In the N ear E ast than in the F ar East. The De partm ent of State, therefore, has di vided its work so th at one section supervises relations with a particu la r p art of the world, w here the prob lem s and the people have some com mon basis. To accomplish this, end and sim plify adm inistration,: six ,divisions have been created In ’the departm ent.;' They are the divisions of F a r E astern affairs, Latin-Am erlcan affairs, W est ern European affairs, N ear Eastern affairs, M exican affairs and E astern EhirOpean affairs. It-w ill suffice to show: the scope of these - groups to point out th at Chm a and ' Japan are among the nations, included in. the-F ar E astern, divisions th a t-a ll of South andlC entral ■ America, are included In fthe -Xatln-American list; th a t. G reat -> B ritain and France/-are am ong those Under W eStern. European supervision;. th a t A lbania and B ulgaria are listed- as N ear E a ste rn ; • th at Finland and Poland are 'term ed E astern EJuropean and’,that !Mexico ,Is. dealt, w ith . alone one division. Acting under the. -general ■ super-? vision o f-th e secretary; or the. under secretary,- the chiefs of .these di visions arevthejdirect contacts of th e ;. foreign service personnel: with th e ir governm ent a t home. Of course, In a time, of .'crislfff the - secretary or the . under secretary. Is kept constantly In-; formed of-every, development, but the? routine giildance of our foreign pol icy after all - Is quite; generally con-. ceived an d executed in th o se divisions ; In conjunction w ith th e diplom at Ht h is p o st o f duty, h e ft,a fe w h u n d re d ; m iles from , W ashington, such, ae Ins C anada; o r Inv,far-aw ay S u m atra. .- © 1932, Wsfltom Newsraper Unlon. . Italy Makes Progress . in-Educational'Reform The educational reform s introduced by the Fascist government during the ten years of I ts : existence are far- reaching. - It Is enough to read the 'history :ot.-Italy-since 1815 to-regard with intense sympathy her struggle for nationhood, w rites How ard R M arraro in C urrent History: A fter.fighting for the right to be come a united nation for more than fifty years she began her effort to build a nation from , a heterogeneous population th at w as more than 75 per cent illiterate, with no money, no in dustry, no railroads, and very limited- natural resources. -In spite of the shock of the W orld w ar and tho series of economic and social dis turbances w hich followed, tlie Ital ians have reduced illiteracy to 21 per cent, and they have created a school system which endows the new gen eration. with energy of thought and will, nnd seeks to develop a culture th at tru ly represents the manifold pow ers of the Italian race. Because Fascism exalts and enobles those qualities which assure the greatness of Italy, and since the prob lem of greatness is above all a prob lem of education nnd culture, M us solini has rightly , defined Gentile’s. educationnl reform s as “the most Fascist of all the Fascist reform s.” To keep dean and healthy tjke Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets. Tliey regulate liver, bowels and stomach.—Adv. W ork* B oth W ays Labor sweetens rest. R est can re ciprocate, too. HowDoctorsTreat and Coughs • To break up a cold overnidit and relieve the congestion that makes you cough thousands o f physicians: are now recommending - Calotabs, the ,naiisealess calomel compound tablets (hat give you the effects of calomel and salts without the unpleasant effects of either. One or two Calotabs at bedtime with a glass of sweet milk or water;' Next morning’your cold has vanished, your, system is thoroughly purified and you are feeling fine witn a hearty appetite for breakfast. Eat what you wish,— no danger.- a Calotabs Vare - sold in IOc and 35c. ; packages at drug stores. ... (Adv.) BEY O N D 'H O PE W eakness of mind is the only fault Incapable of-correction. - LIFE’S ODDITY ; M any a m an’s failure is as myste rious as his success.” . - BAYERSPEED!B A BAYER -E lITie quickest relief for a headache is two tablets of Bayer Aspirin. The tablet bearing the Bayer cross dissolves very rapidly and brings rapid relief, There is no known medicine that works quite like Bayer Aspirin for. the awful head and face pains of neuralgia. There is-nothing with quite the same effectiveness in relieving rheumatism. Bayer Aspirin does not depress the heart, does not upset the'stomach, does not have any ill effect. Its purity and uniformity are tested thirty-six times! Time counts when you’re in pain. Stick to genuine BayerAspirinl A n d B ayer m eans S u fe f P A R K E R ’S. H A IR B A L SA MI Removes Osodroff'Stops Hsir FsOiog Imparts Color and BeaatFtoGraFaad Faded Hair60e sod $1.00 at DrosgiBts. Hlseox Chem. WkB..Patdoooe.N.Y. FLORE5TON SHAMPOO ~ Ideal for ose in connection withParker'sHair BalsanuMakea the hair, soft and fluffy. 60 cents by mail or atdrng- gists. Hiseos Chemical Works. Patchozue^ N.Y. W HILE THEY LAST . . 3-4 W H E K S OLl> C H IC K SBlood T ested, Purebred Bede, Buff Orpingtons. White Rocks, Leghorns.. - ~ 500.....................$ 5 5 • 50.............................$ 6 J0 1 0 0 . . : . . . . . . . . , . 12 25.......................... 3.25 Al* breeds of day old chicks. Hatches dally. H. B. Snr’mcer. (Sac. Norinan Hatcheries) KNOXVILLE. TENN. “I HATED TO SELL HER THAT CAKE OF MRS; PfidRER IHAN THE REST !’*- “MRS. LONlS IS USING SOME ORDINARY BAK ING POWDER LATELY. THArS THE TROUBLE -LETS TELL HER SO!” 1 v* AND ANOTHER WOMAN CHANGES TO CALUMET! # W h e n -a w om an has a reputation . fo r' m a k in g re a lly lo v e ly c a k es a n d delectable biscuits andlnuffins . . . don’t y o n th in k .she is foolish -to n sk it—ju st. for th e sake o f snving a tm y B action o f th e cost o f her baking when- she buys bakm g powder?- - ,■ ■ . For,- o f course— econom y a t th e store . is only, a- sm all-part o f true- econom y: C alum et’s glorious results give you satis faction th a t crn ’t b e m easured in pennies.-, ' I t ’s a jo y to know w hen you slip your . - p an s’in th e-o v en th a t Calum et’s scien- . tiE cally co n tro lle d D o u ble-A ction w ill protect your bakuig.vBecause, you know , ; ’ it acts twice. T h e first action begins .in • th e m ixing bowl; b u t th e second is held in . reserve to a c t in th e h eat o f th e oven, and 'th a t’s w h at bolds your b atter or dough so high-and light all th e tim e it’s baking. CALUMET CREAM LOAF CAKE ( 2 eggs)2 cups sifted Sw ans D ow n C ake Flour 2 teaspoons C alu- < m et B along Pow der Vz teaspoon salt . I cup sugar 2 .eggs, well beaten V/4 cups heavy cream - I teaspoon vanilla - S ift flour once, m easure, ad d b ik in g pow der an d s a lt,. and sift together th ree tim es. A dd sugar gradually to eggs, an d b ea t welL A dd flour, alter* "' . nately w ith cream , a sm all am ount a t a tim e. B eat afte r each addition u n til sm ooth. A dd va- . nil la. B ake in greased p an , 8 z 8 .x 2 inches, in m oderate o v a (350° F ;). 50 m inutes. Spread chocolate frosting o n to p an d sides o f cake. — T hen, -too. C alum et gives you another tru e ec o n o m y : -you u se le ss, b ecau se C alum et goes further. O nly one teaspoon to a cup o f sifted flour—th a t’s th e thrifty standard proportion w ith Calum et. -• T ry C alum et in this .delicious Cream L oaf C ake. T hen youfIl see w hy reason* ably-priced C alum et is :th er-best. bakm g pow der value! C alum et is a product of General Foods, • iV - • ^ . . ■ -Ist A C T IO N 2nd A C T IO N G E T P R O O F ! S s e C a lu m e t s e t tw ic e ! T hese pictures illustrate th e fam ous C alum et D ouble-A ction T e s t.. Y outIl find full directions s fo r wvaigiwg th is easy te s t rtrade every C alum et - - can. T ry*it!-See for yourself how C alum et acts tw ic e to m gke yo u r bakm g bettex.11 THE DOUBLE-ACTING BAKSNG POWDER • .A: H !(V1 S£tt®SSI >'rjf&i'i -.-’•(ijVJi- -_ O T_ J r ® S mww^mm^m^^^M IllIIIiM THE FEATHERHEADS I .p-sser of Evils, . Bjr OsbomeH«. IM< Sngool^l wei.L.1 TriAftS. MdBLfe OF: VoU - AND NOW VotI lWfe VtfOR K»M G-- h er .-: w a v --through SCHba I-( I MOT OMLVMorT MSAN S _ iiv e sivem u p , ™& c a b — StAOK^6— °4S*-_ : ItS riB ic ReFBtseBA-T0R. — cut- o u t MOVlBS— ... , A W O t w ^ ^ E 1 -thb coAL w a USB. IV ^ « r “ rHARDSHIP r S f e i - W 1 NOT A s . , Hh T h a ^ 45- FINNEY OF THE FORCE . ByTeJ OlAn^En • O UTcAcni llww.w* J . Artti ^Piiiyiar Trees OP COURSE.1 EVEM- .; X r^ OH, -fo BE. V([jli HAVB.PROBA81.Y ] SHURS. —1 U£ARt> OP- -POSWOtW--I:,.- AMO <H6M PO dFLO M EISS P O fiB O O T r th er e s ____ COLUE WOWBR, S j - T ool I’LL HAVE VbU KMOW *T*HAT POQS ARE VERV NOBLE . , AN IfAAt-S-WHVj EVEN IN THt= . beautiful w o rld OP BOTANVi c a m in e s - HAVE UBN T TKEVR MAWES To <TROWIN<x ARE VEZ TALKlM1 'BOOT PLANTS AN1 FLO W ERS? ■fop O' -fM' MARMIM6- . TO V E I, MES. SWOOP.1 P o VE STiLI- HAVB •THAT CUR WHICH Vez. I?£>T LAST v y « E K ? poM*r youCARS CALL MV PUPPY A C O R I THWGS!! WELL'— - T h b r e' rr isa R i Our Pet Peeve Along the Concrete h : I iCoyyrighr. Vf, N*. U-) j T o i P N O T . I insist THWT I \u & 6 0 ^ N K 3 H T ; I Be (S&firfJyoti ! almost HIT Trifc ■ i ff e » SEATS SfOTH ^ \W How to train BABY'^ BOW liS Babies, bottle-fed or breast-taj w ith any tendency to be constipated’ w ould thrive -if they received daily h alf a teaspoonful of this old family doctoi's prescription for the bowels. '.T h a t is one sure w ay to train tiny bowels to' healthy . regularity. To avoid th e iretfulness, \omitiao crying.f ailure to gain, and other HS of constipated babies. D r.: Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin is good for any baby. For this, you Irat8 Sie word of a famous doctor. Forty, seven years of practice, taught him 'ju st'w h at babies need to keep their littls bowels active, regular; kem little bodies plum p and healthy. Fot D r. Caldwell specialized in the treat m ent of w om en and little ones. He attended over 3500 births 'without . loss of one m other or baby. O r. W. B. Caldwell ’s SVRUP PEPSSM A Doctor's Family laxative T he Personal Touch Confidences contribute more than w it to conversation. I P ’S YOUR STOMACH? Y O U lose vital nerve force if you allow your stom ach to distress you. j Acid stomach, indi-! gestion, gas or bil- ’ iousness and “cos tiveness” cause the blood to be poisoned j and will eventually S / destroy health and nerve force. This is what M rs. H . S. Ross of 712 West Gregory St., Pensacola, says: “My stomach gave me some trouble, ray food was not agreeing with me, I de- veloped an acid condition, but this was Soon corrected after taking Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery." .Write Dr, Fierce'* Clinic, Baffaloi If. F1 BOBBY THATCHER—A PartyTo See You^.i *GoGHl IV E B E S H AW AV S O LOMG I'D BETTHR MOT w a s t e AHY t i m e *• - G6TTIM’ BACK TO TH S H O TB L T O SE E IP Mt?, PlTTS HAS 7 AMY MAIU TO CO O tt L_» HOMBER f o u r ;...., I MEVBR MIMO THE MAIL..., I THERE'S SOM B FO LKS in T O S E S yOO-... THEV^B SBTTINf IM THE SIDE PARUOR IF I W AS , you to . s u c k o p A bit; t o o COULOffr B E -m e C O H STA B LS -To s e f e M E a b o u t t h a t b ig 'W lHOOW m THBsciibou noose*.. «= he'd a SU SPICIO H EO M E A T ^ A LL H ^O A C 0 U A R 6 0 M E IH H te - L O S B y.... m SSX-J ByGEORGESTORM MAYBE THAT V1NlLUA EXTRACT I WAS AROUHO SEkUN1 TO GET THE FI6I-DERS W fT OiDMV TURH OUT S O C O O O IF T h e r e Ainfr t o o mahY; OF 'EM. »'LU TEUU 'BW PLU C IV S ’EM THEiR MOHE/ BAC.K-« yi/itf*I fttttt iser&Me A persistent backache, with bladder irregularities and a tired, nervous; depressed ' feeling may warn of some dis ordered kidney or bladder con- ' dition. Users everywhere rely oil Doan’s Pills. Praised for I more^tban 50 years by gra«M! users the country over, sold by * -’1 druggists. S’MATTER POiP— Probably Wished To Use It For Attack W h a t V A LL i iTALrf ■A150UT 9 A w : V By C. M. PATOE w a s J u s t V4i&^i«‘ I C o u ti>- SiQ ofitT I vsiA -reis ouT A w y m o& e. u l t r a ' a \ y . - ■-■•- ^ >_;EuEN#nT|S r N o v is t- T v ^TifEi .vieAr:1, Nrt A W % . . „ ............ A D iuretic for the Kidneys 15MATTERI _ y' ^ » G EO R fiK W A S H I N G T O N ’S T R A V E L S g By-;.James W;. JBrooks : CinriiQ im W- b ~ W. Bn.V> ■ ■•■.AU.Xi|Lb |(HmJ .--BittorMllrCerrectSkcfdetT ' ByCALVINTADER'- IAJErtg^ Ar Hc-weosort VfrattiN6©(t Jousted raow sbsatVcwM Ta ne OESWSEO of. Ms stfePson, JAat CU5Ti3,:iM..NEW l^ttt' COUHTVj VlteiHIA. AlOHOUaH. VoWCVW.WE^-.-THe.V'eiUAL. *w OF we (dvplWlOM/IT WAS tW .UKrtL TWo YEASia VATfeS' IW JWST^untS CAME.T& AU ^tuM s V50Si&wtt ;HE-Ws. ewHt 1H: WtTU HEAOOOASrtce AT MEjiieuOsrtr.Hfc FELT NO LE35EKIM6 0F H15.g£S(Waiett-tt1eS; Ohote o<^5si<}M, t^K9 -T^Ei«fe«EP. CalIimg flis itaoop? t&getueK' He rmi£P,to . eab-tHE he:had pbepaeep aho^aio/mem;^^iMfteoBWH.gssi* akp. am no\nalv evuw MittE seaiee. of W coomwt Uesoless -ft m ettoeo. WoMCtiSiZwluBH OF A UCTtia OATt. ENOeOi 6A0& v~Ht» i.. At rFAoNCE^-WlElW lH NEW VoBli.' 'H A'SCENE-^WCE 'tHMoefAUJEO IN WHO- AND PlCtbCE-WASHlHGTDH TfeHOES«/ EMBRACED THOSE. BAtaE--SCAtMeP . - SEtWANS:^THEY1UStfceWfc GOOSPEEO At m COOi/'M «E ^EF1T 1 ;fOC,_AMN?P?lAS. lHERC. IHHitE THE 5TATE HOOgE H£-(2E9tQNEO HBCOMMtSSWH :• ,0(» KCSVff- ts,yts$ AS OotfMAHOEC, IN CHIEF OF THE AMEPlCAtl A&Ttf, AHO S THW Mttort VECfoN. v ~ W Tb, HoonT'Vecho M Complexion Cu»e ;woaieii areWizine. .thatbow*' are: of ten: danger signals of LetHR -elimination and promptly ege si*. >j9onot23 m atter, ru ie 1l^ rv this S** ^ JmVnu HiTnness* 11J dependable* all* S 3 £ M S 'T U f A S " 0 ^ ^ ^ ^ a n d t h r o OfMisto G H A PT E R II— C oj A ugust fifteenth, when meet Pai a t Eoxbury1 cam cloudless. In good tim e t objective before suudown out to m eet his sweethe sauad of cavalry to escort sn hour or so later, Amo: of his best m en w ere spi jiorses to overtake him if save hi.m from , threatening K erere had arrived a t hi soon after Colin’s departui lurking'new s. H ereportec Gage and Patience Faj brother w ere in a plot to c: at Koxbury th a t n ig h t “If they get him, I jv o u copper penny for his IifsT vere. . ’ . ■ I The Com m ander in C hil an oral order by the yoif Amos Farnsw orth. H e wap immediately w ith a squad cf Colin and overtake hin Falling in that,- he w as to i at the D o rse t. house a n ! ■warning and-aid if necessJ the kind of errand that A ir His a rm -w a s no longer I Mounted on his tough rod led the others a t top sp ej narrow, w inding road to jelled llfee a panther a t c | or pedestrians ahead, se a l into hysterics and- leaving" wonder and alarm in tf countryside. . - ■ Colih and his squad had ! rapidly. They arrived a tj mansion w hen th e sun young m an In a chaise door. “Is th at Colin Cabot?” "Yes, sir." "I am Philip D orset a n l welcome. ..Perhaps you w il with me to m eet M iss F a y I “Thank you, sir. I s h a ll go and w ill follow you in f ColIn dism issed his escoij the boys money fo r re fresj they rode on to find th e f village. C aptain Cabot fa chaise. They proceeded a I toward the N eck and cq stretch of thick tim ber, going down through the toward the Neck, used by | young D orset halted. “It Is possible th a t shej up this trail,” he said. ‘‘I I I you w ait here w hile I go to | ; on the road.” Left alone, Colin dism [tied his horse to a small I sun w as down. It w as gr {His m are w as restless. Ye Jh a d no suspicion of the vei I looking trap Into which | loyalist had led- him. picked up M iss F ayerw eatl ter of a mile down the roar around - through the villsj home, saying nothing of of ColIn Cabot. The eyed uien were a t th a t m om ent! the young captain. C H A P T E R II A Duel T h at Led to Ue Difficulties. The venerable G eneral ( command of th e right wl I bury, had lately m et his fo General Gage, on the Neci ference regarding a propos of prisoners. T here he passes good for twenty-foi young H arry Gage and t: friends to come through t the day of the D orset wei rash young m an had abusi Uege thus -accorded him. connivance of Philip Do sturdy young loyalists I were hired to aid him in t venture he had planned. Impatiently CoIIn waited! ^as turning into darkness] aiS pipe and opened his I and tinder. W hile strikir, m sPicion fell Jn to his Idli ■®as like a pebble dropp; still surface of a pond. Si Jiuiet water was stirring, “elay? T h i suspicIpn was ?° ^ePOrt of his eyes or eai f.e had heard a loud yell, road, like that of sor reveler., still, ih th a t wild caUgHt a ,note that ai e checked his effort to Be put !t and the cket AgaIi^ that long, i - e recognized tbe piercing . ° f Amos ;Farnsw orth K « the end of th. » W hat' w as the “ ea TOitv ? os inIfroubIe? ColI tho n lw^ shout °»a t Slasl l"e silence like a trum pet 'hnM* ctde(1 t 0 mount his hpr I!, 0 the Corsets’. E to® !i^e- The saddle girth ItV n00J 1* it had been ct pepped tow srd: him, swor wa, £ ’“T6u tfre prl J 1I I*1® voice of Harry Ga o, _ b^w een them no idl* swr,S2 civilities. Colih EItio ,a? d pIsto1’ backing , I of his . mare. Stand!-, he shouted. er step and i w in kill y< «a T8a^ then th a t be was see ^ e flI1Ckening glooi hart 0Ien-OrOBnd him. O C011 ®o®?ed ppon him and I In Bi K:®"rpr^ - N ow they ^ s l t y ^ h i 116 Why na^rowed M ooucentratic had nnf ii - ' consciousnes the ^eard the gallopln Proaci^f'^ ro^a- Horsemen been hI"?, raP1^ly- Hos« the h n i by tb e soUhdootsem en Colin shouted rZi&m S I 8693 m im * :-fed or breast-M !cX be constipated' ,l,hey received daily ul of this old family jitio n for the bowels ire w ay to train tinyth y regularity. To itfulness, vomitino ables” ’ and °ther iua ' sJ ru R . Pepsin is 3Y- Por this, you have “ .Tious doctor. Fortv- practice. taught him s need to keep tbeir :tive, regular; keep u p and healthy. For icialized in the treat- K and little ones. He &! 5500 births without e r o r baby. Ca ldw ell 's "amily Laxative sonal Touch m trib u te m ore than ion. R STOMACH? . ,nd nerve for£e. Thi3 S. Ross of 712 West insacola, says: “My cj[j 'ie some trouble, my reeing with me, I de- i condition, but this rted after taking Dr. Medical Discovery." c’# Clinic, Buffalo, N. T» a of Kidney or [!regularities at backache, w ith :g u la r itie s and rvous, depressed w arn of some dis- sy or bladder con* s everyw here rely ’ills. Praised for ) years by grateful n try o v er. Soldby A D iu re tic gw ty for the K idneys R RlpI - :vi R E C O R D , M O C K S V IL L E . N . C . T h e M a s t e r o f C h a o s C H A P T E R I I — C o n tin u e d . -i-,Kt fifteenth, when Colin w as to nuv tf n t at Roxbury, cam e warm and flomlless. In good time to m ake his obicctire before suudown, Colin set out to mcot llis s 'v e e th e a rt W lth a Mirid of cavalry to escort him. H alf 'J1 or so later, Amos and three Irs he<t men were spurring their Hordes to overtake him if possible and save him from threatening peril. ” Itc ero Imd arrived at headquarters, soon after Colin s departure, with dis- UirbrIi- neivs. He reported th a t H arry G!re and Patience Fayerw eather’s Kotlier " ere in a plot to capture Colin at Eoxbury that night “If ih"v get lum, I wouldn’t give a copiier penny for his life,” said Re vere.Xtie C om m ander in Chief had sent an oral order by the young m an to Amo= Farnsworth. He w as to set out immediately w ith a squad in pursuit of Colin and overtake him If possible. Failin'' in th at, he w as to look for him at the D orset house and give him warning and aid if necessary. It w as the kind of erra n d that Amos enjoyed. His arm w as no longer In a slifig. Mounted on his tough roan horse he led the others at top speed over the narrow, w inding road to Roxbury. He veiled like a panther at cattle, team s, or pedestrians ahead, scaring women into hysterics and leaving a wake of wonder and alarm In the receding countryside. Cplin and his squad had also ridden rapidly. They arrived at the D orset mansion when the sun was low. A Toung man in a chaise w as a t the door. “Is th at Colin Cabot?" he asked. ilIes, sir.” “I am Philip Dorset and I bid you welcome. Perhaps you will like to go with me to meet Miss Fayerw eather?” “Thank you, sir. I shall be glad to go and will follow you In the saddle.” Colin dismissed his esco rt He gave the boys money for refreshm ents and they rode on to find the Inn a t the village. Captain Cabot followed the chaise. They proceeded a mile or so toward the Feck and came into a stretch of thick timber. At a trail going down through the wooded land toward the Neck, used by pedestrians, young Dorset halted. “It is possible that she will come up this trail,” he said. ‘‘I suggest that yon wait here while I go to see if she Is on the road." Left alone, Colin dismounted and tied his horse to a small pine. The snn was down. It w as growing dusk. Hismare was restless. Yet her owner lad no suspicion of the very innocent- looting trap into which the young loyalist had led- him. D orset had ' picked up Miss Fayerw eather, a quar ter of a mile down the Toad and gone around through the village to his home, saying nothing of the arrival of Colin Cabot. The eyes of unseen uien were at that moment fixed upon He young captain. CHAPTER III A Duel That Led to Unexpected Difficulties. The venerable General W ard, In command of the right wing a t Rox-. hury, had lately met his form er friend, General Gage, on the Neck for a con ference regarding a proposed exchange of prisoners. There he had Issued passes good for twenty-four hours to young Harry Gage and three of his friends to come through the lines on the day of the Dorset wedding. The rath young man had abused the pnv- lleSe thus accorded him. W ith the connivance of Philip Dorset, three stun]} young loyalists in Roxbury were hired to aid him in the wild ad venture lie had planned. Impatiently CoIm waited. The dusk vvas turning into darkness. H e filled his pipe and opened his box of flint sud tinder. W hiIe striking the flint suspicion fell into his idle mind. It wJS like a pebble dropping on the sull surface of a pond. Suddenly the quiet water was stirring. W hy this elaJ I the suspicion was founded on uo report ot his eyes or ears, although ho had heard a loud yell, far back In o road, like that of some drunken roieler. Still, in that wild cry bis ear ud caugnt a note that alarm ed, him. ohecked his effort to light the Ge put It and the box In his Wcket. Again that long, ringing cry. r^ n-Pd the piercing trium phant •eu of Amos Farnsw orth. He had limt lt tke en<t ot hhe w restling ,,, • ' ,hat vvas the meaning of it?: with Tos ln troubleT Colln answ ered ,L a lonS shout that slashed through - silei.^e like a trum pet blast. W t6 t0 mount his m are and - ten in the Dorsets’. He w ent to I- I The saddle girth w as hang- * «*■ [t had been c u t A man savin t,’" ard bIm' sword In hand. w>> o’ iou are my Prisoner.”. , It w»q ' °‘°e ot H arry Gage. There bf n lT eeb them no idle exchange, s»n?!i1?e CI% ilities. Colin drpw -his sido n/'n’1 p,st0** backing against the X of h,s mare. . OttJaad ’’ he shouted. “Take anf acr stop and I will kill you.” t(, e ?a" then that he was surround- Sfeih11 J*le tblcbeUing gloom he couldr had J l uien aroPud him. One of them Golin-o uPOn him and been cut by In » K S" ° rd- Now the-V stood StilL tfnsitv J he knew wb-T- T fce Iu- aarrOwed h iJ concf ntratIon h a d s o had J consciousness that .he the non d the salloplng hoofs In arOacliinn r°ad' aorsem eU were ap- heennh", raPidly- H ostilities had 'he hm J 1>y tbe soun d .' To' stope hocseiwen CoHn shouted: ' R y I r v I n g B a c h e l l e r Copyright 1932, by TrvIng Bacheller - WNU Service" “Mr. Gage, I am not yet your pris oner.” . , “N ot . by a d—d sight.” : The words rang out m the voice of Amos Farns worth. He and his men had ridden down the slope. In a jiffy they were off their horses “that had enough to do to stan’ still and breathe.” Amos and his men with draw n sabers “piled Into the squabble.” The conspirators were prepared only for the overpowering of Colln CaboL They had not expected to meet a num ber of-fightlng men prepared for dead ly combaL Only three of them were A The Principals Advanced and the Fight Began. armed. It w as no difficult m atter to upset their plans. W ithin a m inute “peace w as declared and only one B ritisher bad to be nicked and he got it plenty -when he tried “to grab' my saber.”.. T h e' am bushers • surrendered and w ere disarm ed; One of Amos’ riders w as sent to W ard’s cam p for a wagon to convey the wourided men to the right wing hospital. Colin said, turning to H arry Gage, “I understand you now. You wish to get me out of your way.” ' ; - “I sought only an adjustm ent of our . personal affairs, sir,” young Gage an swered. “You would have been: WeU treated, sir.” “Then why do you try to capture me by violence in the darkness? .It-is a dirty plot—the kind of thing to-be expected from a m an who annoys a lady w ith unwelcome attentions.” “You insult me and I resent iL” said Gage. ‘If you m ust know my reason I intended to prevent the dearest girl In the w orld from throw ing herself aw ay on a w orthless fellow. You were to be m arried tonight and I had. to act promptly.-, My purpose has the ap proval of her best friends. If you are a man you will fight me.” -. : H e flung his glove In CoUn’s face. The answ er of the young American w as In these calmly spoken .w ords: “Your blood is hot and you speak with out thinking. I ask you to con sider w hat may happen to you and these foolish friends of yours. You are In the enem y’s country.” “I care not . w hat m ay happen,’! the young Britisher- answ ered. “U nless you are a coward, you will fight me.” “It is enough,” said Colin; “You shall have your fight. --Amos, build a good fire in the road - and have these men guarded. I reckon they’ll all w ant to the see the show. W e’ll fight w ith our swords." , The old pioneer quickly gathered a heap of tw igs and dry sticks and soon there w as an island of light flaring upw ard and outw ard. Colln drew his blade.; It had been- the grand prize In a long, tournam ent “Choose your second, sir,, and let’s get through w ith this. M ine will be C aptain Farnsw orth.” . ■ . -“And mine will be -David ■Fayer w eather,”' said. Gage.- In the gloom Colin had ; not recog nized the brother of his sw eetheart The men gathered In a line w ith the contestants between them and th e fire. ColIn and H arry G age took off . their coats and rolled up their right sleeves, to the elbow,. ■ “O ur wager- will be th e • g irl”- said Gage, “T he: girl should be consulted, but If you beat me I will agree to recom mend you,” Colin answ ered. “I would- be unw orthy of her.” Amos had a pistol In -each hand. He w as J n a bad tem per. - .He gave this- Impolite w arning to the:prIsoners :- • “ From 'now on you lobsters have g o t to behave - purty.; You ,grab hold o’ one ’nother an’ hang on. .If ye git me. vexed any more, ye’ll be sorry.” T he advice of Amos w as given with slight regard for: .privacy. It was brief and unclasslcal: - “I w ant to see-ye ram a hole-ln that skunk’s . k itte n . as Soonv as. it’s con venient an’ proper.” The principals conferred with their seconds. The word w as given. The principals advanced and the fight began. Amos. Farnsw orth’s account of- the bloody adventure is given below. It made, him fam ous in the army. “They hopped around w hettiu’ blade ag’m ’ blade fer a m inute which that Elnglishman-was as spry as a cat. His eyes swore an' my own wasn’t talkin’ any too proper which it’s sure as shootin’. Satan had his . hand on m y: shoulder. My boy was as pert -an ’ good-natured as a new m im ster. There w as a lot o’ backin’ up an’ jum pin' for’ards like a hoss pullin’ stumps. I see th at he knowed bow to handle him self perfect. Ye hear to me he was a sight w ith his left hand up m the a ir an’ his right one as busy as the bill o t a wookpecker. Limber! God o’ M oses! T hat stra ig h t broad- shouldered cuss swayed an’ stepped so fast It tired my eyes. It was a purty thing to see, by G— d it w as! which there ain’t no m istake. He kep’ th at youngster busy stabbin* the a ir till his lungs w as.pum pin’. Say— did ye ever see a m an move when a hornet is takin’ a ride on his neck? He gits the spur an’ he don’t dally. Ye hear me, son, U ain’t no spryef than Colin Cabot when he sprung his bow an’ shoved his blade.- through the right arm o’ th at lobster an’ got away. B ing! bang! -Went the B ritisher’s sw ord on the ground which his shirt an’ breeches were turnin’ red. He looked a t his arm an’ tumbled over.. My boy jum ped for’ard .an ’ corded the busted.arm w ith his neck. rag. I had a little pot o’ pitch an’ some clean bandages In my saddle-bag. In a few m inutes we got . him patched up snug- an’ reg-lar. T har’s a lot more but I won’t tell it ’cause it puts my soul In danger, . JVhen thar’s a dead cat In the well it’s a good idee to stop usin' the .water. Seems so I can never spin a , good yarn w ithout th e help o’ th e : Lord an’ when I git: through I need it more'n ever.” — , Thus a t the edge1 of dangerous foot ing he w as wont to stop ; suddenly. W ith due, allow ance for personal preju dice, it w as In 'the m ain a correct ac count of the battle. “ I t w as Colin’s generosity th at . roiled him, Amos wanted ' to take the Whole bunch of lobsters to the guard-house for the punishm ent they deserved. 5 . Colin said to his defeated f o e ::. “I will take you back to the Une and let you go home.” Young David Fayerw eather stepped forward^ and offered Colin his hand saying, “You are a gentleman, sir. I have seen no better swordsm an and I. am sure there w as never a more gen erous victor. I can no.longer impose your wish to' m arry my sister.” Colin did not thank him. He was in no friendly mood. H e wiped the perspiration from his brow, saying: ' “You have treated me rather badly. I can forget it. You didn’t know me. H ere Is Tyour chance to make amends. Please go now to the D orsets' and give y o u r.sister my love. “Bring her out on the road to Cambridge in the m orning I ,will m eet you near the Roxbury turn a t nine o’clock.- I must see her, but in-view of What has hap pened I cannot go to the Dorsets’. W hen does your pass expire?” . “My pass is good until tomorrow at sundown.” David Fayerw eather promised this favor and set out afoot for the Dor set house. The wagon had come for the two wounded men, both of whom were young loyalists who lived in Roxbury and were In a sorry state of mind. “W hat are we to say ?’’ one of them asked. Colin flung his words a t them. “Yon sneaks, you crow keepers, you lousy, tick-eaten dogs that lick the dirty feet of a king! Be true to the landyou live In and give us a chance to think better of you.” • .... One of the mercenary youths a n -. sw ered: - “We are minded to Join the American arm y. sir. W e came here only to earn tw o pounds apiece. We are poor.-. We needed the Inonesr1 sir.’ “W ell, you’re a heap of rubbish but we’ll do our best with you,:. Tell them SfiU got Into a skirm ish 'betw een : the B ritish and some M assachusetts- men and that you are patriots.” The wagon drove away, with the wounded boys and their uninjured comrade.: ColIn and Amos escorted H arry Gage and his friend to the line, and, having mended the cut saddle girth, set out for camp. -Riding d o s e together they began to discuss the events of the evening. AmOs- told, o f th e . command from gen eral - headquarters -that he ride^down the road to Roxbury with three armed men and-overtake Captain Cabot if possible- and failing In that to look for him a t -the Dorsets’ “and: bring, him . back to Cambridge.; These w ere-his words • “I knowed: that news o’ danger had come In. W e rode fast. 'Bout a mile up the road I let a yell out o’ -me' enough to w ake tbe dead which ! heered an answ er down near .the Neck an* I knowed it w as you.” VIn tw o minutes they would have bad me helpless,” saldiGollPiA '-‘There’s no. telling w hat-w ould have happened, I should probably be a prisoner on. the B ritish Somerset.which-lies In the har-. SYNOPSIS OP PRECEDING CHAPTERS At Boston, In the fateful month ot July, 1775, CoIin Cehot ardent young lover.of. liberty, bldeiood-by to 4Us sweetheart, Patlenoe “Pat” Fayerweather, daughter o fa -stanch loyallai but heroetf ot heart'a “rebel.” He Jobu'the Revolutionary army a r Cambridge, and Ia Biua-- teredintothe company of CapL Amoa Farnsworth. Xolin’a devotion to the causo-Impresses 'Washington, and hb makes the young.-man-hls informnl aecretary, wHh tho rank of captaln. Alettiw from Pat'fells CoUn she-Is-to visitjrlends outside-the-American alines, and askaj Mm to meet her. Obtalninc leave, ha sets out-. bor near the Neck. I . suppose that H arry Gage: and D avei Fayerw eather had organized a raid across the Hue to slart on a signal. . They have in fluence enough to do it without the knowledge of General ■ Gage. Your coming as; you did-broke: the pretty plan.. We got them and we had to get them off our hands. H arry- Gage would ,, have .been s,n em barrassing piece of property.” “Why?” -I" '..' “W ashington - is opposed to duels, and if Gage, bad gone to tbe guard house, I should have been up before the Commander in Chief for a breach of discipline and the whole little epi sode would be the talk of the army. Now nobody need know that there Was a duel unless your men go to blabbing. Keep - them • quiet. I did my best to sate him hut that pig-bramed fool-had to be slashed.” “He hankered fer it an’ I w as glad to see you put a Iqjik in his hide which I’ll have to lie like a child o’ Satan in that report. ’Tain’t the fust time. I guess it’s w hat the Lord would expect o’ me. I’ve got so many sins to be paid for it m ight'as well be throweO on the heap.” _ “Well, I guess the Lord likes peace and-m ercy about as well as he Ukes truth. T n r not crazy to be a hero and get some fellow hung or w rithing un der the cat-o’-nine-tails.; Let’s call it a little row with some drunken loyalists whom we met on the ro ad I ’d lie any' day to save the honor-of a lady p r to prevent a lot of unnecessary suffer in g ” : Came a few moments of silence broken only by the creak of saddle leather and the plodding hoofs of their horses., Amos w as first to speak. “If God ,Rears us, I wouldn’t w onder if He was laughin’ a leetle.” The rem ark cleared the air and both captains began to laugh. Amos was rarely in a merry mood. W hen it cam e it was like a thunder storm after a ' drought, with no sign of restraint it In,-’ “Well, anyhow, I guess He’ll be in no mood .to send us to h—I,” said Colin. ... “I f 'He is,_I reckon there won’t be folks enough in Heaven to keep each other from bein' lonesome which I like cOmp’ny an’ plenty o f it. Ev’ry day I pray to have the flint took out o’ me an’ I pray fer my neighbors an' the hull town, ’cause if ,the Lord God lets me In I don’* want to be lonesome like I’ve been on that 01’ farm .” '“I don’t think you’ve any cause to worry. I don’t th in k -th at an honest ,man has any need to trem ble and be afraid. You tackled those raiders like u man. You’re no coward.” '. . “I can be sheered easy but hot when Fm riled, which I’m like a roarin’ Uod an’ it’s sham eful how I act an’ talk. JYhen I’m In a; sober mind I think o’ the fire o’ Hell. T hat’s when I do my trem blin’. Fire never felt. good to me. Rurnit bad when I w as young! G ptt enough of i t ” -ir't- In the moment of silence th at fol lowed, Colin w as laughing under his breath! Amos sighed’ and added: “I’vp done some backslidin’ in my ' tim e but never nothin’ to equal this night Which I’d call it uncommon slip pery. If ever a man needed the healin’ balm o’ God’s mercy, I do.” Soon Amos found a sense of relief in these words of the young m an: “You can’t be' a saint and go to war. The Lord don’t expect it. How is a sojdier to keep the ten commandments?” . They were in Cambridge, and before the gate a t general headquarters. The windows of” the' old mansion were aglow. The guard pacing In front of it blew his whistle. A hostler came from the stables. - Colln said to him, “She is cool. Give her w ater and oats. I shall wnnt her at eight In the morning.” - Billy came out of the front door and seeing the young captain said, ”W» was worried about you. sir. The Gen eral Is in his office., Said he w anted to see you soon as you got in.” Colin has not anticipated, that he would have to see the General nor did he know of the alarm ing nature of the report of Revere and of its effect on the Commander inv Chief and Lady W ashington. They entered the hall. “I shall first go to my . room and wash and change my Imen.” General W ashington came oat of his office. There w as a grave look in his face. ■ He gave his hand to the young man saying: _ ' “Captain, we have; been deeply con cerned for your safety. Come Into my- office and tell m e w hat has happened.” . “I apologize ; for my appearance,” said the captain. It was a timely rem ark. His face and-linen, wet w ith perspiration-w hen he set out from Roxbury, were now sm eared with d u st H is: hair was m atted. v - “It Is all a part of the story. Let me hear it.” - Those ’ penetrating; blue-gray eyes had been surveying him. They were now looking in to . his. ; He could n o t. He to this'm an. Those eyes-seemed to make, it impossible. He must tell the whole truth and be done with i t • Lady W ashington-entered the room, exclaiming “Mercy on u s !” . She looked at him .and went to h it side and having brushed bis -forehead w ith her handkerchiet-kissed.lt : eay- lng, “Mv boy. I am glad you w ere not captured. - I have been sitting ,up late and praying for good news of you.. I. told -BiUy to call me :lf y o u ' cam e b e -. fore m ffinight W hat has happened to you?” " '■She-sat" down and.. Colin: told-i tha story o f the am bush, and w ithout negr Iecting Its rom antic background. U n told of" the -timely arrival of C aptain; Farnsw orth and his men,, of J h e duel and- Its wager-and- o f all that,w as said and -done' to his foes. It, was, a vivid,- modest recital. r NTO BB CONTINUED. _ Deaths From Accidents , Show Small Decrease F or 1932 N orth D akota had the lowest, m otor vehicle death rate—8.8 per . 100,000 population; Nevada had the highest—57.7. - . Medford,- Mass., population 64,300, w as the largest reporting city to go through the entire year w ithout a m otor vehicle death. - . M ilwaukee had . the lowest motor vehicle fatality rate of all large cities—18.6 per JOO1UOO population; Los Angeles had the highest, 32-6; -T here were 8,500,000 nonfatnl -in juries last year. In other words, one person out of every fourteen was hurt m an accident. ■ There w ere nearly as many acci dental deaths in homes as in traffic, and more injuries in the home than in traffic. . / ■ The accident, death rate for 1932, 70.5 per 300,000 population, is the lowest on record except for 1921 and 1922. Falls and burns were responsible for 60. per cent o f all home deaths last year; ' ’ v Nearly one-third of all home acci dental deaths -involved children un der fifteen years of age. D eaths from drowning - and ; fire arm s show practically no change from year to year, despite all the educational work done to reduce them.—From AccideBt Facts, Issued ; by the N ational Safety Council. W hen CHILDREN —don’t gain weight —don’t grow.strong — don't keep well H e a d C O L D S PutMentholatum in theV nostrils to relieve congestion and clear the breathing passages. MENTHOLATUM -T he stom ach is not to blam e when a child is finicky about food. N or Is every sluggish girl o r boy consti pated. Instead of a lot.of medicine; give a TltU e pure syrup of figs; You’ll see a change in tw enty-four hours I In a couple o t weeks, your youngster w ill have the appetite ol a young anim al! It’s true, mothers, for It’s Nature. CaUfornia syrup of figs Is bottled health for the little ones. Pale, sickly children whose tongues are alw ays coated, and who' are never reaUy hungry, are suffering from stasxs. T hat means a sluggish colon; a colon clogged with waste. They need the “CaUfornla treat m ent” You can give this treatm ent yourself, any time, anyw here; it’s "simple; Every druggist has Califor- . nia syrup of figs all bottledj w ith full directions for a babe of two years or child In his. teens. Its de- Ucious taste makes it deUghtful to use; no child ever tired of i t S ta rt tonight, giving enough to cleanse the colon of every bit of poisonous waste. Then a spoonful or so, every other day, until tha child’s appetite, color, weight,, and general health teU you aU sluggish ness o r constipation has been con quered. JVhen a cold or severe sickness has sapped a child’s strength and stam ina, rem em ber CaUforhia syrup of figs. If you. want to get real results, get the real California syrup of figs. Do not accept any BoitIe which does not say CALIFORNIA Bymp of Figs. Johnny’s Cold is Better Little Johnny was a pretty sick little boy, but he’s getting blessed rest and sleep now. For Mother and’Dad wasted no time in-rub bing his Uttle chest with Penetro, the m utton suet salve! Penetro: is especially effective for children’s colds. Unlike ordinary cold salves, with mineral oil 'or-petroleum bases, w hich stay merely on th e skin’s su rfa c e, Pehetro, because o f its base o f highly refined m utton suet, goes deep, within. ■ : ,.That’s why Penetro breaks up congestion,' soothes inflammation and drives out the cold before or- , dinary salves get started. Penetro does not soil bedclothes or sleeping garments because it’s stainless an d snow- white. Ask for it by name: Penetro,'25c a jar. The 50c Economy size contains th re e times as much as the 25c size. The SI Fam ily size contains seven tim e s as m uch as the 25c size....... THE MUTTON SUET SALVE You can always relieve and often prevent head colds by using PENETRO NOSE and THROAT DROPS tains cphednne). Clinically tested and approved by ing nose and throat specialists. Generous site bottle, 25c. Your druggist also has the large economy sine, 50c. H EA D Q U A R TER ! for SOUTHERNERS Folks from below the Wojoo -Dwoo line olweys moke the Morfmtque their heodquorfen m New fork. Within one block—the Empire State Building, the Pennsylvonio sforion and the largest deportment stores] withm our four walls — good rooms, good meals and good friendships Smg/* Rooms from *2°® Doub/* Rooms from *3°° Drracfion AMERICAN HOTELS CORPORATION I l£SUe KMCATO. fnudmt CtOtGt WAKtMAK Maaegmt B R O A D W A V A t * 2 * * IV R E E T O T -E L -mARTiniQu-E <* n e u r V O R K ► New—BssentiaI SerrIce for Home*, thear --•terse-hotels,-hospitals, etc. No merchandise ■ tbosell. Blg repeater. -Excluslve territory. 'TBOJAN LABORATORIES. Cohoes. N. I. -WANTED—-50.0WI WOMEN. ElWrrnlnotInB Bed BnCT Guarantee absolutely. NTEryrK return. Recipe 50c. Senfl now. Don t-flelay. Mf jPiereon. 5«08 Eant 11th. Kunsiis Citv. Mo. N o aspirin dissolves quicker or brings more p ro m p t re lie f from, p an and; colds than S n -Joseph’s. Aspirin. Ids - genuine and pure and it’s always fresh, and fully effective because it’s wrapped ' in ir.oisttire-proof ccllophane.. _ World's-LargBst Seller at . . I O c ASK FOR IT BY NAME .. -4Ike 60e site of ’St. Jeieph'e Aspirin Lqs htm reduced in pncr to JOc. Tbe Iflc sue contains more than ft tune* m maay tablet*.!* the IOe ixe.. S t J o s e p h ’s G E N U I N E . P U R E A S P I R I N . T ie makers of-S t. Joseph’* Aspt mend ;Pcnetrp.: tie mutwo sum coldoettd I Ffenetrgl- .- toe m utwa r*nd PeaetroNo k and Throat Drops, 25c and !Otf “ ***• CuticuraGffes fJ o r lto u r S lm T te medicinal and • beaHn^ proper ties o f the S o a p notonly thoroughly cleanae the akin,bat are most benefit d a l and helpful to it# Ifyou are trou bled with pimples or other ekin erup* tion the O in tm e n t \nU quickly heaL - Write for special folder on the care o f the sian. Address: “ Cuticura/’ DepU 8 S, M alden, M ass. - FEET HURT : B ooklet sent FR E E H 6 - describe sym ptom s; • use Br- Sholls Jiew SANPADL. a result of scletttlfic research. - Not a dope, hot simple aa a b-c. Lasts for years/lft minutes'weekly keeps-the feet-In tone- TRx . IT;-you will never part with" It. Send 50c. TH O M A S COit B o x 'JftM A ’ - > : • H ollyw ood, C alif, Are.tYoui .Interested' So'Soutb American employment?-Por Information write Burnside • Distributors. Salto 4«.' Copp Bnildlik. V^n- conver. Cainr Send Nickel to cover, dost&se. U i viBSI fSfl W. N. U.;!ATLANTA, NO; 11-1933 40Tl ~*tr St RECORD. MOCKSVILLK BL C- News Review of Current Events the World Over Congress Passes Legislation Asked by President to End the Banking Crisis—-Japanese Complete the Conquest of JehoL B y E D W A R D W . P IC K A R D E5 Sec'y Woodin 'JCPANrSIOJt of the currency to the extent of billions of dollars will result from the legislation TOftfcii President Roosevelt asked o f the extraordinary session of congress and which was enacted within a few hours after- the new c o n g r e s s was convened »o Thurs day, Sfarch 9. The new currency fs based L S i r a S not 00 go,(1> but on f the lfqaid assets of k the banks- Tl,e PlanB.,-....... 5 S J M wa3 d e v i s e d after I ng hoars of confer- ence b j the President, ..eeretary of the Treasiiry W illiam H . Woodin and a nom her of financial ad- Tlsers of the adm inistration, and it w as the main feature of their solution of the banking crisis that w as par alyzing the nation. The other chief points in the legisla tion which the President called for In his brief but spirited message w ere: Continued suspension of gold pay m ents and embargo on exports of gold. Clothing of the President with the powers of a financial dictator. Continuation of the national b an t ing holiday, wholly or in part, pen din; complete reopening of the hanks. Legalization of the bank holiday proclam ation of JVJarch 5 and ail meas ures- adopted by the treasury to carry It into effect. Becaose the new currency is not backed by gold it is called federal re serve bank notes to distinguish it from federal reserve notes which a re backed by gold. To w hat erten t if any, inflation of the currency will be produced by this increase in the volume of money was <n"t of the big questions involved in the Roosevelt plan. . T hat inflation will be* the conse quence w as a conclusion widely reached in financial and commercial circles, with the result that a leap up ward of commodity and'security prices w as looked for the moment th e ex changes reopen. ventence, the American public re mained fairly calm and -appeared' to have confidence In President Roose velt and bis advisers. T he general feeling w as that the vigorous new Chief Execntfve would be able to de vise com petent m easures for tem porary relief o f the situation and to force their adoption by congress. Following the enactm ent o f the leg islation for the reopening o f the banks the President asked congress for au thority to pat an estim ated $500,000,- 000 out of governm ent expenditures by cnttlng governm ent salaries np to Io p er cent, and by drastic reductions In paym ents to veterans. It Is ex pected th a t another *200,000,OOd will be saved by the reorganization and combining of m any governm ent de partm ents, authorization for which was passed In th e closing days o f the last congress. The act creating th e new currency liberalisses the provisions of th e Grass-S M ? & W J E S S S K S E T ? S W S S ; EIIOCRaTTO membership of 3T3 - In the house of representatives gives them an unwieldy m ajority, and the certain consequence Is Intra-party wrangling. A fp re se n t the control seem s to be In the hands of Speaker H enry RaIoey and two allies, Floor Leader Byrns and Representative Cullen, leader of the Tam many delegation from New York. Opposed to them Is a faction neaded by McDuffie of Alabam a, who sought vainly to be elected speakeu. It was said several of the Alabaman'g m ost active supporters w ere quietly Informed that they wonld be punished by being shift ed from Im portant committees to minor assignm ents. Senator Jam es Ham ilton Lewis of m m ols w as.elected whip of the Demo cratic m ajority In the senate, and Senator Joe Robinson of A rkansas was chosen to be senate leader. Afso party authority w as made stronger Cban It has been for many years The caucus agreed th at the vote o f any fu tu re caucus upon any m easure recoro- TEfE E os Angeres section o f South ern C alifornia, covering an area, : Srom V entora on th e nortft to S aa I Diego on th e south, and extending; fn_ land fo r som e 30 miJes, suffered severe earthquake shocks on Fcfday evening, March: 10. causing 123 deaths, injury to- more than 4,300 and property loss running: Ehto th& mlllloiis. Between 5:53 and 10:5!) U distinctly, vlblient shocks had occurred.- the first on® o f which; did the greater p a rt of th e dam age and caused aH th e loss o f Hfe. Long Beach suffered th e greatest. Toss of life and proportionately th e greatest property damage^ - A t th a t point 65 people were killed and 1,000 injured. At Los A ngeles IZ people; were killed and som e 3,000 w ere in jured. O ther to w te suffering severely and a t w hich-deaths- occurred were W atts, -4 d ead ; Cam ptoar 13. dead; I S anta Ana, 3 d ead ; H antirigtoa Park. 12 d ead ; S aa Pedroi. 2 d ead ; Wilming ton, I dead;*Belltiow er, 3- d ead ; Ar- tesla, 4 d ead ; Hermosa B eacit I dead? G arden Groves t d ead; W alnut Park. I d ead; Norwalk;. I dead. FIre In many o f the towns,, and es pecially Long Beach and Los Angeles, added, to the terror, Bat fortunately th e w a te r m ains w ere not seriously- damaged and tb e firemen w ere able to cope with- the flames. R egular arm y troops a r Fort Mc A rthur w ere ordered to .co-operate w ith th e police In preserving order, and ships of the navy from San- Dfega were dispatched to points along . the coast to -ren d e r aid, naval surgeons providing aid and m edicines fo r the injured. T he governor of California ordered N ational G uard troops to tfte scene to assist In th e work o f rescn°, an d to m aintain ocder. IM P R O V E D U N IF O R M IK T E R N A T I O N A L U N D A Y I rc H o o L i * e s s o n (By KEW F- B.. FtTZWASEB^ Di. D.* Jffenii- ~' fear- at Faculty*. Sfoafily'BibfeInstitute of CbIcagifc.):1S33;, TFestera ST-ewspaper OtetoiL Lesson, for March 26: HOOSEVELTHIEETS WITH60VERN0RS D is c u s s e s M e t h o d s o f T a x a ' - f i o n a n d R e l i e f . W ashington. — - p r e s e n t K dosw ett held th e arranged'ciw ^iecenoe w ftb tb e governors ot moist o f t& e state s In tfie Unions, b itt th e im portance.of this gath ering la t^ e W hite-Etouse w as over- : shadow ed by th e SsaneIaI crisis. Tfie President told tb e governors Briefly w h a t he planned to relieve t&e__ bank M tiiation and spoke In praise o f th e prom pt action by them a n d by tb e legislatures. I . . T nrning then to w hat w as to b a re been th e m ain topic o f th e conference, M r. Roosevelt sa id ; “T he letter th a t I sent to yon toofc up several m atters: “ConBxctlng taxation betw een fed eral and state governm ents. Every one o f yba has been seeking m ethods to Snd new sources o f taxation. I t has been natural and bnnujn to expect th a t. the federal governm ent should try ' to find som e m ethod o f ntfsing revenue ‘A second question relates to fed- Speaker Rainey notes w ith n o 'g o ld reserve-- hehfml I “'f. t'res,uenf should be them. T he n o tS t h u f ^ ^ S e I « " barked only by Onited S tates Soirds In the sam e m anner as national bank notes issued by national hanks, ft fur ther liberalizes section IOa of the fedr era! reserve act as am ended-by the Glass-Steagall act so as to enable banks to obtain currency on “liquid assets" of a character not previously eligible One of the effects of the legislation will be to produce a unified banting system . Only member banks of the federal reserve system are able to avail themselves of the privileges af forded by this legislation to convert assets previously ineligible Into cur rency. StateLbanks ir e compelled to join the federal 3ystem In order to ob tain the funds that will enable them to reopen. Another foreseen effect Is the weed ing out of weak banks. Institutions unable to furnish liquid assets for cur- " S F W nnat>Ie t0 reopen. O thers will be able to rem ain open to the extent of their liquidity pending at least a recovery of general public con fidence In banks. Legislation to stop hoarding also iTrea cImsidere^ h? congress and m eas iires for reaching and pnnishingl the boarders of currency whose w ithdraw al of deposits brought on the panic and caused the closing of tbe banks were I the 'adm lniStration • and leaders of the senate and house. As th» 7 move iB thte directionth e federal reserve b o a rd 'nt the In stance of Mr. Itoosevelt, senr tele graphic orders to all federal reserve banks to furnish by M arch 13, H3ts of- ^ n i 0 PK wh0 have ^ ‘h d ra w n 'g o w since February I, and had not by that tim e redeposited their drawais.gold. with e r e d them selves from voting fo r cause. It was further agreed tb ar a sim ple m ajority, instead of the niore custom ary two-thirds m ajority, should m ake the action of the caocns bind- »ng and that'tw o-thirds of the,, whole num ber o f Democratic senators should constitute a caucnsi - I ^ l f uT I urther chose Senator Kendricfc of Wyoming as assistant leader. Senator Key Pittm an as Demo- cratlc candidate for president pro tem- Porer Bdward H alsey a s candidate for secretary of the senate. ChesIey W Jurney as candidate for sergeant at arm s, and U U BIPfIe as the m ajority. T 1EO tK iH It w as generally adm itted * th at the w orld disarm am ent con ference in Geneva w as In a bad way, the B rtSsh started to make a last ef fort to revive it o r at least to salvage som e thing from its work. W ith this • In -m ind. Prim e M inister Mac D onald and Sir .Tofin Simon, foreign secre tary, went to the Sw iss city to see: what could be done. They denied they had any definite plan of a c tion. but they hoped to get Prem ier DaIa- dfer of France and Chancellor H itler of gether on some arrangem ent tijat would prevent the u tte r breakdown! of the conference. " .J S ir .Tohn Simon said hefort. leaving London th a t one of the,first issu esh e and M r. MacDonald wotcld take up.':In Geneva would be the-fact- th a t "=ino other nations had IoUowed^GrM P rem ier- M acDonald Germany to- ’ secretary to D Utf I f G ,brf6f sPecfal session th. * convened on inaugural day the senate confirmed these appoint m ents by the President : Prof. Raymond Moiey of CoIiimhia a s an assistant secretary of s ta te a s undersecretary of state, who will be S v r ans accoontat,te * W ilbur J. C arr of New r 0rk reap- H i n l t f a95toI nt secretaT o fstate. Henry M orgenthau, .Tr^of New York member of the federal farm hoard. ' W illiam F. Stevenson of South roheZ ° f tbe fcderal home ioan bank board. b J 'S 7 lShl m bIt ot 3lenne3See, mein- ber. of the home loan board. - B o'tain’s lead in imposing an^farrok- ^embargo against C hinfc-anrl i& nSn;. which, as be. rilnur aittTn a situation wfflch- cannof &e-^tl- Iowed to continue.” v fe T b* B ritish , recognized th at i& e financial situation In tbe United States m ight well delay any iiisaniia- ment action and certainly would cause postponem ent of th e w ar debts con ferences, In tile latter m a tte r,. how ever, Sir Ronald Lindsay, B ritish am bassador, did flnd opportunity to lklk with President Roosevelt’s advfssrs. REVIEW : JESU S OtTR EXAM PLE ' IN SERVICE. GOLDEN T k XT—H ow Qod anointed Jesus of Nnza re tit wittfc th& HaIy Ghost and wftli powerr Who w ant about doing goad* and healing; a ll that-w ere oppressed o f the devil; for: God w as wftjk film-. .Acts IO:j S. PHISIAE.T TOPIC—Stories of Jesns.JCKtOR TOPIC—Iesua Shows Cs How. . DrrEEMEDIA-TE AND SENIOE TOP'- IC—Living Lita- Jesus.TOUNG PEOPLE AND ADtTLT TOPIC—Jesaa- Our Example in- Service. The method o f review tnast alw ays be determ ined by the genius o f th e teacher, th e grad e of th e class and th e aptitude o f th e popils. T hrea methods for th e Senior, Toong Peo^ pie and A dolt classes a re suggested. th e second and third o f which a w _______ _ adaptations^ o f the m ethod suggested ^rai aid ia unem ploym ent re B e t T h e • federal governm ent,' o f coarse, does have to prevent anybody from starv ing; b u t th a federat governraent should not be cflllefl upon to exercise th a t duty until o th er agencies CsiL T he prim ary duty is th a t-o f. th e locality, the cftyr county, tow n—if they fail and cannot raise enongb to m eet th e needs the next responsibility is o n th e states and they have to do alt th ey can; and If it is proven th a t they can- Bot do any m ore and tlie fu n d s a re still insufficient ft: Is th e duty o f the governm ent to step Iru “W e com e to th e question of co-ordl- nating w ork. Is fe very difficult u> know in th e federal governm ent wbac states a re doing" w elt fo r unem ploy m ent relief and -w hat states a re not, and it Is my thought th a t I can create sim e kind ^ o f -central relief- agency w hich 'w in be- a fact-finding . body, which w iii co-ordinate1 th e w ork o f states and act a s a clearing house for th e relief o f the nation. T hope to g et that- se t up In th e next tw o o r three weeks. “T he third proposition, the re-prgan- IzfDg- and_ ecnsolidatioa o f local g o w errim ent H> reduce th e taxation cost. T h at is your problem and it-h as been m y problem for th e fast four years. “And th ere is th e question o f mo’rt- gage foreclosures, especially on farm land and also on .small homes. T here again we haven’t.;'? national policy. Som e-of the: states a re doing it one w ay and an other sta te is doing it sn o rte r tOCISE M. COMSTOCK N e llie C ashnaan f \ B T ' of die boisterous <iays o f the Alaskftl ' - she by th e Ltrtiieran Lesson committee. I. The Sum m ary Method. In th e use o f this m ethod th e prin cipal facts • o f each lesson w in be brought o n t w ith th e leading teach ings. -A ssignm ents should-be made a w eek in advance. I II. Th* Key Note of th e F irst S b fi C hapters o f Mark From W hich th e Lessona of th e Q uarter H ave Been Taken. C hapter I : Jesns as the Gospel Preacher. H is preparation wa 3 In the . w ilderaess alone w ith God. It was. In i f«jorar Galilee th a t he" called his first dis ciples and began to preacfi. W hile the synagogue w as th e best place, nat- nrally w hen th e leaders becam e hos tile, the desert, th e m ountain, and even a fishing boat w as his pulpit. C hapter 2 ; Jesus a s th e Teacher. H e gave them, a new conception -of th e forgiveness o f sins, fasting; and th e Sabbath. C hapter 3 : Jesos as the M essiai H e ehose twelve o f his am bassadors, being som ew hat analogous to the tw elve tribes In th e old dispensation. C hapter 4 : Jesos a s th e Interpreter of tbe Kingdom o f God. T hree oot- standfng parables reveal Its character istics. _ C hapter 5 : Jesus as the G reat Phy sician. T he healing of th e dem oniac th e woman with the Issne o f blood restoring to life o f- tie diiushter of JaIrus a re outstanding exam ples;: C h a p te rs: Je sn sa s the G reater Pro vider. An outstanding exam ple of his - _______ SBiHty to provide for the d.'scipres: & [ wayI ? ome states and som e localities seen In tfe- feeding o f the 5ve 'tiion- f ^ ~ ^lo^ n;r t^ie lr eJres to existing law s -- . a n d do not fiavCany. foreclosures. o f six m en, adventurers eii to San Francisco, Rfire coin sent them mirth B ritisb Colombia, she Iearwd senrvey w asspreadins d i« „ J ** th e m iners in the With her six followers m i ,I !? ' m en m ore, and with 1.0« JUmttes and medicine, sho 1 “ rra c u ^ ft w as a n r e w y ^ * tnj> on snowsboes. Wh^ri net„ " underra& fng reached a fflilija^r post, the w m m -iadeT j^ sn re NeiIle conid not Sllrrivt v 'f l a detaQ of soldiers tn the b r f ^ back her body t'„r rim,, buna.L »: Nellie heard tilCT J s Ing and"clim bed a tree rn £ne % Ofj I Al VictJt con. I S he cijnsidArfii] 'raIcii tta I * swj I p O B days there w as considerable con- * fusion concerning the banking situ ation m ainly because of dlfTerences be- ir r f v , the^ President’s proclamaUon and the orders Issued by governors of various states. This w as especially - true In J««tv York and Illinois. 'D ay by day Secretary Woodln issued oW ders modifying those In the govern ment* proclam ation closih? down all b a n k i but there w as mucn misuhder- standing of bis regulations regardiOK^ lim iting, opening of the IiistitdUons. Clearing bouses - were busy bo ld W m eetings but failed to live up to their nam e by clearing up the situation and tbe banks w ere uncertain o f both tiieir. pow ers and -their ; re ^ n sib U ities; In many ciU.es and 'tow ns-banks were open tc carry on Iiinited activi- ties that w ere required to provide food, foodstuffs and medicines and for the m eeting of pay rolls.; Tiiroughout the country preparations w ere nMde for the Issuance o f scrip; pendihg the receipv. o r the n ec^ airy V iithofity from W ashlngton. : .SM r«aij..-wdOi»n, how ever, ruled ..against- scrip, though f 6 S:““ctloned «»e issuance in varicftis Iocalifies^ of clearing house certifidites against sound assets of hanks for use as an emergency circulating medium. D espite all the confusion and' incon- ^ 0],L0V?ING out ■ the, cam paign ■ plan K6IsoCTth ^ T»y u^ t-Kunfaki Koiso, the Japanese arm ies virtuallv com pleted/he conqoest of )>#. province ..of Jehol.-T he. Chinese ^ 7nn. •governor H ed and all .tbe . Chinese troops w ere forced out after a la st defensive strug- • gle a t Koupeikow; a Pass In the G reai WalL Japanese planes first Jbombed the Cbi- n e se ' positions /there; and- then G e n e r a I K aw ahara’8 brigade took the place; The Japanese thus com- 6en-. pleted, the seizure of v Kofso m iles o f the Grei^t. Waif, 'eitendlng from the inner.M ongolia. to' the TdlowSea. . . • ■■ / V : T beO iinese fled tow ard Peiping and ^ ®5d ^ ht ,D tilOt cityled theauthoriU es to establish m artial taw, T he, Japanese.;said tbey:rwould not push on to PelpIng unless forced to by reprisals against their countrv- ^ ^SMtfrshai Chang - ? , lans waa severely criticized for the* loss o f Jehol and:,resigned as miii- Uiry overlord of North Ciilna; accent ing the blam e and asking that the na tlonal government relieve him of all posts. - „ “ “ Maxim U tvlnov, foreign commissar of Russia, bluntly Informed the Lea-iie of N ations that the S 9 vlet governm ent would not participate Im b e doings of the league committee set up to Iuiudl9 tne Slno-Japanese quarrel. PIR M L Y seated In power, by victory *- In the reicbstag elections, Chaircel- Ior Adolf H itler now plans to .rnle G erm any w ithout parliam entary aid?or abont tw o years. H is N ational Social ists hold about 44 per cent o f the: votes In the new reichstag and the Natfon- alisfs, bis present allies, have S nSr cent. The election passed off qufetly instead of being the bloody affiafc-th e ; foes of the azis had predicted. 'T h e chancellor believes th at dem ooacfete a faiinre in Germany and now has the legal tools, to annihilate it. T here w ere m any indications th a t th e coun- try Is on th£ way to restoration ot tbe monarchy. One superficial sign o f this w as the rapid disappearance o f-th e nags of th e republic, the flags o f:the .??fS Jtld ,o f tfIe Otrt em pire being snb- stltnted. H itler; however, feels that- Hie restoration, m ust be postponed un- p l conditions a re Improved, arid In this the m onarchists agree with him An evidence-of the trend tow ard con servatism w as the order of H erm ann Qoering, Na2i m inister w ithout port- reiio. suppressing the nudist move- m en t . . sand, |tfIC SA SM «fted W hich Em braces the? Grouping of th e QuarteKs Lessons Un d er Significant Headings. .. I- Some helpers o f Jesos (Lessons T t a \ ^ Kr,The helPere indicated are Johnrthe= B a p fst who Is th e first re. an(I tfte t^ i v e apostles. It Fs sto&fngly signfficant t& at thongh Jesos possessed all pow er he chose to P^ace tSe b a n d s'o f ordinary men the continuance of his work, H e Is able to nse men of varied gffts and tem peram ents, as shown in the twelve. _ £ Some w orks of Jesns (Lessons 2, S and 4). H e m et arid overcam e the Devil In the wilderness. H e cast o a t demons. H e healed, the slcli and he forgave sins. _ S Some teachings of .Tesos (Lessons 7 and 8). Because the traditions of m e Jew s had obscured the, law he fanght the higher, m eaning of th e law “ It pertained to the I S to th . B y m ^ n s of parables, he took tbe common things ot life and d o tte d them w ith vital and y e t w e bave no national policy for itf but I beiieve we can bave one.” B efore adjourning, th e governors adopted a resolution,, proposed b y a com m ittee of citizens headed ‘by R ear Adm iral R ichard E. Byrd, proclaim ing faith In the. .President and American, institutions. " . approach. JofieJ Su<^ w as her. success », sta ; 1 o n r th e scurvy that Xeiiie Sfient tM years n ear the mines. [„ sh e reto m ed to the States nnrtm J a store, a t Tombstone. Ariz. RPref prospered and w as able tn Ct1Ilc I e ra l o f A rizona's present OiiIlMra on th e gam ble rhey would find s„Mi, J tt e . n jln ^ then , being develn„ed s™ I Tom bstone. Nellie seeme<i to hare a. I tied down. Bnt in 1807 wonioi tbl discovery o f gold in A teka Summiti Her irresistibly north asnin. bOWtTd, I am ong th e first to reach O a ^ j st subSeqaently “mosbed'’ intn the la- terior. prospecting and sreki claim s. She Is' said tn have teaTael over one million dollars from Js claim s on Bonanza Creek. Dttrij; ti? W orld w ar she secnred the aid nife citizens of- Wiseman, trhich she te made- h e r borne, and started sosihit -enlist a s .a - Red Cross nurse, Bef®? sh e reached the “outside; th e w ar w as over. tn I92X, w hen she was a iromuj.; Seveatyv NeHie made her last Kj & th e - S tates,; 480 -miles of it. the & tan<»-,&ej;wea- NoIan and Fairtei by dog sled. She came, she fliec plained.-to raise capital for tiie fleri opm ent ot her ‘claims at Xolan aadii the: Eoyokufc district, from which * w as confident she cotild 11^tt a tsuii* ^ f .miiHpn.’’ . Nellie Castiniaa die) a 102a and-Is buried in Victoria, W A S H IN G T O N B R IE F S W E b s c o n g r e s s appropriated ,000 for tbe annual ex- penses o f the bureau of prohibition enforcem ent it stipulated that none of the money w as to be spent on w ire « ^ DS 0 rJLfie Pttrchase of liquor as not be-OJme^effectlVe until July I. but Amoa W. W . Woodcock has ordered them In- :to effect now, pointing out that “casSs m a^e contrary to them now probably ^ S a a ^ter these proiisions become law.” • •The -result o f the order, Mr. YVoid- Wpfe .said, will m ean k com ptlfo ln enforcem ent- m ethods and ^pili cause this bureau td operate aT W fn=excllI f '- 1^ asaiast th« tnHnufac-- ^ r e r s and transporters” of Jlq n o r T his, naturally, is good new s to the operators of night clubs and ^speafc- nificam e, , Profound slg- °f JeSUS K*xons 9. 10 and 11).. TOis pow er w as exhibited 0^ e r t^ e ^ rc e s of nature, demons, Irtysical ailm ents, and even death £ __®. An enem y of Jesus. (Lesson 12) T he Devil is th e suprem e enem y of r S iS^ f / “ iD g:that hfntlers' the ph>g- 01 tbe gospel may be considered a s / n « e m r. In this light he S en! m f S’ am oDg wbich may b0: -mentioned alcohol and n2rcotfcs. T he -drinkteg -of intoxicating: U quo^ S d ° V d ^ ttes- eta, doll m anV m oral and spiritual natures and Iti- S S ^ L te; « “ - .^ ..t b e h i g h ^ ^ m ost em cient seirfee; G E M S O F T H O U G H T W ith th e retirem ent of R epresentav tive G ilbert N. H augen o f Iow a, Rep resentative Edw ard W. Pon of N orth Carolina is now dean o f th e boose. Secretary of W ar D em m ade his InItfal public bow In bis new official capacity w hen He addressed a confer ence of adjutants general of th e states. 1^lbor departm ent celebrated, ^ ith dancing and cards, its tw entieth a?B ivereary. honoring Its new secret taryr M ss Prances. Perkins, Ar s t wom an cabinet member. ta ” a r°rId tc^es, of-Chicago, a s secre, ^ o f th e interior In the Roosevelt - ^ a sj 03 his right-hand m an an otd friend and political associate o f 21 y e ara standing, Josepb M. Dixon. -. The w orld: crowns crow ns faithfulness. success; Goa It fe better th a t we know “T he Jtnrfr of Ages’ than "the age of r o S * * " * fm m th L ' ershtng h as resigned advisory council o f th e N a- tlqnal Economic Leagueil a fte r express- fnW<f>Pr-°!. o f drgairtzatloh’s ef fo rts to reduce, th e «>st o f governm ent a new. twws. tow ard p ittin g down S ^ ^ t , h e a d s* ? T partm ents w ere asked to -ap p ear be. ■ ? • special •; lipuse ' dom m lttee': to converted to th e statu s of K r nual appropriations. that will be. angry, ana' m ust not - be.: angry Jobn Trapp. ' . not sin; but f o r . sin.—* ninth7 days a fter com pleting fiii t ^ L-onsecuUve term m the house of representatives. Will R.,Wood of Indiana died.quite tm expe«t«d|»'In New Torfc H e was about to on a , tw o m onths' cruise of the M ^ditemTt)bAn-rAii a<«n««uVJ. _•-».... .'In spite o f -wbat i-V in^A . HS. and th a t is m o re lh a n ^ ^ 0 t abont ourselves, he l o v ^ 0^ l ^ D o g R e v e a l s G r a v e 0* r 't ^ ^ a *n I m m i g r a n t P o U ^ p n i ^ ^ l S ^ ^ * ^ - year-old BuIgarIaa am ne^n for a complete rest after his long and arduous labors In W ishlnctnn Mr Wood was on« of .he pmst ^ ,°vo and Influentlnl of «,§ Heo«h|}W nJ £ the house and Im h e last e0nsres8 wa* anHef the a^ wiPi-JaOons1Comm lttee, He W8S ?eTenty two le irs * * » Though I am alw ays in hi«t» , never In a h n r^ r.--j0iII1 W esleyA “Religion does not con«i«f >. . ■ good; th a t Is only a r « S l » Snowing God.” religion la P h ^ lva' break^ r M a n s got rid o f sin in- B|sliop Linton. - p r e s u m S ' J S b ^ a l i l ! , ^ , ^ ham m er o r o ther rounded o b J ^ “ ' A pbTo^thaLtoK -u s e le s s song m ______ W S^ el» M ^ ro n D row n-J 1-eldyT Randolph river. a W t o t a S l“ f0 w as InjuredL “ * lVlB8: happened w hen be^ sw w t« ^ r a r d e n t collision;- - ...... sW ^ e d t^k avoid'ii . Bent toy* V orfabire . m an* , - praiSe t0 [J n 5K h U ho^ asft G r a c e P a rso n s T n BiE .very first long distance 6«s I .. back ride in American blslMywl m ade long before the days of PiJ J Itevere, and by a woman. Awl rift I th e feat o f Paul Revere lias Iieen ;ii» I tride publicity, has been dranaiis£| poetized, burlesqued, the career t G raee Parsons, heroine of tbe # 1 w hen Pennsylvania was still fr®tift I and rife w ith Indian warfare, rejnaiw f shrouded in ’mystery. IVe know that she lived in Easwl In N ortham pton couni.r. Pa.. Ihe dari-1 te r . of an English coltliler. v.-t" rf-1 grated to this country in i7l!ianii*-| seqoently rose t'rnra the sbnerasiffi I bench to be appointed surveyor I era I o f the state. I W ith tb e outbreak of the Frail and Indian w ars Pennsylvania, still*I border state, w as pltinsed into tbe 1*1 .tors of m assacre and nilla;e. © I se ttlers lived in constant term of ® I red mien lurking in the surn»W | forests. One day tronl was W jltI to ESastOn of the massacre al fins1*3 1 H uten In the Lehwli valley. ""-aJ m any m iles away, and the i>rflMK,l th a t th e -Indians, spurred ontrap^ j th e ir horrible sittccess tierp. IvereW1I 'on fu rth er raids to the east. Haiiie descended upon Kaston. W I cesidenf wbo coiild deserted ^ie I transporting bis fami'v anti limisL ,! good? through the wilderness to saw I Ifr Philadelphia. Only WIIIH* " I sons and bis family, and a fe* * I settlers. Mostly older men awf ’r'il® I an d ^Children, remained in I fenseless town. Wilh neitiiw ad e fo r refuge, nor iiminunition-/^. I only hope- of survival lay i‘> I ; D ger • through 10 Pi''iladslJ i J w ith ait appeal for aid. ^1' roan.w; I to m ake Hie journey could I*® ^ I O race Persons volunteered ta w e I m essage, : > .' c , ,^ 1 From , th e tense moment at I she set out from her rarljers ,I . horseback, on ber perilous -G raw - Parsons’ uatne ili?:i|il^,a_ .((f| historic record. No insP - j p l found, tim e in those days of tn I set down the details of her 1“ „ 1 through th e trackless wi Itlerne: w ith m enacing Indians. ,0 reVliafiJ I goal. • No poet has siin^ her • 1 to tripping couplets. 'Ve <t» ^ l tcrs. however, which rel«ip ' . o f fhe plight of the | niftining in Easton «as rc^ .„ „,-f | days and two nights laier *> Jtf ts ry headquarters in flIlilil Irecord that the needed arias- J(j I were- ' subsequently dispn'f1 hj I reached the harrassed 'e"'". ^ jtf| Indians.- changing their ® -1 lected to attack Easton af,e' Cl IH J Western NewsPolief T H E , P A V l E L a r g e s t 'C i r c u l a t i o j D a v i e C o u n t y Ne L O tfL AND PER : -s-:- com es t t e story of nvi ,-. ^ woBran sourdough, 4sN I nrtnes^- w ho could mush ^ * 1H hind th e dogs over endh^ trackless snow with the b--t ^fcs * I a n d gained m ore gold to s h o ^ N th an m ost. -w j | A n “old m aid” was x-e>,f„ . ow n deffnftion. She nev>,i./Jf 1191 ab o u t to help her when sh» ^ I ir m an's job.- Nellie ha„ w ltb her fam ily in isft- T' "«! I w anderlust seized her l6i I- - ■ ■ • -MtD n P3nrJ Ken] S. M. Cairxnade a to Charlotte last week.| M m J . A. Baniel s day'in'the TwinrCtty-S Editor Rutledge, of I RiBpJS was iu town on! week. My L. Gotibyf of wasa- business visitor | d a y r - • Cashier S. M. Call, of Davie, made a busij Raleigb Friday. Reid ToweIl1 who classic shades of Counlj in town last week on .W. C. Elam, of Ale ty, was a business visid vilie one day last weel{ The Bank of Cooley last F riday' morning after a nearly two wee J. B. Bailey who classic shades of Gand in iow u Wednesday on .Gsiinon Talbert. B. Jt.;;;ahd George S h u ttJ were-business visitor! week. sEocal news is rather! Weeki; The editor wa week with grippe and' to. do much writing. --- Feiix H arding and street, students at V College, spent the weei vSth their parents. a Dr. J. R. Lowery, _ Mts T. F. Hudson an<L all of Salisbury, were il Wednesday on businesf A. A. W agoner ba. fatnily from the Denc the Winston-Salem hig K. M. Clement house ■ street. G A. Carter, of ned has been seriously ill] motjia for the past tv somewhat improved, note. Mr. ; and Mrs. H. C J dauftbter Miss Annie, i were in town a shoil we^k-.on their return visit to Advance. Sericea Lespedza, „ Certified, $2.00 per Ibl Davie countjy. Y oui seed at Sanford’s storef Hendrix store, J. G .j .. . . Coolf MrVand^Mrs. J. P. and Mrs. j'. j. Larew1 „ Knox Johnstone, Mrs. I and children were shopl ton Saleoi Friday. fiiss, Mary Eathryii student at D raugboi College, Wiiiston-Sale] week-eni io. town wits and M rs;;li. S.: Mrs- H . C; Sprink. •narle, is a patient atl pita!, Durhatii; Mrs I « « e ro fS..M p and Gal^f of this *city„ an frieBBs here who wisl sP®edv recovery. Alexander, ofl ^hQihas been a "patteifi sanatorium, Statesvill weeks, was, able to Saturday. ,‘;-svk4s”- Inends m Moefcsville to .k n o w th alh |jS hon Rejjresentatfve B. C as spent tb¥ last thr^ tw!le|gh, with A e law!! I • ^ 'e n^d.:iii':to w n 1 ■ , Afr*. Broek says getting very drastic it c*ty, and the end is n<| T H ere w I i i i ^ a m , W ^ d v ^ a r Veterans hoBse;,n Mocfcsviiie, ' “ight^Aprii. rst, at M i ^ w e n t s a n d roo. SM -= Wgether wirl E f e 8, A«soli“ • l9 present T. L. VBIaIoclj ^ Cbinafor the past] J & ^ c h at Libl SJggfe »» ClarksvilleI N o! J TiSh^I Gtaiied Scbl J b u r s a a y n ^ h t M af( P- m. All memb, this- s 1 at »1,5 ^ie stressed f , JJiis meeting.* ' - X1. H.’ANC ( •I'- ■'-m e n c a n roines B y M . COMSTOCK — —“ ‘»11 I e boisterous Pp^ m I the A laskan 2 7 « I °ry Of Nellie ^ ^ JdoiigI., "queen O wIllt ieould mush her WllT hh* s over endless mil™ £ ' " ,th the best of ttl .ore gold to show f„r“’ aid ' w as Nenie. 1)v h: Sl,e neefIed no' „,* her when she IimimS Nellie had come h»y in 1SC5. The,, lh‘ . T H E D A V IE R K C O R P . M O C ^ S V rL tE , fit, g . m A r g h ur.ed her. With idventurers all.' she w 2 isi o. H ereth ellipof e... Al Victoria ibin, she learned that tlic spreading disaster Pnion- In the cassiar district followers and as nill ‘ nd with l.GUO pounds of medicine, she wem t0 tb(, was a twenty-seven .lav shoes. When news of Iler reached a neighhnrins the commander was so fould not survive he sent ioldiers to the mines' her body for Christian lie heard they were eom- |bed a tree to watch their ■he considered it a <.00|] her success at stamping vy that Nellie spent tw» the mines. In tS76 to the States and opened jnmbstone. Ariz. Here she id was able to stake sev- |ona s present millionaires Ie they would find gold in hen being developed near Nellie seemed to have set- Bnl in ISO" word of the ?o!d in Alaska summoned Iy north again. She was rst to reach Dawson, and “mushed" into the in- pecting and staking out is said to have realized 1II10D dollars from her inanza Creek. During the he secured the aid of live Wiseman, which she then time, and started south to Red Cross nurse. Before the “outside.” however, over. hen she was a woman of Ilte made her last trip to 4S0-miles of it. the !lis ten Nolap and Fairbanks, She came, she then H- aise capital for the devei- • rClaims at Nolan and in Ik district, from which she [nt she could “get a couple Nellie Cashtnan died in buried In Victoria. Parsons t long distance horse American history re the days of Pm' a woman. And while Hevere has been given has been (!mnmtized, qued. the career of heroine of the davs nil. was still frontier dian warfare, remains tery.■ she lived in Easton, county. Pa.. Hie .laugh- ish cobbler, who t* untry in .171!) and sub- from the shoemakers pointed surveyor gen- e. i.break of the French ; P en n sy lv an ia, still » a plunged into the bon re and pillage- constant terror of the o in the surrounding ay word was brought e massacre a. fi«ad« Lehigh valley. , 1V. and the p r e * ^ s. sp u rre d Kn w n rd h ' iccess her?. tvere to the east, ed upon Kaston. ■ ■ uld deserted the to'— family and l>nnsel dJie wilderness to Sh f Only William W mil.v. tind a feW „older men and ^ •emained m ... WHh neither is nor animuruno Ji^ # rVir' to’V PhikKle1Fhia m gb t0 /--m nnahlefor aid. Na ' red. urney cm,i( theolunteered to t. : «, svbicli ' QSe mome" ; ^ lisa •m her ;! ,! journey- her perll0,,su„r- from name llisnpW;, ‘writer • No ,nSo mrmoiimy hose days n ride ettuls of ner niive cUless wiWer - -h Indians. tn rePOlVerf has,, sung ner iet- plets Wptd0P^w orf Whio ' re - - „ q. S S tCtown. ‘ Df(. r » ,» * after a»- -O wUuiml the DAVIE RECORD. Largest Circulation of Any Davie County Newspaper. LOCAL AND PER SONAL NEWS. s JL Cal'frnade a business trip to Charlotte last week. W1S J. A. D aniel spent W ednes day in the Tw inrCity- shopping. . Editor Rutledge, of the Yadkin Ripple was in town on business last week. jd L. Godby, of County Line, was a business visitor here Satur day. Cashier S. M. Call, of the Bank of Davic1 made a business trip to RaIeighFridav. ReidTowell1 who lives in 'th e classic shades of Countv Line, was jD town last week on business. \V. C. Elam, of Alexander coun tv, was a business, visitor in Mocks- vjile one day last week. The Bank of Cooleemee opened last Friday morning for business after a nearly two weeks holiday. T B. Bailey who lives in the classic shades of Gander Hill, was in town Wednesday on business. G annonT albert. B. R. Bailey, Ji.; and George Shutt, of Advance, were business week. "Our good frieud R. O Elam,' of Ifedell county, was in town v Mon day and left us a brand new', frog sk in ;. ; / ;; Miss Einilv Powell, of the Center community, was the week-end guest of Miss CIaJa Bauks1 daugh* ter of Rev. and Mrs. J, O. Banke. The Senior class of the Mocks ville high school enjoyed a delight ful weiner roast at RicK Park Fri day evening. ‘ A number of friends were present to assist in the merry making. A; C. Walker Passe?. A. C W alker. 58,- died at his home in Winston-Salem Friday evening, following an extended ill ness. Mr. W alker was a native o f the Center section of Davie countv, but moved to Cooleemee a bout .20 years ago. He moved to W inston Salem about seven years ago. Surviving is his widow, two daughters and one son, allot Wins ton Saleth, and one brother, John Boone Walker, of Calahaln town ship. Funeral services were con ducted Sunday by Revs. Parker Holmes, Raymond Smith and V. M. Swaim, and the body laid 'to rest, jn the Center graveyard. - Mr. W alker had many friends in Dayie county who were saddened by the news of bis.death. visitors here last •Local news is rather scarce this week The editor was laid up last week with grippe and was unable to do. much writing. . Felix Harding and Frank Stone- street, students at Wake Forest College, spent the week end in town with their parents. ; Dr. J. R. Lowery, Attorney and Mrs T. F. Hudson and Ed Hobson all of Salisbury, were in Mocksville Wednesday on business. A. A. Wagoner has moved his family from the Denny house on the Winston-Salem highway to the K. M. Clement house on Salisbury street. G A. Carter, of near Fork, who has been seriously ill with pneu monia for the past two .weeks, is somewhat improved, we are glad to note. Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Foster and daughter Miss Annie, of Statesville, were in town a short while last week on their return home from a visit to Advance. Sericea Lespedza, Scarified and Certified, $2.00 per lb. Grown in Davie county. You may secure seed at SanfordtS store, also Frank Hendrix store, J. G. Crawford, Cooleemee, N. C. Mr;and Mrs. J. P. Legrand, Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Larew, Mr. and Mrs. Knox Johnstone, Mrs. E. C. Choate and children were shopping in Wins ton Salem Friday. Miss Mary Kathryn W alker, a student at DfaughontS Business College, Wiiistbn-Salem,, spent the week-end, in town with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.; H-. S.' Walker.- Mrs. H. C. Sprinkle,, pf Albe marie, is a patient at- Duke Hos pital, Durham; Mrs.. Sprinkle is a sister of S. .M„ and Miss Martha Call, of this 'city,, and has many friends here who wish for her- a speedy recovery. C. E. Alexander, of Cooleemee who has been a patient at LongtS Sanatorium, Statesville, for several weeks, was able -to return home Saturday. Sykes-1-- has; many friends in Mpcksville who. are glad to know that hef is home again, Represenfattve B. C. Brock, who has spent the last three months in Raleigh with the lawmakers, spent the week-eridiin town with his fami >y- Mr. Kropk ' Says' things are getting very drastic in the capitol eity, and the end is not in sight. T herew lilbe a meeting of all Aforld War Veterans at the court- house in Mocksville, : on - Saturday fight, April-1st, at 7130 o'clock Refreshments and good eats will be served, together with some goo ’ speeches. Aliex- soldiers are urg ed to be present. • Rev. T. L. fBlalock, missionary >a Chiiia for the past forty years will preach at Liberty Baptist church, in Clarksville township, on Sunday, M arch;26th, at n a. m.. sad 7:30 p. m" The public is given jMiPecial invitation to attend both wtese services: ' ' , Oayie Grange No, 608 will meet Jn the Graded School" building lhursday night, March 24, 1933 at. s.oo p. m. AU members are urged 0-be,present*at this meetiug. The SpItual will be stressed and reviewed at this meeting.* ■ L. H .'A N G ELL1 Sec. David DaywaIt Weds Miss Seamon. Mr. David A rthur Dayvault and Miss Lena Seamon, both of Davie county,- were united in marriage Saturday afternoon at 4:30 o'clock, at the home of the officiating tnin ister, .Rev J. ClydeYates1 on W est Front street. Mr. and.Mrs. Dayvault will "be at home in. Davie county—States ville Daily, 13th, Planting Time Is Here! Farmers ArejPreparing Their Lands For another crop and we are prepared to furnish them a full line of farm implements and ma chinery at low prices. We carry a big stock of John Deere Impleirents Farm tools of all kinds, Terra Cotta Pipe, Bar bed Wire, Poultry Wire, Rakes, Hoes, Pitch forks, Rubber Roofing, all kinds of plows. FERTILIZERS W e carry the best Fertilizers to be had. Seed IrishPotatoes1 Autb Tires, Groceries, Feeds, Etc. See us before you buy. We can save you money! on your purchase. Cafd of Thanks. We wish to thank our many friends and neighbors for their kind deeds and expressions of sympathy during the sickness and death of our father, John W. Ellis. Also for the beauti ful floral tributes. THE CHILDREN. ' SEED CORN Five Best Varities For This Section. Jarvis Golden Prolific, an early Yellow Com maturing in.,117 days. . Two to four large ears, per pound 5c. peck 40c, bushel $1.50 Slates Va Yellow Dent,.one to two large ears to stalk 11 to 12 in. long, matures in 120 days. Pound 5c, peck 40c, bushel $1:50 L. L. Smith1-Lof Winstou-Salem; George Evans, of H all's Ferry, ar.d W. G. Allen, of near -Redland, were in town Saturday and left life preservers with the editor. Near Southern Depot Mayo’s Improved White Dent, a depend able com even in unfavorable season, A ~ good poor land corn matures in 124 days. Pound 5c, peck 40c, bushel $1.50. . Southern White Snow Flake. -■A ' splendid- general purpose corn, two large ears to stalk, deep grains.. Matures.;in,120 days. Pound 5c. Peck 60c. Bushel $2.25. Patterson, Shoaf Prolific. The best of all White Prolific varities. Two to five ears to stalk and well filled, deep grains,-Register ed and Certified by the N. C. Crop Im provement Association, won.first plaqe at Chicago post two years an<f sweepstake at N. C. State Fair, and many other first prizes. Try an' acre of this corn and make 90 to 125 bushel. Pound 6c, peck 75c. $2.75 bushel. AU kinds of seeds for Farm and Garden, At The Seed Store ‘‘The Store Cf Today’s Best-’ Mocksville Hardware Co. Patronize Your Hardware Store Drugs Drugs We Carry At All Times The Very Best In Drugs, Chemicals And Medicines. - Let Us Know Your Needs. Let Us Serve You LeGiand’s Pharmacy On The Square Phone 21 Mocksville, N. G. “THE SEED STORE” FARM AND GARDEN SEEDS Bighest Purity And Germination Red Clover White Clover Sweet Clover . Alfalfa Clover Lespedeza Sudan Orchard Grass Herd Grass Ky Blue Grass Rye Grass Lawn Grass D. E. Rape Pasture Grass Seed Corn Garden Seeds Flower Seeds Good Seeds Low In Price This Year Mocksville Hardware C 0 ILLUSION: The magician eihibits a-flower pot with hinged sides on a table in the center of the stage. He opens out the sides to show that this container is empty. Closjng it up, he places a screen between it and the audience. After a short period of magic incantations he removes the screen. The astounded audience sees a beautiful girl, covered to the shoulders in lovely flowers, rising from the “empty” container. Where did she come from ? EXPLANATION:. The girl was hiding behind the drape of the table. There is a trap. door in the-bottom of the flower pot, with a hole large enough to allow her to crawl through. The flowers,'called “magicians1 feather flowers,” .are a regular part of a magician’s'outfit. The.flower girl wears-a rubber tunic and a bathing cap to keep, the flowers compressed into small space. She .-slides, the tunic down and the flowers expand when she emerges. JFU W T O . . . I T 9F M O M T T U W T O m A trick’frequently worked in cigarette advertising is the illusion that mildness In a cigarette comes from mysterious processes of manufacture. EXPLANATION: A llpopular ciga rettes today are made in modern sani tary factories with up-to-date machin ery. All-are heat treated■—some more intensively than others, because raw, inferior tobaccos require more inten- COMrtsW. 1933, a I. Eajoolds IVibtcyo.CaiiOMiJ .- -. V- ' Jy.-,,X' "■ C J I M C L S m sive treatment than choice, ripe, to baccos. > The real- difference cqmes in the to baccos that are used. The. better the tobacco,Jthe milder it is.r; : ' It is a fact, well known by Ieqf tobacco experts, that Camels are made from finer, MORE EXPENSIVE tobaccos than any other ; popular, brand. That is why Camels are so mild: That is why Camelshave givehjmore pleas ure to more people.than any other cig arette ever made. ; ; It’s the secret of Camels’ rich “bou quet”. . . their cool flavor... their non irritating mildness. Give your taste a chance to appre ciate the greater pleasure and satisfac tion of the more expensive tobaccos. NO TRl CKS JUST COSTLIER TOBACCOS I N A MATCHXE S S BI?ND :; (:;■ Mi I'^l'Ul I jiii I Im Sll Il v> C i^v^^i'> > ^-j,;Jj«>j:il,-i»*.i*ia?.*5r‘!7r-;'fr-?2Ji:SS^rSs iwe fttvie ftReeftp: MeaavuitR a MAitcit wa _. HeN For A Bridge Player WiU Help Catholics. Bill Story in the Winter Garden The new Catholic Postmaster Gen (Fla) Journal. ‘ eral James A. Farley, Monday made Averywickedbridgo player died his first appointment, that of the and went where all wicked- bridge players and ordinary wicked folks go. For a long tiiro the devil was at loss as to just what would be suit able punishment for him. Finally an idea occurred to him. The devil got a bridge table and a eloth cover and the necessary wicker bridge player sit in one of them Then he called three of his most Io quacious she-devils.. “ Do you play bridge?” he asked. "Yet!" they chorused. “Gobd” he replied “A- muse this gentleman for a while.” And he left them. The game began In the* first hand the wicked bridge player got no higher than a ten spot. The first rubber, the firet day, the first first eon he continued to draw busts. Heartless, he played as best he could. The other players bid and made big slams; They laughed, jok ed, gossiped. They thoroughly en joyed themselves. And then, after millions of mil: lions of years had passed, he picked up.a.mit. He Could hardly believe his eyes. Hh held all the black Aces, Kings and Queens, the H eartifAce. King and Q ieen and the Ace of Dia monds. “Seven no trump,” be fair ly shouted to the devil on his left who' had relieved one of the sht- devils shortly before, ‘ Double!” responded the devil and led a green card._________ Note On Sermons. From the chill of a wind-3wepi street, a shabby old tramp edged a- pologeticallv into the office of the First Presbvterian church in Macon, and intruded on a session of the Mann’s class. He was given a cup of coffee and as the class adjourned the faded eyes roved about the room and came to rest on a piano. Seat ing himself he struck a few chords and found he had an audience. For the movement he was trans formed. No longer a-tram p but a master musician. The gnarled old fingers were now supple as steel. A- mazed the Bible class gathered a- round him and the pastor invited him to return for. the evening ser vice. ‘ ' The sermon over, the- still ragged wanderer mounted to the choir luft. He sat down by- the expensive pipe organ and as the cungation sat hush ed be plunged into a thunderous martial air that fairly shook the building. A moment later and a se lection from the most difficult classes reverberated through time senti mental and finally with a nod from the clergyman the concert ended with Highland Fling. Vainly they begged him to play a- gain, but he shook his head and walk ed slowly from the building. There is no !particular moral— merely a touching human interest story emanating from a church, but who can say that the old man did not deliver a sermon, as eloquent, as inspiring as any heard on that parti cular day?—Wilmington Star. ’’Marital vacation” is euphonious term for whichever it be, whether a temporary or permanent separation. Somebody has figured it out that it costs $8,000,000 000 a year to feed the American people. most important place in' the post- office department, the first assistant postmaster general and whom do you think he named? None other than Joseph C. O’Mahoney, aWyom ing Catholic. O’Mahoney will have under bis department the appoint ment of all presidential postmasters and this means that all the big offices, will be manned by Catholic where if is possible to find one that can mus ter up education enough to make the grade. Mark our prediction. The next postmaster at Charlotte, the largest office in the state, will be a Catholic.—Union Republican. A Tex^s “Panhandler. The “ panhandling” business seems to be the only one that pays these days. One day the past week police at Fort Worth, Texes, trailed a man who makes a business of beg giug dimes on street corners, and found that his business had been profitable to the extent of a hotel rponrarid a.large car with a chauf feur. A seat ch of his room revealed #50 in dimes and nickels. Them an made his mistake when he took off his smoked glasses to inspect a dime that a woman had given him.- The woman reported him to, the police. Turn In The Money. Gold is coming from hiding. In large and small sums it is being turn ed into the reserve banks and the hoarders of gold are coming through Hoarding has been one of the mis takes of the period. Men have with drawn money in their fear and big banks have laid up gold. Now there is a shaking loose. There are several reasons for this, none of which need be spoken of here, the thing to note is the return of money to channels of trade. So it is up to every one to turn loose the money. That which is withdrawn should be placed in cir culation and sent to work during the period of rebuilding into which we are coining juBt now. If you have-goid turn it id to tfti banks. • P utall hoarded money into use that it may do a good day’s Work every day. This will help us to work back to work back to good old normal living, if not to a high prosperity at once.—Salisbury Post, If wives only knew what stenog- raphers think of their husbands, they would quit worrying. Thinking' is the hardest work there is, which is probably the rea son why so little of it is done. Lots of us are looking for-the path of least persistence. It is often said that the public de sires facts, but as a matter of fact, they pay more money for fiction. SEMI-PASTE PAINT One Gallon Makes 2 1-2 When Mixed K U R F E E S & W A R D Strike Up the Band ............................ ■,!1 .■11 ■ *■ — TJ * —---- Patronize Davie County M ills And Help Your County Grow And Prosper We carry a big line of Feeds, Flour and Meal. Whynot patronize Davie county mills and keep your money at home. We are still buying cotton and paying highest market prices for same. We want you to call and see us when you come to town. We will always treat you right. F. K. BENSON, Manager -V'- N e a r SouthernDepot Mocksville, N. C. , iiiiiium uiniiiiHiraiiiniuuBiM iiimmuimii rmn.mrnttBB M R. FARMER! :: We are in a better position to handle Your Cotton Than Ever Before We Appreciate Your Business FOSTER & GREEN NearjSanford Motor Co. * »*>IhIi ,MnIi ,I, * It iiiir-XiirttIinI, ,I. Ip C. C. YOUiNG & SONS : Funeral Directors AmbulanceService . Day, or. Night V Phone 69 I, v .^ . Mocksville, N. C. ,.. SEE HS FIRST. LetTheRecordprint your Envelopes, Letter Heads, Statements, Sale Notices, Cards, Tags, Etc. Prices low. THE DAVIE RECORD; h 4» 1J1 ilifr A1 i|i <1 IDAVIE CAFE P. K, M AN OS, PROP. Next Door to Postoffice and just as Reliable REGULAR DINNERS 35c ■ AU Kinds Of Short Orders At Any Time In The Day Ifrtt I* tt HI 'I' tttt tt tt Ifr tt » tt tt Ifr IfrHi Ifr Ifr Ifr 'frtt Ifr Il I Ifr Ifr ♦ Ifr ♦ tttt tt tttttt tttt ifrtttttttttttttt Hi tt Hiilnlittili -T H IS scintillating orchestra, so full of anim ation and rhythm , has never-played to large audiences 01» broadcast ot»er nation-w ide hook. ups. As a m ktter of fact, being carved entirely out of so,ap, it has never em itted a single audible note. Nevertheless, Jit draw s a crowd w hereve- --id played. SKill in execution, aw arded W eisser an H onorable M ention of $25 in the A dvanced A m ateur ,class. This dance, orchestra is typical of the vast w ealth of'possibilitils for creative endeavor w hich-soappcuip- - ture offers. F o r .the p ast eight ■ years, m any thousands of such w henever it is dis- !.carvings have been entered in the annual com petitions for the P rocter J S S e J J S S plctuR dW f ve iS the 1 & G am bleprizes. Ther N inth a S S S " w ork of H erm an R . W eisser, a in a -, -. * - teur aviator and sculptor, of M il-1 . ^ obd - ^ . S ford, Indiana, Ut proved to be one Iprosre88 closes M ay I, 1933.. of the-centers o fa ttra c tio n a t the - E n try blanks and instruction Seventh A nnual Soap Sculpture booklets m ay be obtained w ithout Competition, held in New Y ork charge by w riting to the N ational City. The. judges, appreciating the Soap Sculpture Committee, 80 H asl originality of the concept-and th e , U th Street, New Y ork, N. Y. LET US DO YOUR JOB PRINTING THIS YEAR. Our prices on all kinds of printing is the lowest in many years. We use the best Snlrej the best envelopes, letter heads, statements, etc., to'be had for the price.- Let.s talk it over. ttttttttttttttttttttttifr tttttt tttttttttttttt tttttt tt tt'fr tttt tt ^^1lHttttttttttttH tt'l '!"littttttttttH ^THEDAyiERECORD. USE COOK’s C. C. C, Relieves LaGrippe, Golds. Coughs. Sore Throat, and Croup. • 1 In Successful Use Over 30 Years DR. E.C. CHOATE DENTIST Office Second Floor Front. New Sanford Building Office Phone 110 Residence Phone 30. Mocksville. N. C. ttttihi ........ BEST IN RADIOS YOUNG RADIO CO. MOCKSVILLE. N. C. BEST IN SU PPLIES . WANTED! Send us your subscription and receive a 1933 Almana.c free. Don’ too. long. W e want the in, I portant news IuJ penings from every section of the com. I ty. Oropus a card I or Ietterifa newvJ ter arrives at y<J home; if yourmolU er-in-Iaw comes on a visit or dies; if the I son or daughter gets married or anything I Blum s!w o r th m entioning. ’t wait ■—------------------ Old papers for sale. -ITiTiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiJl) CAMPBELL -W ALKER FUNERAL HOME .Distinctive;Funeral Service to.Every One AMBULANCE ; - . :v - EMBALMERS Main S t Next To M ethodist Church Day P h o n e -4803 , Nigbt Phone 4811 or 10 1 iiiiimi nimmimmimmiiMMiiiiuiiumimii ln,m r *-KKKK-K-K-K-K-K-X-K-K-K-X-K-K-K-K-KK-K-KKK-K-K-K-K-K-K-K-K-K-K-K-K-K-K-K-*-K-»<****««| * • S*tt* tttt*****Ht 'itt $tt $> I I Itt . $ I* i 5tttttt- 6 tt tt $ Itt tt.tttt Itt: tt ■tt. tt itt 5 I- I★★★ . ★★Ar. r-*★ .• ★ • ★ -* •_ I:-- i ■ic v :*•I'-:i. p : K J :: ★ ••■ic: r* ★ ■:&■:: t V★ ;? * -* • ■ .*!-; t ;■ * M t l-★* Keeping Davie People Informed of AU H appenings In Is The Mission Of Your County Paper The kind of news YOUj .. - y- - * want. . things that are of j interest to ALL people of j t the County, what is going | on, what has happened; j I where to buy the best for I ' ••• J :■■■■. *-■ : '■ * f the least money . . aljj t brought to you each week j for the nomical charge of j ,00 Per Year i * * t - * * 1 * t » * < 1 IS® VOLUMN X X X IV . ^ Y S OF LOl W hat W a« H appening In I TJieD ayi of Automob H oae. (Davie Record. M arch| Mrs, O. L. Williams ! I day In W instpn. Mrs. B. F. Rollins relj ! day from a visit to Elkin Attorney John H Cld ^ a -bnsiness trip to W| week., M issFloreuce A tkinl ; 3> who bas been teach! j near Hickory, has retutj W ..B. Horn, of R. I been-teaching school ne| I bas retjurnedvbotne. ,W.. B. Uorn, of R. 2,1 I bis family to town, ancj ! occupying a house in Sa i ville. Mrs. M. E,. Swic j daughter Tffiss Edith, s | day in W inston. Miss Gleo Coilett1 of I [ accepted a position as st I wftb the R. J. Reynold [ Co . at WipstQh Salem. I The Mocksville depot) E Intb Friday bight and ttj [ booze liftgd tlierefrom. B 0 . Morris returned [ from a business trip Greensboro ,and othd While aufay he parcha |tbres for tbe pew bank.] Miss Hettie Guffey. [Cajabain, died M arch ij |buried Sunday at Socij chuich. She was abon Miss Nellie Fleming i I home of R. L- StarrettJ Iday night of last week, | [iilness.. Mrs. Fleming ! fold. -Burial took place| I church. . . • I, H. Jones, of near C| I died Monday of week, ft vo children survive. [ Fry conducted the funel [at SocietycBaptist churc Miss Laura Ximbroug I Grove,--has; been very il ^ grippe; but is some bett| Louis Gbllet - and r Bailey,; of Cooleemee, : in marriaga Thursday, Goins tying the knot. Rev H Q. Mariey, ] has accepted a ball as psj - Cooleemee Baptist, chard Mr. !Boone Wagoner’s r at CooleemeeiBriday nia [ buried at. Jerusalem) : Thursday. ^Death re [ meningitis. ; G. A. Hartman, of made a business trip last week. ' Lint, cottbn is bringin) 00 the local.!market. The Recdfd. is now) oew-quartm-si. jThe of ground fioor- of . the. Hot.elbuilding.v J- H. £H-aneiine, ClarksviIle^citizen, died) Pear Cana Saturday mo a months Illn^s. Burial at Eatpn’s church Sund and one daughter survij ■ Coptract has: been siJ steeLand concrete! bridg Tadfcin River,Vat Kail’: “eofing DayieVand-FoJ V -The bridge will 1 - Tfie^Dixon gold mine! bpiagain anl x ^ e r o and Carl HegJ spent Saturday J guests [of Mr a | ? stockholders .of Farmer’s Bank ; xx^YlBe April 6th fo Pose 0% electing officers] 5. Apothier snow visited) vnday. Jt the gronndf 3 a Joor wag ers for sale. ^ L H O M E lfiiry O n e E M B A L M E R S |rcb jWght Pbone 4811 or 163 WKimiIlttM People Inl ity tf Your I * * * * * * * * i * ■ * 5 J**** * rS YOU I are of! . * io p le o f \ I is going ip p e ned, fbest for ill ih w e iarge j au I * e k | I o f e a r * i* t J-*** f I************** ';•:' - ■•<■ .iv T'- ••■:.• '•'•<,.' ■ :.• I'?''-*** POSTAL SII6W tH E k£C6ftf> v -.i- H t e fH E La r g e st in t h e eoU N tY . THEV boN ’T Lit: StaHfeii “HERE SHALL THE PRESS. THE PEOPLE’S RIGHTS V O L U M N X X X I V . I UNAWBD BY INFLUENCE AND UNBRIBED BY GAIN.” - M a a 5S V J L M . N O R T H C A R C t l ^ & W E D N E S D A Y . M A R C H 29. UEWS OF LONG AGO. What Wa« Happening in Deivio Before TheDayt of Automobile* and Rolled Hote. (Davie R ecord. March 25, 1914.) jjrS. 0. L. Williams spent Mon day m Winston. Mrs. B. F. Rollins returned Fri day from a visit to relatives at Elkin Attorney John H Clemsnt made a business trip to Winston last week. JIiss Florence Atkinson, of R. 3i who has been teaching school near H ickory, has returned home W. B. H orn , of R. 3 , who has been teaching school near Hickory, has returned home. $?, B. Horn, of R. 2, has moved his family to town, and they are occupying a house in South Mocks- ville. Mrs. M. E, Swtcegood and daughter Miss Edith, spent Mon day in Winston. Miss Cleo Coilett, of Cana, has accepted a position as stenographer with the R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co . at Winston Salem. The Mocksville depot was broken into Friday night and two jugs of booze lifted therefrom. B 0. Morris returned last week from a business trip to Durham, Greensboro and other points. While away he purchased the fix tures for the new bank. Miss Hettie Guffey, of South Calahaln, died March 14th and was buried Sunday at Society Baptist cbntch. Shewas about 70 years -o!d. ■ - -7 Miss Nellie Flemiiig died , at toe home of R. L. Starrette on Monf diy night of last week, after a long iilness. Mrs. Fleming=was 79 years old. Burial took place at Society' church. . • I. H. Jones, of near County Line, died Monday of week. A wife and tro children survive. Rev. Floyd Fry conducted the funeral services at Society Baptist church. Miss Laura Kimbrough, of Smith Grove, has been very iil with la ' grippe, but is some better. Louis Gullet" and Miss Carrie Bailey, of Cooleemee, were united in marriaga Thursday, Esq. J. D. Goins tying the knot. Rev H. C. Mariey, of Old Fort, has accepted a call as pastor of the Cooleetnee Baptist church Mr. Boone Wagoner’s body died at Cooleemee1DPriday night and was buried at Jerusalem cemetery Thursday. ,Beath resulted ftom meningitis. C. A. Hartman, of Farmington, made a business trip to Winston last week. Lint cotton ls bringing 13^ cents on the local mairket. .. The Record, is now located in new quarters; sThe office is on the Erouud floor* of th e. commercial Hotel building. - I- H. Haneiine, well-known Clarksville citizen, d?ed at his home near Cana Saturday morning, after a m°nths illness. Burial took place at Eaton's church Sunday. A, wife ®ud one daughter survive. Contract has-been ‘ signed' for a s'eel and concrete, bridge across the Yadkin River, at Hallos Ferry, con n_ect'nS Davie- -and-Forsyth coun l*es. The bridge will cost $31,000. , The Dixon gold mine, near Cana, lias opened up'again and started to Work. •' - ro and Carl Hege, of Reedy spent Saturday and Sunday guests of Mr and Mrs. N, S ^ e r i y . '! / The stocktiglders of the Merch ants & Farmer’s Bank will meet in Mocksville April 6th for the. pur- P°se of electing officers. ' Another snow visited this section nday. H th.e groundhogj s dead a poor ‘ Taxpayers Speak Out In Meeting. A big mass meeting, was held in the Iredell county courthouse at Statesville ai few nights ago, and some of those present didn’t mind speaking their thoughts about the tax question and what the Morth Carolina legislature should do. Strong resolutions were adopted. Below is a brief report of what two of the brethern bad to say: Mr. W att stressed economies as being necessary and was sure these could be brought about by cutting non essentials. Roads and schools' he listed as the two great burdens of today;. He had tried to get fig ures as to salaries paid out for road work but had not been able to do so. H efavoredietting the little men who are doing the work stay at.: it and give a recess to the others? He said four different man checked up on a piece of work in Shiloh town ship the same day and another piece of work in the county was checked by three different highway men .the same day. H e felt that the roads must oe maintained but with less, force. He favored cutting off all non-es- centials in schools, believing that we. can get along with less. Her feels that there are four agricultural teachers in the county drawing a total of $7,100 per year whichimight be eliminated. He did not; favor catting out a single teacher or reduce ing their.salary. Is opposed to use of school buses to haul-teachers and students to ball games;.is opposed to; Mr. P. H . Hicks was called upon and said “ Amen” to what Mr. W att had said.. Dr. F. B Gaither was the next speaker. H e reminded that during the last campaign some people talk ed economy then forgot it. We need to.practiceeconomy, (bespeak er argued, starting at the top. He thought too much stress is being put on athletics in the schools..‘ He thought we need men to go to Ral-. eigh who would use their heads and not depend on instructions. from back home.—Statesville Daily. State Grange Plans De» bate. Winston Sentinel. H arryB Caldwell, of Greens boro, State Grange lecturer, has announced plans for the first state wide debate of the North Carolina Grange. The debate will continue through the year, with prizes to winners to be- awarded at the Farm er's Convention at Raleigh and the State Grange Convention. The sub ject will be: ‘ Resolved: That a monetary system based on commo dity values would be practical.” The preliminary debates wili be held by districts, first in the local Granges and then the district con tests - Local debates must be clear ed by June 10, at which time en tries for the district events- will be filed. The state is divided, into four districts Forsyth being in dis trict 3. J.-W. McCorkle of Kern- ersville is in charge. This district i > composed of Alamance; Cabarrus, Casnrelll Davidson, Davie, Forsyth, Guiliford,' Moore, Montgomery, Randolph, Rockingham, Rowan, S’.okes, Surry, Stanley and Yadkin counties. Business men of the state have arranged-subtantial' prizes , for ’the winner, wish a special award for the banner lecturer of the state=..at large. .__________ . An einty train of thought has caused many a wreck. Affliction like the iron smith shapes as it smites.—Bovee. Trouble is a lot of fun and fun. is a IoESf trouble. HoistsTheEiite. I Cost of registering, crop , lienl given as security foY-Federal,;; crd|j production loans this year ,falls on; Stand. fgs|Skyland Post, West IeffersonJ the borrower, it is revealed. Last; |r-W ithin ten years farmers every .« ... : . '. . - A_____J_____________-I______ iyear the cost was born by the lead» er, the government; The shift of this cost makes Sa material difference In theactual to terest rate paid' by the borrowed the smaller the loan the highep th^ percentage. ! It will cost as .much? to register a lien for a $25 loan 6sf for a $300 loan* !-..In-this co u n ty ,^ c is announced,; the registration feeT will be $1 for each, paper. ‘ Wherif the loans is for $25', the minimum;- the registration fee amounts; toV'aj four per cent annual interest rate| The government charges five and af- half per cent. The two costs bring the total, interest rate to nine and a’; half per cent on these small loaas| Since the loans do not: run ;for the' entire year, the gross interest rat^ on the minimum loan would qe .all most ten per cent, On a loan $100 the registration cost On^ pet cent. On a $300 loan it wou'd be onlv one third of one per .CeritJp It-may have been necessary,:.fron| the standpoint of the agricultured^V; partment Officials who worked oqtj the rules this year, to put ihi'a charge on the borrower, but m practice it works out that the costs fall heaviest on the little fellows < Presumably, the cost of regisitr# I tion must be uniform, inasmuch the same work is required on'a .i loan as one a $300 loan. • It w'01 be a helpful thing, however, if tee.: could be graduated so borrower. W hen the government paid; the fees last year'the costsf Jt; paid in that respect, were naturally spread out against.all the loans.?— The Dispatch. Prospect For GoM In: Hills of Caldwell. | T h a r ’s g o ld in .th e m t h a r ’ h i ll s ’! —or words to that efifect—-is what a dozen or more prospectors.in -the region near Edgemont are’ saying. ' At the local office of !the Depart ment of Conservation and Develop ment if was learned that, a number of.erstwhile, unemplosed men.'are searching for gold alOng.Lost'Cbye, some persons ftndiug traces of the lost vein which formerly produced large quantities of gold ore. ; ■ The prospectors, were encouraged recently by the visit of several men from Washington, who ' declared that, in their opinion, the vein may prove to be a rich one. . The men were mining engineers.; About six mpnths or so ago some interested parties froai another sect ion of the State came to Gragg a- cross the.Caldwell line ;near"Edge- mont, and set up a gold mining plant. Its present activities, how ever, could not be learned. the Sale$ Tax ‘‘Inevit- The pronouncement of Governor Ehrinxhaus that a sales tax Js inevit able does not set at all well in this section of the State especially amonir the merchants, upon whom, in any form, Uiis tax is likely to Iay^ the beaviesthand. It was our hope that economies could be: effected to - such an extent that no new taxes would bi necessary. Ifj however.' we must have a sales tax, and all indications are that we are beaded precipitately in thatidiffection; jve arja^0.€Ap^'ne, thatitw illno'the:a genefalisarestax but one on selected commodities; if a general sales tax i that--WttI be large enough for the -dealer :-to'.-add to his sales and pass on to the con sumer. Aoneor two percent gen eral salestaxwoulb mean.we believe that hundreds; of small ^merchants in: the State would be: forced to close their doors.>r Morganton^ Ne*rs-Her? a i d . _ ^ » ?here in America, except those who IiVfe near a-large town or city, will J&almost completely deprived of Medical service, according to e sur ly just completed for Thomas E. ^athearf, editor of The Country Jome.. The country doctor ■ is ^ k in g his last stand, and unless Sjnething is done:about it, he will Ion be as much a relic ot the past i^fhe mastodon. Here is the proof- J'h e average age of the country BBtorsin 1926 was.52. years. To it is-highe'r. The.total life span She. average American ohysician ~2 years. With the majority oi doctors well past the half :ury mark six years.ago, it ap is that four years more will see u?Hy the last of them. .^juriger men were replacing IlhereiWould be. nd' causs for But every year fewer and medical graduates go into ifc practice. In -the past ten iS only one'graduate in a bund- ;of- square -miles in area, -and populations that run into isands, which do not have a e resident physician; and year the number increases. Se reason for the situation is ivv cost of medical cduca- Today-.medicine has become ipfession for rich men’s sons, cuts the farmer off at both He can’t afford to give :his ; :rqedical education; and as are 6snp ted 6y'the-S% a^fe^;iatitf difficulties of rural' practice. iThe; average cost of medical education' at present is $10,600, and the time required is nine years • ‘ The couutry doctor’s lot is not attempting one,” Editor Cathcart admits. "The grocer and the butch er' and the coal dealer can cancel a •customer’s credit if they don’t get their money, but the doctor is help less.-' When a call comes he must go'. He may know that the patient wilil never pay him., No matter! Winter and summer, day or night, if-he is: able to move, he must never faiil to answer-a* summons. He may be old and .worn out and hah sick! . . But whatever ;the circum stances,' he must never- shirk or seek an excuse.” - '. Mr. Cathcart suspects that coun try people might do a good. deal, themselves to make the country doctor’s life more attractive. “ For one thing, they should take a more sympathetic: attitude toward their doctor’s money problems. After all, a doctor has got to get along, just Hke anybody, else. Hedoesn’t ask- his ;debtors to give him first consideration. AU he wants is fair play. I If he doesn't.get that,, you can hardly blame him for going somewhere else.” Gopd iAdyice*. a Got any money? We haven’t either;' Got none ib the bank; got none in the pockets; got in the mat tress and. got none in the clock. In fact we ain’t got no clock. Some fpikshayebeen mighty uneasy about tte ir'money in the bank. There it where we got it' on- -em this times When you dont have no money then ypri: no have to worry about who is to take care! of it for' you. We hope h%aps good luck to those who have, ^est advice we can give the monev sick .is just as soon=as you -get: your hand on a dollar pay<it.for a year’s ^ s c i lIP tion to th is ^ h i^ lw ib le jouS-. iiaj.fpr. a year’s visit with you. We haven’t missed but one issue in 23 yearsland that vis - better than the banks have done. No charge for the advice.—Ex. - It is better to have faith that the best will happen than, to constantly TOfferirom the habit of fearing the worst. ______________ posters at this office. l 933' •‘Christ Or Barabbas?” Pilate had. Jesus.on his hands and a howling mob of Jews about his throne. Heknew Jesus was an in nocent man, but how to satisfy the mob that was crying for the death of an innocent man, was difficult. He thought of a plan. He went before the mob and said: This is the time of the Passover, and y ou know we have a custom that at this time of the year there should be released: unto you one of the criminals in custody, whosoever you may choose. Which will you. have •Jesus or Barabbas?’’ Now ■ Barab bas was one of the meanest crimi nals ne had. A murderer and rob ber, and Pilate said to nimself: ‘They will never ehoose him” , for he counted on sonce moral character in the mob, and perhaps there was, but Ieaderswhowanted to sit on high places urged the rabble to say “ Ba rabbas.’' So they cried “we want to take'Barabbas.” “But” said Pila.te, what shall I do with Jesus, who is called Christ?” And they cried, Crucify him!” Crucify him!” Then Pilate, being influenced by cowardice and selfishness Baid,’ “Take him and crucify him.” And they crucified him. 'Firre bleeding wounds Re bore.” Tbey buried Him in a stone grave, rolled, a hea v stone before the door, sealed it with the government seal, and placed the army of the king as guard around it. On the next moir- ing the rabble were rejoicing that Jesus was still in the.grave. On the second morning the hoodlums gather ed for a demonstration over their great victory. But they forgot that God was! on the throne. and .He was laughing at their, . shortsightedness. GodtagaUied o^;fee a m ^ { 0 (|th e y JEbWet^anS^ the seal of the king;^ 'and H6;'criedy * Come forth!” Jesu3 arose arid is living todsiy; Hallelujah! ’ Ahorriblethirig was re-enancted on the eighth day of November, 1982, The cry was: “Crucify Prohibition!’’ Crucify Prohibition!’’ Why? What has it done? What is its guilt? I. Itimmediately closed 177,000 saloons; and the wets say they do not want the saloon. 2. It released 177,000 bartenders from ’an evil bus:- and put them into honorable business. 3. It togk the rule of our country out of the hands of the li quor traffic and put into the hands of its good citizens. 4. It very greatly reduced the consuriiption of alcoholic beverage. . 5 It immediate ly reduced crime. 6. Itbroughton an era of prosperity.-' 7. It saved the boys and girls from the tempta tion of the saloon. 8. T he. people were saved -from -the heartless li cense fee that sojd Souls for dollars. 9: It made motoring on the high ways safe from the drunken drivers. 10. It lifted at once bodily Btrength and eriturance. 11 . It haistakenus safely through this depression, whereas, in foreign lands they have a much worse depression with the saloon. 12 . It was adopted by a larger percentage of States than any other amendment to the constitution But they cried; "Crucify it!” and he says he will keep his promise Perhaps he will; but they forget that there is a God in Heaven who" can open the grave.and let Prohibition come forth to bless the people; and to-Him wenowconsecrateourselves for life to aid in the great campaign to save and restore prohibition to this land and all lands Let all men and women who have a heart, and who will sell souls for dollars, fall in line for an association for prohibi tion to offset the iniquitous work of the Association Against Prohibition. Every four years a citizen of this couutry stands with one hand on the Bible and the other upraised to God and takes that solemn oath as Pre sident of, the United States. Jhis oath not only bindsihe President but binds every Atnerican Citizen, for we have sent him to.take.that oath for us. which reads'ss follows: “I do solemnly swear that I will faithfully excute the office of Presi dent of the United States and will to tbe best of my ability presenre, protect and defend the Constitution of the Umted.States.” - : . An oath ia a solemn appeal to God NUMBER 36^ BrockFights ForReduc- tion. When the bouse bill to reduce the price of automobile license plat es came up in the legislature re cently, the; house voted overwhel mingly to reduce the ’ cost. The News and Observer, in giving a summary of the vote, had *he fol lowing to say in regard to Hon. B. C. Brock, of Davie: “ The minority leader, B.-~-C. Brock, of Davie-, swung into action for the bill, declaring the bill would benefit the farmer directly. Hs said it was unfair to'tax the farmer the same for a tag as a salesman or a professional tr,an who operated cars manv more miles a year." Some of the democrats have been accusing Brock of promising to do everything possible to reduce auto tags and then laying down on the - job Mr. Brock seems to have been doing everything in his' power to reduce the price of auto tags. We hope he and bis colleagues will be able to get the reduction. A Bright Idea. Dr. Luther Little, radio preacher . of the First Baptist church, Char lotte, .extracted a pledge from Gra dy Cole, the Charlotte News radio broadcaster, that from no.w on dur ing the Roosevelt administration, he would be found in some church service somewhere every Sunday. ’Tis a pity that every; pastor does noj have the Vgpods’.’,on ;.all,.their’ church members and. extract a/sim ilar promise from th^m.—-Taylors- . Drog Finn. Cancels Ten Thousand In Accounts. - The Whitney Drug Company, pf Freemorit, N. C., has ’cancelled ev ery account on its books and is' starting over again on a cash basis. The total amount of these accounta is approx.imatelp $ic,o.oo . ThisJgeneraI cancellation o f-re counts includes all recent as well as all old accounts. . It was dointed out that the store had not. gone, on , a cash basis, some time ago and had tried to rollrct all possible accounts. A letter sent to their customers contained the following, statement: “ We are today canoellirig eyery account on our books to .date and expecting io start over on a cash basis to everyone. We are doing this with a better feejing towards every,customer we have served dur ing the ten years that we have been in business. Should , yOu1 have a balance unpaid we are offering it as a discount on -your past patronage ^nd as an offering to whip hard times.” ' ■ .. - Farmer Deposits; Fortune in Gold* r Louisville. K y .,-Deciding that a bank was a better place than a !hay- - staclf ir. which'40 keefl hisiBafrings,; a^ : farmer living,Jn. Butler county,:, near . hete^broujght' SSS’OOO^ in, “double . eagles” toVlocal-bank-yesterday.' ' . Asked by-a bank clerk why he had . - decided to deppsit lhe treasure. the . farm e?answ ered:..’ s “I got to thihkirf th at lightnin’ : might8trike.tliat;haystack.” I l of some rivered person in a testa tion of-the froth of a statement or the SindinK character of a promise. Was George Washington right when he saidrin .his farewell address: “The hope of America is the Independent voter?” Db you consiler. yourself a loyal American'citizen to serve liquor in your own'home, or partake of it in other hp.o>es when it is prohibited by the Constitution of the Uni ted States ceased-to support the constitution of the country, ju sttbat soon will the United States- be on-the road to de- - stru8tion. • . ' ' . . - !Whifeb will-.you have, prohibition or iiquor?^A Reader, in Elkin Tri bune. w -* i f '.‘:- < u » nAVffi ftftfl6ftt>. M 6C t3V lLtt. M. fc t o c 8 a . ■*! THE DAVIE RECORD. C. FRANK STROUD • • Editor. Member National FArm Grange. TELEPHONE Entered atthe Postoffice in Mocks ville, N. C., as. Second-class Mail m atter, March 3.1903. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: ONE YEAR. IN ADVANCE - t I 06 SIX MONTHS. IN ADVANCE - J SO Scott Given Ten Years. E. B. Scott was found guilty of manslaughter Thursday after a deliberation of approximately 30 minutes. The jury filed into the courtroom at 2 p. m. and after an nouncing the Verdict1 judge Michael Schenck sentencen the defendant to ro years in state prison. This was one of the most sensa tional cases ever heard in the coun Kappa News. Mrs. Florence Smoot is improving very slowly. Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Powell spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Daywalt. Miss Mabel. Deal, of Mooresyille was the week-end guest of Miss Mary Foster. Miss Margaret Green spent last week with her sister Mrs. C. A- Smoot The Congresswoke up a few days ago and decided Jthat they wanted to help run the country. Onlv three months until black berries will be getting ripe. There is always'a silver liningtothedark est cloud. ; ^ . We trust that the Republicans of Divie county will not cuss Mr. Roosevelt as miich as the demo crats cussed Mr. Hoover. Many petitions have been signed and sent to the North Carolina legis lature opposing the sales of wine and b'eer, or repealing the North Car olitia prohibition law Wonder if any of the signers voted for Bob R eynolds. Davie Man Is Sent To Roads.t Charlie Jordan was given 20 months on the ioads by Judge Michael Schencjc in Davie county court last weeklafier pleading guil tv to manslaughter in the killing on last October 23 of George Tuck er, World War veteran, of the Ad vance section of Davie county, r Jordan confessed two days affer Tucker died in a Statesville hospital, that he had strqck the man in the head with a rock ino rder to pro tect his mother and sister whom Tucker was alleged Io have assault ed. O. B. Koonts was also held for the murder, but Solicitor Johp R. Jones took a not pros with leave in the case of Koonts. ... Taking the stand in his own be half Jordan made an excellent wit ness. Thesubstance of his testi mony was: About 2:30 o’clock Sun day morning, October 23, 1932, George Tucker'came to the house where he and 0. B. Koonts lived aud after arousing them by knock ing on the door asked to be allowed to enter and tyiild a fire. After building the fire he sent Jordan out side for a quart of whiskey, - and three started drinking. Tucker went into Mrs., Koonts’ room and fell across her as she slept. Mrs. Koonts, being an expectant mother ut the time, beqame frightened and called to her husband who, ac cording to the defendant’s story, was too drunk |to protect her. Jor dan, with some assistance from Koonts, took Tucker to the barn, but he attempted to return to the house, and after striking Jordan with a heavy flashlight, .Jordan' iu defense, picked up a rock and struck him one' time. Accordiug to evidence produced, death would not have resulted had the man been given hospital' treat ment immediately. H ew asnotcar ried to the hospital until several days after the injury. Jordan proved a good character and expressed jus preference - to a chatn-gang sentence to one in state prison, and the bench gave him 20 • months on the roads Jordan was represented by Colonel Jacob Stew, art of the locai.bar. A. jury verdict of dot guilty was returned in favpr of McKinley Du Iin, colored charged with man slaughter in Connection w ith, an automobile accident on highway'48 on February 28, 1931. in which Duke Scott, co|ored, was killed. A straight npl pros was taken by. the state when itbe case of Willie Harbin was called. Defense coun set-asked for a pot guilty plea to be ag^gpted, but (Bolicitor Jones de clined andrtookj a straight nol"ipfqs. -Harbin bad been indicted for nfan- slauphter growing out of the death of Tom Srauh,* aged Negro, in -an automobile accident on the same night as the Scptt Negro was killed, He had—-been released by three justice of the peace; a coroner’s jury, a grand jury and, on the sixth attempt, a true bill was rendered. \ ty and crowds packed the court Mrs. CharlieBenson and daughter house during the trial. Miss Claudie were the week-end Scott was indicted for the fatal guests of Mrs. June Griffith, shooting of his young bride, an ex-; Miss Lois Smoot and Miss Grover: pectant mother, in his store here. (Nellie Dw.ggins spent Sunday with Scott made three statements .0 ^ “ S iS i'S S e g o o d spent the the effect that he had shot his wife weeK_9nd wjtti her father Miaxie a few minutes after it happened,Zgwjcegood but a few hours later before a coto-j Mra g j Smoot and daughter ner jury testified it was accidential Maude, spent a few day’s the past or she had committed suicide. Iweekwith Mrs. Smoot’s son J, . N; Mrs Scott was the daughter of Smoot. . . . ; the Rev. and Mrs. L L. Smith, of Miss Mary Daywalt is spending Hickory, and had betn here with the week at Calahalo with her aunt her husband for about six weeks. i Mrs. W. M. Powell. . _ , . rv .. B , |. Mrs. Mary Daywalt is spendingDuring thetnals Scott was ? the w(»ek at Calahaln with her aant tended by his mother, two brothers jyrs M. Powell. and three sisters, He sat apparent-1 Miss Maude Cartner and Miss Lois — a - * * - " <*• bat tears were observed coursing .Xhutaday night. down his cheeks as his counsel, j R. L. Keller’s condition remains Hayden Burke, plead his case b e - very feeble at this writing. : : tore the jury. As the jury filed into the court room with the verdict a hush fell CenterNews . ... .1 ______________ W. R. Beavers, of Raleighisspend-, over the audience and when • the ing some time with R S. Powell and verdict of “ guilty of manslaugter” family, was announced by Knox Johnstone, Scott and his mother, and .sisters, bioke into Mr. and Mrs. Marsh Dwigginsf of. MocksviIlespent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Tutterow and family, Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Tutterow and dagghter Corine, of Mocksvillespent ! Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. T. A. the work of the court was finished. VarZrnt. and adjourned. Approximately 751 Nancv foreman brothers tears. W ith the conclusion of this case '■ -What TheCourt Did* "The following cases were disposed of last week at. the March term ' of Davie court: W. F. Jarvis. Failure to pay costs. 61 days on roads. C ' Alvis King. - FV ii^fe^ pay/costs: 61-?days on roads, - ' ..Sam Burton and .Clyde Burton Violation of election laws. Not guilty •’Jacob Grubh. 'Operating car under influence of liquor:': $50 and costs. : -c G. Call. Abandonment.’ Pray er, for judgment continued. fISleft Cole. Assault on officer. 90 da js on roads Troy Baker. Abandonment. Judg ment suspended on condition that he' pay his wife $2 per week for' 12 months. . Louico Chaplain. A. w. d. w. Four niohths on roads. i-Louico Chaplain. Larceny. Guilty. ' J. F. Leach. Possession of whisky. $10 and costs Ollie Cornatzer. ,. Possession -or whiskey. $1 and costs. George Cain. Larceny. Sixmonths on roads. . - > G. H. C. Shutt; Violation of elec tion laws Nol pros with leave. Two cases. Tom Lefler, Assault on female. Three months on roads. Jack Hartley. Possession of whiskv Nol pros with leave. jjack H artly.1 Driving car while drunk. $50 and costs. Richard Lloyd. Carrying concealed •weapons. $50 and .costs. DeWitt Fogleman. Larcency. Nol .pros with leave. Approximately 75 J Nancy Tueterow spent Saturdav night with Mary Alice Binkley in I adjourned. ,, . . _ case had been disposed of in less than four full days and many com plimentary remarks from citizens and court attaches and officers were heard regarding the work of his honor, Judge Michael Schenck. Mrs. T. P. Foster. Mrs. T. P. Foster died at her hoine in this city Sunday morning,c following a long illness, aged 70 years. Funeral services were held at Liberty Methodist church yester day afternoon at 2:30 o’clock, con ducted by Rev. J. B. Fitzgerald, of Forsyth assissfed by Revs. J. O Banks and E. W. Turner, of this city. Mrs. Foster is survived by five children, two sons, W. A. and J._ A. Foster, and three daughters. Mrs. V. G Summerall. Mrs. E. C. Lagle and Mrs. H. S. Foster, all of Davie county List Takers For Davie. The following persons have been named as list takers for Davie county: Mocksville—H. H. Lanier. Jerusalem—Will Davis. Farminglon-^W . IF .. McCulloh. Fulton—Mrs Hazel Gobble. -.- Clarksville—Mrs. Annie Peoples. Calahalu—T. A. VanZant. Sbady Grove—J, L- Mechum. was presiding at T aylorsvili^// case was not contested and after witnesses,. Wess Johnstftn/ Grover King- Larceny. 61. days on roads. - ; „ Homer Johnson.. Larceny, ' «1 „-..uinune days on roads. . -,o Miss Pauline Shores, testified ,I/Henry Wood. Abandonment. 12 Jlad saen Mrs. Brown with M ^ months on roads. ! Davis a number of times onj ,^. Henry Wood. Assault on f e m a le .'^ fapr ^ Judgment suspended for t^ T e a r s . ^ Us fitl, John Johnson, W. A. Whitaker.) • • , Deen Iirm- Possession and transporting. W hi-jnuder a deed of separation t a k e r to pay $50 and half costs. t two years. J. K. Anderson. Possession of ing the late hours of the night 0, whisky. Judgm ent suspended on' numerous occasions, a jury tookth. payment of costs. | case and answered the issues in ,1. J. T; Hanes. C. c. w. $50 and cists which county is liable. J. T Hanes. C. c. w. 3 months on roads. Capias to issue AprilTst. James Maxwell. Drunkenness. Judgment suspended. • Carzell Scott. Possession of liquor. P r a y e r f o r ju d g m e n t c o n tin u e d . . , . . , H G. Eller. Embezzlemnt. N ot-m sura of $3,500 from j. ai]j guilty. ... L. C Wallace, prominent Salisbur, John Henry. Hauser. Murder. Continued, Davie Man Given Divorce. H. W. Brown w as' granted an absolute divorce,from his wife, Mrs. Mabel V. Brown, by judge Michael ------------------------ “ JulXtooii i t case and answered the issues in tj, affirmative apd a judgment Ofab50 lute divorce Was granted. • Another important civil action disposed of just before court ad journed on Thursday afternoon vrjj a compromise in the suit broughthy Miss Mildred Carter Sskingdamage i„ .V i *3 ,5 0 0 from j Y ■ prominent Salisbury business men, for injuries sustained in an' automobile wreck near Safc bury on June 4, 1932.. when the de fendant’s car was alleged to bare smashed into the car occupied by -Miss Carter. In the'cOmplaint it was alleged that as a result of the collision Ht 'plaintiff suffered a badly mangledIVlclDCl V. J —:-------* • S c h e n c k here during the session ot and lacerated liaud and atm which superior court which closed on necessitated long hospital treatment Thursday afternoon. Brown enter ed suit in Alexander county some time ago but when the case came up and much suffering. The compromise judgment signed by his honor awarded Miss Carter.IiUJC; QfiV UMV vv UWM —-----------— . • f or trial Mrs. Brown asked for a the sum of $850 and the costs ol Ibt i removal to Davie county which was action to be taxed by the clerk. • granted by Judge Schenck, who j Land posters a t this office* Mocksville. Mr, and Mrs Horace Deaton, of Thomasville and Ras Phelps, of Winston Salem were the Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. B. P1 -Gar-? rett. Mr. and Mrs. S. F T utterow -and son Jeff visited Mr. and Mrs. Griffin of near Mocksville Saturday night. .. M rs. H. WvTutterow and sop^fl. W.'1 Jr., are spending uome tirhp, Id1 Cooleemee the guests of Mr. and Mrs. June Jarvis. , : ‘ Little Richard Phelps is on the Bick list sorry to. note. : Mr,, and -Mrs. Beal Bailey and children spent Sunday in the Chapel community. Annie Walker has returned home from a visit in Mt. Airy. j- Mr, and Mrs. N B. Dyson and children spent Sunday in Sheffield, ' Mrs. Pink Beck and son Asbury visited in Sandy Springs one day day last week.- Mr. and Mrs. Will Smith and family of Mncksville. were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. D. G. Tutterow Sue* day. Miss Ruth Lakey, ofaear Farm ington, brought the editor a hen egg yesterday that was.a whopper. It measared 6j£ and 8 inches and weighed 5.ounces. This ben don’t know that the price of eggs is less than one cent each. List Your Property ! G IV E IN Y O U R P O L L . NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN Thatthelist takersfor the various townships of Davie GountywiIIsIt atthe various listing places during the month of April, at which plhces and in which month all property owners and taxpayers in said tcwuships are: re quired to relurn to the List Takers; for taxation, for : the year 1933, all the Real Estate, Personal- -Property, Etc, which each one shall own on the first day of April, or shall be required to give in then. AU male: persons between the ages of 21 and 50: years are to list their: polls during the same time. Return of Property and giving in of polls are required under the pains and penalties imposed by law. AU persons who are liable for poll tax, and faiL to give themselves in* and all'who own property and fail to list it; wiU be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon convic- tion, fined or imprisoned* A-failure to list will subject you to DOUBLE TAX; - • J . L . H O L T O N , S u p e rv is o r. S LOCATED AT OLD IDEAL STAND 4th AND TRADE STREETS WINSTON-SALEM, N. C; DEAR FOLKS . . . W t A n AJl S«l For Easter! Our Soggetlions (« Easter Shopping M O R R ISE TT ’S FIRST SAVE TIME AND CASH Our great’variety—lovely qualities- beautiful styles:and depression prices should prove a real "nerve tonic’’ for Easter shoppers. We cordially invite everyboby to our new home and remember you ac tually SAVE CASH. You get 100 per cent, merchandise, and reai service with a broad, happy smile. If . we could do rbore.it would be yours. - " 500 Lovely Garment In . Ready-to-Wear Department COATS SUITS DRESSES Marvelous new values-gorgeous new Easter styles. Beautiful ma terials and colors . . . all at Morrisett’s knock-out prices. Let us save you money on your East* er outfit! $1.88 $2.95 $3.95 $4.95 $6.95 $8 95 $14.95 - 1000 Lovely Spring Hats Everythingfor good looks, latest effects, newest and “New Deal Prices, us first for your Easter 98c $1-49 $1.95 $2.95 $3.95 $5 95 SILKS! SILKS! - Every day something new in silks. AU the new ,effects—rough krinkles, prints, plaids and plain The season’s newest colors of real value prices 49c, 59c, 69c, 79c, 88c* $1.29, $1.49 NE W CORSET DEPT. - Marvelous values—]ast*minule styles in Con^ lettes, Corsets, Step Ins and Brassiers. Dear ladies, come and see-what we can do for you! 49c, 69c, 79c, 98c, $1 49, $L9#> $2.98, $3 98 . New Lingerie Beautiful quality- Rayon, Celanese and Silk. Every style known to woman- Slips, Gowns, Step-Ins, Teddies. Djncettes, etc. Dainty colors*- -Look and be* convinced !■-- - 25c,v 39c,‘49c, 59c, 79c, 88c. $1.69 n e w Fw o o l e n s ' -54-inch -All-Wool .Material for only - N ew Silk Hose Just, your needs for spring and E a ste r. - • beautiful sheer chiffon and service weig full fashioned pure silk in all colors- •• - - ' had.bigger selection than we’ve ever 39c, 49c, 59c, 69c, 98c, $1.25 PRINTSarfd BROADCLOTH Lovely Quality in'New Spring -Colors and Patterns- • 5c, 7Jc; 10c, 12 J.c, 15c CU RTAINH-and MATBBliJ5 Draperies. Chair Covering* : Wonderful Values. - 10c, 15c. 25c. 49c to Wc — 0ur"New Thread Department LOVELY KlD GLOVES IN THE NEWEST SPRING SHADES m s m T h. o f b y I r v i n d B a c l Copyrlsbt 193$. by Irvins t WNU Service CHAPTER III- ■ 5 - ^jie Commander in Iwitli deep Interest F o ra | JtJllll rested on his hand Jforward oyer his desk. Kttack In his chair, his !crossed. A smile came I-While he tapped his knee ■cotter. It grew stern a Iadvanced.'- There was a Io ■sadness in his eyes when I I mTou have heard me saj| Ihave no dnels in my arm y] “Yes. sir.’.’ ■■Your duty m ust have ■you. T he m en w ere In IrThey should have been |G enerai W ard fo r puni Jw ere In faot raiders.” I “I thought- that- they ha Rfldently punished. I trid I fighting, sir. H e stung, me 1I—V... ( “You Have H egrdsMe^S Will H ave'N o D uels in'> the presence of my brother. -The matter we ihould have felt like al hould have looked like a f ad refused t6 fight Be I In love. The girl Is mj Ife -to me” Bady W ashington had . nterested in th e norrativeB had fallen! from h e r| Fas lying in h e r lap. -H e were wide open and aglotJ Ja th y as she sa t looking a l pated captain. She turned | ’ nd: "Good land! I ad to. fight” The G eneral , never arg u j Ife1In the presence of o l 3s arose and answ ered hq smile and a bow. T hen I Ihim shlf to th e young Jw as kindly. “You a re you your first offense' You t Io f civil life and have not . Ian officer m ust have self-re ■are in an arm y w here -va. ■ at stake. They depend la ■conduct of our officers. J re3I- I w ill see you a t . ■morning and m eanwhile Jabout i t ” “I shall bow to your will Ieverdtmay be,"said CoiinJ ■Pleasure is a grief to md ■most unhappy. 1 was tL ■sweetheart on. the road to| IJhe morning and bring he ■introduced.” I “I m ust see h e r!” Lady !declared. CoUn went to his roon ■walked up the first flight v ■Spoke a word of encourag I Captain Cabot was wears Ienn te of 1Iis unhappl Kffiums and fifes awoke I ■were w ont to do a t six I i S f ed w ith unusual ca I iJ r into cam p fo r a. Worag the, hour o f his d | ■with the Chief. Colin wa I / ? , 0 w hen the Gent, I J 1J set down his desk] lt» , bi)y’ ht I w ere to foil Isk m m y heart, I would I Ier 1 and coUrage and roj I« J? 7 . ana overlook you inos/h, t^e clrcUmstancL The httle foray I l it T *hat news of it f I m J ^he ktUd story, | ffl “ ^ iuvoived. that feels | Ith ft * shall have to rei und return you lfirt?J ?m wWch you cani I r e ^ La I confess that I.d] for you that is I DrJm^Jve unusual talents l & b e l J " , *?e rcglm I■it .J 1 1 raPid. IassureyJ Ijjrs, 1JjL Slyc Joy and satr I Washington and to n. I ttnof ^ 1 '10 my best, sirTl IsUnn J0t forset 8 matter I IWMeI me in my Sreat an I q m J ^ t j Of Captain Farn] Ivutta Jine w lth ^ ju r at TaV IorsviIle f, . mtested and aFter J ess Johnst0ne \° Shores, testified Brown „ lth “ j er.of tlu^s and h i Is la a U tom ebiles J 38 h a d been , £ ’. lf^ r a tio n lorabJ urs of the night • ' ^ a j u r y J k J ; * j r e d t h e issues in the d a JudSment of abso ’as g ra n te d , ic o rta m civil aciion ju s t b efore court ad Jtu rsd ay afternoon was Iinthe suitbroughtby Parteraskicgdaniages 53.500 from J. v . aad . p ro m in e n t Salisbury fo r in ju ries sustained Mle w reck near Salis. 4 . 1 9 3 2 -. w hen thede. w a s alleged to have th e c a r occupied by lp la iu t it w as alleged J it of th e collision the re d a bad ly mangled I h a n d an d atm which fc n g h o sp ita l treatment fc e riu g . Dmise ju d g m en t signed a w a rd e d M iss Carter 50 a n d th e costs ot the is e d b y th e clerk. Isters at this office'. S >TREETS suggestions for RST ove a real “ nerve J re m e m b e r you ac- 4 « )a d , h ap p y sm ile. If od looks. »st stvles ces,” See ister Hat! 95 T. Corse- • ladies, Hose H n g an d E aster • • • and serv ice w eight in all color?. *e’ve e v e r had. »9c, 6 9 c , 11.25 I8 -and M A TER IA l s s C h air Coverings.. . Iiderful V alues. L 25c. 49c to 98c aad— K n ittin g C ro ch etin g 98c -C;;'--..U : "■ R E C O R D , M O C K S V n.T .K Td r T h e o f C h a o s b y I r v i n g B a c h e l l e r Copyright 1932. by Irving BacbeUer * WNU Service C H A P T E R I I I — C o n tin u e d — 5.™ yhe Commander in Chief listened with deep interest F or a m om ent his t.]iin rested on his hand as he leaned forward over his desk. T hen he sat m i in his chair, his w eary legs crossed. A smile cam e to his face wliile lie tapped his knee with a paper cutter. It grew stern as th e story advanced. There was a look Of rueful sadness in his eyes when he asked: ' “lou have heard me say th a t I w ill lave no duels in my arm y?” ' “Tes. sir.” “lour duty must have been clear to von. The men were In your power. They should have been turned over to General Ward for punishm ent. They were in fact raiders.” •I thought that, they had been-snf-. Ilciently punished. I tried to avoid fighting, sir. He stung me w ith insults I f ■ i® ! 1 I; “You Have Heardy-MeJiSay' J h a t I I Will Have No Duels iU'IVIy Army?" In the presence of my sw eetheart’s brother. The m atter w ent so fa r I. should have felt like a cow ard, I should have looked like a cow ard if I had refused to SghL Besides, sir, I am in love. The girl is more than my life to me.” Lady Washington had been deeply interested In the narrative. ■ H er knit-, ting had fallen from h er bands and was lying in her lap. “ H er dark eyes were wide open and aglow w ith sym pathy as she sat looking a t th e hum il iated captain. She turned to h er hus band: “Good land! I Uke i t H e had to fight” The General never argued w ith-his wife, in the presence of other, people. He arose and answered her only w ith a smile and a bow. Then he addressed himself to the young man. H is tone was kindly. “You are young and it is your first offense. You are ju st out uf civil life and have not learned th a t an officer must have self-restraint W e •re in an army where vast issues a re at sIuke. Tliey depend largely on the conduct of our officers.. Go to your rest, I will see you a t seven in the morning and meanwhile I w ill think about it.” T shall bow to your will, sir, w hat ever it may be,” said CoUn. . “Y our dis pleasure is a grief to m e and I am most unhappy. I w as to m eet m y. sweetheart on the road to Roxbury In- e morning and bring her here to be introduced." deffiared1 see her!” Lady W ashington Colin went to his room. T he lady Jfaiked up the first flight w ith him and “Pone a word of encouragem ent. uptain Cabot w as weary. H e slept. ' a.-Spite of bis unhappiness. T he ms and fifes awoke him as they Urol6 ? nt. t0 do a t sIx o’clock.. H e riM i with nnusuaI care and hur- into camp for a word w ith Amos S ra th e hour o f his- dreaded.talk ... Ike Chief. Colin w as w aiting *h sun ° . wben Ihe General entered ... down a t his desk saying: . * .,,J r cb°y. if I were to foilow th e dlc- sKin my bearI* i would praise your ,aiilJ courage and rom antic gen-. Hons rand overIook your., indiscre-. unJ'ii tbe circum stances it is Im- s i,-1? TIle Httie foray is of such It I- t^ e tbat uews of it will travel; Oamor i of story, w ith great month UvoIved. that feels good In the the W i $ha11 bave to reduce you to uan» « and retUrn you to th e com- fide! 'Jra wbiCh you came. In con- Ie I confeSS that I. do it w ith a Ion h I ou that is- affectionate, urn bave unusual talents and your S afion in the regim ent wlU no it raPid. I assure you also that Itfiv Itr8ive foy snd. satisfaction to !!' WPShlngton and to me.” ' ,U J illd o my best, sir, and now ;I sIihnpd forSet a matte r which had CCIidiIPfme. in “ y Sfeat anxiety. Thd Wit* I I: Guptain -Farnsw orth w as n 'ine with your sense ;of his duty. . H e regarded m e.as his superior and protested strongly against m y ac tion in forgiving, the prisoners. H e w as for. taking them to .the guard house." „ \ “You relieve'm y mind,” said the G eneral “W e sh a ll'd o our best to m ake this a happy day for you. Mrs. W ashington , w ill go down the road w ith her coach and ah escort to m eet the young lady and .her brother and bring them here. She WiU invite your sw eetheart to dine, w ith us.’ The par lors, and the library shall be yours for the day so th at you may have an. op portunity for an appropriate exchange of ideas-and sentim ents.” - T he Com m ander In C hief was'-smll- ing as he added: “I am quite aware, how Im portant it is to you and you have my very best-w ishes.” .The young-m an expressed his thanks and w ithdrew .. ' C aptain Farnsw orth w as entering the front door in his grand new fanciful uniform of blue hom espun w ith brass buttons, scarlet cuffs and collar. W hile an OTderly took his nam e to the Chief, Amos said to C olin: “The G eneral sent fer me, so I draw ed on my best Sunday harness an’ here I be.” A. gold breastpin w as fastened to th e front of his coat. Colin advised him . to rem ove-it. .- ‘TH hide it if ye say ,so, although it cost a m aster sight,” said Amoa CHAPTER IV In W hich Colin G ets B etter Acquainted W ith M rs. W ashington and M eets Sim B otts and M rs. Bowlby. T he Lady W ashington w as not at. th e b reak fast, table. C olin-m et her on his w ay to his room above-stairs S h e ‘kissed his cheek aiid shook his hand. •' • “Poor boy!” she exclaimed in a low tone. “I did m y b e st The Gen-‘ eral -Is the dearest of m en but he is like a g reat rock. W hen h Ism in d h a s found its bed it settles down and— m ercy!—you m ight a s well try to move this house w ith your hands. D onlt worry. You w ill get along. .. .We a re really fond of you.” “T he G eneral is right,” Colin an sw ered. “H e is alw ays rig h t I w ant to help the cause and I have long felt th a t I could do m ore down am ong the m en in the ranks than I can do a t headquarters. I shall m iss the good company I have found here, especially th a t of your ladyship and the Gen eral.” • “I sh all, see you often, for I love your honest face and your graceful courtesies. I did not expect to find such a knight In New England. In a few m inutes I shall be going down the ro a d -ln m y coach to m eet your lady- and h er brother, w ith the dignity and grandeur to which they are accus tom ed. ' I t w ill be. V irginia showing^ h er good-will to New England. I dd- ifegret—” il. , |j. She hesitated aiid Colln interrupted her. ,“I understand. You could not honor a disgraced m an by taking him w ith ; if-'} delayed the w edding T h at.rn ew w ickedness' broke into the p ray ers'o f the m inister—a loyalist ’ shocked, by the injury done to a son of the king’s favorite general. . - Mrs. W ashington said : “Your lover is a big, splendid, noble-hearted hero. Only a w om an'can put the right value on a m an like that. W e do love courage and strength and courtly .man-, ners. Of course you are longing to see him.” ~ The ladies chattered like sparrow s and P a t w as never more sentim ental. H er brother laughed a t her extrav agant adjectives. “Don’t mind him,” said the Lady I W ashington' w ith a ‘ sm ile:.' “I Iova your ta lk Men are cold-blooded crea tures.” - . . ■' She gave the young man a look of feigned sternness and then laughed. Pqt thought her a delightful hum an being. , P at was, it would appear, very ho* m an herself and not unlike.her sis ters of a later tim e >... The lovers m et In the big comfort- ; able, .library a t headquarters, a bit apart from the life of the house. They em braced each other w hile Mrs. W ash ington stood bpside them. . She with drew in a moment saying, “You- may; sit down here and get through with yourrgreetings'iand 'promi'ses. . Til pop. |n once in a while, for fear you might": be lonesome. I m ust have some ex cuse for looking a t you.” W hen she had left them Colin said : “Now let us forget w ar and have a rom antic day. Since I left Boston my . im agination has been busy with you.” “W hat has it done w ith me?” . , She laughed m errily as he w ent on: “It has throned you In Cleopatra’s barg e You1 rem em ber all th a t pretty - stuff—sides of beaten gold and per-’ fumed, purple sails a n d . silver oars moving to the sound of flutes.” 1 “F lutes!” she exclaimed, laughing as she rose on . her tiptoes to m eet his lips with her own. - “I can tell what-, my practical father would say. I love; your talk, It is music to m e but h e would laugh and say, ’Give a Yankee boy. the higher education and you get; flutes and perfum ed, purple -sails. and silver oars and all th at trum pery.’ We know how im portant they are In love-making, but they wouldn’t do in a high wind and a heavy sea.” :V:;i . Slhe laughed and kissed his fore* head. -.; . , - 4 “Away with com m erce!" , he ex* claimed. “We’ll sink the golden barge if you like. A castle or a palace will cost no more.” ' . C!.*'1 “M ake it a pretty little house w ith ? a garden. You know I am a Boston } girl. I have been taught to be prae- ’ticaL” Mrs. - W ashington Interrupted -them - as she “popped in” with these cheery:: w ords: “Now don’t get tired o u t W e shall have- a little dancing after din-, ner." i; JppgFgs ^-m em orable; day/ln ft^e Hjsfei of the young lovers; They sat long:' reciting' the sum m er history and dis cussing their plans. They dined with.. G eneral and Mrs. W ashington and" SYNOPSIS OF PSiECEDING CHAPTERS At Boston, In Uw fateful month of July, 1775, Colih Cabot, ardent young lover of liberty, bids' good-by to his sweetheart, Patlenco “Pat” Fayerweather, daughter of a 'stahcli: loyalist. but herself at heart a “rebel.” He joins the Revolutionary, army at Cambridge, and is musj V tered Into .the company. .of .Capt. ,/Amos Farnsworth,. Colin’s devotion to the cause' impresses Washington,-and he malms'the young man his informal secretary, with the rank of captain!! A letter from Pat tells Colin sbe Is to visit friends outside the American lines, and asks him ; to meet her. Obtaining leave, he sets out. Learning of a British plot to capture Colin, Farns- , worth, with a: troop, rides to the rescue. A British patrol, led by Harry Gage, Colin’s rival for the hand of Pat, threatens the young patriot. Farnsworth and his troop come up. Gage challenges Colin to a duel .They fight and Gage is wounded. Colin returns to Cambridge. you on a public road, nor is it neces sary. You w ill find ., them , near the R oxbury turning.” “Oh, it is not th a t. A knight m ust not m eet his lady-love in the dusty road w ith curious onlookers to em barrass them . I think th a t it will be better fo r him to m eet her in the castle.” ' “Shall you bring them both here?” Colin asked.. "M ercy! T he G eneral w as inclined to kick over th e traces w hen I pro posed ;to -bring a young loyalist to headquarters. O ur spies are coming In a t all hours, you know. So we shall take him to .General Greene’s house -and- send. him ..to -the, D orsets’ < a fte r dark w ith a pass extended to ’ m idnight The G eneral’S son w ill keep him busy bowling In the back yard. I shall draw .fhe. shades in the coach so w e shall see no travel on the road. It would seem , ungracious to tu rn him back and to take his sister. A V irginian could not do i t ” Patience Fayerw eattier’s account of th e m eeting and th e ride, became a. fireside story of old Boston. She and h er brother D avid: stood w aiting a little beyond the turn. A squad of cavalry cam e tow ard them ,followed by a coach draw p by four horses., - The squad and the,coach. h a lte d , near ~ them , - An outrider • ap- ‘ proached and asked if they F w ere D avid a id Patience Fayerw eather,; say-' ing, when he ■ heard th eir answ er, that M rs. W ashington had .come to m eet them • add to take them to g e n eral; headquarters. . ■ ‘ ■ . • ! Amazed -that they w ere so highly '.1 honored, P at w as in .a flutter of ex citem ent until the gentle, /m otherly woman had; em braced and, kissed her. "I have longed to see'you, 'an d ,I am not disappointed,” M rs. W ashington said. “A re you. a. good. American?” On receiving' P at’s ': answ er - she1 gave* th e girl another bug. W hen the young m an was- Introduced th e t*ady gave him her hand saying, “M ercyI T e sI ’ I h a d 'n o t seen him .. T here are mo- - ments. when. men a re of 'uo im portance. Forgive ’me, sir. This shining maid dazzled my eyes.” Sbe turned to Pat.- “Now! let’s -talk. I w ant' to hear you' talk. H ave you; heard of the duel?" ; T he d u e l!1 P a t had Uiought of noth, ing i else since th e newh of * it had flooded through the. rooms and up ;the, stairw ays of. the Dorsets^ house.. It ' members of th e staff and their wives^;, M rs- W ashlngton arranged-for an hour; of dancing a t four o’clock. The Com-? mander- ln Chief took p a rt in lt, W hen . the dancing w as over he retired to his office and' sent for Colin1.; . , • "M rs. W ashington "telis me th a t you and the fair young lady wish to be ’ m arried and- to settle down h e re . in. Cambridge. - Your .wish has my ,sym pathy, for I have been young and have had in my breast the emotion so far'1 above the common things Cf life, that one forgets them. The tim e has com.e„ when a m an’s judgm ent m ay save y ou: trouble. The situation here i s . bad.? W e have no money. Wages" and sal.-i aries .are long. u n p a ii... For- m onths to 1 come we m ay all.have to work w ithout pay. You would not wish to borrow money w ith this prospect ahead of us. If you w ere my son, I would say w ait until the way is clear and-your spurs are w on,.. You are young and : you w ill be w ise not to com plicate; yohr • problems. I have had my say. The decision rests w ith you. I shall only add th a t if I w ere of your age and standing in your shoes, I Would probably m arry as soon as she would- have me.” . ’ The G eneral concluded his rem arks w ith a little laugh. ..." :’ Colin prom ptly answ ered,, ’T3ut I- shall, n o t My. sweetheart- has -m ore i wisdom than L She has spoken of the- things of which you rem ind me. She is willing to wait. I shall be governed b y your judgm ent U ntil better days' come my bride shall be the G reat Cause.” So it happened th at late in . the afternoon’ o t th at day Colin se t’out In a chaise for Roxbury w ith P a t beside' him. M rs. W ashington ’ cam e to the door w ith them as they w ere leaving.' "Oh, these cold-biooded! m en!” she exclaimed! “I feel as if I had been robbed..and-I shall feel, m ore so ,when ^oh' are gone.” ;1 / / -,-v'' - F ;? :. . As' they w ere driven on they cheered each ’other w ith the bpinionh of cer-r tain m en.that the w ar would soon be .over} They, Went ;to th e . D orsets’ house, w here .he left her to aw ait,tjie arriv a l: of her- brother. ;In Lhevmoi' ' ment of parting Colin said to h e r:;:. ." I 'shall try to.,get a pass th a t'w ill. let you across th e:'line when you may w ish-to use IL ,I can only pour my 1 e: Intofjwrlttcn- w prds and; thifik of ’ . eyeiy^hour .until you. come." : ; r ..: She stood erect, looking at -him." 1 - "Oh, the cnielty of w ar! How I hate to sep you going! B ut I m ust try to be as brave as you are. I could •throw m yself down and weep but I ’ .will not. I -will stand up straight and look at you as if I had a heart of stone. Then I -shall think of your Courage - a n d . with the L o rd h ; help I will try to. im itate i t ” ' ’ . W hen he left, the setting sun w as shining on her face' and form. The /-Picture and her words w ere being branded upon his memory, as he drove ;.dowii into the deep shadowed; valley "Where night, w as falling.; 'H e fe lt1 an overwhelming sense of loneliness. ' “T he.w ar may- go on for .years,1 for' mSny years,” be m uttered, “and any day We , may move or I may be sent to some distant place.” • , Wt|en he returned W ashington -and the staff w ere-in a * conference. He, -Went into the library to sit down and recall the enchantm ent he had felt there. The night w as chilly and a fire 'W as blazing in the grate. Lady W ash ington found him alone—a dejected figure gazing into "the fire. - •"My boy,” she ,said! “let me look into your face. Yes, ,I. thought so. I know right - well how you feel Pve been to Sorrowtown myself. You need to be cheered up.” . 1 She, rang, the bell arid sat down be side him with her knitting. , W hen the -servant came she ordered supper to be brought to the young man with tea and a pint of claret ' Sitting In her arm chair she tc-ld him stories of her girlhood and first-loves in rem ote Virginia and. by and by sent him aw ay to bed cheered and re-. ' freshed by her m otherly kindness. The next- day he w ent back to his tcpnipany. News of- his exploit had /traveled through the camp. To his surprise he soon learned th at he w as probably the most popular man in the regiment." W ithin a week a company Fwhich had lost its captain elected him .to the place. Captain Farnsw orth said th at the Only, way to punish a man like that was to kill him. It seemed to be so. ' The New England brigades were In a faiting spirit. Reorganization w as pnder way. Officers about , to be dis charged’ w ere trying to dissuade their men; frdm service. Colin, Amos and a band of strong-arm ed fellow s1 sought them out and gave them warning, aDonnecticut regim ents would have no M assachusetts soldier in their ranks and those of M assachusetts would have neither Connecticut men nor Rhode Islanders. Colin w as one of a ,committee of the . brigades who en deavored to reconcile these rivalries fand jealousies, Only thirty-five hun dred men had enlisted for extended service, .and - they, demanded fifty- fu r- Tloughs to the regiment. The gentle* fmaD of the iron will a t genera) head quarters w as in no way discouraged by the chaos th at surrdunded hlm. In* t B f.............................................. POULTRY BUSINESS " HARD TO COUNT ON Producers Should Not Grow Too Optimistic. By H- H. ALP, Pooitry Extensioii SpeclaUsi.College of .Agriculture. Dnlverslty- of Illinois.—WNU .Service. 1 Ju st as some poultrymen were : too pessimistic a y e a r ago, some of them may be too optim istic now. Prospee tive flock owners should not get over- enthusiastic on the basis of profitable egg prices during the last m onths or 1932. Poultry and eggs bring in more than 11 per cent o f the millions In Illinois cash farm income, w hich explains why. good egg prices should-.be bailed w ith' optimism. However, there is little rea son why flock owners as a group should adopt a general-expansion pro gram. Undoubtedly, fo ri some an 1'in*. crease in size of flock, buildings and equipment would be justifiable. How ever, any marked increase In thq^ poul try business should depend largely' upon the availability of a good mar ket, other farm activities, tbo experi ences of the operator and the relative im portance of poultry to other farm enterprises within the area. - Probably** the 'best plan -for- most people during the year w ould be: to follow a normal procedure and do the best possible. The “In and outer” has seldom made money. W hat -poultry prices will do during th e coming year is problematical. - Any w ild optimism a t this time would be as foolish as the loose think ing and foolish pessimism of a year ago. At that tim e egg prices. In Feb ruary, March,, April,. May and June caused many people to become rim wisely discouraged. They decided-to quit their interest in poultry nnd drift along;. Consequently, when egg prices, reached the profitable level, only those flock ow ners who. had maintained their interest were prepared to take advantage of the situation. hotrie^loyers. At this tim e Colin w rites In his ’diary:’ Y ; I- ; “No pay for anyone. M any of the Officers' are discouraged. The men are hom esick and dejected. They are all needed on the farm s. The call to go 'is,stro n g .. The food Is poor and often insufficient T here is not powder enough for a day's/fighting.* Still the arm y remains. I w onder a t It.” M any of the Connecticut ’ troops w ould' riot rfrenllst, and they w ere hissed, , pelted and hooted when they left ;camp betw een long lines of men WhO resented their conduct. Amos, back In the crowd, y.elled In his ring, ing voice, “Go home, ye white-livered clam -diggers! Go home, ye scare faced mammy-suckers, an' leave yer country to the cutthroats In BOston.” Ari outburst of-laughter, bitter arid derisive, followed the sally. This little event helped the spirit of the camp. T here were m any re-enllstm ents in the days’ th a t "followed. Then D aniel M organ arrived w ith his Virginia Bushmen, a famous regi m ent of sharpshooters. . It w as said th at every man of them, riding a t a gallop, could hit a tin cup fifty yards away. • Golln had heard General W ashing ton tell of M organ’s exploits in Brad- dock’s arm y. A B ritish officer had insulted him, not. realizing-that a w agoner had any right to feel insulted. Morgan resented" his conduct The officer tried to run him through w ith i sw ord,. M organ disarmed hiin and gave him a severe drubbing. F o r this he w as condemned to suffer five hun dred lashes. Fopr hundred and fifty, were adm inistered when the torture deprived him of consciousness, H a w as a m an of immense stature w ith the vitality of a bear or the cruel punishm ent would Have destroyed him. It had only chopped his back intb ridges ,and .kindled. an unquenchable fire In his h e a rt . He and his Bush men had gone into, camp near the troops of M assachusetts.1 . 1 Colin w as chairm an of the entertaln- irient committee of his brigade. It be came his duty to go and ask Colonel M organ to speak to the M assachusetts m en.' H e asked the first Bushman he m et w here he would find the colonel., “He’s in front of his tent over thar restin’ his foot,’’ said the Bushman. 'Colin w as soon to learn tliat Hie re doubtable m an was often “resting his foot.” . H e found the colonel w ith his . 1 rig h t-fo o t-b a re ... The. big,, swarthy,. red:cheeked, silver-haired fighting m an gave the young captain a hearty g reet-, ing and. asked, “Did ye ever see su c h ' a dam’ fool toe as .th a t? :’ v - 'W; (TO BE .CONTINUED;) .C1 '- Life of B oilen Boilers with proper care have gle en efficient service, for 40 to 60 years ; while others! which have not received .’th is. care .have seriously deteriorated ’~ five,years, ,says the Plumbing tab - " es bureau. Blood-Tested and Culled Flocks for Best Chicks The most- im portant question before the poultrym an .is-w here and what kind, of baby ,chicks, to. buy. says C.,F, Parrish, poultry extension specialist at North Carolina State college.'. .“I ani convinced, however,’ that the Safe plan for; ahe poultry m an} is . to get his- new jg if i^ f r p in , hatcheries where :the.uggs ! used ,''c o m e T ^ m ^ 1 cdliSd'Stippiyj 1Arickfew';'/1Y i;' j Mr. Parrish says bis- reason for mak? ’ In g -this recoinmendation. comes from certain tests, which; have been: made! Reports on 79.686 chicks produced by hatcheries where the eggs were pro duced by blood-tested birds show 5.151 chicks died from all causes during the first four weeks of Iife- T h is is a m ortality of, 6.4 per cent. • Vy . • Reports on1 7,958 chicks produced from birds that had not been blood- tested show that 2,875 died from all causes during the first four weeks of life. Tlils' Is. a M ortality of 36.1 per c en t ■ ’ • : - - - - - - - JMPROVED UNIFORM INtERNATIONAL U N b A y CHOOL essori (B y -R SV . P . B . P IT Z W A T E R . D . D ., t MdEZL- s b e r o f 'FacQ lty.fM oody B ible!' Ar ,ChIcsg1O.) . -© , 1933» W «atw H ’N nw H paper U n io n .- .Lesson for April 2 JESUS MINISTERING TO JEVIf$ AND GENtlLES (World Friendship Lesson). - 4BSS0N TEXT—M ark .7:1*37. GOLiDEN TEX T—And oth er sheep X Dave, w hich are not of th is fold: them - also I m ust bring, and they ..shall h ea r my. v o ic e;’&nd th ere shall be .one fold» and oiie shepherd. John 10:1«. PRIM ARY TOPIC—L ittle N eighbors. JUN IO R TOPIC—A F oreign W om an M eeting Jesus. . IN TERM ED IA TE AND SEN IOR.TOP- Our. A ttitude to O ther Races. YOUNG PEO PLE AND ADULT TOP IC —T he M inistry .of Jesu s to Al) Races. Keeping the Male Birds Farm management .experts and agri cultural economists have coMmoHly in sisted that a well established agricul tural practice is usually sound. We like to agree with them, but are at a loss to know the advantage of keeping the male birds in the flock after, the regular batching season is o v er., And yet this is done on a m ajority of corn belt farm s where male birds are car ried through into spring, The lowered quality of the eggs,’ the feed eaten by the birds, the usual de cline in their value between May or June a n d ' late fall, the troUble they" cause bothering; the growing stock if they can, get in with them, are some Of the reasons why people should sell roosters as soon as the- regular hatch ing season is over. “Swat the roos ter” cam paigns have been held and tnuch w riting has. been done each year, urging the adoption of an early sale program .. But ft has not been adopted very widely. There! must be a rea son. Why Is it, asks a w riter In Wal lace's Farm er. , ; P o u l t r y N o t e s ' Blackhead disease, a' turkey tlinese, Is blanied for the. dying. out o f th e ; heath hen ; ; Cod liver oil .fed to bens improves the batchability o f the eggs about 1IO to 25 per cent; milk, 5 to 15 per cent; and green feed. 5 to to p er cent! v - • 1 ’ 'A bill was introduced In the Ohio legislature authbrizlng county officials to collect $5 for every stray chicken found on the higbwaya :■ ** V --. Y ' : On a ship which recently arrived a t Plymouth, England, were 10,000,000 A ustrailan-O ^s.1.- , *. i ; • " • .*; * '' 'Y'*/-. i1 ■ T here were 469,457,000 chickens on farm s in the United States, according to an estim ate of January. L 1930. by th e .,Department - of Agriculture. ': -.,/'.’/iyy*y “Laying batteries;” tiers Jof! Inffivid-- ual metal coops:in which hens are per- marieritIyVl caged. - are " being offOTed? ponitryme'n. .Eggs1 are driivered * flrbm" th e■ ‘cages automatJcally: As 'soob - as., they • are ‘ "lrfld-* *;flooded through the. w om s ;and up:ioyef ondt tlilnK;:of -n^e,yearsrr?ays tue ( Lttiey;-are-teid;v..vx. stairw ays of the D orsets’ house. It J you every hour until you come.”^ ^ I H eating industnes bureau. | ' I. Jesus' Dealing With tnc Phari sees and Scribes (rv. 1-23). T he Pharisees and scribes zealously sought to preserve Judaism from the encroachments of heathenism. In this effort' they built’up a . wall of tradi tions which In turn obscured the very law of God. As they gathered to gether unto Christ, he taught them: L The emptiness of formal wor ship (vv. 1-7). The tendency of rite human heart is to depart from the life and rest In the form which was calculated to express the Iifm Christ declared that worship which centered in forms "was-as empty' Snd meaning less as lip Service while the heart is away from God. This kind of service he calls "hypocrisy,” and ft is com mon today. , 2.- It made the Word of Gnd of none effect (rv. 8-13). A case in point was the consecration of earthly goods to escape the responsibilities of caring for one’s parents. This made it pos sible for a man to be living In luxury ,Whll^ his pa^tntK were JU the poor- house. 3. The real source of defilement (vv. 14-23). Sin is moral and spiritual. 'A man is defiled b? that which springs out of his soul and not that which enters his mouth. The deliberate choice of the will Is the source of defilement (v. 20). !: . II. Jesds Healing the Daughter of the Syroiiheniciah Woman (vv, 24-30). " In sharp contrast with the apostasy .’of Israel .and .their rejection of the Savior, w e see In the Syrbphenician woman the forcgleam of the offer of the Savior to the Gentiles.. - V The mother’s awful distress. Her daughter ,was grievously vexed with the; devil. The daughter was’’ the one affirotbd,- but th e} mother carried ..the burden. Doubtless,/this Gentile.worn- .ppwer-tAbeai, and 1Many .times!longed- fSr 7Mml TorIcoIiie 1Q fif Wity that" her daught'eir might be healed. She now came straightway to him. ... ..,* 2. Her fervent appeal for help (vv. 25, 26)! She humbly fell at Jesus’ feet aUd besOught him to cast the devil out .3. Her faith rewarded (vv. 27-30). a. Jesus’ apparent refusal (v. 27). According to Matthew’ he answered her -not *a -word. The reason for his silence wps that she appealed to him on the wrong basis, addressing him as the Son of Dayid (M att 15:22). An Israelite only had a right to seek bis blessing as the, Son of David. He was sent ..to. the lost sheep, of the house of IsfaeL Jesiis said,-“Let the cfail- 1 dren first be- filled: for It is not meet to. take the. children’s bread, and . cast it unto the,dogs.”. b. The! woman’s qiiick response (V..28).’ As soon-as she perceived the real difficulty/she addressed him as Lord and cried for help (M att,; 15:25- 27). Only an /Israelite could approach him as the Son' of David, but all could come to him and own him as Lord. She willingly, took her place as a Gen tile, showing her willingness to re ceive • but the; crumbs from the chil dren’s table c.-. The glorious issue of her faith . (vv. 29, ’SO).' Jesus said. “Go .thy way, the devil Is gone out of thy daughter.” , .III. Jesus Healing a Deaf-mute (VV/3J-37). ' I. The place (v. 31). This is the region where he had healed the Gadarene demoniac and where the people bad requested bis withdrawal . from this country (Mark 5:20), be cause of the loss of their swine. .2.. The method (w . 33. 34). • • a. “He took him aside from the multitude” v. 33).1 He did this io avoid publicity. - • ' * b! ;“Fut- his fingers in:bia ears, and he spit, and touched his tongue” (v. 33). Thfa: Jwa*; a. sign language de signed to objectify to the man what Jesus was goifig to do for him. C.; “He. looked up to heaven” (v. 84), to show to the man that bis belp was from God. ' "'V ■ - d. A! -command Issued (v. 34). The cure Cwas immediate and complete (v. a£). v ’:'v’ ’-; 8. T he. effect'-(vv. 36, 37), 'Though he charged them to “tell no man,” so much the^jnore they a great deal pub lished i t '! La^er Comprehension If th e message :.(s.. to come to men /wiftt m ost effect' there ! Is need - fo r kfgerVooinprriiension .on th e p art o f those-w ho. proclaim .i t a s w ell.as of those.w ho My plans for its rele£se.-~ John .R. M ott ’ ! -1' . . . ,*The Majter Light- ' ; ; 1 In our w orld o f the inner Hfe we’ gratefully acknowledge C hrist as the Jfastm 1... light, h f . aii o u r sering,! .in . whose!; fadiant .presence Our problems are rsoived! dhd'o u r faith m ade’ plain. RECORD, MOflKSVlLLE, N. C. News Review of Current Events the r e r Congress Quickly Acts on President Roosevelt s Request for New Legislation—-Reopening of. Banks Spurs. Upturn in Business Activities. President Rooseve t PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT’S request to congress that he be given au thority to riialte cuts In the salaries of government employees, up to 15 per cent, and to make re- ductions In the am ounts paid to vet erans, that authority, to Include practically an entire revamping of the government policy as it applies to government ex penditures, as It ap plies to veterans of the World war. and other wars, met w ith, a quick response on the part of the house of representatives and the senate. The bill passed the senate by a vote of 62 to 13. Forty-three Democrats and nineteen Republicans voted for the m easure; four Democrats and nine Republicans against i t The vote in the house w as 266 for the m easure and 13S against i t That result was not achieved w ithout diffi culty, and the difficulty came In the ranks of the President’s party, and its passage would not have been possible without the aid of Republican mem bers of the house. In a party caucus 92 Democratic members bolted the President's leadership and voted against the measure, their opposition being to that portion of the bill giv ing the President dictatorial powers in the m atter of expenditures for vet- ’ erans. At the final roll call, 197 Dem ocrats and 69 Republicans voted for the bill/and 92 Democrats, 41 Repub licans and five Farm er-Laborite^ against i t Several members who were opposed to the bill but who did not wish to be recorded as against an economy measure, decided not to vote. An analysis of the vote shows that 68 per cent of the Democrats voting and 62 per cent of the Republicans stood by it, but leaders said that the Democratic percentage for the meas ure would have been much lower had not a parliam entary m aneuver been invoked to prevent rebellious mem bers of the party caucus from going through with their plans. Still another factor w as credited w ith part of the favorable, vote, and th at w as the word passed around the house cloakrooms th at President R oosevelt. planned to denounce the opposition in a nation-wide radio broadcast if the bill had failed of ap proval. -i I t : is believed the President will m ake a saving of approxim ately $385,- 000,000 In the expenditures for vet eran relief by cutting out all men whose disability, on which claims, for relief are based, w as not the result of w ar service. The reduction In the salaries of government employees is expected to save .approxim ately an other $150,000,000. In the senate an effort w as.m ade to delay the passage of th e act by pro posing amendments and the senate cham ber resounded to the oratory of friends of the veteran and of federai employees, battling, against certain and overwhelming odds, to win some amendment to the bill. Secretary Wallsice WHILE the President has received Republican aid in securing de sired legislation for his banking, econ omy and beer program, he will prob ably not be able to depend upon it to the sam e extent a t least for his farm program. T hat contemplates giv ing the President dic tatorial powers In so m anipulating the price of farm products to bring them up to what is term ed a “parity” price. The contem plated law would au thorize the President, acting through \ the secretary of agriculture, to fix a parity price of each farm product; th at is, a price at which the producer of the product would be placed on a parity w ith the producer of manufactured articles. I For example,’ the secretary of agriculture might declare $i a - bushel to be the parity price of w heat The object then would be to manipu late the price of w heat upward until the desired ’parity price should be reached. In order to raise the prices of farm 1 products the secretary of "agriculture under the term s of the bill would In voke various devices. H e might em ploy the domestic allotm ent plan; to influence the prices of one group of commodities and the government land leasing plan in the ,case of another group. Secretary W allace insists that it would not be Si price fixing law for the reason that no price would be fixed by fia t Instead, a price would be declared to dim at and the m easures adopted •vould be those judged most likely • to raise the price to the point, desired. . The products covered In the con tem plated law a re w h e a t com, cotton, cattle, sheep, hogs, milk, dairy prod ucts, tobacco and rice. Along with this the President pro poses the scaling down of farm m ort gages and a reduction Jn the . in terest rates'- through agricultural credit agencies, all of which are to be consolidated under the direction of Henry Morgenthau, Jr. BANKS began opening for business on M arch 13. On that date only banks connected wilth the Federal Re serve system and .located in Federal Reserve bank cities opened their doors under licenses from the Treas ury departm ent Banks I n jJill clear ing house cities that h ad . applied for and been issued licenses either by the federal treasury or, in th e .case of state banks, by state banking depart ments, began opening on Tuesday, and those in the sm aller cities and towns on W ednesday. There were no restrictions placed on the banks in the way of lim iting-with drawals, except w here the depositor Wast attem pting to secure sums that would indicate hoarding, when the per son making the w ithdraw al w as re quired to state his purpose and give his name and address. , . . ' The banks were also required not to pay out gold or gold certificates, the embargo the President had placed on gold being continued, and vast am ounts of the m etal 'were being, re turned to the banks. Up to M arch 13 it was estim ated the Federal Reserve bank in New Totk had received, more than $100,000,000 of hoarded gold and in Chicago more than $23,000,000 had been returned. The returns through out the nation indicated a largeir am ount of gold brought back to the banks than the total w ithdraw al of the m etal since February I, though the governm ent did not. give, out any definite statem ent on the subject It w as after the President bad re peated and emphasized the embargo, he had.placed on gold paym ents that Governor Blood of Dtah signed a bill passed - by the legislature requiring “th e , treasurer of the state of U tah and of each taxing, subdivision within the- state to pay all public employees under their jurisdiction In gold coin.” W here wili U tah get the gold? The President, in a published state m ent and also in a national "broad cast, detailed In simple langbage the reasons ffir the national bank holiday and the plans for opening! He w as careful to emphasize the. point that th e-tim e of opening any bank w as not determ ined by its relative condi tion, but by the ability of. the officials of the Federal Reserve banks and of the Treasury departm ent to make the proper check for the Issuing of licenses. H e explained that banks th at w ere not sound would not be perm itted to open except under government-' supervision for the purpose of reorganizing-them ; The reopened banks were Supplied with a liberal allowance of the new currency based on bank assets, but In practically no case w as any of this needed as the deposits exceeded the w ithdraw als, and in many cases the new currency w as returned to the Fed eral Reserve banks. WITH a special m essage o f only . 72 words—the shortest Presi dential message ever w ritten—the; President secured Ifeislation amend ing the Volstead; act a;nd making 3.05 per cent beer legal in the ,Onlted States. The President’s 72 words w ere: V' ‘I recommend to the congress the passage of legislation for the .lmmet diate modification of the Volstead a c t'ln order to legalize the m anufac ture and sale of beer and other bev erages of such alcoholic content as is perm issible under the CohsU tution;. and to provide through such m anu facture and sale, by substantial taxes, a proper and much needed. Tevenoe fo r the governm ent “I deem action at this tim e to be of the highest Importance.” . The: beer bill provides for an alco holic content of not over 3.05 per cent, for a tax of $5 a barrel, for a license, fee of $1,000 for each brewery, and the: law to be effective 15 days after' it Is signed by the President, which m eans .beer will be on s a le . shortly - after* the first of April. ’ ;';.v The bill ..w as passed by a strictly non-partisan vote! In the • house 23§ D em ocrats voted for i t and:58 against;; ,73 R epublicans for and 39 against, and 5 Farm er-Labor, for. Twenty m em bers did not vote, and Uiere are tw o va cancies. ' ';•! K ansas w as the only state whose: representatives voted solidly againsl; ■ the bill. While the representatives Ot 18 states voted all w e t - The senate am ended the house bill to include wine, to make. the alcoholic^ content of both 3.05 instead of 3.2 and to prohibit sale to children unden six teen years of ag e.. The vote In the senate w as 43 fo r. th e. hill a n d ’SO, ag ain st also along strictly non-parti san lines....... . It is estim ated the $5 a barrel tax on beer "will produce about $125,000,- 000 additional revenue. PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT to O k tim e out from the urging of new legislation to give some consideration to the filling of im portant diplom atic posts. H e has sent to the senate the names of R obert W orth Bing ham, publisher of Loulsvifle, Ky., as am bassador to Great B ritain; Jesse Isador Straus, president of R. H. Macy & Co., New Y ork-departm ent store, as am bassador to France, and Jose phus Daniels, w ar sec retary of the navy, under whom Mr. Roosevelt served as .assistant secretary, as am bassador to. Mexico. ;; ■ ..'VV- ' A t least one of these will m eet with, some opposition In the senate. Sena tor A rthur Robinson (Rep., Ind^ an nounced that be would offer evidence that Mr. Bingham had m ade'speeches, In England which caused him to be Jabeleid as “apologetic American.” . • Adviserfe of the President, however,! declared that he w as full.v satisfied th at Mr. Bingham will assert and de fend America’s position on all Issues emphatically and pa.triotically. V I Jesse I. Straua ’ORLD w ar. veterans, the U. S. ' V Supreme court decided, are; with-* out priority., over -other depositors Ii i the claims; against insolvent banks for th e money received,! from the United States. Tbe ruling was handed -down' in. a case involving a deposit of approx imately £6,000 which Sam Spicer had' In the Hargis Bank , and T rust com pany o f B reathitt; county, Kentucky; when it became insolvent ■ .The assets of the bank w ere.not suf ficient to. pay. ■ ail depositors, and it .was contended that money-,:received from the United States1 by veterans for insurance and. disability.-: allowances was money o& the-Untted States while on deposit In banks to the credit of veterans and was therefore entitled to priority. The Supreme court dfecided otherwise . \ TORNADO, swept/ the (Tennessee* ■.iCV. Kentucky border- fronr the Mis sissippi riv er,: to : the Cumberland mountains, killing 30-persons,‘!injuring more than 200 and did -damage estt m ated a t $1,000,000. Pope1 Pius OF SPEC IA L. Interest to Rom an Catholics. Is the allocution deliv ered by Pope Pius a t the secret con-: sistory inaugurating the holy; year. H is holiness; issued a w arning th at commun ism Is attem pting to . exploit th e ... w orld’s . political and economic; disorde.rs and '.ex pressed a fervent wisii. for disarm am ent and settlem ent o f ;war debts. The pontiff b^r stowed the ,. Rbman purple on six -new cardinals of the church and announced th a t two others: would be elevated later. The six elevated w ere: Pietro Fumasoni-Biondi,. form er apostolic delegate a t W ashington; Archbishop Villeneauve of. Quebec, Angelo Dolclj; Archbishop InnItzer of' Vienna, Arcfe bishop Cktsta of -Florence and . Aich-'1 bishop Fossati of Turin. , ■ . Second only Vto the “nefarious, propaganda of communi'sts” ;which, he said, threatens C hristian civilization, the pontiff deplored proselyting activi ties of Protestant sects In Italy and Rome. H e describes these activities; as being: “im pudently pursued” and urged, all the faithful to co-operate against “th is ' menace- and. defend the treasured riches of city and nation." PLANS for im m ediate reconstruction and rehabilitation are w ell under way Irt. Los Angeles and Its' suburbs, w here earth trem ors caused 115 deaths and property dam age estim ated •' a t $75,000,000. An appeal has been m ade to the federal governm ent -and the Reconstruction Finance corporation for the m ajority of funds needed for re building. Congress passed a bill, In-/ troduced by Senator W illiam G. Mc- A doo. of L'os Angeles, for an emer gency appropriation of $5,000,000 to: relieve immediate, distress in the stricken area. r The earthquake will , probably give to science the first accurate records Of ju st how. . th e . earth shakes, during such a disaster. Inform ation which may be highly valuable In construc- Ing buildings to w ithstand earthquakes In the future. "V/, TH E : French cabinet'' is sounding out the members of the cham ber of deputies in an attem pt to w hip. up a , m ajority In ftivor of paying the $10,261,432 w ar debt Installm ent to t h e United States ,.which w as defaulted on De cember- ID. Form er Prem ier H erriot has been lob bying in the govern-; m ent’s behalf, seek ing pledges to , vote favorably in case PiJe-' m ier D aladIer should: decide to bring the: m atter to a vote. Her-, riot has been, telling the deputies that It is necessary to act quickly, as the governm ent would like - to have the; paym ent coincide' w ith the departure of the new French: am bassador to W ashington.. - y-.;,1. P rem ier Daladier 'T 'H E new adm inistration. ref uses to: - J- allow the United States to be bohhd; by any actiop that is taken, but agrees' to join • the League of Nations, mem bers In a discussion of w hat the world! should .do about. Japanese military: Jn-; roads in northern China v.Hugh R. W ilson, m inister to Switzer- land, has- been named, to sit a t the' council: table :with the,-league’s' special! advisory committee on jthe undeclared w ar in the .Far East, with two impor tant- re s e rv a tio n s T h e United States, a nonm em ber.o£ the. league, will not; vote. It will not agree in advance to bow to the committee’s decision, which may call for an economic boy. 1COtt or other coercive measures^ *• -. ©. 1933. Western Newspaper Dnlo^' r:-;' Our Government — H o w I t O p e r a t e s By Wttliam Bruckart OUR PO STA L SERV ICE f T IS possible th a t you felt you had, I so m e com plaint to m ake last Jlily w hen you had to place a stam p on your letters instead of the red tw o-center th at sufficed prior; ,to th at time, but I w ill w ager you not m ake much -noise about it after all. I think th a t I can tel y o u . th e reasons why you complained so little about th at increase of one-third m th e postal ra te s: there Is nothing th a t gives ■ you so much for so, little a i d o e s‘th e postal service. y,'-.V H ad the landlord increased your ren t by a third, you would have moved right o u t; had the grocer raised any price th a t much, you would, have gone Im m ediately to tils com petitor, and had you been told by your b an k .th at the interest r a te y o u w ere paying w as to be raised 33% per cent you would have sworn vengenance. I have w ondered since . th a t ra te increase w ent into effect w hether poSr sibly it w as. not a good thing from the standpoint o f p abons ,of the. post al service as well as assuring to the federal governm ent som ething near th e am ount of funds it h as'to have to pay operating expenses. The fact th a t there w as an Increase In rates, espe cially on le tte rs,: brought to the a t tention of all of us the benefits we had been enjoying through years and years of th at service which we ac cept as a m atter of course. It costs between $600,000,0.00 and $700,000,000 to operate th a t farflung system known as. the postal service each 12 months. The principle w as In culcated In our governm ental struc tu re when th e . nhtion . w as ‘ form ed th a t .this service, should be self-sus taining, though- It Is run; by the fed eral governm ent', If never h a s' been quite able to 'p a y its own way, .but a t the sam e tim e It never has been much of a charge on the governm ent Itself. , - . The- reason postal rates never,, have q u ite succeeded In producing sufficient revenue to pay . all expenses of the great organization th a t serves, Is th at fundam ental belief th at it should not be an agency for pro fit In. other words, congress, alw ays has. clung to the idea of having the postil, service ’do its job ju st as cheaply (for . the people) as it can.and th a t It Is better -. for ■ it to fall ju st a Iittle short of m aking, expenses.; than , to tafte from' those who use th at service m ore than Is needed. If there Is a deficit a t the end of th e year, as there nearly a k '■wavs has been:*, congress has been willing, to take care of it wi.tli an a p i propriation from funds received by general taxation. . B ut In the last several years when th e volum e of letters fell off a s It alw ays does when there Is not much .business., the. am ount o f the! deficit grew to a -size which congress, de cided w as a little too large.. So It turned to. th e Increase In the postage rate on letters to make, up p art of the loss: T hat one-eent Increase probably, w lir not be enough to offset th e an ticipated deficit completely, but It will reduce the difference betw een the In-' come and the expenses, to a com para tively sm all sum. If there had been no ra te Increase, I am told th a t th e deficit from last! July to the end of next -Tiine would have approached $200,000,000. ; ^ And th a t brings another thought. As a people. Americans have al ways ' stood,,- against the -governm ent wigaglng In business. O f course,, there, i r e exceptions, yet th a t has been onr general ,conception. W e - have alw ays . said as a people th a t governm ent w as not - created for any other purpose thin.: to govern. It w as not a busi ness Institution as we know business.! - T et. there are not many greater bugl-. nesses ■ than the postal service^ arid it fs, not an agenc.v th a t, governs our conduct Ot onr relations w ith! onr neighbors except Indirectly, 'w h y .! then, should not private capital and: private Industry perform the service and enjoy, the profits therefrom ? • The. answ er ,is; simple. The reason Is. th a t those who conceived our form of governm ent and envisioned the m agnitude Of our nation, a t the sam e time, saw the necessity for a uniform: system o f handling Its w ritten com- munlcations. Those men recoghized more than a-,century and a hAlf ng& that the In dividual states, m ust not be allowed to control the: means of communica tion ; that, when a. letter w as once' 6^arted .on Its way, it must- go on, .and th a t only one agency could be m ade responsible if ,success were to be attained. The post roaster general .occupies th e, post of head of the post offlce departm ent Embodied In it are dozens of supervisory agencies, filled for the m ost p art by men and women who have moved up through the ranks of w orkers who gained appointm ent In .^ e service only after m eeting civil’ service tests They were promoted onv m erit What I have said relative/ to th(tL machinery of the postal service does not apply, however, to several thou sand post masters who gain jobs by appointment from the President not after an examination of tt-elr quallfi- “ b,lt aftCr they have qualified with the politicians. Fortunately ° f m m al,s’ how^ver; the “ runs 0,1 without squeaks be rawse it was organized on a sound basis, as we later shall see. < W32* ^M tem N«tvspapar XtoiotL Grasshopper Area, Sees Less Tiouble Oiliy One State Reports In crease in Number of Eggs in Ground; The prospects", for dam age fro® grasshoppers! over the infested area as a whole are much less alarm ing th an !they w ere a y ear.ag o , according to t i e results of the 1932 survey, of grass hopper conditions reported by the.bu reau of. entomology of the- United, States D epartm ent of -Agriculture. Only N orth D akota shows an increase In the num ber of eggs In the ground over the num ber deposited in the fall <of -1931. If the w eather this spring and early sum m er happens to be fa vorable tor grasshopper grow th, how ever, mor„e than, five and one-half mil lion acres; in eight w estern states may need applications of poison bran to save, cereal and . forage ■ crtops • from wholesale destruction by the hoppers. D etailed surveys in co-operation w ith state entom’ologlsts of the areas, where ,the. 1932 grasshoppers Jaid their eggs show tbat a big hatch may be expected; In. six counties:in Colorado. 10 in Idaho, !55‘!’In M innesota, 23 in M ontana,- 42 In N ebraska, 50 In N orth Dakota, 48 In South D akota, and four in Wyoming. T he num ber of acres in these !states th at may need - poisoning ranges: from 30,000, with an estim ated cost- of $3,750 for ^m aterial, in Colo rado,1 to 3,084,736, w ith an estim ated cost of $385,430 for . m aterial, in N orth D akota. " , / .: G rasshoppers gained a firm : foot hold in the hay and grain fields of the W est In 1930 and 1831, when the hot, dry w eather provided conditions ideal for the hoppers and uBfavorable. for the disease: and parasites th a t serve as a natural control of this p e s t, The infestation expected In 1932 from the m illions of .eggs laid in 1931 failed to reach serious proportions over much of the area threatened because the w eather early In the season w as Cold and damp.. W here the- w eather fa vored grasshopper, grnw th m any farm ers—assisted by states or counties— .took' advantage of the warnings: Jtfroad- cast by entom ologists and spread the recommended - poison bait over/ their fields in' tim e to destroy .th e young hoppers. ’ L O U IS E M . New Wool Test Is Good Guide for Sheep Breeders By the applicatioi of , a sim ple m ethod, coupled ’ With: the. assistance of dry-cleaning establishm ents, sheep breeders may determ ine, from ,a small sam ple, the clean-wool yield and dens ity of th e fleeces of their, sheep. . i ' T his Is th e judgm ent of Dr. John L H ardy of the U nited. States D epart m ent of A griculture, fiber; technologist of the bureau of anim al industry, who has been seeking to develop a rapid and? inexpensive test for th e density of fleece and for clean wool yield. ! The procedure .consists; in shearing, w ith'clippers, a sw ath of wool I' Inch wide and 4 inches long from th e side of the sheep, ; weighing .the. i sample, dryrcleanlng It by the ordinary dry- cleaning process, and- w eighing. it again. From the difference betw een the tw o weights, th?. percentage .of yield of clean, dry . wool can be com puted fpr the sample. This percent age, when applied^ to the w eight of the fleece, shows approxim ately; how much .clean wool the fierce will yield. T his Inform ation Is of practical value In selecting ,breeding! anim als.. The wool, sam ple is taken 'from a m easured area, of skin and - furnishes the basis for calculating the w eight of clean, dry wool per square inch of skin sur face as an expression of th e density of th e fieece. ! - V When to Fertilize Grapes Fertilizers, partICBlarly nitrogenous fertilizers. Increased the yield, stim u lated wood gtow th. aiid improved the quality of the fru it In a 10-year test w ith grapes m ade by Prof. F. E. Glad- -Wini horticulturist in charge of the Vlneyard laboratory m aintained ■ at Fredonia1 N. Y.,. by the state experi m ent station. .Comparisons w ere m ade of complete fertilizers and of vaMous com binations :of nitrogen, potassium and phosphorus. ; W herever fertilizers w ere used m arked benefits w ere ob served, although nitrogen proved the ■ most , beplful o f th e three elements. Farm Population Gaining Estim ates by the U nrted States bu r e a u 'o f agricultural 'economIciS'- Indi c ate th at the- farm population^ of the country will be 32,000,000 by ..the end of .this year. The net gain in farm population in 1930 and 1931; plus the gains th at are. believed probable last year, will m ore than offset the de- crease of approxim ately 1,500,000 peo ple In the- farm population from the years 1920 to 1930. Farm population reached its peak.In 1910,' when th e fig ure given by the census bureau w as 32,077,000. I To Control Insect Spread : Simple changes in routine tfarm op- ;ft*ations. to .deprive Insects of food' dr shelter, a t critical periods^ In their illfe cycle offer; a valuable control method according to U nited Statesr e n to n W gists. Timely forecasts of the ^prob-' able perform ance of m any insects based on th e results of entomological studies, now m ake it easy to ontmove these-pests by advancing or delaying seeding or "harrowing by thoroughly cleaning up a threatened area or changing crop rotations^ R ftc h e l Jackson V V h e n Andrew Jnekson toot * , 'VVv as seventh President O fT 0fiti ;ed States, he wore on his nri Cbi' :°f black crepe. It Was a N th at in spirit at least his h- 6J* j| Rachel, who died between his = ^ and inauguration, martyred a~ lieve; by his political enemler,,naniprl him us- * '■ raWj I,, panied him ,into 'bTs honor. PosItion F or fiaehel was "Old Uickorsv gre^t love. When Jackson callow young lawyer come om f N orth Carolina to establish ' order in the wilderness settieml, Nashville, 'he roomed at S m * Rachel’s mother, the Widow D Rachel w as then a dark-ejert * ' cious young woman, wife of LewispIh I ards, whom she had met during * 1 ln .Kentucky, Bobante1 tt ^ seldom home, but chose to IleinI T I jealous of his wife when h e w ^ C '1 ■bIDally Robards loudly announced^ intention of getting a divorce and» , off for Virginia, which still ccntro'ioi Such m atters in Tennessee t»rritm, to arrange for i t News that quest had been granted filtered back m Nashville, and In the summer of l® belieying herself free, Kachei marriei A ndrew Jackson. !T hree years -later Uobards actuall, did secure the divorce, on the oji; grounds of adultery, but, though tte couple w as. straightway remarried am th eir friends were quite willin' [Dfjr. get the. m atter, Jackson’s political en em ies were quick to seize upon it aid use it. 'As a result Jacksnn fought El least one duel of melodminatie aspst : In 1828, when her husband was rat I ing his second attempt for the Presi dency, Rachel was sixty, and old is w om en.of the frontier are old at siitt, O nce again the old scandal was rp- viyed, circulated throushom toe com- try. Back In the Hermitage, bgsj tending the plantation while the gen eral ; w as away, entertaining Ui friends, among them the famous San Houston, and General Ufayette, Bi- chei w as kept ignorant of her umtl- com e part In the campaisr;. Aftertti election, however, waitins in the W room o f a hotel In Nashville where* bad been buying clothes to war when she accompanied her husband to M ington. Rachel overheard people lair ing and talking out front. Thej ten talking about her! She returned Ii th e H erm itage a broken, sick wohb and w hen Andrew Jackson went ui» W ashington the next March, he rot alone! Tobey Riddle A S IT w as an Indian woman ski ' * * aided the white man to gain Wi first foothold in this country, so a«- other Indian woman, appropriately caled the “Pocahontas of the tin Bedsj” befriended him against beron people over two and a half centuries later. W inema, daughter of the SIoW had m arried Frank Riddle, a Kbit* m an, adopted his customs, learned hi* language, and taken the name of Tf bey. Riddle. NowtiieModocswerei sm all and peace-loving tribe of the Pacific Northwest, whose doom « sealed by the increasing inroads# w hite settlers in Oregon and Califor- nia; In 1772 fifty Modoc braves.™ three tim es as many women and cU- dren, w ere entrenched in the lava Bed- n ear th e border, where, familiar m th e crevices and passages among * r«clcs, they succeeded not only in ^ fending them selves but in I®®®** severe losses on the American « besieging them. In vain Gen. E. ■ • Canby attem pted to treat with tiie emy. . He w as under orders no yield; they would not. At lesff ■ cburaged of gaining their ends, c 6 f‘the Modocs planned to m,ir<:c whites a t their next Iinrlf?; ,., th eir leader, Captain Jack, objei: su c i treachery, they threw a * h at and shawl on him, slmmws into consent. Now Tobey Riddle and Iier bus 5 w ere frequently called upon to interpreters' between her penp bis. Learning of the JIodne» P straightw ay; warned Genera _ ^ pi?ading With him to call off t!l ference. B ut Caiiby had* w ord to the red men. FW unarm ed, were to meet witi ^ leaders, under a flag of 0™»^. to his word, Canby went o ■ to m eet the Indians. Wrtb ^ 5r- to his word, Canby went ‘,',t to m eet the Indians. Wit ^ri three other whites, two of hidden weapons. Tobey .in' The ^band. It w as a tense conference. docs again made their I ew..'- «... demands. C*’UUCS a ju iu Jiuuo I..-- sjiveo b y again refused. Then- ’ o r signal, the Modocs 0Pent' . iiegal. tain Jack’s second shot fe< ffer, Iant Canby. Soon two mor ^ down, and' Riddle and the ^ ^ taken .to their heels. 0ne „ lornf en men w as A. B. jleaV nf Tnlie^ Indian'agent and a fric de,i si* Seeing he was only ^ sprang to his defense. • |c6 u aside.-by the butt of a n thought she cried, ‘‘Sol<!l Ing,” : and the Modocs Md. ^ iil : M eacham w a s nursed ' j,Bt!tei th e !! Modocs were eventiw . ^ v down and their leaders n ^ er s«« bey,-, a fte r many years as • ^1« m issionary to her own ’ ^ I* 1920, a t the Klamath re. Oregon. C. 193!. WeBtem N2WEp P A K o d e m .' By ELMO S q H E other F ort D. Tex., a cei| revolutiona history. Oul m arched thl in the Uij “D andy F ij and troopej to tb eir ho' w as to be I its m em bers w ere to mounts, the cavalry chi fast arm ored m otor carl As.-the column procel ground, sw ung into line I was led out to the “frcf of honor. He w as “Old ; of the regim ent, veteran In every p a rt of the cj rayed In funeral trappj m ent’s sorrow a t parti comrades. At the cerem ony Col. L der of the regim ent, vo| officers and m en when begin in earnest our p re j which m eans farew ell tl a century this regim ent! privilege to serve w ith,] spicuous p a rt tow ard th | stability of the nation.' _ into existence to m eet | of a great emergency, every crisis and danger the Firsti cavalry has and has been am ong thl tectlon, defense and servT "No other regim ent in wealth o f tradition, sucJ orable, brilliant achieve! this hour farew ell to o | noble com panions of mal rison—^our beloved hor pendable com rades, they| ards of the F irst Dragoo heroic hardships and end! It w as a ju st tribute t<f as Colonel A ustin said, such a w ealth of tra d itl of honorable, brilliant ar various loosely organize! States arm y had no regif ry arm of the service Revolution to 1833. In . there w as created by a l United States Regim ent! "Dandy F irst” traces its | line back to th a t outfit The newly organized , and concentrated first a t| Its first com m anding . Rodge, who resigned h ii become governor of W ij mental adjutant w as a y<f from W est Point, nam e* destined for fam e as the! of the C onfederate StatT ( At th a t -time Jeffersoq ■frontier” of this cou n tr. of dragoons first re c ru it! on the duty for which tl ^ted to suppress tribesl In October, 1833, the fivl onel Dodge left JeffersoI for Camp Jackson, ArH ~^ey spent th e w inter, pr hostiles. In June, 1834 ( «iany hardships during la g o o n s w ere sent out L “ On. The com m and remjj ’’Btil Septem ber of tb at I tim e one-fourth of the Principally from fever. For the ensuing w intel ^ a s sent to F o rt Leaveii Remainder w ent into the! ^ g h t bank of the M issil iooL ^ °* nes river, f the entire. commanJ no engagem ents wit], forded, It is probable th al ourrter-marchings w ere f exploration of our outlyiij the M ississippi. The whole of the regH organization \ until the oil XjfIJn !846 w as devota w d d ie - Southw est—alter! exploring the new ! vents are recorded duriJ nnj resnIts accom plii the sustained enl ^ p la y e d by the soldiel ^olpner-Kearney,'with fil ^eavenw orth and set out! nioW taIns. The- J P t a t an d re tu rn e d t0 itJ s h ? 4 01 the sam e yeaif 2nS?Se an^ generally bl m iles In less than I 2 por^ns upon thPTiey- said : "In the IeJ ierican |r°iues By M. COMSTOCK bhel Jackson jfUrew Jaeksou tool- ~ J th P r e3idew o f t t e ? *I wore on Uis a he Dnit. §P°- It was the I 1,11 I at least his beloved mb01 K <1 between £ ? « * fe |t>< n martyred, nianv b, !political enemies a„ L"Jnto *• iSC:; was • Old Hickory’s" «n Vhen Jackson was bu°t“' * lawyer c.,me out ft0‘ a to establish Iaw wilderness settlement of roomed at the home o K the Widow D0nelso;' 'then a dark-eyed, vi» ,oman wife of Lewis 1^ I'V 1Ild “ et durinS «'isitRobards. it seems, J . hut chose to he insanelv ■ wife when he was there; lrils loudly announced his ' 'Cttmg a divorce and set ia, which still controlled in Tennessee territory Pr i t News that his re ■11 granted filtered hack to d in the summer of 1791 self free, Uacliel married son. s later Robards actually he divorce, on the uglv idultery, but. though the traightway remarried and were-quite willing to for- ?r, Jackson’s political en- iuick to seize upon it and result Jackson fought at :1 of melodramatic aspect ien her. husband was uiak- id attem pt for the Presl- ;l was sixty, and old as t frontier are old at sixty, the old scandal was re nted throughout the cous in the Hermitage, busy plantation while the gen- in wav. entertaining his ng them the famous Sara d General I-afayette. Ra- it ignorant of her onwel- the campaign. After the .ever, waiting in the back Itel in Nashville where she ing clothes to wear when ded her husband to Wash- >1 overheard people laugh ing out front. They were t her! She returned to re a broken, sick womas. idrew Jackson went up to the next March, he weol Iobey Riddle Iis an Indian woman who pe white man to gain bis in this country, so an- Ho woman, appropriately iPocahontas of the Lava lnded him against her own I two aDd a half centuries ghter of the Modocs. rank Riddle, a white s customs, learned his aken the name of Te- w the Modocs were a :e-loving tribe of the :st, whose doom was increasing inroads of n Oregon and Caiiior' ty Modoc braves, with many women and chil- inched in the lava beds where, familiar with d passages amoDg the -eeded not only in de lves but in indicting n the American army Tn vain Gen. E- R- • • d to treat with the en under orders not Id not. At length, du aing their ends, certain planned to murder ft, r next parley- W,pn ntain Jack, objected t they threw a womaA on him. shaming hi"1 iddle and llor duV n0 called upon fO nc1 tween her Peop rl)e if the Modoc VVitiv- irned 0enernl lim 10 mven «*, anby had ^ evhites- ed men. r Mo|lnc to meet will ^ a da? of ' ,I unarmed dians. " 1 poretes. two of ' 3( Tobey ner ThG e Conferenc n,is Can- e their demands- ;ed. T hen, at a ^ iocs opened nre- <*«* fe men fferP ,0n tV tlie fourth Mli rile and the ‘ f(lI1. heels- 0ne f0rmer B- Mea(f of Tohe-''’s' nd a friend of* she s on* Vewaa 'Itrnsfefense. ne QflieIt a3 KS&rsSS. ■ere e' enJ,” n„' and T0 10 ___<-naD£T U»,0P RECORD, MOCKSVILLEt N. C. C a v a l r y C h a r i e r o r f a n k ? Ut H te N ew Tl}pe o f T an k K&fsssr G ^iSiOfSaSffra-InJ ‘ Cavalry Horseback Radio S et * A M -O derrtIV oop o f C a v a l r y By ELMO SCOTT WATSON HE other day there took place at Fort D. A. Russell,- near 'Marfa, Tex., a ceremony which marked a revolutionary step in our. military history. Out on the parade ground marched the oldest cavalry regiment in the United States army, the "Dandy First,” where the officers and troopers were to say farewell to their horses. For this regiment was to be “mechanized,” that is, its members were to replace their traditional mounts, the cavalry chargers, with tanks and fast armored motor cars. As the column proceeded across the parade ground, swung into line and dismounted, a horse was led out to the “front and center” position of honor. He was "Old Louie,” the oldest horse of the regiment, veteran of 28 years of service In every part of the country, and he was ar rayed In funeral trappings to show the regi ment's sorrow at parting from its four-legged comrades. 1 At the ceremony Col. W. A. Austin, comman der of the regiment, voiced the feelings of the officers and men when he said: “Tomorrow we begin in earnest our preparations for that change which means farewell to the horse. For almost a century this regiment, which it has been our privilege to serve with, has contributed a con spicuous part toward the security, progress and stability of the nation.'The BTrst Dragoons came into existence to meet the rigorous. demands-- of a great emergency. And ever, since, during every crisis and danger confronting the country. • the First- cavalry has ridden in the vanguard and has been among those first to render pro tection, defense and service to the country. “No other regiment in our army has such r. wealth of tradition, such an abundance of hoii orable, brilliant achievements. . . . We bid n< this hour farewell to our faithful, willing end noble companions of march, maneuver and . Ir rison—our beloved horses. Patient, silent, dr pendable comrades, they have carried the stand ards of the First Dragoons through a century o’ heroic hardships and enduring accomplishments.' It was a just tribute to a gallant regiment for as Colonel Austin said, “no other regiment ha- snch a wealth of tradition, such an abundance of honorable, brilliant achievements.” Except for various loosely organized “rangers” the United States army had no regularly constituted caval ry arm of the service from the close of the Revolution to 1833. In March 3 of that year there was created by an act of congress “The pnited States Regiment of Dragoons” and the "Tlancly First” traces its history m an unbroken line back to that outfit The newly organized regiment was organized and concentrated first at Jefferson Barracks, Mo. Hs first commanding officer was Col. Henry Dodge, who resigned his commission- In 1836 to ■ become governor of Wisconsin. The first regi mental adjutant was a young Mississippian. fresh fiom West Point, named Lieut. Jefferson Davis; destined for fame as the first and only president of the Confederate States of America. ^ At that time Jefferson Barracks was on the frontier” of this country and the five companies of dragoons first recruited were soon dispatched on the duty for which they were primarily cre ated—to suppress tribes of marauding Indians. In October, 1833, the five companies under Col onel Dodge left Jefferson Barracks and set out fOr Camp Jackson, Arkansas territory. There they spent the winter, practically In sight of the hostile®. In June, 1834. after having suffered many hardships dunng the winter months, the dragoons were sent out on the Pawnee expedi tion. The command remained in the field only nntil September of that year, but in that short une one-fourth of the officers and men died, Principally from fever.- ■■ For the ensuing winter, part of the regiment 1I as sent to Fort Leavenworth, Kan., while the remainder went into the Indian country on the right bank of the Mississippi, near the mouth nf the Des Moines river. The following summer, I'm-), the entire command was kept In the field. As no engagements with the Indians are re corded, it is probable that all the marchings and counter-marchings were done In the interest of eVploration of our outlying territory to the west °‘ the Mississippi. The whole of the regiment’s service from its °rgamzation until the outbreak of the Mexican 's r in 1S46 was devoted to activities -In the - iddle Southwest—alternately fighting Indians nd exploring the new territory. Outstanding e'onts are recorded during those years, notable nr the results accomplished 'without bloodshed nd for the sustained endurance and hardihood displayed by the soldiers. On May 18, 1838. Vnio 11 cI Kearney, with five companies, left Fort caienworth and set out for South Pass in the ocky mountains. The- command reached that oint and returned to its starting place by Au- *dst 24 of the same year, having marched over ^ range ind generally hostile • territory,- about AWO miles In less than TOO days. I reporting upon the expedition, • Colonel eaiHey said: “In the length of the mnrcb, thn THe Old First Cavalnjman rapidity o f movement, and the sacrifices made, the expedition is supposed to be wholly un precedented.” W hether or not it was. unpre cedented, is not known. It is however, worthy of mention that a command of cavalry, movi'ng as a large body, maintained a rate of march of .20 miles a day for so long a period. - In the Mexican war the First • Dragoons-^ . there bad been a Second Reglment organized In 1S36—took a glorious p art -Companies A M d K fought with' Taylor in ,his vigorous, CahipaiSn -' Company F escorted General Scott from Vera Cruz to the City of Mexico, and was present at the battle fought before thait city. Companies D and K, also saw service in Scott’s line. The remaining companies in the United States car-' ried on as before the war, helping keep the Indians under control up and down the western Mississippi valley. The period from the close of the Mexico war to the outbreak of the war between the states was in all respects similar, to the period pre-. ceding the former contest. The .dragoons were 'on Indian duty In the W est Headquarters were moved to Fort Union, New Mexico Territory, in 1854, and with that as a base of operations, companies of the command operated against hostile Indians all the way from the RIo Grande to the Canadian border on the one hand and from the-Mtssissippi to the Pacific on the other. Engagements with the Utah,- -Apache, Navajo. . Spokane, and other Indians are recorded. At the outbreak of thb Civil war the designs tion of the command was changed from “First Regiment of Dragoons” to "First Regiment of Cavalry,” without any change of internal or ganization or shifting of personnel other than what was necessary for expansion to war strength. During the latter part of 1861, the regimeDt. less Companies D and G, was transferred from the Pacific coast to Washington, D. O., to be come a part of the line of Union defenses around that city. And while the regiment, minus its two companies, was taking part in various tactical movements around the Federal. Capital, the two companies left In the West were making history. In January, 1862, they acted as escort for General Canby; on February 19, . Company D engaged Confederate troops, in a skirmish near Fort Craig; the two companies took part In the battle of Valverde on February 21; and Company D took part In engagements a t. Pigeons. Ranch, March 30; Albuquerque. April 25, and Peralto. -April 27. In June, 1863; the,two companies-were broken ' up,, the officers- und noncommissioned officers being transferred to Carlisle, Barracks, Pennsylvania. There the two units were reor--- ganized and joined the-regim ent at Camp Ba ford, Maryland, October, 1863. 1 From this time until the end of the war, .the First regiment was destined to see action on many fronts, tramp -many miles up and down the valleys of Virginia, and finally to be presen> at the closing scene at Appomattox In April, 1865. It was attached to Sheridan’s famous cavalry corps which on the march and In thtf attack was second only to Jackson's -in point of 1Swlft ness. - ■ , - . . :• : When “Little Phil” swung around Richmond the First cavalry was-with him,-taking part in the following engagements: Beaver. Dam sta tion, Yellow Taverni- Meadow Bridge, Mechanics- ville, Tunstnll’s station, Hawe’s Shop, and Olii Church. Other important engagements .In which the command took part were Cold Harbor, Pen insula Campaign, AUtietam, ChancelIorsvilIe.. Gettysburg. Wilderness, SpottsylvanJa, Peters burg, and Appomattox. ■ ■ After the surrender, of both-Lee and Johnston, the regiment returned-to ,Washington, escorting General Sherman, and was present for the ‘.‘Great Review” on M ay 24-and 25,. 1865, when 65,000 of the victorious troops paraded through- the - streets of the city.. f > ■ Almost immediately thereafter - th e . command . left for the 'South to aid In the work.of -recon-. struction. taking station In .the vicinity, of New Orleans. There-it remained until December, 1865,: US, A. OK)MAb COM* TtCTOBIAt StWKC mOTO When it left for California, via the Istiimus of Panam af Jt took station a t the Presidio of San Francisco on January 22, 1866. From this time until the outbreak of the war with Spain In 1898, the regiment remained In the West,; scouting and fighting Indians from the Pacific coast to. Oklahoma, its unties pracjicany the same us they had been: during the interval between; the Mexican and Civil wars. Engage-- nlents were fought with every important tribe of red men—and at times the troopers were -even ,engaged In roundiiig up horse thieves who practiced, tbeir trade along the RIo Grande. In the Spanish-American war, the regiment took part in the Battle of • Santiago,'; and later rendered;;a .glorious account of itself in the Philippines during the insurrections. Since the' war with Spain,-the command has -. soldiered extensively in the Philippine-islands and the western United States, it was on bor der ,duty during 1916, 1917, and 1918. Its service during the period has been generally without striking historical significance, but the organiza tion has nevertheless 'occupied an important place .In : our ’national defense system. In the performance of its routine garrison duty and on maneuvers, it has upon many occasions drawn the praise of high commanders and inspectors. AfterHthe sad ceremony which took place at . Fort D. ,^4. Russell, this historic regiment was transferred to Fort ,-Knox, Ky.. -to become a part of the mechanized force of the army which for some .tinfe has been experimenting a t Fort Eu- stis, Vai; with the latest developments in tanks andftmtnCjrfea cars.- This- was In; line with the War.department’s desire to maintain the cavalry In its role as the fastest-moving fighting force . and it was believed that it could best be dene by replacing; horses with high-speed cars. This does not necessarily: mean, however, that the cavalry charger will be entirely eliminated from our military establishment of the future. . In fact, ;it wonid appear from a study of past ex- periehce that , there-will, always be; special, sit uations in which the mounted soldier w ill, be needed. Man and' horse caii get through and gain information when other means are blocked.. The airplane is helpless in a fog, for instance. Nor can thoroughly effective reconnaissance be accomplished without the aid of the horse In exceedingly mountainous terrain. AU this would indicate'the retention of the horse for some military purposes and that mounted troops, in smaller numbers) will be available for scouting, at any rate. In the. broader - field of tactical usefulness, however, the horse cannot compete with the newer mechanical weapons. The speeding ar mored car, for ground reconnaissance, can cover much greater distances in quicker time. . With the development of more effective weap ons, the horse has lost its “shock power” In operating against either mounted or dismounted enemies. There are too many machine guns, auto matic rifles-and quick firing artillery guns to permit such close contact, and the horse offers a larger target than the man on foot. Gas, too, is a potent- weapon against the horse. It Is too expensive to completely cover an animal with gas-proof cloth and there are gases now which inflict deep burns at the slightest exposure. Ever slnce the British launched the first Iand- ships or “tanks” (as they were originally Damcd to mislead spies) many military, experts ,have been looking t toward a mechanized cavalry, mounted on mechanical steeds, still carrying on its traditional roles of distant reconnaissance, pursuit, surprise attack and last-minute reserve, hut. covering more ground in less time, striking with more force and power and with fewer risks and greater protection than the horse offered. _ Bnt the World war tanks were incapable of i-arrying out such assignments. Some power they enjoyed, but- mobility, the prime essential of cavalry, they, lacked. The light tank, for in- ’ stance, maneuvered across country at the rate • of three to four miles an hour. After ten miles it ran out of gasoline, and, what was even worse, it usually had to go back to the shop for over haul after a comparatively short trip. The heavy tank, carrying - the tremendous weight of 44 ■ tons, lumbered along at a maximum rate of ■ five and a half miles an-hour, and often bogged down In -Its ■ own tracks. > . Today, however, the ordnance department has given the American. fighting forces a light ex-, 'perimental tank -capable of operating on the road at 25 miles an hour, across country at 18 miles an hour; 60 miles on. one filling of gaso line. and more than 2,000 miles before major overhaul becomes -necessary.. And all this has heeii'accomplished without increasing the light tank of seven and a-half tons by a single pound. - Besides tanks and vesicles of its type, a mechanized force calls for armored cars, wheeled ■ vehicles armored and armed with machine guns only. For. long-distance reconnaissance, ps- -trols and raids, such vehicles are held indispen sable; and the time .may not be far distantiWhen ' they will replace entirely that faithful compan ion of our trbopers, the. cavalry. charger, .,who - helped push-back the frontier In the conquest of America.,(S br-WeoterwNelWBPRPerUnIon.* ■ : GivingVarietyto Fish on the Menu Since fish is now served more or less frequently, It is important for the housewife to know how to pre pare and serve it ■ in a variety of ways. It is thus that she provides menu3 free from monotony even though such food appears'often. Fish that is of fine rich flavor should not have its taste impaired by too nignly seasoned sauces, while those that are -rather lacking in flavor should be accompanied by fish sauces. Salmon, 'once a choice fish, has lost prestige somewhat through its prevalence in ’canned goods. It lends itself to so many different ways of preparation, that homemakers are apt to use it too often. This should be guarded against, and other kinds of fish be more frequently, intro duced. - Fish . Pudding. Two cups of finely minced fish, previously, boiled and iiaviDg skin and bones removed, I cup highly seasoned white sauce, % cup mashed potato,' also highly- seasoned with salt and pepper, % teaspoon onion juice, Ti teaspoon minced parsley, I tablespoon grated carrot, I table spoon minced ■ celery, 3 eggs. Mix all ingredients except the eggs. Beat the mixture well. Add the beaten egg yolks, and lastly fold in the stiffly beaten egg whites. Pour into a buttered baking dish, and bake in a moderate oven for.20 m inntes. Brown- under ,the heat. Grated cheesy can be spriD kied on top of th e pudding. Baked fish is improved in flavor: if it has a well-seasoned stuffing pressed into the cavity and then se cured with a few stitches taken in the cut edges of the fish. Oysters may be added to the crumbs.- They improve the flavor. An interesting garnish for whole fish is. made of circles of lemon slices dipped in minced parsley. Put radish roses with these parsley lemons.- © . 1933. B e ! ! S y n d i c a t e . — W N T J S e r v i c e . AlWAYSOHE D G E PUZZLED 'S p l i t t i n q " H e a d a c h e s # /n fc 7 she.learned vhy ehe wa3 always €/###// miserable — and found out about NR Tablets (NaturetSRemedy). Nowshe geta along fine with everybody. Thk safe, depend* . able, all-vegetable laiative brongbt quick relief and quiet nerves because it cleared her system of poisonous wastes—made bowel action easy and regular. Thousands take NR daily. It's such a sure, pleasant corrective. Mildt non-habit^- forming. No bad after- effects. At your ^ ' * J druggist’s—25c. "T U A A S " Wanted—500 Acents, Distributors, amaz* ing fuel-less, flameless cigarette lighter;' send 25c sample, wholesale prices. Hurri* cane Lighter. Inc^ Suite C411, 320 Sth Ave.. New York. x • f BAYERBAYER fThe popularity of Bayer Aspirin is due in large measure its speed. There is no quicker form of relief for a bad headache, neuralgia, neuritis, or other severe pain. But even, more important is its safely. Anyone can take Bayer Aspirin. It does not depress the heart. It does not upset the stomach. No one need ever hesitate to take Bayer Aspirin be cause of its speedy action. Its rapid relief is due to the rapidity with which tablets of Bayer manufacture dissolve. YourCould take them every day in the year vrithout any ill effects. For your pocket, buy the tin of 12 tablets. For economy, bottles of 100 at the new reduced price. And Bayer has SpeedI °"l™«E RU, 0I| m CALUMET IS THE BEST BUY! s better baking / YOU USE LESS AND NOW... /reduced IN PRICE - *■ w , ill I i l W km RECORD, MOCKSVILLE, N. C. D o es -H e K n o w !ByOibMMT H E F E A T H E R H E A D S r So TH*T‘S IT? L . >jjejLL., ....HAVE-THEtCKgT 'Joss 6oT FoR PARKINg- VJHt/ I PItMjTHeaaDEARi I WAS POWW ToWH HERE-ANP I ThouCHT i'o p ro p m to see V ou- No? ViiELivVreuj*. OH, a y THE. WAV’ Dtp V otl CoM B I COOVS• /o u r . w i f e t o see voo, w*,FEAfHeRHEAO1 - J H A T R f i A S O f Js& MlCft OP MiDU- HOW MUCH MONBY PO SJ5U WANT? A t , ALi-S DOWM BY _ TBbLLBY? ; > ^ i r J lN N E Y O F T H E F O R C E !^ 2 J S f5 S R O L U O !! R Q t u e l H E R E R O t L p / / / S e -wiixli P o Y f iZ MFAM „ THAT.fr HERE, HERE.! WHUT'5 Trt' JDBA OF MAKlN' AtL THIS NOISE? WANT To WAKB EVERY BUDDY UP ? OVJ- SmFpt jMwie- jvty p&OIV VO&<3\Bz IS LOST-I'LL OVB -TeN POLLARS QS-4T HlM: BACK. ROUOji Ro l lo J HBBE POLLO!! My P 06 HAS SLIPPED ourOF= HIS COLtAI^ AtlO RtW AWAY OH, ROLLOJ ROLLO / / Our Pet PeeveAlong the Concrete I IPOMTUUE •© VWBAB gUPPE« 0IUR SlPEWAUiS IfiQHVM Mfe-W/.'SAAt QO KM SMELL '!JIHAT I PO/, o J // ^ SORT OF I (Cw*T7tiW. W. K. v.>.. B O B B Y T H A T C H E R — A G r e a t S u r p r is e . . . B y G E O R G E S T O R M v z m m .I HOPS B O B S / WILL B a G lAD T O S E E HIS .S'ST E P ANO HIS O l-O AUMT HE’LL. BE S U R P R IS E D TO FlMO WE'RE. MOVING TO JOM ESBORO B o e s y !GOSH! A Uht f tV e a lw a y s S A tb A c?«c»wiN’ b o / o u c h t a , f. « HAVE SOME WOMEM iPOLK&TO LOOK APTER H IW i '■ MICHTy GLAO Y outeE coMim’ HERS: T O S rrA y^lT tu.. e e -Tlts eiTVfe LOSS BUT jOMBSBORO’S O AIM, MRS. BAJCTER.. BOBBY HBREte WORKBO FOR « S CC -' “ OW T v O iV E A R S ifrW ^r V O d f^SAV' IT -MYSELfi i\IB T R ie o tb TiseAT HlAA L ik e A SOM, A M p s e t exA m p l e O f h o r e s t / b e f o r e 193^ b y T b e B ^ U S y n d i c a t e , t n e . ) S sM A T T E R P O P - - O o m p ! H e S h o w ed O n e O f T h e m , A n y h o w !B y C . I ^ P A Y N E vV eij Y o u -HAv =T^iVE. oe.w S& s-'Si 6-*JT Tt=XJC-H-, T -A a ts.44 e.'A -Am® d M S - t. IMT w h e n ;K lS M d u n iT-HlW^S I VoWi ^ 5 3 © The Bell Syndicate. Inc ) G E O R G E W A S H I N G T O N ’S T f e A V K T S i » By * James W. Brooks 1H£ FpAhWUN VUnSON •=■ CopjrrijIit 1930 it Jiait V. Jntb A n a i ^ t o R M t m I t ; V i ' : . - ' Peaceful moiw vecnon Mosf tuvE BttN a "heaven jbe, vwswNarSM in TWOSE OAVs Ante. THE WftaiBUT REnstMEHT FROM ftJBUC MFE WAS W - TO BE H\3 , He-WASONE OF TOOSE WrtO FBAMEO THE OJtBrtTUtlON OF THE. : UNlTfcP STSlta AND. VWS THE RfiST TB SIGN THAr COOOHOtC AHO TfiENr THE Fiesr WESlPEKf OF tWE ONntO STATES / SoB&WlRHJ-V TXjUNG V£AV/t OF HS AGpO. MOWER, AT FKEDEiactlaBOKQ, YIH06& OA* WECE NOHBEeEP HE douftNEYEO TRlOMPHAtW-Y TB HEW VBBJi Ta 66 SWWrt lit AT FEOECAU HAU-Ott APWL 30,1789. Hl5 PWWmflAL. . • BE3I0EMC& WAS TVE f BAHWJM MANSION. Historically Comet bkrtehe* . Br CALVIN FADER The. Mrmioh Hoose . BfiMowAy N Y. On OCtOSEfi- l5.fl89W6rtlN<JTt>N BEGAN ATtXId OF THE EASTettIi “STATES. HE LATER MAOE A soui Hech -RiOB.. The Pobpose Sf these Trips w s Tb Fmo cot how the people. uwa> tim e. > MESK eoVESMMEKT. (T WAS INDEED ASWHT FOB. THE CClWJTfW FOLKS TO SEE TltE COACH OF Tttt pee9l0ew^ me ONtfEO s^lte “ * colWMa Thfi^H the! S , I L w m S iBEACtlEO SosrtJHi THE eovECtoC. OF MASSACrt0Sen& couwo MOT MEET him 0E<»O3E i3F A5UPK6ED THAY'jOF-ASWTt OovtBNOlt-AtroSO H i HAO Un .Irani uAij’WAii J .i •’f ’ : M- ” ■ - i 't ' a Ma r . ^ d a g ^5^ ^ a a g a y , . John Hmcoc *. WOMEN “STARS” OK , JF IE L D AlND t r a c k O lym pic Competition ReaIj G reat Spectacle. No ,(Joubt about it, tlie Teioiair side of tlie Olympic track ana flei! competition added a touch to th- great International spectacle that J* Jacking until the bars were let (W* at Amsterdam four years ago. se° enteen countries sent women'athfej.' to compete in track and field, swim ming,'-fencing and gymnastics at Loj Angeles, and thousands wondered bfr fore the. games were finished wb» these modern Amazons have been classified as the weaker sex. China, Turkey and India Stiii cloister their -womenfolk, but there was a sprinkling of entrants froa, Europearn countries; and .Iapan fflllr shaled a -formidable array for thj feminine activities. The (Jaiieij States has lagged in its development of women’s sports, aside from swim ming, blit the rise of such a super" star as Mildred Didrikson, of Dalia. Texas, promises to m ate up fnp i^J time. SIiss Didrikson, who prefers to be called “Babe," qualified to com- pete in three track and field events —the 80-meter hurdles, javelin ana discus throws. And' yet there is a physical side to the women’s track and field com- petition 'a t Los Angeles which arouses serious doubt as to the wis. dom of their participation. Olympic rules are strict, and no alternates are allowed. Thus the three gMj chosen In the various events eoald . not be expected to step aside, even though the rules of health and com. mon sense should dictate their with, drawal. Regardless of the physical side, however, it' is quite clear that women's athletics have come to stay, even though some of us would have it otherwise.—Boston Tran script. - POISON in Your bowels! ; Poisons absorbed into the system... from souring waste in the bowels, - cause that; dulli -headachy, sluggish, bilious condition; coat the tongue; , foul the breath; sap energy, strength ’ and nerveJb'rce. A little' of Dr, ■ Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin will cleat up trouble Eke that, gently, harm lessly, in a hurry. The difference il will make in your feelings over night ■ will prove its merit to you. D r. Caldwell studied constipation' for over forty-seven years. ThU long experience enabled him to maie his prescription just what men, women, old people and children need to make their bowels help themselves. Its natural, mild, thorough action and its pleasant taste commend it to • everyone. T hat’s why “Dr. Caldwells Syrup Pepsin,” as it is called, is th® m ost popular laxative drugstores sell, D r . W. B. C a l d w e l l ’ s SYRlIP PEPSWA Doctor’s Family Laxative AT TH E FIRST SNEEE USE Mblii IiIGKT AND HORNING E s s e n c e of MislJjf o n y o u r handkerchj" a n d PILLOW & s m GUARANTEED V C 7 VM h RELIEF FOR C o l d ' S o r e s , , s c r a t c h e s . Stings. * B i t e a , M u c k S o r e s . B u r n s , C h a p p e d ^ T w o S i z e s — S O c & $1.00 i i r e p a i d . G u a r a n t e e d o r m o n e y r e f u n d ^ ; .V A t I G H A N - M A L O O F f .J*. O. Bor 3011. _ - • Bryson t«r» I G d t i y p p ib o f K e r y o u . , Heed promptly bladder ir«= ularities, getting up at nig and nagging backache, j " / may warn of some disorde _ (kidney or bladder condlJ1 I Users every where rel^ e Doan’s Pills. • Praised for mo« I than 50 years by grateful „ the countrv over. Sold b> druggists. - Pa W. N. U., ATLANTA, NO. 12'i-19» It h e d a v i e [Largest C irculation] Daine C ounty N e\ [l o c a l a n d p e r sop s. A- Stnoot, of Salisbj [town Friday. Mrs. J- C. Sainford Si] [afternoon in Salisbury j. -J Larew arrived hj I fro m a business trip tbrbj [C arolina. V iH. B. Bailey, of Ired| I was in town Jast week Iround- Harry Stroud, of Bre\| Itown aday or two last [ing court. j. M Smith. of-Fart [in town last week and t.skin with us. Mr. and Mrs. W. E i IrIredell county, were in | [ping Thursday. Clarence Craven wenl [Thursday to spent s«f I with H. S. Stroud. Mr. and Mrs. C. E. I Advance, were in tov I Friday afternoon Cashier J. H. L I Bifiik of Cooleemee, wI [ Friday on business. Rev. L. L. Smith, Is£ent several days in [ week attending court. J. M. Stroud and M.j I of County Line, were i I court visitors here ThuJ Miss LuciIe Horn, I n . C C. W ., Greensboi] I week-end in town with Mack Campbell, a stj [ C. State College, Ra! [last week in town with! Mr. and Mrs. Marsh I Lenoir, were guests of I I Rev. R-. C. Goforth a f| Iweek.''' . M r.'and Mrs. J. W l [Mrs. BessieJ-Craven Si Eafterpoon in Winston ; [ping. • . ■ V Attorney Sayden Bul I lorsville, wa& among thq [attorneys here during [ week. : Otfr old friend J. Edl I U’inston-Salem, was il : week .shaking'hands w | friends.1 t- 0 , Cl Austin, of St |o town Wednesday Sb Witji old friends who ar to see him. I Born, to : Mr. and Cole, at their, home on I street, W ednesday, M I s°n, Charlie; Mooney H. Everhardt1 of Je [ J- M.--W hitaker, of Ca among the cotirt visit I membered the editor I Mr. and Mrs. Chas. I Miss Caroline 7 Chej ry, \ Va., spent the.week en ives; in.Mocksville and W A NTE6 ^-A man local sales work-, Real for perisaneiit-connect wan, W rite,T. J Terr N..C-. General Deliver : . Rev. A. G. Loftin, pine, spent a short w Thursday on his way ■visit to-his daughters boro; : ? . The heavy frost and nesday morning is tho done much damage tc P?9r and otber:fruit tr iti bloom, ' - Sericea Lespedza, . Ceiitified, $2.00 per Ib u SvJe-- county.v You u 8 <^v1 Sanford’s store ^^ndrix store.! J. G. : -. Jv Co° ' ^ 8 t* sidewalk is I avanu^etw eei ?^3^alisbur^'' street: ,^reet >s being gradei street and adjoining the ty.on Salisbury street wfch . South Ma 1 ^ t b e r n Power towei a 8 »saa 8MBBSa ^ ^^/../:3B <me oaviE ReeeRgt n. t. MARCH 29, iq ^ the pavie record , Largest Circulation of Any Davie County Newspaper, local and PER sonal new s . s A. Smoot, of Salisbury, was in town Friday. Mrs. J- C. Sanford spent Friday afternoon in Salisbury shopping. I J Larew arrived home Friday from a business trip thrbngh Eastern Carolina- - - M. B Bailey, of Iredell county, vas in town last week courting a- ionnd. Harry Stroud, ol Brevard, was in town a day or two last week attend ing court. j JI Smith. of-Farmington, was in town last week and left a frog skin with us. Mr. and Mrs. W. E Smith, of Iredell county, were in town shop ping Thursday. Clareuce Craven went to Brevard Thursday to spent several days with H. S. Stroud. Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Faircloth, of Advance, were in town shopping Friday afternoon Cashier J. H. L Rice, of the Bank of Cooleemee, was in town Friday on business. Rev. L. L. Smith, of Hickory, sjient several days in town last week attending court. J. M. Stroud and M. L Godby. of County Line, were among the court visitors here Thursday. Miss LuciIe Horn, a Senior at R C C-W., Greensboro, spent the week end in town with her parents. Mack Campbell, a student at N. C. State College, Raleigh, spent last week in town with home folks. Mr. and Mrs. Marsh Goforth, ot Lenoir, were guests of his brother, Rev. R. C. Goforth a few days last week. . ■'r* " V Mr. and Mrs. J. W. W all and Mrs. Bessie Craven spent Fridajr afternoon in Winston Salem shop ping. i A Attorney Hayden Burke, of Tay lorsville, was among the out-of town attorneys here during court last week. ' v ' Our old friend J. Ed. Smith, of Winston-Salem, was in town last week shaking'hands with his many friends, i. 0. C. Austin, of Statesville, was In town Wednesday shaking' bands with old friends who are always glad to see him. I Born, to Mr. and Mrs. James Cole, at their home on Wilkesboro street, Wednesday, March 22nd, a son, Charlie Mooney Cole, H. Everhardt, of Jerusalem and ]. M. Whitaker, of Calabaln, were among the court visitors who re membered theeditor last week. Mr, and Mrs.- Chas. Hendry and Miss Caroline’Cherry, of Marion. Va., spent the-week end with relat ives in Mocksville and Salisbury. WANTED-4A. man with car for local sales work-. Real opportunity for permanent’connection for right “ an, WriteiTi J Terrell, Hickory, N. 0. General Delivery. Rev. A. G- Loftin1 of Glen Al pine, spent a short while in town Thursday on his way home from . a visit to his daughters at Greens boro. The heavy frost and ice last Wed- uesday morning is thought to have done much damage to. the peach, Pear and other.-fruit trees that were bloom. „ Sencea Lespedza, Scarified and vertified, $2.qo per lb. Grown in Uavie county.. You may secure seed at Sanford’s store, also Frank ePdi ix store. J. G. Crawford. fij Cooleemee, N. C ., Ai new sidewalk- is being built on I aPle avanue’-between South Main snIf; Salisbury'" streets. A new ?treet is being graded connecting ,Salisbury street and South Main street, adjoining the Booe- proper- tV °n Salisbury street and connect- “ S wtth South Main near the .,Southern Power tower. P. R. Kimbrough, of Atlantal’is spending, a few days in towd with relatives and friends. We saw three state highway pat- rolemeii in (own one day last-week. Something unusual to meet up with even one of these boys in Davie county. ?■ • Mary Elizabeth, little daughter of Mr. and Mrs Boone Stonestreet, underwent au operation for append icitis at Long’s Sanatorium. States ville, Friday. She is getting along uicely. • Rev. W-. I. Howell, pastor of the Presbyterian church, underwent an operation for appendicitis at Long’s Sanatorium. Statesville Friday. His friends hope for bjm -a speedy recovery., JUST R E C E IV E D -B ig line of ladies aud children’s spring oxford’s which we are selling at very low prices. Call and see them. I. FRAN K H EN DRIX . v Will Goslin of the Union Re publican, was in town one day last week on bis way to Statesville ob business. Mr. Goslin is one of the owners and manager of one of the best Republican papers in the south. About 30 Boy Scouts enjoyed a delighttul goat barbecue supper Saturday evening at the Scout headquarters in the Methodist church basement. Two young goats were donated to the Scouts by C. 'G. Woodruff. The barbecue was prepared at Rich Park but ,the inclement weather caused the sup per to be served in the Scout head quarters. We thought the groundhog, was dead last week bnt he wasn’t. A big two hour snow visited this sect ion Saturday morning, followed by some sleet. The ground was warm and the snow melted as fast as it fell. Nearly everybody thought spring had arrived, and the coal dealers were kept busy filling empty coal bins " It’s an ill wind that blows nobody good.’-’ ' Eastern Star Officers In? stalledThursday Night. New officers of the lpcal EaBtern Starwereinstalled Thursday even ing. The installation was public and about 75 members and guests were present for the oocasion. Mrs Mar jorie Hogan, of Charlotte, Grand Matron, was present and had charge of the installation. Following is the Iist^nf new officers; W. Matron—Mrs. Veieria Hall. - Worthy Batron—W. J. Hunt. Asso. Matron—Mrs. Geneva Wat ers. Asso Patron—Koy Holthouser. - Sec.—Mrs. Ella Holthouser. " , T reas,-Mrs. Lizzie Tomlinson. Conductor—Mrs. Eleanor Hunt. ' Asso. Conductor.—Mrs. Florence Daniel. ’ Chaplain—Mrs. Ollie Stockton. Marshal—Mrs. Creola W ilson.;. ■ Pianist—Mrs. Helen Martin. . Adah—Mrsi Alma Young. Ruth—Mrs. Hazel Drewery. Esther—Mrs. Rena Sheek. Martha—Mrs. Jennie Anderson. Electa—Mrs. Mabe !Alexander. Warder—S rs. Ida Christian. Sentinel—H. C. Meroney. Fdllowingtheinstallation of offi cers a number of short addressei were heard. Delicious refreshments were served before adjournment. Dinner Party By Mrs. Alexander. Mrs. Mabel Alexander, Worthy Matron, of Mocksville chapter 178, 0. E S., was the charming hostess at Cooleemee honoring the Worthy Grant Matron of the Grand Chapter of North Carolina; and her patron, associate matron and associate pat ron. Spring flowers in the colors of the order made an attractive setting. The table was artistically arranged with its beautiful floral centerpiece of the emblematic star with lighted, tapers at the five points. Upon arrival.the guests were pre sented lovely corsage and buttoin- eers. A delicious three course ( ^ t ner was served to the following: Mr; H. B. Peeler, Charlotte, N, ^ Mrs Marjorie Hogan. Worthy Grand Matron, Charlotte; Mrs. Joyce: Find lator, associate grand conductress, Winston-Salem; Mr, Walter Hunt, worthy patron and Mrs. Hnnt, Mr. H.. B Hall and Mrs. Hall, associate matron and Mr. R. M. Holthouser, all of Mocksville. - Mrs Sarah Davis. ■ Mrs-. Sarah C Davis, 84 died at her bo ne 6t Fork Thu sday 'night following aa illness ot some time® Mrs. Davfs1 is survived by one daughter, Mrs. Lelia - Shugart,1 of Lexington; three sons,. j. M. and W. Henry Davis, of Fork; and John V. Dayis, of Kernersvllle. One brother, Prof. J. D, Hodges, " and one sister,-Mrs. C. A. Davis, both of Jerusalem—township, 'survive. Mrs. Davis has been a member of . day afternoon at i'o ’cldck. conduct ed by Rev. Mr. Hayes, of Lexingtoh and Rev; E. :W.i Turner, of Mocks ville.. Interment followed in the church graveyard.. M r\ Davis had many friends in Mocksville and throughout the county who were saddened by the news of her death. X Roads News. Mrs. S. Y. Boyd scent last Thurs day with her grand daughter, Mrs Felix Gabble. ... . , Mrs J. S. Holland has returned toFprk Baptist church for more than ,her home Jn Winston-Salem. fifty years; Funeral services were - m . E. Glasscock and family spent held at Fork Baptist chnrch Satur last Sunday with'M rs. Glasscock's I will m eet the taxpayers of Davie County at the fol lowing nam ed places and tim es for the purpose of collect ing 1932 .Taxes: FARM INGTON TOW NSHIP Monday, April 17th, Graham’s Store Monday, April 17th, Cook’s Store . Monday, April 17th, C D . Smith's Store Monday, April 17th, Tommy Hendrix’s Store 10 a. m. to 11:30 a. m. .1 2 m. to I p. m. 1:30 p. m. to 3 p. m. . 3 p. m. to 4 p. m. CLARKSVILLE TOW NSHIP Tuesday, April 18tb, Stanley's Stcre - Tuesday, April 18th, Enoch Bailey's Store Tuesday, April 18th, Four Cdfners Tuesday, April 18tb, Naylor's Store . 10 a. m. to Xl a. m 11a. m. to 12 m. 12:30 p. m. to 1:30 p. m. 2 p m. to 3 p. m. C ALAHALN t o w n s h ip Wednesday, April 19tb, Smoot’s Store . :. Wednesday, April 19tb, W. W. Smith's Store Wednesday, April 19th, Powell’s Garage Wednesday. April 19th, L. M. Tutterow’s Store. 9:30 a. m. to 10:30 a. m. 11 a: m. to 12 m. . 12:30 p. m. to 2 p. m 2:30 p. m. to 4 p. m. SHADY GROVE TOW NSHIP Thursday, April 20th, Lonnie Hendrix’s Store Thursday, April 20th, Robertson's Store . Thursday, April 20th, Bailey’s Store 10 m. to 11 a. m. 11:30 a. m. to 12:30 p. m. I p. ro. to 2:30 p. m. 3 p. m. to 4:30 p. m. 1:30 p. m. to 3:30 p. m. 4 p. m. to 9 p. m. FULTON TOW NSHIP Thursday,' April 20tb, A. M. Foster's Store JERUSALEM TOW NSHIP Tuesday, April 25th. Davie Supply .Co; . > Tuesday. April 25th, Cooleemee Drug Store Last round for 1932 Taxes. Please m eet m e at the a bove tim e and place and pay your 1932 Taxes and save additional costs. CHARLES C. SMOOT, SH ERIFF DA V lE COUNTY. New Wash Frocks Mind you . . . they are fashioned w ith the new , adorable puff or short, ruffled sleeves. Slim waisted w ith intriguing, crisp style details, you’ll look just lovely in them . - A colorfuI assortm ent in sizes for both Misses and W om en. See them . You’ve never : looked a t . .better values. IjL 50c to New Spring Shoes For Now A nd Later Fasicnating FOOTWEAR A delightful array of! Spring Style variations ,to please every taste. All theinew Spring Colors and Leathers. Every heel style. F ine selection of W hite Shoes. Buy your graduation Slioes^Early. 98c, to $3.95 C. C. Sarilord Sons Co. “Everything For Everybody” parents, Mr. and Mrs. Boyd Rollins. Mr. and Mrs. Ramond Lanier. Mr. and Mrs. Jim Link and daughter, of Lexington spent Sunday in this com- nunity. - ' ' - ~ ;- T. B. Lanier is moving near here t ie friends are glad to know. We are glad to learn that Miss Tempe Smoot will He able to come back to her school Monday morning which has been closed the past week; Mrs. Thomas Richardson is not im proving very much her friends'.are sorry to state. _ Dent Ijarnes is preparing for him a new home. ' Cherryand Gerry Cabell, twin daughters of Mr. and Mrs. J-. R Cafcell, ' of Salisbury, celebrated their 5th birthday Saturday with a party from 3 to 5 in the afternoon. Delicious refreshments were served the guests. Wbile you are wishing for child hood days again it is well to remem ber that you do not have to drink sasafras tea in the spring unless voii" want to. C H ER R Y BLO SSOM TIM E IN WASHINGTON Train Travel Bargain Fares Via Southern Railway System Saturday. Ap, ii 1st and 8tb Round Trip Fare QFrom MocksviIIe^Q QQ Proportiooate fares from otber North Carolina stations. TicKets on sale going trip April 1st and 8th, return limit leave Washing ton, D. C.. prior to midnight of April 2nd and 9th. NEW DEAL" EXTENSION FEATURE Tickets may be extended as long- 88 five days at fee $1.00 per day ticker. Reduced Round Trip Pullman Fares The Japanese cherry trees are bloom ing again along the historic Potomac. Don't Miss It This Spring. Tickets Good- On AU Trains Except CRESDENT LIMITED Consult Ticket Agents. R. H. GRAHAM. Division Passenger-Agent Charlotte. N. C. Drugs Drugs W e C a rry Alt AU Times J h e V ery Best In Drugs, Chemicals A nd Medicines. Let Us Know Your Needs. Let Us Serve You LeG iand’s Pharmacy- On The Square Phone 21 Mocksville, N. C. “THE SEED STORE” FARM AND GARDEN SEEOS Highest Purity-And Germination Red Clover White Clover Sweet Clover Alfalfa Clover Lespedeza Sudan Orchard Grass Herd Grass Ky Blue Grass Rye Grass Lawn Grass D. E. Rape Pasture. Grass Seed Corn Garden Seeds Fiuwer Seeds Good Seeds Low In Price This Year Mocksville H ard w are Co !SEED And FEED! I We Carry At AU Times | I A Complete Line Of Feeds For J I Cows, Hogs and Poultry I I Our Prices Are As Low As Any | t BUY YOUR FEED HERE AND SAVE * ★See us for any $ I kind, of G arden and Field Seed. O ur prices are right. * * : :-— — :------------------------------------ * * W e have a com plete line of SEED. See Us For Seed Potatoes, O nion Sets, C abbage Plants, Etc. 5 W e have plenty of R O O FIN G of all kind and lengths J * ----------------------r—-------- J I Plenty "of Wire and Fencing If •______— ---! -----------:— ? Come To See Us We Can Save You Money On Your Needs J “.On The Square” Mocksville. N. C. j N O W AN ADDITIONAL PENALTY W ill. GO ON ALL COUNTY TAXES AFTER APRIL k ' PAY NOW AND SAVE THIS EXTRA COST. CHARLES C. SMOOT SHERIFF Hlllllllllimillllllllin illlinTTTTTTTl I B i P ^ I S I g g S ,-JSPpISS® * W im ffiE DAVtE RECORD. MaCKSVftlE; ft. & M a rc A a ju g M Criticises Governor. I hope that every one who did not bear Governor Ehringhaus' speech to the legislature over the radio, read it in the papers Just think, the only reason Mr. Fountain isn’t governor today, is because people knew he was for sales tax and thought Ehringhaus was against one. Governor Ehringhaus told a close friend of bis before the election that "No mah in North Carolina could go into office on a sales tax platform.” He forgot to add that they could do as they pleased after they got in office. I did not vote for Governor Eh- ringhaus, because I went to hear a • campaign speech he made before a farm audience, in which he said, "I can sympathize with you farmers I know the condition you are in be cause Iam a farmer myself. Judge Meekin here, is also a farmer.” However, he failed to say that neither he or Judge Meekin were depennent on the farm for a living. The governor in speaking before the legislature said: ‘‘I do not ap prove of crippling the state depart ment’s highway or school system, in order to balance the budget I strinabe my ears to hear him say, I do not approve of crippling the tax pajeis further,' but no such luck, w hat I heard was, “I approve of a uniform sales tax which is adequate to take care of any shrinkage.” He had just as well said. I ha~e no ol - jectioii to your breaking the backs ot the tax payers, if that’s what it takes to balance the !budget. The Bible says that the people will cry out for bread and that they will give them a stone. Ont-‘hird of the people in North Carolina are crying out for bread and the governar of our great state is offering them an eight mon th’s schools, Np wonder when he made his choice between a sales tax and an eight months’ school he said, "And may Gad help me.” The saJdest thing about it all is that the people who are suffering most had nothing to do with getting the state in the condition it is in at present, and those who helped to get it in its present fix are still living on the fa.t of the land.—Mrs. G. B. Wal ters, in Charlotte Observer. - Slaps Tlie Mercliant Governor Ehringhaus has spoken. He adds his voice to the chorus that the sales tax is inevitable. He ap proves the appropriations bill recom mended by the joint committee, and warns legislators that they must not cutdeeperthanthey must not cut deeper than the figures named by that committee. The schools, he Bays, must be maintained to their present efficiency, even at the ex pense of misery from a sales tax, which he confesses he “loathes.” In a burst of eloquence he told the leg islators these things. Then the governor boldly strikes at the very thing that we have been talking about in these columns. . He says the flood of protest againBt the sales tax have come from those who will collect—the merchants and the middleman—rather than from those who pay. • He never spoke a greater truth, nor left a more insidious inference. No man knows better than the Governor of North Carolina that the man between the plowhandles and on the streets and at the lathe, has no time for lobbying and is not inclined to write lettera to his representa tives in the legislature. The merch ants have been- fighting his battle, and the merchants have no political significance; politicians have no fear of them in future elections—there are not enough of them. They can be shooed aside; with a wave of the hand-* Any straight-thinking man can see that while the merchants would be inconvenienced Jn acting as collector for the state, they can pass the sales tax on the tenant and widow. There fore their’s hns- been an unselfish fight, yet the Governor of North Ca rolina paused'; ipt-his foresicfury to slap them in hid face asa group of ingrates .'j . .Theschbol and highwaysystem of North Carolina'ihave the power and • influence to dictate to a successful conclusion any !governmental policy the chorse, because back to each are votes—Elkin Tribune. The Gold Leaf Farmer, of Weldon, N. C., says: ’’Judging.front the pictures we have, seen the latest styles show a good deal of girl but n it much else.” Any man who is nit satisfied with such styles is not entitled to be in the newspaper busi-1 ness. In fact he should not be per mitted to run loose,—Ex, Too Many Escapes. Fourteen convicts, described as ’ long termers and desperate charact ers” walked out of a state highway prison camp in Yadkin county the other night. Peace cfflcers have been hunting them. Two or three have been caught.' The others are wandering around, getting’ their food and shelter where they may. If they are the desperate characters they have been pictured, they will hesit ate at nothing to provide their needs Taking French leave is a more or less popular pastime for North Car olina’s criminals. Apparently they depart when the notion strikes. ' An accurate estimate of the actnal num- beofr escapes during the past couple! of years, just in North Carolina a- lone, would reveal alarming figures And practically all of the escapes have been dangerous criminals, d< perate characters. Apparently, no closer watch is kept on them than on the drunk who is serving the mini mutn sentence. The fourteen who left Yadkin camp the other night sawed a hole in the floor of the bunkhouse, right after supper. The where-abouts (f the guards, while all this was going on, haven't been revealed. Four teen men, crawling through the floor and dashing from the camp, surely made some sort of noise, if there had been somebody to hear it. But any way they went and now they are I jose on society, again. One of the convict w was wearing overalls, to cover his convict suit. But it’s hard to believe that a citi zen, or one who would call himself such, would voluntarily supply such aids to an abvious criminal. We can’t believe that the donation was voluntary, if it was a donation at all. A person who would help a criminal in his escape is as dangerous as a cri minal. j North Carolina citizens are entit led to better .protection against es caped convicts than they have been getting. Peace officers have their hands full catching new offenders, without having to run down and re capture those entrusted to the state’s care.—Twin City Sentinel. Got Them Fooled. Of all the joys known to man, that of running a country news paper is—some people think—the greatest. Nobody every comes a- round with pet ideas they want someone to put over; no one ever asks the paper to boost something which they think for the moment is RIGHT renardless of the other fellow’s ideas; no one ever hops on the editor because he ought to be running sixteen pages instead of eight so that eyerything that is of new value can be gotten m regard less of whether there are enough ads to pay for‘ but one or two pages; no one ever hops on -the editor because he doesn’t see things just like ioo per cent of the people who read his paper sees it; no one ever gets peeved at the editor of a country newspaper—no never. Heaven is going to be made up of newspapers, edited just like the beantifnl white winged angels want them—carrying such news and such features as the angels want carried —booking such things as are right in a way that angels should boost them qnd seeing things just like angels—which means that there will be no room m Heaven for anybody except people running newspapers. —Erevard Times. ...................... m i m i iiirmii in IiiiiiiiiiMMi- Iit- Cross crossings carefully and avoid that run down feeling Notice! Re-Sale Of Lot. By virtue of an order made by the Clerk of the Superior Court. I as commissioner. will resell to the highest bidder at the court house door in Davie county, for cash, at 12 o'clock m , on Monday.- AnriI 3rd 1933 the property described below; a ten per cent bid having been placed upon same; this is known as the Charlie Brown cafe lot. and is bounded as follows; Locat ed near, the Depot, oeginning at a stone. Southeast corner of the original Jesse Clement lot near the old well, thence N one chain to a stake: thence West SO feet to a stone in R. M. Foster line; thence South one chain to a stone, R.'M. Foster’s corner in side of Depot street; thence to the beginning corner. Thls lot is sold for partition among the. heirs of J. W. Martin, dec’tf. This Maroh’TStb IS 9Sr* A. T. GRANT, Commissioner - GRANT & MORRIS. Attys. ‘ Patronize Davie County And Help Your County Grow And Prosper W e carry a big line of Feeds, Flour and . M eal. W h y n o t patronize Davie county mill® and keep your m oney at home.' W e are still buying cotton and paying highest m arket prices fo r same; W e w ant you to call and see us w hen you come to town. W e will always, treat you right. Green Milling Co. F. K .BENSON, Manager Near Southern Depot Mocksville, N. C. M m uiinw niiiiim um iiM iIIiitinih t,I; -aa-ti<"t"l"l"i"i"i M R. FARM ER! We are in a better position to handle;; Y ourCottonThanEverBefore W e A ppreciate Y our Business FOSTER & GREEN .Near Sanford Motor Co. ******l*»»»H C. C. Y O U j N G & SONS FuneralD irectors A m bulance Service ^ ^ Day or Night Phone 69 - ^ — Mocksville, N vQ, SEE USHRST. Let The Record print your Envelopes, L etter H eads, Statem ents, Safe Notices, Cartes, Tags, Etc; Prices low. ' THE DAVIE RECORD. » » HhIii1i» » » » » » » » » » » » » » » » » D A V IE CAFE RK. M A N O S r PROP. - Next Door to Postoffice and Just as Reliable REGULAR DINNERS 35c :: AU Kinds O f Short O rders A t Any Tim e In T he Day »»♦»»■»»»» » » » »1.1,,!, » .l.»» ,i„l, lt, Hi» » » »»» N*»»» » * » » » » » »»i| ,» » iii»iji4 SEM I-PASTE PAINT One.Gallon Makes 2 1-2When Mixed ■ K U R F E E S JT W A R D LET US DO YOUR JOB PRINTING THIS YEAR. * * * * * * k * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * ^ ^ ^ * ^ * * * K * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * . Our prices on all kinds of printing is the lowest in many years. We use the best inks, the. best envelopes^ letter heads, statements, etc., to4b§: had for the price. Let’s talliSit over. U S E C O O K rS G G G Relieves LaGrippe, Colds, Coughs, Sore Throat and Croup. . . In Successful Use Over 30 Years DR. E.C. CHOATE D ENTIST OfficeSecond FloorFront __ - New Sanford Building OfficePhonellO Residence Phone 30. Mocksville. N. C. tw r i" ItMiMMiMiiMiittmiiiiiiiiuit^ BEST IN RADIOS Y O UNG RA D IO COi MOCKSVILLE. N. C. BEST IN SUPPLIES Send us your subscription and receive a 1933 Blum rS A lm anac free. Don’t w ait too long. - WANTED! We want the in; portant news hap. penings from every section of the coun. ty. Dropus a card or Ietterif a newvoi ter arrives at home; if your moth er-in-Iaw comes on a visit or dies; if the son or daughter gets married or anything worth mentioning, -O ld papers for sale. ihi iu n Titn IirrTtHTTTTTTTtTrnntiTTm irT.......htittttttittihttitii iiiiii im iiiii mmnm CAM PBELL - W A LK ER FUNERAL HOME AMBULANCE " EMBALMERS T elephone 48 Main Street Next To Methodist Church m iim m m m iitHTmrttiiiiTiiiinnTiiHTTTTTTTTTmnrTTTtm n m m iiiiimiiiiiiiii mm r « * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * « * - « * * * * * * * * * M [ * M « i ** I Keeping Davie People Informed of - * % I ' > AU H appenings In T he County Is The Mission Of Your County Paper ^ » » » * ,» » » » » » .» » » » » » l» » » » » » » i|i» ^ TIE DAVlE RECORD. The kind of news YOU w ant. . things that are of :»* • • ’ ' -W I interest to ALL people of ★ • . s • ■ • • '* ■ ■ r ■ ••• I the County, what is going J I on, what has happened, ★ j where to buy the best for Jr I the least money . . * I brought to you each week ★ f $ for the nomical charge of j J 1," / i .00 P e r Y ear M i .< p.-’-'-......... ........ r.. -. ,L-.....'-.. . - P1 ****** VOLUMN XXXIV. W m OF LOj WhSt W as Happening I . TheJOay* o f Antomobij H ose.I (Davie Eeiwrd1 Mad Mrs. John Tatum, visited, her parents in J week. . Mr. ana Mrs. R babe spent Tuesday day in Winston-Salen boro. j. L- Sbeek and Hl made a business trijj last-.week. pisses Henietta and son spent Wednesday shopping C. B. Leonard has I G ; W - Green resided stree(-arid has moved | Mocksville. .,!Mri and Mrs. W. Rajeigb, were here la te|d the funeral; of I father, Mr. James Co Miss Louise WilliaJ beien at borne for weeks recovering frotj measles, returned to I last week to resume . Edgar Green, of-. -Vi ':. r-. .Hasbeen in town for i week looking after hi! tate here,- Iett WednJ bdme.< • ; C. M. -Griffin, of has-been visiting rela Simejtime, returned bl Mr. and Mrs. Cl Thursday- night for i Indrj; where-they will futnire homer “ IM i^JuUa EeoDWi I ls tbe gnest of Miss ..Mrs. Kershaw, of Y., who has been visitj Mis. .W. A.-Griffin, last ..week. ■ • .. .Mr.-.and; Mrs Dd of Indiana,-, are spend on.Ru-3, with relatid Zantriwill likely rnofl ville in the near futv G,; W. Ratledge, al the Florida East Ca and, .who lives at . Kei returned home Tlj visiting his father, J | on R. i. : Mr. and Mis. j. turned last-week frod trip throughEIorida. I 40 acre tract of Jand j the Indian River. We-tOok-.a:lookthJ resfdenceiof T. L. Sb MocksvilleThursdad new home will, contj with running.water 1 propf , cedar ward rob ing_doors and all me enceg.^. ■Lj. .Frank-Sjonestl salesman for the Kuq Louisville, spent Sun folks on R.. S-. Miss Elv.a -Click number of friends at| Jerjchq Thursday m J Miss Sjisan Mqore. The graded schooll tains the names of I students for week- '5tn:‘" Sixjth .'grade SalIieWhitley- ErnJ Mary - Meroney, RuthJRod Wellj Ivie l| grade—Mary Stoc SnJiHj1 Janet Stewail fiu^Kate Rollins, ClJ Frank Williams. %atr*ce Linvllle, I-Hornr !Euth I Ninth grade- Jha Call,,, Mard SarolynMil^r. Tame Rollins, EdnaStewaiI TrrRose Owens, F | MartS^ Clement, Lonnie Call, Rebecc Ui#Allison, Abram ] 'r John H .: Cl^tchjsgction^d’??;