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08-August
s s s W l i£^it^SSSsl !adversary speaks Wen I lm over very d “ |efore saying “yes-. checks MALARIA in 3 day* COLDS flrrt day, TONic-Snd laxative |mii)iiin Ii i Himmttaa. IN RADIOS Ig radio co. I ksville. n. c. I IN SUPPUES -TTTITTTT'...................... LL HOME BMBAJaMERS !Church — Liiti.iiiiMiiiiiinnmaaB, day for I 2 PER MILE )ACH TICKETS yeled. i Limit 15 Days veled. i Limit 6 Months I'eled. veled lent of proper rcharge. ad using the Southern e |nn Travel. Charlotte, N. C. Jystem e d l e s t , M o s t P a p e r [ u n t y . Inly e a r . tion To Your In Distant ’hey Will IyNews Iome County ICORD Features jndjin Any County, ispsiflispl - ,a ” v S il0 W W e o fe fe O f t e b U t h * W te L A Iie tS T IN T H E , COUNTY. TH EY DOITT LIE. % “HERE SHALL THE PRESS. THE PEOPLE’S RIGHTS MAINTAIN: UNAWED BY INFLUENCE AND UNBRIBED BY GAIN.” VOLUMN XXXVII.MOCKSVTLLE. NORTH CAROLINA, WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 7, 1935 NEWS OF LONG AGO. m , Wa. H appening In Davie Before The Day* of Automobile, and Rolled Ho<e. (Dlvie Record. July 2 7 , 1910J j a. Daniel spent Wednesday in Uinston on business, Harrv Little, of Hickory, spent Sunday in town E C- Lagle made a business trip to Winston Saturday. JIrs J. T. Parnell is seriously ill with fevei at her home on Salis bury street. Hiss Mary Heitman spent one day last week in Winston shopping. Luther Leary, of Morehead City, spent last week In town with -Rev. and Mrs. C. S. Casbwell. Tbe editor spent several days last week with relatives at Lincolnton. JIiss Aneta Miller returned Thur sday from a with friends in Char lotte. - ' Mrs. J. B- Johnstone and son Knox, spent Thursday in Winston slopping- Miss Daisy Hampton went over toElkin last week to spend several days with relatives. Work has been delayed on the Masonic temple, on account of hav ing to wait for brick, but work will be pushed from now on. Misses Josie Prather, of Mt. Airy, HalMorrison. of Statesville, and Agnes Speight, of Roper, were bouse guests of Miss Mary Sanford last week. ProL J. D. Hodges and Roscoe Stroud Idt Monday for Raleigh to attend ffie State meeting Of ,the. Patmet1S Union as delegates. Sev- eral other members are also attend ing, among them the editor of The Record. Wanted—Some young men to lo cate in Moeksville. Our young Ia- diesoutuumber the boys five to-one. N. T. Foster, of this city, is very III with fever. T. P. Foster, the good looking farmer on R. 4, made 107 bushels ot wheat on 4 acres of land this year. Misses Helen Patterson, of Con cord, May Dorsett, of Greensboro, Eva Poindextor and Gertrude Horn, of Winston, are attending a bouse party at Mrs. R. P. Ander son’s this week The 32nd annual Masonic picnic comes ofi this year on Aug.. nth. Au excursion will be run from Winston as usual. Mr. Charlie Allen and Miss Dovie' Xttrfees, both of near Holman ,- were united in marriage in this tlty Wednesday by Rev. C. S. t Uashwell, and left that afternoon for a bridal drip to Richmond and ether points. The big Farmers' picnic was Heiid M Center last Thursday, Dr. Alex ander. of Charlotte, President of •heN. C. Farmers’ Union, deliver^ cd a splendid address.-- A bounte ous dinner was enjoyed by the large crowd present. Will Haper, of Kappa, is Iook- I11EsohIgh he can’t see the roads; lost drives across the fields and was seen eating green apples that don’t 8eLtlpeuntil IanuarV- It’s a boy.' Miss Annie Moore shot and kill- erself at the home of her moth- et' rs- Cornelia Moore, near Har C|tfV’ wednesdaV morning. - Mrs. George Livengood died Sun- aV afternoon at her home three m'fos south of Advance. - zrani ;-,M°Ck' oi Advance, was Men!!!!!- ense t0 P«ach by the 55£LD‘« 'i« c-fa** Salem.met recently at Winston-. to print y°u * • M- S m U a and Vilie. k " S Elean°r. of Louis- reiaHvJin nh° haVe beCn Vls5ting laatw Jk returned home Gives Political Views. ‘ President Roosevelt will, receive less than 5 0 electoral votes in No vember, 1936, and he will be unable to carry North Carolina,” Robert L. Lovelace, of Elkin, predicted while a visitor in Greensboro recent- ly. -V- I amlookingfor a complete, over turn next "year iu North Carolina,” continued Mr. Lovelace in response to questioning. ‘ There is every in dication that we are going to; have in 1936 the strongest resurgence of Republican doctrine in North Caro Iina and elsewhere in the nation since the days of Abraham Lincoln It is my confident expectation that Republican victories next year will include a return to power in the- state government as well as nation ally.” Mr. Lovelace readily qualifies as a man who has devoted some active attention to politics. Last year he was the Republican' nominee for state senator in the 23rd district,: composed of Surry and Stokes coun ties, and Republicans say that he. reduced the Democratic majority in that district very materially. V While in the city the Elkin man called on Jfames S. Duncan, Greens, boro attorney, former state senator and former Republican state chair man, and he chatted w'ith a number of other friends here. He did hot attempt to conceal his keen interest in the political situation and ■ he promptly asserted his faith in ‘‘the early return of the country to - Re” publican leadership.” :v ;V- State politics also received^hftenv. tion from the visitor when he -was" interviewed. . “I.'dm for Gliiford Frazier, of Greensboro, for governor of North CaTolin a and hope that he will be nominated again in 1936 ,” said Mr. Lovelace. ‘‘He made a vigorous and statesmanlike cam paign in 1932 and in the event of his selection as our standard bearer next year he should be elected. He is eminently fitted for the high office of governor. He is a man of ex ceptionally large caliber and he will not desert bedrock principles. There also is strong sentiment for Frank C, Patton, of Morganton1 for gover nor. He is considered a very able young leader and has a strong fol-" lowing ” Mr. Lovelace nroclai thcd hi mself strongly in favor of the re-election of Charles A. Jonas, of Lincolnton, former member of.the national house of representatives and former Uni ted States district attorney, as Re publican national committeeman from North Carolina. "He is a worthy leader, tried and true, and he will not surrender to the forces of expediency,” the visitor main, t lined. " - Although he modestly refrained; from discussion of the matter, Mr. Lovelace is being mentioned in poli tical speculation as a potential Re publican candidate for lieutenant governor of North Carolina in 193®:. His friends isay that in the event of his nomination be will UnQuestlon' ably make a vigorous campaign. Reverting to the national situa tion, .Mr. Lovelace declared himself quite apprehensive over ‘ ‘alien in fluences which have been making; themselves felt in high places re^ cently. "“ We are in a hell of a fix.’’ he Said, disclaiming any intention to be really profane but seeking to place emphasis on his conviction that “very-vital changes are very vitally needed,’ ’ and that some of the trends witnessed in this country during the last few vears impel serious consideration. . S ’ “ When we try to m ake the United Statas constitution elastic 11 ls a daiigerous condition” the Elkln man asserted.. “That sacred'document is intimately related to the sound development of the country over a . . — and we must going to haven, rebirth of constitutional government reflecting the principles enunciatec by Lincoln. Manyof theudeastba£ are seeping into the government arej communistic and alien in character: and had their beginning m soviet Russia. L We are not going to allow our country to be sovietized.” 'M In 1932 “the Republicans erred,*!? said Mr. Lovelace, ‘ -but they will reI turn to the fold in 1*3 6 . the right to do our own thinking and.we are going to think our way through to a great Republican vie tory next year.’-.’— - Who is your choice "for Rresil dent?”- the visitor was asked. ’Senator L-- J- Dickinsbu, of; Iowa,! ’ he replied,. ‘ ‘or Gov. 'Alfredi M. Landoni of Kansas, -or Senaton Arthur H. VaUdenberg, <jf MichK gan.” / ' .“ /-“ “ “ !'i' Incidentally Mrs. Lovelace, the former Miss Minnie Hubt1 of NorfH Wilkesboro, is a granddaughter of- Sidney Stokes, who distinguished; himself in the Confederate army; £ great granddaughter of Gov. Mpntti gomery Stokes, and also a: greaty granddaughter of United;States Sen| ator Jonathau Hunt: Mr. Lovelace, is a cousin of G^n Koberf F- Lee.^| Greeiisboro’News...*. • • • ' ' ■ “ * . '' CorralAbsentee I understand the lastlegislature appointed; 26 new justices of: the,, peace, for Burke county. TheseSew justices will be a great help in get-: ting in the ballots in our next ele$ tion. Of course that, is what th # were appointed for, as absentee;!)^ loti obtained at home (must hav£$be; Ifus^ee way to get rid of the • some §ome^toffl^fficer“ f“ 5 ^ We cast l;122 absentee ballotsi in Burke county in odr last:.election. Threepf the. thirteen townships of the county cast 922 of these votes, and these three townships got 13 of the 26 new justices. -The legislature was evidently doing its best too help these ,three overworked tpwnBhips. ■ Thetoweships that voted few ab sentee ballots got few . new- justices of the peace. The'two townships that cast no absentee ballots, got but one new justice of-the peace between them.' Any one”can see that. these appointments were made to help the absentee ballot, but the question is, who got the legislature to; appoint these 26 ne^wjusticesfprBurke coun ty? Somebody did it^.but of course, purjrepresentatiye', Mr. Hatcber. had nothing to do with it. - He was bit terly opposed to the absentee voters law. - He wrote me twice during-the Session to that effect,- and said he was going to have the' absentee-law re pealed aS to Burke county. ; I have not heard whether he did or hot. but being opposed to the law as he was, of course lie would not have appointed, or had any hand in appointing justices to help it. >■ There is anotherman that I have hsard of that may have caused the appointments. - He lives in the coun try. He wen t to town and told some friends that he had come to town to find out how many places there were that men couldjgo to when they died. His friend told him' there were but* two places. Heaven or hell, He replied that until the last few years that bad been his-opinion,- but recently he, bad about; changed his mind.' That he knew a number of men who had been dead for years, and yet every tiine: there was an election they 83tt in their absentee ballot, from a place by:the name of.Kentuck. They bare all been dead for years, and if they can always send in their ballots from Kentuck they must be. located there, and there must be three places dead Toiks cah go to instead of two. ••; He may have, had a: hand, in get-, ting these justices appointed. Somp- body did. Unleas'Mr; 'Hatcher did have the law'repealed as be promised we will no dou^hear fromKentuck again in-our next, election.—J- -F. Spainhour. in WihRtbja Journal. -,i f. The South; has" jfliorie people thafi jn jah#;couhtfyi-in?Eurbpe;^Mptihg Germany and -Russia; more people thanin any country jh Central gnd min^pepgieiM Cyclone Mack Cyclone Mack is dead. The fire the eloquence and the fury of one ?f. the most unique and- powerful evangelists the South has known m decades are no-more. " Baxter F. McLendon was born in obscurity, reared In poverty and ed ucated in the University of Hard Knocks. An omnivorous reader, he devoured more books within ■ a few short years- than the average college graduate, reads, perhaps, in 1 lifetime. Words from these books stuck in his mind and he went to the dictionary with them. An amazing vocabulary resulted With winged words he wove a web of wonder that hypnotized and enthralled multi plied-thousands from north to south and from coast to coast. • Some people said Mack was a fool. Others said the man couldn’t be sincere. They claimed he was look ing toward the profit-side of the ledger in his battles with the hosts of sin, intolerence, bigotry and other isms that plague America. But Mack didn’t.care what -people said ofhim. He loved people. Most of all, he loved the poor people, the old people with ragged clothes and bent backs, the little children whose eyes were misted With the tears ot despair, the struggling young men and women who wete determined to conquer bad backgrounds and poor environments, and amount to something-in a 'competitive world. He didn’ t abide by all the niceties Hf convention. When hewanted to say_-a thing he said -it, no -matter NUMBER 3 Two and Two Make Four cautlousllttleSea'^He^sigbteff-'f Wrong, beheld a vice and -became as the lion roaring or the voice that- cfied out in the wilderness. . He had his faults—the taujts of the wild and unconquered prophet-— the weaknesses of a man who was determined to live his own life, preach his own doctrine, run his own.show in the way he wanted to run it. - The good he did is hard to esti- Inale1, When men heard the searing blasts from his caustic tongue, they cowered and shrank as if they stood in the presence of an avenging spirit. When the magic eloquence of a chastened.tongue‘stirred ihe heart of women and children, the lambent light of love gleamed through their tears and together with the mean of every class and creed they hit the sawdust trail. The intelligentsia tell'us that all this is animalism responding to the beat of the tom toms in the jungle. Maybe it is. We don’t know. But when it causes men and WomenV and eVen the heart-of 3 CjhiId,;to catch a brighter gleam of glory in life— when it trains little feet to walk truer on the path that leads to worth while. things—who would scorn the telling of this truth, though it were •told in the tones ot thunder by a man, who despite all power and elo, quence, is not quite so perfect as He who walked the Gallilean sands?— Winston Journal. ... What Each Got Out Of It A Kentucky'.editor says: r -:; ■?:'■■■ + ^iom a bushel of corn the distil ler-: got four; gallons: of -whiskey. Which retailed at . "$16.80 Thefarmergot . .. . 25 Tne U. S. Government got . 4.40 The railroad got - 1.00 The manufacturer got . :; . 4.00 The drayman got r,- -Theretailergot . _ - 7.00 The consumer got ; Prunk The wife got . , Hunger The children got’ ’ : - ■ ■ ■ ; ’ ' Rags The politician got -. . Office W " "" -.VAgain the New Deal is saving the world. Itbas begun to import, the jPiuchctj Roosdvelt Backer, Deserts Ad ministration. New York—Amos R.E. Pinchot, eminent liberal who worked for President Roosevelt’s election in 1932 announced that he has con cluded the new deal is prolonging the depression. He said in an open letter to Pro fessor.Felix Frankfurter, of Har4 vard Universlty law school, .one of the first members of the, "brain trust,” that he is "no longer gam bler enough to support the new deal." President Roosevelt, Pinchot said basretarded recovery materially by refusing to state definitely “whether he is: for capitalism, socialism or fascism.’, “ Till now,” he said, "Roosevelt has shown a strange predilection for keeping the country in the dark ..as to his beliefs and intentions. No one knows what he thinks or wh he will do tomorrow. He is the Great Uncertainty. Thefactthat unce:- tainty "emanates ‘ from him and per meates the eit're country, in all di rections is keeping a good many mil lion men and women out of jobs.” - “ I cannot understand why you men who are-advising Roosevelt to go having a blind spot about these things—why you think only in terms of things which,^important as theymay be,- are nevertheless not essential to real recovery and re employment,V-he said.. “ We are lettipg England break ^dv^bnr^outlierncotton.ihdustry, burwheat and• tobacco -"states -.and otherlbasicindusfrial areas, just be. cau e we won’t 'tackle - the - money problem realist icallyV..... ‘.‘Our country is being hamstrung by an obsolete monetary policy, dis carded by England.” Heasserted that "a sensible-mon ey policy is just about the onecbance Roosevelt has of making his admin istration a go” and said .he is failing now because “he- follows- no con secutive line, and apparently doesn’t think things through to the end.” Our Glorious ‘‘Relief.” " Editor Sherrill, of the Concord Tri btine.who spent., the past .week on the.coast in South Carolina: not-far from Myrtle Beach, writes to- hiB paper that: . "Moat of the complaint I-hear a- gainst Washington is that the relief program has failed to function pro perly, and people living here tell 1 me that fishermen and other natives are disinclined to work much because they can get ‘relief.’ ' “It is a fact that fishing, boats are less numerous than formerly, though visitors are more numerous, and na tive negroes aren’t as keen as . in other years about bringing in fisb/ crabs, calm and shrimp.. They’ve had a touch of ‘relief’ and are con tent with that.’’ / " .- ' NotWnly is this’Roosevelt "relief’’ that i3 being handed out so lavishly from Washington ruining the fisher men buf every other line of labor, industry and business is affected. Thousands of people on ;the “relief” refuse to work when offered jobs. This Roosevelt Democraldc admihis-. tratioh is fast making America a generation of loafers and idlers.—Ex. Furious JFight In Ken- . Lcuisviile; Ky.; July 28.—Charges formerly whispered in ;hotel lobbies were being shouted through loud speakers today as a factional: fight among five Kentucky Democrats for the gubernatorial' nomination ap proached a first roun’d decision in the August 3 primary;. ' Th contrast .to the almost. Hnparal- Ieled- bitterness of; the Democratic figbt'was the apparent -harmony among Republicans,. They;planned to nominate tin agreed, ticket - and h$ed the bitterness of their foes’ ctnnpaign wpnldhelp them.gmncdn-; Two stumps for Woodrow Shrop shire. Two stumps for Robert Barnes. To the practical and the matter-of fact, this makrs a total of four stumns. And so far as twelve good men and true assembled in'a jury room in Mecklenburg’s mil lion dollar temple of justice is con cerned four amputed feet leave four stumps, that’s all. Woodrow Sbopshire and Robert Barnes came from the bottom of so- ciety—from the dark and seamv side which m the ca ual optonion of : the elect and the elite produces- those individuals who go to make up the scum of the earth They are Negroes, and there are lots of . white men in the South who do not give credence to the words that fall from a Negro’s lips even when: the black man is on oath So the twelve White men who heard the evidence in the case against the while prison officials charged with cruelty to Woodrow Shropshire and Robert Iarues decided that as usual • the white men were telling the tjuth and the black met were lying— their four mutila.ed legs dangling .from the witness chairs failing to speak- loud enou gh in support of ' the prisoners’ story. - Well, the Mecklenburg prison of ficials are free What's more, they are cleared of all cruelty charges. Remain only the four stumps, signi fying the loss of four feet—indicat ing that two men will never stand and walk upright again-that two men-will never.again enjoy all: the privileges of n normal hutnaojlife. • The ieet of-these,men froze, stiff ; while they-were damped to—iron bars in a solitary confinement shed during weather bitterly cold.' As to all the circumstance's surround ing the event, the victims told 'one tale, the accused white;officiaIs;to!d another. The.jtirors found truth on the lips of the white officials. They seemingly found falsehood on the lips of the Negro prh oners. But four feet hive b;en cut off. the bodies of. two men. Tne four stumps that remain do ’not speak' falsehoods. Theyare the living witnesses of a great wrong that somehow the great State of Ndrth Carolina has been uhable to run to e rth and punish..—Winston Jouy ual. , ' : Backed Down Twice. A young couple came to the of fice of the register of deeds of Cald^' well county, one day the past week, and secured a marriage license. They started to look.for some one to’ tie the knot and ran’up with Magistrate G. R. McLean who was on bis way to supper Always obliging, the squirei-re traced his steps to his office and step-; ped outside the .room to get three witnesses, as required by law ' but upon his returnTound the prospec tive bf idegroom alone, With the pros- pective bridegroom alone, with the prospective ,bride standing on the outeide. . 'Sheaafd she could not .go - thrOugh with the ceremony: The squire told bis witnesses they could go as there would.be no] wed ding-and he again started to bis sup per. The coUple held a brief confer ence and hostily' overtook the magi strate, the prospective bridgegroom telling the squire that "everything’s all fixed up; now.” He said the would-be; bride "was in a hurry to get the marriage, over and to her home where - a- supoer was await ing them. But'again the bride - de murred and McLeaii became dir- guested at ^Wo backdowns by the woman, took her word and left them StandiDgin the .street. He: learned, theiiext day that tiie woman changed her inind Sgain for the third 'time and the couple were mairried later in. the evening by a minister living near the city.: ‘ : ' -;Womeh’s place may be ih the heme . but it takes, more - than. the world’s IliP I iiiM r * ■'V' Sfjffe D A ^ iE feECO RP, te o C fe g ffiS lJ . :& AUGtisf 7, *93$ THE DAVIE RECORD. C. FRANK STROUD • - Editor. HeDber Notional Fann Grange. TELEPHONE Entered at the Postoffice in Mock* viUe. N. C.. as Second-class Mail matter. March 3.1903. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: ONE YEAR. IN ADVANCE * *100 SIX MONTHS. IN ADVANCE - J 5f There is talk of not opening the public school in North Carolina un til the first of October on account of the infantile paralysis epidemic in some sections of the state. Since most of the picnics, reunions, and Other gatheringshave been called off, this might be a good idea. ' Senator William E. Borah, of Idaho, may be the next Republican presidential candidate. Well, • tbe party might go farther and fare worse. Senator Borah deserves much’ credit for his fight on tbe NRA, and also, for the stand he took on tbe soldier’s . bonus bill. He made a brave fight for the soldier boys.' but was snowed under by the New Dealers. State highway ’ patrolmen were rushed to the scene from Raleigh, but-arrived in their sliver colored cars after tbeuegro had been lynch ed. They then stayed on the scene and .directed traffic. " AU this hap pened in Franklin county one da> last-week. , A negro bad ran wild, cutting a farmer’s head off. and try- ' lng’t’o kill other folks, Tbe Gov ernor deplores the lynching and re proves county officers for failure to Shfce report or seek' aid in time. Heie’s betting that not an’ arrest will ■ be made. . You can always count on the highway patter-rollers being on the scene— but generally after everything is over but fht shouting. Notice of Sale ; of Land Fot Taxes-ForTheY ear. 1934 as Provided . By Acts 1927 and ; Amendments Thereto • Under requirements. of act 1927 and subsequent amendments thereto, the un dersigned will, on - MONDAY. SEPTEMBER 2.1935 at1JLg o’clock Nooa in front of the court house door in MoCksviUe. N. C.. sell foi unpaid taxes due the County of Davie foi the year 1924, the following lands !as sei out. below under township sub beads the acreage and amount of tax being shown opposite each name in which the tax n listed. r These taxes may be paid on or before saledate. by adding accrued cost and any penalties that may attach. ' . CALAHALN TOWNSHIP Name 1 Acres Amt. Barksdale, B..W ............. 93% $13.18 Bosch, Mrs. Mary, Est. 9 Campbell, Mrs. Mollie .. 67 Campbell, D." T, ____63 Cleary, TV. A,._:,__ 263% D.wiggins, Mrs." Delphia 52 I SMOKE A MIlD OGIUttTTe CAMELS THEr DONT OET MT WIND. AHO AFTER HARO PLAY A CAMEL GIVES ME A'LIFT IVE TAKEN THE ATHLETES Tl 9 .ON CAMELS. CAMELS OONT AFFECT MY CONDITION THEY MUAT BE M ADE FROM COatliER TOBACCOS TO BE SO MILO < 4 WM.T. TUDEN, 2nd Famous Tennis Stat MECHANICAL ENGINEER G E . Smith' _ O I M C L S /rfroccco/ 58 53% 30. 12 16% 68 3.07 11.44 8.64 ’43.65 9:74 26,80 8.11 5.87 26.84 14.19 8.81 .15.25 30.19 14.04 2.40 10.15 14.86 9.91 5.6C 2.36 3.93 23.7! 2.14 1.36 7.56 Efitdj P. A., E st .:.™ 129% Efird, S. B, 52 Felker, D e w e y . 17 J- B- - —'- 4 -Gaither, W .'L ........... 99 Gaither, B, P. : ——..._59 Godby, J. E . 62 ijam'es, Mrs. Annie ——115 Martin, Mrs. Will ....... 75 Misenheimer,, .G, W-._11Bichardson1 D. L. ....— 92 Richardson, 0. !M.~ — SmitJh1 B- Gi -Strpnd; D avid..,—.—— Swihk, Mjs. 'M ary1E. Tayse, Carrie. B,.r!-- Tomlinson, p. H. .—. Tutterow, Mrs. M. E .E st. 8% Vickers, J. P. - I ..- ™ .3% Williams, Edna ______41COIiOBED Clampett, J. 57. Gorrell, Nora ... Holieman, H .H . Houpe, Lee ...V- Nicholson, J. E. Studevant, Bichard Wilson, S. P. — . Wood, Amanda _------— I 2.0S Dwiggins, G. _C. .———.. 70% 10,04 > CLARKSVILLE TOWNSHIP .Name Acres : Amt. Southern Barlway-Co — $4,572.73. . . . . 17>6a 5.64 11.37 - 8.04 2.80 35.63 9.49 10.35 6.65 4.-82 2:29 5.64 -4:604*65 '6.54 13.11 15.45 5.64 9.03 17.15 2.62 40.69 6.33 11.92 18.92 4.68 Adams, G. H. .„....— ...-110 Anderson, J. P. Anderson, John Andersonj S. A. Baity, Mrs. Clete Baity, D. N. — Beck, Mrs. J. A. • Bbger, J. Walter . Brookshire, J. 0. . Brown, P. G.- t A.-H. , Mrs.>W--T. B. Mk d . r : is, Mrs.jiA. 5y. - 34 »- “ • - Gaitlier, T. AM--—I-----107I Goorge, Mrs.! M ary 81 Graves, J D, & 0. A. - 39 Gunter, Paul ...-----—‘ 40TTAneii. Mrs.. ML B: -i-ii—117 ’ Name • Acres Latham, G. W , — 50 Lippard, J. L .------ — 78 Martin, U. A. —~—— 143- ■ Phillips, J. L . —..... 39 Pierce, P, M. --------— 1?% Batledge, W. R. ----- 35% Beavis, W. L. — \4. - Beavis, W. D. ....--------189 Beavis, Mrs. W. D. — 125- Richardson, T. P. ----- 86 Sain, J. B. — — _:— 90% Sizemore, J. B. &W ife 104 -. Smith, E. W. 80% Snyder, W. B. —.—..— 445% Spainhour, A. E. .—-___40 Stanley, Ht K. -----231% Steelman, Mrs. Dora— .424 Stewart, L. M, -------—11% Stokes, B. M. ...'!— — _. 70 Tutterow, S. B. & M. E. 172 COLOBED Bean, B. C. ——-------39 Hanes, Albert, Est'. '— 36. Naylor, Warner -:—™----14% Parks, Adeline —— .!— .1 ■ Patterson, T. C. —I— ;7% PULTON TOWNSHIP Name AcresAllen, Andrew W. i 81. , Anderson, Mrs. M,_M. HO Barnes, James D. ?::..___16 Beck, Mrs. C. C. 2___ 16 Burton, B. H.~— ....__- ,:7% Burton, L. E. —1—1___66 Burton, Clyde C, .-U___' 7 7. Burton, Samuel ———__i;l Branson, Mrs. Mary, Est. 19 ' Carter, P. M . !I™.___21% Carter, Geo. A . __200 Carterj Ernest __ 113 ■' - Cope, K. L. & M. -Bf -A ll Davis, H. S. _ Davis, Mrs, H. S . _ Doby, Manuel G, . . 63 . 61 .'9 . 94 ,72% . 50 76 Pleming, D. J, .—p.:.__ Porrest, G, P, —ii-__ Poster, 0. A. — Aii-., Poster,- Mrs. Steve'.!__ Foster, J. H., Heirs '___13 Pry, Miss Mollie .....___2dPry, S. D. ____.......____21% Garwood, S. E. ___145 Garwood, S. D. ...._____ 3 . Garwood, A. M. “.....___244 Garwood A HVilliams _ I Lot - Grubb, Jessie -LlA___146 . ■ Hairston, Peter VVi'_2,718 Hege, L. M., Heirs. I 70 Hendrix, L. A. — Li! 28 Hendrix, Mrs. V. V. 24 Kesler, John B., Heirs 4 Lanier, Donald ..—I——. I Lot' * Livengood, J, M, ___ 95% MerreU, Mrs. B. V .:___24' Mejrell, Harold A'Leona 24 Milton, Mrs, M innie 10% Minor, G. W. ....C- 103 " N. C.. Midland B y i 35>10 Pack, Gurner B. -.'..i I Eot L Peebles, W, G , I—;.— 30. . Peebles, W. B-, Heirs'— 28.T. Batledge, Walter Glenn IOd...' : Sain, W. A . !.?.—__62 •' Seaford, Wiley C . 54 L Smith, C. LI ILL—— 50 -. . Steward, E. M. —L—. li% . Upchurch, Mrs. Mollie - 87 Weavil, Howard C::-___79. Williams, Mrs.-Bufus B. 22’ . Williams, P. E. I Lot Williams, Pearson —’... I Lot Wood, J. A . .1__101 " Young, Noah P.1 ____ 22 , Zimmerman, C. C. ___’42" / COLORED Hairston, Ada, Heirs - 0 8 .■ 5.22 Hairs'ton, Shack L.,____ -2 • » 1.11 Hairston, Mattie j 5% 2.80 Hairston, Paschal < 6 4.87 Hege, Peyton _______:-8 . 2.97 Mason, Shirley H. ___ .1 . 2.93 Mason, John H. .....___ 40 17.16 Peebles, James, Est. — 14 3.28 FABMINGT.ON TOWNSHIP ‘Name Acres -Amt. Allen, Mary Ann ....__ 10 Allen, J. P. _________ 25 Allen, Mrs. J. P. ..— 12 AUen J. WiU _______ 5% Allen, H. L ........132 AUen, Geo. W. ....... — 5 Bahnson; H a l___........ I Lot Bailey, B, B. _______ 4% Beauchamp, Mrs. Jerry 80 Beauchamp, L. W. ——■ 29 2-10 Brame, Leonard. B, .——100 Bowles, Mra JrL . .......- 24 Byerly, 0. S. .....: __155 Carter, Mrs. Mamie B—130 Cash, Mrs. SalUe, Est. .. 27 rClement, B, C, .....— 1288 Cook, G. ' L. — 98 Cook, J.! C. 8 Amt. 6.89 17.45 14.40 5.01 4.00 8.54 6.23 23.54 11.45 13.98 21.49 17.59 17.10 50.96 7.42 ' 25.98 57.25 2.02 13.18 29,81 6.89 3.22 5.51 1.08 1.82 Amt. $18.22 38.04 9.12 3.8C 8.14 13.91 5.98 2.86 5.01 5.04 52.68 ! 28.40 44.36 18.28 43.44 4.62 19.05 21.86 13.30 13.75 ,2.99 . 4.39 7.35 37.09 9.77 11.29 5.00 33.17 646.17 10.67 13.29 6.49 1.73 3.41 47.86 6.49 6.48 1.51 22.95 -.9.55 6.12 10.46 5.08 26.4t 20.49 17.05 10.98 2. 27.78 11.52 5.34 6!71 6.71 26.63 6.48 7.68 .Comatzer, A. M., Est. - 50 Cornatzer, Mrs. Br, Est. 20 Dalton & Hunt ......__ 90 8-10 Dbnthit, E. J:, Est 117-Donthit,’A. B., Est. —— 25 Dunn, W. A. ——— .16% - Dunn, Noah, -Est. .......... 38 DunnjMrs. G. H. _____ T - Poster, Mrs. SaUie — • I - Foster, Mrs. E. A l -4 Foster, Mrs. W. P. — I Lot-. . F ryj Pinches, D. K. ..I.:.—__ Goforth, S. T. —i'_——. 90 6^10 ''35.39 Graham, G H.!__L?—-L IiLot L '25,56 Gregory, Mrs'. L.: A. —— :!t9'! ’ A39 Gregory, H. • Wi ,1—L— 24% . 5.95 Gregory, H. 0; -i— i Lot;. : , 6.13 Griffin, .W. G. —--------: 38% • 13-59 $2.7.7 '5.22 ' 2.49 3.83 34.67 3.87 : 1.78 2.31 25.39 4.42 15.56 3.75 10.34 11.9: 10.31 - 44.76 15.56 10.16 5.32 6.13 34.91 24.39 5.96 5.80 6:13 1.94 4.84 1.33 :. 3.45 Griifinj.: J, P^ Ji-.30, • w .h.;.y U , ' - 1 m a s Name .Acres Amt. Haneline, W. T.............. 35 ' .- 6.59Hauser, M. L................. 22 3.72 Hauser, W. H. ______- %1.38 Hoekaday, C. L .____- 5%4.20 Howard, C. I.......___... 39 7.30 Howard, Miss Mary „.7%1.76 Howard, Ernest ____... 17%11.85 Howard, W iUie_ _18 4.43Howell, Miss Jennie B-243 39.50 Hudson, Delia, Est. ...... 32 4.84 James, E. C. _____.......132 36.19 James, Mrs. E. C........I Lot 10.04 James, W. F. __:____ 30 5.58Jame's, C. D. ____,....- 1 2%6.17 James, Mrs. M. E., Est. 31 4.84 Jones, W. J. _______49 8.93Jones, Bros.................97%9.81 Kimbrough, C. L. __... 93 24.18McCuUoh, Mrs. W. P... 39 6-100 9.86MeDaniel, A. P............. 59%14.01 McDaniel, Mrs. Ida J... 25 7.11 McDaniel, Prances__.. 15 ' 5.63MeKnight, J. W. ___~-24% ■'12.06 MiUer, Minerva ____... 2 2.19 Montgomery, J. H. __.. 60 31.74Myers, W- G. ______.. 58 3.78Potts, J. 'E. _______.. 80% 7.24 Bidenhour, G. A'. ___.. 37 1.67Biddle, Mrs. Charlie .- 5%1.59Biddie, 0. H. ______- 4%12,22 Biddle, Mrs. Henry __.. 25 8.78Biddle,-W: B. _______. 2 . 7.28Seats, P. T.................... 50 8.42Sheek, E. P. ______..125%26.61Sheek, Mrs. G. W. __.. 31 ; 6.21Sbeek, H. G. —^_____I Lot 4.72Smith, Early —____.. 35 ! 7.84 Smith, Harmon J. __„ 12 ’. 8.75Smith, B, L. .....____.. 68 15.61Smith, L. A. _______.. 3 - 4.48Smith, Tom_-L. _____.. 5 1.60Smith, Mrs. G. A.......- 3% . 2.90Smith, Mrs. Geneva .... 15 2.49Smith, Alex _.’.____- 8 % 5.63Sofley,: T. W. _____..... 66 . .18.37 Styers, S. S.' ....;__.. 3 24.33.Tucker, H. C. ...___..!- 37%11.82' Thornboro, C. P. _?...2 1 6.07Truelove, A. G. ____..160 17.30Trivette, S. A, _____„150 26.35 Wagoner, P. A ._____. 88%22.07WaUcer, S. P ..............- 3%5.10Walker, Boy G. ____.. 37 12.33Walker, S. W .______- 3% 1.32Walker, K. P, _____- 1 %4.41Walker, E. W. _____.. 61%15:35 Ward, Mrs. J. L. ____..35 8.63'Williams Herbert W... 11 6.89WilUard, J. S! -!..___.. 96 14.65 Williard, W. H..........—.. 2 5.68WilUard, Sandy ____-, 1 %.72Wiseman, Tom _____.. 7 7.43Wood, Mrs. Lizzie__.. 11 2.55Bowden, Grady C. __.. 35 9.04Walker, Will ______.. 32 4.54 Johnson, L. H. ....__„ 80%8.07Smith, Mrs; Ada, Est.. . 5 3.66 . COLOBED . BaUey, Chalmus ____.. 4 1.73Bowman, Peter, Est. .- 2 1.73Brown, John ......____- . 5 2.69Crews, John ...______-- 4% - ^3.77Cutherell, lTom ....'.____.. 5 •1.54Dismuck,' Jane ____..... 20 5.64Diilin, B. A................... 7 2.02DuUn, J J ._______..... 12 6.07DuUn, A-. B. ...............w 50 14.00 Eaton, Laura ..:_____.. 18%3.72Eaton, Jordan, Est........ 40 8.47Eaton, W. H.--.____..... 31 11.62Eaton, S. B..................... 90%17.34Eaton, W. E.................. 20 6.55 Hamlin, L ee.................. 3 1.73Hairston, Id a _______.. 18% 5.05Hanes, Bufus, Est. ...:... 11%4.84 ■Holderberry, Tom ____.. 1%1.14Johnson, John A. .........56 17.13Lyons, James, Est.-. 2% ^ .90 March, Lucy ..............- I 1.17Morgan, L. H. ___.. 4 :: 7.39McMahan, Nelson ...::.. . I 1.61 Sutzer, Laura ..._____ Smith, W iley............. Smith, Jakd ................ .. 29 2.48.. 5 2.34 -- 1% .5.01 Studevant, ShiTley ...... I 3.11Whorton, John :.........- 15%3.75Wiseman, Tom .............: 7 7.51Williams, Louis ....._„■ 7 2.12Williams, Bettie ____.. .6 ■■3.51Williams, Lonnie ____..23 8.52 Williams, B. W., Est. ... 37 8.75 Williams, Bell, Est. ...13%2.79 Young, Crawford ___1 %3.15Tomlin, Charlie -. 2%3.72Eaton, Jordan H. ....... 76 9.11 JERUSALEM TOWNSHIP ' - Name,Acrhs Amt;Alexander, Joe A. ...... 56 (23:68 Apperson, Mrs. Beulah 117%28.86 Apperson, George .......... 49 .15.26BenBOn1 H. H. ... : ... ..3 .Lots 4.-26Bessent, Mrs. Bessie ...29'6.94Bessent, S. B,.. 47 ■23.51 Blackwelder, S. A. —.I Lot .88Cook,- D. S: ...._2 Lots 2.60 3.37 17.83 12.62 : 4.71 27.54 8-99 Cook, S. B: ....-.... 24 Cook, J, H. -..A:.—..A I Lot Crawford, J. G. I Lot Creason1 J. S. - ... .—. 20 ! Croason, 0; T., Est. ......101 : Crotts, C; H. & Co.,' -..1.132 " Crump, Mrs. S. Br I—...135 6-10 35.37:Daniel, J. S?..:,...- 50-A-.2 Lots - - 7,34! Daniel, Mrs.-T. C. .... 40%. . 12.24Davis,' I. C. .................... 50 16.68 Davis, C. A. .^L--L- - - 93 , - 22.63 Deadmion,,G- H! LA i-L I Lot .. • 5.97Deadmon, L. C., Jr.,.... I Lot- 5.82 Eyerhardt,'W. D. AA-A 12 ., ; -11.68Foard,!Mrs, M. & L ....., 77 . , 17.61 Foard, W. ’G. .— A,..— 15 . '5.01Foster, Mrs. Kate L .-.-154. 45.92 Gibson,- Geo. E —. I Lot 12.65: Ar 20 :20,66 FORD L E A D Truck Sales I N C R E A S E S I n P a s s e n g e r C a r a n d O ffic ia l 1 9 3 5 R e g is tr a tio n s T o D a te F o r d 4 7 0 ,2 0 4 C h e v ro le t 2 9 7 ,8 6 7 P ly m o u th 1 5 1 ,8 8 9 T o ta l O f A ll M a k e s T h is Y e a r 1 ,4 0 0 ,9 2 1 Ford Leads Nearest Cdmpetitdr in 1935 - - = 172,337 Ford Leads Nearest Competitor in 1934 • • • 27 930 Ford Iocreasies Lead In 1935 - - 154,407 Ford Sales Total More Than The. TWO Nearest Competitors Combined. Ford Sales Are ONE-THIRD Of All Cars Registered^ To Date. There Are Reasons For This. Follow The Leader. B U Y A V S F O R D Above Figures Copied From Autom otive Daily News Of July 27,1935 S A N F O R D M O T O R C O . Fbrd Dealers For 22 Years MocksviIIe, N. C. Name Acres I. L. C. ', : ___70 —— 91 C. - 50% . 2 Lots 37 A 2 Lots-- ■A—- 125 - —__2 Lots 7%' Mrs.- Dodd - .198 ... - 1% ..192 E. L s___...104 leo: P. .—...' I Lot s. U. ___... 26 i..-----—.......14 7-10 COLOBED ' . C.............. I Lot I Lot I Lot Johnson1-Ployd I .Lot n — I Lot MOCKSVILLE TOWNSHIP Amt. 1 53.77 I 61.631 29.83 28.74 20.90 S 14.531 = 29.04 - , 31.44] I .73 12.19 8.97 2.77 2.98 41.14 2.81 10.53 6.17 21.06 28Gl 10.19 -6.89 24.21 2.59 16.54 3.69 .. 1.47 1.66 6.12 . 2.37 3.75 3.12 2.53 2.86 1-2.06 1.17 Name. Acres •A 4 Lots —. 2 Lots 2 Lots H. W. A 43% 2 Lots - Carter,- J.- L., Eat. .—— I Lot . . Cartwright, T- L- I Lot Clement, B. C. & • C- A., Est; - . 75:A I Lot ient, K. M. ...—-— I Lot, Cobbler, Mrs. - K-* -L. — - 21% - Cornatzer, W. P. ...——.118 Cornatzer, H. P. 322 a Crawfordj J. G. ..— ..... 1-Lot-- Daniel, J- S.1-————. 2: Lots . Daniel-'& Ijames — -I: Lot Danielj. Annie L. _—.. I- Lot Doncvant, H. J., E st..... 7 Peezor, Miss Prances :.—180 Poster, Mrs. S. A - I Lot Poster, H. .Clinton -___64 ; Grant, C. S .-------------35 Green, J . . B. A. 43. Gri«in, E. L. .A—?------1 J.3% .■V Hall, A. E .--------------10“ -. Harris, Mis. Kate' C- ,A G Lot A Hkriis, " Amanda D. — I Lot A • Hdathmanj Mrs. Maty-2 Lotd . • Hendicks,' Mrs. ,P.- Est: 30- •. - Heliard/ G. C. . ^ I Lot :i Heplerj-Mrs. O. BA — I Lot ■ Sehrn,: vy.: M. : —_ A .-l’Eot • • Hinkle. Yance;.*: Co.? 7! Lots:: A Amt. $15.56 21.89 2.81 13.05 5.34 23.28 .9f 23.37 33.26.5.64 ’ 8.20 : 40.81 9.41 , 10.04 30.81 16.33 5.95 34.00 90-00 8.24 9.11 8.94 6.92 6.92 . 71.08 • 8.24 7.64 7:43 6:19 4.04 4.37: 23:26 768 4:57 4.71 5.43 3.11 2.49! 6.89 -GOING- Great G u n s ! R e p o rts F ro m AU P a r ts O f T h e C o u n try G iv in g S u p e r S o l v e n i z e d PUROL-PEP A G r e a t . H a n d T h e M o to r F u e l That Chases Carbon Out AndKeepsItOut Thereby Enabling Your M o to r T o G iv e M o to r P o w e r I AT pmgm#, The Lm By K A THLEEN N ( rfI CHAPTER X-Conti —21*" , .■She may have a houseful j Lily, who36 mind.rat] ' upon this subject, might sug••Even if she had— ! .‘Did you like Bichard 6 A1 guick twist at her heart] memory of a man’s ugly, find “ ow smile. But Gad’s voil come quietly enough. I “Oh, very much. “Even if I cOulli account I I couldn’t account for him,”1 0^Every family has some it that acts that way,” Lily i shrewdly.* » • » » i In September Lily’s daua born. Gail carried the newcoL through the big open hous| kitchen, where she tremblinl and oiled the mottled, writhT ing IitHe scrap of womanhol “God grant that I don’t I baby!” said the Second Gailf to Uie Third, aloud. I The baby did not die undefl.-c nnmVOIT SVtO wViItIJ.IiV --------- istrntions, anyway. She wh her waving little saffron art troduced into the microse but when Phll and Lily’s mi down, hot and anxious, hal later, the Uttle Gall was so in her namesake’s arms. “She’s real pretty, Phil!’1 grandmother proudly. “Is she?” “Well, she’s jest as cute’: be. I don’t know’s Lily’s e better-lookin’ baby. She’s go' rente look, all right.” “Look at the Lawrence Phil.”“Gee, she’s sleeping hard,’ served, In a half-amused, hal tone. “Lily aU right?” “I suppose so!” he muttei tentedly. “My G—d!”. he his breath. He went to sit on the d chin In bis bands, elbows knees. There was the sili dreaming autumn Sunday a1 the house that had -been ri agony for the last endless Mrs. Crowley went through1 with an unsightly bundle of Ungered on her way to f1 tubs to smile at the yo rence. “She looks kinder mad she was treated—yes, she says,‘Why did ye yank me ■way, and spank.me good, w done nothing!’”' crooned thi old washwoman. “How do, ser. How’s aU your-folks?” I “All real well, thanks, Mi How’s Hazel?” “Bezel had a bad spell I ’twas a week ago.” ‘Ton'd oughter be glad have to have ’em!” Mrs. \ to Phil’s still bowed and hoi In the doorway. She chucl “Look at her sleep—thi Gail murmured. “I always say that if the have ’em every other time, i be two babies, his and thei then no more!” old Mrs ' with relish. “Ain’t that true?'Wibser. Wiff-waff, come here am sister!” “It’s about time, you go “ChnSd hflK a few o£ yo aunt” * *° bave “What say?” I sald that all children hi .an old maid aunt” “Baby?” aSked Biff-raff, n,f®‘ with a solemn upw: -M0urbaby slsler'..,r^ Lawrence,” ceccy ng into the room In aU nurses regalia, said authl «rs. Lawrence wants somef •*» to the Williamses’ for cMldren, and she said to te S t e ^ thatstefeetefiH "Cerf"”i ech0ed’ outr SlFere Inly- She feels toe, for- eL fi she enn have sc w e Socs °ff to sleep. Phii 0 hali been In si gf* an^ G«n. “you aren’t t|°nd see her a 1 -tojT tired, no!” Phil ss her—r,vUt sbe fi°esn’t want- •m e/ eeIs if I was Just at S ' S9°dness’ sak somef/ ? ennfini3b!” Bntty tell w ,, 60 11P nnd s Btdf J,® briuSing up son to th„ one wild Slance laUgSkaceompanlment 01 mZrtU’fe golns be iucky.j horn oo fh Chlld' “Tbe i Iuly0a0 tbe snbbUth day i Thea1Id !ood aUd gay!” appri The httlf and 8ay!” , tisrhn- ’ war“ ‘ P ulpy S confidluSly. to her ic^ t Thfipped already I 4Hs1 of was a smeU ofl fcabJ dflmr.00 new finnnelsf Saa nd nipnesa- The baby I1V «sam8t her arm. forever h°°,b]Uke could “I FL1boIdta' that child, I her R„el as “ I never “TW ra- Wibser.” 4jcS- W ih T n'4 do t t a t w ith c act Wlbsec said — “lay so l Gdnk a8Mght 1 F1 bet youllI ** sight of that babd 53232353534823484856235348235348234853532353482323232323534823534801232348234823239148230053235348 5323534823484848482323484823235348235348482353484823534823235348232353484823232353485323 244881848482849^590352534923232395815181824794594^922024205^87845892849796868114^31045209^58519349484697895022948984519^94 9999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999^999999999998 tales te 921 172,337 [27 930 7 Lder. 11935 k). Ie, N. C.I A ipsItO ut] out P o w e r] ions RECORD, MOC KSVTLT.T! N. C. Lucky Lawrences Ht KATHUEN NORRIS CHAPTER X—Continued mav have a houseful of kids by J THr wiiose mind, rather dwelt ' ^ iWSf f Ch-ld-8“ SUSSeSt•‘Even if s^e *-Did you Uke Richard StebbiDS, 6A ^iiiCk tvlstJit her heart A quick DieDiory slo«' ■ of a mail’s ugly, fine face and a,He. Uut Gail’s voice would ^ am «ly enough. .............. OlIU1It.“Oh verv miK’h* -Pvcn if* I could account for Ariel, , c„ul(ln’t itocoiint for him," she said °“CFverv family has some member In ,,flat ads mat way,” Lfy generalized shrewdly- in Lily’s daughter was Gail carried the newcomer down the big open house to theborn, througii titclien, and where slie tremblingly wiped oiled the mottled, writhing, weep- lD? little scrap of womanhood.' "-Cod grant that I don’t hurt you, baby!” s:,i(I t,ie Second Gal1 Lawrence to the nl°u(J'Xlie IiabV did not die under her min- Icirations1 -Hiyway. Slie whimpered, as ter ivavmp little saffron arms were in troduced Into the microscopic shirt, but VlIieu Phll and Lily’s mother came J01ID Iiot and anxious, half an hour Uter, the little Gail was sound asleep Ir. J1^r Dauies!ilv6 s arms. -She’s real pretty, Phil!" said the grandmother proudly. ‘•Is slier’ "!Veil, she’s as cute’s she can je, I don't know's Lily’s ever had a better-lookin' hahy. She’s got the Law rence looli, all right. •Loot at tlie Lawrence eyebrows, Phil"■■Gee, she’s sleeping hard,” Phil ob- tsied,” In a half-amused, half-resentful HE.‘lily all right?" I suppose so !” he muttered discon tentedly. “My G—dl” he said, under bis breath. He went to sit on the doorsill, his chin in Iiis hands, elbows resting on tnees. There vns the silence of a dreaming autumn Sunday aftenioon in the house that had been ringing with agony for the last endless hour. Old lira, Crowley went through the room with an unsightly bundle of linen. ,She lingered on her way to the laundry tubs to smile at the youngest Law rence. "She looks kinder mad at the way she was treated—yes, she does! She ap/Wliy did ye yank me ’round that TCj.anl spank me good, when-1 ain’t done nothing!'" crooned the toothless old waskoman. “How do, Mis’ Wlb- Eer. Hoir's all your- folks?” “Jll real well, thanks, Mis’ Crowley, floir's ta li’’ “Hazel had a bad spell last Sunday— 'was a week ago.” “You'd oughter be glad you don’t have to hare ’em!” Mrs. Wibser said to Phil’s still bon ed and horrified back In the doorway. She chuckled. “Look at her sleep—the darling,” Gail murmured. “I always say that if the men had to have 'em every other time, there’d only be two babies, his and then hers, and then no more!” old Mrs. Crowley said with relish. “Ain’t that true?” approved Mrs.ffibser. "iff-waff, come here and see yoursister!” Its about time you got married, “ I; anrI had a few of your own!” Children have to have an old maid Mnt" "ffhat say?’’ f said that ail children have to have ?• old maid aunt” “Baby?” asked Biff-raff, at Gall's a solemn upward glance. ^om baby sister.” “Mrs. Lawrence,” Betty Crobks, sall- S into the room in all her formal .Jrses regalia, said authoritatively, i rs. Lawrence wants some one to go I ? to the Williamses’ for the other “ten, and she said to tell you, Mr. wretice, that she feels fine and wants BOe tea!” Ieain phii echoed, outraged. ile«it. feels fine* on'y She'8 for# I. s**e can ^ave 30me tea be- Btiu ,,SOes off t0 sleeP- Say,” said Phii , 0 been In school with Gai*. “you aren’t too Ured to P there and see her a minute?” W i tIredl no!” PhiI saW dazedly. her-Ti, she a°esn’t want—you heard , -he feels as if I was to blame—” Jta ’ “r f°aness’ sake, that was ,? *!'e finish!" Betty said whole- Wl hpr t'S° u g0 up anS see her> and Hn . brinSing up some tea!” to th’eW---°ne 'vi-ld slance about, fled 1Mghter^cc0mpaniment “Vwt of women’s tturen ??lng t0 be lucby" Gall rnur- bom Mt0.,t h “The girl that Is ^ckv ath day 13 wise and Xhe S lgooa and say!" “fitly c '% 'va™’ PulPy band held 5’ coaMingly1 to her finger. It Sfippea already about her was a smell of householdV . There"%of oi« v“ vu uuuaeuoxu dam^n “ew flannels> of sweet wSUmniv t Tbe baby Eeem6d to ‘Ton i , galnst her arM. forever Ukc you could sit there “I f e e l that cbild> Gail!” U s e ^ rw a n te d t0 le t ^ WibIw t d^ that with every one," T 80 goodt ru~K,ay 80 Ouiet- aBd uHnb a j, ’ 111 bet you’re goto’ to slSht of that , baby.” TH bet I am,” Gail said seriously. .■ ‘Well,” said the old, woman to her granddaughter, “you’ve started on a hard journey, young IadyI Some day,” she added to Gail, “some day she’ll be tailin’ folks, ‘Why, yes, I was born in a place called Ollppersville in California.’ Ain’t that funny?/’ “Maybe life is just a succession of births,” Gail thought “If they take «The BeUs of Saint Giles, ’ she mused, “I’ll go to New York for a visit” A little laugh broke over the new baby’s head. Gall’s novel was barely begun; she did not know that it would ever be a novel. But still she thought: “If they really do take The Bells of Saint Giles,’ I’ll go to New York.” She loved to hold the baby at this time of the day, and when Lily , was downstairs again and autumn was deepening, .darkening into winter, five o’-clpck often found Gail, with her lit tle namesake In her arms, rocking, gos siping in the old kitchen, while Lily bustled about the dinner-getting, and the little boys stuffed themselves on fresh-cut bread and peanut butter at the table. ‘TH thicken that stew, Lily.” “I donrt mind anything,” Lily would say, “as long as you’ll keep that young one quiet What used to drive me near-. Iy crazy was when they’d all begin to squawk just as I’d get my hands into the dinner!” “Keep her. quifet!” Gail would laugh. GaiI the Third was a very model of babyhood. Nobody ever had any trou ble keeping her quietN The days grew shorter; it was dark now' when Gail came home from the library at five o’clock. As she sat cud dling the baby she could see the oak branches tossing in the dusk of the yard and the leaves scurrying down. The snap of the wood in the old French range and the smell of toast and tea were very grateful now; there was a sense of coziness, of homeness about it At this hour she would often fall to dreaming. It was an hour in which to remember Edith, talking eagerly of, poetry, of drama, of utopias and phi lanthropy, as she buttered pudding dishes and peeled apples—an hour that brought back ArieC spoiled, petulant, beautiful, always to be excused and adored by her isisters. Ariel, willful and discontented, scolding, raging, threatening, and presently to be whisked, limp and pitiful, upstairs to be comforted and sponged and soothed to sleep. Above all, In the winter twilights, with the soft lump of babyhood that was another^ Gail Lawrence in her arms, Gall dreamed of Dick and of the brief moment of romance that had somehow seemed to give her her true values Sn life. She had been playing, playing Idly and superficially, with Van Murchison, and she had awakened to the full realization of what her heart needed, what her heart could give, just a moment too late. It had been Ariel, all the time, for big, sober, quiet Dick. He had never seen Gall; she had never tried to help him find her. But she knew in her heart, that she could- have given him a'thousand times what Ariel could give. Ariel must be changed Indeed if she had become a helpful, tender mate for a struggling lawyer. Her restlessness, her .haughty discontent, would not be cured by any thing that Dick could provide for her. Ariel’s ideal was not one of home mak ing, of quiet and domesticity beside a fire. Hollywood—supposing them still to be in that neighborhood—would only Inflame Ariel with a desire for luxury, fame, money. It was almost three years now since that memorable Christmas day before Artel’s eighteenth birthday, when she and Dick had run away from them all. Gail had had two communications from her since; the first was tbe scribbled note she had left in her deserted bed room, the note they had all read with such amazement and consternation; and the second had come a few months after Edith’s death, and had been post? marked Phoenix, Arizona: “Gail dear, I am so horribly sorry about darling Ede, but Gail she was happy. She was too good, for this world and only would have had trouble and disappointment I am well and so is Dick, and we are coming home soon to. tell you all the news, so no more now except that I adore you.” It had been signed simply' “Ariel,” and had borne neither date nor ad dress. One day Gall had driven Phil’s car, full of small boys, out to the Stanis laus ranch. It was prosperous now, and the Lawrence’s money troubles, preposterous and unexpected as the situation seemfed, were over. Phil was doing well, Gall had had a . raise, the oil station paid Its hundred a month faithfully, and ,that money Phll handed over untouched to his sister. The remains of the once magnificent Lawrence estate were divided; the old house was Phil’s, the corner had been surveyed and measured and given to Gall, Uie Stanislaus property was wholly for Sam and ArleL Kent went monthly Into the bank in Ariel s maid en name. Sam pald,;hls board to'.UJJ. Gail looked at the old ranch wist fully. She had dreamed once a “rl“ dream of coming Chere with Plc » being mistress of these acres of orcn- ard and pasture and wheat fields. They could have been happy “ er®’ Uvlngin the moon-faced old farmhouse, under the great towering oaks iuh? eucalyptus trees, surrounded ,by a ta“ gle Ot-. sheds and fences. corrals^nd pastures; barns and fowl . would have had children, wouldJ a v e driven into town. In .an old car, stopp for mail, for feed, for needles and egg beaters and Ink at. the five-and-ten. Dick would have had cases in the Mg courthouse In the shady square, where scared little Ariel had been summoned years ago, and Gail would have gone into the library to ask the girl at the desk for .the new novels. And on Sundays'they would have telephoned Phil and Lily to ask what the chances were of a picnic up at the old dam. It was going to be hot todayf and the children would love to get near to .the water. Gaii bad cold chickens and tomatoes. If Lily would stop for cake somewhere. . . . “I might have had a boy and a girl by this time. But certainly I wouldn’t have had time for any writing. There’s that to think about! . . . Dick, I’d give up the chance.of wriEing another Iliad to have had you love me, to have been Mrs. Dick Stebbfns these three years.” Gail was twenty-seven now, and the birthdays were coming faster and fast er. Men had wanted her, some of them fine men, men who could have given her at least the position Dick’s wife would have had. But Gail was barely conscious of their existence. She was only vaguely regretful when she had to hurt or disappoint them. , At twenty she might gladly have ac-. cepted any one of them, and made a success of it, too. At twenty-seven they found her coldly kind. She was very happy, living in the old house with that preposterous wife of Phil’s, and the children, and her brothers, and the characters in her books. Her blue eyes . would be almost absent-minded under the faintly knitted, heavy Law rence brows as she explained that she was not going to marry anyone. It just did not seem to mean any-, thing, marrying anyone else than Dick, and until it did, Gail would not con sider it. But sometimes she did consider the strangeness of the situation should Dick and Ariel come back to Clippers- ville. They would never know that this brother-in-law was shrined deep in Gail’s heart They need never know* But it would ' be hard—it would be hard to see him, to have him kiss her in fraternal fashion, to hear Ariel complaining of his treatment of his new clothes and of the care of his children! Once, after Edith’s death, Gail had written a simple, friendly letter to Dick’s mother, trusting the post office to forward it to her In Oregon, where she lived now with a widowed daugh ter. Did Mrs. Stebbins know just where Dick was now? Gail had asked. She, Gall, had a book that he had wanted—and so on—and so on. ■ And Mrs. Stebbins had answered, In a painful hand, on ruled paper, that Dick was just about the worst letter writer that ever was; he had been some In L. A., and after that up to Las Vegas, and last she heard he was in Phoenix for three weeks, but he was coming 'home, according to what he wrote, and just as soon as he did, Mrs; Stebbihs would see he wrote Gall/ Seemed like he had lost sight of his old friends. There was no mention of Ariel or Dick’s marriage In either letter. Gall had not dared risk the secret, and either Mrs. Stebbins had been equally cautious, or Dick had not taken his mother Into his confidence. - Gail suspected, as the months wore along, that there was but one ade quate explanation of Dick’s and Ariel’s silence. They were not happy; the Im pulsive marriage that had found her so young had proved a. mistake. They were quarreling, perhaps already sep arated. The' secret would remain al ways a secret—no one would ever know. And perhaps Ariel would come home some day, bitter and dlslilu- sioned,1 and take her old , unhappy place In Cllppersville society. “Poor Ariel, poor Dick, poor all of us!” Gail would think.V“It’s hard to clasp air and kiss the wind forever I I can be a writer, I suppose. I cer tainly mean to make myself one, If work and trying will do it, But it would hiave been wonderful—wonder ful, to be a wife!” CHAPTER XI One rainy October afternoon Lily and the three* older children were de layed at her mother’s house down on Thomas Street hill, the shabby cabin light-hearted Gall and Edith and Ariel Lawrence had once so despised, and Gail found herself writing alone In the big house with the tiny Gail. Sam traveled up and down the coast now, doing press-agent work for a string of vaudeville theaters, and was as often In Portland or in Los Angeles as at home in CUppersville. . Tonight Gail half expected him, and half-expected that when, PBil discov ered his family’s absence he would driVe at once' to the Wibser house and bring them all back. Meanwhile, In a rainy twilight that made the lights and shadows of the old kitchen more than usually pleasant, she fussed away con tentedly-with' preparations for her own supper tray, foir although the clock said only' half-past five, this was a special night at the library, and she had to go back for a1 directors’ meet ing. ' ;■ Wholewheat toast neatly buttered, thin hot tea, a' piece ot Lily’s apple sauce cake, and the remains of the cofned-beef hash reheated and browned Iii a pan, and Gall. felt'herself ready for a feast Suddenly she heard a motor car on the old side drive, and heard-the:en gine stop and a car door slam. Then there were footsteps on the porch, and the: handle of the kitchen door-turned. A second later, as Gail turned an In quiring glance that way and said aloud, '“Phil?’!. Oie door swung opim, aitf dimly lighted aperture frame^ a an’s slender figure. : i , . TO BB CONTINUE*. . IIU |[A IM PROVED U n if o r m in t e r n a t io n a l UNDAYIcHooL Lesson Institute of Chicago;©, western Newspaper Union. '. L esso n fo r A u g u st 1 1 DANIEL 1 ^®SSON T E X T -D an tel l:S -20. T E X T -K n o w ye not th at ypor body is the temple of tbe Holy Sr^ L ? hi,cV s in *0Ui wblcb ye haveo tPD0T .;-? C orinthians 6:19. Stfo^g T O P IC -H ow D aniel Grew i™ i0 R T O P IC -T en Tim es Strong J1e d 1a t e a n d SENIOR TOP- V m ^ in s the l ^ws of H ealth. p e o p l e AND ADULT TOP IC—M otives for T otal A bstinence. The lesson committee has designat ed this lesson, “Temperance and Health. In the use of this as a tem perance lesson ft must be borne In fflind that it is temperance in the sense of self-mastery, rather than having to do with Indulgence In intoxicating liquors. Daniel’s self-mastery was due to. his right relation and loyalty to his God. It is utterly futile to hope to enforce a program of temperance upon those who are in rebellion against God. 1. Daniel in C aptivity In Babylon (Vv. 1-4). Daniel with his companions were carried away to Babylon In the first selSe of Jerusalem by Nebuchadnez zar. At the command of the king, cer tain choice young men were carried away because they were “skillful In wisdom, and cunning in knowledge, and understanding science,” that they might be trained to stand In the king’s palace. II. Daniel’s Trials (w. 5-7). I- Conscience tested (v. 5). By the appointment of the king, a daily pro vision was arranged of the king’s meat and wine for Daniel and his compan ions. This was contrary to the custom among the godly Jews. Being con trary to the Jewish customs they could not conscientiously partake of them. 2. The change of name (vv. 6, 7). Among the Hebrews names were given to children which were most signifi cant Daniel means “God is my Judge." The significance of this name is that all the problems of life were submit ted to God for a decision. God was made the arbitrator of his life. His name was changed to Belteshazzar, which means “Bel’s prince.” It meant, therefore, one whom the chief god of the Babylonians favors. Hananiah means “gift or beloved of Jehovah;" His name was changed to Shadrach, which signified “Illumined by the sun god, Racb." Mlshael means “who is as God?” His name was changed to Meshach, which means “who Is like goddess, Sheshach, the gentle one?” Azariab means “Jehovah Is our nelp.” This was changed to Abed- nego, which means “the servant of Nego." Back of the change Of names was the attempt of Satan to wipe out the name of the true God. III. Daniel’s Courtesy (vv. 8-13). Daniel seems to bave been the spokesman for the company. Although bis heart was fixed, he did not forget to be a gentleman. He requested to be excused. from this meat and drink In order that he be not defiled. We should learn from this that in times even of great trials we should be courteous. When Daniel asked that a test be made as to tbe effect of tbe food upon the countenance of lilmself and companions, gracious considera tion was given to them. IV. Daniel’s Triumph (vv. 14-21). 1. As to physical health (vv. 14-16). A test was made for ten days, and it was shown that Daniel and bis com panions were fairer in countenance and fatter in flesh, than those who In dulged In the eating of the king's meat This meat and wine would have been pleasant to tbe palate, but would have meant a compromise of the con science. It is obligatory upon God’s children today to abstain from that which is conirary to his law. 2. Spiritual Insight (v. 17). Because of Daniel’s loyalty to God, Nebuchadr nezzar’s dream was revealed to him (2:81-45), and he was'given visions sketching the whole history of the world. S. Mental growth (w,. 17-20). Dan iel and his companions were found to be ten times superior in matters of wisdom and understanding to their comrades. Those' who abstain from Indulgence In the use of strong drinks have clearer minds and are thus bet ter* equipped mentally .for their work than those who indulge therein. 4.'Their social and political prefer: ence (v. 19). They stood before the king. N® higher.position of Influence and honor could have been given them. 5. Their .temporal Influence (v. 21). They were all advanced to positions of influence, and Daniel became pres ident of the college of wise men, and the prime minister of the nation. This position he /Continued to hold during several dynasties. Good Action* : Do you act .as'if you had ten thou sand years to throw away. Death- stands at your, elbow. Be good for something, while you.Uve and It.Is In- your power.: -What remains but to live easy and-cheerful, and crowd one good- ac&on !so. dose-to another that there may be the least empty space between them.' - .' 'J . Habit ' Habit is the magistrate of our lives; and, therefore, we should' see; that we have-good habits.—Lord Bacon. . Let Our Motto Be GOOD HEALTH BY DR. LtOYD ARNOLDProfeuor of Bacteriotosr end PrerentiTe Medicine* UnivereJty of Illinois, College of Medicine. C ro c h e t D e s ig n s in W id e D e m a n d n e w PROBLEMS IN RURAL HEALTH . Something new has been happening In this country since 1930. We are having a back-to- the land movement Before this, ever since we became an Industrial nation, we ,,had an on-to- the-elty urge. The new movement Is giving the rural community a lot of new p ro b le m s. There are m o re children to go to school, for Instance, and so new school rooms must be built And then an In flux of . more people means ^that the community health problems gre greatly Increased. We were an agricultural country during Colonial times. Almost every one got his living from the land, and practically the only Industry was home industry. The only power, outside of the muscle power of man and beast was the power of a few water wheels In the streams along the New England coast It was at these sites that our first industrial towns and cities grew. Then came steam power, and since steam power Co1Ild not be transported easily, the workers flocked to where the boilers were. And then came elec tricity. Electricity can economically be transported long distances, and hence the development of industries using electrical power, could be spread over a wide geographical area. This led naturally to the rediscovery of small towns as, ideal factory sites. But whether in city or small town the industrial worker did not till the soiL During the last 40 years the popula tion of the United States has almost doubled. For every 100 persons living In the United States In 1890, there were 195 In 1930. But for every 100 farmers In 1890, there were only 124 in 1930. In other words, there was an actual decrease In the farm population In those four decades. On the other hand, the population of towns of 25,000 to 500,000 inhabitants Increased 300 times as compared to a general population in crease of 200 times. The figures are still more striking In the larger cities of half a million to a million In popu lation. Here the increase has been 700 times what It was In 1890. We were in 1930 a decidedly more urban than rural population. Now, Mue to the depression, we are In the midst of a redistribution of pop ulation. It has been estimated. that more than 100,000 persons a. month are moving from the cities to the land. Many city homes have TO LET signs on them, but it Is difficult to find a vacant farm bouse almost anywhere. Likewise it is difficult to find a vacant house In a small town. I heard of one town the other day of about 2,000 pop ulation. It waa In the iron mining dis trict of Upper Michigan. When the mine shut down 15 years ago because the ore had run out half the popula tion moved away. But a newly mar ried pair recently could not find a house of any sort to live In; So many former residents' bad come back, or people from Milwaukee or Chicago, who had loaded their families Into cars, hunting for cheaper living, had decided to stay In this town. The new comers figure - they can raise food, if they can’t do anything else. And this condition Is duplicated all over the country. Many of these people will stay per manently In the small towns and on the farms, although the probability Is that only a small proportion of them will continue farming as an all time occupation. The majority are still ma chine-minded. Great industrialists, such as Henry Ford, hold that the solution of manufacturing slack Is for the fac tory to be situated In the country, with the employees working their home gar dens on OS days to supplement with homegrown fruits and vegetables, their factory income. Be that as it may, the present fact Is that the rural districts have had wished' upon them an influx of population that has been trained to city ways. Is the migration going to be for the health benefit of every one? We believe It Is. It Is better for children to be brought up surrounded by green grass than by concrete pavements. - Oo the other hand, tbe city-born peo ple bave been accustomed to better sanitary health guards than the coun try-born people have. They have, for Instance, been accustomed to safe drink ing water, whiltj ln some country com munities tbe well water Is not safe. In the cities typhoid fever has been practically wiped out It is in tbe coun try districts that this disease now persists. Medical officials are watching .to see whether there will be any flare-up of this disease among the back-to-the- Iand settlers. Health authorities generally believe- that this spreading out of formerly con gested population will have a very good’ Influence on the' public -health of this ^country. The city, people will leant s6me valuable health lessons from the country people, while the country peo ple will learn from the City. Many cities have established infant welfare stations; it may be that the country districts will no w deem it essential to have these, too. Anyway, one thing Is certain: there will be more children': brought up with the benefits of sun shine, fresh air, /and .direct contact with Mother. Earth.. ■■■ -■ C Western Newspaper. Union: I ' Lrurtfts 23S 332ijV ..v\ Jnsikiii;ns SP t J s Crocheted edgings and lnsertiens have such it wide application te household linens and tvearing ap parel that they are always In de mand and always In use. Pillow cases, towels, table run ners, dresser sets, aprons, gowns, kiddle dresses, handkerchiefs, cur tains, bed-spreads, and many othei articles, require these handmade flnlshlng touches to make them at tractive. Book No. 26 contains 72 actua) size illustrations with instructions for many beautiful edgings, some insertions and a few medallions, and Is a valuable book to have on hand when an edging Is wanted Use a thread of proper size, depend ing on article to which edging Is to be applied. Send 15c to our crochet depart ment and receive this book by mail Address, HOME CRAFT COM PANY, DEPARTMENT B, Nine teenth and S t Louis avenue, S t Louis, Mo. Inclose a stamped addressed en velope for reply, when writing fcrf any Information. ' Otaranteedt eflfeotlve, - Keafc convenient— Cannot wmnotsoll or Iojorefl: lasts.all season. 20o~at □ A l 5 Y T L Y IK rL L E R W NU-7 S O R E E Y E S EyeUotiM reUevesa&Ocures sonsn&ihfiamsdeyesInSitotf Alpine Memories One of the most beautiful customs which has been followed for cen turies In the mountains Is that prae- ticed by the Alpine herdsmen of Switzerland. Just as the last ray* of tiie setting sun are disappearing and the. golden glow is reflected on the white mountain tops, the herds man living on-the highest peak takes his Alpine horn and calls loudly, '•Praise the Lord God! Praise the Lord God I” As soon as the neighboring herds man below hears these words he takes his Alpine horn and relays the call to his neighbor, who takes it up In turn. Down the mountain side the call goes, sounding like a ' won derful echo and - rolling on for a quarter of an hour. When silence falls every herds-, man kneels by his flock in evening prayers. When the devotions an. over the herdsman on the highest ridge again calls, “Good night I Good night I” This call is In turn carried down the mountain side and then the herdsmen drift back to their eot- tages and all Is silent B I L I O U S N E S S ECZEMA., To quickly relieve the itching and burning, and help nature restore skin comfort, freely apply R e s in o t QuickrPIeasant Successful Elimination Let’s be frank—there’s only one way for your body to rid itself of the waste material that causes acid ity, gas, headaches, bloated feelings And a dozen other discomforts Your Intestines must function and the way to make them move quick* ly, pleasantly, successfully, without griping or harsh Irritants Is to chew a MIlnesla Wafer thoroughly, In ac cordance with directions on the bottle or tin, then swallow. JOInesIa Wafers, pure milk of magnesia In tablet form, each equiv alent to a tablespoon of liquid milk of magnesia, correct acidity, bad breath, flatulence, at their source, and enable yon to have the quick, pleasant; successful elimination so necessary to abundant health. Iffinesia Wafers comle In bottles at 35c and 60c or In convenient tins at 20c. Eecoinmended by thousands of physicians. All good druggists cany them. Start using these pleas ant tasting effective wafers today. KILL ALL FUES RECORD, MnrKSVlLLE, N. C. BRISBANE THIS WEEK A Tongh Old Bird Five Billions More? News of Hogs Submarines Wimted Amos K. E. Pinchot, who has lei sure and thinks, utters profound truth writing to one of the “professors.” “Capitalism is a tough old bird, that wiil live a good deal longer than any of us will.” Capitalism, which means government by organized dol lars and industry, instead of organ ized soldiers, will last longer than the present generation, longer than th is century. Capitalism is the new financial feudalism that replaced military feu dalism. There Is no reason why it should not last as long as military feudalism lasted, many centuries. Senator Borah, one of the senate’s able men, predicts that congress will sit until November I, and that five thousand one hundred and twenty mll- JIons more will be appropriated for Immediate speeding, ""hat would make about an e-?en t'-o '■ Ilions in extra ap propriation for tuis year. Two thousand one hundred and twenty millions of the money would nay the soldiers’ bonus In "green backs,” and three thousand millions ,would be used to take up mortgages on farms. “Hogs sell up to $10.10, best price since September, 1930.” That comes from Kansas City—ten dollars and ten cents for a hog weighing one hundred pounds. That may not mean much to you; it means much to the farmers that raise hogs. It also has meaning for housekeepers that buy sausages. For some mysterious reason, when .pork prices go up 10 per cent sausage prices go up 100 per cent AxthQT Brisbane Bear Admiral Yates Stirling, Jr., commanding Brooklyn navy yard, says America needs long-range submarines to protect our Interests In the Pacific. Since 1918, when sweet peace re turned, wise Japan, according to Ad miral Stirling, has built 64 submarines, including 27 of long range, each car rying sis torpedo tubes, powerful guns, able to cross the Pacifie and return without refueling. Japan has also a special fleet of eight submarines for placing destructive ocean mines, four of them able to operate 5,000 .miles from their base. Each could place 45 bombs In the path of enemy shipping. Newell P. Sherman, choir singer, Boy Scout master., fell in love with a girl sixteen, admits that to make his way clear he upset a canoe, throw ing the mother of his two children Into the water, kept pushing her away from the boat until she sank and drowned. This young gentleman is 0 feet 4 inches tall, but the electric chair can doubtless be arranged to fit him. ' I You will hope that no tender-hearted parole board will say, "He ought to have another chance.” One chance to drown the mother of your two children seems enough. Bome reports Fascist excitement be cause “Japan assumes the role of Abyssinian champion.” Mussolini’s press sayB Japan sets lierself up as leader of Asiatic and African peoples, “against the civiliza tion and culture of the white race.” A Fascist newspaper calls Japan “the enemy of Europe and America, dreaming of world conquest.” That seems to be a keg of powder’With only a spark lacking. Scientists experimenting with guinea pig3 take one or ten or a hundred guinea pigs, never all the guinea pigs at once. College professors, union labor lead ers convinced of their ability to Invent a better government, gentlemen who believe In no government at all, and other experimenters, should select a definite number of American guinea pigs for experiment, not practice on the 130,000,000 all at once. Miss Margaret McDermott, spinster lady of Chicago, left $25,000 for an old spitz dog. Many write to the ex ecutors saying they simply •'adore anl- tnals,” especially spitz dogs, and would like to take care of “Pet” In return for the Income on $25,000. - That interests men that , leave large fortunes to 'daughters or sons. For tune hunters from abroad are always ready to spend money left to daugh ters, and scheming ladles, foreign or native, are ready to help-a-young' gen tleman spend bis Inherited money, as recently Illustrated. In a certain Byan case. . Moscow dispatches say the Soviet’s north polar flight fromMoscow to San Francisco may start any day. If three Russian airmen make that 6,000-mlte flight, nonstop, from Moscow to San Francisco successfully,’ Sail Francisco: will be Interested, and Washington, D. C, ought to be Interested. 1 The government might even Interest Itself In building- some long-distance planes. (Q KJag Features Syndicate* Irw%WNU Service, News Review of Current Events the World Over President’s Way of Ending Virgin Islands How Arouses Criticism— Senator Black Probes for Truth About Utilities Cigar Box. B y E D W A R D W. P IC K A R D ' © Western Newspaper Union. THAT row over the administration of the Virgin islands was so un pleasant that: President Roosevelt felt Impelled to settle it himself. So he removed from ' office the two chief battlers, Gov. Paul M. Pearson and Judge T. Webber Wilson, had other jobs found for them, and nominated as Pear son’s successor Law rence W. Cramer, who was serving as Iieu- t tenant governor of St. JjT j Croix Island. Confir- * ' mation of this appoint-L. W. Cramer ment wag not imme diate. The senate committee Investi gating the islands affairs was slow in making, up its mind about Cramer, and from S t Thomas came the news that the foes of the Pearson administration there, together with a delegation from S t Croix, were protesting vigorously against the President’s selection of a new governor. The Emancipator, opposition paper; said editorially: ^ “The islanders would about as soon have Pearson, for under Cramer no change of policy can be expected. Poor and unknown as the humble people of the Virgin islands may be, they are en titled to an example of honor and cour age from the President of the Amer ican Republic.’’ The disposal of Pearson and Wilson also aroused criticism in Washington. The former had been attacked stead ily by Pat Harrison of Mississippi and other Democratic senators, but Secre tary of the Interior Ickes had defended him warmly, so he was given a job un der Ickes, being made assistant direc tor of housing in the PWA at SS1OOO a year, a place not previously filled. In order to provide a job for Judge Wilson, a former congressman from Mississippi and a protege of Senator Harrison, a woman was forced off the federal parole board. Attorney General Cummings requested and obtained the resignation of Dr. Amy A. Stannard, a psychiatrist who has been in the gov ernment service 12 years with a civil service status and had been a member of the parole board since 1930. Wilson was sworn in as her successor. ^Since Wilson’s qualifications for the place ap peared to be chiefly political, observ ers in Washington noted sadly that the parole board was getting back into po litical hands. SC Senator Black and that he his efforts on WHAT was In the cigar box wrapped in a newspaper? That Is what Senator Hugo Black, chairman of the senate lobby committee, want ed to know.. Before the committee fo r questioning was John W. Carpenter of Dall as, president of the Texas P o w e r an d Light company. He ad mitted freely that he and other utility men had hotel conferences, dinners and a trip down Chesapeake bay with congressmen dur- the fight over th e Wheeler-Bayburn bill, himself bad centered Texas congressmen. But of the mys terious box he could or would tell nothing. Black probed and probed, and finally asked: 1 “Do you still say tbat In the morn ing (of the day before the' vote on the utilities bill ‘death sentence’) you didn’t give a congressman a box wrapped up In a newspaper ?” Carpenter, replied»quietly: “I don’t think I did, unless it was a few ci gars.’’ £*fcate and house conferees met to consider the utility control bill, but there were small signs that they could get together, and one session ended abruptly In a real row. Two admin istration lobbyists, Benjamin Cohen and Dozier A. De Vane, were brought into the executive session by Senators Wheeler and Barkley and though Rep resentative George Huddleston pro tested, their. continued presence was insisted 1 upon. ’ Whereupon the fiery Alabama congressman and his fellows from the house walked out and broke up the meeting. Cohen is generally given credit for writing the measure. After leaving the committee room, Huddleston said flatly that the house conferees' woud hot recede from the position that the' “death sentence” must be eliminated. ton Circuit Courts of Appeals held the AAA unconstitutional, will not be thrown out and the highest tribunal will have a chance to pass upon it .• Amid so much adverse criticism, the action of the Mid-west farm leaders gathered In Chicago must have been soothing to Mr. Wallace. Resolutions were, v passed praising the secretary and congressional ieaders for their ef forts In behalf of “agricultural equal ity.” The farm leaders urged senate ap proval for the commodity exchange bill, passed by the house, and asked re-establishment of the Pacific North west Wheat Export corporation under the AAA to prevent wheat surpluses In that area from competing with Mid west wheat and other grains. The meeting voiced opposition to the plans for transportation co-ordi nation, suggesting farmers would profit more by competition among carriers. DERMANENT federal control of the *■ liquor business is provided for in a bill which was passed by the house and sent to the senate with prospects of early adoption by that body. The meas ure, which creates within the treasury a new agency to be known as the fed eral alcohol administration, was asked by the President to replace the FACA killed by the Supreme court’s; NBA de cision. Mr. Roosevelt wanted the new agency to be an independent office, but the house decided otherwise. OPPONENTS of the AAA amend ments designed to strengthen the powers of Secretary of Agriculture Wallace ‘ decided... to- let- the basic • act go up to the Supreme court, so. the ad ministration bill .Was passed..by the senate with, only 15 adverse votes. . Both Republican and conservative Democratic foes of the AAA are con fident that tie Supreme court will hold the basic act unconstitutional and an early test is-assured by a senate amendment permitting suits to recover processing .taxes thatt have not- been passed on to producers or consumers: One of the major purposes- of the amendments was to- close the , courts, but the senate rejected this scheme by a vote of .41 to 23. As a result, the Hoosack Mills case,. In which-the Bos- IMMEDIATE convocation of the League of Nations council to deal with the Italo-Ethiopian question was demanded by Haile Selassie, emperor of Ethiopia. On his behalf the demand was telegraphed to the league secretariat at Geneva by Tacla Hawariat, Ethiopian minister to France and delegate to ‘ the league. He insisted that the council pro ceed to the examina tion of the situation . . . . under article XV of Emperor Haile tl)e Je a g u e covenant, Se assle Ethiopia invoking this article because of the “threat to,: her independence from Italy.” British dispatches said Prime Minis ter Stanley Baldwin and leading mem bers of his cabinet were believed to favor full league, action, if other na tions agreed, as a last resort to avert the threatened conflict. Diplomatic quarters In London heard that the British government probably would al ter Its policy and permit the export of arms to Ethiopia. The emperor’s new minister there, W. C. Martin, had a conference at the foreign office and came out smiling happily but saying nothing. Previously Mr^ Martin had admitted, that Ethiopia was short not only of: arms but also of money. ‘At the moment we have very little money,” he said. “I am doing all that is possible to raise loans In London, but thus far I have not met with a great measure of success.”- Franz Guertner .HESTER C.-3DAVIS, AAA admlnls- —J trator. and his fellow officials were erevlously shocked when they were shown this classified real estate adver tisement In the Globe of Joplin, Mo.: "Dandy way to make money: Buy this 13 acres for hog raising. Sign up with the government to not raise, say, 500 bogs. - It will pay you $1,000. That will pay f°r the acres and have some left” “It’s preposterous!” exploded Mr. Davis. “It’s at least preliminary to fraud.' It’s deliberate misrepresenta tion and not Jn any way possible. I shall begin an Investigation at once.” De t e r m in a t io n of the Nazis to put. an end to “political Catholi cism” in Germany and their consequent drive against Catholic youth organiza tions may bring on results more serious even than has the N a z i antl-semltism. General Goering, bead of the secret police,. !gave out a warning to ft. * J Catholic priests to be careful- In- their com ments from the pulpit, and Franz Gaertner, minister of justice, is sued a decree threat ening prosecution for any priest violating Goering’s injunction. Throughout the county generally the Catholic clergy was cautious, but In Freiburg, Baden, where the Goering order had "lot been published before Sunday, tl t priests read in their pulpits a letter from the episcopate calling the Nazi action a violation of the concordat with the Vatican. To this charge the Nazis re ply that the Catholics were the first to violate the concordat by making at tacks on the-Hitler youth movement In their parish'papers. This new “purge” by the Nazis in cludes a renewed crusade against the Jews and dissolution of the Steel Hel mets, veterans’ organization, in vari ous, provinces. The Jews are helpless and, if Julius Streicher has his way, will be all driven out of Berlin or se gregated In ghettos. But the Steel Hel mets, whose chief is Minister of Labor Franz Seldte, are likely to cause the Hitler government a lot of trouble. The organization’s weekly paper is us ing language that is not often heard In Germany these days, and Seldte is demanding the reason for suppression of the local divisions. MAYOR LA Gu a r d ia of New Yorki has created an International In-' cldent all by himself. He backed up License Commissioner Paul Moss In his refusal to license one “Mr. K” to work In the metropolis as a massage oper ator because he is a German. The German diplomatic officials were pre paring to * complain to the State de partment that the city was violating the German-American commercial treaty of, 1925. But Mt. La Guardia declared the treaty is null and void “because Germany has discriminated against American citizens of Jewish origin.”, . He indicated that not even the State department can force him to back down. "This order shall be carried out un til such time as we are directed to do otherwise by the courts,” he said. The German question also threatened to come up In the senate, for Senator King of Utah said be would ask an in vestigation to determine whether the United States would be. warranted In “severing <•'-diplomatic ! relations” with Germany. . p ARTIAL investigation of the .mills 1 industry by the federal trade com mission was said to have revealed de plorable conditions and the adminis tration asked for $200,000 to continue the inquiry. The senate committee In considering the deficiency appropria tion bill cut out that Item altogether, but when the measure came before the senate Duffy of Wisconsin moved an amendment, adding the sum asked. Aft er a hot debate this was approved by' a vote of 51 to 18 and the bill was then passed. The. numerous senate amend ments hhd added a total of more than 580,000,000 to the house measure, so the $306,000,000 bill. was sent to con ference. CvARmERS In the Middle West, ready " to harvest their crops, found they couldn’t get hands to do the work. The idle men ordinarily counted on for this were on the relief rolls and declined offers of farm labor for two reasons: The' wages paid by the farm ers were less than the sum's received from the relief organization or for government works, anfi if the men once went-oS the dole they feared they would have trouble getting back there when the harvest was over. The sit uation was desperate and emergency relief commissions were urged to take action. This they did in the states af-' fected and 'It was announced the “re volt” was- under control. The Illinois commission stopped all relief works In the rural areas until after- harvest' In- Eansas- persons - re fusing any temporary employment were removed from the relief rolls. -In Ne braska'26 counties WereiCut off from federal relief allotments and In 15 /oth- era- the allotments were cut In half. In nearly a score of'Iowa counties officials denied relief ,‘and able-bodied men on relief rolls were admonished to accept employment-In the: harvest •fields.. . . ii -S * In North DiLkota all but specialized .projects were baited and the state ad ministrator announced 'that ,as soon at the harvest-was over the new works progress admihistratlon would take care of unemployables. 11 1 HAT . wholly un-American proce- • dure, the general strike, was tried out by organized labor In Indiana and the 67,000 inhabitants of Terre Haute were deprived of all food supplies. The local authorities of Vlgo county called on the governor for help and Mr. McNutt promptly, ordered 14 com panies of the National Guard to the scene. Brig. Gen. Wray De Prez, In command, promised the merchants who had been bullied Into shutting their shops would be given protection, and said his first endeavor would be to restore the milk and Ice service. This hadsbeen-cut -off* even -from .hospitals. The general strike was- called by 48 unions without Warningt^because labor leaders had been unable to reach an .agreement with ; the Columbian En ameling and Stamping company. Some 600 of that concern’s employees went on strike in March and the plant was closed down, but the union. leaders thought it was about to be reopened by strikebreakers. Conciliators from , the Department of Labor arrived and within 48 hours the general strike collapsed and was called off by the union officials in charge. The strike at the stamping company, how ever, continued, In effect and several times the. troops were forced to use tear gas bombs to disperse riotous mobs. Terre Haute merchants estimated thatvtbe .two. days’ strike cost them at least half a million dollars. The state spent probably $50,000 in maintain|n- order by use of the troops. The state federation of labor asserted the sym pathy walkout was unauthorized. a11 rebellious In- dignation, the Democrats of * the house did everything the administra tion wished In considering the social security bin as altered by the senate Jhe conferees had settled an dtf. ferences after two weeks, of hard work, but one of- the amendments they ac cepted was that permitting, private pension-systems to function under the measure. The majority, members of- tbp house: were informed that Prekl. Jent Roosevelt was oaposed'to this; so ™ n .i\.UV d ^ accept “r S e n a t e would not-permit the elimlnatibn of so National Topics Interpreted by W illiam B ru ck art KattcnaI Press BuHdlng Washington, P. C. W asblngton--Presldent B posevelt knows and those close to him realize that sometimes some- A Laagh thing more than a Not Enough 1bbS11 Is required ton o t a n ougn a rumor ;T|iat Is one of the reasons why the Presi dent Ib planning If and when congress adjourns to make an extended tour of this country. He knows of rumors going about the land that his health Is not up to par and he is .taking this method of disclosing to the American people by action rather than word the answer that he Is physically fit. Whoever occupies the White House Is continually subjected to whispered rumprs as well as open assertions of one kind or another. Some, as In this Instance, reflect on the health of the chief executive. Others, as happened within the last quarter of a century, reflected on the personal habits and practices of the President Still others have related In times past to personal fortunes and financial dealings of the man In the White House. Usually these “whispering campafgns” are of a de rogatory character. -No one ever knows exactly how they start nor is it ever possible for Observers to put a finger on the rumors as they float by. It Is a condition that seems to be bred by prominence of the individual about whom lie rumor mongers can operate because people are always interested in what a President of the United States is doing. In the current instance the “whis pering campaign" was largely unknown to Washington until summer resort residents began returning to the city. They brought back all sorts of stories that were being circulated In distant p la c e s concerning Mr. Roosevelt's health. The gossip, for that is what it appears to be, spread like wild fire In Washington and became of so much concern that it crept into one of the White House press conferences. “Mr. President,” one of the 200 corre spondents present asked, “are you in a little bad health?” . The chief executive’s answer was. the IaugF which has endeared him to many people. He was just back from a short cruise' aboard a yacht in- Chesapeake bay. His face was sun-tanned. He leaned back in his chair and demanded to know what the correspondents thought about i t I think that the news dispatches from Washington that night Indicated rather clearly what the correspondents thought about the state of the President’s health, for surely none of these dispatches Indicated any particular alarm. * * • ■ Nevertheless,-the rumors continued to go and a good many thousand peo ple apparently be- Let People See lieved t h a t Mr. for Themselves Boosevelt had bro ken under the strain of his New Deal presidency.1 So, be fore the summer is over millions of Americans probably will have an op portunity to see for themselves just as the correspondents saw at the press conference that th'e President still has his smile; that his hair is no more gray than when he took office In 1933, and that his countenance shows do ear marks of the strain which every Presi dent of the United States finds an in herent part of that job. One trip upon which Mr. Roosevelt has set his heart is a tour to the Pa cific coast and return. It will provide an opportunity for several millions of Americans ;to see him and a lesser number to hear him speak. It will carry him through territory which con tains probably about half of the na tion’s population. It Is well recognized in Washington that no amount of denials by informed persons or any amount; of second-hand testimony Is sufficient , to squelch ma licious stories of the kind that have been circulated about the President The eye witness is the only one who is prepared to discredit such stories and, unless present plans are revised, the eye witnesses will., be mariy this summer. The President probably will make other trips during the late fall and early winter as well. Plans for these are still In the making and tbeir length and number depends somewhat upon the date of congressional adjourn m ent The program1 fits well into the Roose velt methods. In the 28 months of his tenure-the President has done a con siderable amount of travel. He has made three cruises on the yacht owned by Vincent Astbr, two of which lasted more than two weeks each. He trav eled to the east coast of Canada In' June, 1933, aboard the craft, Amber- jack, and returned two weeks later aboard a navy ship. Last year, It win be remembered, he visited Haiti, Puer to Rico, the Virgin islands, Colombia, the Panama cabal, CIipperton island, and HawaiiL On Md' retuttf- frbm' that cruise he crossed the Northwest,.mak- lng several speech* before reaching Washington. O ^ 193il ^ d to 1934 he visited Warm Springs, Georgia, the iolohy where victinM of infantile pkralysis are pursed back to health and with which the President, because of his own af- much personal con- nfection;y jn ‘retaining Ironh-Uie 1934 ^isit to W am Springs, Mt. Roosevelt stopped a t Muscle Shoals, Norris dam, and Binilngham for personal visits to thinS8 whteh Interested him. ,AU of these trips have been In addition to periodical visits to his home Hyde Park, N. Y., and, apparent]? ,n I that he needs to add to his m iw this summer is a period of CmiilarI* tive calmness In Washington. If superficial appearances count fa anything, the administration is _ n . ally making mors*To Reduce designed to red,,! , Deficit the federal trea. sury’s deficit. It b yet too early to tell definitely what th plana are and administration Spjt, men are strangely quiet about but there are certain signs and pa tents which may be examined in n! effort to determine which way the ernment Sis headed In respect o( tie gigantic expenditures for public Wtu relief, and general government costs. While congressional committees cob. tinue to examine tax questions Witb i view to enactment of legislation (bat will increase federal revenue, the Pns. Ident and his advisers have taken steps to cut down the drain on the Jreaaty, The first and probably the most Jtt. portant of these moves is the m. nouncement that on November I f«j. eral aid to those people unable to fort I will cease definitely. Belief Admkfe I trator Hopkins announced after a con ference with the President that tin relief policy win be changed on & vember I and that the various states, counties, and municipalities will |jj expected after that date to look after that segment of the population know as the unemployables. These are peo ple who for one reason or another cannot earn their own living by Previously Mr. Roosevelt had direct ed his fiscal advisers to make a tint- ough study of relief requirements for the fiscal year beginning July 1, 1036. ] While this is almost 11 months awaj, the President told newspaper corn-1 spondents that he desired to know as early as possible what the burden ot reUef would be In the future. Bis an nouncement was Interpreted as having a connection with budget requirements and prospective revenue under the pro- posed new tax legislation. Earlier, Public Works Administralor Tckes had made known that the pro gram of public works expenditures for improvement of the Mississippi valftf and its rivers bad been abandoned. It will be recalled tbat th e National Re sources board had recommended a- tensive improvements to be carried (A from public works funds In the handj of the public works administrator, These involve vast sums. Now, It is made to appear that the PWA and He administration have In mind some restraint on expenditures of that char acter and that hereafter gigantic allot ments of a public works or improfr ment character may be expected to Ie fewer in number. I The result of this will be, of coarse, I to hold In the treasury some of total of the $5,000,000,000 public norta appropriation. Reduction of the outgo for direct re lief necessarily will be reflected in remainder of the public works-reM | fund and It Is reported that other pla j are In the making which will ban a their prospective end a restoration I* private employment of greater numbffl of idle workers than heretofore ton been contemplated. j Then, as another indication of *» ministration Intention to restore fundi I to the treasury and thus reduce lit difference between income and ex penses was an announcement by Jesse I H. Jones, , chairman of the Iteconstruf tion Finance corporation. Mr- made known that hereafter the 1‘‘ WiU not make loans to banks. Be I dared that the banking structure in an excellent condition and ] further aid was not required. The fact which Mr. Jones did W mention In his announcement fe W ‘ ever, that the banks are exhibiting s particular desire to borrow fro® “ federal government The RFC a'r® holds preferred stock In almost ■ of the banks In the country and banks, according to RFC records, liquidating their obligations as MP I as they can do so. This is sign>“c | I have reported to you . - how slow ly th e administration p for spending the ft Works-Rdief 000,000,000 n orks if Plans Drag gressing. In c°»“ tlon w ith th e H opkins’ announce® on relief and th e President’s relie vey order, it w as disclosed tJiat ^ approxim ately fifteen thousand P - have been givea jobs since the w aBi m ade available. This . rC. not'In clu d e th e additional list , c ru its fo r th e Civilian Consena I corps w hose num bers have Sroff , 300,000 to 403,000. It will be rera that-provision w as m ade in tne f I 000,000 appropriation resolution # I Increase of the CCC from 300.U l U K ha I 600,000. Thus, In two mon"‘v , 0( I CCO has had only about onej ' 4 the total increase which was e ^ Ime iouu uicr««ae . peD EFrankly, COC enlistments have d ^ disappointing that the ^ p0" '|iinitli> thorities have changed the age ^ order to permit the naasimu p J tries Into that service. Those j . sifion to ■ know and; who „nter[ala candidly about conditions ap. soine feat that the total ®T ta,eB» proach the 600.000 to which enlist are restricted.WesterD Newspaper U Modern CUi Tem perature Seldon Much Below Freej Washington.—Ketchikan, J n l ioto the Public utilit The city h as arran g e d to bd Seetrie light, pow er, w a te r! ^ i s T o 'n l y another iudif Ketchikan is a strictly mJ wftii very few of the chalpopularly attrib u ted to AlasM JrJL the N ational G eograplj population o.f 3,800 woul M te it a m etropolitan stand rfates, bu t in A laska it is r' to the capital, Ju n eau . More Rain Than In Pi ■•Situated at the very sol tIn of the long, Alaskan that reaches down the coas' Columbia, Ketchikan is fii «.11 for all steamers enterl through the inland passf perched on a rocky hillsidj abruptly into the waters j N arrows. Around it rise std hills green the year arounl ters’in Ketchikan are as F Richmond, Va. The temnd dom drops much below fri there is practically no winding sea channels and tain streams never freeze. I is rain, plenty of it; oveH year, which is worse thd panama. Yellow oilskins al vailing fashion In all seasod "The bare, rock foundatj city provide neither soil I space for roads, so the strea of wooden planks. The bJ triet is set on piles, close I line of wharfs. Stairs aj board roads lead up to thef part of town. There aid home has a bit of law nl probably planted on import! Is Busy Place, f “Business is good in Kel Is shipping center and supi| a large district The shop; are stocked with foods an dise fresh from the states Seattle is only 660 miles . regular steamer service summer. Huge salmon ca frantically busy during thd son when salmon are runn the Httle river that rusij Ketchikan, incidentally with electric power, is with pink and silver fish, or king salmon, is the prl ety of the Ketchikan dia but fishing is another big ill there are great cold sto[ where the fish are frozen | are shipped south. “Although there are _ mills, lnmbering has not oped on a very large scale. M illio n s A r e l Receiverships Said Huge Retur Washington. — Evidenci the existence of so-called ' Inlttees" of • bondholders Chicago and New York an millions of dollars’ worth realty bonds was made pu! gressman A. J. Sabath, < the house committee inve; ceiverships. Evidence concernin', __ of the committees ana theii continuing to be uncoven result that prosecution ma; ed for violation of a numb and state laws, Sabatb de ' chain. committees, control from a few issu ma"y as 400 issues of , aggregating In par amo Ti,1111111011 uPward °f Si, Tbe chain committees, tl Jbd sa'd, form but one MUonai racket” througn “®>.000 citizens have be "early $8,000,000,000 of ■^Ity. bonds are In defi Wrted. Control or administrai REDUCES THE SP e je c iu v f-f E West, I kbed dish ^le Boy scouI ^ o wni washing for thef Seouu j a^ end the arst !I ^ t 21in °lee ’D WasJ ?»d consL T1,ey wU1 useISeeine e val«able tim l 81Og to other fnn-' All f Ioeal I attend .should apt] ut headquarters. RECORD. MOCKSVILLE. N. C. L 1 1 visits to his home ^ 3*. Y., ana, apparent! tn to add to hi* mll^ Jis to add to is a period of C ffl ; In Washington. * * * al appearances co„nt . ( ! administration is i ^ ally m a lW m o t1 :C to red£ the federal tre» sury’s deficit Jt to tell definitely what “ d administration spokd |angely quiet about them e certain signs and J , may be examined in h., rn>ine which way the beaded In respect of iu nditures for public works ineral government costa. ’ tressional committees con ^ P ‘ne tax questions with . btment of legislation that I [federal revenue, Uiepres. ' I advisers have taken steps i Jthe drain on the treasury, I Ind probably the most Im I !these moves is the an. Ithat on November I fej. lose people unable to work j definitely. Relief Aaminis- j as announced after a con- . Uie President that tie] will be changed on No- id that the various states, Jd municipalities will be I jpr that date to look after * : of the population known ployables. These are peo- one reason or another I I their own living by work, I I Mr. Hoosevelt had direct-1 I advisers to make a thor-1 Iof relief requirements for I |a r beginning July I, 19341 almost 11 months awajJ ht told newspaper corre-1 |a t he desired to know as I Isible what the burden of j Jbe In the future. His an-1 Iwas Interpreted as haring ] I with budget requirements ! Jive revenue under the pro- ax legislation, pblic Works Administrator i hade known that the pro- : Jlic works expenditures for j of the Mississippi valley I Is had been abandoned. It j lied that the National Re- J Vd had recommended ex- ovements to be carried ’> iworks funds In the hands j Jlic works administrator. I te vast sums. Now, it is| sear that the PWA and the | i)D have in mind some I Jexpenditures of that char-f |a t hereafter gigantic allot-1 public works or improve-1 ter may be expected to Is | ber. of tills will be, of course,! the treasury some of the I 5 5,00 0,0 0 0 ,0 0 0 public works | n. I of the outgo for direct re-1 •ily will be reflected in the| jf the public works-reliefI |ls reported that other plans f nakiDg which will have rs| ctive end a restoration to I Eoyment of greater numbers! |kers than heretofore have! nplated. I another indication of aa-| , intention to restore fi™3| :sury and thus reduce the| !between Income and es-| an announcement by JesseI airman of the Reconstruc | L-e corporation. Mr. In that hereafter the ItFM ks loans to banks. He ae-g the banking structure jllent condition and tua g was not required, which Mr. Jones did “ 8 his announcement is. 0 L he banks are exlliblt'n%hJ| !esire to borrow from »eg rnment. TheRFCfilreadJ rred stock in almost m m -is in the country and tli - 1 Jn-ding to RFC records, ■ Itheir obligations as rapW'. do so. This is signiflcao. leported to you prcvioii J I the administration for spendingI IUi o r6,g ie lie f 0 0 0,000,000 ''’orks T l I ra e lief fund were \ 8 gressing. In coD“ nj*Le Hopkins’ announce J Ed the Presidents reW I J it was disclosed that J Iely fifteen thousandI p J !given jobs since £I !available. This fig re_L . the additional list « ■ the Civilian CoMiei . B numbers have grow J |403,000. It will ^ rs5flOOJ lion was made in the 5 • j | nropriation resolution 1JJg If the CCC from W .w ' ■ Vhus, In two monO ■A ad only about increase which was efl* , J JCC enlistments havei I L g that thelave changed the age eB.i L rm it the maximum « JW IO iat service. Those Jknow and; who -w J j (about conditions gJ | that the total tB,e&C» 6 0 0 ,0 0 0 to which enli | >rn Alaskan Town Has Climate Like Virginia Tem perature Seldom Falls Much Below Freezing. mild as In temperature sel- and no snow. The ,Yl=liin=i™.-Ketcliikan, Alaska, Is tlie public utility business. Stlins .,r I,-, arranged to buy up local 2 lWc'li?i't-. power, water and tele- |J'X ri"ronlV another indication that . , -Jl ;s a strictly modern city, Ke!, fovr of the characteristics Jrivfltiriliiited to Alaskan towns,” tlie N.-itional Geographic society. of s's0° r ou!d sc,arc^ y' Va nietropoiitan standing In the but In Alaska it is second only othc capiw!. Juneau. More Rain Than ,n Panama- -Cltiinted at tlie very southernmost " f ' iiie ions. Alaskan panhandle Iw reaches down the coast of British rnlimbla. Kotehikan Is first port of for all steamers entering Alaska fLm.li the inland passage. It is Sfd on a rocky hillside that falls abruptly into the waters of Tongass ‘ Around it rise steep, wooded Jli1I1- ~m>n the year around, for win ters’In KetcWKan are as RfchIBMKll ^ iom Iii-CPs ®»«* bel0'T fre6Zing',here is practically ffindin" channels and swift, moun tain streams never freeze. But there Israio plenty of it; over 13 feet a vear wliicli is worse than tropical panama. Yellow oilskins are the pre vailin'' fashion in all seasons. •■The hare, rock foundations of the tilv provide neither soil nor level spot for ranis, so the streets are built of wooden planks. The business dis trict ic set on piles, close to the long Iite of wharfs. Stairs and winding Hoard roads lead up to the residential 0f town. Tiiere almost every tore lias a hit of lawn or garden, Jtcbably planted on imported earth. Is Busy Place. '‘Business is good in Ketchikan. It Is shipping center and supply base for B lirge district. Tlie shops and stores are slocked with foods and merchan dise fresh from tlie states. After all, Seattle is only 660 miles away, with regular steamer service winter and summer. Hnge salmon canneries are frantically busy during the short sea son when salmon are running.. Often the little river that rushes through Ketchikan, incidentally supplying It with electric power, is packed solid with pink and silver fish. The chinook, or king s.iImm is the principal vari ety of tlie ICetciiikan district. Hali but SsMng is another big industry, and tee are great cold storage plants TtiiCTe the fish are frozen before they are skipped south. "Jltkiujh there are several saw mill!, lumbering has not been devel- opetf <Mia very large scale. But Ketch ikan has all the potential resources for a great pulpwood industry—unlim ited, year round water power and al most Inexhaustible timber. The for ests, which are mostly spruce and hem lock, mixed with some elder, willow,, and cottonwood, are controlled by the United States forest Service.” Missouri Towns Boast Odd Names, Guide Shows Jefferson City, Mo.—Using names of towns as a standard, Missouri ts well equipped for almost everything, a state postal directory shows. A “Sentinel” to watch over It, “Speed!’ and “Swift” at its command, Missouri has little to retard its prog ress. Even “Success” is within the state. Trick names are plentiful. For the boaster there’s “Brag City,” and for the peaoe-seeker, “Amity.” An “Annapolis” Is boasted by the state, but the best that can be done toward West Point is “Cadet,” a Wash ington county hamlet. The state has a “Bachelor,” but no spinster; a “Day,” but no night, a Chain System Used to Circulate Books Madison, W is.-A chain idea start ed more than 15 years ago by John L- Meyer, secretary of the Inland Press association. Is perpetuated monthly when he purchases a. new book and starts one travelfbg from his library. With each book he sends a note saying: “Please accept this with my compliments. Some time please pass it along to someone else you think will be interested in it” He sends his books to friends and acquaintances who are in newspa per work, but does not specify that they must be relayed to persons similarly occupied. “Bendavis,” but no apple; “Joy,”, but no sorrow; and a “Shamrock,” Ijut no St. Patrick. Seventeen other varieties of “saints” are iisted. For the traveler, an extensive, tour is provided within the bounds of the state. He may jump from “Mexico” to “California,” then to “Delaware.” Then he has his choice of the “Klondike,” “Louisiana” and “Nevada.” “Alley” was remembered with a “Rat,” but “Pochahontas” In Cape Girardeau county, was not given a John Smith. H itle r ’s D o u b le S tr o lls in N ic e *■* WiffTmW ^ i*™* W i f e ________I 3b A strange character bearing a striking resemblance to Adolf Hitler, German chancellor, is shown here strolling along the promenade at 'Nice with the escorts who always accompany him when he ventures ontdoors. Millions A re L o s t to B o n d h o ld e r R in g Receiverships Said to Bring Huge Returns. Washington. — Evidence disclosing the existence of so-called “chain com mittees” of bomlholdefs centered in Chicago and Xew York and controlling millions of dollars’ worth of defaulted iwlty bonds was made public by Con- Sfessman A. J. Sabath, chairman of the house committee investigating re ctorships. Bridence concerning the operations ot the committees and their affiliates is continuing to be uncovered, with the ISiilt that prosecution may be request- ™ for violation of a number of federal “4 state laws, Sabath declared. " Ttie chain committees, he declared, cOntrol from a few issues up to as ffi8Iir as 400 Issues of realty bonds ^Egregating in par amount from a le» million upward of $200,000,000. "t>* chain committees, the congress- said, form but one aspect of a »onal racket” through which 2 0,- eitizens have been affected.1Mrly ■$8,000,000,000 of outstanding 'U|y- bonds are In default, he reported. Control or administration of the R e d u c e s t h e k . p . I eseOative «. n St’ chlef scoutlslIed dki, ue Boy Scouts' has ban-Ho will !"ashlnS tor the 30,000 boys S™ot .-TnmK6n the flrst National Boy ebsI 21-30 In 'Washington Au-, 5O'] ConJrv wil1 use PaPer plates seeinS and lLvaluable time tor slSbt- »in8 to Hi, fun> AI* scouts plan- l^al scout h .shoul(1 aPPly to their -coOt headquarters. chain committees is nationwide, the congressman reported. Sabath said he had found Instances where the so-called “protective” com mittees destroyed the value and in come of the property involved to en able the house-of..issue to purchase back the bonds “for a song.” He added: ^ “We have discovered Instances where committees -have taken bonds sent in to them and posted them as collateral for loans to pay expenses and big fees —5 per cent to the protective commit tee, 5 per cent to a management com mittee, 5 per cent to the lawyers, and so on down the line. “They are resourceful and deter mined to get away with everything they can.” Istanbul Sets Up Code for Its Grave Diggers Istanbul.—In Istanbul Turkish mourn ers have staged a revolt against the grave diggers. They say that they charge more than the due fees for burying the dead and bargain ^peculatively over the corpses. So many complaints have reached the municipality from the mourning population that the police have been sent a schedule, of grave digging charges which all grave diggers must follow. It will cost $3.75 to bury any one over five years old, and $1.80 for persons under five. But fdr burials-In graves which are already open,, the charge will be only a dollar. Exchange Plan Brings Vermont Rare Relics Burlington, V t-B y an exchange plan with natural history and ethnology museums in Britain and France, an clent Koman relics and other valuables soon are to come to the Fleming seum of the University of VermonL Relics of old Roman rule In Bnta n and * France are ■ the chief exhibits. In exchange, the museum will send to Europe implements and other objects of the American Indians. Get Cheap Electricity by Capturing Sun Rays French Lick Springs, cheap electrical power, ^rivefl the san, will make thecompany issue obsolete within the nex - v years, Albert G.; Burns, president the Congress of National Inve ThliTpower will become so cheap few ,of said that utility holding companies will die of uselessness, according to Burns. . Experiments now being made by the New York Society of Electrical Engi neers to harness the sun’s power soon will place 200,000,000,000 volts of electrical energy at man’s disposal daily, Burns asserted. Outlining an alluring' future. Burns continued: “Transmission of these huge vol umes of. power without the use of transmission lines Is being perfected and will -be in common use within a few years. Already great electrical charges have been thrown for 26 miles.” TELEVISION TESTER Dr. W. R. G. Baker, vice president and general manager of RCA, and a noted electronics authority, who heads a committee of the company’s research and development engineers that will plan »pd carry out extensive! tests of high definition television under actual operating conditions during the next year and a half. He is shown check ing one of the huge iconoscope tubes which will transmit the television images. Minister I* Forest Ranger Tulare, Calif.—A minister In the win ter, Bev. Arthur.Rice, of the Tulare Congregational church, will become ft forest ranger In Yosemlte. ' He held the same job in 1933 and 1934 while a pastor In. Salt.Lake City. .-.-Gold-far Petrified Wood. -» -Fallon; Nev.—Black petrified y wood containing gold has been found near here. Cye Cox reported that many (ietrlfled logs i»*e been ground to mortars and the -gold extracted. ■ ODD A V E R S IO N S ' N O T U N C O M M O N Strange Pears Baffle Skill of Doctors. A version, amounting almost to terror, of cats is not uncommon, par ticularly among women. Snakes, too, have a repellent effect on many peo ple. Less frequent is terror of the house-fly. A-doctor recently stated, however, that among his patients were two men In whom the buzzing of a fly inspired profound fear. At the sight of a fly crawling on the window panes one of these men im mediately starts to tremble violent ly, and as soon as the fly begins to buzz beads of perspiration break out on his forehead and he has to be led from the room. This man was an officer decorated for bravery dur ing the Woirld war. Many famous people have been similarly affected, although normal in other respects. The Roman emperor Domitian could not bear the distant hum of a moving fly. Marechal d’Albret, re lated to the French king, Henry IV, a man of exceptional bravery, is said to have been stricken with terror If he saw a pig. The duke of Epernon fainted at the sight of a hare, while a mouse sufficed to make the distin guished Italian writer, Caracciolli, ill for several days. That inoffensive creatures should inspire such fear in normally brave men is strange. Still more remark able is the horror some people have for the sound of a certain word or the sight of some inanimate object. A chevalier of Alcantara is said to have fainted every time he heard the word “Lana”—Spanish for wool—al though the actual “feel” of woolen clothing, repugnant to many people, did not affect him. The sight of an eclipse of the moon also caused the great Francis Bacon to swoon, while the famous Italian doctor, Scaliger, shuddered at 'the sight of cress. Even more astonishing was the case of a squire of Bolston, of whom it Is said that when obliged to listen to the twenty-fifth chapter of Isaiah and certain texts from the Book of Kings “he felt an icy hand upon the top of his head and a sensation of intense cold around the heart.” Easier to understand, especially by vegetarians, is the aversion that one of the daughters of Frederik, king of Naples, had for meat. Taxed by her sisters with being weak-willed she once placed a small piece of cooked meat In her mouth, where upon, to their great consternation, “she fell into a fit, remained uncon scious for half an hour, and lay ill with a fever for many weeks.” These aversions and phobias still baffle doctors, for the victim is nearly always normal In other re spects. Soine doctors believe them to he due to a slight kink in the brain and • associate them with a mild form of Insanity. Others sug gest they are hereditary, while psycho-analysts maintain that they are due to the Influence of the sub conscious mind impressed by some apparently insignificant incident dur ing the life of the victim. Sup porters of the theory of reincarna tion believe that all these inexplica ble dislikes and uncontrollable fears are vestiges of some happening in a former life. . One thing that the study of these cases has- revealed is the fact that phobias and aversions do not neces sarily indicate a flaw in the intel lect. As a general rule, only the more Intelligent men are thus af flicted—and the more developed SEd active their brain the more intense Is their particular aversion. The phobias most commonly en countered are those caused by the smell of flowers or fruits.—London Tit-Bits. Cracow Honors M imory of Heroic Trumpeter The patriotic fervoi* shown by 'Poles all over the world at the re cent death of Marshal Pilsudski is evident In many customs which impress the traveler In Poland. No visitor to Cracow can miss one sound of the trumpet which echoes every hour, day and night, from the slender tower of St. Mary’s church. From the streets of Cracow, lined with medieval buildings, the trum peter can be seen as he faces north, then cast, south and west, each time playing the opening notes of a medieval hymn in Iionor of the Blessed Virgin. Always at the same note, about three-fourtfcs of the way through, he stops short. The tradition governing this “broken note” goes back to the year 1241, when Tartars Invaded CracOw. The whole population fled to the Wawel, the famous fortified castle. The only one to remain was the trumpeter of St. Mary’s, for he had taken a vow to blow the Hey- nal, the hymn to the Virgin, every hour, no matter how great the dan ger. ' The trumpeter climbed to the tower, true to his vow, and blew the opening ,notes of the aria. Some Tartars feasting in the market place looked ap. One of them fitted an arrow to his bow, took aim and pierced the trumpeter’s throat, kill ing him on “the broken note;" Today the trumpeters of S t Mary’s take the same vow and play the same aria, breaking oft abrupt ly at that note, in memory of Cra cow’s hero. "OINTMENT ' will aid in. rem oving th at ifching" dandruff, assisted iy shampoos with. ( u t i c u r a^ SOAP fo keep ^our scalp clean,. LET’S CHIEER IT’S HERE C R ISP A N D SW EET V IT’S A TREAT R A C K ETY -R A X SW E LL F O R S N A C K S a , O nCE you taste Grape-Nuts Flakes, you’ll cheer, toot Crisp, sweet, golden-brown flakes with plenty of real nourishment One dishful, vrith milk or cream, contains more varied nour ishment than many a hearty meal. Try it— your grocer has itl Product of General Foods % Where Ocean Breezes Temper the Sunshine.. j - CTMT TDADtrifSEMI-TROPICAL SAVANNAH IDEilL YEAH-BOUND CLIMATE x Enjoy life at tho historic HOTEL DeSOTO . •, Beaches thirty minutes away over paved high* way. or svrimming pool in hotel patio . . « toomy/cabiinas for private parties . . . IuxurU ous rooms and suites . . . unexcelled cuisine* AND the famed air-cooled D e S o t o T a v e r n Dancmg to the strains of Ed Courte nay's famous 14-piece dance orchestra Unusual Food—Beyerages You'll enjoy life at the DeSOTO... good Ucihways In all directions... splendid connections by air, rail, -waier. J2.50 up wMi baft—Eawpean plan—Special party and week-end H o t e l H e S o t o J. 2. POUND. President = CHABLES Gi. DAY. Vie* FriMident and Muaget ri-r 11«! i s 1P hi i I 1I I m U- i t l i tif Il r s i i U Ii I! It IlS r Iif II I!hr 'fi I'I* I! I I i # fP I it I i«.i Iff! I I RECORD, MOCKSVDiLEi JJC . TH E FEATHERHEABS & Bjr Otbome♦ ffwhw Iliwtnw TMM Check I VIELL, MEPi- (so IMG- ON A VACATION _ TRIP TrtlS HEARf 4 ‘s QoakC WowavJI(sEMgpAU--/ StlS6 ESTS NOT SURE—BUT I KNOW TWE BRST PtACE WlLt- BE TrtE BANK. W EAH-VtHERE HoU SoiHS SuS6 EST_ VJHEREtHe VACATION B ta WILL BE RON UP- BUX IHE HUSBAND S e ttle s it GoT ANV PLANS IB S—I'M GOWS- SOM EW HERE WlTH HHE WIFE MADE? Ii M F I N N E Y O F T H E F O R C E e VaUn Vt—m— Vaka Pleasure fo r AU We z sh o u lp h a v e B o u s h t TWo - T -He n Th* B iB COULP , HAife v/A M .T oo/ TOR. THB TOUNSSEF ANP I'M SHoWiNG- HlWl HOW To USE IT ME. MEANS,? ONCT * 1K inm (?A1n i s ^ X (Sf MORE1 fUN OUTO c w im e N ’J VLEAfilRgS THAN Trti KiRj "Po SjM A T T E R P O P — A n d H e ’l l C a tc h S o m e th in g E ls e W h e n M a w H e a r s T h is B y C M . P A V N E "fitATS T o o -TBAa*' I'm m a -ts AT MY MAW -Has A m tIJoBY O o T WfjooPiw* COU&4 O I > I e>4|, MY* M o! WAMTfr SUm -t-4Tf W - - J The Bell Sjaidicate “ R E G ’L A R F E L L E R S ” N ot EggsactIy YOU SL. AVV/ JU S AI-lU W H IL E UONKae-Ti., MOM ,P L E A S E I I'M U P TO T ME.PA R T W H E R E T H E COW B O T A M / T H E , IH O IA Ii A R E W iSHTIH AT T H E E D S E O P T H E yCUPPt W )TH ) The Asoclated Newspaperg MESCAL IK E Br s. l. huntley T h e re * s N o T e U in g A b o u t M u le y MtfWSS VlJM50MSBU00VF 5LtPPOSiNJF A. SWOT MthrfI A PAtuj-TMeR. <SOT WthrfI AhJ* 0*2US -AjsI TMEKJ IF NE SlTS UP AK)* GOES wohde w e ’u . k ^qnv ) •— W AS o e s rRSSTIKJ' W HATCmA PECKOhJ W E W AtT AROWNjOORTA OO CAJVIl- SwPOERWlM^ pR UMpER MtT ? y , WtTw WihrfI n S ' VtV* ^ CCanyrlsbt I !ISt by &HonUey, Trade Mark.Reg. Vf. 8. Pat Office) 0Our Pet Peeve By M. G. KETTNER RAINED OUT By GLUYAS WILLIAMS J,^ W j (Omritto vr. k ej M r Jasi- AS 6RME15 ABOUT MSURE5 JVEgVWlE BftT RftiV INfREftSES. poiNfe RiM EftSiVfi IIP OR A * BE61I< SO^boW AV- tfWOlfi-AMOUMr TO AMV- OPnMlSdfwS’TO S I ' S w sM K WNniINEK IflS RftlNlNa TRlMS r JUSf A VEvV . , - . . - - L I . rnm tN I, 5H00IS HAVTtolJNCK lf« RftlNlNa I I THiNS -JUSf A FEY DRORS. . . I BfWKiife up IM-Br yea; bail and 6Efs same MORE QR LESS SftRfED INlMOHAmV JfSfAfTfS EfCHANSES RaSeiK. u. "tr=* — RAITWS WAIN m es Tb Wim-ISEoum^rtCH lfM * e w zm iv 3 5 2 5 3 ? « ? f f i E R K f 2 “ « « * “ *.Slitt MAMftmiNS TiIAT J W J Vftlfep-lONgfj}If Yoinj) HAVE- CIEARjn “V '-rf J W I T H A N E Y E T O C O O L s i m p l ic it y I PATTERN 0354 ■ The smart girl has one eye oo Ili I budget and the other anticipatlm I a rise In temperature—and a cool decision to include seveni I summer sports in her irardroJ right now. It took a lot of ingennltj I to design that clerer yoke-cape-piijjl In one. It makes sewing so east I and briefly, that cape is much could than a sleeve. Pattern 9354 spoul an action pleat back and skirt Ju f to help you “get places.” If you BaL a simple flat neckline becoming,omit I the dashing revers (but we like’em). I Yery correct for spectator sports, of. I fice wear or week-end jaunts. Mab I It op in washable sport sift <# shantung. Try a novel “cork" buckle and buttons. Pattern 9354 may be ordered only In sizes 14, 16, 18, 20, 32, 34, 36,38, | 40 and 42. Size 16 requires 4 yards •36 inch fabric. Send FIFTEEN CENTS In Mlm »r stamps (coins preferred) for IMi pattern. Be sure to write plainly your NAME, ADDRESS, the S1EtS NUMBER and SIZE, Complete, diagrammed sew chut included. Send your order to Sewing Orel* Pattern Department, 232 West Eight eenth Street, New York. ON THE FLY PAPER ManageV—Where is the Hutniu | Fly? Fat Lady-H e got Into an aiflj ment with his wife and she snattfg him.—Answers Magazina Economical Percy—I dream every night I you and I are married. Gwendolyn—Grand Idea—two **J Uye as cheaply as one that way. No Charge “Where did you get the p your seoond novel?” “From the film version of Uj first I”—New York Daily Mirror. Everyday View* •How was the scenery oa FijI trip?” I “It ran largely to tooth paste smoking tobacco.” When the Game is Over “Fortune favors the brave.” “Not If the brave buy WiltfI stocks."—Pathfinder Magazine lL a r g e s tC ir c u I a tio n o f l ^ ^ e C o u n ty NewspJ ^ H l ToUND TO I ■ e M Call made a business I Wfnsto'n-Salem Thursday. I TFSmitbdealofwinstonI LasiB l0wnThUrsdayOnI A ttorneyA - T. Grant n !business trip to Statesville on I last week. ' |I o. L- Harkey. prominent! Iof Clarksville township, vr I w w n last week on business. jliss Oleta . Church, of I^esTofbMiss Mary Elizabethl !street. P I W R. Carter, one of Tfl cord’s good friends from Jwas a business visitor beij |week. Mr and Mrs Marvin Bink| !children, of Detroit, are sp | ,w o weeks with Mr. and Mr ] Binkley. M p. Adams and C. A. Iwho livein the classic shd I South CalahalD, were amol I Mocksville visitors here last I ■ Cecil Clement, Jr., who hi I spending several weeks wtf Iuncle1K. M. Clement, on I !returned to his hotne at Laij I pa, last week. ■ J. K. Meroney went I cpvernment Hospital, at As I Thursday, where be will sped | lime taking treatment. HisI Iwfeh him a speedy recovery! Mr. and Mrs L A. Dani I leave Thursday to visit relatil I friends in Indiana. J: H. a [ will handle the mail on Rout| I Mrs. Lois Bennett will loo| I The Hotel. See Buck Jones in llTitj I Rider” at The Princess Thea day and Saturday. Cominjj I day and Tuesday a new Cd picture with big cast in [ pagne For Breakfast. J. F. Click, former net] man of Hickory, who is not) 88th year, is spending son in town with his daughter, j F. Stroud. He will visit ous relatives in the cotintyl returning home. Hoyt Blackwood, sec man on the Southern Rai , Guilford College, was pa; ; jured early last week wh< tie fell on his foot Seve bones were crushed.. He home here recovering. Gaither GriflSth and Le of Farmington township, x a hearing before Esq F. R Thursday morning, chat an affray and being drunk I orderly in a public plai j were fined $5 .0 0 and costs Mrs. W. B. Waff, ,of I. C., SDeut several days M town, the guest of Mr. J; P. Green. Mrs. Waff sident of this city for t< while her husband, the I w- B-. Waff, was pasto j Mocksville-Baptist church ic V * children of the la Snuth gathered at the c Place at Fork Church Sun. lV0/ taeir annual reunio Ir 1« 1^lnder of Harm Io'!f' Sorter, Mocksville Z l hof Winston-Salem J«nce Hodges, of Foi Qfthe nephew: I10 atIendanee. IcaMr 5 V M A n w i t iled j;' T0 handle an oleKfty 170JaTand 1 IguaTnt 0utd00f work,6 e f c , We help y, W ts w - Smethodsl Ilogue. We todaY fo' k p t? ;£ ,h e b ERL1NC I ; 797 Bloomii ,O f f e ldHrs R A I IsevtfS rand^ Qregon, ari lWeuds i •vvltb reh l^ilker. Davte- Mr-N S r t0redthe2IHoJ oiLnetrll0 Ine. to Davi ^ r d a v so n tiie >aIealwa °y friends, in back to n f ^lad t0 we • a to the old home 0 ^ e r ies of meetingsTPk ’ J • 4/ p ^ ; . s s s V f e d a i r r 8 P ffi-.* 1Ifeih Jd ? 3 aPd 8 ^H sfdnIaF-careY 0{tl e l : f leffi. WiH I hed tOaKhs - T h e 1 t ^ ; S ^ e ^ rvlees Ifteach1V civde D arnell A N E Y E TO ^o l s i m p l iCITy| PATTERN 0354 J1 U part girl has one eye on ItJ Ind the other anticipating Ji temperature—and maki iecision to include several ” sports in her wardrobe It took a lot of ingenmtj- that clever yoke-cape-panef I It makes sewing so easy! Jly, that cape is much coolef Sleeve. Pattern 9354 sport pleat back and skirt ou “get places.” If you SsL Iflat neckline becoming, omln Ing revers (but we like’em)! pect for spectator sports, oil or week-end jaunts. SIaksl washable sport silk otl Try a novel “cork" buckle] Ions. i 9354 may be ordered only! jl4, 16, IS, 20, 32, 34, 36, 38,1 Size 16 requires 4 yards; fabric. TEEN CENTS in coin |3 (coins preferred) for thi' B.e sure to write plainly] piE, ADDRESS, the SHI, r and SIZE, fete, diagrammed sew cha four order to Sewing Circlt Department, 232 West Eight| lreet, New York. I n th e fly paper Jer—Where Is the Humtu lady—He got Into an arg Ith his wife and she swattej lisw ers Magazine. Economical —I dream every night I are married. [lolyn—Grand idea—two [cheaply as one that way. . No Charge |re did you get the plot * ond novel?” _ the film version of pNew York Daily Mirror. Everyday Viewt was the scenery on largely to tooth paste I tobacco.” when the Game Ie Over Iune favors the brave. , If the brave buy WiWj —Pathfinder Magazine. jTnAVlE RECORD. e8t Circulation of Any County Newspaper. S ^ R O U N D TOWN. visitor here last , J 1 Callnihdeh business trip to , Xt Smitbdealof Winston Salem . ■„ town Thursday on business.Iifas I*3 «« A T Grant made IbJssnHip to Statesville one day Ilist *«*■A T Harkey. prominent farmer , , Clarksville township, v - «« I town last week on business. Miss Oleta Church, of North i w was t h e week end f e f Miss Mary Elizabeth Stone- Jstreet- I f R.Carter, one of The Re- L i go°d friends ^ronr Fulton, Ls a business !week. Kr and Mrs Marvin Binkley and I kSfcn of Detroit, are spending E k s witb Mr. and Mrs. S. F Ilinkley- M P Adams and C. A. Thorn, Icbolivein the classic shades of Isoulh CaIabaIn1 were among the I Mocksville visitors here last week Cecil Clement. Jr., who has been !spending several weeks with his lie , K. M. Clement, on R 4 , returned to bis home at Lancaster, I Pa, last week. I K Meroney went to the IGovernment Hospital, at Asheville I Thursday, where he will spend some I iinetaking treatment. His friends Llhimaspeedy recovery. Jr. and Mrs I. A. Daniel will IitaveThursday to visit relatives and I friends In Indiana. J. H. Rodwell Lillhandle the mail on Route 2 and I Mrs. Lois Benuett will look after I The Hotel. SeeBuck Jones in “The Lone I Rider” at The Princess Theatre Fri day and Saturday. Coming Mon day and Tuesday a new Columbia picture with big cast in “Cham pagne Por Breakfast. J1 F. Click, former newspaper , man of Hickory, who is now in his MthyearJs spending some time in torn with his daughter, Mrs C. F. Stroud. He will visit numer ous relatives in the county before retcrning home. Hopt Blackwood, section fore- I man on the Southern Railroad, at Guilford College, was painfully in- I jnred early last week when a cross lie fell on his foot Several small bones were crushed. He is at his I home here recovering. GaitherGriffithandLeo Smith. IofFarmington township, were given IahearingbeforeEsq F. R. Leagans IThnrsday morning, charged with I an affray and being drunk and dis !orderly in a public place. Both I were fined $5 .0 0 and costs. ■ ^rs W- B. Waff, of Winton, JkC., soent several days last week I in town, the guest of Mr. and Mrs. li-T. Green. Mrs. Waff was a re- 1 adent of this city for ten years, Imle her husband, the late Rev. IW- B- Waff1 was pastor of IHocksville Baptist church. D A V IE R E C O R ftl M O C K S V IliE , N . 0 . the Thechildren of the late J. B. I ®’h gathered at the old home JP ace at Fork Church Sunday Aug- Ilwtheir annual reunion. Mrs I P11 ^inder °f Harmony—Mrs. I -H-Carter1 Mocksville, Mr. J. B ! ' 1JhofWinston-Salem and Mrs. LJnceHodges, of Fork Church Iin ,,,maIly of ^e nephews and neices I111Iltendance. OaIeV m a n W ITH g o o d led'it, t° k4ndle an old establish ■Prod,6, 1T0 iarm aQd house hold loin,, . steadY employment, | Eu.r,n,loDldoor work, every item IS Wehelpyouto sue |restiiiQUr ,S,a'es methods bring quick I kSUe today for free cata I DtA c- HEBERLING CO. '97 Bloomington, 111 ■o fMrs A Wilkerson I ltIeral lQdfV 0reSon, are spending Ilrieuds witb relatives and I^ersnn avle- Mr- and Mrs ? 0lore(* 2®°° m^es l^eiohfj 10 spend l h»iefan tVS.°“ th? road- They I be j]w y friends in Davie who Lktn t0 weIcome them ■ : J0‘he old home county. KijK0f meetinSs wiil beSin F iJdav A6t baPtlst church on I f e n 1 , u^- tn h . Three ser IaIh1-. r a j on Sunday, at ri I -iN a i lv i l p and two ser- I S the ‘yat 3 and 8 p. m ., dur- S o nJ - 0areV W Jlliams1 I lile sim,i„etD’ wiii have charge h ,led to an ?' T hepublic is. in- I!' V Clvae ^ervices T he past- lathing/ arneiiI will do the Billie Meroney and Henry Poplin spent Sunday at Carolina Beach. G. L. Potts, a member of the Clemmons school faculty, was a business visitor here Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. John Clodfelter, °f Richmond, Va , are spending two weeks with relatives in Davie. Miss Lillian Mooney, of Wash ington, D C., is spending some time in town with her father, C. B. Mooney. Mr. and Mrs. Harley Sofley and children, spent several days at Myrtle Beach, S. C., returning home yesterday. G. I. Howarn, of Knoxville, Tenn., who has been spending two weeks in Davie and Rowan with relatives, returned home Monday. Mr and Mrs. I. E. McDaniel and three so vs, of Washington, D. C., are snending ten days, in the county with relatives and friends, who are always glad to see them. A protracted meeting will begin at Ijames X Roads Baptist Church next Sunday morning, Aug. nth at eleven o’clock with Rev. Millard BooeofLilliugtondoiugJbe preach ing there will be three services on Sunday, with dinner on the grounds. The meeting will continue through the week with Rev. Booe assisting the pastor Rev. W. V. Brown. An attempt was made to enter the home of J. S. Daniel last Tuesday night. A screen on one of the win dows was torn loose, but the noise aroused neighbors and the would-be thief was frightened away. Au at tempt was also made to enter the home of Mr. McGee, in South Mocksville on the same night. The police and county officers will have to keep busy, or thieves .are liable to carry the town off some night. Rev. E. I. Harbison returned home last week fiom Lake Juna- luska, where he spent two weeks at tending a Pastor’s Conference of the Methodist church. Rev. _ Mr. Har bison says that the tourist travel in Western Carolina has been seriously affected by the publicity given the infantile paralysis epidemic in this state by outside newspapers. There are but few cases of infantile paraly sis in Western Carolina', but busi ness has been badly hurt as a result of the outbreak in Eastern Carolina of this disease. The crowds at Ridgecrest, Montreal, Chim n e'y Rock, Lake Junaluska and other mountain resorts are said to be small as compared with other years. AUGUST Celebrates One Huiid- TOUR M ONEY’S WORTH w h e n y o u b u y a l o w - p r i c e d c a r SOLID STEEL TURRE TOP COKSTRUCTiOK 'CJ ' A VALVE-IK HEAD ^ EKCIKE DEALSR AD VERTfSEMEPfT P. 0. S. of A. News. July was a busy month for the Cooleemee DegreeTeam as three Ini- tiotions were put on during Julv We also regret that Brother D-. W. Tutterow is confined to his home with a broken arm, but glad he is improving. W. H. Daniel’s also lost part of one finger but is improving. A. J. Blackwood also had two fingers la cerated but he is at work W. H. Swain missed $2 50 pre mium by not being present last Thursday.Camp No. 56 has been serving le monade during the hot weather. Le monade bas been furnished for the month bv Baxter Young’s Meat Market, C. B. Hoover’s.Store, R. V. Alexander and Grady Spry, and sev eral of the brothers having been do nating to this fund.A. L. Lowder, A. L._ Jordan'and J. F. Sain done a nice job of re-arranging the Camp Regalia and clean ing the hall for which the camp gave them a rising of thanks.Camp No. 56 is looking for a nice gain in membership as the fellows are interested in seeing their camp grow.Brother L. J. Davis is now on his vacation and our camp wishes much pleasure while away. Center News Mrs-George Evans is spending some time with relatives and friends in Va. Mr. and Mrs C. E. Anderson and daugh ter Betty Lou, of Winston-Salem ‘spent Sunday here with Mrs. H. F. Tutterow. Miss Edha Jones, of Charlotte was the guest of Mr. ahd Mrs. C. A. McAllister Sunday. Mrs. OdusTuttefow and little daughter Norma Jene. of Salisbury spent week here with Mr. and Mrs. L. M. Tutterow. MissAnnaMse-Anderson is spending this week with her parents Mr. and J. G. Anderson. Mr and-Mrs. Alvin Dyson and Mrs. H- Howard spent Friday in Sahsbury. John Dwiggins. of Winston-Salem was the guest of his parents Mr. and Mrs. J H B Dwiggins last week. Walter Horn of Texas visited his cousin Miss Lula Koontz Thursday nlte. ; ■ Miss Nana Etcbison, of Winston Salem is spending this week with . Mr. and Mrs- Alvin Dyson. . „„„Mr. and Mrs. L. F. Dwiggins and son Kenneth, of Salisbury spent the week end with the formers parents Mr and Mrs I p. Dwiggins. ' Mrs W. Edward Stewart, Davie county’s oldest citizen,, was 100 years old Monday, Aug. 5 th. Many of his friends gathered at hishome near Fork Church Sunday and honored this aged Confederate Veteran with a big birthday dinner. Col. Jacob Stewait, of Mocksville, a kinsman, was present and acted as master of ceremonies. Mr. Stewart was a memoer of Co E 4 2nd N C. Re giment. He has spent his entire life In Davie and has lived to many changes take place. Farmington News. Mrs. Melverine Woodlief returned to her duties Monday at the Mills Home. Thom- asville, N. C. , Miss Marjorie Gregory visited her cousin. Mrs. H. L Brewer in Winston-Salem last week. Miss Vada Johnson has returned from a six weeks visit in Washington, D. C., and Asheville. N. C. Mrs. Herman Lowe and baby of Mora- vin Falls are spending some time with Mrs. Lowe’s parents Mr. and Max Brock. Mr. and Mrs. Otis Freeman, of Clvde. N. C., are guests of their parents. Rev. and Mrs. H. Co Freeman. Mrs. Ray Parker and little daughter, Frances of WinBton-Salem are visiting the John David Furches family. George Johnson, of - Macon. Ga.. Rev. and Mrs. J. W. Williams, of King’s Moun tain soent last week at their home the Mrs Rachel Johnson Estate. Mrs. J. C Brock spent last Saturday in Winston-Salem as the guest of her sister Mrs A. C. Walker. Farmington Base' Ball Ciub journeyed over to Old, Richmond Saturday and brought b8ck a 14 8'victory. Miss Bessie Brown, of Franklyn, N. C., has been the house guest of Mi6S Mae Freeman. Miss Ruth Hudspeth, of Winston-Salem is the guest of Miss Virginia Furches. Miss Martha Reece Allen was at home Wednesday night to a number of her friends at a, delightful party. Numerous games and contests were. enjoyed, MisB Martha Furches and Cedric Smoot being the winners. Delicious sandwiches, cakes and punch was served to Miss Allen, the hostess: Misses Martha Furches, Bell Howell, Lib Miller. Rutb Ferabee, Edith Smith, Sarah Lou Peoples, and ,Annie Spillman, Messers. Ezra and Sam Howell, Frank Bahnson, Jr. Edwin Johnson, Eug ene Cornatzer, Wilburn Spillman, McKin ley and Cedris Smoot. Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Graham Madison, Monday a daughter. Qlenda Carolyn. Mr. Madison is principal of' the Farmington School System. . Col. Will Murchison, U. S. Army, of Gal veston, Texas is spending a few days at his borne place. Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Howard Seats Sun day, a fine daughter. Dr. and Mrs. Lester Martin and child ren spent the week end at their summer lodge The Le-Ge-He. DANCE Glen G ray And ,His Casa Loma O rchestra M anagem ent Rock well-O’Keefe Jax’s Auditorium, Inc. The Largest Floor In The CaroIinas Fayetteville, N. C. M onday Night, Aug. 19 th. wJ Z o t u h J Z ^ T H A T A R E F b U N D O N L Y I N C H E V R O L E T T h e m o s t f i n e l y b a l a n c e d l o w - p r i c e d c a r e v e r b u i l t Get all of these vitally important features when you buy your new motor car. You can get them at lowest prices in the new Master De Luxe Chevrolet—the most finely balanced low-priced car ever built! The Master De Luxe Chevrolet is the only car in its price: range that brings you a Solid Sted Turret-TopBody by Fishar . . . Knee-Action Ride . . ; Blue-FUmte Vtdvedn-Head Engine and. Weatherproof Cable-Controlled Brakes. And your own eyes and your own tests will prove to you that these features are absolutely essential to the greater beauty and safety, the greater comfort and roadability rand the greater combi nation of performance and ecpnomy which only Chevrolet provides. Visit your nearest Chevrolet dealer today. CHEVROLET MOTOR COMPANY. DETROIT, MICHIGAN Compare Chevrolet's low delivered prices and easy G.M.A.C. terms. A General Moton Value < zA ta £ 6 e J t SD & J jto o e , C H E V R O L E T MOCKSVILLE N.C. Learn Beauty Culture In One Of The South's Finest Schools Graduates Qualified For Superior Positions. ■ . Complete Course.: Highest Rating.. Write ForFree Literature. M arshall School O f Beauty Culture 406 N. Spruce WinstonSaleut.N.C. ..... i KiU The Weevil For A Small Inves.ment You Can Give Your Small Grain Complete Protection Against Weevils and Worms. A sk U sF o r Infornlation and. Prices.. Let Us-Setve You- , LeGi and’s Pharm acy On The Square Phone 21 ‘Mocksville, N. C. tminiiHinraagnmnstiimnuiiiiiinai (C ontinued From Page 2) Holman, G. B. and Maud Gaither ___ 70% • 35.52 Holton, J. L............. I Lot 15.04 Howard, D. C................ 2 Lots 11.33 Howard, W. T. ...1____ 51 6.43 Hunt, E. E., Est. .... 2 Lots 32.3) Jones, Cartner & - , Evans ________ 4 Lots ,4.60 Jones & Walker ___ I Lot 22.77 Jones, E. M, ............... I Lot 2.18 Kerr, E, ____________ 30 6.56 Kimbrough, P. R. .:.__ I Lot 4.45 -Koontz, J. H ............... I Lot 1.55 Kurfees, Z. C. ..........159" 38.36 Lanier, Mrs. D. G. .... I Lot 5.00 Livengood, Milton __- I Lot - 10.04 McClamroch, Mrs~S., Est 68 16.75 McCulloh, V V. __-. 3 Lots 8.15 McGuire, Mrs. Hattie .. 84 25.82 McDaniel, Mrs. J. L . 6 1.76 McMahan, Mrs. Martha 47 8.91 Martin, .!. W. I Lot 3.12 Martin, Mrs. W. F . 24 8.71 Meroney, J. K. _____ I Lot 22.67 Meroney, W. R., Est .. I Lot 17.59 Moore, J. E. ,___2 Lots (Depot St.) 5.50 Nichols, Mrs. Mamie —114 19.99 Peacock, Mrs. W. H 60 ^ 14.19 Penry, Mrs. Laura:---- 411J 4.39 Pope, John D................- 76 18.44 Sanford, H. A ...1,216)4 303.83 Sanford, E. C I Lot 15.15 Sain, J. F., Est..........._.... 39 « 7.22 Seaford, C. A 10 '5.46 Seaford, C. W.,Est. ....-103 37.68 Seaford, C. H. & C. A ./ 38% 10.99 Sheek, Mrs. G. W . I Lot 10.23 ShieldB, E. L -------- 26 5.59 Smith, A. V. .........____ 7 Lots 2.49 Smith, B. I. ..... I Lot 101)4 Smith, B. B, :_____I— — 48 20,48 Sparks, Mrs. Cora--------152 .45.48 Stevenson^ Mrs., Beulah & Blanche Hendrix -.125 Summers, C. S. —---------12 Swicegood, N. H. ....— I^Lot ” , Tomlinson Chevrolet Co. f Lot =, Tomlinson, C H. ----- I Lot Turrentinef C. M .'.......... 14 Vanzant, 0. G.........—.. I Lot Walker, R. G.' -------- I Lot Walker, G. G. ______8 Lots Wall, Mrs: John :.__ I Lot Winecoff, S. J .--------' 3 Lots Zachary, J. W., Est. 2 Lots McGuire, James, Heirs.181 A I Lot 7-7.04 I COLORED Barringer, Lather —. Brown, Hannah, Est. . Brown; Mary A.,- Est: Brown, Ernest — . Burse> G. B . —......— Clement, Geneva....... Clark, Bettie ............ Clement, Frances -----Clement, F ran k ..... Clement, Rachel _ Clement, Geneva . Clement, Giles ...__.:. Clement, Geo . Cox, A. P. ................I.: Day,:Willis — Billiard, Alfred Dulm, Elizabeth ——~ Foster, James, Est. ... Fosteri Robert -___ Fosterf -R.- M. _____ Foster, TilL _ — Erost, 'Annie^ E st.___ 26.34 13.57 8.10 6.14 25.00 3.78 .8.5930.18 77.99 3.27 3.16 28.91 •A-*: r.’-vO; I Lot 1.08 . I Lot 3.99 I Lot 3.99 ...I Lot 2.31 I Lot 6.26 2 Lots 1.28 I Lot 3.11 I Lot .6.26 I Lot 5.12 I Lot 6.26 2 Lot;:' 1.23 ... 4%3.51 4%.. 2.97 :.. 25%- 6.26 .-1 Lot 2.87 I Lot . 8.06 I Lot 8.15 . I Lot :.5.61 I Lot ■ 4.90 3-Lots 15:46 43 117 . I Lot 4.84 ll#lt Name Acres Furches, Freeloye........ I Lot - Gaither,' Julia -.......... 2 Lots Gaither, I. L ......... I Lot Gaither, Elijah ............. 7 Gaither, Rosa A. & Esther _______.“... I Lot Garrett, Sarah Jane, Est ....... I Lot Gorrell, N ora I Lot Gibson, Sophia .......... I Lot Harris, Daska ............. I Lot Hamlin, S. Lee ....._ 2 Lots Hanes, Amos, Est I L ot" Hanes, Spencer, Est. 2 Lots Hill, Martha .S I . 2 Lots Holeman, Lula ........ . 2 Lots Huston, Frank, Est. I Lot Ijames, Elijah, Est, .. I Lot Johnson, Wilkie D.I Lot Kimbrough, Dinah;— I Lot Nash, Mary V. ...... I Lot Malone, Will -----........ I Lot Meroney, Henry W....... I Lot Meroney, Cora C. ___ 1% .Neely, . Mary ............... I Lot Pettigrew, W. A........... I Lot Rose, Charles, Est. .. 2 Lots Scott, F. M , ......,.. 76% ' Scott, J. D. —.............. ,7 - 7 Scott, N. A..................... I Scott; Lizzie ....... I - Smoot, J. A. I Lot r Steele, F. M. _____—- 10 ; VanEaton, Simon ‘..I— I Lot -- Woodruff, June I Lot Woodruff, Henry ----- I Lot SHADY GROVE TOWNSHIP Name Acres Atlantic Joint Stock Land Bank ........ 10 Barber, C. L. -iI ----- 7% Barneycastle, C. M 18 Beauchamp, Mrs. J. S. 29 Branson, M. L. --------- 6% Carter, G. A. ----------- 75 Carter, Mrs." Annie....... 24% Cline, Mrs. Bettie ----- I Cornatzer, J. S.................20% Amt. Name Acres , Amt. .4.02 Potts, Lonnie .............. 1%2.91 9.87 Potts, Eugene ..._____- 1%: 7.07 5.66 Ratledge, J. H., Est. ..I Lot 6.89 5.28 Robertson, Mrs. Odelia 3%2.66 Robertson, G. S. .......8 6.89 6.26 Ro.bertson, H. D............6 4.95 Tucker, Z. V................. 6 2.30 1.45 Waller, L. P................- 8%6.92 6.26 Ward, Mrs. Dora ........ 3 10.66 3.45 Wood, A. C..................I Lot 15.04 3.45 Zimmerman, J. G. —...:. 48 13.95 6.53 COLORED 5.70 Dulin, Lily ...................I Lot 2.30 7.39 Flint, Mace ................I Lot 3.11 12.97 Foster, Emma .............. 5 1.32 1.23 Glasscock, Alice, Est.. 14 3.45 5.13 Hairston, Henry, Est.4 1.96 3.45 Johnson, T. G................. 12 6.25 3.99 Motley, Fannie ...........I Lot .85 4.66 Peebles, Clifton -------. 4 9.77 76.12 Peebles, Charlie -------... 8 2.64 '4.44 Worth, Rebecca ...-----I Lot .94 - 2.81 1.90 6.27 5.12 1.34 16.63 3.812.31 .79 6.0' 7.55 2.49 5.35 1.70 Amt. . 1.54 .11.59 3.99 7.81 5.59 18.88 2.30 1.24 9.46 Cornatzer, Mrs. Z. C. 46% A I L. 20.1938.54 13.83 12.0913.26 "3.75 27.98 32.67 32.79 Cornatzer, Mrs. M. M. - 65% Cornatzer, Mrs. -Augusta, Est. -----__44% Cornatzer, R. C. -......... 63 Cornatzer, W. A — 24% Crews, Mrs. J. L . I Lot Fry, H. G --------- O1 Hall, C. W. -------84Hartman, E. M-. Est. -H 874. f- Hendrix, Milton G. .... 13618-100 23,38 Hendrix, Mrs. W. A. ....3% A. I L-14.17 Howard, Mrs. Sallie .... 80 Howard, Mrs. J. R. 24% Jones, Mrs. O. F. ----- 42 Jones, W. J. ------- 121% •Kimbrough, P. R. — McDaniel, G. H. —March, Mrs. 0. M. - Markland, L. Q........ -Massey, Miss Ida .. Massey, C. S............ Milton: W. E. Sjr— -Miller, Martin ....... Milton, Mrs. Minnie Mock; Mrs. Fannie - Myers, W. T. ------- Myers, G. V. ------- Naylor, F. A- -— - N- G- Midland R. R. OrreU, Miss Amue .. OrrelIy J. E., Est, Pofitfl, E, .J- ------- Potts, G. • 30:00 9 8-10 CHARLES C. SMOOT, Sheriff Davie County. The Mocksville baseball team de feated the local American Legion bovs 17 to 3 in a fine game of ball played on the local diamond Wed nesday afternoon. A big crowd saw the game. H E N D R IX Big Sale Is Going At Full Blast. Thousands O f Bargains A re To Be Found In Q ur Store. Dry Goods, Notions, Clothing, Shoes, Hats, Groceries, Feeds and everything at prices that will appeal to the ^ Thrifty Buyer, Visit O ur Store This W eek And Save Money. : YOURS FOR BARGAINS J. FRANK HSNDRIX ... I Lofc r.i-v -H j| ill ■iSRsWI 5 j m m B £^f?^S ^i.-;C v:. y: ^ H E D A tB E JtE C O ftS, M O O K S V X Iil, ft. & A U G trsIt 7. *^55 I n s* JSIes WIff: tij I. I: I >,I v ; I M W M 4S S fF , *" & nt&iz % % \ mx ^ % \ Tbe department of agriculture re ceives thousands of-letters a year asking about means of eradicating weeds. . - - Admbistrator’s Notice. Having qualified as Administrator of Mary Jones, , deceased, notice is hereby given to all -persons holding ciaims against the estate of said de ceased to. present the same to the undersigned oh or. before the 24th day of June, 1936, or this notice will be plead in bar of recovery. AU persons indebted to said estate will please call and settle without delay. This the 24th day of June, 1935. G1 F. CORNAZTER, Admr. of Mary Jones, decs’d. A. T. GRANT, Atty. ©193}; LlGCSrr & Mysks Tobacco Co. S E E S lN F U T iO N A SLOW PROCESS A Real Danger for the Future, Col. Ayres Tells Banking Groups. NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J —Present prospectB do not indicate that inflation severe enough to cause further dollar devaluation will come soon In this country, but as an, ultimate develop ment it seems to be a very real dan ger, Leonard p.. Ayres, Vice President Cleveland Thnst Company, said here tonight in an. address before the Grad uate School of Banking. He believed this statement to be true "unless the government enters frankly upon a pol icy-'of issuing flat money with which to meet its expenses.” At present that does not seem to be in sight, he said. The Graduate School is operated jointly by the American Institute of Banking S e c t io n 'o f the American Bankers Association and Rutgers Uni versity to offer advanced studies tor bank officers. “We have so enormously increased the capacity of our banking system for credit expansion that it is difficult to see . how we could have a vigorous business revival without having it de velop into a credit Inflation,” Colonel Ayres declared. Inflation a .Slow Process If inflation-does come it will be a Blow process, he said, pointing out that In Germany, France, Belgium and Italy it took about five years to develop from the time when the governments en tered upon policies of financing large peace-time deficits by bank credit up -to the time when the public generally began to spend money rapidly because of fear that it would still further de preciate In purchasing power. 'Tf we are to go through-such a period here it would seem likely that -it might last rather longer than the corresponding periods did abroad," he said. 'Tts beginning would date from the spring of 1933 when we left the old gold basis for our money and en tered upon the pollcy of financing large governmental deficits by the sale of Federal' securities mainly to banks rather than to private investors. . "The method-that we are following is the one that proved disastrous In Europe for. in all those countries In. eluding Germany, the increasing issues of .money that caused the inflations were not mere, printing press issues of flat currency, but; were secured by government bonds and notes discount- ied - at the -banks. Nevertheless, the wprocess ls Inherently a slow one.” ' ‘‘kmong the-vclearest-lessons-taught . by the European experience. Colonel Ayres asserted; is that there are “no - good hedger' against inflation.” - He 'added:: - Oid Not Lighten Debt -Burdeos ; ■ ■ “Oneof the strange facts about these 1 inflations ls that while they destroyed: - the values of-most existing debts, they burdens of either the people as a whole, or of the corporations. "Inflation destroys the value of bonds, and mortgages and so confiscates the. property of these holders of obliga tions and hands it over to the share holders and the equity owners. How ever, it introduces so many new eco nomic difficulties that these share and equity holders are at once forced to Incur new indebtedness so that when stabilization comes the . problems of debt are about as troublesome as they were before, or even more so.” The five requisites of inflation were listed by Colonel Ayres as first, a pe riod of. sustained active business; sec ond, a rising Btock market; third, real credit expansion; fourth, greater out flow of gold “than we can. tolerate which would force us to cut our cur- reffey entirely free from gold”; and fifth, continued large budget deficits In government operation. A PROPHECY Significant economic developments to be expected in the next decade are listed by a prominent business writer as follows: . (I) Higher' standard of living. (3) Continued advances ih tech, nlcal processes of production. (3) Fac tory built houses, better and cheaper than hand made houses. (4) Somewhat cheaper money. (E) Faster travel. (6) News printed by radio. (7) Mechanical c o tto n picker, revolutionizing the South. (8) Cheaper electric power. (9) Better distribution of “goods; more chain stores. (10) Another depression five or six years hence, preceded by -an inflationary boom. TWO QUESTIONS AMSWEREP . Why is it that one farmer raises 100 buBhels of corn to the acre, and the other one, on the other side of the fence, raises 25 bushels to the acre?- Why is it that one farmer produces 100 pounds of pork on five bushels of corn, and another uses 25 bushels? Not until power machinery, - scientific principles of soil fertilization and restoration, rotation of crops, ■: diversification of crops and .economical feeding- are ap plied to the farm, will the farmers’ problem be solved; says a farm au-. thorlty. ^ - _ - BANKING READY NEW YORK. — There is abundant evidence that-banks are In an unusual Iy favorable position to finance a pe riod of industrial growth, says the June isBue of “Banking” . published: by the American Bankers Association. •An official- survey.: on- June 10 in dicated that - the Government of- the (Jmted States, through its loans, was the potential owner of more than, half- of the existing world , stacks-ot Atneri-- can cotton. The newspapers say that- State auditors found - four mistakes- that amounted to more than -a.million dol lars. Theretire plenty-of people^m insane aaylums.-thBt can ..do better , did-not succeed-in Ughtening- the debt- .bookkeeping thanihatr Retribution Comes, j It is pathetic to read the lamen- { tation of some of the Democratic press who attempt to belitte and belabor those of our citizens who have said something not very com plimentary of the President. Some of these penny-a-liners seem to think Roosevelt is a god and should not be criticized, it makes no difference what he may do and how much he may flout and defy the Constitution They forget that from the very first' day that Herbert Hoover went into office that the most damnable and outrageous campaign ever inaugur ated against a President was started by a Democratic newspaper hireling of the National Democratic Commit tee who had his instructions to ‘smear’ Hooverinevery way possible and not stop at anything. And now when the tables are turned we must all sit, like slaves in abject silence, and not utter a word. There is al ways !’retribution in history” and Franklin D. and his worshipers are getting some of "theirn” for the way they treated Herbert Hoover during the four years he was in the White House trying to .save the country from ruin.—Ex. imiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiimtHiKiiiuiiiiHimw * DR. R. P. ANDERSON - DENTIST Anderson Building Mocksville, N. C. OfficeflO - Phone - Residence 37 NOTICE! ( Having qualified as Administratrix of I the estate of George Hendrix decs'd. no tice is hereby given to all persons holding claims against the estate of said deceased to present the same; properly verified, to the undersigned'on or before the 28th day of June. 1936, or this notice will be plead- ed in bar of any recovery.All persons indebted to said estate please call on the-undersigned and make prompt settlement. This the 28th day of June. 1935. BEULAH APPERSON, Admrx. of George Hendrix. Decs'd. By A. T. GRANT, Attyr Admmistrator7S Notice. Havingqualified as administrator of the estate of Gaither Wood, deceased, late of Davie County. North Carolina, notice is hereby given all persons having claims . a- gainst the said estate, to.present them to the undersigned on or before July 16.1936. or this notice will-be plead in bar .of- their recovery. AU persons indebted to said es tate, are . requested to make immediate PaymenL-ThisJuIy 15,. 1935. : M. BRANSON, Admr - Gaither Wood, Dec'd. B C BROCK, Alty Land posters for sale. Notice To Creditors! Having qualified as Administratorof the estate of W. S. Guffy deceased notice is hereby given to all persons holding claims against the estate of said deceased to pre sent the same, properly verified, to the undersigned, Cleveland, Norih Carolina Route 2, on or before the 9th day of July, 1936 or this notice will.be pleaded in bar. of recovery. Allpersons indebtedto said estate will please call .and make proper settlement. This the 9th day of July 1935. J. R. GUFFY. Adm’r. of W. S. Guffy, decs'd. By A. T. GRANT, Attv. Administrator's Notice. Notice is hereby- - given' that the undersigned has qualified as admin istrator of J. A. Hege, deceased. AU persons, having claimsagaiqst the es tate of the said deceased,'will pre sent them to the undersigned on- or before the 29th day. of-June, 1936, or this notice will be pleaded in bar cf theirirecovery. All persons indebted to - said estate will please make immediate settlement. This 29th day of June, 1935. ' W. T. S. MYERS, Administrator of J A. Hege, deceased. ROBERT S. MCNEILL, Attorney; DAVIE CAFE _ “On The Square” Mocksville Next To Postofiice And Just As Reliable_ Regular Meals ■ Ice Cream. Soft Drinks. Short Orders.-Every Hour. P. K. M ANOSj Prop. N. C. 35c DR. P. H. MASQN Dentist ,SANF O RiD" BUILDING Phone 110- m m Mocksville, N. C.- : When your adversary speaks »ell of you look him over very closely and hestiate before-saying "yes > checks MALARIA is 3 days UQUID-TABLETS f O I FlOSAJ.VE-NOSE '-''-IL U O DROPS firit day. TONIC and LAXATIVE iuiiiiim iinnnni m m imrmmua- « BEST IN RADIOS 8 YOUNG RADIO CO. MOCKSVILLE, N. C. BESTIN SUPPLIES I 111 I TVl 111111 TTlTTtnTtTT T111 ITl I...........^ I 'TTTTTfTtn--• ........................*"UHIIIIIIIII|||||||IUi . CAMPBELL - W ALKER FUNERAL HOME AMBULANCE ' EMBALMERs Telephone 48 _ ' ' Main Street Next To Methodist Church Iiiiiiim rm im iiiim m iiium inninniiiin iiim ntiitiitnHminiiiiTiiii i n | , | |iL“ Travel anywhere . . any day I l the SOUTHERN for Ion A Fare For Every Purse 2 PERMILE ONE WAY and ROUND TRIP COACH TICKETS .. . . for Each Mile Traveled. ROUND TRIP TICKETS—Return Limit 15 Days . V for Each Mile Traveled. ROUND TRIP TICKET'S'—Return Limit 6 Months . . . for Each Mile Traveled. ONE WAY TICKETS . ; . ... for Each Mile Traveled lie Per Mile * 2c Fer Mile * 2 Jc Per Mile ,* -3c Per Miie , * Good in Sleeping and Parlor Cars on payment of proper ' charges for space occupied. No surcharge. Economize by leaving your Automobile at home and using the Southern Excellent Dining Car Service Be Comfortable in the Safety of Train Travel. R. H, GRAHAM, Div. Pas3 Agent . . . Charlotte. N. C. Southern Railway System I s T h e O l d e s t , M o s t W i d e l y R e a d P a p e r I n D a v i e C o u n t y . T h e P ric e Is O n ly $ 1 .0 0 P e r Y e a r . Send A Year7S Subseription To Your Relatives Who Live In Distant Counties Or States. They Will Appreciate A Weekly News Letter From Their Old Home County T H E D A V IE R E C O R D Carries A Number Of Features That You Will Not Find In Any Other Paper In This County. U e- RieWM is prepared to print y®af ^ notice. VOLDMN XXXVII. NEWS OTWN1 VVhst Was Happening In I The Days of AutomohiIeq . Hose.' (Davie Record, Auj Miss' Blanche HanesJ day in Winston-Ahoppi] Dr J- W. Rodwell ness trip to Greensboro] J. D. Casey spent o| week in Winston on bu jllss Minnie Coley for Virginia, where she music. Mr. and Mrs. Cail Mt. Ulla, were among visitors here Thnrsday.l Miss Bertha LinvilUf ton, visited her parents last week; 0. W. File, of Salist town Thursdaytaking | picnic- Leary Cashwell, ofl spent several days la town with friends. Miss ClartL-Foard, _oh was the guest of Miss| iimey last week. Sanuel Turner, of several days in town la| relatives. ’ Miss Thelma Wooteij ville, has been the gu Swift Hooper.. ’ 'Mrs. Robert Faucettj ren. of Chattanooga, some time in town witii Mrs. Carl Stroud an| ' and Shirlie Stroud, of' spent Thursday in towl - " ' M/ss Martha Call'refl sesday from a' delighj her sister at Spencei. Miss Louise Hunt, boro, is visiting in tbl guest of Miss Mary StcT Mrs. W. S. Walker, visiting her daughter,J nard Ballentine, in Wa Miss Louise Fittz, | Va., is the charming Edna Stewart. Marsh Bailey, who tion iu Elkin, come picnic Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Asheville, were among visitors Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Sam daughters, Misses FatsI of Fort Worth Texas, relatives and friends ini W. 0. Byerly, oi ^enn., is In on a two I to home folks. Miss Hattie Fowleij ville, spent last week friends. Mrs J. B. Armfiel daughter, of StatesvillI eral days in town last I Pf Mrs. Z. N. Audersc Rev, E. P. .Bradley ed the J. A. LinviIIe on Church street. Mr. and Mrs. O- C . Rttle son. of Statesvilll ors.to the picnic Thurq as usual, handed us a I J- K. Foster, whol position as salesman fa Hardware Co., forsomj today for Huntersvilll “as accepted a clerkshl Choate & Cd. We ds of success in Misl M- R. Bailey, of El to°og the picnic-visitoi « wouldn’t be a picm] Mr. and. Mrs. J. , a“d babe, of Asheville ing-some time in the Natives. Morris, who m m -^ness at Newland. town ,to I Ws family. W .? H o i® ? 167 ' Winston d 3re Sr f f i t f <■ > rM m checks MALARIA •» 3 days COLDSfirit dav TONIC and LAXATIVE IN RADIOS RA D IO CO. KSVILLE, N. C. IN SUPPLIES HOME EMBALMfiBS Church day I I I for I 2°I PER mile PACH TICKETS feled. Si Limit 15 Days reled. P Limit 6 Months jel ed. IeleI ent of proper [charge. id using the Southern an Travel. I Charlotte. N. C. pystem t e s t . M o s t [ P a p e r m t y . Inly e a r . ionToYour Distant ’hey Will iy News ome County :c o r d Features id In Any County- toprint y°ur .... OSTA L ftfe c E lP fl S ito W f H E M c o ftb O R C H tA fi6 K THE C A f t m t IN TH E COUNTY. THEY DON’T l i e : "HERE SHALL THE PRESS. THE PEOPLES RIGHTS MAINTAIN: UNAWED BY INFLUENCE AND UNBRIBED BYlJAIN." column x x x v ii. DEffS OF LONG AGO. Y1Ttll Wai Happening In Davie Before TheDay* of AutomobiIea and Rolled Hote. (Davie Record, Aug-Jpiz ) Miss Bianche Hanes spent Fn diy ia Winston-shopping. pr j, W. RodweII made a busi neS6 trip to Greensboro last week. j D. Casey spent one day last ffeek in Winston on business. Miss Minnie Coley left Friday for Virginia, where she will teach music. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Sherrill, of Mt. Ulla, were among the picnic visitors here Thursday. MissBertha Linville, of Wins ton. visited her parents in this city last week. 0 . W. File, of Salisbury, was in town Thursday taking in the big picnic. Leary Cashwell, of Statesville, spent several days last week in - town with friends. Miss Clara Foard, of Statesville, ms the guest of Miss Mary Me- ioney last week. Sanuel Turner, of Monbo, spent several days in town last week with relatives. Miss Thelma Wooten, of Reids- ville, has been the guest of Mrs. Swift Hooper. ' Mrs-RobertFaucetteand child ren, of Chattanooga, are spending some time in town with relatives. Mrs. Carl Stroud and little son, andShirlie Stroud, of Thotnasvilie, spent Thursday in town. Miss Martha CallrrriftnttSTWgd=- nesdayfrom a delightful visit to her sister at Spencet. Miss Louise Hunt, oi Greens boro, is visiting in this city, the guest of Miss Mary Stockton. Mrs. W. S. Walker, of R. 1. is visiting her daughter, Mrs.. Leo nard BalleDtine1 in Wake county.. MissLouise Fittz1 of Danville, Va., is the charming guest of Miss Edna Stewart. Marsh Bailey, who holds a posi tion in Elkin, come over for the picnic Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Clement, of Asheville, were among lhe^picnic visitors Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Naylor and. daughters, Misses Patsy- and "-Nell, of Fort Worth Texas, are visiting relatives and friends in town. W. 0. Byerly, of. Knoxville, Tcun., is in oh a two weeks visit to home folks. MissHattie Fowler, of States ville, spent last week in town with friends. Mrs I. B. Armfieid and little daughter, of Statesville, spent sev eral days in town last week, guests of Mrs. Z. N. Anderson. Rev. E. P. Bradley has purcbas the I. A. Linville house and lot on Church street. ..Mr' and Mrs. 0. C. Austin and tile sou, of Statesville, were visit- ors to the picnic Thursday. 0. C-, Js llsuaIi handed us a life saver. ' J-K. Foster, who. has held a Position as salesman for Mocksviile InT^ware for sOrtie time, leaves aVfor Huntersville, where be asaccepted a clerkship with T. L". ti °ate & Co- We wish John all Ms of success in his new homef M- R- Bailey, of Elkini was v a- ouK the picnic visitors Thursday, wouldn’t be a picnic without M. MOCKSVILLE. NORTH CAROLINA, WEDNESDAY AUGUST Dead Man Returns In Dream. A witness testifying at a will con test in Mocksville, North Carolina, swore hts father’s "ghost” had ap Reared to him in a dream and told him how to find a will that had been drawn a number of years after the one ,that was being challenged —and thejury believed him. James-Chaffin, a farmer, who bad lived.in Davfe County, had a wife and four sons—but when, he died several years ago it was found that his will, drawn in 1905, left all of his property to his third; son, Mar- shalL- Althougn no provisions bad: been made for the widow and the; other three sons, they decided at that time not to contest the will— since there did not seem to be suf ficient grounds upon -which to bring suit. Four years later Marshall died leaving the;-Chaffin estate to his own widow and child —and as the quaint legal phrase goes, "to their heirs and assigns forever.” Bpt shortly after Marshall’s death James Chaffin's second son, Pink ney, went into court\and -claimed that he had recently found another and later will which divided the estate equally between the four sons and instructed them to take care of tbetr mother. On the witness stand, Pinkney told an odd story.'- “In all my life,” he said, "I.never heard my father mention having tnade^a . later will than the.one dated in 1905. But some months, ago I began to have -Vivid-A reams;- in-whieb=- -m-iMatbeVfi appeared.at my bedside, At first; he did not say anything. Hg-just stood there and looked-at me, with a sorrowful expression, He seemed to have something on - his mind— as if he felt, that in his lifetime he *4 ,-1 9 3 5 R. SnJrKund Mrs' J ‘ P- G lodfeltri Ijf e> of Asheville, are spend- TihtiZe tim^ in the county witli: bfen? Morris* who is engaged in dbs ,^s at NewIand, spent .several with i,- t°wn thisl and last week ms family. : . ..riv-;-: ' W Sf and Palley Clement ‘ Winst00 W3rd are at had done something wrong, .and wished that he could set ft right!' I "Of coursefrve always felt that he did not treat the rest of us right when he left all his property to my younger brother. But it did- not occur, to me that this could be what was worrying him. , In fact,, the first few times I saw him like^thipt- in my dreams I did not attach- any importance to it. - - " "A fellow is liable to dream most anything^ and usually it doesnlt have any meaning. But one night he appeared' in a‘black overcoa.t be used to yvear when he was- a live. Thattime he Canie CiosertO thribedy and pulling back the overcoat, he pointed to the inside pocket; and and said: .. You will find something about my last will in my overcoats pocket.’ ’Then he' disappeared, and Wheni I woke up the nextmbrning I was convinced that I hadn’t -just been dreaming. I whs sure , that my father’s spirit had comi back from the grave and spoken' to me. - So I. went to my "mother’s place and s id: : - W ’-ffi:--Wri/.! ffi- V ; “ 'Where’s that, old black over coats fat her usdd tp; wear?’. ’ "Mother hunted all over the; house' and finally ..she remembered that she had given that overcoat to my brother,?John; 'who lives J dyer- in Yadkin CounTy;. about,-twenty miles ' northwest . of« my hgthe. drove over.to John’s place, aodsure enough; he had the overcoat. When I .examined -the inside • pocket _I found that the lining bad been stitched to the coat. I cut the stitches, .and inside the lining was a little. rolT of paper tied with a string.; WritienVori that PJece °f papri, in mv father’s handwriting, were-these words: - > > - - ; ." ‘Read the tWenty-seventh: chap- ter of' Genesis! in my daddy’s- pld Biblerir.; \ '■ V i v" Well, none diLtis knew whei;e grandfather’s Bible'was-— unless cided I had better have some ,wit nesses with me- when I examined; the Bible. So I asked-Mr. Thomaif Blackwelder- and his daughter; fcj go with me to mother’s place. M\ own daughter also- went with, us;=.;-! “ When-.we got to mother’s plaee. she said she hadn't seen that old; Bibleinyears. Wesearcbed every; where--for it, and finally found -'-it'1 in the bottom of bureau drawer in; the attic. ■ ■ -a . The Bible was in bad shape; and while I was haadlmg it. it fell into three pieces.. Mr. Blackwelder- picked up.the.part, containing the; Book of Gensis and turned “ the: leaves until he came to the twenty-; seventh chapter. At that ’ place.’ two leaves had been folded-together; the left band page_folded to the right, and the.right hand page fold ed to-the left, forming a pocket. In that pocket was my father’s last will. -j The paper which Pinkney Chaf; Sn contended was his father's lasit will was then introduced as evid ence.- - It said: "After reading the twen ty-seventh chapter of Genesis, I, James L..Chaffin, do make my -last NUMBER 4 . Remember The Truth _ Always. Remember-that if a person Judgei he conditions about him on the basii if casual observation; he will doubt ess conclude that everything is un stable and that changes are taking olace sorapidly tbatnothmg m the world can be depended upon as per Oiement. !Friends andjgood timer will and testament, and.here,it is I want,-after giving, my body a de-" cent burial, my little property to be equalLy divided amony- my four children, if they are hving- at my death, 'both personal- and real estate divided equal; if not living, give share tp their children. And ,if she is-living, you all must take care of your mammy. Now this is my. last will and testament. _Witnesfl " The above striy a'ppeared ia a number;. o f “,daily UewspapeK - thoughout the .country. The Re* cord editor is persouajly acquainted with all the characters in the story,- and has' talked to Mr. Pink Chaf-. fin; Mr. Thos. ,BIackwerder and others-abbut theamattri. -Most j the story is cprreri,"' with, the ex ception! of the part about i.hri j urv reapportioning the ; estate. - The Suit was taken into court,’ but was 'comprbmiMd Wforerit.;reached. the; jury.’ r- ’ahdthg.New. Peail^ihe-dWmopfats are tryfnS to read, these, boys out of the^parfy. Don(t !cu^.the;, ,Repub- iome and go. Possessions are here today and. gone tomorrow, happi- iess flashes highly and fades, then ihines again. , Mountains rise from the sea and r*aii back into the sea again Ev<ry- Jthing is changing. - Thehome of our -hildhood, if indeed it can be found, •’s.not the same as it used to be wher we were children; neither are we same as were when we lived there. Would you want to be just-as you were when you lived back -in your old home? -Would you want to be itilfa little child though all your as sociates are grown up?.- : Lookingattheuniverse about us m a certain way. Every thing seems to.be insecure and undependable, but looking at it from another viewpoint Everything is alive and growing all hing are appearing continually in a regular merry-go-round, new beau ties and new adventures are every where. When the waves of change come !rolling along they upset our peace of mind if we have attached our too Sfirmly to material things If our pnnd is alert and open to God. We ^ide safely on top of the waves but one shall doubtless be . submerged Jffhen the waves hit us if we have be came- crystallized in personal con sciousness, if we try to make our- my'fakhd and seal. -JamesL- Cfiaf^ ^felvUs" beleive:. that our Concermng fin ,-this January. 16, rg 19. ’V The twenty-seventh chapter of Genesis, which was read to the jury, relates how Esau, the elder son of Isaac, was tricked out of his birthright by his younger brother, Jacobi ' • . In concluding his testimony Pink; ney Chaffin said: ; ! .. ■ "About a week, ago my father appeared to me again in a dream. He showeji considerable temper and asked: “Where is my-offi w:H?’ From that, I concluded he hoped I would win the suit.” ; ' ■ No one rememhered hearing the father mention the !.existence; of a second will, but serveral. witnesses testified-that the^paper .Introdneed in cdurt . was in- his'handwriting. The members of the jury were then told-that. aitbough'the second will had not - been witnessed, if they werricbhvinced' that Jameri Chaffin had .written it they-must uphold it —dn accordance with the; law of the State. : Sb the jury returned a; vridict annulling the first-Will and making the second one valid . ; . After the verdict, Pihkney. Chaf fin said: - - - ~ "Many of my friendrido not be lieve that it is possible for the living tp hold communication with the dead ,.but I am convinced, that my my father actually appeared to me on riveral occasibns^-'and.I’ll be lieve it to the day ofjay death!”' matter are more important,than the welfare of our soul. We shall be continually buffeted. - If we are try ing- to believe that ■ happiness de pends upon-the permanency of ma terial possession, we’8ball be disap pointed often. But something with in us ".cries-out. What can I relv upon? .I musthavesomething that I can depend upon. Is there.no per son upon whom I can absolutely rely to do the right thing always? Isthere no one strong enough to combat these waves of change, whose strong arm I can lean on so that' I can’ re main secure in Jmy old ideals? Is there not somewhere, -a. person who will never- disappoint me? And never-offend me? ' IfTI-could only find some one who would always be. just and true and unchanging, .what a-comfort it would be. How WouId you like toatand upon the narrow pedestal of some other person's ideal of perfection? ; Stand rooted there, not daring to cbatige your characteristic pose lest you slip and fall off the pedestal and tlius shatter your admirer’s ideal?-!. If you should ever be in such a position you will realize that you-^Eave accepted a yery . difficult, responsibility. - Your every thought cannot , possibly be in union with every-jthought of the other personi and for this reason yob bbthwillform different idealsjabout many things. Thisbeing true, how can you ever know w henyoii; may be innocentiv thinking and doing that which does not conform to, your friend’s ideal of what you should be, thu's’cauBing him tb be disappblhfed ihyou? ’ p - - , vjCjVi.’ You must live your own life ..in ypur own way. following your high est jdbal.sunder the guidahce-of : the Christ mind. You must grow and develop ih the Waythat seems right to ybu/ You must accord every one the same privilege.. Db not eltpeCt anyone to he P permanent model, expressing only, what yon think is right. ; Yoii y.ourself should, be this model person. No pne’blse can be it for you.-/ I' You must change and grow physi- cally,’; mehtaliy - ti n d. spiritually. Everybody must change and' grow. Bdt, you wk, is thereihothing per,^ maneht; hbthlng th'at;TCaii rely upon when'I. need.help? jls.thefe no /Coni* Wild Spending By High way Heads. (From Rockv Mount Herald ) We notice the-jiews item whicb was carried a few days ago in the press purporting to come from the revenue department which showed that the highway department was collecting and spending from the people of North Carolina from auto mobile and gasoline taxes more mon ey than all the other departments of government; including schools and colleges, insane institutions-, charity institutions, charity institutions, courts and law enforcements: Now is this a healthy condition for North Carolina? Are the roads spending too much m proportion to other de partments of government, or is it that the other departments do not have enough?- - Propaganda is being issued from time -to time telling the people who live on secondary coun ty roads that these expenditures must continue for them to have then roads improved. Now it is generallv known that the mone is being spent on other thoroughfares than the secondary roads that need improve ment so much-in most of their coun ties. - The Legislature was called into special session once when the budget was supposed to be out of bal ance about one half million dollars. Now the highway department takes over bridges, changes the roads or widens a ioad that probably is plenty wide for its traffic where one fourth to one-half million dollars is involved, for the wave of a band, the scratch .pf a ppn by_autbority oi_ law by authority assumed This is the condition that North Carolina should consider seriously. The great extravagance m the prison and-highway departments and yet the’ actual performers of labor still do not receive but small, salaries. Butsince these "taxes come 'from automobiles our people have been negligent in seeking bow this mon ey was‘expended. ^If- this , money was properly safeguarded and a dol Iars worth of goods Was received for a dollar expended the. tin. bucket man todoy would not have to pay sales tax on corn bread, and fat back collards and molasses. Delayed Scbool Open ings Raleigh, N. C.; Jtily, 30.—Tie state board of health today, reiterat ed previous statements that it - has placed no restrictions on visitors to North Carolina but at the same -time warned that scbobl openings should be delived until October 1 if possible due -to the infantile paralysis, situa tion: . ■ . ’'.!- , , v ." vri'v - The Fresident’s prestige- has as many crushing, defeats as the League of Nations. :.- thing is Truth. Though facts may be smashed. TriSth may be relied upon at all times, whether you seem to be glad or sad, rich or poor, well or ill- When things seem to be slip ping under your feet and wanes’ off wordly changes roil over you .; Just grasp Truth and bold to It while you adjust yourself to new condi tions’ There isnothtng.tp fear when you hold fastle Truth. -. - - Ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free.”,.-;.., : Hfs truth is a shield and, a buck- lbn” ' “For the law! was-: givmi though Moses: grace, and truth came though Jesus Christ.” "I am the Way, ahd-the truth 'mid the life.” '- ,ri-;;,:!’ “When be, the Spirit of truthi. is come, he shall guidei you ittto * all the truth.” ~ . , /Abjde ;in -Y riS ^ ^ ;^ y ^ r;jp i; fye onAhe highia;(bUt5 of ^reaaiJ of • . . _ .world chang^andVyou1. wilf be!.on-,pass tq.point to way where skies are, harmed b tbem. You 8re -^re8ter dark and the sea. of jife is rough?; ^ - ^ • Intrenching the Sales Tax. . The appeal of J. Paul Leonard to • Representative Doughton to" dis courage' attempts to enact legisla tion authorizing the Federal Govern-' ■nent to mint money of less denomi nation than one cent, is based on the iatural and logical fear that the ioining of Buch money would act to perpetuate the sales taxes in those itates wh ch are already cursed with t. and cause the spread of the levy ’ into other states - While North Carolina has had -few qualms of cors.-ience reya-ding ’the practical workings of its sales tax law which force the customer in uany instances to pay 10 per cent, ir more m sales taxes instead of the 3 per cent authorized by Iawi JIli- oois has been -disturbed by the ine- ’ quity and illegality of such practical workihgs, and an effort has ‘been made, to prevent overtaxing. Coin -ihecks have .been issued,. these hav- ng the value of a mill, which repre- ients jjne-tenth of a cent. SOme questions has been raised, however, »s to whether the use of-such checks -isn’t in violation of the federal coun terfeit laws. Therefore the effort to have the government issue mill coins has arisen: . ■ - With the operation of the- BaleB tax law thus simplified, many other states may be tempted to adopt' tbis ■tax system, since the vested interests all over the country are making a determined drive having as its ■ ob jective the “broadening oi the- tax base,” as their agents euphemisti cally express it. This broadening of ,tax base, as it is called, m ot course.' •the shifting of^the major portion of . thetax-bnrden upon those feastuble -■! to pay, and the coming of mills -by the Federal Government might have the effect of placinng the burden: a-- round the necks of the less affluent ‘ taxpayers in perpetuity, - unless --the latter make their protests more arti culate.-riWinston: Journal. A Minister Who Is. Pop- iilaiv Rev. V. M. Swaim, a Baptist ;miii- . ister of the late Dr. Henry A. Brown I; type, personally and in preaching, is “ frequently referred to as one of Ahe most widely known and best loved divines in this- section of the state. After serving Southside Baptist Church as pastor for several years," he was! elected"'pastor - emeritus; by that-, congregation, with whom he was exceedingly popular.- V ■' Since bis retirement ffora Ihe ac tive pastorate,, he has preached prac- tically every Sunday- for congrega tions in this! and othericountieAf It also might be said that few, if Any, pastors.officiate at more.marriages.. or conduct more funerals than Bey. V. M- Swaim. rf' • ” - . For several months he bas hhen serving as supply pastor.of the Bap- - tist Church at Thomasville. He was ' offered the regular pastorate of this charge, but due .to illness in hiafam-. . ily. be thought it wise to decline;’ .. ... “Brother Swaim,” as most- of, his "J: friends delight to cail him, baa pass- ed the three score mark in age, yet be ^ is as active as the average roan.of 35 ! ' or 40 —Winston Sentinel. ■ : ! Predicts G. O. P.Prejsi* I I:- : '.'Vi San Francisco,,!July 20.—A-VRe- publican president-. in '!1937, was - ■ the prediction left! with; Galifrinia G. . 9 P- leaders today by Col. Frank Knox; Chicago publisher. The latest Of nationally - prdmi- • nent, Republicans to visit with|,for- mri-President Herbert Hoover, Col- bnef’Ktiox declared in att -address- - hrig, last night that - a :Republicau ^ president would take office in A93 7 on a platform opposed id "plaiffied economy.” _ - ' - FooIiih question^- No. 69,907i342: Don’t'you want to'pay this billvtc- day?” f ? i ;-v - V- . - : t v : ... .Sf- .............. S ic a n si& c ^democrats II I m s: "" i T * V-. .. ;, ;,- f*kmmtiKxvmM. & & THE DAVIE RECORD; C. FRANK STROUD • • Editor. Member National Farm Grange. TELEPHONE Ehitered atthe Poatoffice in MockB- rille, N. C., as Second-class Mail matter. March 3.1903. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: ONE YEAR. IN ADVANCE - J I OO SIX MONTHS. IN ADVANCE - S 50 Some of the newspapers through out the country are taking straw ballot votes, trying to find out whether the voters want another four years of Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Frotn what they are saying about Franklin in this part of the moral vineyard, it would seem that thftv have been sufficiently amused, and would be glad to see the country put back on a sound, sensible basis.' A number of Federal court judges have declared the AAA to be un constitutional. And t h e demo cratic papers said but little about the matter. One Tennessee Federal judge, who, we take it, is a demo crat, has declared that the AAA is constitutional, and many of the democratic papers in the country have carried big headlines, together with the picture of this judge, prais ing his decision. Suchispoliticsin the land of the free. New Deal Takes licking Tuesday. The new deal suffered a defeat in Rhode Island Tuesday when voters in 'the first congressional district elected a Republican-to:fill a vacant seat in the national house of rep resentatives previously occupied by a Democrat. With Roosevelt policies directly at issue, Charles F Risk, a former judge, was swept to victory by a margin of more than 10,000 votes over Democratic: State Treasure^ Antonio Prince. Risk had cam paigned on a platform of “repudiate the Roosevelt administration.” Central Falls, R I. went Repub lican for ..the first time in a score of years. Pawtucket elected a Repub lican state representative in a dis- t r i c t normally overwhelmingly Democratic. Newport chose its first Republican mayor in 'almost two decades. ; Seems that North Carolina is go ing to collect inore money than the democratic officeholders are able to spend this year. With the price of jn’eat what it is, we would suggest that the state purchase at least ten pbunds of meat for every poor man in the state Who hasn’t- been able to buy a pound since the New-Deal and the Mles tax- has raised ’ the price of breakfast Mcon from 15 to 40 cents a. pound. The rich are getting richer,1 and the poor are get ting, poorer. Barbecue- Supper. Mr. C. B. Hoover'was Host Wed* nesday evening at a Barbecue Sup per, which proved to be one of the inest enjoyable affairs of the summer V Tbe supper was given in honor of his employes and friends; After a swim in Peelers Lake, Mr. 'Hooyer told of his application for the loyal ty and cooperation of his helpers. •' The table was arranged with bar becue, slaw,' ice tea, and wafers for I each guest present. ?; Those enjoying this happy occa sion were: • , ;r Mr. and Mrs. G. B. Hoover, Mr. and'Mrs. J. A.: Sink, Mr. 'and Mrs. CiydeReece, Mr. and Mrs. Grady .Spry, Misses Dorcus Milholen, Maxine Alexander, Helen and Hazel Strty, 0 f Cooleemee. - Gertrude Honeycutt, of “Salisbury, Messers Clifton Marsh, Rufus McGill, of Salisbury, Beauford. Doyle and Ken neth Hoover, Paul Booe, Mack Paint er, of Cooleemee,- . Birthday Party. . One of the most delightful, parties of-the season was that which was given last Saturday night when Mrs. D.f>. Tutterow entertained at -her home near Mt'. Gilead, with a birth day party in honor of Raymond Maske’s 14th and Mrs. Tutterow’s son Lawrence’s 8th birthday. .' The color scheme was carried out ' in white and pink. The birthday cakes were white with pink candles. After a number of outdoor games were enjoyed, Mrs. Tutterow served refreshments consisting of ice. cream cake; lemonade, and melon. Around 20 were present and all 'went away wishing Raymond and Lawrence many-more happy birth days. Cooleemee News. Mr. and Mrs. L. J. Davis 8nd two children, Billie and’ Dollie, are spend ing ten days at Chicane; Rock, Lake Lure and other points of interest. In the land of the sky. ' Mrs C. B. Hoover, her three children. Dovle; KenneLh, and Clay- tfe of Cooleemee along with- her sister and rieice Mrs. D. L. Roseinan of Statesville and Miss Virginia . Smith, of Troutman, respectively, are spending a:ten day vacation at Yorktown, Va. ‘"Rev. P. E. - Howard, of Advance " was a week-end visitor in Cooleemee. >vXbe many-ftipndB of H. E. Banies wilPoe glad-tt^se'eiihat he Kayfi&i a- side-bis crutches arhe is out on the Farmington) News. Mrs. M. C. Ward who lias been quite ill i9 very much improved. - Will Furches of the Government Refore station of Asheville spent the week-end with home folks. Ibe many friends of J. Frank Johnson will be glad to learn that he is able to be out. after being confined to bis home for several weeks frpm a serious operation. Mrs. Bich Rich, 0MVake Forest is the guest of her daughter, Mrs. F. H; Bahnson. Miss Leona Graham attended the meet ing of the King Woman’s Club, of which she is a member,.in King Thursday night. Miss Sue Mae Slate of King is the house guest ot Miss Leona Graham. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Wright and children of New Providence; Iowa ^nd Vance Low ery and sister Mtiss Viola Lowery, 0; Kan napolis were guests last week of Mr. ana Mrs. D. D. Gregory. Mr. Gregory is an uncle of these people. Miss Margaret Brown, of Washington, D. C., is spending her vacation with, her parents, Mr. and Mrs. R- C. Brown. . Mr. and Mrs. J. C._ Goodman, of Clem mons and Mrs. Clinard Goodman and little son of Winston-Salem were recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Smith. There will be a. lawn party on the M. E. church lawn Saturday night. Benefits go the M. E. Sunday School.' . Mr. and Mrs. Albert Long and children have gone to Ronda to spend a few days. -- Farmington base1 ball team won over Beeson Brothers a score of .8 to 15. G. H Graham is quite ill at this writing. Mrs. Queen Bess Kennen, of Danbury, Miss Dorotha Norrington and Mrs. George Sheek. of Winston-Salem spent the weekend at their home, KenneiT Krest. They were Sunday dinner guests of Miss Vada Johnson. Miss Emma Lee. Poole, of Greenville, S. C., and Henry Furches, of Winston-Salem, were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. L. M. Furches. Miss Mae Freeman was the week-end gnest of Misses Lillie and Essie Dunn, ot Bethlehem. Mrs. E. P. Walker, of Winston-Salem, is spending the week-With her parensts Mr. and Mrs. M. C. Ward. Miss Gwynn Furches delightfully en tertained a number of her friends at an informal party at her home Saturday oight. Gamesandmusic were enjoyed. Delicious refreshment were served toJJiss Furches the hostess, Misses Martha and Annie Furches. Ester Wood, Louise Moht.-. gomery Messers. Odell Wood, Francis Horne, Frank Bahnson, Edd Johnson and Paul Walker. Arthur Phelps, of Mt. Vernon was in town Thursday but he said - he didn’t cptne to the picnic'. We think"his chief reason for coming to give The Record a frogwas to give IskiniT many others didn’t ■' " ' Fork News Notes. Mr and Mrs. J. M.Livengood, entertain ed a large number of young people on Fri day evening from 8 to 11 o’clock, in honor of their daughter. Miss Treva Livengood. it being her birthday anniversary, after games, and social fun, the guests were sumptously served with refreshments. Mrs. J. Gray Sheets, and three, sons, of Roanoke, Va.. have been .visitors here with,-Mr. and Mrs. Milton Foster, Newtos Mason, of GreensbordrSamuel'Mason, and Mr. and Mrs. Edgar MSson. of Miami, Fla., and Mrs. N. G. Byerly, of T^inston Salem, were all dinner guests, with :Mr. and Mrs. W. Hugh Mason last Sunday. Mrs. M. S. Benfield, of Miami. Fla , is spending a few weeks here with relatives. Mr. and Mrs. -W. L. Bottoms, of Beu- nettsviiie, S. C., arrived here Friday after noon to spend a part ot their vacation here with Mrs. Bottom's parents Mr. . and Mrs. C. L. Aaron. Don't forget the revival services in pro gress this week at Fulton M. E .. church. Everybody invited to attend. Mrs/S. B. Siddoni of Winston-Salem, is spending her vacation here with her mother Mrs. James Hoyle. - Redland News. Mr. and Mrs. Back Foster of Smith Grove spent the past, week-end with .the Iatters parents. Mt. and- Mrs. S. H. Smith. Miss Margaret Foster, of Smith Grove spent the past week' with her sister, Mrs. Wiilie Armswortby. . ~ Mrs. C. S. Dunn is on- the sick list we are sorry to'note . v : Miss Mary Freeman. of Farmington and Miss Cordelia Smith and Elva Hendrix were the Friday afternoon guests, of Miss es Lillie and Lessie Dunn. ' Mrs. Willie Armswortby and children sbent one day the past week with 'her mother; Mrs. C.M. Foster. Miss Liliie and Lessie Dunn was the guest of Miss Edith Smith Thursday.- . Mrs. Ralph Baity, of Winatoh Salem Bpent Thursday with her sister, ^ Mrs. G. Z Cook. V . Hurt In Auto Wreck. y Mrs. M. M. Turner and Miss John Smoot, of Kappa, received paitiinl injuries in an auto - wreck - near Kannapolis, on Saturday afternoon. They were carried to a Statesville treatment. - Mrs: Tur- broken leg.- All Edward Stewart, Davie county Confed erate Veteran, born Ahg. 6, 1834, celebra- brated his IOlst birthday on Sunday, Aug. 4tb, at his home near Fork Church. jurors ForAugustCourt ; The following jurors have been drawn for the August term of Davie Superior court, which convenes in this city on M-mdav, Aug. 26th, with his Honor, Judge Kf Don Phil lips, of Rockingham. on' the hench. and Solicitor John R. Jones, of North Wilkesboro, prosecuting the docket. There are a number of cases on the' IiH m in aI docket to be disposed of at this term of the court: L. P Seaford. Geo. H. McDaniel, Geo. E Barnhardt, W. Lee Ellis, Dalton Hendricks, W. B. Howard, Lewis Seamon, A. M. Kimbrough.' Jr. M. M. Harris, Zeb Brinkley. R. P. Collette, P. W KoontZ; J. M. Stroud R. S. Powell, ,1, M. Latham, W. T. Rights. F. H. Bahnson, C. E. Fair- cloth, J. G Orrell. Nathan G. Bailey C. E Milholland, M- D. Peoples, 0. L. Ha'rkey, R. M. Woodruff. P. J. Johnson. J. J. Allen, C E, Pierce, L. B.--Ellis, E L. Freeman, Robt.. L. Smoot, M. -M. Naylor, J. L. Cartner. Wade Dyson, M. F. James, J. L Bog- er. C C Walker. — Mrs. Will Roberts. Mrs., Will Roberts died -at her home.near CountyJLine last TJues . day morning. The body was/laid to rest in Salem Methodist church graveyard Thursday morning at 10 o’clock, Mrs. Roberts is survived by several sons and daughters. She was a membei of the Jericho Chris tian church You can drive it 50 miles an hour the day you buy it T h e F o rd V -8 is ready for normal driving wfien you! buy it. There is no tedious period- of breaking-ill for 500 or 1000 miles. : Yon. can drive it up to 50 miles an Hour the first -day. Aini after die first hundred miles von can drive it as fast as you desire. . That means greater motoring enjoyment for every motorist*/ It is especiaUy important to • motorists who are thinking about a new car for a vacation trip -— to physicians, salesmen and all those who use a car for business. In stead of dragging dong at- slow- speeds for days, you can make good time from^the start. The reason for this is as important as the result. The Ford V-8 needs no breaking-in because of unusual accuracy in the manufac ture of moving parts and the smoothness of bearing surfaced Clearances are correct when you buy the car., It is not necessary to depend on a long wearing-in period to eliminate tight ness and insure smooth running.- Longer life, greater economy and iette r performance are bound to result from such precision methods. The Ford V-8 gives you fine-car construction, along with, fine-car performance, comfort, • safety and beauty. F O R D V-8 Virgil Boger, of Cana, R: I, was in town Wednesday for the first, time in several months ' He re cently underwent an operation at Duke Hospital, Durham, having his right leg amputated above the knee. H eisgetting along nicely, his friends will be glad to learn. J. E.. Horn, of Newton, spent several days last wjeek 'visiting rie latives and friends .in and around town. Mr. Horn always attends the Masonic picnic, but he paid his annual visit despite the - fact that there was no picnic held this year. Repair Work Done Ecoiiomically No M atter W hat May Be The Trouble-W e Can Fix It. ' And O ur Charges Are Very Reasonable. From a Dented Fender to a Broken Crank Shaft, Our Staff of Experts is Ready to Remedy Any Defect; A Trial WilI Convince You O f O ur ^ Capable, Swift and Courteous Service, And Above AU Of O ur Ecohomical. Charges. M o c k sv iile M o to r C o . Phone 97 Mocksville, N. C. ■ Td: Davie County Housewives “ M o c k sv ille ’s B e ^ tn A re Of The FINEST QUALITY And Are GUARANTEED To Give PERFECT SATISFACTION ^ A T-ial Will Convince You That- "Mocksville’s Best’’' And "Over-The-Top” Are The EQUAL Of Any Plour You Have Ever Used. - ^ ~ Sold, By The Leading Merchants OfDavie County. ✓ _ Manufactured By H o rn ^ J o h n s to n e - C o . Phone .3 MocksfiOe. N. C,; paint Every thing T h atx Needs It. Fresh Color Is Cheerful . . It Makes Your Home More Livable. ; Besides, Paint Protects AU It Covers Paint Up Now And-. Be Sure You /-Use /v “ ^Oae Gallon Makes 2 1L Wben Mixed - Kurfees & Ward ‘Better^Service” ‘ ‘ ' MocksvilIe( N. ,J. J ^ m e r i c a t o ] Very Busy Fellow Prove as Natural Engj •Washington.—The U StagtaK a eomeback. SI and Industrious, the HttP proving his worth as a 4 nepr “Once sought by wl| JndIaDS alike for Ws skin, thick-tailed creatnre, measa three feet from chin whij ♦in was slanghtered ru tl now, thanks to his enterprl jje ij more valuable alive r "Hundreds of thousand gklns, warm and heavy, from the Ifew world dn times," says, the NatIona society. “In one year I gay Fnr company expoj hides from what Is nowl States and Canada. As e | e gentleman was not In Us beaver h a t A good r than four pounds. llBeaver |)elts provided f | the first parish chnrch Inl jta furnishings. In wesjj States beaver pelts °fte* currency. | •Tbe Adirondack reglol to at least a million beavj white man came to New r IS95 natnrallsts declared I gtream were searched, n | five to ten would be fomF new stock has since ha from Tellowstone Natlond ever, and under strictly 'el laws, a rapid lnirease ha Beaver Ponds Put «In Minnesota’s Itascal wherein He the headwa HlssIssippI river, beaver| tectlon are multiplying 3 In 1924, when the lrrlgat the Minnesota and North £ ran low, the fruit crop 1 be lost Fourteen large located above the head < tlon canal were tapped al carried down Into the vaf the orchards. “Beavers have made id «attle to graze on seven national forests of CoIorad were almost useless becaj water. The busy creati cp the streams, built pol served the water, malrinf throughout long, d rj^ o n g nlson National forest, I have proved effective barr] Ing forest fires. “One of the most recen| ects Is In Lake county, the active little fellowd under way with an enl which forestry officials J veat soil erosion, preservf V e te ra n D i\ Hulk in Lake MkhigJ M ystery Cra Menominee, Mich.—Effj tify the water-soaked I Cheneanx Island waters! be that of the. Griffon, fird to Ply the Great Lakes I rl onsly disappeared In 161 sumed this summer. John Beattie, veteran ■ Joor, Mich., has offered! free In an attempt to iff the Griffon, built by th l wlT LaSalle 256 years! ■v lest was seen | “ e Present Detroit hartf ton island, Green bay, loaded with valuable 4 nt the ship on Its retun oer the command of L ucJ explorer remained to pi] 6««tB of the “strange” eountry. 1 In letters to friends ai never seea again, J Pressed the belief that I ht,™ ? ° le the fur3> and! bwned the ship. Soml “owever, believe the sh l P ? ’ f 1riyiaS 811 hands1 Efforts to raise the SfS"? Waters weree W ater of 1933-34 beef h e a d s n e w ainlste?' Stevens, for J has / trade ana col Poliae., the leadersli “recontf Earty ha^ nS fo3 soCh^ WK0n flnd refoI 1,83118 montai l beeD EdV°^ 92 RECORD. MOCKSYTT.T.b a t /i , J t buy it rtant as the I breaking-in ie manufac- aoothness of porrect when r to depend iinate tight- Longer life, Jonnance are lion methods, construction, Ice, comfort, FAINT fcds It. ie More Livable. Covers fou /Use te n M ix e d ijrci Mocksville. N- ij- Americah Beaver Staging Welcome ComebackVery e - Rusy Fellow Proves W orth as Natural Engineer. ^i'ln^a'comeback. Sharp-toothed I 5TndMtrious, the little fellow Is L L his worth as a natural engl- PIor Once sought by white men and I 8L 3 alike for his skin, the nervous Iu,k tailed creature, measuring a scant £ feet ft™ chin whiskers to tail The American beaver was' slaughtered ruthlfessly. But I ; thanks to his enterprising nature, 6^9 more valuable aUve than dead. '..Hundreds of thousands of beaver .tins warm and heavy, were shipped Tm ’the riew world during Colonial time=" W 3 the National Geographic , “,.’tv "in one year the Hudson’s S Fur company exported 175,000 from what Is now the United 5“ tes ana Canada. As early as 1663, . -eotieman was not In style without Ills beaver hat. A good one cost more dan fonr Pounds- "Beaver pelts provided funds to build (he first parish church In Quebec and t, furnishings. Iu western United States beaver pelts often served as currency. "The Adirondack region was home to at least a million beavers when the white man came to New York, but by 1895 naturalists declared that If every stream were searched, no more than ire to ten would be found. Vigorous HOT stock has since been Imported from Tellowstone National park, how- tier, aid under strictly 'enforced game laffi a rapid Increase has taken place, Beaver Ponds Put to USi. «Ia Minnesota's Itasca State park, wherein lie the headwaters of the Hlssissippi river, beavers under pro tection are multiplying year by year. In 1924, when the Irrigation supply of He Minnesota and North Fork valleys mi low, the fruit crop was about to be lost. Fourteen large beaver ponds located above the head of the lrriga- HO! canal were tapped and the water oirfed down Into the valleys to save the orchards. “BeaTers hare made It possible for attle to graze on several ranges In national forests of Colorado which once were almost useless because of lack of water. The busy creatures dammed up the streams, built ponds and con served the water, making it available throughout long, drj^aonths. In Gun nison National forest, beaver ponds have limed effective barriers In check ing forest ires. ''Ooe of the most recent beaver proj ects is in Lake county, Oregon, where the active little fellows are getting Mder irar with an engineering job which forestry officials aver will pre vent soil erosion, preserve timber sup ply, and beautify landscape. Live beavers are captured In huge, basket like traps and transported from places where they are not needed, to depleted areas, There they are liberated to build dams across mountain brooks that dash down the hillsides In early spring, washing away the top soil. Build a Dam, Then a House. “Beavers begin a dam at a site where the stream’s bed Is firm and the banks surrounded by young trees. Working from the upstream side, they carry sticks and stones, sod and mud, laying the debris across the brook until the water piles up. More sticks are brought to the dam, pushed over the top, and allowed to lie criss-cross against the outer side. The ends of the branches are bound Into the struc ture with mud and stones until It Is strong enough to withstand the pres sure of the water against It, and high enough to make a ’lake’ at least 6 feet deep. As the pond rises, the dam must be extended In length to keep water from running around the edges. Some times a completed dam Is many times the width of the stream. One bulft on the Jefferson river near Three Forks, Mont, was 2,140 feet long—over a third of a mile. “Not all beaver-built dams are made W idow Pays Off Debt in Silver Dollars 'North Little Rock, Ark.—Mrsv B. Flesehner, eighty-one years old, paid oft a $1,000 mortgage : on her home recently In silver dollars. S. J. Finch, holder of the mort gage, was offered a cashier’s check on a local bank for the amount of his mortgage, but refused, asking that he be paid In legal tender. Mrs. Flesehner returned to her bank and obtained the sum needed in coin. Because Finch could not deliver an abstract after the mortgage hid been paid, attorneys for the aged widow deducted $25 to be held by the county clerk .until the paper was delivered. Finch was forced to call upon his bank for an armed messenger to carry the sliver there for deposit of mud and willows. In 1899 several dams of coal were discovered In North Dakota. Beavers had dug the hard ■black substance from a nearby cliff. “Around beavers have grown up leg end and fiction. Indians linked .the warm-coated animals with deity, and some tribes carried a ‘beaver bundle,’ a sort' of a sacred medicine bag. One yarn told by white men of the animals, though long since disproved, Is that beavers use their broad, flat tails a* trowels In spreading mud; as stake drivers-; and as sleds on which to transport sod and earth.” H e r B ir th d a y P a r ty in th e A ir S R * Because Jean Schmidt of Newark, N. J., obtained good’ marks In school, ner father gave her a special treat on her fifteenth birthday. He allowed her to have a birthday party In the air In one of the Airline, planes. Ted Schmidt, father, Is the head of the American Airlines flight department at Newark air port Here is Jean cutting her birthday cake. Veteran D iv e r to H u n t L a S a lle ’s S h ip HuIt in Lake Michigan May Be Mystery Craft. Menominee, Mich.—Efforts to iden tify the water-soaked hulk In Les Cbeneatn Island waters, believed to be that of the Griffon, first sailing ship to Ply the Great Lakes which myste riously disappeared In IeTSrwill be re- fiDfflCd this summer. John Beattie, veteran diver of De- J1Mrl Mich., has offered his services ffee In an attempt to learn more of the Griffon, built by the French ex plorer LaSalle 256 years ago. The ship last was seen at the site of I present Detroit harbor, Washlng- , lsland, Green bay, where It was loaded with valuable furs. LaSaUe Kot the ship on Its return voyage un- Mr the command of Luc, a sailor. The explorer remained to probe Into the Eecrets of the "strange” surrounding country. In letters to friends after the ship ws never seen again, LaSaUe ex- Pesed the belief that Luc betrayed r®* 6tole the furs, and scuttled and rned the ship. Some historians, Wever1 believe the ship sank In a "Mn, carrying all hands down with It Mtorts to raise the hulk In Les enaux waters were abandoned In winter of 1933*34 because of flnan- heads n e w p a r t y WntoJ3',. ^ steven3' fOrmer Canadian hag , * -rafle and commerce, who Political m thhe leadershlP of a new "teCtrMoH Lng for lts object a ^ehaaht t t reform program" t>a$t J8 en advocating for the clal difficulties. It was found that a large hole had been made In the bot tom near the stern and that the upper part of the craft had been burned. Couple Save Pennies to Provide Park Vacation TeUowstone Park, Wyo.—The old maxim “a penny - saved Is a penny earned,” multlpUed 12,207 times, pro vided a neat Yellowstone Park vaca tion for Mr. and Mrs. George R. Swal- Iey of Glendale, Calif. Bach day as Mr. Swalley, a confectioner, totaled np his receipts, he separated his coppers and, metaUy repeating the old adage, dropped the coins into a large sugar sack. When the collection reached an ag gregate of 93 pounds, the couple spent several hours on an Inventory *and found that their savings were' worth $122.07. They then decided on a va cation to Yellowstone Park. The sack ful enable them to go from their CaU- fornla home to Omaha and return by way of the park. W ater Control Project Starts Big Boom in Town New Philadelphia, Ohio.—A boom has started In real estate and building activities In the Muskingum watershed conservation district, where a $34,000,- 000 floofl-control project Is getting un der way. Jobs for more .than 1,800 persons al ready have been created, resulting Ib a shortage of bouses. Building trades employment has Increased 25 per cent. Real estate transfers are the highest In five years. Most sales of land following the acquisition of land for the project have been cash transactions. The district has paid $381,495 for land so far. Along with increased real estate ac tivity, rents have been raised $5 to $10 a month In some locaUties. Fat Teachers Not Jolly v Enough; Board Bars ’Em New York.—City school authorities are opposed to fat teachers on esthetic, physical, and psychological grounds. The fat are not JoUy, It’s said. That Is the substance of an expla nation of its refusal to license over weight teachers, presented by the board of examiners to state commissioner o education, Frank Graves.. For ten years the board hasbeen refusing to license fat teachers. . had been no formal protest until turned down MUs Bose Freistater. She weighed 182 pounds when she took her examination In 193L board gave her six months to reduce to 150. Miss Freistater made heroic efforts, but in vain. Dieting and exercise took off only 20 pounds. She did not get her Ucense. . She appealed to Commis sioner Graves. The principal reason for Its act, the board said In Its report, Is that med ical. experiencee Indicates that mark edly overweight or underweight per sons have a relatively high mortality rate, so that hiring fat teachers would deplete the pension fund. “Teachers should Be acceptable hy gienic models for their pupils,” the re port continued, explaining Its esthetic opposition to fat people. R A IN Y D A Y F O O T B A L L Arthur "Dutch”. Bergman, football coach of Catholic university, Washing ton, D. C., holding the new “rainy day” football that may be adopted this falL The baU was demonstrated during a convention of football coaches In Brookline, Mass. Australian Bullet Plant Makes Lipstick Cases Melbourne, AustraHa.—Aircraft ma chine guns and lipstick containers are the proudest products of Australian defense factories. A small arms fac tory at Llthgow, N. S. W., has Just pro duced the first machine guns buUt In the empire specially for air,craft use. The guns can Are through propeller blades , at the rate of 1,000 rounds a minute. A Melbourne munition factory, find-. Ing Its cartridge making machinery Idle, turned to the manufacture of metal Upstlck containers. More than 700,000 containers' have been made In the last 12 months.' University Refinet Radium Columbia, Mo.—The only radium re fining plant In the United States Is operated In the University of Missouri chemistry laboratory here. ‘The an nual output sells for $25,000. Simple Rules for Guidance of Those Fond of Sponge Cake and Angel Food; Bake in Slow Oven Sponge cake and angel food are In a class by themselves, and although they are caUed cakes, they are made so differently from other cakes that they need a column to themselves. Every kind of sponge cake has eggs as Its basis, and In large pro portion. It also has sugar and Sour In small proportion. Usually It has, besides, a little acid—vinegar, lemon Juice or cream of tartar—to help stif fen the beaten eggs which lighten the mixture. Quick or cheap sponge cakes which economize on eggs haves a small amount of baking powder to help raise them. This type of cake may not have the fine texture of real sponge cake, but It Is so easy to make, so certain to turn out consist ently, and so good with Ice cream, whipped cream or crushed fruit that It Is a standby In many households. I am giving you my grandmother’s recipe today, says a cuUnary expert It was the first dish I was aUowed to help with when I was a Uttle girl. Tradition made It necessary to beat the eggs and sugar together for ten minutes with a sUver fork, and I loved to relieve a tired arm for a moment or two. In later years I found that a wheel egg beater re duced the time for beating at. least half. This Is still my favorite sponge cake because It has more flavor than the more expensive cakes with their finer texture. The success of any sponge cake depends first upon using fine granu lated sugar, well sifted (several times) flour, and preferably cake •flour, and upon the baking.. A tube pan is the best for this purpose and a slow oven (about 820 F.) gives best results. This allows the cake to rise slowly and form a crust evenly. This means baking for a long time—about an hour for a large cake In a tube pan. When the cake comes out of the oven, turn it upside down on a cake cooler and let It come out of the pan, as It shrinks slightly with cooling. If It does not come out of Itself, aft er It is cool, loosen carefully around the edge. Grandmother’s Sponge Cake. t eggsI cup sugar I cup flour H teaspoon salt I teaspoon baking: powder I tablespoon leiuon Juice, or I teaspoon vanilla Beat the eggs and sugar together five minutes. Sift flour, salt and baking powder together and fold Into the other mixture. Flavor and bake fn a long bread pan or In muffin pans 25 to SO minutes In a slow oven (320 F.). Angel Food Cake. I cup sifted pastry or cake flour I cup egg whites % teaspoon salt % teaspoon cream of tartar & teaspoon almond extract I cup sifte.il granulated sugar Slft flour once, measure, .and sift flour four more times. Beat egg whites and salt with egg beater. When foamy add. cream of tartar. Continue beating unUl the eggs are stiff but not dry. Fold In sugar, a Uttle at a time. Add flavoring. Fold In flour the same way. Pour batter Into angel food pan and bake tn a slow oven (325 degrees F.) for one hour. Remove from oven and Invert- pan. Inexpensive Sponge Cake. I eggs I cup sugar I cup cake flour I teaspoon baking powder Salt % • cup cold water Break the eggs Into a bowl, add the sugar and beat together ten min utes. Add the dry ingredients, which have been sifted together, alternate ly with the water. Bake In cake pan In slow oven, 325 degrees F., for about one hour. © Bell Syndicate WNU Service. What Is Wealth? A woman .has said In court that with $200,000 to her name she would not call herself rich. In another court a bankrupt said that he did not feel wealthy on $10,000 a year and sometimes was very hard up. An actress who had more than $20,- 000 a year has told how she had to spend $30,000. These people have missed a lot of fun. A man who feels rich because he' has a dollar In his pocket Is fifty times as well off as any of them. His Is a grand and glorious feeling. — Manchester (Eng.) Sunday Chronicle. TREES AND RAINFALL There Is much controversy Over the Question whether trees and other heavy vegetation bring rain or not A t ’eat number of forcible points are cited both for and against question. But we cannot help noting with Interest a report from the Sov iet government In Russia a cod* slderable area was planted with trees In 66 foot strips 700 feet apart Rainfall In the area of these strips was carefuUy checked against rain- faU In surrounding untreed areas. The results were astonishing. Th* Increase In rainfall In the area bor dered by the forest strips was from 13 per cent to 27.2, per cent In the tree'd areas the evaporation between the strips was from 20 to 35 per cent less than In the open. KILL BLACK WIDOWf • The deadly Black Widow ; spider’s b ite is decidedly dangerous to people. K ill A ll S p id e r s ...Watch for them in garages, corners of porches) etc. The minute you see’ them spray THOROUGHLY with FLY-TOX. It also lulls FLIES, MOSQUITOES and other taiectM saf Be sore you get Quick, P leasan t S u cce ssfu l E lim ination Let’s be frank—there’s only one way for your body to rid Itself of the waste material that causes acid ity, gas, headaches, bloated feelings and a dozen other discomforts. Your Intestines must function and the way to make them move quick ly, pleasantly, successfully, without griping or harsh Irritants is to chew a Milnesla Wafer thoroughly, In ac cordance with directions on lie bot tle or tin, then swaUow. MUnesia Wafers, pure milk of magnesia In tablet form, each equiv alent to a tablespoon of liquid milk of magnesia, correct acidity, bad breath, flatulence, at their source^ and enable you to. have the quick, pleasant successful elimination so necessary to abundant health. Milnesia Wafers come in bottles at 35c and 60c or In convenient tins at 20c. Recommended by thousands of physicians. AU good druggists carry them. Start using these pleas ant tasting effective wafers today. spears a O n e HERE WU ARE, JOE THIS BGMB WILL BLOT IM OUT W VWVHl ANO ALL YOU COTTA OO1 JOE, IS TO THKOW IT WHEN THE GOVERNOR LOOKOUT! A BOMB! ( GETS IN THE REUtEWlNGL STAND . ~ / '/ v s -I SHUCKS! ANY BUSHER COULO HAUE SPEAREO IF IT HADN T BEEN FOR YOU, I'O BE BLOWN TO BITS I p r f IT — ANO YANKED OUT THE FUSE. GOSH— IT'S DIZZY DEAN ! I LL TELL YOU ONB SWELU WAY —- EAT GRAPE-NUTS. ITTOPS THE BAHiNG ORDER FOR MAKING ENERGY. I KNOW ~ l EAT IT MVSELF THAT WAS SURE A I GREAT CATCH, OIZZYI ANOiFAST THINKING t o o ! WELL, SON. TO THINK FAST YOU COT TO BE WIDE-AWAKE. ANO TO BE WIDE-AWAKE HOW CAN I HAVE PLENTY OF ENEfiGY? YOU GOT TO HAVE PLENTY OF ENERCY Boys! . Diszy Deem Winners Membenhlp PInvSoIid bronze, with red eoamded lettering. Free for11 Grape-Nots package-top. In ordering member* *Wp pin* fee sore to ask for Prize 301, Dhz/ Deon Lucky Piece. Jnst like Diay carries—with Jus. good lock motto oo reverse tide. Free for I GrapeAfats package-top. In order- Ioc Incky pieces ask for Prize 303. . . . G e t V a lu a b le P riz e s F re e ! Join DizTjrDeao Winners—carry Dizzy’s Lucky Piece! E^gjftgjg Send the top from one yeflow-and-blue Grgpe-Nuts package, with yourname and address, to Grape-Nuts,Battle CreektUBch., for membership pin and copy of dub manual, containing list of 37 nifty free prizes. And to have Ioada of energy, start eating Grape-Nuto right away. It has a winning flavor ail its own—crisp; nut-like, de- ' I ndous. Economical to serve, too, for two table- • spoons, with whole milk or cream, provide more varied nourishment than many a hearty meal. « - , . , (Ofier expires Dec.31,1935. Good only in U:S. A.) j & x u '1*1 In* M t'm l I l 'I ; RECORD, MnrifSVILLE, N. C. BRISBANE T H IS W E E K Two Birthdays Mussolini Waiting? Italy’s Gold in London _ . Match This, Mr. Swope ' ’ • Two iinportant human beings Celei brated their birthdays recently. Henry Ford was seventy- two. If you saw him going upstairs two steps at a time and guessed bis age, you would say, at most, fifty-, five. Mussolini has Just celebrated his fifty- second birthday. You may spend a profitable th r e e , minutes contrasting those two leaders of men in your . , _ , . imagination’s eye.Axttnr Brtabnne Henry Fofd haa made millions of people independent of the law of gravitation. History will tell exactly what Mus solini has done. His test lies in the future. The London Times and Universal Service announce a clash between Ethi opians and Italians, 20 Ethiopians and ‘4 0 Italians, killed, a stream supplying the Italian camp turned In a new di rection and the Italians compelled to retreat “Rome “ has no Information” on this Incident Perhaps Mussolini, who knows that war should supply only good news, is /waiting to add something such as: •Air bombardment of Addis Ababa has Inflicted swift retribution for the kill ing of 40 Italians." ' Italy has $100,000,000 In gold stored In London and can’t get i t Why can- Mot Italy get that gold? England says to Italy, “When you pay the money you borrowed In the war, you can have your gold.” Britons are practical. When they lent money to Italy they said, “Send along your gold; not that we ques tion your honor, but as a mere for mality.” Too bad this simple-minded country didn’t think of that when It shipped $10,000,000,000 abroad. ■ Perhaps we shall think, of It next time, more prob ably not The General Electric company has developed, electrically, a temperature of 13,000 degrees Fahrenheit an nounced as “hotter than the sun’s 9,000 degrees.” But 9,000 Is only the sun’s external temperature. Go to some distance into the sun’s interior, where atoms are throwing oft electrons to supply us and other planets with heat and light, and you would find a temperature of 40,000,- 000,000 degrees centigrade. When will Gerard Swope develop that tempera ture artificially? Thomas E Dewey, chosen to fight racketeering in Hew York, says In a broadcast: “The criminal underwot-ld plays no favorites. It preys on the public, oil Industry and on labor alike. Organ ized labor has been one of its most recent and most tragic victims. Many originally honest and sound labor unions have been slowly but surely Infected with the virus of organized crime. Today certain corruptive lead ers operate as extortionists both upon industry and upon members of their own unions. An intelligent group of motorists announce a “safe driving campaign for August,” urging automobile drivers to consider safety, particularly in their own cars. The safest thing would be to send tens of thousands of cars now run ning to the junk pile, get new cars and live longer. Modern tires give miraculous mileage, but often they look “good for ten thousand miles more” when they have reached Gie danger ppinb In Yugoslavia 20 years ago Alexan der Bogar, now living In Minneapolis, Minn., kHled a friend in a fight Wish ing to make amends, he offered to marry the widow. That could not be done. He has saved $15,000, work ing in mines, and now offers the honey to the twenty-two-year-old daughter of the man he killed. She Is poor and wiU accept Atonement by payment is almost as old as murder. There are still coun tries in which crime may be paid for cash, the amount depending on ie rank of the person murdered.£ George, former king of Greece will Sake the- crown * if 60 per cent of Greeks vote in his favor. He thinks 60 per cent enough. Once crowned, George might be surprised to find what ,49 her cent of Greeks Could do. George Bernard Shaw, in a dispatch to Editor Walter Howey, remarks that' both Irish and Jews are not easy to deal with when they are uncomfort able. That applies also to Greeks. The British forbade shipment of arms from England to Abyssinia,' also shipments/from England to Italy. An noyed, the emperor of Ethiopia de clines to provide special guards for the British legation at Addis" Ababq The BrlUsh will send their own guards. They have a way. of protecting their nationals.C Klas FeBturesJSmaieBte, Ino.WtltJ Service. News Review of Current Events the World Over Statesmen in Geneva Straggle to Prevent Italo-Ethiopian W ar — Progress of the New Deal Measures in Congress. : ^ By EDWARD W. PICKARD . / © Western Newspaper Union. \ Anthony Eden C APT. ANTHONY EDEN, British minister for League of Nations af fairs, was exceedingly busy in Geneva trying to find a way to avert the war between Italy and Ethiopia. He was aided and abetted by Premier Eaval of France and together they evolved a plan iL? S for procedure by the leagub council which appeared promising, until it was communi cated to Premier Mus solini. Then Baron Aloisi, Italian dele gate, announced the Eden-Laval formula was “entirely unacceptable.” How ever, hope was not abandoned for there was a chance that modifications could be made that would satisfy the de mands of the Italians. . Unofficially, it was said the British- French formula dealt with these points: L Conciliation and arbitration is to continue. 2. Neither Italy’ nor Ethiopia Is to resort to war measures in the mean time. 3. Appointment of a fifth arbitrator to the deadlocked Italo-Ethiopian con- dliaUon commission. 4. Signatories of the 1906 treaty— Great Britain, France, and Italy—will lend their good offices to obtain a gen eral broad solution of the conflict Italy was expected to protest against time limits fixed in the draft of the projected peace formula. One deadline was set for September I, by which time the arbitrators on the Italo-Ethiopian conciliation com mission, who would resume tbelr work, would be required to report to the league council. Another time limit was set for Sep tember 4, when the three powers and Ethiopia would be required to report their findings to the league council. In any event the council would be scheduled to meet September 4. One important concession was made to Italy in the formula. It was agreed that the ownership of Ualual, scene of the frontier conflict involved, should not be discussed. Tbe Ethiopian con tention has been that responsibility for the border clash could not be estab lished without the ownership of the locality being first determined. Emperor Halle Selassie met his chieftains In council at Addis Ababa and they told him it might be now too late to prevent war for their tens of thousands of fighters were eager for hostilities to begin and could hardly be restrained. The emperor, how ever, sought to hold the chiefs back. At the same time he issued another defiant note informing the world that Ethiopia never would accept an Italian or other mandate,’adding: "Noamount of prosperity under foreign domina tion would compensate far the loss of independence.” Mussolini seized control of Italy’s metal and fuel Imports for use In the expected war, and several thousand more soldiers and workmen sailed for Africa. LED by George Huddleston of Alabama, the members of the house who opposed the "death sen tence” In the utilities bill scored an other victory over the supporters of that plan of the New Dealers. Sam Rayburn’s motion that the house agree to the senate action on the bill was defeated, 210 to 155. Rayburn ar gued, pleaded and threatened, but to no avail. He warned the represent atives that .those who voted against his motion would be incurring the wrath of the administration, and at the last moment had read testimony before the senate lobbying commit tee to the effect that a New Jersey man had suggested the utilities com panies start a whispering campaign regarding the sanity of the New Deal leaders. Still the big majority in the house insisted on rejecting the Ray burn motion. Then the bouse, by a vote of 183 to 172, adopted a resolution which vir tually called for the exclusion of Ben Cohen, administration lobbyist, from future conferences on the bill. y \ EMOCRATIC congressmen started the week briskly determined to push through the President’s “soak the rich” tax bill at this session Opposing them with equal de termination w ere a number of the hardest fighting Republicans who 'Insist that con-' sideration of taxation be postponed until next winter and that meantime the question be studied carefully in connection with the budget for the next fiscal year. These Re publicans are urgently calling for an early adjournment of congress. Senator Hastings of Delaware has Introduced a ,resolution setting August 10 as ;the day for- quitting and was trying to have It brought up for consideration before passage of the tax measure. Senator Vandenberg Senator Vandenberg of Michigan, often mentioned as a Presidential possibility, also demanded postponement- of the tax legislation until January, and he gave out a statement denouncing the administration’s plan as a “sterile po litical gesture” which would raise “only a little extra pocket change” and de clared that “we chatter of taxes In millions to offset known deficits In billions.” "The pending tax bill, as It Is being developed,” said- Senator Vandenberg1 “will not produce appreciable revenue for Uncle Sam. It will not pay the President’s deficit even for the period while the bill is under consideration. As a contribution to the public credit, it is as grim a hoax as was ever per petrated on the country. As a ‘dis tributor of wealth’ it is a mere vagrant flirtation with this left wing idea.” Nevertheless, it appeared probable that the tax measure would be enacted before adjournment, for the adminis tration leaders had promised this to Senator La Follette and other “liber als,” and besides that, they have no desire to pass a taxation bill in a Presidential election year. As pro duced by the house ways and means committee after great travail the mea sure embodies an 87 per cent confisca tion of large fortunes and increased levies on the rich which would produce perhaps $250,000,000 of additipna] an nual revenue. CONGRESS has passed and the Pres ident has signed a bill which as sures promotion In the near future for about 5,000 army officers. It acceler ates the advancement of commissioned officers below the grade of colonel and takes effect September L The act increases the number of colonels by 158, the number of lieuten ant colonels by 364, and the numbet of majors by 890. More than 1,000 second lieutenants will be advanced immediately to the rank of first lieu tenant and 1,769 first lieutenants will become captains. In all, 4,918 officers will receive immediate promotion. SENATE and house committees in vestigating the activities of lobby ists went their separate ways, neither thinking very well of what the other was doing. Senator Black’s quiz oc cupied itself much ,with the doing of representatives of the Associated Gas and Electric corporation. An execu tive order from the White House di rected the secretary of the treasury to make available to the senate commit tee all incomes, excess profit, and cap ital stock tax returns to the extent necessary in the Investigation with the so-called "holding company bill or any other matter or proposal affecting leg islation.” Simultaneously President Roosevelt approved a new treasury regulation authorizing the release of this information’ to the committee. Representative Patton of Texas went .before the house committee again and satisfactorily explained how he bad been able to buy $3,000 worth of bonds out of his savings. As to the cigar box he carried away from the hotel room of John W. Carpenter, president of the Texas Power and Light corpora tion, It contained nothing but cigars, Patton said. • “The fact Is, you have been done a very great wrong,” commented Rep resentative E. E. Cox of Georgia. SENATOR GLASS scored perhaps the greatest victory in his long* public career when the senate, without a record vote, passed, his draft of the .1935 banking act, re jecting th e central bank features urged by Gov. Marrlner S. Eccles of the federal reserve board and fa vored by the adminis tration. The doughty Virginian, who was once secretary of the treasury, had ’fought desperately ag ain st the Eccles scheme and his triunjph was de- tor Glass eislve. There was no demand for a roU call on the final vote, for the fate met by the proposers of various amend ments showed this procedure would be futile. Senator La Foliette sought to strike out a provision permitting com mercial banks to underwrite securities and his proposal was beaten, 39 to 22. Senator. Gerald Nye of North'Dakota, another radical Republican, offered the central bank plan of Rev. Charles EL Coughlin, radio priest,’ which would set up a government owned and wholly dominated syBtem. It was voted down, 59 to 10. - - - FROM the Communist Internationale In Moscow comes the word that the reds are planning a strike “of un precedented scope” by seamen and dock workers on the !Pacific coast of the Uiiited States, beginning In September. Sam DarcyAof San Francisco, an American - delegate told About i t He repeated what had already been said by Earl Browder, general scretary of the Communist party In the United States, that Communists were respon sible for the seamen’s and dock work ers' strikes last year. n ASSAGE of the biR to restore $46,- 1 000,000 of Spanish war veterans’ oensio'ns was completed when the sen ate accepted the house measure, the onlv opposing vote being cast by Sen ator Hastings of Delaware. This nulll- Bes the various adjustments made by the President for the purpose of econ omy to carry out the party pledge of a reduction of at leqst 25 per cent in the cost of administration of the federal government ......... Fr e d e r ic k H. GILLETT, who rep resented Massachusetts In the house for many years, for six years was speaker, and thereafter served as United States senator, died In Spring field, Mass., at the age of eighty-three. Able, dignified and unfailingly courte ous,-Mr. Gillett was highly esteemed by 'his fellow congressmen, whatever their party affiliation. In his home town he was known as a politician who said little and did much. JAPAN will probably have another cause for complaint against the United States. Secretary of the Navy Swanson has announced that strongly fortified naval bases will be' established In the Pacific ocean up on the expiration of the naval - limitation treaties on January I, 1937. He said he con sidered the creation of naval stepping stones in the Pacific an inevitable result of the •s’” j treaties’ expiration. He revealed that the navy Sec’y Swanson ]ong Jias gjTen consid eration to Pacific fortification problems and that impetus had been given to the study since Japan's abrogation of the naval treaties. The necessity for adequate bases in the Pacific was demonstrated forcibly last May .during the annual fleet ma neuvers off Hawaii and the Aleutian islands. According to reports, the navy high command in a report of the lessons learned in the exercises strong ly recommended' an Aleutian islands mry . ■- _, _ ...... The United States naval bases are few and far between as against those of Japan and Great Britain, which lie along the principal courses of English and Japanese traffic lines. The Ameri can bases are relatively obsolete. GERMANY’S diplomatic note con cerning the Communist attack on the liner Bremen, in the port of New York took the form of a Request that the offenders be punished but asked for no apology. Acting Secretary of State William Phillips, in his reply handed to the German charge d’Af- faires, Dr. Rudolf Leitner, told briefly the efforts of the New York police to guard the vessel and to' subdue the mob, and pointed out that some of those who took part in the attack were arrested. The German note said the incident constituted an insult to Germany. In his press conference President Roosevelt declined to comment on the affair. Asked about the protest of Jewish organizations against the Ger man government’s religious attitude, the President intimated that the ad ministration’s view was fully expressed by Mr.'Phillips’ reply in which he ex pressed sympathy for anyone who was denied religious liberty: Representative Dickstein of New York told the house that no apology was due to Germany for the Breiifen Incident and that neither the federal nor the locdl authorities were to blame for it He asserted the attack was made possible by “a selfish desire on the part of the skipper of the Bremen, who would not take police advice to halt visiting to the ship and lose the revenue of visitors.” Over in Germany the saner men In authority recognized that the Nazis were going too1 far and were probably headed for a fall, if not restrained Dr. Hjalmar Schacht, president of the Reichsbank and economic dictator of the reieh, uttered a solemn warning to the anti-Jewish ^id anti-CatholIe forces, declaring that the great task which the German people must - fulfill to comply with the wishes of Hitler cannot be fulfilled unless “all distur bances are ended, be they in the intel lectual or economic field.” Among developments In the current campaign against the Steel Helmets, the World War Veterans’ organization, the Schutzstaffel or “black corps” formed to protect the person of Hit ler, gave out a'warning that it must be reckoned with In the event of a showdown against “state enemies," and asserting its complete loyalty to der fuehrer. The proclamation closed with these ominous words: “For many reasons it would be deen- Iy regretted if the Steel Helmets, by their own fault, should come to a dis honorable end.” A/fORE disasters in the Far East .A"tung’ an lmPWtant city, In Manchukuo, was engulfed by a terrific flood; a thousand persons were drowned and practically, the entire non- Ulation of 110,000 was rendered hor£T less. Formosa was ravaged by another typhoon which took many Hves «nd did vast damage. ,Aiong ^ e Han and Yangtse rivers the surviving Chinese were stiivmg to keep alive and at tte of painters. m usm Ln^ w r i t e r ? ^actors. They are- d .for music, Hailie *FianagM fo°r°tte theater, Holger Cabill for p“ nters and SiSK v a” » a i - S S . .V / 7'.': V ffla & U u u ft& ii V u ftk tm NATIONAL TOPICS INTERPRETED NATIONAL PRESS BLD1G. WASHINGTON Washington.— President Roosevelt has settlel a controversy by the sim ple expedient of Settle transferring two men Controversy from responsible po sitions In the Virgin Islands to Jobs In Washington. He has taken Paul M. Pearson from the post of civil governor of the Virgin islands and has made him assistant di rector of housing In the Interior de partment and has transferred Federal Director Judge T. Webber Wilson from his post in the Islands to the federal parole board here in Washington. Each man has accepted his new ap pointment and In so far as a current controversy is concerned, the book Is' closed. It will be recalled that Governor Pearson and Judge Wilson long have been at loggerheads over Virgin island affairs. The battle was bitter. It came to a head . when Paul Yates, executive assistant to the governor and a former Wasfiington 'corre spondent, resigned his job and came back here with a bag full of charges against his former chief. The Yates allegations ranged all the way from minor charges of poor judgment to gross accusations. He succeeded In getting a senate committee investiga tion iand it was at that time that the Pearson-Wilson feud flared so openly that administration officials here were dragged. In and the whole scope of differences aired. x As a matter of fact there is every reason to believe that Governor -Pear son was far from a successful execu tive In the islands. He frequently aroused the ire of natives and, ac cording to testimony adduced by the senate investigation, had very little to show for the sums of money he ex pended In attempting to give the Vir gin Islands a new lease on life. All of the information tends to establish that the islands continue to be “an effectual poorhouse” just as.President Hoover described them on the occa sion of a visit during his term as Chief Executive. : But Governor Pearson had his sup porters In .the administration. ;• Chief among' these was Secretary Ickes whose department Is responsible for administration of the islands. Just why Mr. Ickes has been so enthusiastic about Governor Pearson’s regime is not fully disclosed In any evidence here except that the interior secretary has .certain Ideas about social . reform that some unkind critics refer to as pure socialism which Governor Pear son had been attempting to impose upon the island inhabitants. Governor Pearson has expended vast sums of PWA funds In the islands in his efforts to carry out the ,Ickes program of ref ormation. It seems, however, that the schemes were not as practical As -they might have been and so trouble started In a ' rather extensive fashi.on. The President stayed outside of the row until in the course of the senate Inquiry Senator Tydings, a Maryland Democrat and usually an anti-Roosevelt Democrat, received a letter from Mr. Ickes. Mr. Ickes ac cused the investigating chairman with having whitewashed a witness whose testimony was’ all anti-Ickes and anti- Pearson. The senator flared up in a big way at that letter. His reply Is likely to become’ a classic In official correspondence. He did not mince his words. After voicing his general conception of the attitude exhibited by Mr. Ickes and accusing him of at tempting to Interfere In the investiga tion, Senator Tydings Informed the in terior secretary that he may as well attempt to run the Department of the Interior and let the senators run the senate. He used just about those words. That was the signal for Mr. Roose velt to take a band. It was easy to sge that a few outbursts of that kind and Mr. Ickes might have found him- .self In a splendid position to resign from the cabinet So the President got the feudists into ,his office, singly of course, and.when those conferences were over the senate Investigatlondnto the Virgin island Mtuation was sus pended for two weeks. The transfer of Governor Pearson and Judge Wilson resulted. * • / • One might properly Inquire why all of this agitation has occurred about WA.. bA- t^e Virgin islands.Vrny the They are many hun- Agitqtion? dreds of miles from Washington. They lie In the Caribbean sea, considerably out of the usual pathway of ships; they are populated by ; about 22,000 indi viduals; '95. per fcent of whom are negroes and may generally be de scribed as a “backward” place. The^ may have some military and naval value. That has. never been fully demonstrated. But the fact re mains they, are possessions of the United States and If our government is to be their protector, lt ls responsible for a sane' administration of their affairs. > • , The Washington fight may have had its start in the Virgin islands, but It has progressed beyond that point and Is a . domestic battle now. It Is safe t0 saJ that for 18 years, which is the time the islands have been on,j. United States rule, there has been » dire need for a plan of government suited to those people. Each year con. gress has been appropriating thou- sands of dollars for the island govern ment and each year there lias been miserably little In the way of improve- ment to show for these funds. Almost as frequently as congress IL1 appropriated money it ha's uaj, changes in the administration meg,, ods In use there. There has never been a long term program laid out and there has been nothing whatsoever done showing the sympathy of a s#. called intellectual people as we claim to be for those downtrodden masses that populate the Virgin islands. ' AU of tliis, it seems to me, shows the woeful need for careful consider* tion of that situation. It seems fo ® equally apparent that as long as con. gress keeps meddling In and as longai politicians from the mainland are sent there purely on a political basis we will continue to have a pack of trouble bundled up In those Virgin islanls. Several attempts have been made to work out a governmental system worth while but the politicians are not nmon; those who will let plums escape, it £ certain, therefore,. that the Pearson- Wilson-Ickes-Tydings battle royal Isaa outcropping of what amounts to a festering sore In American govern mental policy.• • * If congress continues In session put August 15, and it Is now apparent that . It may run to Sep- L ong Session tember I, it will have Severe Strain been In session 21/ days, some twl weeks longer than the average of the so-called long sessions of congress Prior to adoption of the “lame duck1 amendment which did away with ses sions of unequal length, the shorter sessions of congress averaged about 170 days. The longer terms were around 215 days before final adjourn ment was taken. Thus, the current session stands In 9 fair way to be among the list of hardy sessions. All of which is by way of sayiqg that the current session of conges has worn down its members bA physically and mentally to an e.vtett quite unusual. I was talking a few days ago with 9 veteran senator, a man who has served .almost 25 years in the upper bouse of congress. He Is known as a physically strong indi vidual and. usually lasts very well through the work that piles up before senators and representives. I inquire! of him concerning the general health of congress and his reply was: “I regret to say we are just a huuch of debilitated old men, Incapable of doing the job that Is expected of us and everyone is hoping against hope that we can live through this work and this heat” As 9 result of that converstalon the thought came to me that here was n answer to the oft repeated declarathi that members of congress fail to ean their salaries of $10,000 per year. I have observed congressional proceed ings almost a score of years and it I* my mature conviction that few tim® In' that period has congress failed to earn its salt.• . * • There Is another reason why con gressional sessions should not ron w long and should not When Solons be carried on In the Are Tired htense heat of*Washington sunn®* One- condition nearly always has w tained near the dose of a long s* sion. As the days drag by, person* witii axes to grind and individual In terests to serve have 9 way of digs® up questionable bills that theretofor* had been side-tracked and assumed • be dead. With resistance low, «* average senator or representative unable to fight off legislation which knows to be bad with the same spin- that accompanied his activities ear in the session. Likewise, he is una to battle as successfully as before legislation which he knows to be g°w This, condition opens the 'vaI t a revival of lobbies. They are h In Washington in numbers now desp the disclosures being made by the congressional committees that are vestigating the lobbies that 0Perat* defeat, temporarily at least, the • Iation killing utility holding panles. One would have 83301Jtf justly with the Investigations uuo way after the utility legislation^ passed that lobbyists and self-se » representatives would have frightened away from Washln,, Such was not the case. They are 1 ln suc’h numbers that' some obs believe Mr. Roosevelt has made a ® take in demanding that consress until i t . has enacted the 3tiartV10, wealth-tax bill and the leSi which will prohibit lawsuits OS ’ the government for damages re ftom abrogation of the promise' eminent bonds to pay them ( Mr. Roosevelt is insisting on laws. He will get them. Bh fln(B opinion of many authorities b a fair chance also of Settm' J0I other legislation which he ma} G Western Newspaper Onto"- '"T ep ,<om H i 6 0 AWAV ToSETl coM iM S--T n ev r^c, t o n is h t FlN N EY O F T H E I =P3 Come" o n ; b r r e I ,T u p l B R R B A K 1 ^M A T T E R P O P wREG jLAR FELI .0 2 I MV MtOtM CHJaTVB,' W.V 4 S T U C K . W Hh S H E B O U Sl1 T H E S E S T O O K l S ll 2L MESCAL IK E Our Pet Peeve ..n ' V .. nm m zi - ..w RECORD, MOCKSVliLE. N. C. interpreted 'tu c A a x t iHINGTON. D.L. ands have been Under rule, there has been I a plan of government J people. Each year COn Sen appropriating thou' Its for the island govern Jh year there has been f in the way of improve Ifor these funds. Jequently as congress K_. I money it has |ie administration meth there. There has never Irm program laid out ana Ien nothing whatsoeTer I the sympathy of a so- Itual people as we claim |lse downtrodden masses 'I the Virgin islands. I it seems to me, Shovf3 led for careful considora. Jtuation. It seems fo ffle pnt that as long as con- pddling in and as Iopg as p) the mainland are sent bn a political basis we Io have a pack of trouble I those Virgin islands. Jmpts have been made to Jvernmental system worth !politicians are not nmong ■I let plums escape. It Is lfore, - that the Pearson- Tydings battle royal Isan |)f what amounts to a In American govern- !continues in session past it is now apparent that it may run to Sep- on tember I, it will have |(in been In session 21? days, some twl I than the average of the sessions of congress Ition of the “lame duck rliich did away with ses- nual length, the shorter Jongress averaged about The longer terms were ays before final adjourn- lken. Thus, the current |s in a fair way to be of hardy sessions, is by way of saying f-ent session of congress own its members htrth |d mentally to an exteat I was talking a few [th a veteran senator, a served almost 25 years house of congress. He is physically strong indi- Iusually lasts very well ,York that piles up before I representives. I inquired Lrning the general health |nd his reply was: say we are just a bunch old men, Incapable of that is expected of as is hoping against hope Jive through this work and of that converstalon the K to me that here was M Se oft repeated declaration ; of congress fail to earn of $10,000 per year. I congressional proceed- la score of years and It w Tconviction that few times Cd has congress failed to S • • •!another reason why om issions should not run 8 I long and should not , io n s be carried OD In i intense heat of > f Washington summer- ; bn nearly always has ® I J the close of a long 6 Ie days drag by,{ grind and individual in Irve have a way of diggto. Ible bills that thereto^ fie-tracked and assumed to KVith resistance low, Iator or represent^ « I Iht off legislation whichI bad with the same PIanied his activities enrWM In. Likewise, he is »" I [successfully a s ^ ooi Irhich be knows to be S Eitlon opens the t I Jf lobbies. They are Ion in numbers now despite ires being made by th ^ T1I committees that a ^ the lobbies that OPffl iris. Lrarily at least, the ^ Jng utility holding I Tne would Jiav? un<jerI the Investigations Itlie utility leeislat.Wr?iDgI lobbyists and self I Jves would I away from wasnin» Jot the case. They Ler„ers I Lbers that-some obS«I I Roosevelt has maJ1 staJ I Lndlng that f n^ rVthe-Es enacted the Iat3„8 T bill and the «s s, prohibit lawsuits ILent for damages res Etion of the P™m‘ J gotd. Lds to them m g ^ Svelt is lnsistmg on Iwill get them; But ^■many authorit.es c Ince also of getting Jlation which he ■»»* | D NftwspaPer Vd1oil YjiE fea t h e r h e a d s By OsbonieO.VMua Knn^ttViIa NaturallyJ ^ i s r e o /focwY, that \a/& AWAY "Tb (SE TrtER FOR A SWaFarm c r e s t 2 sounds’Go o d -AMP ITiS SUCH A UTTlE PLACE-ABSobJTELy UNSPoiLEP-QuiET — RKTFaL O til NoJ WE U TAKE OUR, CAR AND € 0 To ONB O P THH SI® PLACES NEARBY— WE’LL JUST SLEER AT SEA FARM CREST AMP OMW THB CNE H o te l 2 v/ohlcn'T o n e _ Finp >t T u ll t h e r e Z eopue. VlHO SO away W r A QUIET RESTFUL VACATION, NEEP PLEttT1/ OF gycrreMENJ Irj I Dom t mind & - A S LOMG- AS v»E <So T o TriE ^ S H o r g FlNNEY O F T H E FO R C E M eaning W hat?-rney a in t ruwniw v e r y fa st—Ol QUHSS O ltLL HAVE T'coLLAR. WAkJ O1THIM WHUT ? S o ii A&AlM.TiM? WHUT PiD o i t h l l sYeiZ. 'b o u t KAPElNtf1 OUT 6 ' BAO Com pa ny 2 A ffooP OFFICER $B K kO W tf COMpANy HE KApeJ- OuT O ' TAiL I KNOW,.SiR ., AkI' I’M SbRR I'M H E f e E U B y C. M . P A Y N EQiMATTER PO P— O .K . by the Ink / A / . / i m•wi-r-4- jU is IMK* vk-Tev no, wor ^X -P E W S iv e.T a A T AUU A H J(© The Bell Syndicate, Inc.) hREG1LAR FELLERS”N ot So F ast A t T hat MY MOtVICE-KTV=M Y <SOT STUCK. WHEM SHE BOUGHT T H E S E ,I STOOKI MS W H A T A R E XOO ,KlCKiK 7TH EY HAVEN'T AWV HOUE& 11 W A U K The-Asoclated Newspapers mescal ik e Br S. L. HUNTLEY Two Heads Are Better Than One HEV, MUL^V, WCNBE IP I MELPEO NUW BETVWIV- TM* TWO OF US VUS COUUO FlNJO OOT VOMV IT IOOWTs o , wuw ? 0<5 & %-k . by'S. I* Huatle^. Trade Matk Re*. V. 8. Pat. OAee)<CooyrIsht. 193 0 By GLUYAS WILLIAMSPICKING UPOur P e t P e e v e By M. <3. 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Don’t those big SQuare buttons conform beautifully with the unique cut of the front?—and joys of Joys, the wrap is deep enough to beep from popping ont at the wrong time. Con fidentially, freedom Isn’t the only virtue of those sleeves—they’re so easy to make. Pattern 2240 is available in sizes. 14, 16, 18, 20, 82, 84, 36. 38, 40, 42 and 44. Size 16 tabes 4 yards 86 Inch fabric. Illustrated step-by-step sewing instructions included. Send FIFTEEN CENTS (Me) In coins or stamps (coins preferred) for this pattern. Write plainly namet address and style number. BE! SDBB TO STATB SIZE. Address orders to Sewing Circle Pattern Department 243 West Seven teenth street, New York. @nieS EQUALITY "Women are advising equal rights for men in matters of alimony,’’ re marked the hostess. “We might go even further," said Uiss Cayenne, “and. insist on a Blue Eagle code for gigolos." That Wa» Al! Judge—Now, just what passed b* tween yoa and the complainant? Defendant—Weil, your honor, then were two pairs of fists, one turnip, seven bricks, a dozen assorted bad names and a lump of coal.—Phila delphia Bulletin. ( Knew Her M a "Bill’s girl has dropped hlms he's broke?” "As usual when girls drop thing* eh?” ‘‘Not exactly; she broke him tie- fore dhe dropped him."—Exdiangb Fair Warning "What would you say, Jackie* If t married yonr mother and became your daddy?” “Don’t do It, Mr. Smith.”—Lelpsl* Der Lnstige Sachse. W\¥% COOLING m RECORD, iwnflKSVlLLE, N. C. >1 « >1«& $ The Lucky Lawrences T T T * By Kathleen Norris Oopyxinbt by Kathleen Norris WNU Servloo * * * * * * * * * * * CHAPTER XI—Continued —22— A young woman In a furred coat spattered lightly with rain, with a small hat drawn down over drifting flyaway golden hair. ArleL Gail stood, stricken, motionless for a moment Then Ariel came, with a bird’s flight, across the kitchen and flung her arms tightly about GaiL • “Oh, my darling—my darling!” Gail whispered, her wet cheek against Ari el’s wet cheek. “You’re back!” “Gail!" Ariel sobbed. “Oh, dearest—dearest!1’ There was no bitterness, no memory, now. It was Ariel, the adored young est here against her heart again, liv ing, loving, sorry, eager to“be forgiven ; there was nothing In Gail’s feeling but one great ache of joy and pain and love. “Gail, I've wanted you so!” “And I you!" >• They drew apart, hands linked, and looked at each other. “You look—older, Ariel. Y ou-I hardly knew you.!" ’ The exquisite transparent skin flushed; Ariel shrugged In the old in different way. “Oh, well—” “Oh, well, naturally!” Gail finished it for her with a laugh. Ariel saw the basket and the baby; she gave Gail a frightened glance. “Gail!” “Oh, no, no. That’s Phil’s baby. Lily’s baby.” Ariel’s proud mouth curled In the old haughty way. “I heard he had mas-ied her,” she said, displeased. “That horrible Wib- ser!” in an impatient tone. Sudden ly they were back in their old rela tionship, and there was reproof In the voice m which Gail said: “Be carefuL Ariel! She Isn’t here, but Phil may be any minute.” “They’re living here!’’ “They have been, from the first.” “But this-Is our house!” Ariel ex claimed, head In air. “Oh, Ariel dear—” Gail pleaded, patiently. “Do yon mean to tell me that Joe Cass’ divorced wife—” “Joe Cass died, Ariel. And they were here,” Gail said, as the other voice stopped on an indignant note—“they were here when Bditb— And they’ve been here ever since,’’, she added, after another pause. “I see," Ariel said, in a gentle, low ered tone. The old hoarse, boyish voice, and the old penitent look in the ,hazel eyes—how they brought back the days of long ago! “Is Dick with you, Ariel!” “Dick? Oh, yes! He’s coming In with the bags.” “And are you going to stay In CIip- persville?” “Are we—? Oh1 heavens, no!” Ariel said expressively. “But are you happy, darling?” “Nothing to cable home about, col lect,” Ariel answered drily. Something seemed to shrivel In Gail’s . heart at the tone. “Can we announce your marriage now, Ariel?” Instead of answering Ariel fastened' bright curious eyes on her sister. “Do you mean to say that nobody’s ever suspected?” “Nobody.” “Oh, come now, Gail!” “Well, it surprised me. Of course I told Lily. But she never told even her mother. And people have all taken it for granted that you were down In Los Angeles with Aunt Annie Rals- ton’s family. Anyway, if anyone has ever connected your name with Dick Stebbins' I never heard it His mother never did. Or if she did.she was as mum as I was about it" “I’ve often wondered,” Ariel said, lis tening attentively. “Not” she added, with her own little favorite air of arro- gance—“not that it made any differ ence to me I But Pve often wondered what the old ladies In town were thinn ing about it” There was a moment’s silence, for Call sensed something unexpressed In her-sister’s tone and waited, puzzled, for an explanation. “I’m terribly glad—” Artel began hesitatingly.. “Gail!" she added, sud denly, on a more definite note. “Fve got to tell you something—it’s going to surprise you.” She fell silent “You must have known that there was something tunny about all this?’ she interrupted the pause to ask Irr relevantly: There was a sound behind GaiI at the'kitchen doorway. She turned and faced Dick Stebbins. Bigger, browner, with, more of that, sweet homely, kindly , air than ever. Some quality, reliable, trustworthy, restful, seemed to emanate from him; there was. Infinite strength for Gail In the mere touch of his big hand. He kissed her, ‘ very simply, and looked beyond her to ArleL Gall, blue-aproned, tawny of hair, her thick eyebrows drawn together questlonlngly, her sapohire eyes and the disciplined sweet wide mouth accenting her feel ing of bewilderment and non-compre hension, sent her glance from one face to the other. “Had your talk?” Dick asked, and the remembered voice sent waves of thrilling weakness and joy and pain through Gall’s whole being. “Not yet” Ariel said. “Tell her. Tell her the truth, Dick:” Dick had brought two rain-spattered suitcases into the kitchen. Now Ariel glanced from them to her sister’s face. “First,” she said, “you can put me up, Gall?” “Put you up!” Gail echoed, In an almost shocked tone. “But, darling, this is home! Papa’s old room is the guest room, anyway. You and Dick can have the guest room all to your selves.” • “I’d rather double up with you,” Ariel said, without embarrassment, but with an appealing little touch of shy ness. “Well—” Gail colored to her fore head, IAughing again, and sending Dick an apologetic glance. “If you don’t mind?” she said. “Of course we have to talk all night” “There’s a man in town I have to see, anyway,” Dick answered Immedi ately. “But not tonight!” “Well, I thought I’d go down to the Empire and telephone him, anyway. Willoughby—he’s the attorney for the ship people,” Dick explained. “Oh, yes, I know him. Mrs. Cantor’s father. But he’s quite sick, Dick—she was telling me yesterday in the library. He’s In the hospital.” “I know he is. But you see,” Dick persisted uncomfortably, with a red face, “It’ll be better for me to be at the hotel, because then if he gets bet ter—we’re been working on this case together—” “But, my dear,” Gail said in her big sisterly tone, “you can’t go to the Empire, and leave Ariel here! You know what Clippersville is; there’d be any amount of talk! What .does the illness of a casual stranger like Mr. Willoughby matter?” There was a pause. Then Ariel, bal anced on the edge of the kitchen table In the old fashion, said explanatorily, “Mr. Willoughby and Dick have been working on this case together. And if he goes to London, Dick’ll probably go, too!” “But tell me—before the others come In—before anything else,” Gail said, “you’re going to announce your marriage now, aren’t you?” Something “Oh, My Darling—My Darling!” odd in their silence bewildered her, and she turned sharply to ArleL “Aren’t you going to announce it even now?” she demanded. “Immediately,” Ariel agreed briefly. “Well, then! Surely Dick ought to stay here!” Gail argued. Her keen look moved from face to face. “There isn’t any trouble?” she asked quickly. “No, dear, there’s no trouble,” Dick said reassuringly. “You have your talk and Fll be back. Of course I want to see PhiL You don’t know wbat it is to get home. I can’t wait to start talking.” When the kitchen door was shut and the car in the side yard had chugged away, Gail turned toward : ArieL “What’s—queer?” she asked. “Nothing’s queer,” Ariel said In her proud, faintly hoarse voice. “But your cramming me and Dick into one room was rather funny,” she said slowly, airily, “because we aren’t married, not the way yon think—not any more. We never cared for each other—that way.” “You and Dick Stebbins aren’t mar ried!” “I said we weren’t, Gail.” “Then—then—” Gail stopped short, and there was utter silence In the kitchen. “Divorced,” she said. “Then who’s been supporting you all these years, Ariel?” she demanded sizing At random the first of a hundred ques tions. “Dick,” the other girl said airily. Gail’s honest face reddened; she spoke sharply. “What are you talking about!” “Oh, not what you think, and what all Clippersvilie would gladly think!” Ariel-answered. “He never put a fin ger tip on me,” she said proudly. “He despises me, I think. Not—not that I care!” “Tell me, dear,”' Gall said patiently. Ariel softened suddenly. She spoke coldly, with a sort of proud reluctance, and on a long sigh. “What you never knew, Gail, and Ede never knew was that I had fallen in love with Van Murchison!" “You mean— !’’ . “Yes.'While yon and he were going about together, I couldn’t help It; In fact I didn’t know It,” Ariel confessed dispassionately, her. hazel eyes nar rowed. “I Jost went nutty—gaga*= about him!” she said. “Did he know it?” ' “Wait.” Ariel paused. “Do you re member a Saturday,” she began again suddenly—“a Saturday when you were going over to Los Gatos with Van, and you’d sort of—sort of maneuvered to get away from the library?” Bemember it! How often, with shame and regret, Gail had remem bered that old undignified juggling with business and home obligations, just to get free for those exciting, un satisfying week-ends with Van! “Yes, I remember. It was hot And you came down to the car and said good-by to us.” . “WelL while you were in the house he kissed me,” Ariel said. The Indignant color blazed in Gall’s face. “He didn’t!” ■ “Oh, indeed he did.” Ariel reflected for a second, and then added, “I made him.” “Oh, darling, darling, if I’d only known! For I was getting so tired of the whole thing then. You could have had him! You could have gone to Los Gatos—” “Well, anyway,” Ariel said, when Gail paused, “he said to me, 4What chance Del Monte tonight? Some of the fellows and I , are going over to Del Monte late, for the golf.’ I said there was no Chance at all, and you came out with yocr coat” “I remember! I went back for my coat” “Well. Anyway, it was very hot and stupid, and Dorothy Camp, Larry, and Buddy Raisch came ’round and asked me to go over to somebody’s yacht in Santa Cruz. So I left a note for Ede, and went off with them. “Do yon remember,” she went on, thinking it out, “that after we’d had lunch we passed a sign that said 4Del Monte 38 Miles,’ and the boys teased us to go down there for dinner and dance? I thought of Van then—I knew he’d be there. “And such a funny feeling came over me,, Gail. It was just as If—I knew. It was just as if I knew that if we went to Monterey all the rest would happen. “Well, we went down there, and we got rooms in a small hotel in Monte rey. Buddy and Larry drank too much, and that made us mad, and we didn’t quite know what to do. But about ten o’clock, when we were all over at Del Monte, I left the others and went to the desk and asked if Mr. Van Murchi son was there. The man said yes, that, he had just registered. “I telephoned upstairs to his room, and said, ’Well, I’m here.’ “He was awfully nice, and said he was coming down to dance. But when he came down Buddy was acting so badly that I was terribly embarrassed, and Dot and Larry had disappeared. Van was wonderfuL He said I must go to the hotel and lock my door, and go straight home the next day, and give persons like Buddy and Larry a wide berth in future.” She was silent awhile. “I really loved him.” She added the words thought fully, as if thinking aloud. 44Hb said he would take me to Mon terey, Gail,- only a mile away. But first we went out past'the Presidio to Cypress Point, and we parked the car and went down to the shore. 44Van told me he loved me, and I said that I loved him, and we were engaged. There’s—there’s no other excuse for it, GaiL . . . “Except,” she said, In a dead silence, “that we’d both been drinking—not too much, but enough to make every thing seem unreal and—oh, I don’t know —unimportant If I thought at all—if I thought at all, I thought that noth ing mattered! Anything was better than being an old maid, like the Fos ter girls. “You and Edith never knew that, did you?” “Knew ft!” Gail said, on a breath of agony. “Yes. But—but I wasn’t eighteen!” Ariel said, In her hoarse, appealing voice. “You weren’t eighteen,” Gail said heavily, swallowing with a stiff throat) “but you knew better than th at” The other girl seemed to wilt sud denly. She looked away. “Oh, yes, I knew better than that A girl is born knowing better than that!” she conceded dully. 44And you despise Lily!” Gail mut tered, trembling. The resentful color stung In Ariel’" face. - “She’s common,” she said quickly. “But she didn’t do what_you did I’’ Gail wanted to say. No use. Nd use. She was silent 4Tm sorry!” Ariel said then impa tiently, In the tone she always hsed when it was too late. 4Tm not proud of myself I But—but it happens ail the time,” she added resentfully, “and girls get away with i t ” “Ariel! Don’t talk, that way,” Gail commanded, with an angry flash of blue eyes. “It’s true,” Ariel murmured, sub dued. 44You didn’t" Gall began, thinking— “you didn’t marry Dick Stebbins that Christmas, not telling him?” “No,” Ariel said, with an indignant look. “H e knew ?” ' ' ■ “Everything!” “And loved you In spite of it?” “He got me out of. It,*’ Ariel ‘said. “And did yon stop caring for Van afterward?” ‘ . “You don’t understand,” Ariel said. “Dick and I never were married. We aren’t married now! For nearly three years I’ve been married to Van. That's the marriage we’re going to announce.” Gail stared at her, stricken dumb. V 44You and Van Murchison married I4* 1 0 BE CONTINUE!!). let Oor Motto Be g o o d h e a l t h BY DIL UOYD ARNOLD Professor of Bacteriology arid PreyeotiTe M edicine, University of Illinois, C ollege of M edicine. SUMMER TIME IS HEALTHY TIME Fifty years ago people looked for ward with apprehension to the ap proach of the hot weather s e a so n . They knew that the summer months were the most sick ly months. More people died during the summer than at any other time of the year. Chol era, typhoid fever and diarrhea were the dreaded dis eases. These be gan during the late spring and spread like forest Are until the onset of cold weather in the late fall downed them. Every family had one or more members ill each summer with some type of diarrheal disease. Flux, they called it And If a family escaped a long spell of fever, they considered themselves fortunate. Colic and diarrhea were the general rule for Infants. A baby’s first summer was a hazardous time; babies were expected to have diarrhea while teething, and they were not expected to show much gain In weight during hot weather. My great-grandfather died of cholera In the southern part of Illinois In 1855. He was burled on an isolated plot of wooded ground on a high bluff overlooking a running stream; his body was carried across fields during the night so as to avoid people travel ing the roads. Many cholera victims were buried In this summer, and many of the small Isolated cemeteries we now see were started with one of these cholera graves. It is hard for us to comprehend the fear and dread of illness suffered by our grandparents during _ the hot months of the year. I can remember very well my grand father telling me how the early settlers moved from place to place In their cov ered wagons, driving what live stock they possessed, seeking high ground to keep away from “chills and ague.” This of course was malaria. They djd not known then that mosquitoes car ried malaria; they thought malaria was In the night air of low places. Now we look forward to the summer months with pleasant anticipation. We expect to be at our best until the fall colds, grippe and Influenza strike us. We take It for granted that we are to spend our leisure time out-of-doors, free from all Illness and In a state of well-being, mentally as well as physi cally. This change from fear,- depres sion, worry, anxiety and sickness to one of pleasant outlook, has been brought about in an orderly and scientific manner. Medical and sani tary science has closed up the ave nues and highways by which the germs causing summer diseases travel from the sick to the healthy. Germs cannot fly, walk , or crawl. They must be carried in some vehicle. The first vehicle In Importance Is wa ter; the second Is milk. Germs In water, do not grow and multiply, but are passively carried from one place to another. .Germs In milk, however, do grow and m ultiply;''hence milk Is doubly dangerous, being both a vehicle of travel and a good culture medium. Purification of the drinking water and proper disposal of sewage have been responsible for the reduction in water borne diseases. Pasteurization of milk has destroyed the disease-producing bacteria In our milk supply and given us a safe, wholesome milk for human consumption. The pasteurization proc ess consists in heating the milk to a temperature that will destroy all dis ease-producing germs; it does not change the physical or nutritive prop erties of the milk.' Pasteurization of milk has made us milk conscious In every way.: The producers of milk have found it profitable to keep the milk clean from the time It leaves the cow until it Is delivered to the consumer. This is as Important as pasteurization. 4 Typhoid fever was everywhere fifty years ago. When the largest cities began to purify their water and to dis pose of their sewage properly, typhoid was pushed back to the small cities. Then as these communities did the same, typhoid was pushed still farther back to the smaller towns and vil lages, where It now has. its chief bang-out Typhoid fever Is spread through the excreta of man coming In contact with water, milk or food. The fewer people'sick the fewer germs are scattered about Two out of each hundred recovered typhoid cases, how ever, continue to excrete the typhoid germs In their stools. These persons are called chronic carriers,' and ■ are now the principal reservoirs of typhoid germs. The department of public health in Illinois, In conjunction with the University of Hlinols, has recently developed a method of X-ray treatment that will cure many of these' chronic carriers. So these germs get another knockout blow. Infantile paralysis and sleeping sickness are the two summer diseases now dread. They are much more difficult to control than the diarrheal dis eases, for they are diseases of the nervous system and are caused by germs too small to be seen with the microscope. . Science win eventually win. over them very soon, we hope. But even in epidemic forin, their fatalities will not bfgin to approach the -mastnitndn of the diarrheal fatalities of flftvyears ago.."', e WMtVra N«w*p»par UttIott.. V ” ' lMPROVED UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL SUNDAY IcHooL Lesson a y REV. P.' B .. PlTZ WATE R, D. - Member of Faculty, Moody"Rlbl® 4 Institute of Chicago.©, Western Newspaper Union. Lesson for August 18 MARTHA LESSON TEX T—L uke 10:38-42: John 11:17-28. G O LD EN TEX T—Jesu s loved M artha, and h er sister, and L azarus.—John 11:5.PRIM ARY TOPIC—A H om e Jesus Loved. _JUNIOR TOPIC—A H om e Jesu s V is ited. ' _IN TERM ED IA TE AND SEN IOR TOP IC—How Can I H elp a t Hom e? YOUNG PEO PL E AND ADULT TOP IC—A H om e T hat A ttra cts Jesus. The lesson committee designated Martha as a home-maker. That she was a home-maker is to be conceded, ■but to view this lesson only In that light is to miss its vital point, for Christ’s teachings here are equally ap propriate ■- to male and female,. In the home, office, shop, schoolroom, farm, etc. I. Jesus Revealing to Martha Her Supreme Need (Luke 10:38-42). 1.-Jesus welcomed into her home (v, 38). Though Jesus had no home ef his own, he could come into this home at any time and throw off the re straints incident to public ministry. What a blessed thing it would be if all homes were open to receive Jesus. 2. Mary sitting at Jesus’ feet (v. 39). While this was Martha’s home, Mary seemed to have lived with her. Mary bad a peculiar spiritual Insight which prompted her to sit at Jesus’ feet and listen to his words. The real place to hear Jesus’ words is “at his feet.” Let no one imagine that Mary did not render any service, for the lit tle word “also” Indicates that she had been serving with Martha. 3. Martha’s complaint (v. 40). She was so bent on providing a good meal for Jesus that she was on the verge of distraction. Her many assumed duties had so got on her nerves that she not only found fault with Mary, but even censured Jesus for allo^ng Mary to sit at his feet while dinner was being finished. She even assumed the authority to command Jesus to send Mary back to help her. The sure way to serve without distraction is to first sit at Jesus’ feet and listen to his words. ' 4. Jesus’ reply (vv. 41, 42). a. Be rebuked Martha (v. 41). ’This rebuke be administered most tenderly, for he knew that Martha loved him sincerely. Those who are supremely occupied with Jesus are anxious for nothing (Phil. 4:6). b. He defended Mary Xv. 42). In this defense he declared that there was -but one thing needful and that Mary had chosen that good part which could not be taken from her. Those who choose this good part cannot be robbed of It by friends, foes, or circumstances. II. A Revelation of Christ’s Love (John U :l-36). 1. Tbe sickness of Lazarus (vv. L 2). Even those who are In close fellow ship with the Lord are not immune from sickness. Sorrow, comes even to the homes where Jesus is loved. 2. Martha and Mary send for Jesus (v. 3). Because they had come to know Jesus as more than a mere man they instinctively turned to him when this shadow fell across their home,. 3. Jesus’ strange delay (w . 4-6). They sent for Jdsus because be loved Lazarus. They said, 44He whom thou lovest is sick.” Jesus abode In the same place because he loved Lazarus and his sisters (v. 5). This mystery Is to be explained by the fact that Jesus was divine and knew all things. 4. Jesus goes to the Bethany home (w . 7-17). His mission in going into this home was twofold; to minister to the sisters and brother and to strengthen the faith of the disciples (w . 11-15). 5. Jesus teaching Martha (w . 18-27). As he was nearing the village, Martha met Mnr w]th a complaint because of his delay. He ignored her complaint and taught her concerning the resur rection and the life. a. 44Thy brother shall rise again” (v. 23). He is saying these words to ev ery sorrowing sister, brother, wife, husband, child, and parent b. “I am the resurrection, and the •life” (w . 25, 26). He is the source of life, and all who are joined to him by a living faith are in such'vital fellow ship \as to be unaffected by ' bodily change. 6. Jesns weeping with Mary (w . 28-35). In" response to the Master’s call Mary fell at his feet, uttering the same words used by Martha, but, no doubt, In a different tone of voice and attitude. Her words were responded to with tears. “Jesus wept” J III. Jesus Raising Lazarus (w . 38- 44). His great sympathy now expressed itself In supernatural .power. Sym pathy would be. valueless without this connection !with, divine power. MuSle Music, like a true coin, rings best on the domestic hearthstone. The es sence of it-no .more belongs to the con cert room than—reverently let it be said—does religion to the church, i t must needs be .an everyday matter, ei£ tering the hearts and homes.-of the peo ple other wise, its true functions remain unfulfilled. . .■ Repentance-. Repentance is a goddess and the preserver - of those -who have erred.— Julian. - . . ,• , [Housewife's Idea Box A Time Saver Did you "every try Siftlug a onto a piece of waxed paper or large paper napkin? Try it the nest time you bake. You will enq easier to handle. than when sifted Into a bowL Besides, the paper can he thrown away and there is no bowl to wash and replace, I 0u find It an economy of time and flour THE HOUSEWIFE Copyrlzht by PuWle Ledger, too.WND Service. BOYS! GIRLS! Read the Grape Nuts ad In anothet column of fids paper and learn how to join the Dizzy Dean Winners and win valuable free prizes.—Adv. Household Fetl Strathbogie Cochlarachle Lochia var Mister, a Great Dane, owned bj a finance expert in London, !s seven feet long and weighs 238 pounds. He will qnswer to all or any of his four names. The dog eats three poundi of raw meat and a beef heart dally and his food costs nearly 54 a week BILIOUSNESS yf PARKER’S HAIR BALSAM EcmovraDuidmI-StopsHurFnto I ImpartsCoIeraod BeautytoGray and Faded Heir I 60e and $1.00 at Dro wists.Wks.. Patchogue.K.Y,^ ■j^=^sxra»_iLftJ±±«_aM:nvirue.n.i-| FLORESTON SHAMPOO —- Ideal for use la Mme^onvrithParler'aHair BalsamJJakestlo hair soft and fluffy. 60 cents by matt or at drop — _ TI.------Chemical Works, Patchozoe.N.Y Rash on Baby Caused Constant Irritation R e lie v e d by Cuticura . “About three months after my ba by was born, eczema broke out all over her body. It came out In a rasb and was very red. It caused con stant Irritation and loss of sleep so that I had to put gloves on ber hands to prevent scratching. I could not bathe her. “For nearly two years this erup tion lasted. Then I read about CutI- cura Soap and Ointment, and sent for a free sample. I bought m e and after using two boxes of OInt- . rnent with the Soap she was re lieved completely of the itching/. (Signed) Mrs. Raymond Parks, llfti Massachusetts Ave., North Adauu Soap 25c. Ointment 25c ant 30t Talcum 25c. Sold everywhere: Fre prietors: Potter Drug & Chemical Corp., Malden, Mass.”—Adv. MAKE THEM HAPPY One bottle of ‘DEAD SHOT’ Dn Feery’s Vermifage will save you money, time, anxiety, and restore the health of your children in case of W orm s or Tapeworm. Dr.Peery’s ‘DEAD SHOT’ Vermifof8 __ SOo a bottle a t dninbtai « w YW SW e PUI Co- 100 Gold St.. N.Y. WNU-T DO you suffer burning, seenly d too frequent urination; badadifi headache, dizziness, swollen feet • ankles? Are you tired, neivout*"" all unstru^ig and don’t know wna wrong? •Then give some thought to yo tridneys.Be sure they function prop* Iy, for functional kidney disord«P* drib excess waste to stay In the blow; and to poison and upset ih« * systems - * AtUse Doan’s Pills. D o a n 's arete ®* Iddneys only. They are recoromen« the world over. You can get the g trine, time-tested Doan's at any store. :;r'V JLargest Circulation Davie County Newsi TC I Miss Pauline Campbell s LeekendWitb fnends in I I Sale®- , Miss Ruth Johnson, of I Va:, is the guest of Mis I Mooney- M issM argaretBellisi someiimeatLaunnburg.l Iof Miss Margaret John. I Dr L- S. Henderson, of I G a -spent the week-endIsisteripMrs-H-L-Campb1 I Mr. and Mrs. J, P- LeCchildren are spending two I I Lake Waccama, in ColumB ItY- - J - Miss Addelene Jones, wilkesboro, spent Tbni town, the guest of Mifd Stroud. I Mr James Trexler and! I Mrs, Chilson of Salisbury i I Jgy afternoon visitors o| I Brown and Miss Kate Brt I Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Cl turned’ to theirhbme- at I Friday after spending sevj j jo town with relatives and" Private Tom Gregory! stationed with the aviatW ILSngley Field, Va., is I several days in town with! Miss Mabel Chaffin, of I has been attending suffimj I it Duke University, Dur ! the past six weeks, arriv ■ Friday. NEW ARRIVALS—i| , merit,'i car lime, I car 28) I roofing. Furniture arrivj Mocksville Hardwl Rev. William Howard, ! derwent an appendicitis opl Long’s Hospital, Statesvij two weeks ago, was able home Thursday. Mrs, Gilbert Kurfees r^ her home at Richmond, day, after spending some | with her parents, Mr. Marvin Waters. . Rev." and Mrs J. H. Misses Hazel Baity and Naylor are spending this Ridgecrest attending a Mission meeting. Mrs. E. W. Griffin and of Kings Mountain, are] several days with Mrs. Gu ents, Mr. and Mrs. R, near Cooieemee Junction! Roy Call who has held] as shoe salesman with a Tenn., department store ! months, returned hotnq Glad to have Roy home ; The many friends ger will be sorry to continued quite ill a South" Mocksville. this aged citizen an The annual Revival begin at Center^ext Sum 18, with an all day service] lnK will be under the aif public is invited to come i a basket.” auction s a l; one good mire, s farming tools, etc., auction at my homeSaturday, Aug. Ivtl ‘0 the highest bidde A. A. CC D- J- Kimball of f Kihioall, of Macon, Kimball, of Columb Mocksville visitors week. These gentl “ents of this city som .L.: I Morris; Tenri., spent" several 10 town with his b; ^ e- H. Morris; been chief train disr Southern Railway aawUy years. 7 . C ^ fenOftbeHour Vthurel1 aPdBillv PrUcllapter of 4 Tl Monday ,I Princess Theatre - c i s ? 1I t 31i1a n M e d W -? 0 baBd!« u “ TT--UI BUarant oeed, ot results fogue. liePtfi ¥ h e d a Itie re c o rd . M o q i s l r i M l , Sf.-.a. Atfcffstf t i m [very try sifting flour I oC vaxed paper or » Japkin? Tryitthene: I ke- you wiu fina lt Sidle than when sifted !Besides, the paper can Iway and there is no I and replace. You will homy of time and Aoar J THE HOUSEWIFEib y Public Ledger. Ine ^TNTJ Service. ‘ FS! GIRLS! tape Nnts ad in anotherJ s paper and learn how iizzy Dean Winners and n free prizes.—Adv. lusehold Petl I CochlarachIe LochIn. I Great Dane, owned by ||®rt In London, is seven I weighs 238 pounds. He Io aU or any of his fonr J dog eats three pounds land a beef heart dally Jcosts nearly $4 a week! i o t a b s E O fe lil ji? p g | PARKER’S I HAIR BALSAM I ™ tS £ g ® S S S » * 4 jfscpx Chem. Wks.. Patchogue. WYI jHAMPOO —Ideal for use Sn Parker's HairBalsanLMakes the Jfy. 60 cents by mail or at drop* t^iicalWorks, PatchoguetN. Y ill o n ia f e y Id Constant I r lta tio B i id by Cuticma |ree months after my ta- eczema broke out ail By. It came out in a rash fry red. It caused con- |ion and loss of sleep so to put gloves oa her [prevent scratching. I Jathe her.rly two years this erup- IThen I read about Cutl- land Ointment, and senl isample. I bought more BSing two boxes of Oinfc I the Soap she was re pletely of the ItchingJ Kaymond Parks, Hot jtts Ave., North Adann Ointment 25c and 50e _. Sold everywhere Pro gotter Drug & Chemical Jen, Mass.”—Adv. I eth em h a ppy Jof ‘H EA D SHOT’ Dr. Iennifuge will save you fee, anxiety, and restort jlof your children UJ caS Ior Tapeworm* I d e a d s h o t v e rm in 32—S3 l e y P o i s o n j eu suffer burning/ frequent urination; bseweMj d iz z in e s s , swollen feci Are you tired, 1Jervous , , mg and don’t know wfwt give some thought to ye^ Be sure theyIundion p»P_ nclionoikidneydiso'^^: SSS waste to Stayinth ^ poison and UPse* me Oan-SpiIIs-DoantS arcfo ^ te s te d Doan’s at any DAV IE R E C O R D . uest Circulation of Any n.vie County Newspaper. ^aS u n d t o w n . [ PaulineC^Pb ! 11 sPe.nt,theIffS eud with friends .n Winston- SaIeni- Micc Rutb Johnson, of Hopewell, Va _ is the guest of Miss Lillian I Jlocuey- if.. Marearet Bell is spending ! Sl‘ .ime I Laurinburg1 the guest 1Jm w Margaret Tohn* n T S Henderson, of Atlanta, „ sMut the week-end with his |Ser, Mrs. H. L. Campbell, of R. I* Mr and Mrs. J. P- LeGrand and I Jdren are spending two weeks at Ijte Waccama, in Columbuscoun- ItT-Miss Addetene Jones, of North U'ilkesboro, spent Thursday m ,own, tbe guest of Miss Louise Stroud. Mr James Trexler and Mr. and cbilsonofSahsbury were Sun- 1 to' afternoon visitors of J W. Brown and Miss Kate Brown. Mr and Mrs. Dewey Casey, re turned to tbeir home at Charlotte Friday after spending several days in town with relatives and friends. ■ private Tom Gregory, who is I stationed with the aviation corps at I Langley Field, Va., is spending I severs) days in town with relatives • - SIissMabel Chaffin, of R. x, who I has been attending summer school I atDnlte University, Durham, for } the past six weeks, arrived home I Friday. . SEW ARRIVALS—r car ce- J ment, I car lime, 1 car 28 ga. galv. roofing. Furniture arriving daily. Mocksville Hardware Co. Her. William Howard, who un I dement an appendicitis operational Long’s Hospital, Statesville, about I two weeks ago, was able to return j borne Thursday. Mrs. Gilbert Kurfees returned to her home at Richmond, Va., Fri day, after spending some time here with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Maniti Waters. Her. and Mrs J. H. Fulghutn, Misses Hazel Baity and Elizabeth Naylor are spending this week at Ridgecrest attending a Foreign •Mission meeting. Mrs. E. W. Griffin and children, of Rings Mountain, are spending several days with Mrs. Griffin’s par ents, Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Kurfees1 near Cooleemee Junction. Roy Call who has held a position as shoe salesman with a Nashville, Tenn., department store for several months, relurned home Sunday, Glad to have Roy home again. The many friends of D. W. Gran der will be sorry to learn that he continues quite ill at his home in South Mocksville. AU wish for this aged citizen an early recovery. The annual Revival meeting will begin at Center next Sunday Aug d>, with an all d ay service. -Preach- ltS will be under the arbor. The Public is invited to come and * bring 1Iasket." ■ AUCTION SALE—Four cows, I J“e Rood mare, some furniture, J timing tools, etc., will, he sold at J*hon at my home near Bixby, on 'Way, Aug. 17th, at 1:30 p. m., '“e highest bidder. A. A. CORNATZER. ^ J. Kimball of Statesville; Jack jutDall, of Macon, Ga., and Joe . '“’ball, of Columbia, S. C., were Mocksville visitors one day last *cck. These gentlemen were resi- eUIsof this city some 60 years ago. L’ L Morris, of Knoxville, cun, spent several days last week ’utown with bis brothers, B. 0 , E. H. Morris. Mr. Morris has eU chief train dispatcher for the outbern Railway at Knoxville for toUy years. thW Hour” with Richard, jll, Jve'1 and Billv Seward. Also K f pterj of “Tbe Lost City” the oLat^ Salurday- "Mills of Victnfr starrin^ M>y Robson, Ounedv M 3Jd Fay Wray- Ako “ d t ^ 1*' « w ITH GOOD ed Sn,= . J0 ha^dIe atrold establish Ptoducts 170 farm.and house hold pleisantm,taSteady . emPloyment. 6aOtameed Sr T i * ' every item ceed, oi,r : '1 we help you to sue tesUlts Hh . methods bring quick loRUe. rUe today for free cata- % G‘t,Co,HEBERLING CO. -ivi Bloomington* IlL Miss Margaret Walters is spend ing some time with friends at Mooresvi lie. — NOTICE — To all members 01 tbe Junior Order Council, ) Any member that does not fully under stand the New National Law in.re gard to payment ofDues. also the insurance of members, please, con tact some officer of the lodge ,be fore Sept. 1st,' 1935 , or it-will bt too bad. S- C. STONESTREET, F. S. - Mr. and Mrs C F. Stroud and children, and J. F. Click, of Hickory spent one afternoon last week with Charlie Click and family near Wood leaf. Mr. Click, has been an invalid for over two years, having been seriously injured when dragged over a- stump by a cow. Despite bis af fliction he seems to enjoy life very much and is always glad for his friends tocall on him. Dr. P. H. Mason, who located here about two.months ago to prac tice dentistry moved his family from Winston Salem to this city Monday and they are occupying the John H. Clement house on North Main street. The Record is glad to wel come these good people to our town. Dr. Mason’s dental parlors are locat ed on the second .floor of the San ford building. Mrs. Harley --Walker and daugh ters, Misses Ruby and Helen, and Miss Marv Sue'Thompson, who re ceived painful but not serious in juries in an automobile wreck at Redland Saturday afternoon about six o’clock, are getting along nicely at their homes here. Mrs. Walfcei received a severe cut on her head and Miss Thompson had two ribt broken and her back injured. The Walker car was being driven by Miss Mary Kathryn Walker, She and MissOssie Allison escaped uninjur ed. The car was badly 'damaged A Mr. Dilliou1 of Winston-Salem, ran into the Walker car when try ing to run around a CarsHriven by a Mr. Meacbum. Learn Beauty Culture In One Of The South's Finest Schools - Graduates Qualified For Superior Positions. Complete Course. Highest Rating. Write For Free Literature. M arshall School Of Beauty Culture 406 N. Sprace WinstonSalem, N. C- „ mnetmiWtinimnnnnnnnnimiinini K i l l T h e W e e v i l For A Small Investment You Can Give Your Small- Grain Complete Protection Against Weevils and Worms. 'Ask Us For Information and Prices. Let Us Serve You LeGiancTs Pharm acy On The Square Phone 21 Mocksville, N. C. Iin n aitn n iiiiiIIiiinnn B I G S A L E Is Still Going At Foil Blast cugar, B lbs Crackers, Ib 5c package Salt Lard, 8 Ib carton Flour. 98 lbs Feed - Cotton Seed Meal Vinegar, per sal , ” 1-gallon jug-White House Coffee, bulk Kenney. Coffee, Jb PinkSalmon Pork and Beans. Vlb can 50~$20 to $30 Suits closing out~$7 50 25-$ 15 Suits going at $5.00 100 Dresses now b7c Blue Bell Overalls Work Shirts , 24c IOc 3c -99c $2.95 $1.75 $1.65 19c 48c 9c He lie 5c 97c Work-Pants 79c and ut I Rack Shoes $2 00 to $?50 valae 97 j AU $4 and $5 Ladle’s Shoes $2 47 Now is the time to buy your Shoei aid Clothing. Come look them over, I have hunSreds of Bargains. ^ Plow Casting i price , 4 foot Poultry Fencing 10 qt. Galvanized Buckets . I ply Rubber Roofing, $1-15 $1.59. 3 jply $1 S 1 1 9 Scythe Snaths _ * ’ Yours For BargAi*68 $2.59 . 19< 2 Pb B la c k M o u n ta in G e ts S a n a to riu m . Rfck v Mount. —The new western Norlh Carolina tubercular sanator ium authorized by the 1935 legis lature will be.- located on the old Buckner Place, 2 miles from Black Mountain, in Buncombe county. . Selection of the site by the special committee and approVal of the place by the board of directors 'was an nounced here by’Kemp D Battle and Senator L. L. Gravely, chairman of the respective groups. Sheffield News. Curing tobacco is the order of the day in our berg at the present. Miss Ruby Cleary is spending this week with her brother Roy Cleary. ‘ Mrs. J. -D. Cleary spent Saturday ir Winston-Salem visiting relatives. Mr. and Mts. Robert Wilkereon and Eu gene Mendenhall spent Saturday night at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Dan Cleary's Paul Cleary and wife of Winston-Saien' spent Sundav with his father J. D. Cleary. D A N C E Glen Gray And His Casa Loma Orchestra M anagement Rock w ell-O’Keefe J ax’s Auditorium, Inc. The Largest Floor In. The CaroIinas/ . Fayetteville, N. C. Monday Night, Aug. 19th. qV ^ ame v AcresStanW N-. K. —231% Steelman, Mrs. Dora 424 I rmvait. l , m. . r .___u %Stokes, K. M. _______ 70 Tutterow, S. B. & m Te ."i 72 „ ' CQLOEEDBean, s . C. _________39 Hanes, Albert, Est 30 Naylor, Warner _.„..._._.1434 Barks, Adeline ______ I Patterson, T.-C. _____ 7% - PULTON TOWNSHIP Name - H AcresAlien, Andrew W 81 Anderson, Mrs. M,- M. HO Barnes, James D. ....___16 Beck, Mrs. C. C. 16 Burton, B. H. 7% Burton, L. E. .. 66 Burton, Clyde C_____!!! 7 Burton, Samuel __ I Branson, Mrs. Mary, Est. 19Carter, Geo. A ........300 Carter, Ernest HS Cope, K. L. & M. B. _ 111 Davis, H. S. ______ 63 Davis, Mrs. H. S 61 Doby, Manuel G. 9 Fleming, D. J ._______' 94Forrest, G. P. ______ 72% Poster. C. A.................... 50 Notice of Sale of Land Foi Taxes For The Year 1934 as Provided By Acts 1927 and Amendments Thereto Under requirements of act 1927 and subsequent amendments thereto, tbe un dersigned will, on ' MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 2,1935 at 12 o’clock Noon in front of the court house door inrMocksville, N. C. , sell fot unpaid taxes due the County of Davie foi the year 1924, the following lands as eel out below under township sub heads the acreage and amount of tax being shown opposite each name in which the tax it listed. ' • These taxes may be paid on or before sale dateT by adding accrued cOst and any penalties that may attach. CALAHALN TOWNSHIP Name Acres Amt, Barksdale, B. W..............93% - $13.18 Bosch, Mrs. Mary, Est. 9 ’ 3.07 - " 14.44 8.64 43.65 9.74 26.80 8.11 -5.87 26.84 14.19 8.81 15.25 30.19 14.04 2.40 10.15 9.91 5.60 2.39 . 3.93 '23.75 2.14 1.36 7.58 Poster, Mrs. Steve 76 Poster, J. H., H eirs 13 Pry, Miss M ollie______21 Bry, S. D ________2 1% Garwood, S. E. _____145 'Garwood, S. D. ______ 3 Garwood, A. M. _____244 Garwood & Williams .. 'I Lot Grubb, Jessie ......____146 Hairston, Peter W. .,..2,718 Hege, L. M., H eirs 70 Hendrix, Mrs. V. V. .... 24 Kesler, John E., Heirs 4 Lanier, Donald .... I Lot Livengood, J. M 95% Merreii, Mrs. B. V . 24 * Merrell, HaroJd & Leona 24 Milton, Mrs. Minnie 10% Minor, G. W.............. 103 I N. C. Midland By. ...... 35 3-10 Pack, Gurner E. I Lot Peebles, W, G. ....____ 30 Peebles, W. B., Heirs 28 Batledge, Walter Glenn 108- Sain, W. A..................... 62 Seaf ord, Wiley C . 54 Steward, E. M 12% Upchurch, Mrs. Mollie .. 87 Weavil, Howard C . 79 Williams, Mrs. Rufus B. 22 Williams, P. E.............. I Lot Wood, J. A. _________101 Poung, Noah P. ____ 22 Zimmerman, 0. C. __ 42 COLORED Hairston, Ada, Heirs .. 8 ' Hairston, Shack .... :... 2 Hairston, Mattie ____ 5% Hairston, Paschal 6 Hege, Peyton _______ 8 Mason, John-H .............. 40 Peebles, James, Est 14 Amt.25.98 57.25 2.02 13.18 29.81 6.89 3.22 5.51 . 1.08 I, Amt. $18.21 38.04 ' 9.12 • 3.81 8.14 13.91 5.9t 2.8t 5.01 52.6i 28.40 44.3; 18.2; 43.44 4.61 19.0;2li( 13.31 13.7; 2.91 4.3! 7.3. 37.0. 9.7'. 11.2; 5.01 33.1. 646.17 10.67 6.49 1.73 3.41 47.8b 6.49 6.48 1.51 22.95 9.55 6.12 10.46 5.08 26.46 20.49 17.05 2.83 27.78 11.52 5.34 6.71 26.63 6.43 7.68 5.22 1.11 2.80 4.87 2.97 17.16 3.28 FARMINGTON TOWNSHIP Campbell, Mrs. Mollie - 67 Campbell, D. T. 63 Cleary, W. A. ......203% Dwiggiris, :Mrs.' Delphia 52 Efird, P. 'A., Est i...l29% Efird, S. B. __ ........ 52 . Felker, Dewey —- 17 Gaither, J. B..............:...... 70% Gaither, W. L. .;_____ 99 Gaither, R. P. 59 Godby,, J. E. ------..Vs.. 62 Ijames, Mrs. Annie ....-115 Martin, Mrs. Will 7.5' Misenheimer, G._ WV .--V 11 Richardson, D .:L .’.—— 92 Smith,’ B, G. .V...........— '53% Stroud, David ---------- 30 Swink, Mrs.' Mary E .'.. 12 Tayse, Carrie B. -------.16% Tomlinson, 0. H. .—... 68 Tutterow, Mrs. M. E. Est.- 8% Vickers, Jl P. ----- — - 3% Williams, Edna -------- 41,COLORED Clampett, J. W- ------- y% '"Gorrell, Nora _______164 40.69 Holleman, H, H. --------' 6 , 6.33 Houp'e, Lee ----------------76% 11-92 Nicholson, j. H........-— 36 Studevant, Richard — 11 4-.68 Wilson, S. P. — 13 2.80 Wood, Amanda --------.’ I ... 2.02 CLARKSVILLE ,TOWNSHIP Name Acres Southern Railway Co ’.;— Adams, G. H. —— .— .HO Anderson, J. P. — ~— 52 Anderson, John ......— 44%- • - • .... 52 -Anderson, S.- A, Baity, Mrs. Olete ------ 2Baity, -D. N. ----..— 77;- -Beck, Mrs. J. A. _—-.... 65- . Boger, J. Walter —...J- 45.. Brookshire,- J. C. .—— 31 Brown, 'P. G. ....... 13Crews, A. H. -------- 10Danner, Mrs. W. T. .—.. 9% Eaton, R. M. ....— 3 Eaton, D. K . . .52% Gaither, T. A. .J— —..107 George, Mrs. Jdary ;:------81- Graves,’J D. & O.’A .-.,.39 Giinthr, -Paul —..——■ 40 Hanes, Mrs; M. E. .—.—117: —Hicks, BT. M .... 80 ,Hutchins, Mrs. J.'A. .... 52 Jordan, H. V. .....—— .. ’41%Jordan; Mrs. A. D. —... 29 ' Joyner; B. G. ..—--—.— 40 Lathain,' G. W. ’—— .—-V 50 Lippard, J. L. -———- 78 Martin,. U. A. .......-—,^143 PhiiHpS,##JL.' ...4 ..;.^.;,’. ■ fO 'v Pierce, -R-SM. ...%.;2V"X 15% ... .Eatle dgeReavis, Wi-^L. 'sL^-2 _4Reavis, W. D, -189 ;Beavie, Mrs. W. D. ......125 -Richardson, T. P. —..—. 86 ■ Sain, J. BI? -—I—v—- 90% Sizemore, J. .R. Ss Wife 104 . - BnutiS, ;E. Amt. $4,572.73 17.r- 5.64 11.37 8.04 2.80 35.63 9.49 10.35 6.65 4.82 2.5.64 4.60 6.65 13.11' 15.45 5.64 9.03 17.15 14.08 8.15 12.48 7.87 3.04 6, 17.45 14.40 5.01 4.06 , 8.54 6.123.54 11.45 13,9821.49 171» 17.10rn as ■ ’ Name - _ Acres Allen, Mary Ann ___— 10 Allen, J. P. __________25 , Allen, Mrs. J. P. ____ 12 ARenj H V L .- .132 Allen, Geo. W................. 5 Bahnson, H a l —. I Lot Bailey, B. R .... 4% Beauchamp, .Mrs. Jerry: 80 Beauchamp, L. W. ___ 29 2-10 Brame, Leonard R —100 Bowles; Mrs. J. L 24 Byerly, 0. S. _______155 Carter, Mrs. Mamie B—130 Cash, Mrs. Sallie, Est. ..,27 Clement, B. C ____288 Cook, G. L. _________ 98 Cook, J. C.................— 8 Cornatzer, A. M., Est. .. 50 Gornatzer, Mrs. B., Est. 20 . Dalton & Hunt _____ 90 8-10 Douthit, E. J., Est __117 Douthit, A. B., Est. .V— 25 Dunn, W. A .....—— 16% Dunn, Noah, Est. .....— 38 DunnjMrs. G. H —.. I Poster, Mrs, Sallie ----- I Poster, Mrs. E. A. ------ 4 Foster, Mrs. W. P. — I rLot Fry, D. E.................._ - 12 Furches, D. K .---------...219 Goforth, S. T ------- 90 8-10 Gregory, Mrs. L. A. — 9 Gregory, H. W. — ___ 24% Gregory, H. C .______I Lot Griffin, W. G — . 38% Griffin, J. F., Jr., ----- 30 Hanes, W. H................ % Hanes, Morgan -------- 4% Hanes, D. 0.............. — 50 Haneline, W. T. — 35 Hauser, M. L —a— . 22 Hauser, W. H .'----------- % Hpckaday, C. L. -----— 5% Howard, C. I. ------------ 39Howardj M issM ary-— 7% Howard, Ernest '.—.—— 17% Howard, Willie ---------- 18 Hudson, Delia, Estv, — .32 James, E. C. ;------------132 James, Mrs. E. C I Lot James, W- P- ——— 30 James, C. D. ------------- 13% James, Mrs. M. E., Est. 31 Jones* W. J, —----------- 49 Jones, Bros ----------97% Kimbrough, C. L. — — 93 McCulloh, Mrs. W. P. - 39 6-100 McDaniel, A. P I— 59% McDaniel, Mtb. Ida J. - 25 MeKnight, J, W . — 24% Miller, Mrnerva --------- -2. Montgomery, J. H . • 60 Myers, ’ W. G. -------— 58 Potts, J. E. 80% Ridenhourj G. A - 37 Riddle,, Mrs. Charlie — 5% Riddle, Mrs. Henry —.—. 25 Riddle, W. R. -------- 2 Seats, P. T -------------50 Sheek, R. P. ........ 125% Sheek, M rs.' G. W. --— ?1 Sheek, H. G. — —— — I Lot Smith, Early ------------ 35 Smith, Harmon J.— 12 Smith, B. LV -----—— 68 Smith, L. A .------------- . 3 Smith;. Tom L. ———-. 5 , Smith, Mrs. G. A , 3% "Smith, Mrs. GeneVb — 15 Smith, . Alex ----- 8 % Sdfley,’ T. W. ------------66 $$yers, S.-.B. —~v~ - Tucker, H. C.'...------ |7% Name Acres Williams, Herbert W. _ 11 Williard, J. S ._____I___96 : Williard, W. H. ___;__ 2 Williard; Sandy 1 % Wiseman, Tom ......... 7 Wood, Mrs. Lizzie ' ... U 35 32 80% Bowden, Grady C. Walker, Will .'__ Johnson, L. H. V. .. Smith, Mrs. Ada, Est. .. A UQLORED Bailey, Chalmus .—;___ 4 Bowman, Peter, Est. .— Brown, John _________ Crews, John v—.... Cutherell, Tom Dismuck, Jane ’.__;__ Dulin, -B. A. ______...... Dulin, J J, .,__ v_. Dulin, A. B. 5 4%5 20 7 12 50 J-21' „160Thpmboro; C. P, Truelove, A. G. Tnvette, S. A-'— —150 -Wagoner, P. A . 88% Wdlker,' S. P. J 3% Walker, Roy Gv — —•• 37 ’ Walker, S.,W ; 3% Walker,. E J P. 1% Walker, B. W. -.,— - 61% . Amt. •$2.77 5.22 2.49 34V67 3.87 1.78 2.31 25.39 4.42 •15.56 3.75 10.34 11.93 10.31 44.76 15.56 10.16 5.32 6.15 34.9124.39 5.96 5.80 6.13 1.94 4.84 1.38 '3.41 2.65 -50.94 35.-38 4.325.95 '6.13 13.56 11.25 ' 2.4C 1.67 '13.87 6.58 3.72 1.32 4.20 7.30 1.70 11.85 4.43 . 4.84 36.19 10.04 5.58 6.17 4.84 8.93 -9.81 ’ 24.18 9.86 14.01 7.11 12.06 2.19 31.74 3.7E 7.24 . 1.67 1.59 8.78 7.2£ 8.42 26.61 6.21 4.72 7.84 8.75 15.61 4.48 I 1.60 2.9C 2.49 5.63 18)37 24.63 11;82 6.07 17.30 26.35 22,07 5.10 12.33 1.32 4.41 15.35 Eaton, Laura _______18% Eaton, Jordan, Est :. 40 Eaton, W. H. _______ 31 Eaton, S. B________— 90% Eaton, W .. E. _______ 20 Hamlin, Lee —__,_____3 Hairston, Ida 18% Hanes, Rufus, E st. 11% Holderberryl Tom 1% ' Johnson, John A ._____56 Lyons, James, Est. 2% March, Luey .............- I Morgan, L. H. —...____ 4 McMahan, Nelson ; I Sutzer, Laura _______ 29 Smith, Wiley ________ 5 Smith, Jake I_________ 1% Whorton, John _______15%, Wiseman, Tom ___ 7 Williams, Louis _____ 7 Williams, B ettie____— 5 Williams, Lonnie ___— 23 Williams;_B. W., Est. —..3 7 Williams, Bell, Est. —.13% Young, Crawford __!_ 1% Tomlin, Charlie ____ 2%Eaton, Jordan H . 76 JERUSALEM TOWNSHIP Name Acres - Alexander, Joe A 56 ~ Apperson, Mrs. Beulah 117% Apperson-George 49 Benson, H. H ......3 Lots Bessent, Mrs. Bessie .... 29 Bessent, S. R.' — ___ 47 Blaekwelder, S. A. .... I Lot Cook, D. S —.— 2’ Lots- COok, S. B. _____ 24 Cook', J. H ,____8..„ I Lot Crawford, j. G I Lot Creason, J. S. ______ 20 Creason, C. T., Est. — 101 Crotts, C. H. & Co., 132 Crump, Mrs. S. B . 135 6-10 Daniel, J. S — 50 A. 2 Lots . Daniel, Mrs. T. C. —. 40% Davis, I. C ..’______50 Davis, C: A ........ 93 Deadmon, G. H...............I Lot Deadmon, L.lC., Jr), ..V. I Lot Everhardt, W. D. _____ 12 Foard; Mrs. M. & L .__77 Foard, W. G .,________15 Foster, Mrs. Kate L. -154. Gibson, Geo. E. ...— I Lot Granger, J. M. _______ 20 Gregory, R. C. _____; I Lot' Griffin, J. D .________4 Lots Hendrix, G. M - 30 A. I Lot Hendrixj T M .......____209% Lefler, Mrs. M. L. ____ 73 McCombs, C. H. A . ____70 .. McCulioh, J. G. ------ 91 McOiillbh, Mrs. C. C. .... 50% McSwain, P. G....____2 Lots Miller, B. L 37 A 2 Lots Pack, J. C..........— .-----125 Redwine, 0. T. —__I... 2 Lots Ridenbour, Mrs. Pearl .. 90 Ridenhour, Mrs. ,Mollie I Lot Salisbury Motor Co 7% Smith; R. C. — — — I Lot Smith, J. L. --------------198 Stewart, Z — .— 1% Stewart, C. W .,---------- 5%Summersett, T. W., Jr-, 27 85-100' Summersett, T. W., Sr., 50 7-10 Taylor, W. W. & ■ ' - Mrs. Dodd __192 Williams, Mts. Abbie .. 33 Williams, J. A. ...—:— I Lot Wilson, A. E. ----------104 Winecoff, Geo. P .-I Lot Mock, Thos. U. ---------26 Peebles, Ed. ............14 7-10 COLORED ; Clement, H. C. I L.ot Clement, W. C. .— — 2 Lots Clement, Sallie D . I Lot Fowler, Jim — ------- I Lot Hairston, Robt..... — . I Lot Johnson, Floyd —.— I Johnson, Charlie .--I Lot Miller, Henry ...-- I Lot Rosseau, W. G. ——— 2 Lots ,Woodruff, Gaston I Lot : MOCKSVILLE TOWNSHIP N --I Amt 6.88 14.6! 5.6t.Ii 7.4; 2.51 9.0; .4.5; 8.0 3.6. 1.71 1.7) 2.6! 3.7’. 1.5 5.6 2.0. 6.0 14.0 3.7 8.4 11.6 17.3 6.51.7 5.0 .’ 4.8 1.1 17.1 .9 1.1 7.3 1.6 2.4 2.3 5.0 3.7 7.5 2.1 3.51 8.52 8.75 2.79 3.15 3.72 9.11 Amt, $23.68 28.86 '15.26 4.26 6.94 23.51 .88 2.60 3.37 17.81 12.62 4.71 27.54 8.99 35.37 7.34 12.24 16.68 22.63 5.97 5.82 11.68 17.61 5.01 45.92 12.65 20.66 3.47 3.19 7.64 53.77 .61.63 29.8V 28.7 20.9 145 29.0: 31.4; .7) 12.1: 8.9’. 2)7’. - 2.9! 41.1; 2.8) 10.5' 6.1 21,0 283) 10.1! 6.8: 24.2: 2.5! 16.5; ' 3.6: 1.4’ 1.6' 6.1! 2.3’ 3.7; 3.1! 2.5! 2.8< -12.0;-ET • Name Acres iAngell, C. J. --------- 4 Lots Angell, Mrs C. J. — 2 Lots Bowles, Mrs. Cordelia - U Bowles, L. S —— 84 Bayles- Realty Co. —. 2 Lots Brown, P. G. ----------- J Lot Brown, M. D. Jr.,. Est. I Lot Brown, M. D ............67Brown, H. W. -V .48% Cain* Jas. H., Est. .— I Lot Call, Walter L . I Lot Carter, P. M .........2 Lotsy Carter, J. L., Est. - — I LotCartwright, T. L . I. Lot Clement,.B. C. &G. A., Est 75 A I Lot Clement, K- M . I Lot Cobbler, Mrp. K. L. .... 21% Cornatzer, H. P . -822 Crawford, J. G. ----- * • ?Daniel, J. S-------------2 Lots Daniel & Ijam es I Lot Daniel, Annie L, ^— I Lot Donovant, H. J., Est 7Feezor, Miss Frances—180 Foster, Mrs. S. A. — - I Lot Foster, H. Clinton — 64 Grant, C. S. -----—— 35 .Green, J. B. -------------43 Griffin, E. L...............— *8% Hall, A. E .-----------J10 Harris, Mrs. Kate 0 ... I Lot Harris, Amanda D. — I Lot Heathman, Mis. Mary 2 Lots Hellard, G. C. — V- I Lot Hepler, Mrs. C. B ..... I Lot Hearn, W. M. — — PL ot Hinkle Vance & Co. 7 LOts Holmany G. B. — l y% HsliiWnJ G. B. and^ .- • Maud Gaitherr t— - 70.% -Holton/ J. L, ._.ri— Lot Howard, D. C. — 2 Lots . Howard, W, T . J 1. . Hunfc, E. E., Est. — 2 Lots Jones/ Cartner-& ’ .Evans ....— Jones & Walker Jones, E. M. — rKwfer-lV ■— 4 Lots I Lot — -- itJmt ______*4" ISm inm ji, P / R- \ fo t Amt $15.51 21.8! 2.8) 13.0,' 5.3; 23.28 .91 23.37 33.26 5.64 8.20, 40.8) 9.41 10.0; - 30.8) 16.31 5.91 90.01 8.24 9.11 8.94 6.92 6.92 71.08 8.24 7.64 7.43 6.19 4.04 A. . 23.26 7.88 4.57 6.43 3.14 2.49 6.89 10.59 35.52 15.04 11.33 6.43 r 32.31 4.60 -22.77 2.18 : 6.56 '<45 Name Aeres ' Amt. Koontz, J. H .-----------I Lot 1.55 Kurfees, Z.~ C. ____159 38.36 Lanier* Mrs. D. G. —.-1 Lot 5.00 Livengood, Milton — I Lot 10.04 McClamroch, Mrs. S.,Bst 68 . 16.75MeCulloh, V .V .____3 Ldts 8.15 McGuire, Mrs. Hattie - 84 25.82 McDaniel, Mrs. J. L. —. 6 -1.76 • McMahan,- Mrs. Martha 4,7 8.91 Martin, .I. W . 1 I Lot - 3.12 Martin, Mrs. W. P . 24 ' ' 8.71 Meroney, J. K. -I Lot. 22.67 Meroney, W. R„ Est .. I Lot 17.59 Moore, J. p ....... 2 Lots (Depot St.) 5.50 Nichols, Mrs. Mamie —.114 . . -19.99 Peacock; Mrs. W. H .___60 14.19Penry, Mrs. Laura- 41% : 4.39 Pope, John D. ______ 7« 18.44 Sanford, H. A. -----1,216% 303.83 Sain, J. F., Est. _____ 39 7S i Seaford, C. A. _______10 5.46 Seaford, C. W.,Est. __103 37.68 Seaford, C. H. & C. A. 38% ' 10.99 Sheek, Mrs. G. W . ... I Lot 10.23 Shields, E. L. ________26 5.59 Smith, A. V ._______ 7 Lots' ' 2.49 Smith, B. I. ____ I Lot 10.04 Smith, B. B J_________ 48 . 20.48. Sparks, Mrs. Cora_____152 45.48 3tevenson, Mrs., Beulah & ■ Blanche Hendrix _125 26.34 Summers, C. S .________12 13.57 Swicegood, N. H .____ I Lot 8.10 Tomlinson Chevrolet Co. I Lot. 6.14 Tomlinson, C H . I Lot 25.00 Vanzarit, C. G. -_____ I Lot '8.59 Walker, R, G. „ .—„„ l :Lot 30.18 Walker, G. G. ___.... 8. Dots 77.99 Wall, Mrs. John_____ I Lot ' 3.27 Winecoff, S. J . 3 Lots 3.16 Zachary, J. W., Est. 2 Lots 28.91 McGuire, James, Heirs 181 A I Lot 77.04 COLORED V ' J Barringer, L uther_I Lot 5-1.08 Brown, Hannah, Est. .. I Lot ' ,3.99 Brown,. Mary A., Est. IL o t 3.99Brown, Ernest ______I Lot 2.31 Burse, G. B I Lot -6.26 Clement, Geneva_2 Lpts - 1.28 Clark, Bettie — _____ I Lot 3.11 Clement, Frances_____I Lot 6.26 Clement, F rank ______ I Lot 5.12 Clement, Rachel —____I Lot .6.26 Clement, Geneva J 2 Lots 1.23 "Clement, Giles .,______ v 4% 3.51 Clement, Geo. ____:— 4% .2.97 Cox, A. P J ,_______ 25% "6.26 Day, W illis I. I Lot :;2.87 Dilliard, Alfred — __ I Lot 8.06 Dulin, Elizabeth — I Lot '8.15 Poster, James, E st. I Lot -5.61 Foster, Robert _____ I Lot 4.99 Foster, R. M 3 Lots 15.46 Poster, Till _______ 43 '1.17 • Furches, Freelove I Lot .4.02 Gaither, Julia ______2 Lots 9.87Gaither, I. L I Lot V5.66 Gaither, Elijah __)____ .7 -.5.28 Gaither, Rosa A. & ■ ri Esther ____ I Lot ‘6.26 Garrett, Sarah - ‘ '■ • Jane, E st. I ,Lot 1.45 Gorrell, N ora _______ I Lot -.6.26 Gibson, Sophia _____ I Lot . 3.45 Harris, D aska ,__ I Lot 3.45 Hamlin, S. L ee __ 2 Lots <53 Hanes, Amos, Est. I Lot ,5.70 Hanes, Spencer, Est. 2 Lots 7.39 Hill, Martha — 5 A. 2 Lots 12.97 Holemanr Lula __ 2 Lots 71.23 Huston, Frank, Est I Lot 5.13 Ijames, Elijah, Est, .. I Lot 3.45 Johnson, Wilkie D . I Dot --3.99 Kimbrough, Dinab —'— I Lot ;4.66 Nashj M ary V . IL o t 76.12 Malone, Will ....__ I Lot 74.44 Meroney, Henry W ; I Lot 2.81 Meroney, Cora C ,1% ’’1.90 Neely, Mary _______ I Lot ‘ 6.27 Pettigrew, W. A I Dot , 5.12 . Rose Charles, Est. .. 2 Lots :;1.34 Scott, P. M. ______ 76% 16.63 Scott, J. D. ___ 7 3.81 S.cott, N. A. .)-______ .1 2.31 Scott, Lizzie ________ -I - .79 Smoot, J. A. I Lot 6.07 Steele, P. M. ________ 10 7.55 VanEaton, Simon .... I .Lot 2.49 Woodruff, H enry I Lot 1.70 SHADY GROVE TOWNSHIP Name Acres Amt. Atlantic Joint Stock Land Bank ____... 10 1.54 - Barber, C. L.................. 7%11.59 Barneycastle, C. M.......... 18 3.99 Beauchamp, Mrs. J. S 29 7.81 Branson, M. L. ____- .6%5.59 Carter, G. A. :_;— ..... 75 18.88 Carter, Mrs. Annie —... 24%2.30 Cline, Mts. Bettie __- .1 1.24 Cornatzer, J. S."—-.__- 20%9.46 Cornatzer, Mrs. Z. C. 46% A I L. 20.19 Cornatzer, Mrs. M. M... 65%38.54 Cornatzer, R. C- —•••- 63 12.09 Cornatzer, W. A .____... 24%13.26 Crews, Mrs. J. L .___I Lot 3.75 Fry, H. G. --------... 91 27.98 HaU, C. W. ------------... 84 ’3^.67 Hartman, E. M., Est.-.118%32.19 Henfirix, Milton G. ...13618-100 23.38 Hendrix, Mrs. W. A. .„3% A. I L 14.17 Howard, Mrs. Sallie ... 30 5.90 Howard, Mrs. J. R.24% .10.97 Jones, Mrs. O. F. __- 42 14.97 Jones, W. J. _ ....•—-121%26.36 Kimbrough, P. R .------ I .5.14 MeDaniel, G. H .____- 7%1.67 March, Mrs. O. M...—„ I 10.6777 __________ Markland, L. O. .. Massey, Moss Ida —— 27% Massey, C. S. -----------105%Milton, W. E. — --------27 Miller, Martin .—------- I Milton,.Mrs. M innie 7%’ Mock, Mrs. Fannie I Myers, W. T. ______- 10% Myers, G. V. ________63% Naylor, F. A. ------- — 50 N. C. Midland R. R. _ 9 8-10 Orrell, Miss A nnie 27 Orrell, J. E., Est. ------115 Potts, E. J .__________17 Potts,' G. A ._____—— I Lot Potts, Lonnie ------ 1% Potts, Eugene ----------- 1% Ratledge, J. H., Est. .. I Lot Robertson, MrsvOdelia ;3% Robertson, G. S ' 8 Robertson, H. D. -----..... 6 Tueker, Z. V. 6 WaUer, L. P. ----------- 8% Ward, Mrs. D ora '3 Wood, A. C . I Lot vZimmerfaan, J) G. -------- 48COLORED . Dulin, Lily —- I Lot Flint, Mace ...—.— I Lot Foster, Emma t5) Glasscock, Alice, Est. -. 14 Hairston, Henry, Est. :4 Johnson, T. G. —~ — ~Motley, Fannie — I L o t' Peebles, Clifton — '4 Peebles, Charlie ——-----8 Worth, Rebecca ----))- I Lot CHARLES C SMOOT, Shenfl Devie County. 30.00 79.57 16.1813.70 1.17 1.75 9.68 6.89 15.99 9.17 2.96 9.87 15.90 8.49 12.63 2.91 7.07 .6.89- 2.66 6.89 4.95 2.30 6.92 10.66 15.04 13.95 2.30 .3.11 132 - 3.45 1.96 6.25.859.77 2.64 .94 J:- -■I! i l l -if--. Ir Iu ISil u m f f iE DAVIE RECORD, MOCKSVILLE, N. d a u g u st i4. ig*3 Real Chicken Feed Pro- Looks like the government is de termined that everyone shall have a ; little money, although the proposal to issue new half-cent and one-mill coins can hardly be considered a part of any of the various share-the wealth programs. Secretary Morgenthau has an nounced that, with the approval of the President he will ask congress to authorize the issuance of these nuis ance coins, and if congress approves it will be the first time-in the history of this country that one will have had the pleasure of jingling a mill in his pocket, and there’ll be a bunch of us who will not know what to do with it. - The issuance of these coins, it is claimed, is made necessary by the numerous state sales taxes, many of which are levied on a fiat percentage basis. But under the present- law these coins would be of little use in North Carolina in connection with the sales tax, because a schedule of collection has already been provided that does not split the penny; a sys tem which by collecting one cent on a ten-cent purchase, actually takes atoll of io. instead of 3 per cent for the privilege of buying. Theclaim is that these new coins would avoid a loss on small' pur chases—that the poor man would be the greatest beneficiary, and it is re freshing to note-that the govern ment takes this interest, but most of us will continue to hope that w.e shall not be pestered with this new.nUis abce that is neither justified by ad ministrative convenience nor com mon sense.— Statesville Daily. More Sense Than Nonsense. Writing about the convention of the-American. Bar. Association in California last week, Will Rogers said: “Wbat they ought to do is to kick the crooks ou.fc-of their profes sion. They should recommend a law that in every cash that went on trial the lawyer defending should be tried first. Then, if "he,; comes clear, he would be eligible to defend. As it is how. they are trying the wrong than.” . . Cif course, there’s considerable ex aggeration in that statement, but everybody knows that in addition to the many men of splendid character and integrity in the. legal profession, there also are quite a few shysters who are interesting in only one thing -7-getting ali the money they can get. lawyers could very easily get rtdj of m any. undesirables who are practicing law a t the present time, A cam paignih th at direction would injset with national approval.—The State. And Wife Go Spooky. ; Editor Eugene _ Ashcraft, of the Monroe Enquirer, relates the follow ing spooky story in his paper: '-Last Sunday night while Mrs. Ashecraft and I were quietly read ing ai'big rockin’ chair btgan rochin’ for no apparent reason or cause. We poBses no cat or dog that might have run against the unoccupied chair— but the darned thing rocked. : VWhile the chair, similar to thou* sands of others, rocked we racked our brains to figure out the cause of itsunseemly action. ’’Now you and you and you have bad unexplainable things to happen in your own homes. If youknew the cause it would simple indeed to figure out. - Many’s the time at night. I’ve heard thieves downstairs. ransackin’ the house.- Next- morning every door and window would be found fastened and not a thing misplaced. But. dogon it, why-did that old rockin’ chair rock? Why The Newspaper Is Like A Woman. Y o u - a r e e n t i t l e d t o ALL THESE FEATURES w h e n y o u b u y a l o w - p r i c e d c a r FISHER NO DRAFT VENTILATION The department of agriculture re ceives thousands of letters a year asking about means of eradicating weeds. - . ■ _ .. A l WEATHfRPROOFCAfllE- CONTROLLED BRAKES DEALER ADVERTISEMENT /CHEVROLET (By Frances Nunn, Brenau College) Becausev they are -thinner than they used to be................ -^Because they .have forms. 3TBecause they are well wortf&Jook- ing over. , : - Because thev are bold-faced-types- a n d y o u g e t t h e m o n l y in CH EVROLET The most finely balanced low-priced car ever built You are entitled to all of the fine car features pictured here when you buy a car selling in the lowest price range. And the new Master De Luxe Chevrolet is the only car in its price range that brings you all of them! It is the only car of its price with a Solid Steel Turret-Top Fisher Body—the. smartest and safest built. The only car of its price that gives thefamous gliding Knee- Action Ride. The only car of its price with Blue- _ FlaMe Valve-in-Head Engine—Stabilised Front- End Construction—and JFeatherproof Cable-Con- trolled Brakes. See and drive the Master De Luxe Chevrolet'and learn by' actual test how much these features mean in’terms of added motoring enjoyment. Do this and you'w ill' agree fhat the Master De Luxe'is. exactly-what its owners say it is—the most finely balanced low-priced car . ever built. Visit , your nearest Chevrolet dealer and drive this car—today! CHEVROLET MOTOR CO., DETROIT, MICH. Compare Chevrolet's law delivered prices and easy G .TA.A. C. terms.. A General Motors Value ■ When your adversary Speaks w.„ of you look, him over very cioae| and hestiate before-saying ^yea . ? Administrator’s Notices 666 checks 10 3 daysUQUID-TABLETS ~ ~ " SALVE-NOSE DROPS fi” 1 day.TONIC and LAXAHVf MALARIAi& 3 days COLDSHaving qualified as Administrator of Mary Jones, deceased, notice is hereby given to all persons holding claims against the estate of said de ceased to present the saroe^to the,mriprsnrned on. or before the 24th — day of J une, 1936, or this notice will -MtHHtUHHiu 11111 be plead In bar of recovery AU .3 u ttb t txt t> a tat,,,. i persons indebted to said estate will please call and settle without delay. This the 24th day of June, 1935. G1 F. CORNAZTER, Adrnr. of Mary Jones, decs’d - A. T. GRANT, Atty. BEST IN RADIOS YOUNG RADIO CO. M0CKSV7LLE, N. C. BEST IN SUPPLIES ......I... C - A la A te S i £Z).g J ? u x e ,CHEVROLET H o m e C h e v r o l e t C o ., I n c ., MOCKSVILLE N.C. speak their minds. Because they have a great of in- fuence. Because if they know- anything they usually tell it. Because they always have the last word.'-.. Because back.numbers are not in demand. , . - Because every man should have one of his own and not run after his neighbor’s.—(Keowee Courier.) Administrator’s Notice. Having qualified as administrator,oi the estate of Gaither Wood, deceased, late of Davie County. North Carolina, notice is hereby given all persons having claims a gainst the said estate, to present them tc the undersigned on or before July 16,1936. or this notice will be plead in bar of their recovery. AU persons indebted to said es tate, are requested to make immediate payment. This July IS1193S. /. M, BRANSON, Adrar. Gaither Wood. Dec'd. B.C. BROCK, Atty. ' ' North Carolina I In Superior Court1 Before Davie County I M. A. Hartman,' C. S. C1 M. C. Cain, G. L. Harkey, et al vs M. C. Fowler, Louise Fowler, Nellie Ollive(NellieOIliver)f Clyde Austin, et pi. Notice of Publication. The defendantSi Louise Fowler, Nellie Qlive (Nellie Olliver), and Clyde Austin, above named, will" take notice that an action or special proceeding entitled as above has been commenced in -the ,-Superior Court of Davie Gounty. North Caro lina, asking for a sale for partition of the lands of R L. Caim deceased, located in Davie and Onsiow coun ties, Baid action being for the parti tion of said lands by sale, thereof, for division:, And said defendants will further take notice that they -and each of them are required-to appear at the offiee of the Clerk of the Su perior Court of Davie County, North Carolina at the court house m-Mocks- vilte, N. C.. before M A. Hartman, G. S. C.. within'ten, davs^-after-the -128th day of August; ..1935,' it being I the last day of publication of this DR. R. P. ANDERSON DENTIST Anderson Building Mocksville, N. C. Office 50 - Phuue - Residence 37 Notice of Sale. Under and by virtue of authority conferred in me by Deed of Trust executed by Cary W. Hepler and C. V. Hepler, his wife, dated the 8th dav of January, 1929, and recorded in Book 23 of Mortgages, page 105, in the office of Register of Deeds of Davie county. North Carolina, R. M. McClamroch, Substituted Trustee, will, at 12 o’clock noon, on the 31st day of August, 1935, at the court house door of Davie county, in Mocksville, North J Carolina, sell at public auction for cash, to the high est bidder, the following lands, to- wit, lying and being in Mocksville township, Davie county, North Carolina, and more particularly described as follows: - Lying on the West side of the road leading from Mocksville to Salisburv new highway, being two lots. Nos. 50 and 51, in Block B. Clement Crest .land, according to a map recorded in Book 23, page 426, Register of Deeds office, Davie County, North Caroliha- This sale is made on account of de fault in the payment of the indebted ness secured by the - said Deed of Trust, and is subject to all: taxes and assessments against the said prop erty whether nowrdue or to become due. This the 31st dav of July, 3935. R. M McCLAMROCH, SubstitutedTrustee. Land posters for sale, NOTICE! : Having qualified .as Administratrix of the estate of George Hendrix decs’d.. no tice is hereby given to all persons bolding claims against the estate of said deceased to present the same, properly-'verified, to the uhdersigned on or before the 28th day of June.'1936, or this notice will7 be plead ed in bar of any recovery; " • AU persons indebted to said estate please call on the undersigned^ and make prompt settlement. _.....— . This the 28th day of June1 1935.. ; . T BEULAH APPERSON, Admrx. of George Hendrix. Decs'd. By A. T. GRANT, Atty. Notice To Creditors! Having qualified as Administratorof the estate of VV. S. Guffy deceased - notice is hereby giveo to all persons holding claims against the estate of said deceased to pre sent the, same, properly verified, to the undersigned, Cleveland,' North-: Carolina’ Route 2, on or before the 9th;day of July, 1963 or this notice will be pleaded in .bar of recovery. AU persons indebted to said estate wilt please caU and make proper settlement. This the 9th day of July 1935- J. R. GUFFY. Adm’r. of.-.W. S.- Guffy, decs’d. By A. T. GRANT, Atty. Administrator’s Notice. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned-has qualified as admin istrator .of J. A. Hege, deceased.-AU persons having claims against the es tate of the said deceased;- will pre sent them to the undersigned-on or before the 29ih day of June. 1936, or this notice will be pleaded In bar tf their recovery. AU persons indebt ed to said:estate wilf please make immediate settlement. This 29th day of June, 1935. . W.T. S. MYERS, Administrator of J A. Hege, deceased. • ROBERT S. McNEILL, Attorney. ■ DAVIE CAFE ‘‘On,The Square” Mocksville, N. C, Next To Postoffice And JuitAs Reliable ' . RegularMeaIs -35c Ice Cream, Soft Drinks1 Short-Orders, Every Hour - P. 10: MAJNOS, P rop. / notice, apd answer or demur - to the ,Hecause they are- easy to read. ,complaint or petition of the plain- Because you cannot believe every-, tiffs, or the plaintifpg . will apply to -,!.!.-A n n i' the Court-for the relief : demandedthing y p . in the-comDlaint. This the 30th dayBecause they carry the news 0f j u|yii935, - where they go. Because they are I M 'A. HARTMAN, not afraid to CIerkof Superior Court. DR. P. H. MASON SANFORD Phone 110 ‘ - Dentist BUILDING Mocksville, NiTC. Hllllllllllllf i«im»*|||HT.........—......»—»«««.......Il I IllTmillllllllIIIIIIlIlllll CAMPBELL - W ALKER FUNERAL HOME AM BULANCE; - ■ ■■ EMBALMERS . Telephone 48 Main Street Next To Methodist Church ..... Travel anywhere . . any day 11 on the SOUTHERN for I A Fare For Every Purse 2 PER MILE . - ' lie . ONE WAY and ROUND TRIP COACH TICKETS Per Mile . . . . . for Each Mile Traveled. * 2c ROUND TRIP TICKETS-Return Limit 15 Days Fer Mile . . . for Each Mile I raveled. * 2ic . ■ ROUND TRIP TICKETS—Return Limit 6 Months 1 PerMile :. - . . for Each Mile Traveled. * 3c ONE WAY TICKETS PerMile . . v. for Each Mile Traveled t Good in sieepingand iparlorCars onpayment of proper charges for space occupied. No surcharge. Economize by leaving your Automobile at home and using the Southern v vEhccellent Dining Car Service Be ComfortabIe in the Safety of Train Travel. :R, H. GRAHAM, Div. Pass: Agent . . . Charlotte. N. C. Southern Railway System I n D a v i e C o u n t y . T h e P ric e Is O n ly $ 1 .0 0 P e r Y e a r . Send A Year’s Subscription To Your Relatives. Who Live In Distant Counties Or States. TheyWill Appreciate A Weekly News Letter From Their Old Home County T H E D A V IE R E C O R D Carries A Number Of Features That You Will Not Find In Any Pther Paper Th This County. The Record is ‘prepared to print y°ur stafioncry ^nrsWt notice. v o lu m n XXXVj NE^OFU What Was Happenjnd The Days of AntomoH Hosq (Davie Record, Miss Maggie Call! day in Winston shol p. R. Kimbrouglf from a trip to DallaJ Miss Carrie Foy, the guest of Dr. anJ Taylor. 7W. W. Stroud, I spent Saturday in latives. H. T. Kelly, oj was here tor the picf Miss Julia Loedh^ bam, is the guests Hanes. J. B. Johnstone rl day from a visit to Misses Annie, Ell Click, of StatesvtlI Thursday for the pig Mrs. Dourckka Carolina, came up visit her mother, M| Clegg Clement few days for Atla goes to enter a busil Miss Gertrude eigh, is visiting in of Mrs. A. f . Grar , Miss Gertrude Pt| marie, is the guest Coley. Miss Clara FordJ spent last week in tj of Miss Mary Mero Miss Gussie Booel -returned home Sund ing several days heij and relatives. E. H. Morris Il Concord, where hej In -the campaign. . C. F. Sheek and | Fannie, of Bowers ! part Of last week in latives. C. L. Granger, ol has been spending.]] with his parents, last week. Miss Frances Jot] Cove, is the guest, Hardison, on Salislj Dr] M. D. KimbJ to Long’s Sanatoriif Monday evening fo| G. C. Bracken aif Trouttnan, of RowJ united in marriage sonic picnic groul Rev, W. R. Ketchl ceremony. The 3 2nd annuaj held at Clement was a grand succesl ctilarv between gi,J being raised for The crown was est| Mr. and Mrs. Asheville, were ami visitors Thursday. Miss Myrtle Gri ville, was the gues Horn last week. •Thos. Stone, ol last week in town Mrs- F. M. Johnsc Miss Evelyn She beth Sherrill, of guests of Miss B Week. Kimbrough Sb badly when struc last week is getti Mr, and^Mrs. Richmond, Va., pJcIhip visitors . sPent sev tiveS and fricnc Mr. ald Mn daughttrS iMis! etVMonday foi spend a fewday er’s sister, Mrs Mlss R nth R sPent several da Wlth relatives. H over very cloaJJ pefore aaying »-ye3 , _ _ checki MAIARIA in 3 days COLDS_ first dav tonic and laxative IN RADIOS |G RADIO CO I ksville, N. c. J in s u p p l ie s Ja l h o m e embalmers Church w tttiiiiniiuuua, day I for *2 per mile )ACH TICKETS peled. t Limit 15 Days |reled. I Limit 6 Months reled. re!el lent of proper rcharge. Id using the Southern fin Travel. Charlotte, N. C. >ystem IionToYour Distant ’hey Will \y News >me County Ic o r d Features id In Any [County. to print y°ur postal ^£ceipt§ mm record - 'i ■ »N TMfe LAfeGfeST IN THEL COUNTY. THEY DON’T LIE; PEOPLE’S RIGHTS MAINTAIN: UNAWEO BY INFLUENCE BY GAIN." VOLUMN XXXVII.MOCKSVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST NEWS OF LONG AGO flfhat Wm Happening In Davie Before Tbe D»f* ®f Automobile* and Rolled Ho«e. (Davie Record, Aug. 17, 1910) Miss Matfgie Call spent Wednes day in Winston shopping. p, R, Kimbrough . has returned from a trip to Dallas, Texas. Miss Carrie Foy, of Winston, tbe guest of Dr. and Mrs. A. Z. Taylor. W, W. Stroud, of Statesville, s p e n t Saturday in town with re latives. j£, T. Kelly, of Taylorsville, was here tor the picnic last week. Miss Julia Loedhart, of Rocking ham, is the guests of Mrs. Philip Hanes. j b. Johnstone returned Thurs day from a visit to Bristol, Tenn. Misses Annie, Ella and Margaret Click, of Statesville, were here Thursday for the picnic. Mrs. Dourckka Adams, of South Carolina, came up last week to visit her mother, Mrs. E. H. Pass. Clegg Clement will leave in a few days for Atlanta, where he goes to enter a business college. MissGertrude Terrell, of Ral eigh, is visiting in town the guest of Mrs. A. T. Grant, Jr/ . Miss Gertrude Pakner, of Albe marle, is tbe guest of Miss Minnie Coley. MIssClara Ford, of Statesville spent last week in town the guest of Miss Mary Meroney. Miss Gassle Booe, of Davidson, returned home Sunday after spend ing several days here with friends and relatives. E. H. Morris left Sunday for Concord, where he goes to assist in the campaign. :C. F. Sheek and daughter Miss Fannie, of Bowers Hill, Va., spent part of last week in town with re latives. C. L. Granger, of Charlotte, who has been spending.iome time here with his parents, returned home last week. Miss Frances Jones, of Walnut Cove, is the guest of Mrs. M. E. Hardison, on Salisbury street. Dr. M. D. Kimbrough was taken to Long’s Sanatorium at Statesville Monday evening for treatment. G. C. Bracken and Mrs. Emma Troutman, of Rowan county were united in marriage near the Ma sonic picnic grounds Thursday. Rev. W. R. Ketchie performed the ceremony. Tbe 32nd annual Masonic picnic held at Clement Grove Thursday was a grand success in every parti cular, hetween $1,200 and $1,500 being raised for the orphanage. The crown was estimated a 5 ,0 0 0 , Mr. and Mrs. Ray Clement, of Asheville, were among the picnic visitors Thursday. Miss Myrtle Graham, of States- ville, was the guest of Miss Octa Horn last week. • Thos. Stone, of Atlanta, spent last week in town witfchis mother, Mrs. F. M. Johnson. MissEvelyn Shepherd ai d Elza beth Sherrill, of Statesville, were quests of Miss Bonnie Brown last week. Kimbrough Sheek who was hurt I Iy when struck by a freight train last week is getting along nicely. Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Henley, of lc Hiond1 Va., were among the P1QOic visitors here, last week. ey spent several days with rela tes and friends. j ^Ir‘ ^ rs- E. L. Gaither and ^aUgbti 2 1. *935 left m ’Misses IaneaId Dorithy ^ ayfo rLeesburgt Va.. toPadafewdayswith Mrs- Gaith. M 8 «ster, Mrs. Trundle. ' SDont ' ^°**lns> °f Courtney, With T 6ral days Iast week *n -townWlll>relatives. Drivers Must Secure License. The driver’s license.law enacted by the last legislature will become effective November I, and appiica tions for these license will be avail able September i; Thosewhodrive cars will find it to their interest to file applications promptly. No charge will be made for li cense provided application is made before. November r, but after that date a fee of $1.00 will be charged. Oncesecured1 the license will be permanent until revoked for cause .The main purpose of tbe law, of course, is not revenue, but to pro vide a right dependable weapon with which to strike at those who either have no business behind the steering wheel because of physical or mental incapacities, or who habi tually abuse the privileges of the highway to th£ hazard of others. The chances are that the new law will apply to the latter group in particular, .because it is understood that no rigid examination will be conducted into the actual driving qualifications of the applicants, therefore it can hardly be expected that any great number of physical or mental defectives will be weeded out. But motoiists, taeretofere indiffer ent to the possibility of fines, and willing to take a gamble against a run-in with tbe will take seriously this matter of a revocation of their driver’s license, because it sanctions a privilege, which if removed would bring right much inconvenience and embarrassment. At-Ieast that, is the way the law makers figured. It may be interesting to note, too, that after November it will be antawful for cities to charge, for a city driver’s license. There are a great many cities.now collecting this privilege fee, and under the new law it is expected that many thousands of dollars will be saved to urban residents of the state.— Statesvill§ Daily. ^ever Know When They Are Beaten. The liquor crowd, it SeemSti never know when they are beaten, and are forever and eternally trving to find some loophole in the law whereby they may establish their rum em poriums in dry localities. There is a persistent rumor that a liquor store will be attempted" to be established in Madison, Rockingham county, despite the fact that the county voted dry in the election last month. „. . Wade H. Gentry, of Madison, who managed the dry forces in that city in the recent election, when ques tioned stated that be bad heard some tajk of the opening of such a place but so far as he knew nothing has developed to date and he thought there'was little chance of such ac tion, especially since Rockingham ciunty on July 9 voted against con trol by a majority of 519 votes. Before the' election some of the wets” contended that under the PaaqUotank act which Rockingham was a part^an election was unneces sary and there was talk of opening a liquor store and testing the niatter out. This may be what Madison is contemplating.—Ex. • Painless Dentist. Patient—Have you been a dentist long. , ... 'D entist—No. I used to be a steel riveter but I got too shaky to worfc oh high buildings and bridges. .. C otton growers in eastern Itforth Carolina are /reporting heayy jp- festations of bpll weevils on Jow lands. Some of the ,cotton on high fields shows a slight damage. ~ Early In the eighteenth century growing girls weie called flappers: from a fancied resemblance to younjjf-ducks. Recalls Old Times. Raleigh News and Observer. “We have had some real sheriffs; in Iredell county,” recalled William W. Leinster. “I well remember one time, about 30 years ago, wheji we nearly had a lynching. It never occurred because-of the resourceful-' ness of Sheriff W. A. Summers. “A negro had’raped a woman-,- killed her and thrown her body In a well,” continued Mr Leinster. ‘‘I didn’t know anything about the ne^ gro being caught, b'ut that Sunday, morning in-Statesville I went-down- town and saw a crowd of about 3,0 0 0 angry people milling about the jail ‘•Presently, Sheriff Bill as we call; ed him, arrived to lock up his pris oners. He was leading the negro by a rope tied around his middle, and he was carry ing a pistol that looked to be a foot long. “Seeing me, be said ‘come here and take this rope ’ I grabbed tht rope and led the negro behind the sheriff, wno waved his gun at the crowd and said ‘the first damned: man that lays his band on ,this nig ger is gonna get killed.’ The crowd fell backhand we got through with out any trouble. ;.£ "Fearing that the jail would ncSj; hold the prisoner Sheriff Bifl decided to take him to Charlotte. On the day he was to ,be moved, a crowd gathered at the Jfront of the 'jail. Sheriff Bill-freed tbe negro and told him to walk down the street to the next corner, crawl through a hole in a board fence and get in a ^car riage. that would be waiting for Him there with guards. Deputies-,wefe:. stationed; along the back street that the negro took, but. because he was not shackled or guarded nobody sus’ pected he was culprit. He got in the carriage, which was pulled by two-fine horses, and was 20 miles away before the mob knew he was gone. . . “ “In about 60 days he was tried and convicted, and shortly after wards was banged for his crime,” said Mr. Leinster. -V Peddlers Are Pushiog Their Wares. Peddlers, those fellows-who live in distant cities and trek here annually seeking customers, are only, pushing the sale of their wares in the opinion of ait-exchange.-' They are to be -commended for their aggressiveness, but the prospective” buyers should take a different view; The Augusta .(KansaB) Gazette suggests the following: The next time a peddler raps at your door greet, hiin with: a smile, and these questions: - Do you pay (axes to support our streets, public schools, and other public'institutions?” . - Do you support or contribute to our churches? Do you contribute anything to worthy community projects? ■ . Are you a membeFof the Augusta Chamber of Commerce? . Do you. spend the majority of the monev/you make here in Augusta: like our business men are doing? >; Are yra eligible to .vote in AuguBta in any election? ( If the peddler stays Jong enough to hear all of your questions and if he fails to show that he is one of your community builders; you have your strongest poinffor refusing to listen to his sales iine. A' pleasant good day will send him on his way. What Wonld It Take 1V> NUMBER 5 Fifty Years' Service to Childhood. Mills Home, of Thomasville1 which is now. linked with the Ken nedy Home, of Kinston, under the general title of North Carolina Bap tist Orphanage, with Dr. I. G. Greer as,superintendent; is celebrating it® fiftieth anniversary.' For a half century the Baptist institution has been caring for the fatherless and motherless little children of tbe State and giving them that training which has enabled many of them to go out into the world and rise to prominence in their chosen fields. Tbe late JohnJEL Mills, alumnus of Wake Forest, teacher and editor, observed the hardships imposed upon the orphaned childhood of the Stateoversixty years ago. He saw. the little ones being “bound out” to work for their board at early and tender ages. He saw them imposed upon. He observed the impositions under which they were forced to exist in the homes of- those who naturally loved best their own chil dren., His heart went out to these little ones. He conceived the idea of establishing a home which would be their very own—a home where they would be trained to do useful Bjork ,and encouraged, to play—a home where they would be educated and trained to assume their place in society on an equal footing with Other children. Mr. Mills was a man,. who once having dreamed resolved to make his dreams come true. By the sheer 4o^e and ,influence of his magnetic •personality, Dr. if/W*.-Spilfriftn tells us, Mr. Mills won over tbe Masons of -North Carolina to the idea of establishing a state orphanage at Oxford. For several'years he was genera! manager of this orphanage. Twelve years later his work at. Ox ford and bis personal influence mov ed the Baptist State Convention to open an orphanage to aid in the great work being done at tbe Ma sonic Orphanage! - - After all preliminaries had been clei red a I i t 1 1 e institution at Thomasville began its great work of service to the children of the. State in 1885. When the state conven tion met,-August 5 , 1885, ihe Mit chell building was going up at a |- rapid clip, and the efforts of Mr. Mills to raise funds for the orphan age had met with a fair degree- o.t success.' Tbe rest ofJi he story is too long for the telling The people of the State arie well acquainted with Some of tHe outstanding' characters who contributed to the steady pro gress of the institution. -It is un necessary to Sayj more about the noble endeavors of Mr- Millsi or to point to the work of Rev. Iesse B. Boone, the excellent publicity given the work by the IaterArchibald John-' son, for 30 years editor of Charity ahd Children, and John Arch Mo:, Millan1 the present editor, the splen did-progress attained tinder the leadership of the late Dr. M. L' Keslerv third superintendent of the home, and the rapid strides now be ing made under Dr. Greer. Allthis is known to the Baptists of North Carolina and to many others of dif ferent faiths. It is enough here to pay tribute, to the inestimable ser vice to humankind rendered by this institution which was born of .the dreams of a devout and kindly man whose heart was quickened by his love of IlUle children.—Winston Journal. - • ' ' Excellent, order in the: church and-abouit it^wgs n^ed during the or; two nights^ a little shpotiug, cursing, and. hitting people>in- the head with flash; lights or-blackjacks, on the way home, was reported, but.notH- ing to worry about.—Wilkes Jour nal Patriot. " TheRecord » $1 per yearr' - ~ V * * AU Settle. Affable Traveler ^ Do ro|py. Strangers settle here,- landlord? - Host—They all settle. An’ them Without no more baggage than you have'got has; tb settle in advance; CGreenland is the largest island in the world. It'has over :8oo,ooo square miles- of surface,- most ot which is covered by an ice sheet. Daily, Must Vaccinate Dogs. By this time people should be fol ly aware of the fact that the last legislature passed a law mandatory that dog-owners have their dogs vac cinated against rabies — In other WGrds we want to see a sure-enough effort made to enforce its provisions. We want to see peo ple who are careless "enough not to have their dogs vaccinated brought to task. . In enforcing the law the township rabies inspectors will have their hands-full. * ' There is also a law that,requires that a fixed sum.be paid each year as taxes on dogs. We would like to see this law enforced to the ,latter and wish at this time to commend tax listers for their diligence in get ting so many dogs listed this year. We have no objection' to anyone keeping dogs.. They are intelligent animals and as such are hlghiy prized. Itris the stray dogs and the worth less type that are most likely to have hydrophobia because they roam all over several townships and are th< ones most apt to come into contact with. a mad dog A person who real Iy prizes his dog is going to pay tax es on it, admit ownership and have it vaccinated. Unless he takes these precautions' tbe animal Bhould be killed on sight. This would be good for the good dogs and would lessen the danger of rabies to humans.—Ex The Voice Of Love. There has been some very interest ing services held on-the lawn, at the Baptist Church each Sunday night, since the middle of June. . ' Rev. A. T. Stontamire, the pastor, hats been using-some subjects that have cauaedmany -a-.person^ to open his eyes and to begin:io' think, foV himself. His lectures, have ,ibeei built up such a manner that he never fails to- holdvthe interest of, tbe adults as well.''. Those loving the Lord can feel His presence in each word. Tbe musicof theevening services has been wonderful with every on< taking an active j>art, which adds to the interest, and blessings of the meetings. This little story was told to me so I will pass it on to you. A pastor and his little son went tr church one Sunday morning and at they went in tbe door, the collectior plate was on a .little iable, the sor> noticed tbat his father .’dropped a half dollar. After the service, and th; y were ready to go home the pastor went to get the collecti6n.«hd it was just fifty, cents.. The little boy walked along in quiet solitude for a long time and.then said to bis father. “-Father, if yoTi had put more in, you would have gotten more out? This is my tbougbt to you if you put more in the evening services you will receive more from them. So when you .come, come with the expectations of putting a lot in the song service and you will receive a greater blessing. There has also been some extra fine male quartets which every one seemed to enjoy. : Those that come one night always delight in coming, again. The ser vice in the open air keepd every one cool and no one suffers-;from the ex treme heat of the .building. - There is always a good breeze in the air. Come One? Gome AU and enjoy the Sunday, night service, on the lawn at the back, of the CooIeemee Baptist Church each JSunday evening at eight o’clock. Shoes in 28 A twenty eight-year-old. pair of shoes had their first shine this morning when their owner, Mr. Jim Shernll, of CPncord township, who is 82 years old, .was in town and de cided that the slio^s were entitled to a bit of furbishing; considering their long years of service, He Went intor Hooper’s shoe-shop and the !shoes were shined by Elmer Morrison. Mr. Sherrill safd- the shoes were bought at Sherrill-White Shoe Company 28 years ago.5—Statesville Billopp on Thunder* storms. (Winston Sentinel ) (3ne recalls that as a child Ije was prone to run into the house, slam doors shut and hunt a .dark corner when the thunder began to roll across the sky and keen bolts of lightning dashed here and here And adulthood with its maturer judgment has never quite succeeded in banishing the fear of thunder storms. But these suggestions from !Chris topher Billopp1 of the Baltimore EveningSun on how to handle thunderstorms help out a great deal. They are so practical that a ■ few readings possibly may have the ef fect of preventing anyone from ev;r having any more trouble ,with thunderstorms:. “1, Asthestorm approaches shut all the windows, selects roomi.with* out a fireplace, put on a silk dress and sit on a piano stool with': glass' feet. •‘2. If the telephone shouldering don’t pay any attention to it. pre tend it’s a wrong number. “3 . Try to, banish the ideiiJthat every bolt of lightning is aimed di rectly at you. Count the nuinber of trees, chimneys, cornices, animals and human.beings in the vicinity it is just as likely to hit. If vou« are good at mathematics take the total' ahd estimate your chances of escap ing. “4. Think up some, goodidted that you' may pledge;' vourseii .toy perform if "you are* spared, suchVvasi- becoraidg¥scoUt'leader;^ Sunday schoorblass or’ going;'a<! a' missionary to China. ’ / 1 " " 5 Avoidcowsin fields, barns and carrying an army rifle on. your shoulder with a bayonet fixed and pointed upward. v "6. It you have children of an-im pressionable age,1 remind them tbat. there is really nothing to be afraid of. Discourage boisterousnesS 'and laughter and explain to them that a thunderstorm is a solemn occasion. 7. Keep away from, cats, -dogs and other electrically charged pets. “ 8 As the storm passes do no£ be in too great a hurry to go outside. You never know when a mischiev ous flash of lightning may be -lag ging behing just for the purpose of suddenly leaping down, and giving you a scare. !9 . When you. are convinced that the shock troops.have passed; over and are now attacking another sec- tion of the city,- put 'on your wdrk • ing clothes and go out and put jjack the driveway, that has washed down into the garden. - 'J- ‘*10. By this time you will prob ably be very hungry. If you cook by electricity and the storm has done something to tbe curreht dpen a can of beans. ; } :- Highway Patrol Got Lost At Louisburg. “If reports are true.” writes T. W. Duke, in tbe Raleigh Union Her ald, “the highway patrol regiment got lost.in Louiaburg while. looking for Louisburg. They should have, in place of bullet-proof. windshields, Windshields with the map - of North Carolina, on them , with ^instructions ' how to read it... But you gotta; hand it to them. They surely know how; to put on a show. Oh, boy! those new gray shiners!- The entire fleet,: beaded by the generalissimo, ;'aure made a pictareque sight as they they moved north oh Person Street. While they missed the Jynched negro, lynchers, and the town of LouiBhurg. they put on a gSftd ahoife:—Ex.|'| Joins Harmony SchfwL W. H. Adams, of -Hiddenite. Al- ^ exender county. has been elected; teacher of ,agricul ture in the Har- ncony Farm Life School, Ireddl county, succeeding Tal H. St^fford^ who fas been given a federal job« = !,i " I I " ' - * ' * .'' " r— . • • • - - v -^.: ?.-. ,• ;• v'.." • 'J/.: • A i J*Hri li' Atj6 U^Tf i S f r A V S l t i d o f t f ) , m o c k s v i M , » • THE DAVlE RECORD. C. FRANK STROUD - • Editor. Member National Farm Grange. TELEPHONE Entered atthe Postoffice in Mocks- yille, N. C.. as Second-class Mail matter, March 3.1903. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: ONE YEAR. IN ADVANCE : - * I 00 SIX MONTHS. IN ADVANCE - S SO The price of meat and tobacco keeps soaring skyward. The trouble with most of us forgotten men is that we have neither meat nor tobacco to sell. More than one hundred thousand voters have signed an agreement-in Gook county, Illinois, that they will not vote for Franklin Roosevelt for president in 1936. Franklin, that sounds mighty bad. President Roosevelt remarked on the morning after the Rhode Island election a couple of weeks ago., that he didn’t know they' were holding an election In that state. Ye gods and little fishes. Jlm Farley, leading Catholic poli tician, and head of the democratic party in this and other countries, is touring the Hawaiian Islands Jim must think the donkey party is go log to need some votes from these islands next year. 5 Senator King Fish Long, of Louisiana, announces that be has decided to run for the -democratic presidential nomination in 1936 . He also announced that if President Roosevelt was renominated, he would run as an independent unless the Republicans nominated some one he could support. Just what Republican the King Fish could support is not'known. Well, per- -haps the more in the race the mer rier it will be. The-woods are full of democrats who have thrown their hats into the ring, or are about to throw them 'in, for the various state offices next year. With the sales tax, the liquor laws, and other -legislation that was passed by that body of lawmakers in Raleigh last winter, it would seem that it would take a fellow with a good deal of nerve to ask for any office next year. One of these days the good people of North Carolina are going to rise up in their wrath and send a new bunch of men to rep resent the state. : The Davie County Fair will be held in Mocksville the first week in October. It is time to begin mak ing arrangements to be here for this occasion. Saveyour big water mel- ous, pumpkins, turnips, cucumbers your best tobacco, cotton and corn, to'put .on exhibition. We want to make this the biggest and best fair ever held in the county. Owing to the fact that the Masonic picnic was called off this year, it is also hoped to make the fair a home-coming oc casion, when many former Davie folks will come back home to spend afe w days around the scenes of their childhood. Rogers-Asd Post Killed Will Rogers, famous actor and comedian, and Wiley' Post, noted flyer, were killed last Thursday night, when their plane crashed while flying from Fairbanks to Point Barrow, Alaska. In the death of these two famous men the country is bowed down in sorrow. Their deaths are mourned by tfce whole world.- L"" Republican Gain Is Not - Disputed. Washington-—The six New Eng landstatesof Maine, Vermont, New- Hampshire, Massachusetts, Rhode Island and Connecticut would go. Republican if the. presidential elec tion were held tomorrow or the day after. That, at least, is the private opin ion of the strategists of the Demo cratic political machine. Theysuspected as much, even be fore the Republican congressional victory in Rhode Island. Now they’re virtually convinced. Rhode Island Democrats, occupy ing administration posts, including some smart politicians, were pre dicting weeks ago that Judge Risk, the Republican candidate, would defeat Mr. Prince, the Democratic candidate. . But they didn’t expect quite such a hard wallop. The size of the G. 0. P. majority surprised them. Farmington News. Miss Mapjaret Brock, of Greensboro spent the week-end with her parents Mr. and Mrs. M. B. Brock: The many friends of W. F. James will be delighted to team that he was able to visit Mr. and Mrs. Will Groce, of Mocedonia, Saturday. , - Mrs- C. A. Hartman and Mrs. Nell Lash Iv made a business trip to Mocksville, Monday. Mrs. Ray Parker has .returned to her home in Winston-Salem Thursday. After spending some time with her father. J. D. Furcbes- Miss Virginia. Furches who has been quite ill for the past few days is some what, improved. Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Johnson. Jr., and Fred Furches are spending thiB week in Boone as the guests of . Mrs. Johnson’s parents Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Green. Mrs. Wesley Johnson has returned from a delightful visit with her daughter Mrs Mrs. Harold Davis in Winston-Salem. Mr. and Mrs. Zeb Smith, of Winston- Salem were the guests this week of Mr. Smith's mother Mrs. E C. Smith. Miss Elizabeth Walker, of Winston-Sa lem spent last week as the guest of Miss Leona Graham, of Miss Leona Graham. The condition of G. H. Grabam is some what improved at this writing. Messrs. Ralph James and Evans Lakey spent Tuesday in Winston Salem. Mrs. E. C. James and daughters Misses Nell and.Elizabetb were Sunday visitors of Mrs. A. C Walker in Winston-Salem. ~ When you come to ,(Surt next week be sure and put' an extra dollar in your pocket for The Re cord. Hundreds of our subscribers are behind with their subscriptions, despite the fact that democratic papers are saying that all farmers have plenty o t/money, and that prosperity is sweeping over the land. If you canH come to court, send us. a dollar by your neighbor, ot mail it to us. We have many bills to pay and' no money to pay them with. Your help at this time will be doubly appreciated. ■ Sheffield News. - Crops are looking better in onr commu- since the refreshing showers of the past three days.— ...... ■ .Mrs. John Thompson, of Winston-Salem is spending this week with her son; Odell Thompson. " - ~ Mr. and Mrf. John Hill and daughters Misses Blanche and Edrice, . .of Harmony spent Sunday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Cleary. - - - Aronnd 50 friends and relatives gather ed at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Odell Thompson and. gave him a surprise birth day dinner Sunday in honor of his 27th birthday.Roy Cleary and family visited home folks Sunday. . Announcement. There will be a lawn, patty at Oak Grove church Saturday nite. Aog 31. Cakes, ice cream, lemonade, etc., will be :sold. Tbe public is'cordially invited. Proceeds to go for the benefit of the church. ' . Mr. and Mrs. Robert Faucette, of Cbattanooga,' are visiting rela tives here this week. Lawh Party. "r There will be a lawn party at Bethlehem Methodist church oh Saturday night, Aug. 24th. Many good things to eat and drink, such as ice cream, cake, fried chicken, sandwiches and other things. Everybody cordially invited. Proceeds go to benefit of the churchy_______________ Dulin’s News. Mr. and Mrs. L E. McDaniel .and two . Children Jack and James, of Washington. D. C., also Mr. and Mrs. W. -K. .McDaniel spent their vacation here with Messrs. Mc Daniels parents, Mr. and Mrs. Q. S. Mc Daniel. - .Mr. and Mrs. -W. "A. Ellis, of near Cor- natzer spent'a few/days at the Beach.- Mr. and Mrs; Albert McDaniel, of Rich mond, Ya.. spent their vacation with. Mr. Daniel parents Mr. and Mrs. -. A. S. Mc Daniel: : ; : .The Annual Home Coming- and revival meeting will be. held at Dulin’s - M. P- church. Sept. 1st. Everybody is cordially invited to come and, bring your friends . and enjoy the.day with us... Mrs Ri H. Adams, of Greensboro and LifirsLFrank Tborpa.'of.Winston-Salem and 'Mfss Hilda Adame,:"of. New York?'spent bne day last week .with Mr and Mrsi A, J. Hendrix. --^'"LL .. 7 :.'. ' 1I1.' -The youug'ladies of Dulin's M. P. church are sponsoring-a Iawji party Saturday, evening Aug. 31, at 7:30. Everybody, is ' cordially invited to come and- bring your ■friends. . The net proceeds, goes, for the - ; benefit of the church, -. / Refreshing showers-.- have > fallen, L in this^section sinceSafurday-rO yer; poc inch of ram iell up to Monday Ellec Iorth Carolina I - OllflllrinilT w D avieC ount/ f In Superior Court Mary Dismuke Mayberry,: and Betty Dismuke Allen vs John Disnyike, Samuel Dismuke, Lillian Dismuke, Lizzie Dismuke, and J.Irving Fulton, Executor of~ the Ehtate of Adam Dismuke, . Notice Of Re-Sale! j Under and by virtue of authority conferred- upon the Undersigned Commissioner hy the terms of a cer tain judgment entered by the' Clerk of the Superior Court jof Davie. County;, on the 27th ~day of May, 1935,'and !pursuant to an order of resale entered on the 17th day of August, 1935, by tbe said Clerk of the Superior Court, the undersigned wilLbfferlor re-sale.' at. the Couiit- house door of Davie County, in the city of .Mocksville,'on September 3, 1935, at 12:30 o’clock p. m ;'the 'fol-' lowing described property, torwitr “Adjoining the land of Caleb Bow den on the .North (now- Loii Bmitb and Alice Spillman); Luckett Etchi- son-on .the East (now B. W. Allen); Albert Phelps .on the .South .' (now Jobn LonRl-Bnd-Tdary Ann.-Beach.amp on the West (now C M, Foster.) coh- tainng 25 acres, more or less.” The above described ’ Dropartjr is located in Farmington Township,fha .Ikflnl . TfiOlI Notice of Sale of Land. Under'and by virtue of the power of sale contained in a" certain mort gage executed by Mary A. Boscb (Widow), Annie Buseh Ijames and husband, M D. Ijames, dated De cember 7. 1926,. and recorded in Book 21, Page 107, in the office of Register of Deeds for Davie County, North Carolina, default having been made in the pavment of the 'indebtedness thereby secured, and demand having been made for sale, the undersigned Mortgagee will sell at public auction to the highest bidder for casb, at the Courthouse door' in Mocksville, N C.. at twelve o’clock noon, on the 14th day of September, 1935, the following described property, located in Davie County, North Ca rolina.'AU of two certain tracts or par cels of land, located, lying and being situated in Calabaln Township, on both sides of State Highway No. 75 lead ing-from Mocksville to States ville, adjoining tbe lands of Z. N.Anderson, J. A. Tutterow, Mrs.Saliie Smoot, Mrs. Tabitha McMahan, Alice C. Anderson, R. S. Powell, G. S. Anderson and others, and bounded as follows:First Tract—Beginning at a stone, J.:A. Tutterow's corner, and runs E. deg. S. 14 87 chains to a stone; thence S. 3 deg. W. 2.07 chains to a stone;'thence E. 3 deg. S.; crossing State Highway No. 75..11.82 chains to a stone; corner of Sallie Smoot and Tabitha McMahan land, thence S. 27 deg. W. 7.50 chains to a stone; thence S. 37 deg, W 3 50 chains to a stone; thence S. 57 deg. W- 1.50 chains to a stone; thence S. 45 deg, W. 12.25 chains to a stone; thence S. 72 deg. Wl 5 23 chains ^to a stone; thence N 15 deg. W. 22.12 chains Io a stone, Alice C, Anderson’s corner; thence S. 75 deg. W. 3 17 chains to a stone, Alice C. Anderson’s corner; thence S 15 deg. W..3.17 chains to a stone, Alice C. Anderson’s corner; thence Si 75 deg. W. 15.78 chains to a stone; thence S. 15 deg. E. 10.74 chains to a stone on -State Highway No. 75; thence with said Highway No. 75 S. 81 deg. E. 2.50 chains; N. 68 deg. E. 7 50 chains; N. 83 deg. TS, 4.06 chains to a stone on South Bide of said State Highway No. 75; thence S. 4 64 chains to a stone; thence' S. 15 deg. E. 10 chains to a stone in Saliie Smoot’s and Tabitha McMa han; thence S. 75 deg, W. 9.90’chains to a stone; thence S. 34 deg. W 5 chains to a stone, thence W. 4 deg: va riation 14 chains to-a stone! thence N. 34 deg. W.. 1.85 cuains to a stone,Mrs. Annie- Er Anderson’s corner; thence N. 2 deg; E 9 §0 chains to a stone, corner of C. S. Anderson’s fi acre lot; tbenc^ N. 58 deg. E. 7 chains to a stone; thence N. 25 deg. E. 4 66 chains to a stone on South side of State Highway No. 75; thence rwith said Highway N. 52 deg. W. 8.86 chains to a stone; thenee.across said Highway No. 75 N. I chain to a stone, thence N.,8 6 deg. W1 9-.90 chains tb_ a stone, thence N. -21 chains to' said Highway. No.. 75, thence with said Highway N. 39 deg. '-W. 7.66 chains to a bridge at the branch; thence up -and- with said branch N. 59 deg. E: 3 50 chains; N.' 79 deg. E. 3 chains; N. 17 deg. H 2.50 chains; N 63~deg. E 2 -chains; S1 44 deg. E. 2.50'fehains; E. 3 40 chains; thence N. 7 90 chains to a stone in G. S: Andersonlg outside line; thence E. 2 deg. S. ,2.50 chains to a Btone, thence N. 7.93 chains to a sour- wood; thence > E. .2 deg. S. 22 73 chains to a stone; .thence S. 5 deg W. 2133 chains to the BEGINNING,containing 175 acres, more or less. Second Tract—Ad joining the lands of G. S. Anderson and others, and described as_Iollowa;l BEGINNING at a stong. ZT N. Anderson’s corner, and runs E. 4 deg S. with said At- derson’s line 5 72 chains to a stake or stone on West ^ifle of the Noah’s Ark Road; thence with said road S. 8 deg. W. 11.13 chains to N. G High way No 75; thence with said -High way W. 4 deg"N, 5 40 chains: to Z. N. Anderson’s line on the Wast aide of Beaver Creek; thence N 3'deg E with. Z; N. Anderson’s IiQe 1113 'chains't6 .the'BE!G.TNNiNG/!!i^iitain-taining 6.18 acres, more or: SAVE AND.EXGEJP-T 155: acres Joyneii B. G.' released., by the Greensborij ;jointj Latham, Schools Io - OpMi Sept 9th. The Mocksville and Davie county schools will open the tall term on M o n d a y , Sept.'9th- It-SeefflS th at the infantile paralysis, sit nation is much better in 'Eastern Carolina, and up to this writing not-a case has been reported in Dayie.. The list of Mocksville' teachers will be available next week, it is thought. Atleast two of the last year faculty will not return here this fall. Namesoftheteachers will ap pear in The Record as soon as Supt. F. W. Robinson turns it over to us. State Highways Rerout ed. State highways 80 and. 90 are to be rerouted through Mocksville if plans already approved by the State Highway commission are carried out according to information obtained here. Highway- 8 0 which leads from Salisbury through the main part of town on north to Yadkinville and into Virginia will be -rerouted through town and changed from South Main street to Salisbury street which will take it away from the square and strike North Wilkesboro Street. Number - 9 0 which leads from the east through town on west to Statesville will be changed, and intersect number 8 0 one block south of the square and follow it on out North Wilkesboro "street to the junction one mile from the square. These changes will not shorten .the distance materiallp but will elimi nate the short turns encountered at the square which' is confusing to many out-of-town' motorists and will carry the through, traffic one block west of' the; courthouse and do much to avoid congestion there. Robert Morris Day. One of the most events in “the lives of the members of the Order of E aste m S tar is the-. Robert Morris Day. which will be held in Greens boro at the Masonic and Eastern Star Home on-Thursday, Aug. 29th. Robert Morris was the founder of the Order of Eastern Star and this annual event is held each year in his memory. It is hoped that eyery member of the order may make plans now to attend this meeting and assured of a most cordia^ welcome. It is a real pleasure to visit the Ma sonic and Eastern Ster .Home in GreenBboroandchatwith fhese hap py ojd inmates and learn from them, just what this home means to them._ Vn.'- Swicegood Reunion. The Swicegoc 'J; reunion was held at J. Li Swicegood’s, In Davie county Aukust 11. 1935. One hundred and ten friends and kinfolks were present cousin Mr: and Mrs. Rice and mother also cousin George Swicegoodi from Hopewell, Va., were -present. The oldest person present was Mrs. Mar tha MouldinLthe youngest was Lon nie W. Deal AU enjoyed a bounti- fuPdinner on the lawn. Servicesin the evening by Rev. Grady Sheek, from Kannapolis: Officers; H. g! Sheeks. President; V. A. Swicegood] Vice Pres; L. F. Swicegood, Sect; M. R. Swicegood, Treas. If any person, anywhere can give any record of father, brothers, sis ters or children of Andrew Swicegood Please write to L. F. Swicegood. Statesville, N CH Route I. Will be much pleased to hear from some one as we want to get a record of the old Swicegood generation. Andrew Swicegood died April 28, 1862. The next meeting will be held at K. A. S m a goo’s, on the 2nd Sunday in August, 1936, in IredeU County, on the old Mocksville-Statesville road. Miss NellieReavisand Marshall Reynolds, of near Courtney, Yadkin J County, were united in marriage in the office of F. R. Leagans, the of. Relating Magistrate, on Saturday afternoon, Ahg, ioth. I CAN BACK UP WHAT THE ATHLETES SAY: CAMELS NEVER INTERFERE WITH MY 'CONOITION/ / ANO I GET A LIFr WITH A CAMEL, TOO ?/7, CAMELS OONr UPSET MY NEftVES Oft AFFECT MV 3 WIND THEY ARE SO MILD ANO TASTE RICHER AND SMOOTHER CYRIL Ra HARRISON 7-Goal.Pdlo Star ARCHITECT E.M. Johoson CJtM CIiS .-5.—.—“-. : VJ ■ .w ytcciow y, u.:vv„i,,.lj|»u«u, ; .StockLand Bank on Jufly 27. .1929,1 Lippard, .•and 25.13 acres released on Decern-i Martin, IT. ;A.-;v —143 her 31," 1929. ' - - " ' . |FhiffiP*> J- 'The DUrehaser at the sale Will^heH^fiTC^ P.- Notice of Sale of Land Foir T axesForT he-Y ear 1934 as Provided ' By Acts 1927 and Am endm ents Thereto Under' requirements of ,act 1927 and subsequent amendments thereto, the un dersigned will, on’ MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 2,1935 at 12 o’clock Noon in front;of the court bouse door in Mocksville, N: C., sell .for unpaid taxes diie the County of Davie' for the year 1924, the following lands as set out below underjtownship sub-heads the acreage and amount of tax being shown opposite each name in which the tax ie fisted. ■ ■ j A These taxes may be paid on'.or before sale date, by adding accrued cost and any penalties that may attach! CALAHALN TOWNSHIP Nam e. : v Acres Amt. Barksdalej B. W_____-__93% $13.18 Bosch, Mrs.; Mary, Bsti 9 . 3.07 Campbell, Mrs. Mollie .."67' • ■ - 14.44 Campbell, D. T. 63 _ . 8.64 Cleary,' W. A. .™.._...:..203% . 43.65 Dwiggins, Mrs.: Delphia 52 - 9.74 Efird, P. A.,-Est,.™.„„I29J4 -26.80 Efird1 S. B, 52 . 8.11 Felker, Dewey __ .1 7 5.87 Gaithelr, J. B :_ ^.v ^;„; 70% - . 26.84 Gaither, W. L .__99 ■ 14.19 Gaither, ‘ B. F. 59 ' 8.81 Godbyj J. E. _______62. 15.25 Ijames, Mrs, Annie'.— 115 - 30.19 Martin, Mrs. Will ...... 75 ' - : 14.01 Misenheimer, . G. W .— : 1.1 . 2.40 Biphardson, D. L.- 92 '10.15 Stroud, David . 30 . 5.60 Tayse, Carrie B. — — 16% . 3.93 Tomlinson, C. H. ........ 68 „ . 23.75 Tutterow, Mrs.-M, E.;E st:'8 % -, - 2.14 Vickers, J.; F. ------3Vz •: 1.36 Williams, Edna .............41- •• "7.58 " COLORED Clampett, J. W- ....... 7 Vz 2.62 Gorreil1 • Nora —.....:......164 -40.69 Holleman, Hf* H. v. 6 . 6.33 Honpe, Lee" ...............- 76~Vz - ■ ,11.92 Nicholson, J. E. — 36 ' '■ 18.92 Studevant, Eichard .— 11 4.68 Wood, AmahdaV________I. ■ ' 2.02 r. - CLABKSVXLLE- TOWNSHIP . ' Name \ : Acres. Amt. Southern Bailway Co - — $4,572.73- - - 17.62 5.6i: 11.37" VSiOi 2.80 35.6f 9.4S ■10:35" 6.65 4.82 2.29 : 5.64 A6C 6.65 15.45 5.64 -9.08 17.15' 14.08 .-8.18 12.45 7.87 : 3.04 17.45 1C40 sub ' .AOO 8.54 Adams, G. H. Anderson, J. F. Anderson, John Ahderson, . S. A. Baity, Mrs. CIete ■-—.. Baity, D. N. Beck, Mrs. J. A. Roger,' J, Walter Brookshire, J: Brown, P. G: . Crews, A. H. C. Danner, Mrs. W, T ,...: Eaton, B. M . —- Eaton, D. .B. — ------:George, Mrs. Mary.— Graves, J D. & 0. A. Gunter,- Panl. — Hanes, Mrs.:M.'E. v._ -110 _ 52 , - 44% 52 - V 2 77' :. 6 5 45 ■’ --.I- 31 ...... 13 10 9% - 52% „81 . 39 - :. 40 -117 . „r : so :TTinrTrHj R. M.Hutchins, M rs^Jr :A. ^Jordan, H.Jordan, Mrs.’ A. D. — 29. ^ i -Amt. 17.10 50.9* 7.42 25.98 57!25 2.02 13.18 29.81 6.89 3.22 5.51 1.08 1.82 Amt. $18.22 - 38.04 - 9.12 3.80 . 8.14 13.91 5.98 - 2.86 5.01 52.65 ' 28.40 44.36 18.25 .43.44 4.62 19.05 21.86 13.30 13.752.99 4.39 . 7.35 37.09 9.77 11.29 5.00 646.17 10.67 . 6.46 1.73 3.41 47.86 6.46 - 6.48 1:51 ' 22.95 ' 9.55 6.12 10.46 -5.08 ''26.46 20.49 .17.05 2.83 . 27.78 11:52 ■ 6.71 - 26.63 ' 6.43-7768 5^2 1.11 290 ■ "497 Mason, John. H; V.:____io . - Peebles, ..James, Est. .!_.14 FARMINGTON TOWNSHIP ... Name'..: ^ ( - -. A c r e s Amt Allen, Maty Ann Itf ; fev $2.77 ^ on, -~ ^ ,~ ri--2 5 5 ^Allen, Mrs,. J.- E. is ; - - 2 4B a* .132' ' Z lfl-Allenj Geo. W: :. v ' : 5 - a jio' Bahnson,^Hak_.„zi_^r. I Lot Vv 1.78Bailey, B. B: rr_ -.V 4 % :- 2.3] Beauchamp, Mrs. Jerry 80 . V : 25 39 Beauch^pj.i.-.W /- 29 2,10_. . .4i42 Name Acres Smith, E. W. —----- 80% Snyder, W. B- —____:445% Spainhour, A. E . 40 V Stanley, N. K ........— 231% Steelman, Mrs. Dora 424 Stewart, L. M, — 11% ” Stokes, B. M. :__;__- 70 Tutterow, S . B. & M -E. 172 - COLORED Bean, B. 6 . _______39 VHanes, Albert, Est. .... 30 Naylor, W arn er______14% Parks, ,A deline .-.___ I Pattersohi T. C. ______ 7% ' FULTON TOWNSHIP . Name Acres Allen, Andrew W; .V.,..: 81 , . Anderson, Mrs. M, M--UO Barnes, James D.-_____16 Beck, Mrs. .C. C. 16 Burton, B. H. ___..„ . 7% v Burton, L: E. .... 66 Burtonj Clyde C .__... 7 Burton, Sam uel____ I : Branson, Mrs. Mary, Est.;19 Carter, Geo. A . ,—200. Carter, Ernest ------ Il3 Cope, E. L, & M. B. —111 Davis, H. S. - .63 Davis, Mrs. H. S. — 61 Doby, Manuel G . I 9 Fleming, D. J. —_; 94 Forrest, G. F. :__72%- Foster, C. A .,—..__....„: 50 FostSr, Mrs- Steve —..... 76 Foster, J. H., H eirs_____13 ■■Fry,' Miss MoUie -V_21 ' ' ftW, S. D. .— .„ 21% Garwood, S.'E . 145 G-arwood, S. D. _____ 3- Garwood, A. M ._____244 Garwood & Williams'^ I Lot Hairston, Peter W . 2,718 flege, L. M., H e i r s ’70 ^ Hendrix, Mrs. V. V . 24_ ' Kesler,' John B.; Hrirs .4 Lanier, Donald , I Lot ;. Livengood, J,~M. ____ 95% Merrell, Mrs. Br V . ..:V 24 . , Merrell, Harold & Leona' 24 Milton, Mrs. Minnie V ...1 0% Minor, G. W. — ___103 Ni C. Midland By. -AL' 353-10 Pack; Gurrier B ._____i Lot Peebles, W. G . ___ 3 0. Peebles, W. B., H eirs 28 . Batledge, Walter Glenn 108 V - Sain, W. A. „...:____62 Seaford, Wiley C. „LL» 54 V- Steward; E. M . p% Upchurch, Mrs. Mollie .. 87 Weayil, .Howard ,0, __; 79 Williams, F. E. I Lot Wood, J. A. A ._™ ...ipl '; Fouhgj Noah Fi L^V V-2a Ziinmerinah, C. C. Name Acres 42 ' ; .. . COLORED Hairston,'Ada,•-Heirs _ 8 -■ Hairston, .S hack V™ 2'V - Hairston, Mattie .V.L..L 5 % ■ Hairston,VPasehM 6 V Hegei -Peyton 'LvL--LLVVfSV" 4"LLM5.56§OWl8Bi; Ml8; ’ -'-'OM.-B^fly;-::0 .--B:gL&: Carter, Mrs. Mamie’B.L130 .f Ioo k . .. * --- ■__I*11.93 CV10;16 0;msis3491: Donthit, E. J., E s t__117 Douthit, A. B., Est 25 Dunn, W. A ._________16% Dunn, Noah; Est..............38 Dunn1Mja-- G. JH. _____ 7 Foster, Mrs. S allie ___ I Foster, Mrs--E.- A .___ 4 Foster, Mrs. W. F I Lot Fry, D. E. __________ 12 Furehes, D. K ._______219 Goforth, S. T , ____ 90 8-10 Gregory, Mrs: L. A 9 Gregory, HL W. ______24% Gregory, H. C ..... I Lot Griffin, W. G. _______ 38% Griffin, J. F.,- Jr., ___30 Hanes, W. H. ____ % Hanes, Morgan _____ 4% HanesJ D. C. _L;______ 50 Haneline, W ..T. 35 Hauser, M.VL. ....______22 Hauser, W,. H ._______ % Hockaday, _C. L .______ 5% Howard, Ernest _____ 17 % Howard, ,WiUie ______ 18 Hudson, Delia, Est. __ 32 James, EL C. ________132 James, Mrs.jE. C .:____I Lot James, W,- F. ________30 James, C. D. __ 12% James, MrSLM-E., Est. 31 Jones, W. JV _____49 Jones, Bros." ..._______ 97% Kimbrough/ C. L. -____93McCulloh, Mrs. W. F. .. 39 6-100 McDaniel, AV- F. 59% 25 24% 60 58 80% 37 25 2 50 McDaniel,. Mrs. Ida J. .. McEnightj JL W: ____ Montgomery, J. H. -Li... Myers,. W. G. _______ Potts, J. E. ....L______ Ridenhour, G:'_A. __ Biddle, Mrs- H enry ___ Biddle, W. BV_______ Seats, P. TL ____ _. Sheek, E. -F.- ___V....125% Sheek, Mrs. G. W. 31 Sheek, H. G . L — I Lot SmithjLEarly ........___ 35 Smith, B, ;L . J 68 Smith, L. ; A. ________ 3 Smith, Torn L.' ..._.___ 5 Smith, Mrs. G. A . 3% Smith, Mrs. Geneva 15 Smith, Alex __....___ 8% Sofley, Tl W . 66 Tucker, H. CL __.... 37% Thornboro,' C. P. ____21 Truelove, A. G . LL..160 Triyette, S; A . .____1.50 Wagoner, F. A. L:_88% -Walker, S. P. _______ 3% Walker, Boy- G .____.... 37- Walker, S. W. ____L.. 3% Walker1 K. P. ....... 1% Walker,: BV W. AL._61%Ward; Mrs. J. L .___35 Williams,’, Herbert' W. .. 11 Wiiliardi' J. 'S . ____ 96 Williard1 W. JH. .L.._____2 Williard; Sandy LL.. 1% Wismnan, . Tom L 7 Wood, hlrs.-Lizzie .;__11 Bowden, Grady' C. ____35 Walker, Will 32 Johnson; L.^H. _____80% 3ipithi, Mrs. Ada, Est. .. 5 COLOBED Hailey, Chalmue _____4 Bowmkh, Peter, Est. ... Brown, John- ....... Crews, " John __ CuthereU, Tom ____ •Dismuek;JahC __DnBni B- W.' -’- " Dtilih," .Tf.f - : - - Enlin,^A-1SSV' LLLlL—. :Eaton, -Laurav, •_ _Eaton,: JordanijrEst,Eatbm -W. H ... Eaton, S. B. V"""' -L-:. E a t p i i , „L.m^-- HaridinV Lee V L L L . - • 18% 5 4% 5 20 7 12 50 18% 40 3190% 20 3- Amt. 24.39 5.96 5.80 6.13 1.94 4.84 1.33 3.45 2.65 50.94 35.39 4.39 5.95 6.13 13.59 11.25 2.40 1.67 13.87 6.59 3.72 1.38 4.20 11.85 4.43 4.84 36.19 10.04 5.58 6.17 4.84 8.93 9.81 24.18 9.86 14.01 7.1112.06 31.74 3.78 7.24 1.67 8.78 7.28 8.42 26.61 6.21 4.72 7.84 15.61 4.48 1.60 2.90 2.49 5.63 18.37 11.82 6.07 17.30 26-35 22.07 5.10 12.33 1.32 4.41 15.35 8.63 6.89 14.65 5.68 .72 7.43 2.55 9.04 4.54 8.07 3.66 1.73 1.73 2.69 3.77 1.54 5.64 2.02 6.07 14.00 3.72 8.47 11.63 17.34 6.55 1.73 5.05 IeciFAPlA VACAfi^ el Roirfe--* PiN N EY O F T H E F<^ OVElj it) NteR H o l \N telSl IffM A TTER P O P - . MA-AM’ *NoO A1PE ^oiw’TISqiM SvjuT'-fe-tt EVES ■AM7> +U»-b Oo r VeVK -HAiJiB ttREGfLAR FELLI Plhiwe-AD S T AM D U P j IF •YOU F I V E CHC ice. CREAM so fl AMD you dpaHT H R e e HOWIWOUUO *YOU jll-E£CHE m e s c a l i k e MOVJ, COME OKJ _O ust om e m o re JUESTlOhJ AKJO TWGhJ ^OU VJi 1_L KKJOW VOUG SCHOOL. LESSOkJ SusooaV 'et Peeve I oh! Local Page) RECORD. MOC KSVILLE- N C i was Mrs. Mar- Jineest was Lon- Ijoyed a bounti- Ivn. Services in I. Grady Sheek !Officers: H. q! I A* Swiceeood iwiceeood. Sect’ I eas'- Iwhere can eive T> brothers, sis- Jidrew Swiceeood I Swiceeood, bute I. Will be Ir from some one } reIord of the !ration. Andrew SI 28, 1862. The p held at K. A. 2nd Sunday in dell County, on Statesville road. |is and Marshall ourtney, Yadkin in marriage in pagans, the of. on Saturday Itl'." Can back up |*T THE ATHLETEsi } CAMELS NEVER g ERFERE WITH SY 'CONDITION/ 1 I OET AHFrBh a camel, tooJ RCHVTEa . Jolmsoa , / Acres .— 117 25 16% 38 7 I __ 4 ... I Lot 12 __219 90 8-10 ..... 9 24% I Lot ... 38% ... 30 % ..: 4%... 50 ... 35 ... 22 ... % .... 5% - |.____ 17% 18 __ 32 ......132 I Lot 30 12% Est. 31 49 97% 1........ 93 I F. .. 39 6-100 59% J. .. 25 .... 24% .... 60 .... 58 80% .... 37 .... 25 2 ..„ 50 i_.:.....i25% T...__ 31 . I Lot ... 35 ... 68 ... 3 ... 5 ... 3% ... 15 ... 8% ... 66 ... 37% ... 21 ...160 W. ...150 ..„ 88% .... 3% .... 37- 3% .... I % .... 61% .... 35 11 96 . 2 "I % 7 11 35 32 80% ■E st. -- 5 uOBED .... 4 Est.5 4% 5 20 7 12 50 18% 40 31 90% 20 . 3 . T 18% Amt. 24.39 5.96 5.80 6.13 1.94 4.84 1.33 3.45 2.65 50.94 35.33 4.39 5.95 6.13 13.59 11.25 2.40 1.67 13.87 6.59 3.72 I.38 4.20 11.85 4.43 4.84 36.19 10.04 5.58 6.17 4.84 8.93 9.81 24.18 9.86 14,01 7.11 12.06 31.74 3.78 7.24 1.67 8.78 7.28 8.42 26.61 6.21 4.72 7.84 15.61 4.48 1.60 2.90 2.49 5.63 18.37 II.82 6.07 17.30 26.35 22.07 5.10 12.33 1.32 4.41 15.35 8.63 6.89 14.65 5.68 .72 7.43 2.55 9.04 4.54 8.07 ' 3.66 1.73 1.73 2.69 3.77 1.54 • 5.64 2.02 6.07 14.00 3.72 8.47 11.63 17.34 6.55 1.73 5.05 r ^ ^ T H E RHEADS L f f S T T T i i t 'f f ir O sborneC WwCtm lftwtpspfr ■■O ut of O rder Takes No Time to Make Cotton Frock T s Q uaklIbU CERTAIMLy ARE EATtMeHEAViuf today. MED T- POESMT HE ALWAYS1 EAT VlELLZ SET MAYEE HE LIKES__ Th e cootciM ^ h ere b et ter THAM HE POES AT HOME IrAHrt/ s f e.nc Cl rOK A HUSBAUD’S fiASfROMOMlC PREFEREKCEj SHOULD RE FbOD FOR THOCfiHT ft* HIS W lF f BUT I CAH ORDER. V/HAT . I WAmT here/t l FATTBRN 2315 yoloK (BR LUNCH Hl ■ I U \U OF T H E FO R C E T raining C am p NO-Yhb FAMILY ALL WANT Tb (So ON A CAM PlNd- YtelP WHEN I d eT FAY. VACATION— s o YE’R E Yte-YlM OUT TM' Tin t NOW ? NO* I'M YteYlNd O U T THE* FAMILY-I'M d o IN d Tb SET THEM To TAKe YXiRNS S L E E p lN d IN THE Te n T - A W EEK EACH oiTTiM OVERCROWDED IN YEB HOUSE7 MR WEIS 2 O l EiT IT -Y E Z TlM K THAT WILL Cu r e TrilM O F TH' OIDEA ? c>|UIATTER PO P— A H andful of Suggestions B y C . M . P A Y N E SHUT m t© The Beu syndicate.- Inc Simple Addition‘REG’LAR FELLERS” STAWC VOU HOW•YOU I © Th* Asociated Newspapers mescal ik e O i That Was Before :Pa Piffle’s TuneBy S. L. HUNTLEY ppB iraffiKJOvAJrj COMEviusr ome mors OOtSTlOM AkjO TUQkJ kKu W1LL kkjow v o u r^UhJpAY SCWOOU LES50KJ POR SU M DAV VJWV WAS AsKJ AKJI ASs o scveR SL V pukj»sm ed fo r . m is f a l s e m o o o s r SAVS MAsV BE WASKsJtT 5 0 U SED AsRS IKJ THEM OAVS f t 134. by 8. Im Jfuntiev. TrRde Xiark Res. U, s. Pat. Office) Make It In percale for a morning frock I Moke It In novelty cotton, shantung or pique for a sports frock I And then make It again In silk crepe for an afternoon faock f. This pattern will make a cbarmlng- frock for nearly any summer day time occasion. Us lines are partic ularly good—for the •not-too-sllm- figure. Moreover. It can be run up before the clock moves round. Note both versions of the flattering col lar. Pleated sleeves, a kick pleat, and cleverly placed fullness all con tribute to th9 charm. Two or three frocks of this pattern will prove classics In your wardrobe. Pattern 2315 Is available In sizes 84, 36. 38. 40. 42, 44 and 46. Size takes 4% yards 33 Inch fabric. Illustrated step-by-step sewing In structions Included. SEND FIFTENN CENTS (15c) In coins or stamps (coins preferred) for this pattern. Write plainly name, address and style number. BE, SDBE TO-STATB SIZE. Address orders to the Sewing Cir cle Pattern Department, 243 West Seventeenth Street, New York City. Our P e t P e e v e " By m. g. k e ttn e r SE - v J K t t - J ° ' ^y v D ? 10 £ Difficult Decisions By GLUYAS WILLIAMS 0 -IiiQiTy IlL WHEN EPPlE 'SEJ.2ER'. WHO WAS SUPPOSED Tb BE HOME PRACfiCINfi, SAW HJS FATHER REfURNINfi EARUER. THAN EXPECfED. HE DIDN’T KNOW WHEfHER Tb FINISH OUT HIS HOME RUN WHlCH WOUtD WlN TH £ SAME, OR KEEP ON ACROSS THE OUTFIELD AND UEFST HIS FATHER TO THE HOUSE (Copyright, kr The BeU Syndicate. lug.) - ______________________ BUSINESS "Do you think business t* goodTr "Beyond a doubt," answered Mr. Dustjin Stax. "Our natural re sources are enormous and so are the requirements ot the people. Business Is right thern. AU we need is the ability to transact It” Too Much to Ask Mr. McNab (after having lease read to him)—I won't sign that. I havens' been able tae keep ten com mandments for a mansion In heav en, an' Pm no gaun tae tackle near ly a hundred fur two rooms In the High street—Exchange. Wrapped In Herself Conductor (on tram)—Your fare, miss? Young Lady—Oh. thank you I De you really think so? i------------------- ISoft-Pedal "W hat's your name?*' “M-M-M-M-M-M-Mabel.” •I'll call you Mabel for short"— . •Pearson s Weekly. !III I P iI on Local Page) 11 ill V- . {" -IV'". / • f .- R E C O R D , M O C K S V I iX E , I* . C . The Lucky Lawrences T T T ♦ By Kathleen Norris OopyrIglit by. Kathleen Norris WNU Servtco CHAPTER XI—Continued'—23— “Yes—In XiOS Angeles. The Febru ary after I went away.” “But then, Ariel—Ariel, why did you run away with Diet! Did you make Um think you, cared for tym? He wrote Phil, after all. He said that you were going to get a license—you had gotten a license.” “We got a license; yes. But you’ll have to let me tell it the way it hap pened, GaiL “Van took me back to the Monterey hotel that night,” she resumed, finding Iier words slowly. “And be kissed me good-by, and said tbat he would always love me, and that I belonged to him. I believed him. I was all excited, but not ashamed—not one bit unhappy, Gail. I thought that there was some thing heroic about It “Dot didn’t come in until after I did, and of course I didn’t give her any U nt But we talked things over, and decided tbat we’d get up early the next day and give the boys the slip. We were wild at them! “The next morning, while Dot and I were figuring it out how we’d get home, and we’d gone over to the bus to see wbat time it would leave, Buddy and Larry found us. They said that they were sorry, and asked us to for give them, and said they’d drive us home quietly and the whole thing would blow over. “I was—well, of course I hadn't slept all night, but it was a sort of pleasant excitement, too; I felt—sort of swim ming, in emotion, you know, and I said Fd like to watch the Pebble Beach golf for a little while, so we went there. Van was there, looking stunning of course, and terribly sweet; and we bad a few words together. “I wanted to get home and get rest ed, and have things go back to normal. 6 0 we started at about twelve, and then—then of course the accident came. Dorotby ^ad left us, and I was driving. “I thought Van woifjd come to me Ahe minute he heard. But he didn’t And then when he did show up in court lie didn’t say anything about an en gagement _ . “Once, when I said something, he said his stepfather would cut him off without a cent if be ever dreamed of It! He said tbat the main thing was to keep out of jail.” Gail could bear him. She could re member the ethereal little Ariel of three years, ago; she remembered the casual, laughing Van. Ariel struggling with the saddest problem, any woman ever knows—youth, faith, gaiety, se curity wiped away at a blow—and Van noisily jovial over her whispers, her asides, her anxious smiles and too- ready tears. “You see, almost from the' first, Gail, I knew what had happened. It wasn’t the Hetty Sorrel business. I was sure. Ten days after that trial I knew what I was facing. And he didn’t even like me; he didn’t come near me. I tele-, phoned, I sent notes, but he wouldn’t coma You and Ede were so pleased tbat the trial had sort of—exonerated me, and that I was sobering down. I saw. it, and every one was so happy, making plans. Dorothy well and safe end talking about going east for Christ mas, and all the time—this tiger tear ing at me.” “You poor little thing!” It was the first note of sympathy that had come into Gail's voice, and Ariel answered It by a quick blinking of filling eyes. “It was all my own doing, Gail!” “Isn’t It always?” Gail asked slowly. Those bad been happy days for her. Days In which she had discovered- Dick, discovered her own heart And 'all the time the little sister had been walking in the shadows deeper than death,, beside her. “Yon can’t think what it. was,” Ariel said. “I told Van. I didn’t know what else to do! He didn’t;believe me, or lie said he didn’t,” Ariel resumed. “And the next thing I knew some one told me calmly that he’d gone east There was just one thing, Gail—” She paused. “Just one thing that kept me from killing my self,” she added. “And that was you.” , “Me!” “You. Yoii kept talking about how we had all to hang together, and get through, the hard years, and carve out onr destinies for ourselves. And I just couldn’t do it I. I couldn’t shame and hart yon that way. “The day after Van left I told Doro thy.: And she said wbat be said, that she didn’t think it was true. But they went away, too, Gail. She must have told her mother, and do you remember that Mrs. Camp took Dorotby east to school, right away?” “Beasts I’*- Gail whispered, looking away. “Dofotby only laughed abont It, Ariell stammered, with a memory of that youthful agony and shame flush lng her cheeks again, laughed I” “I couldn't tell you or Edith; I was afraid to tell Phil! I went to see old Doctor Somers, and he only said that he would rather have seen one of my father's children dead .than have to tell her what he had to tell me!” “ArIel-^yon poor child!” “Van didn’t answer my letters, and time kept going on, Gail, and I had no. money! I couldn’t get away, and I couldn't stay home. ‘ “And then I thought of Dick, and that maybe if. I was nice to him be would want to marry me right away— In tim e” She laughed bitterly, fell silent again. “What a fool I was!” she said. “But he didn't He was wonderful, but' he didn’t care—that way. “And then Christmas week came, and Dick was going on Christmhs aft ernoon to Los Angeles, on a case for three weeks, and I wondered if he could get me a job, any kind of a job. So I went to his office—and I told him the whoie story. “He was wonderful I. He never said a word .of blame; the only thing he seemed to think of was how to get me' out, and how to spare you and Ede and PhiL He adores our family, of course. "He .said that since; I was a minor a very serious charge could be brought against Van. At first I wouldn’t con sider th at But he talked me over, and he composed a letter to Van, as my •lawyer,’ and sent It off that afternoon, a few days before Christmas, a few days before my eighteenth birthday. And Dlck told me just to keep quiet and -not worry, and that he would keep working at it, and it would all come out all right “Van , wouldn’t write me, ever, through the Clippersville post office, for fear we’d be discovered. We had rented a box in the Greenvale post of fice, and I used to take the trolley over there and ask for letters. And during this Christmas week I went over and there was a lettei-—from Van. He just said that he was not going back to col lege, but that bis father had staked him to a year’s trip around the world, and he and his chum were going. Gaii,' it went through my heart like a bullet’’ “You should have wired his mother!” Gail said passionately. "You oughtn’t to have, let him get away with it I” “Gail, she knew, of course.” “She couldn’t!” “Of course she did!” The older sister was silent "Gall, do you know that I never felt —bad.” Gall reddened in embarrassment “I know what you mean.” “I mean,” Ariel said, “that I loved him—I did care. I was carried away; I’d never loved anyone before! ‘But what I did feel, Gail, was fury. Fury at myself for being such a fool! Like some cheap little factory worker —like a servant girl. Why, the servant girls have more sense! I could have torn myself to pieces, having Van smile and go his way, and Dorothy and her mother clear out” . “You. have a child, Ariel?’’ “W ait Well, I lay awake all that night of Christmas eve, after we had come Sack from church, and I thought and thought—how to get,away, what to do! And It seemed to me that I was going raving mad—I was, too. I thought the people- in the church were looking at me, and I knew you and Edith would find out long before they did. ‘And then quite suddenly,peacefully,- I made up my mind to go away with Dick, to make you think we were eloping. I thought that if Van sent for me I could tell you then, and if he didn’t Dick would fix some way out! ‘I got up at four and packed my bag and dragged it down and shut it in the old woodshed. And that afternoon,' when you thought I had gone to Miss Vail’s, I went out and waited for the trolley, and took the bus to San Jose, and bonght myself a ticket to Gilroy. That was as far as my money would go. “After the train was started I walked all through it, and I found Dick talking to a man, and he came right back with me, and I told him what I’d done!” “And was he wild?” “Wild? Oh, no! He said that he thought I had done right. He was won derful !” Gail’s eyes flashed darkly blue. “Dick—” she breathed. “He said he thought it was the right thing to do. And he said not to worry, and that he would arrange everything the next day. He asked me if I had anytUng with me, and I said Oh, yes, my suitcase. So I took his berth and he sat up all night—thinking, he said.” The havoc she had left behind her, the havoc she had wrought in his life, had meant nothing to her then, and meant nothing to her now. “He didn’t mind:” she said vaguely. “We were going to be married the next, day, Wednesday,” she':presently added.: “But you can’t do that down there. Dick wrote you that we were getting a license, and we did. But we couldn’t get married, not for several days, and meanwhile Van wired, wired to Los Angeles. You see, he’d had Dick’s letter, and it was true that he was going around the world, but by way of Panama. He wired that he would be in Los Angeles in sixteen days, and. would see Dick. “Then Dick said it would'be much better to wait and see Van. To make sure, he cabled the ship In HavantL And Van cabled back, ‘AU right’ He was afraid of being arrested, on ac count ofTny being so young. “Van’s ship got in and we were mar ried,'and Dick and I swore that no body should ever know. I hated him, then; I didn’t want to marry him at all. But Dick said he would start legal proceedings. “So we were married, and Van went on, on the next Shig1 and nobody knew. Dick had to go to Las Vegas for months; but he sent me money every month,. and If he was in town he’d come to see me and take me to a movie or something. And I got work to do—you don’t have much chance In the movies.. I got a start—Ariel Adalr they called me—only I didn’t like it much. It's all right for the stars, but I .never would have been one. So I got small parts with a stock company. We played Hollywood and Venice and Glendale and Pasadena. That was kind of fun. “Arid then last year, when Murchi son’s Mills failed, Van _came 'to Los Angeles again, settling tEings, and he came to see me. He tdld me that he had never looked at another girl, and he wanted to have me go back east with him. But then it was my time to say No,” Ariel ended with a little curl of her lip. “But you haven’t ' told me, - darling. What happened'to you? Were you 111?’’ ' “Oh, yes—or not so tei-ribly UL They said it was all wrong from' the very beginning—Ifc never would' have been a healthy baby!” Ariel said. “They said it was. luck it died.”- '-Motherhood. The magic word, the magic estate of which Gail had dreamed. She was silent from sheer Shock, sheer inability to speak. "Anyway, I was In a hospital for three weeks, In a ward,” Ariel went on bitterly. “That was when?” “February. Whiie Dick was In Phoe nix. He had cases all over everywhere. And I was taken ill very suddenly, and hadn’t much money.” “You poor kid!” “AU that made me feel that I never wanted to see Van Murchison again. But he was having his hard times, too. Everything was crashing, and he was working bard In the New Jersey plant to save what he could. He’s there now. “When he came last year we had lots of long talks, and in a way he did what he could. He said he knew he had behaved terribly, but that he was a spoiled kid.” She was not very angry at him, even now. Gaii saw; with a sort of stupe faction, tbat what the great Murchison did was still sacred, still above' criti cism, to Ariel. "Finally we arranged it that If he went back and got a good start, with these people who have bought the mills,” she resumed, “then I’d come on and we'd announce our marriage. And that’s what has happened.” “You’re on your way east now?” ‘ “He meets me In Chicago next week.” A pause. Then Gail Saidj “Yon still love him, Ariel?” “I don’t lore the idea of living in New Jersey,” Ariel said, after a brief pause. “But you’re not unhappy?” The old bored, haughty look. “Oh, no,” Ariel drawled. “But mind you, I was as much to blame as he!” she added with sudden force. Gail mused on' the whole story, her eyes on her sister’s face, .tumult In her heart, and the drum-drum-drum of the rain falling softly on the porch roof. “You came here just to announce It?” “Not exactly. Dick thought I onght to come home and explain.” “Was Dick at your boarding house?” ‘Not even that!” Ariel said, with her scornful little laugh. “I tell yon "It Was My Own Doing, Gail.” he never so much as put a finger tt on me!” - “But you saw him all the time?” “Off and on. He wasn’t in Lds An geles much. But he would turn up and ask me if I had money enough.” “What a friend!” GaU said under her breath. Ariel made no response. She was looking about the old kitchen. “I can stay here, Gail, in spite of the Wlbser tribe?” “Darling, of course! And they’re not such a tribe,” Gaii answered, laughing w ith'a touch of hurt and reproach. “Just Lily and the boys.' And- look— this is the baby. This Is GalL” "They named her Gail!” “Lily would have it”.. “You might know she’d take-your name, GalL I suppose she’s more a Lawrence than us Lawrences!” Td this GaU could make no reply. She said tactfully, “It’s a i quarter to seven, Ariel, and It looks as If either Phil had to be at the shop tonight, or had gone to Lily’s mother’s. You and I'll- have dinner anyway. But what a buzz when the marriage is announced !” with a sort of mUd awe. “Let’s go up stairs, ArleL” Ariel sat on at the table, a mutinous, dark look gathering In her eyes. “Everything's changed, and I miss Edith !” she burst out suddenly; laying her head on her locked hands and be ginning to cry. ■ • - . ■ ■ ■ GaU came. over to .her, and' bent down to crook an arm about Ariel’s bowed head. Her onjn eyes were brim ming. • TO BB .CONTINUED - Let O ut Motto Be GOOD HEALTH Medicine, Umv|Ki<y of Ilhnoifc , CoIleg eo f M edicine. . ssssSSS3Sw9w5w9w k eepin g w e l l,b e t w e e n 45 AND 65 This age group Is usually .not both ered much with contagious diseases, If we except tuber- ~ culosls. In Illinois In 1930; there were23,690 deaths In this age group from all causes. Of' these more than half were ; caused- by degen* era tl ve diseases, which Is another ' term for diseases ' that result from the ; wearing out of some ■ vital organ. Chronic kidney diseases headed the list with- 2,684' deaths; chronic heart disease came next with- 2,425 deaths; accidents, third, with 2,332 deaths; cancer of the digestive tract, fourth, with 1,919 deaths. Cerebral hemorrhage or apo plexy ranged fifth with 1,600 fatalities; endocarditis,-.or inflammation of the lining of the heart, came sixth with 1,131 deaths, and tuberculosis was sev enth with 1,052 deaths. Old age, you see, is operating within this forty-five to sixty-five age group, with diseases of the kidney and of the heart and blood vessels causing most deaths. The kidneys can be thought of as two organs, each about the size. of a doubled-up fist, that are shaped like a kidney bean. In fact it Is because of this resemblance that the vegetable kidney bean gets Its name. These or gans are specialized glands for the ex cretion of water and dissolved sub stances from the body. It is just as important for the kidney to excrete water as It is for It to excrete-the dis solved salts, urea and other substances which are poisonous to the body when allowed to concentrate In the blood stream. The kidney represents the dam that allows the constant flow of the end products of metabolism from the body. The secreting units of the kidney are specialized small twists of capillaries that are like a small ball of yarn, and are located In the outer portion of the organ. There are several million of these smaU secretory unlt3, whose Job Jt is to secrete urine every minute of the time, day and night Nature is -prodigal with the number of these se creting units, for there are many more than are needed for daily use. >She has provided for a reserve supply In each kidney, so that In case of emer gency, these can come to the rescue. Now during: childhood or adolescence, a person may have-had an Infectious disease common to young people, such as measles, diphtheria or scarlet fever. Although apparently recovered, there may have been some damage to one or both of the kidneys, which was not sufficient, however, to~cause acute kid ney disease, and the reserve secreting units Vere able to- carry on the normal function of the kidneys. And for the next 20 or 30 years, the individual was left happily In Ignorance that the kid neys had been damaged, for there were no extra demands placed upon them, and they seemed to be functioning a3 they should. Then when this individual reaches an age past forty, and the aging proc esses of the body begin to take place In him, be suddenly finds himself with a bankrupt excreting system, for his kidneys have no further reserve secreting units to draw upon. Such an In dividual then has chronic nephritis. And-Bnds is very difficult to rest the kidneys, since they must secrete day and night, every minute, to prevent ac cumulations of waste products In the blood stream. This individual must place himself at Once under -the care of a physician. Vaccinations against diphtheria, scar let fever, and measles were not avail* able forty years ago, and so heart and kidney disease patients In the over forty age group can hardly blame any one If the damage to their heart or kidneys occurred from an Infection due to one of their childhood diseases But the child today can be spared this danger, we have the vaccines-now; we know that these childhood diseases need not be. ,“Inevitable” accompanl- pents of young years; we could stamp them out if the community so willed. Certainly every older adult who Is pay ing the penalty for chUdhood iiifec- Uons now-with a heart or kidney X ment should see to it that every child under his guardianship is protected against these avoidable; ehildfiood dis-6AS6Si . Science has not yet' been able tn Ctaate against the H fa y t S diseases out of the body Thiitissue will not be fonn ed ^as^^rS of a secondary infection, or Infl=SS? tion, on either o f t i S o ^ S .tissue -on a Hdney impedJ ^ w^ldjmpede the working T b U i^ ! heart life, if he *U1 learn how tH L HUs Impaired heart or kidney must let them now hn Z-I - e his activities. If he does thn?1 6r he wm often be able years without Invalidism In maDy tor short complete-rest period Q Wctem Newspaper JJaiottl Forgiveness fo r ^ U nderst^dable in W riters - Vi6w, but Not Easy £0 Forget. “When I was away visiting my sister-in-law In another city recently. ■I had' occasion to . see a rather un usual little play that opened there. It" was called “The Perfect Marriage,’ and showed two' people- who had been married- fifty years ,who. were beloved by everybody and jeally be lieved themselves to be aif example of a perfect marriage. “Lovers over seventy, they Were. And ln reviewing' the years, they had spent together theirs seemed really to be an example of what all who start out on a honeymoon hope their marriage will be. “And then,- by one-of . those quirks of circumstances that take' place In plays, like the one pulled stitch that starts to .unravel a whole job of knitting, tiere is unraveled the story of an extra-marital “affair’ on the part of both. Both the husband and the wife of this perfect marriage once had a lover. Neither find out until now, after fifty years of ‘ideal’ marriage. When they do the revela- : tion nearly upsets their sturdy little citadel of love—but not quite. With . the philosophy of . their years they forgive" each other, and—-live hap pily ever afterward. - “Now we bear a good deal In real life, too, of forglv&ess of Infidelity, and at a more hot-blooded age than that of the golden-wedding couple. Can yon understand tt? I pride my self on being modern, and all that, but I think this is a question of hu man values that does not change with the age. W hat do yon say?” Broadminded,- and with the tinder- standing of human. nature that Is her marked characteristic, the fa mous writer to whom this query was addressed thus answers It: - . “I say this—the old saying: rSou can forgive—but not "forget I’ Though marriage "'may, indeed many -mar riages have survived discovery of In fidelity on one or both sides, Iii my opinion there Is always something killed. The fabric of marriage may be patched up, but the " warp and -woof and soul of the thing must surely carry the mark. “On the other hand, to my mind, It is not at all beyond „n,i„ , ing, as my correspomw t sN l how such a couple, or can-be wiUing to ‘take Ija".,., faithful one, or make fhe ri BD' forgive. " lifWt i0 “While I certainly a,, . Imize the hurt, the Wrench i "i^ pulse to the contrary H1Y te 1O-nntnrflllw ««_t.._ , . tVoQjfl*— '-wutiary fh#,f naturally be involved in ,TtlJ ro11 to Uve with a husband or has been discovered unnuthfl, richer and the happier e „ ^ “>» has been the m orf > understand such a forglTenL tt * h really true marriage is . h» * many mansions. Beside the T e #( love there is the undTrs companionship, with ^ to say,, one never traits a w that companionship there is I J t suffering, mutual stru^ie joy-m utual understating 5 ? people of quality—the human , the social kind—those are thin 1 make Ufe rich Indeed Wili ssb y°" ttar say’ iufW jI!not happen. And yet it hi, ? known to. And In such a cL t giveness, while a bitter enoml - “ d white the drink £ * + the same as when it -,vas tab* the spring of untainted beliefli" nevertheless, understandable” ® Bell Syndicate.—WNU Service, C orrect Use of Land to Stop Erosion P en l Vegetation on'the earth Is likened to the skin on our bodies by federal eroslon-prevention workers. Bemove a large portion of "the skin and ter rible sores result. Beckless denuding of millions of acres of the richest land In the country has resulted In erosion; huge sores upon the earth. "■Recovery from the disease of ero sion is not a simple matter,” says H. H. Bennett, O^1 the soil conservation service. “Obviously we cannot return to presettlement conditions. The na tion has its roots In "agriculture and if the nation is to continue, agriculture must continue. We cannot raise corn, tobacco and cotton In the woods. We cannot harvest a-w heat crop from the unbroken prairie. But we must make some concessions to nature, whose laws-we cannot repeal even If they are irksome. _ “Protection and production are not necessarily Incompatible. W ith a sys tem of correct land use we can farm much of onr soil and keep it, too. We cannot safely, farm all of It to clean- tilled; erosion-producing crops. Some of the steeper-and more erosive land must be In trees or grass; These crops anchor the solL U ke the Skln on our bodies they protect the earth from- the disease of erosion.” Malaria! Banish ChiUs and FeverI To conquer Mainiaj you must do tn things. (J) Destroy the infection in fo blood. (2) Buaa up the blood to“ “! come the effects and to Iorliiy Sgaja further attack. There is one roedicins thit does these two things and that u Grovri Tasteless Chill Toniel The tasteless mi iiine in Grove’s Tastcies Chill TonicV stroys the malarial infection in the blood' while the iron builds up the blood. Thou. sands of people have conquered Mala* with the aid of Grove’s Tastelea CHl Tonic. In addition to being a noted nm- edy for Malaria, it is also an eiceBent tonic of general use. Grove’s Tastelea Chill Tonic is pleasant to take and cot tains nothing harmful. Even chOdrolife it and they can take it wfely. Forsife by all drug stores. Now two sfees-soc and$l. Tbe $1 size contains2^ tinsi] much- as the 50c size and gives you 25$ more for your money. There’s the Rub Trouble with an Income b to get It to come In.—Florida Times-Unlon. BILIOUSNESS C h a f i n g ItchingRash easily soothed byIhe bland medicationof Resinol WHEN kidneys function badly Iirf you suffer backache, dixiinett, burning, scanty or too frequent mini- tion, getting up at night, swollen Iw and ankles; feel upset and roswWe ...u s e Doan’* Pills. . - Poan’s are especially M U jw wottiing kidneys. Millions of 001B are used every year. They u t mended by users the counhy A sk your neighbor! Smokers! Try one/ . It makes the . next smoke taste better COmmHT SMO Most men that smoke s lot have what we call “fuzzy tongues” and don’t know it! Smoking Btops the flow of .saliva U the mouth and you •8®^?op much acid in your systgm. Makes you feel sluggish and loggy. H e best way to lick the •ji® md iitfll ]teq» gmoldiig is by taking Milnesia wafers-iwice a day. Your mouth will —-~ ^always feel clean and fresh and you always have your MILNE§IA. Wafers neutralize the excess acids that gestion, heartburn and sickheadaches Each Wafer is a dose, chfldian^ne-quarter t<r ®ne-hal£ Pleasant to take. Kec “ ended by thousaiids of physicians—A t A ll Good DrugF Golliy of Every IW HabitlJ B,, TwiJM**,SveitTM K0 Escra"' U Ki^n ■ IisualpeP', Economical, tool ~EMb'li3lnala ia & . age containt non -VP^aam BjrJnx-- % q in a l • aF6RS/MILK OF MAGNESIA WAr ^ S p o r t Has Its A b s e n t-M u id e d p ro fe s s o rs , T o o l DURlNG the seasons of olory the newspaper bd ways uncovering one flaw fection of that stout citizen devoting his declining yea No matter how often they I or otherwise commune wit* always discovered that the I er twenty meetings were • After that the stout citizen up guessing as to whether t or Daroon or Joe' and fr their lives could be made ful by the knowledge thatl would know them, colIectiiP divldually, as “Kid.” Of course from time to men, from whatever estatj paper buslr to be In, disregard : doubted baptism al, Most of merely to evidence sure that I man or placently which pen Ing bald-J Ruth. dence thaj staff was all wrong, Recently a reporter m ofr this at one of those gatherings where he Is su Immediately some busy' audience inquired If In member the names of commentators upon spo tling was confined entire! Sadly, being one of thO! Iuctant to share the mi secrets of the professi world, the reporter was mit the truth. For instance, there Is baseball scrivener who eral seasons to giving' h! aid and comfort to Bill, while the latter was pla field and managing the haps they were not as and Tilford but to all dence they seemed two| heat as one. Then fate ure to win a pennant) Southworth should try tones elsewhere. Scant the two met In the lob “How are you, Bill, baseball writer, rushing eagerly outstretched ha jjlad to----- There was a hiatus (wl high-class writers use w a painful pause and tL of a fish In the form of “Ah, uh,” it was not . worth is a snob, a Hbber devotes bis life to deal His brow was wrinkled _ centratlon for a full mln surrendered. “Say, I kn Didn’t you use to play — But the curtain over this deplorable sc It can be lifted upon the athletes also fall to other. By this I do n Helen Wrlls Moodys, . cobses and those others have very good reason fi as they pass by. Neitl ln0 of any blue-blood oarsmen who may havi no matter how far tl. Cabots and the Lodge slipped In their salutati going to keep- Boston t0 recognize their own Homer Fails to Revive Memory Instead the reference) fflOrtals such as the pltc 8®Wul arms have snowed up the best strategy 0f Eogers Uornsby and Prankle fWsch this season, “orlng one of those anbhouse sessions de moted to deep thinking concerning how to foil ~e opposition Horns- told In detail how ■7 ® Browns should to Roger Cramer. ■J-hat afternoon Cramer Pelted a game winning George Blaeholder. Knowing that the p lti Hn 01I8 h# ha<* 80 Pr^lHornsby rushed out up<T .I h~ ‘ do y°u Iwere throwing to?” he I Mse long acquaintai Players had made him Z “8 Biaeholdej TJn? concentrated brad MaJtTew that 11 couldl Sot fc . Gee* W2 P'aee but I juste; am*i he confided. T H E D A V I E R E C O R D , M o c k t v i l l e t N . C tt A u g t 2 1 . 1 9 3 5 . CARBON’S ENEMY Is A Motor Fuel That Will Destroy Any Of The Carbon Binder That Exists In Your Motor § And With Regular Use Keeps It Out. Results: A G l e a n M o t o r , F u l l P o w e r , . S m o o t h O p e r a t i o n A n d G r e a t e r E c o n o m y . It’s Exclusively At Yates-Council. Mr. and Mrs. T. C. Council, of Ra leigh, have announced the engage ment of their daughter. Miss Sallie Elizabeth Council to Richard E. Yates of Mocksville. The wedding will take Dlace in September. The bride-elect is a graduate of Meredith College in Raleigh and for the last few years has been a mem ber of the Moncue school faculty. Mr. Yates is a graduate of State college at Raleigh and is now work ing toward his doctor’s degree at Vanderbilt university in Nashville, Tenn- No Bond Election. The Davie county board of-com missioners and the Board of Educa tion met in joint session at the court house last Tuesday morning, and after discussing the matter, de cided not to call an election for the purpose of issuing $52,000 in bonds to build additions to the Cooleemee and Mocksville school buildings. The Government was to put up about $4 0,000, and the county a- bout $5 2,0 0 0 . It was thought by both boards that should an election be called, the bond issue would - be defeated, and it would be a need-' less expenditure of money in calling an election at this time. To The Unemployed. The Reemployment Service, in cooperation with the Federal Em er gency Relief Administration, is con centrating its efforts during week of August 19 to 2 4, to registering with the Employment Service each em ployable person who is on relief rolls. Each employable person in any family group must be registered with the -Reemployment !Service. Those in any family who have been certified to the Employment Ser vice as being eligible for releif and employable, are urged to call at the Reemployment office and register for employment. The Davie County Reemploy ment. Service, is located in the Ma sonic Building, Mocksville, N C. Pink Ratledge and sister, Miss Minnie, of Woodleaf, were Mocks ville visitors Saturday. leyona ondorsK . Jsi'ondent su ^ I ’ °r either r a,ke 1^ U ' tl,e0"e'Iuake th« I iDly do not I le "Tench, the ,m' Sitrary that „ I 1^ed t» c o L C '4islan d or wife red Unfilithful Ippier the mar'r^ |e possible it !I forgiveness. ^ I aSe is a h0a s / ' V eside th e nh™ Jiinderstanding .IalI tu *hlch, a s ! , t walkS alone r! I ip «• Btltu1"I stWSSle, fflu "“ Ilers tanding. ^ith f — th e hum an,W fH ose a re tl,ia' ° Jldeed- W K hfuIsay, Infldelity I yet, it has been > «jch a case Z bitter enough cun .drink can never beJ n it was Jaten ^ Sntamied belief-j, Werstandabie,”Ife--WKU Service. IIs and Fever! j you must do two |y the infection in tie Iup the blood to over- |nd to fortify ogamst Tre 15 Qne medicine that Pp and that Is GrovctS pic I The tasteless qui- IsteIess Chill Tonic de. infection in the blood' Bs up the blood. Thou- lye conquered Malaria prove’s Tasteless ChOl J to being a noled rem- Hit is also an excellent p - Grove's Tasteless lsant to take and con nful. Even children like Jke it »afcly. For sale I. Now two sizes—50c |e contains 2 f'2 times as Izc and gives you 25% lney. th e R ub |an Income Is to get Florida Times-Union. ^ h a f i n s f and rching Rash lily soothed by the fend medicationoFesinol M H l Ineys function badly Sndp >r backache, diziiiwss, Y or too frequent urina- 1 p at night, swollen feet el upset and miserable * pi»s- ,!especially for pooily eys. Millions of boxes { year. They are « cora* users the country over, ghbor! J f K \ i j •& Guilty of fi>es0 Every Doy Habits? EalTooMucb SmokcTMHmb J* Exercm UteH""1 [e your usual pep- Is that cause in** aferisafu lU d u it to take. Recom- Good DrugSists• RECORD, MOCKSVILLE. N. C. Sport Has Its Absent-Minded professors, T o o . Uring the seasons of his greatest ) -Iory the newspaper boys were al- WJys uncovering one flaw In the, pe* Ruth. D lJIory-^ie newspaper boys w ereal- gncc - faction of that stout citizen who now Is W ina his declining years to golf. « matter how often they might dine ^rtherwise commune with him they S 1JX o v e re d that the firsi: fifteen Ttwenty meetings were the hardest After that the stout citizen would give up guessing as to whether this was BIiI . Damon or Joe and from-then on Lir lives could be made more beauti- fill by the knowledge that Babe Ruth ”0Uld know them, collectively and in dividually, as “Kid.” Of course from time to time gentle- men, from whatever estate the news- paper business happens to be In, resented this disregard for their un doubted worth and baptismal monickers. Most of them, though, merely took It as new evidence of the pre- sure that besets a great man or smirked com placently at mirrors which persisted In giv ing bald-headed evi dence that this “Kid” EtnB iras all wrong. Recently a reporter made mention of this at one of those vast public gatherings where he Is such a favorite. Immediately some busybody In the audience Inquired if inability to re member the names of the eminent commentators upon sports and wres tling was confined entirely to the-Babe. Sadly, being one of those who are re luctant to share the miseries and the secrets of the profession with the world, the reporter was forced to ad mit the truth. For instance, there Is the St. Louis baseball scrivener who devoted sev eral seasons to giving his best advice, aid and comfort to Billy Southworth while tie latter was playing the out field sod managing the Cards. Per- laps they were not as close as Park aid HIford hut to all outward evi dence they seemed two hearts that heat as one. Tben fate (and the fail ure to win a pennant) decreed that Soutbworth should try his baseball for tunes elsewhere. Scant months later the two met In the lobby of a hotel. *How are you, Bill?” caroled the baseball writer, rushing forward with eagerly outstretched hand. “Gee, I'm {lad to---- There was a hiatus (which is a word high-class writers use when they mean a painful pause and the handing out of a fish In the form of a handshake.) “Ah, uh,” It was not that Mr. South- wrth is a snob, a rlbber or a guy who devotes his life to dealing out the ice. His brow was wrinkled In earnest con-, centratlon for a full minute. Then he surrendered. ‘‘Say, I know your face. Didnjt you use to play the piano at But the curtain must be drawn over this deplorable scene. It can be lifted upon the fact that “* athletes also fall to know one an- other. By this I do not refer to the Helen Wills Moodys, the Helen Ja cobses and those others who probably have very good reason for not nodding I o r d in a r il y this space is not de. voted to answering letters but I have a feeling that there may be many other young fellows'!*) the same fix as the one who sought advice three days ago. So—: ' . Dear Ted—I f t were you, I would not worry too much about what the boys say at school. Neither would I strain too much this summed. Perhaps the coach Is right In saying that you are too small for football, but what of Itt You are only sixteen years old and you have plenty of'tlm e for adding extra pounds and inches so that you can make your letter. Look at Jlm Braddock. Up to the time he wag twenty-nine years old he was kind of small for the honors he really i seeking and the grown-up boys used to say a lot more about him than the boys at your school - possibly could Imagine. He did not fret about it. In stead, years after most men In his line would have been through growing or advancing in any fashion he add- Braddock. ed an inch to his height and 20 pounds to his weight. Then he became heavy weight champion of the world by beat ing Max Baer. As for you figuring that 115 pound* Is not enough for a baseball player be-' cause you have read that managers prefer stopping six-footers, let me tell you a story. It goes bactc through the years to the decade that was known as the glamorous'nineties. Baseball was young then, a teeming, boisterous sport. The ball was' not en dowed with the elastic qualities of a later era, and when fences, were built far from the home plate, a giant could seem needed to produce a batting average of .432. It is a mark that never has bepn equaled since that sea* son and has been beaten only once In the sixty recorded years of the sport W ant to see the man who achieved It as well as 243 hits, a record toward which not even the giant Hank Green berg may aspire?. No, I am not trying to kid you. That pale little fellow with the thin cheeks and the angular elbows folded across a narrow chest is not the bat boy. This Is on the level, Ted, no matter what the boys at school may have tojd you. Wat? How could such a half pint rise to the heights when strapping pitchers and burly, far-ranging fielders rallied to defend against him? Keeler, McGraw Were' Little Guys M ‘hey pass by. Neither am I think- lllS of any blue-blooded, red-shirted 0Jrswen who may have decided that, "•matter how far the Abbots, the abots and the Lodges might have tllPPed In their salutations, they were Sioing to keep Boston safe by falling 0 recognize their own crew coach. Homer Fails to jWiye Memory Instead the reference Is to ordinary “wtals such as the pitchers whose for getful arms have sJowed up the best ®«egy of Rogers Uorasby and Frankie ^ c h this season. I0rinS one of those clOMiouse sessions de- T0te4 to deep thinking 'oucerEl ng how to foil opposition Horns- told In detail how Hf, Browns should Wch to Roger Cramer. ^ftafternoon Cramer Hornsby. a game winning home ran off Blaeholder, the*B°nWiLa lliat th* Pltch ha<* not been M eiwf had 80 Prudently advised, "Win*!!. r“ out upon the diamond. wer. ,u do you thlnk that youre throwing to r he demanded, be- Plav J r 3, accIuallItance with ball eioua J 1 made him a very Suspi- *ome JTan- Blaeh°lder indulged In !» k n l 'I ' 3ted brain totl- Ofcourse Mack- V 11 could not b0 Connl* some Bi, f’ |,ve “ en h,m around n am Jf6 but 1 Just can’‘ think of his he confided. Q U IC K M E A L F O R C O O L E V E M N G S Tonlato Stuffed W ith Icebox Leftovers Is Good. By EDITH M. BARBER A.VERY simple menu for the quick. meal tonight has been chosen and we are planning on a night at‘ least cool enough to light the oven for half hour. We are using the, old ^stand by, bacon, which you probably* know, responds so well to oven treatment, and as we have the oven, hot for the corn, the bacon can be baked a t the same time. The broiling pan' • with Its rack makes an .excellent baking ' pan for this If it fits In the oven. The tomar toes-may be stuffed with whatever is In the Icebox. Perhaps a few slices of cucumber from last- night’s salad,, a Uttle deviled ham, some lettuce which may be shredded very fine, make a de- liclous combination. Possibly instead we find a stalk of celery, some cottage cheese and anchovy paste. Whatever we use, we must not for get a little onion juice or chopped onions with mayonnaise, which holds the stuffing together. Another tomato salad can be made of small whole to-, matoes, skinned and chilled and served on lettuce leaves sprinkled with cheese and garnished with mayonnaise. The melons, which are very good just now, have been chilled for at least 24 hours. Choose your favorite kind. If the night Is warm, do not light the oven, but cook the bacon on top of the stove, remove the fat and stir the corn and seasonings into it. Cook five minutes and serve with the bacon. E ggs'm ay be beaten slightly and stirred Into the corn if you have not had your eggs at the morning or noon. meaL The menu then is: Deviled corn Bacon Stuffed tomato salad Buttered cabbage Melons Whole wheat roils Coffee Crackers Cheese Method of preparation—Light oven. Let us, still imagining that we are back in the nineties, ask him. See how he gazes steadily at us while’a knobby chin ceases moving and a wad of chewing gum gets a moment’s rest. “That’s easy,” Wee WUlle Keeler is saying. “I just hit ’em where they ain’t.’’ Translated Into more elegant terms, Ted, this atom of a man scarcely big ger then than you are now, has ex plained -the superiority of mind over matter. Blazing speed, muscles that co-ordinated with an alert,- ever In spiring mind, made one of -the smallest men In the history of baseball one of the greatest batters of all time. Along with John McGraw, another great little guy, Wee Willie changed * the trend of the game, caused rules to be re vised. Their ability to tap the ball out of reach of the fielders brought science into a sport that had sub sisted on force. They proved th e worth of the bunt, the sacrifice, the hit-and- run play.. Before their time a foul baU did not McGraw. count as' a strike. Mc- Graw and Keeler could stand at the plate and deliberately hit so many fouls that they wore down the strong est pitchers. The rule was changed. When thpy Joined the Immortal old Orioles they were such scrawny little guys that other players laughed and said that they should- not be permitted to do anything more strenuous than carry bats. They fought with frantic muscles, fiery tongues and quick brains. Thi/ never ceased trying, learn ing. Before long the fans were fight- Ing to get Into the parks to see them. For more than thirty years after that the greater- little guy, McGraw1 was to continue as one of the,blggest men In the history of the game. Of course, that was long ago, Ted1 but don’t-le t the boys at school tell you that similar things no longer can happen. Instead, when you retorn to the fall ask them about Little ^BUl Johnston, or Cyril Walker or Bert Metzger or Morris Ely. Because the United States Polo as- sedation is determined to name an “All Amateur” team to play aBal^ t England at Hurllngham Irj1 «36. Cecil Smith, Elmer Boeseke, R u b e Williams and other horse-trading star* ma^ passed over. , 0 0 * Boston prom oters are trylng_ to t a lk Jack Sharkey into coming, back to m oot lack Doyle. This is because the Maggiieh u setts com m ission ln s‘at* ^ a£ s - j s f l r S B S t S l B J S S A r - S 5good drawing, cards. © N ew Y o rk P o s t— W N D S orvlo*. Prepare com and bake. Place bacon in oven. Cook cabbage ten minutes. Make salad. Heat rolls. Prepare mel ons. • Make coffee during meal and toast crackers, . Deviled Com 2 tablespoons butter or savory fat 2 tablespoons flour 1% cups milk 1 teaspoon salt % teaspoon mustard Paprika 2 cups corn pulp (fresh or canned)1 egg I tablespoon W orcestershire’sauce • Crumbs Make a sauce of the fat, flour and seasonings, add corn, egg slightly beat en, and Worcestershire sauce.- Pour in to a baking dish, cover with crumbs mixed with a little butter and bake until crumbs are brown. Com Tartlets _ Rich biscuit dough I cup corn pulp I teaspoon salt .1 tablespoon melted butter Pepper I teaspoon chopped pimlento I teaspoon, chopped green pepper 1 teaspoon minced'parsley Roll out dough, spread half with in gredients mixed In order given. Fold oven dough, cut In 2-Inch squares. Pinch edges of dough together. Place in pan with small amount of fat— brush top with fa t; place In hot oven and let brown. Serve with tomato sauce, or with chicken gravy Com Fritters 2 caps grated com 2 eggs % cup flour " Pepper Salt Beat the eggs, add the corn, flour and seasoning.' Drop by spoonfuls on a well- greased griddle and cook like pancakes on both sides. Whole Wheat Puffs I cup whole wheat flour I cup milk Salt Into the flour stir the milk. Add the salt, beat well with an egg beater and pour Into hot gem tins which have been well greased. Bake in a hot oven (450'degrees) 20 minutes; lower heat and bake 15 minutes. Cool and cut Into squares. © Bell Syndicate.—WKU Service. IMPROVED UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL SUNDAY I CHOOL L esson The Household By LYDU LE BARON WALKER CELAISE longues and reclining chairs of different types are among The fascinating portable _ pieces of lawn furniture. These would be unwieldy In folding furniture so they become chairs on'wheels, riot wheeled chairs in the ordinary sense, for this term is too closely allied with Invalidism. These, modern pieces are for the hale and hearty rather than the infirm or sickly. They are the' essence of lawn luxury in chairs, especially when equipped with canopy awnings that form decorative hoods for the backs- of the lounges. The shape of the chairs is so cleverly contrived that one scarcely realizes that'the curved legs at the end of the chaise longue Aiake just the right han dles by which to trundle the chair about from one spot of beauty on a lawij to another; as the sunlight shifts or the fancy dictates. UnJike the us ual wheel chair, the novelty chair on wheels is~not pushed about from, the back, but is trundled about by IlffIng the wheelless foot, the light end, by the legs and then pulling the lounge, or reclining chair, whichever you wish to call it, which rolls along easily on the rather small wheels positioned un der the back. This is the heaviest part, and yet so well balanced Is it on the wheels, that Its weight is not realized as you trundle the reclining chair over the. grass. Portable Chairs The latest Innovation In these wicker lounges and chairs on wheels is the awning top. .This is attached to the slanting* back which is. invariably at one end of the piece of furniture, and not along one side as is the case with sofas, love seats, and regulation lounges. In fact, the difference be tween the lounge and the chaise longues is immediately recognizable by the spelling. The "u” comes In a dif ferent place in the words. The longue is a long chair with a seat sufficiently extended to include the foot rest, and so permit the occupant to recline, al though not precisely to lie down. The shape is classic. - The development In portable form is modern. The awning top adds an element of utility to the chairs, softening the light as well as shielding from the sun. It peimits a steady light to fall on a book, rather' than the Intermittent-Jight and shadow through trees swaying In a breeze. And when cool autumn days come, the chair can be In the warm sunshine, if desirable, and the occu pant be able to read without a glare from the sun on the whiteness of the printed page. There Is also protection from too strong a wind. The awning is a utilitarian luxury. Care of Silver " In summer time, above all other sea sons, does the homemaker put away her extra pieces of silver and so save herself care. And If she -closes the ■town house to take up residence at a summer resort, she further protects It and eases her mind about It, /by putting It in a vault In her bank. .This is a wise precaution, and costs very little. If there Is much sterling silver, and this is the only kind; that requires this looking after, it is seldom left In a . home. It would be costly In dol lars and cents to replace It, and many pieces would probably be impossible of replacement—such as family silver, and other articles of sentimental asso ciations. If the quantity of sterling Is little, it may be treasured all the more because of its scarcity, plus Its asso ciations.- So In both Instances it de? serves to be well looked out fat. Whether one puts the silver In the bank or not, and whether it Is sterling or good plated ware, cases to put the flatware pieces In are needed. Silver scratches when one piece rubs against another. The finish Is ' impaired. If laid in a cloth-lined silver drawer In a sideboard, each piece should be al lowed room so that it or-es not come In contact with those next it How ever, silver articles should be-In cases, and some homemakers use cases In any event - : © BeU Sybdtcate--W NU Service. Th p. reclining chair on wheels, when equipped ^with an awning, Ia a luxurious piece of portable fmrhiture. Note Ihej cane table held securely by thrusting eane^nd into the groand. Also c portable ' ■ .?. ., ^r - By REV. P. B. FIT2WATER; D. IX, Uember of Faculty, Moody Bible Institute of Chicago.©. Western Newspaper XTnloif, Lesson for August 25 BARNABAS OLD AND N EW PATCHW ORK QU ILTS LESSON T E X T -A ets 4:36, S7; 11:19- SO.' GOLDEN TEXT—H e w as a good man, and full of the H oly Spirit and of filth .—A cts 11:24; PRIMARY TOPIC—Barnabas* Love Oift. ....... JUNIOR TOPIC—The Friendly B arnabas. ' INTERM EDIATE AND SENIOR TOP IC—H ow B araabas Used H is Posses sions. ‘ TOUNG PEO PLE AND ADULT TOP IC—In P artnership W ith God. The explanatory .tide given by the lesson committee, “Barnabas (A Con secrated Man of Means)," is not entire ly satisfactory, as it emphasizes only one of bis-many excellent qualities. I. Barnabas the Man (Acts 4:36). His original name was Joseph. When he became a Christian he was by the apostles’ renamed Barnabas, which doubtless signifies the, change from the old life to the new. This was a com mon custom, e. g., Simon to Peter and Saul to PauL The name means “son of prophecy” or "son of exhortation and consolation.” This shows not only the nature and spirit of Barnabas but Indicates that be possessed a gift of hortatory' preaching. II. Barnabas the Philanthropist (Acts 4:37). So fully had the divine love per meated the very being of Barnabas, that, seeing the need of his fellow believers, he sold his property and brought the money and laid It at the apostles’ feet. He was In no sense obliged to do this as there was no such binding law of a community of goods In the early Uliurch. Private own ership. of property was recognized (Acts 5 :4). III. Barnabas the Christian States man (Acts 9:26-30; 11:19-30). . 1. Befriended Saul (9:26, 27). After Saul’s conversion he came to Jerusa lem and tried to join himself to the disciples, but they were afraid of him. Barnabas saw that Saul was really a converted man. Being a good man he could see there was good In Saul. Tc be able to judge personality is the first mark of a Christian statesman. 2. Sent to Antioch (Acts 11:22-24) Violent persecutions of the Church sent many disciples to the regions about the Mediterranean sea. As they went they preached the gospel and ehurches were, established. The most conspicu ous of these was at Antioch, the capi tal of Syria, becoming the most im: portant center In the spread of Chris tianlty. Everything went well as long as the gospel was preached to the Jews only, but certain of these dis ciples deliberately preached Christ among the Greeks. They announced to them that God had become incarnated In a man, that that man, after a min istry of love and grace, had died a sacrificial death on the cross, and that salvation was now offered to all whc would accept him. Tidings having reached the ears Oi the Jerusalem Church that a great work of grace was expressing ltseli through the Grecians who were preach ing the Lord Jesus Christ at Antioch Barnabas, was sent to look after It. Barnabas was a good man and full of the Holy Ghost and fa.ith. He, there fore, bad spiritual discernment and broad sympathy. Those who have grace in theihselves will be able to see grace in others. He exhorted them and urged them forward'in their work. , 3. Goes after Saul (11:25, 26). The .work at Antioch so prospered that help was needed; therefore, Barnabas went after Saul. Barnabas thus introduced iSauI to his great work as the apostle !to the Gentiles. The gifts of both of these men were needed on that field. 'Different temperaments when brought into harmony by God’s grace are need ed In the church. 4. Disciples called Christians first In Antioch (v. 26). After a year of teaching by Paul and Barnabas the name “Christian” was given , to the disciples. Observe that the name was associated with the teaching. Paul -feught the vita] oneness of the be liever with Christ! therefore. It was natural that the disciples should be called Christians. The notion that the name “Christian” was given In de- rison has no factual basis. IV. Barnabas the Dispenser of Ajms '(vv. 27-30). Because of the oneness of Christians with Christ and with one another, the distress of the brethren at Jerusalem must be Relieved by the •gifts of believers at Antioch.. The Spirit of God, through Agabus, made ..known the coming dearth which was to "prevail throughout all the world. The disciples were therefore moved, according to their ability, to send re lief unto the brethren In Judea. These gifts had a powerful effect In remov ing the suspicions of the brethren at !.Jerusalem. A S tron g W ill If we have need of a strong will in order to do good. It is more necessary still for.*us in order’not.to do evil; from which it often resrfits .that the most modest life is that where the force of will is most cxercised.-^-Count Mole. . . ~ ' ” L ies . _...■ One lie In word or act opens the dooi io a thousand. Truth Is the magician’s circle, to cross which is to break the spell and turn ail tq .darkness.-H). S Marden ■ ,-: - ■ -. .v ‘::v V--. -. .,.-r _ _ ^ , * r *• *■ Patchwork quilt making Is StUl In the limelight and the old patterns seem to be most In demand. Here are the names of the blocks shown above. Most of them are very old designs—‘‘Log Cabin”—"Bare Old Tollp”—“Polnsettla”—“Pineapple”— "Butterfly”—“Pussy In the Comer” —“ijinWheel"—“Sunbonnet Babies.’’ . Wiien making the next quilt watch Qie seams, one seam sewed Y n tgyg ruins the whole block. Here are a few suggestions for making perfect quilts. Press all material before cutting. Use blotting paper for pafr terns, thus avoiding pinning. Cuteadl piece exactly like pattern. Matck all'edges perfectly when sewing to* gether. Lay the patches and blocks out for best (color combinations be fore sewing together. Patchwork Quilt Book No. 21 eon* tains 37 old and new quilt designs with llljistrationa, instructions and cutting charts for the patches. The above 10 quilts are Included. Send .15c-to our quilt department and re ceive this book by mall. Address, HOME CRAFT COM PANY, DEPARTMENT D, Nineteenth and St. LOuls avenue* S t Louis, Mo, Inclose a stamped addressed en velope for reply when writing fo» any information. Irrigation’s Spread The Irrigation of arid and sent, arid areas, which received its first great impetus about BO years' ago, now is so widespread throughout the world that at least one quarto of the human race, It is calculated, is primarily dependent on the food produced by this artificially watered land.—Collier’s Weekly. roieiiian M antles • LAST LONGER e MADE STRONGER , • GIVE MORE LIGHT SBND for 2 genuine K gh Powor Coleman Mantles. Use them on your gasoline pressure lamp or lantern. LeV them prove that they are made stronger^ last Ionger9 give, more light* Lowest cost to use. ; Juai the right size, shape ead weave for longer and better light* Ing service. Coleman Mantles are always fresh * gnar*. asteed quality. Dealersi everywhere recom* mend them* Tbe name CoIemaatl stamped on the mantle protects yon against eabstl* tntes. Send 10? In stamps or coin to- cover postage and llaadlinff. Vonll set your two sample Coleman mantles promptly* Send today* £51351 THE COLEMAN LAMP 6> STOVE CO. FKtoty AHonw Office, WlCHTTA.KlKB..Dept.WUlffl Train tlie Memory The secret of popularity is alwayt te remember what to forget. Quick, Safe-Relief For Ey.es Irritated By Exposure ^ To Sun; Wind - * cind Dust — - Those Golden Dreamsl A lr castles may be cheap or they may cost a fortune; W hy «!o you spray?.. r WHt BESUtTS / W llacheapquaK tyspiay ^d o th ejo b ?...g %nt& Bssj ‘ t h a t ’s th e an sw er^ ^REFUSE SUBSTITUTES.^ D em ad .FLY-TOXi W NtJ-7 33-38 D o e s Y o u r M ir r o r R e fle d . R c u g h fin ip ly S ld n ? U s is CIITICURA Anoint the affected parts, wftfc C o tie n r a O in tm e n t W ssb off . after a short time with CuWctura S oap and Iiot water and continue bathing for several mintiten. Pirn* pie*, rashes and other distmang eruptions -are qmckly: soothed and ' a condition established which con* laces to healing. P IPIf I ri- Ut 1M Si' I RECORD, MnrKSVTLLE, N. C1 BRISBANE T H IS W E E K Why So Many Men? Bitterness in Berlin Frank H. Hitchcock Dead The Snake Has Rights Why does HussoMnI need so many men for little Abyssinia? If he at tacks, he will go through the air with bombs, poison gas or both. He certainly will not march hundreds of thousands of men through swamps, and over hot sand. He now has 925,000 men under arm3, with 340,000 Fas cist militia ready to be called, plus 200, 000 others, born two years before the . „ _ . . biS war started.ArthurBrtebane Is S0methlng else present or expected, back of all this man power? Even if Japan should come In, that would only mean a mbrc complicated air war. Berlin reports Increased bitterness In the war against the Catholic church, with official posters, eight feet high, printed In red, scattered through the city, attacking alleged CaFhollc oppo sition to Nazi rule. The posters speak of the "grafting Center (Catholic) party, working hand In hand with Bolshevism,” and declare that Catholics, “the eternal enemies of the reich, wish to destroy the unity of Germany.” The posters are be lieved to indicate new and more bitter pttacks on Catholic organizations. Many Americans will learn with sincere regret of the death of Frank H. Hitchcock, postmaster general In Pres ident’s Taft’s cabinet and at the time of his death publisher of the Tucson Dally Citizen. Frank Hitchcock, typical, Intelligent American, will be remembered as first to appreciate the airplane’s Im portance In connection with distribu tion of mail. Twenty-four years ago, when flying was new, he flew, taking a pouch of mail with him, and adve rte d Immediate nse of planes over Impassable stretches of country.” At Thomasvllle, N. C., Rev. Campbell Holmes, “Holy Roller” preacher, al lowed a rattlesnake to bite him as he preached, “just to show yon that God will take care of me.” There was ex citement and admiration In the congre- gatlon. Next day his arm was badly swollen, he was violently 111,- death threatened, but the “Holy Roller” preacher refused medical attention. The reverend gentleman perhaps for got that the sam e. great Power that gave him his beautiful faith also gave the rattlesnake Its powerful poison. Each creature has its gifts, not safely ignored. Did you bay bonds In the big war excitement, when little ladies, seated on elephants, sang patriotic songs and begged you to give “till It hurts”? One hundred and elghty-flve million dollars’ worth of government bonds are mislaid somewhere, .perhaps hid den In old trunks, In desks, safe-de- poslt boxes, by those now dead. The government would like to get these past-due bonds and pay for them. On the edge of the Sacramento river In California, a lady, thirty years old, appeared with a suitcase. While eight youths looked on, she undressed, then danced for some time on the edge of the water, finally plunged In, crying, •Tm not coming back,” and sank In midstream. That death-preceding dance is new In suicide. One out of every three married cou ples In the IJnited States Is childless, news not complimentary to the child less families. Exceptions are cases In which nature refuses to send children. You would not value a chain of steel With every third link broken, or a chain of heredity with every third link missing. This "childless family” news should make this country revise stupid laws against immigration, shutting out men and women willing to have chil dren, and work for them. Madame Evelyn, who reads the stars, the future, the crystal globe and the lines in your hand on the New Jersey beach, read the "lines'' for a 200-pound customer, then sighed and said: “I see only trouble ahead of you.” The client also sighed, and he, says Madame Evelyn, stood up and said: “ ‘You are an excellent fortune teller, and here's the beginning of the trou ble,’ and socked me on the jaw, knock ing mg out of my chair.” . Americans Interested In cotton pro duction and wonderingvhow long our export figures will stand up will want to know that Japanees.-cotton buyers have “folded up,” as one Texas cotton grower put it; have mbved out of Tex as, apparently giving up all idea of guying ctitton there. [ The late Nathan Straus used to say: 4Tf a German loses one of his relatives; he feels' badly,y If he loses money, he goes to bed sick.” German trade and industry will "go to bed sick” if it persists In its present attitude toward those-that promote business and prosperity In every coun try where Jews are treated fairly?” © Klns Features Syndieate, Inc.WNU Service. News Review of Current Events the World Over Victory in Rhode Island Election Elates the Repuhlicaus Guffey Coal Bill Undergoes Changes— Black’s Probers Enrage Hurley. B y E D W A R D W. PIC K A R D © Western Newspaper Union. Chas. F. Risk REPUBLICAN leaders throughout the country were immensely, heart ened—probably too much so by the result of the by-election In the First district of Rhode Is land. Charles F. Risk, Republican and deter mined opponent of the New Deal, defeated Antonio Prince, Demo- f • crat, by nearly 13,000 votes, capturing the seat in congress which Francis B. Condon, Democrat, resigned to go OD the State Su preme court The re versal was so decisive that the Republicans bailed It as a clear Indication that President Roose velt would be defeated for re-election next year. Representative B. H. Snell of New York, minority leader, made a speech about It in the house In which he said: “This is the first time the people of any part of the country have had an opportunity to pass on the reckless and extravagant expenditures of the administration. They have passed up on It in a very decisive manner. The election shows the people are begin ning to think. The handwriting is on the wall. From now on we will wit ness similar rejections by the citizenry of the IIew Deal program.” Other Repubiican congressmen spoke In similar vein, but John J. O’Connor, New York Tammany Democrat, coun tered with the assertion that there was a split In the Democratic party In the Rhode Island district; while Tom Blan ton of Texas shouted shame on Rhode Island because It had asked more fed eral aid than almost any other state. Anti-New Deal Democratic senators, like Gerry, Byrd and Tydings, agreed the election was significant, but from the White House there was no com ment Former Benator Fess of Ohio with surprising frankness expressed the be lief that the G. O. P. would have, to wait until 1940 to elect a President. Voicing the opinion of many, the vet eran campaigner said: “I don’t see how the strongest Republican without all that money next year can beat the weakest Democrat with nearly $5,000,- 000,000 at his disposal.” DEPUBLICANS of the ten Midwest- ^ em states that participated in the Grass Roots conference in Springfield, 111., have made the Grass Roots’ move* ment a permanent auxiliary of the party. Harrison E. Spengler of Iowa is its chairman, Mrs. Leslie Wheeler of Hlinois the vice chairman, and Jo Ferguson of Oklahoma, the secretary. Michigan, Ohio and Eentuckyi not rep resented at the Springfield meeting, have been invited to join in the move ment SENATOR HUGO BLACK of Ala bama may bring ont a lot of facts in his inquiry into lobbying, but his way of conducting the investigation is not winning him any credit ' The house has all along felt that he was trying to buUy It into accepting the UtiHtles bill “death sentence” clause and has been correspond ingly resentful. Vari ous witnesses before the senate committee have felt seemingly With reason, that they were being treated un fairly. One1 of .these witnesses who com plained bitterly was Patrick J. Hurley, secretary of war in the Hoover ad ministration. He testified that he had received' $100,000 from the Associated Gas and Electric system In the last three years, but insisted he was pard for legal advice only and had done no lobbying. Hurley , was not permitted to read a prepared statement, ^and Black’s Interjections and questions so angered the witness that he rose to his feet and shouted: “Everyone knows all you gentlemen are good prosecutors! Of course, you don’t know what it is to be fair or ju st You try to put words into a witness’ mouth. Your questions are all on the type of the ‘Why don’t you stop beating your wife?’ query.” Joseph P. Tumulty, who was secret tary to President Wilson, also was put •tn the stand and was not treated so roughly. He, too, admitted receiving -onsiderable sums from utility con cerns, and like Hurley he denied that ie had done any lobbying. Tumulty estified that he paid former Senator ■ Jeorge H. Moses (ItepJ, N.'H., $5,000 md~would pay another $2,500 to John Walsh, a brother of the late Senator i'homas J. WaIsh (Dem.), MonL Moses . ind Walsh, Tumulty said, are attor neys and aided In work done for the itility clients. THERE were strong indications that the house ways and means ommittee would'produce an entirely iew measure to replace the Guffey1 bituminous coal bill- Chairman Dougbton revealed that the committee P. J. Hurley Sc»<6T Sen. Barbour had adopted a number of amendments designed to bring the measure within constitutional limits and to meet ob jections that it would discriminate against some coal districts. The com mittee still stood 14 to 11 against the bill, however. The President was said to have Informed the Democratic mem bers that he was agreeable to any changes rhey might wish to make pro vided the main objectives of the meas ure were maintained. According to ^current report, the changes agreed upon In the committee Included: Elimination of the section forbid ding the Interstate Commerce commis sion to issue certificates of conven ience and necessity for operation of railroads to bitiminous mines without prior approval by the bituminous coal commission. Establishment of a consumers’ coun sel to safeguard the interests of con sumers. Addition of a provision for hearings to determine whether the method of fixing prices was working to the detri ment of any coal producing district Reduction from nine to five In the number of commission members, and the addition of a stipulation that none shall have any outside connections. Reduction from 25 to 15 per cent In the amount of the tax assessed against mine operators. Reduction from 99 to 90 per cent in the amount of credit allowed (he pro ducers who abide by the code. VIOLENTLY attacked from all sides and nowhere defended with en thusiasm, the President’s new share the-weaith tax bill nevertheless was put through the house because of the great administration major ity and also because the congressmen^ are tired out and eager to go borne. Represent* ative Treadway, Re publican, of Massa* chusetts, made a last effort against the measure with a reso lution to send it back to committee, but this was'easlly defeated. N A f passed by the house, the bill is not quite what the President asked for. Briefly summarized, it increases taxes on lndividnal Incomes over $50,- 000, substitutes a graduated eorpor* ation-lncome tax for the present flat levy, puts new taxes on Inheritances and gifts In addition to those -already borne by estates and gifts, imposes new taxes of 5 to 20 per cent on “ex cess" profits of corporations. It is designed to raise revenue esti mated at between $250,000,000 and* $270,000,000. Its warmest friends couldn't explain how this would dc much In the way of bringing about what the' President calls “wider dis tribution of wealth,” or in the way of balancing the budget. The measure was banded on to the senate with dubious prospects. It was expected the senate finance committee would study it for about a week, and In the meanwhile the conservative Re publicans and not a few Democrats were preparing to fight It. Senator W. W. Barbour of New Jersey, Repub lican, fired an opening gun with a statement In’.which he said: “Votes, and votes alone, are the objective of this half-baked measure.” Declaring the bUl “has no relation to making income meet outgo, but is Intended to accomplish some weird social objective,” Barbour continued: “What this biu actually attempts Is to climb upon that hard-ridden steed, “Share-the-Wealth,” and ride him away while the demagogues who have pressed him sorely in the past are look ing In the other direction. “The bill should be laid, away until the next session of congress when the budget for the ensuing year will be presented. Then, In the light of care fully appropriated federal moneys, we can determine how much revenue will be needed to operate. “Taxes can be levied deliberately as a true revenue measure. Any other program Is not . good business and-is not good government" OUe change made by the house against the President’s wishes involved corporations’ gifts to charities. Mr. Roosevelt was firmly against letting corporations deduct from their taxable income any gifts to charity. Jnst as firmly the house voted to let them deduct up to 5 per cent of their in comes. W Z -ITH some reluctance the senate v v began consideration.of the Walsh bill giving the President power to require minimum wage and maxi- mum hour standards of all firms bid ding for government contracts. That measure has been added to the admin istration’s “must” list. The Repub licans were preparing to flght the bill as another government plan for regu lation of private industry. -They point out that it hits about every Industry in the country, since it not pnly ap ' plies -to corporations selling to the government but extends also to stare and local projects wholly or partly linanced by federal funds NOT to be dismayed by the death of NRA, Senator J. O. O’Ma- honey of Wyoming thinks the objec tives of that contraption, high labor standards and fair competition, can be reaUzed, and for that purpose he has drawn up a measure, for the regulation of all national commerce by licensing business. The bill creates a licensing system for businesses engaged In commerce among the states and provides a na tional incorporation law. The federal trade commission, the government’s business policeman in the days before NRA and the agency to which the New Deal turned after NRA codes were outlawed, would be the key stone of the new plan. O’Mahoney’s bill would Increase its membership from five to nine, with three com missioners representing, employees, three employers, and three the gen eral public. No t w it h st a n d in g warnings by Dr. Hjalmar Schacht and other sane Germans, some of the Nazi lead ers insist on pushing to further ex tremes the war on Jews and Catholics. For Instance, Paul Jo seph Goebbels, minis ter of propaganda, In speech at Essen an- Paul Goebbels nounced drastic ac tion against all “en emies” of the Nazi state—Jews, Catholics, the foreign press and the Stahlheim war vet- e r a n s. He predicted these important de velopments : 1. Suppression of the Catholic press and Intensification o f. the Nazi cam paign against all Catholic opponents, of the third reich. 2. Nationwide dissolution of the Stahlheim. 3. An official ban In near futnre on marriages between Jews and Aryans. ENGLAND and France were still try ing to find the way to avert war between Italy and Ethiopia, but Pre mier Mussolini of Italy was so skep tical that he ordered 75,000 more men to the colors. By the first of October he will have about a million men In uniform. Haile Selassie, the Ethi opian emperor, was reported to have sanctioned the concentration of 60,000 of his troops. on Italy’s east African frontiers. The chiefs, it \& said, are finding It Increasingly, difficult to re strain their warriors from"bvert acts that would surely precipitate warfare. ANANDA, the eleven-year-old king of Siam, nearly lost his throne the other , day. A widespread plot was formed under the leadership of non commissioned officers of the regular army to overthrow the government But loyalists uncovered it and effec tually smashed it The plotters in tended to seize and kill their superior officers and oust the regency council that rules the country. SUDDEN death put an end to the ca reer of Nathan P. Bryan of Jack sonville, Fla., presiding judge of the United States Circuit Court of Appeals, Fifth Judicial circuit Judge Bryan, who . was sixty-three years old, was formerly United States senator from Florida. Frank Ht Hitchcock, publisher of the Daily Citizen of Tucson, Arlz., suc cumbed to pneumonia after several months of Ul health. Prominent . In Bepublican party politics all bis4 ma ture life, Mr. Hitchcock managed Taft’s Presidential campaign in 1903 both before and after the convention and was postmaster genera) In the Taft cabinet For years he was ac tively interested in the progress of aviation. TOE LOUIS, negro pugilist of De- *-* troit who hopes some day to be the heavyweight champion of - the wOrld. advanced another step toward that goal by defeating “King” Levinsky In the first round of a scheduled ten round bout In Chicago. Levinsky was knocked down four times in little more than two minutes, and the referee then gave the fight to Joe on a tech nical knockout Louis and Max Baer, former champion, have signed for a battle In September. SAMUEL INSULL’S annual pension of $21,000 has been restored by vote of the directors of the Chicago utility companies which he formerly headed, and he also receives about $33,250 to cover payments accruing since the beginning of last year when payments were suspended by the com panies. Insull previously announced he had made no effort to regain his pensions. Agitation ito restore the payments was begun after Insull had been freed in the federal and state courts of all criminal charges growing out of his management of his 'former properties. WAGE cuts decreed by the French government led to strikes and violent demonstrations. Especially riot ous were naval shipyards workers a' Brest, steamship employees at varloui ports and bus and gas plant workers In Paria The sailing of several Iarg- liners was, delayed. Finally the gov ernment issued new decrees Iowerin- the cost of living, and the strikers wer" somewhat mollified. The Communisi were blamed for the violence. M e ARLY $8,000,000—$7,784,000, t. be exact—has been allotted fron the works-relief funds by Presiden. Roosevelt tor a census of Americai businesA The census bureau asker and received this after it had beer allotted $293,000 for a survey of retat trade. The business work Is to be gin at once, and the canvass wilstart on January 2. DIGEST PAVIE RECOI ^ e s T c ir e u l a t * 011 o f 1 a v ie C o u n ty N e w s p a p e l I T O W l b y WILLIAM BRUCKART N A T I O N A L P R E S S B L O G . W A S H I N G T O N ^ determining whether they Ilad d,„ ered all of the potentialities of the WashIngtom-One of the oldest and perhaps the meat constant of aU com plaints about th e Too Much federal government Red Taoe at Washington has been the tendency toward bureaucratic control. Bureau cratic' control, simmered down, Is red tape; it Is attempted management of even personal affairs by. a government al agency and it Is natnraUy and obvi ously repulsive to -the average Ameri can. it was a condition thoroughly to be criticized In Mr; Hoover’s adminis tration when there were boards, bu reaus, and commissions everywhere. It is even worse now, I beUeve, with aU of the New Deal’s alphabetic soup agencies scattered hither and yon In execution of various New Deal experi ments and theories - AU of this constitutes a prelude to what appears to^ne to be a most fla grant attempt by bureaucrats to man age private affairs I refer to an or der issued the other day by the fed eral communications commission under which It has asserted a jurisdiction which I cannot beUeve congress ever intended it should have. Further, the asserted jurisdiction which the com mission is seeking to exercise goes far beyond anything which might be made the basis of complaint solely because it is bureaucratic. It has reached .into the field of commercial enterprise in a manner which, without a doubt, wUl have the effect of covering Invention and experiment In Industry with a de structive frost bite—if the commission is aUowed to get away with It. The facts involved are these:' The American Telephone and Telegraph company, which is spending mUlions of dollars annually In scientific research to Improve our system of communica tions such as the telephone, the tele graph, and the radio, lately has per fected what is technically known as the coaxial cable. This cable is revo lutionary. It holds the possiblUty of transmission of 240 telephonic conver sations simultaneously over - a single pair of wires It is not commercially complete In aU of its phases Like ev ery organization of sound judgment, the A. T. & T. wants to iron out weak nesses and imperfections through a pe riod, of experimental operation. -: ; - * * * Here is where the federal communi cations commission enters the picture. As a courtesy, pure- FCC Eaters Iy, the A. T. & T. Picture submitted its plan for- experimentation; to the communications agency, saying as it did so that the commission did not have jurisdiction but that In the „ development of such a revolutionary invention the corporation was advising the commission of its plans and sug gested that if the commission thought it bad jurisdiction it could Issue an experimental Ucense covering tbeyvork. In all of this it is to be remembered that the communications commission has jurisdiction over rates regulations, and practices of the wire, telephone and radio companies It seems that some bright young men* In the communications commission Im mediately conceived the idea of hav ing that group take jurisdiction when legal authorities tell me there is noth ing In the law giving them that au thority. The story I get around the commission lobbies is that the A. T. & T. would'not have objected- to having th e commission exercise what it be lieved Its right to be In- granting a license for the experiment but wh.en the order emerged from the secret chamber of the commission, it carried In R a provision..which said .that the commission could withdraw its ap proval and nulUfy the permission granted on 10 days' notice as it saw fit . Suffice to say-that this provision to gether with several other technical phases of the circumstances . was enough to arouse the ire of the busi ness men concerned. They are not only disgusted. They are downright sore. It is one of those things that poli ticians undertrained in sciencs at tempt to do that cause practical peo ple to lose faith In their government. * • - * If it were simply a fight between the A. T. & T. and the.commission that is . . . involved, the situa- right-of tion would hold no Vital Interest interest at all for *■ me as a Washington writer. But, as I said abovs it goes much further. I. am told that some of ficials of the A. T. & T. are so dis satisfied with the attitude of the com mission In this instance that they are ready, even anxious, to withdraw their' appUcatloq and decUne to proceed with this experiment which ultimately., is going to mean enormous changes in telephonic and telegraphic contact be tween cities .located great distances apart The A. T. & T. engineers have been working on this problem some six or seven years They proposed to build 100 miles of cable by connecting New York- and Pbiladelphis It had very little of the commercial In i t They wanted to try out transmission of television images for rebroadcast by radio. They ^anted to perfect further the transmission of photographs by wire and they, were desirous as well of invention.. AU of the expeuse six hundred thousand dollars-.*-!!? be paid from surplus funds of tho ~ poration. It takes no stretch of the imagi,, Hon to realize that if the a t j. , backed away from the program'in,! laid out and refused to . ^ 7 * ! money.In perfecting its Invention™ declined to attempt to put it into co^ merciai use for the benefit of the «T try as a whole, the countrv, that h you and L would suffer. We wouM denied advantages developed bv Sdent! and made avaUable virtnallv "as „ ' tlonal benefit ‘ I do not know what the end win bt It is not at a stage wherein a forecan is possible. But the principle of «,! commission's action, whether it be forward under Democratic or Eepubll. can administration, remains exactly the same. It should not be tolerated aid if the communications commission nso sists In its efforts to expand its La- trol, its usefulness certainly Is at an end. Hitherto, the communications commission has had a very satisfao. tory relationship with business. I barj heard dozens of executives from com. munications corporations say they me wUling to forgive and generally over look Ignorance piled up in the com mission by political appointments In several spots They wanted to co operate but It is the opinion of more than just myself among Washington observers that this sort of thing doa not contribute to good government. * * * Duck hunters will have only 30 days for shooting this fall in accordance with the most rigid N ow , as to regulations in tbs Duck Hunting history of Amerl. can game hunting.; This is the result of a determination by the federal government under an act of congress to give migratory wild fowl an opportunity to increase In numbers. In explaining the govern ment’s action which was made the sub ject of a proclamation by President Roosevelt, J. N. (Ding) Darling, chief of the biological survey and an lnter- natlonaUy known cartoonist, declared that unless the shooting of ducks and other wild fowl is restricted it is oifq a question of time until none of them remain. It is assumed that hunters will be Interested first In the period during which they may shoot ducks, geese, brant, or jacksnipe. The season will open In northern states October 21 and will close November 19. In the south ern states the season will run from November 20 to December 19. For the Information of hunters there is set out below the states included In the northern area where hunting may be done between October 21 and No vember 19: Maine, New. Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecti cut, New York, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Ohio, Michigan, Indiana, Illi nois, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Iowa, Mis souri, North Dakota, South Dakota, Nebraska, Kansas, Montana, Wyoming. Colorado, Idaho, Utah, Washington, Oregon, and Nevada. The southern states listed and In which hunting may occur from No* vember to December 19 follows: New Jersey, Delaware, Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina, South Caro lina, Georgia, Florida, Alabama, Missis sippi, Keptucky, Tennessee, Arkansas, Louisiana, Oklahoma, Texas1NewMei- tco, Arizona, and California. Regulations issued by the biologies survey,' according to Mr. Darling, a based on the necessity of having ia » annual increase of migratory birds m over at the end of each shoo season until the present depleted pop lation of waterfowl is restored something like normal. This y rigid restrictions, he explained, folio a period of approximately thirty - years during which the kill of fowl has exceeded the increase | To give an'idea of hoiv thoroughly the wild fowl are to be Protecteir ' r new regulations prohibit sliootm„ what is known as baited water o ' —that is, land or water on winch f has been scattered as an !"'locemL •for the birds to stop their fllSllt' other thing ruled out in this e protect the water fowl is the « coy. This has always been the - effective method for luring "i from the air* None will he a H ArA (i ffor The regulations restrict Shootiugm the hours between 7 a. m. and 4 P- a course taken In order to per In flight an opportunity to teea out being subjected to pot shotV matte and repeating shot 3°"» ^ be restricted to a limit of tbr for their chambers and no - *> larger than a No. 10 gauge « mitted. , . .epa-. Mr. Darling who has gam c011. tat ion as an enthusiast for ^ , servation, relinquished bis » ^jj cartoonist In order to carr- mOI)ihs Ideals.. It has taken him som ftel3 to work out a program but: his efforts haVl been worth s © Westero N ew spaper Cd ° Lof-W - F. Robinsonmade a I I Boone otte day last week. I I rov Brown, of Woodteaf. wd LcSviHe visitor Wednesday. I miss Elva. Cartner spent P with friends in Row an con I rcoree Walker and son Altod fastonia were Mocksville vis! 1st Tuesday. FORSALE-O^ muje Barj I quick buyer. SeeJ. w. J court house. j L E. Seataon.of St. Paul, Ni Ias intown Wednesday on his I Uefrom avisit to his par] .car Kappa- I jjr and Mrs. Frank Miller I L dren, of Salisbury, spent si {days last week in town wittf ftives. I Misses Sarah and Dorothy ,, of Davidson, spent several I J week in town, guests of-| •auline Daniel. I Mr. and Mrs. Howard Pj lave moved to Mocksville J ^oleemee, and are occupyitj jouse on Salisbury street. At Tbe Princess Theatre Fj Li Saturday Tim McCoy in J jquare Shooter.” Monday Iuesday the best on this SKeeper of The Bees” I Mr. and Mrs. Paul Spry, and Ld Mrs. Paul Hoffman have tn om Cooleemee to Mocksvillej : occupying one of the Ga ittages, on Pine street. j.FARM FOR RENT—1 2 0 I {arm, situated ZjA miles weF Jfocksville, near two hard-siL loads. 65 Acres in culdvatio| lcres in bottom, with 5 acr Clover. Good wheat, cotton, itnall gain land. Renter musl pish stock, See Paul HoltcF Ridson Nursey, one mile we Rolman's X Roads. ■ A revival meeting will be L [be grove at the home of L ‘.dams, near Farmington on ,/inston road, beginning nexf pay night. Services each er II 8 o’clock. Rev.. Jim Groct Io the preaching. Sunday Aug. nth, a reuni- held at the home of Mr. and Jp. B. Broadway for all the |amily and relalives. C. A. ms. C. B. Broadway, Mrs. Itoontz, Mrs D. C. Kurfe Hiss Eleanor L- Orrell, wit] "talitives and friends enjoy xasion. Jake Beaton, 6o, died - Jounty home last Tuesday mi iollowing a long illness.. Tl pal services were held at Bet ^ Pethodist church Wednesday i ng at Io o’clock conducted hi H- Freeman, pastor, and t' aid to rest in the church ce »r. Beatou is survived by t |ers, and a number of relati Unknown thieves enter: Poreof Maxie Swicegpod, at F i’s, some time Wednesday Pd carried out about $40 w PYerallsi tobaccos, grocerie r®d piled them on the side P'ghway, where they were i pearly Thursday morning F 0Ught the rogues' beca ^efore they could Itoth 10 a caJ or truck,Liest0re was madeI *ck window. ■the^i?^'® ~ T° all mem Itnemh cJr Qrder Council ltand th l xat d°es not fully Igard to n National La' Iusnran paymeW of Dues, Pact members, -j>li ftoo bad. l’ lp35. or it S c- s t o n e s t r e e t , I akdrFofrdV'8’ driven by Ji Kdriven , neaIv Bixby, and a < !Burling G R* CUr Ion Dutch!!!’were ba-diy Ioutbew0lancreek UIU- 4 1 Idayifte ,nstc,?'Sale.m hight |W fc"^noPn-'W hitaker- Ifiaptjst Tj ’ ®?$Lwas carried l W o ? M ; at Winston I ^ tit Whitob1 Haoeline‘ w IlUries Jta k e r1 suffered pai !^kidded an ls sa,d that tIotslick n„,ross the-road on EcOtUing J yentent. and the I lile Ford. ° the 11,11 st^ becam e I Iol Ef thrq -; •• •■■■,:■::"■ ::*' -, . V.''.-'' i':.'’-'"'.'ii> : ~!<': • v' ; ::• V'!^.'-j--:; rN - Ir I V 5 H IN G T 0 N > ^ b e tte r they had 6lfcnr J potentialities of theT 6 Si of the expenses—66 W Shousand doUars-,^®* !surplus funds of the «£ stretch of the Imaglna e that if the a. t. * £ ■from the program it has I refused to spend W 6 Jfecting its invention «3 IrT h eh 0 p fiu tltin to ^a- Irthebeneflt Ofthecoutt. I m % countrJ'. that is Juld suffer, we would be Iages developed by sciencelilahle virtually as a na! low what the end will bo !stage wherein a forecast KiU the principle of the faction, whether it be nut fa Democratic or Repnbii. jition, remains esnctiy the bid not be tolerated and Jiications commission per. worts to expand its Coa- llness certainly Is at a„ la, the communications Has had a very satisfa®. Wip with business. I have Jof executives froni com- Trporations say they were bive and generally over- Ie piled up In the com- Bolitical appointments In They wanted to co- is the opinion of more [self among Washington this sort of thing does I to good government,J * • * »s will have only 30 days Jthis fall in accordance with the most rigid regulations in the Kng history of Ameri- I can game hunting.: Jesuit of a determination II government under an is to give migratory wild prtunity to increase In explaining the govern- .which was made the sub- pclamation by President p . (Ding) Darling, chief fcal survey and an inter- J>wn cartoonist, declared Ie shooting of ducks and [ I is restricted It is onlj Jtime until none of them Jed that hunters will be I t In the period during nay shoot ducks, geese, tsnipe. The season will era states October 21 and Jember 10. In the south- Je season will run from Jto December 19. Irmation of hunters there pw the states included In area where hunting may |een October 21 and No- Hampshire, Vermont, I, Rhode Island1Connecti- |rk, Pennsylvania, West I Michigan, Indiana, Illl- |n , Minnesota, Iowa, SIis- I Dakota, South Dakota, psas, Montana, Wyoming, tho, Utah, Washington, kevada. |rn states listed and in g may occur from No vember 19 follows: -y, Delaware, Maryland, Iti Carolina, South Caro- Jpiorida, Alabama, Missis- Jty, Tennessee, Arkansas, jlahoma, Texas, New Mex- Hand California. I issued by the biological ding to Mr- Darling, are necessity of having a net se of migratory birds Iett end of each shooting ihe present depleted popo- Jiterfowl is restored JLe normSl. This years ions, he explained, follow Iapproximateiy thirty-^I which the kill of wild Seeded the increase front . idea of how thoroughly 9 are to be protected, the ,, Sns p rohibit shooting over In as baited water or land Si or water on which fe Sttered as an Induceul,n. I to stop their flight. Iuled out in this Offcrt pater fowl is thelneJ st L always been the W* pod for luring WtW f None will be alien ea Itions restrict shooting to Iween 7 a. m- and 4 P- ^ In in order to permit !opportunity to feed Ijected to pot shots. ■ Sepeating shot gun Ito a limit of throe Shefls L b ers and , I No. 10 gauge wiu oe v I who has gained a repu; I enthusiast for gam® Ilinquished his work M I order to carry out I s taken him f £ * f a program but be r« L i been worth while- Itern Newspaper UnIon* R FC O R D ^ EXTRA —A state highway pa-! K C tU IU /. trolman passed through Mocksville Friday afternoon at 4 -4 4 o’clock. ... I • Mrs. W. M. Crptts returned I home Sunday from Charlotte, where’ she spent several days with rela- -tives. \ ^ h e D a v i e r e c o r d . 6 . sj Circulation of Any ,County Newspaper. E ews a r o u n d t o w n , last W F Robinsonmadeatrtp £ n e one day last week. IKoyv-rown,ofWoodleaf.was a CviHe visitor Wednesday. L s Elva Cartner spent Jekwitti friends in Rowan county. , W a lke r and son Alton, of IjSt0Uia' were Mocksville visitors (Tuesday- I I mj cALE-One mule Bargain lS v e r-S e e J . W. Turner, Jj court house. I D g Seamon. of St. Paul, N. C., Ttown Wednesday on his way Lefroma visit to bis parents, Iear K-aPPa* LrandMrs. Frank Miller and Ldreo, of Salisbury, spent sever- Jdays last week in town with re fcti«s. I JIissesSarab and Dorothy John- of Davidson, spent several days iireek in town, guests of-Miss Llioe Daniel. I Mn and Mrs. Howard Phelps bare moved to Mocksville from jpleemee, and are occupying a eon Salisbury street. I AtThe Princess Theatre Friday M Saturday Tim McCoy in ‘"The !mate Shooter.” Monday- and Spday the best on this year J1 Reeper of The Bees” Mt. and Mrs. Paul Spry, and Mr. d Sirs. Paul Hoffmanhave moved Ifoo Cooleemce to Mocksville. and e occupying one of the Gaither !cottages, on Pine street. I .FARM FOR RENT—120 acre ■farm, situated 3}4 miles west of pockstille, near two hard-surface |ioads. 65 Acres in cultivation, 15 Jscres in bottom, with 5 acres in Jtlover. Good wheat, cotton and Jsmall gain land. Renter must fur- Jnish stock. See Paul Holton, at IEidson Korsey, one mile west of I Holman’s X Roads. A rerival meeting will be held in Itie grove at the home of Will JAdams1 near Farmington on the IWrtistOD road, beginning next Sun- Jday night. Services each evening Jal 8 o'clock. Rev. Jim Groce will Jdo the preaching. Sunday Aug. nth, a reunion was Jheld at the home of Mr. and Mrs. JC. B. Broadway for all the Orrell Jfainily and relatives. C. A. Orrell ■Mrs. C. B. Broadway, Mrs. B. - L. IKoontz, Mrs D. C. Kurfees and JMiss Eleanor L Orrell, with other Jiealitives and friends enjoyed the Joccasion. Jake Beaton, 60, died at the county home last Tuesday morning following a long illness. The fun eral services were held at Bethlehem Methodist church Wednesday morn raj at Io o'clock conducted by Rev. J-H. Freeman, pastor, and the body IWtorestin the church cemetery, JW Beaton is survived by two sisi' I'®’ a°d a number of relatives. Haknown thieves entered the JBatof Maxie Swicegood, at Hardi- J®cs,some time Wednesday night Iit carried out about $40 worth of .tobaccos, groceries, etc., j*™ piled them on the side of the JJS Bay, where they were discov- I,, estiK Thursday morning. It is I1WRht the G- W. Ratledge, proprietor of the Ratledge Flour Mills at Woodleaf, was in town Friday on business. Thanks, George, for a frog skin. Mr. and Mrs. P. J. Johnson of this city, and Mrs. M. C. Campbell of Winston Salem, spent last week at Carolina Beach.. Listen, every one should see Gene Stratton Porters “Keeper of The Bees” at The Princess Theatre next Mondayand Tuesday. 10 25 cents admission. Rev. and Mrs. B. C. Reavis and children, of Greensboro, spent last week with Mrs. Reavis’ parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Cartner, on R. 4 . ^ Mr. and Mrs. L. V. Shelton, of Tulsa, Okla., are spending several days with Mr. Shelton’s parents1 and other relatives in Clarksville township. Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Horn and daughters, Misses Lucileand Irene, spent several days last week at Myrtle Beach, S C., and points in Eastern Carolina. John Nail Waters, who has been living in Raleigh for the past six years, is spending some time here with his parents, Mr.' and Mrs. Marvin Waters. Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Sanford . and dV UghterMiss-Agues, -and Mrs. Roy Holthouser are spending this week in New York where Mi. Sanford and Mrs. Holthouser are purchasing fall goods for C. C. SaufordSons Co. [1Stdbefi flay morning, ! rogues became frigh ore they could load the IlotWacaror truck- Entrance !^window*3* “ ade tbr°Ugh E I He1WC^7r To a11 members ofLefflbTl0rder Council- A“Vstigj tlJ M 5 “ot fullX under- g!t(j. e ew National Law in re- ijsOrauTnfment °J Dues’ a,so tbe IllCtsom6 Lmembers- Please con R eSeT r 0f the lod^e be-, Pt- tst, j935> or it wiH be S c- STONESTREET, f . s . I i^iT 8Adriven by Ijm Whit I jlivCn hu L y' and a Chrysler P ttliaRt0n R- Christopher, of 0aDutdiT-,* re badly smashed up 0Ulhe Wino.0 Croeb b111, 4 miles out J-Tohenm60 alem highway Suu- I vlbJured j ^ bltakerwasbad- IaMstH^nd,wascarried to the L earn Beauty Culture In Ooe Of The South’s Finest Schools - Graduates Qualified For Superior . Positions. Complete Course. Highest Rating. _ Write For Free Literature. M arshall School O f Beauty C ulture - 406 N. Spruce WinstonSaleui, N. C- Kill The W eevil r'""—f For A Small Jnveslment You Can Give Your Small Grain -Complete Protection Against Weevils and Worms. - Ask Us For 1 Information and Prices. Let Us Serve You L eG iand’s Pharm acy Gn TBeSquare Phone 21 MocksviUeJL C. iiiiunniiiiiiiiimnrtmr B I G S A L E Is Still Going At Full Blast r $1.68 IOc gallon IOc . . 24c IOc 3c $2.95 $1.75 $1.65 19c $2.95 Flat Crepe now Standard Kerosene. 15c Red Devil Lye- Sugar, 15 .lbs Crackers, Ib 5c package Salt Flour. 98 lbs Feed CottonSeedMeal Vinegar, per gal “ I gallon jug-White House Coffee, bulk ■ Kenney Coffee, Ib Pink Salmon Pork and Beans. I Ib can'. 50-$20 to $30 Suits closing out*-$7 50 25--$15 Suits going at $5-b0 100 Dresses1 now. 7 orC Blue Dell Overalls - WorkSbirts Work Rants. , ’ 79c and up I Rack Shoes $2 00 to $3 50 valae OTe AU $4 and $5 Ladie’s Shoes $4 i I Now is the time to buy- your Shoes and Clothing.' Cpmelook them over. I have hundreds of Bargains. , Plow Casting J. price 4foot Poultry Fencing 48c 9c lie lie 5c I So oLvm T at ^ inston Salem.1 G{.ivanized Buckets ?lt,dded SfriLsaid tbat !be Ford $L59,3j)ly $194 I 6Islic^0acrosstbCroadon account Scythe Snaths aZld the Chrysler' V«,,r« ! JbeFord. 11 side-swiped McGormick-Deering FAkMALL QUALIFIED TO PROVIDE ANY FARM WITH ECONOMICAL POWER. Many good things come in threes and among the very best - from the farm point* of view is FARiMALL power—In THREE" sizes FT-30, F-20, and F-12—each of them ready not only to plow but to plant, cultivate, run belt machines, and handle all row-crop and general purpose needs. ~ - All of them have these exclusive patented FARMALL fea tures :quick-dodging albility, forward location of gangs, and braking either rear wheel through the steering gear for square turns. ' Call us and we will come out and demonstrate. McCormick-Deering No. 7 Enclosed-Gear Mower We are anxious to have all of our friends see the New Mc- Cormick-Deering No. 7 Enclosed-Gear Mower. We think it" is one-of the finest pieces of farm equipment we have ever sold! ... ' Everybody who. has seen it says they never had any idea that a mower ,could be built as this one is. For example: The entire operating mechanism, including driye gears, differential, and countershafts, is " assembled compactly in an oil-tight gear housing and runs in a bath of oil. There are four high-grade roller bearings. Oper ation is" so sniooth and noiseless that you can scarcely hear .. the light hum of the sickle! \ Special oil seals at the ends of the main axle and fly-wheel shaft, and the oil-tight gear box prevents leakage and pro tect all working parts against the entrance of dirt and other abrasive materials. Floating action of cutter bar provides ample play without .disturbing knife registration. -• N e w M c G o rm ic k -D e e rin g A ll-S te e l M a n u re S p re a d e r Steel frame) steel box, steel bracing—ALL STEEL all the. way through. That’s what you get in a new McCormick-. Deering All-Steel Manure Spreader. The rust-resisting, . nonwarping box is built, of heavy-gauge !galvanized steel • containing copper. It is low for. easy loading and has a . capacity of 60 to 70 bushels. .V -' ; The McCormick-Deering has five spreading speeds. .The - upper saw-tooth, nbnwrapping heater, the lower spike-tooth .: 'beater,- and~the widespread spiral shred the manure and spread it in an even layer over the ooil. Remarkably iight draft is provided , by the use of eight roller bearings and" Alemite lubrication. W e c a r r y a c o i u p l e t e l i n e o f M c C o r i n i c k - P e e r i n g F a f l i n iin p I e iM e n ts iia m d ; R e p a i r s . n e e d s i n t h i s l i r i e Saaford1-C. " W-,Bst. _—103 . Seafprd> C.: H. & C. A. SheafeMra.; G-WShieldsj B.' L. —i- I i o t '1Everything For Everybody” . Mocksville, N. 0. • . Yours For Baifigatn? Sale of Land For Taxes (Continued From Page 2) . Name -Acrea Amt- Hanes, Eufua, Eat."_ 11% Holderberry, Tom ...._1% 1.14 Johnson, John A."_._____56 17.13 Lyons, James, E sti 11 '2 % '.90 March, Lucy ...________~ 1 ; 1.17 Morgan, L. H. ..... 4 7.39 McMahan, Nelson._____ I 1.61Sutzer, Laura 29. 2.48 Sm ith/W iley.... :B 2.34 Smith, Jako________________ 1% " S-O1I Whorton, John ___... 15% 3.7£ Wiseman; Toin 7 7.51 Williams, L ouis_______ 7 2.1i Williams1 B ettie_________5 • 3.51 Williams, Lonnie ; 23 8.5£ Williams, B. W., Est____ 37 8.75 Williams, Belt, Est. _.. 13% ' 2.11 Young, Crawford 1% . 3.1E Tomlin, Charlie ___ 2% 3.7i Eaton, Jordan H . 76 . _ 9.11 JERUSALEM TOWNSHIP - Name " Acres ^Amt. Alexander, Joe A' ..'___56 $23.'6f Apperson, Mrs. Beulah 117% 28.8( Apperson, George 49 " 15.2( Benson, H. H. ____3 Lots 4.2(Bessent, Mrs. Bfessie ™ 29 6A4 Bessent, S. B . 47 . 23.51 Blackwelder, S. A. I Lot .81 Cook, D. ;S.'.: .' - 2 Lots 2.61 Cook, S. B ........ 24 3.35 Cook, J. H .... I Lot 17.8: Crawford, J. G. I Lot 12.61 Creasoh, J." S. _______20' 4.71 Creason, C. T., E s t.__101- „27.54 Crotts, C. H. & Co.,-..’ 132 ' 8.99 Crump, Mrs. S. B. __135 6-10 35.35 Daniel, Jl S .-I— 50 A. 2 Lots 7.34 Daniel, Mrs, T. C. .... 40% 12:24 Davis, I. C. _________ 50 16.68 Davis, C. A. ________ 93' 22.61 Deadmon, G. H ._____I Lot" 5.97 Everhardt, W. D. a____ 12 -11.68 Foard, Mrs. M. & L. .... 77 . ' - 17.61 Foard, W. G. I_____15 5.01 Foster, Mrs. Eate L. _154 45.92 Gibson, Geo. E .______I Lot 12.65 Granger, J. M ._______ 20 . 20.66 Gregory, B. C. ______ I Lot 3.47 Griffin, J. D .........____4 Lots 3.19 Hendrix, G. M. „.30 A. I-Lot ' 7.64 Hendrix, T M .________209% 53.77 Lefler, Mrs. M. L r____ 73 61.63 McCombs, C. H. A_____ 70 29.83 McCulloh, J. G .\_____ 91 28.74 McCulloh, Mrs. C. a .... 50% 20.90 McSwain, F. G ....-._____2 Lots 14.53 M iller,E .L 37 A 2 Lots 29.04 Pack, J. C ____,....125 31.44 Bedwine, O.'T .........2 Lots .73 Bidenhour, Mrs. MoUie I Lot 8.97 Salisbury Motor C o. 7% 2.77 Smith, E. C. ______ IL o t ’ 2.98 Smith, J. L .'._____198 ' 41.14 Stewart, Z. ___ 1% ~ 2.81 Stewart, C. W. I_____ -5% 10.53 Summersett, T. W., Jr., 27 85-100 6.15 Summersett, T.’W., Sr., 50 7-10 21.06 Williams, Mrs. Abbie -3 3 10.19 Williams, J. A. . J I Lot 6.89 Wilson, A. E .........104 . 24.21 Wineeoff, Geo. F; ___ I Lot 2.59 Mock, Thos. U. __.... 26 16.54 Peebles, Ed. 14 7-10 ' 3.69 COLORED . Clement, H. C. I Lot . , 1.47 Clement, W. C._______ 2 Lots 1.6f Clement, Sallie D. I I Lot 6.12 Fowler, Jim --...___ lJ ,o t ■’ 2.37 Hairston, Robt I LpJt 3.75 Johnson, Floyd I . 3.12 Johnson, Charlie I Lot 2.53 Miller, Henry — I Lot '. 2.86 Rosseau, W. G ........._ 2 Lots ' 12.06 Woodruff, Gaston. ™ -- l .Lot 1.17 MOCKSVILLE TOWNSHIP Name Acres Angell, C. J. - ,-. 4 LotsAngell, Mrs C. J . 2 LotsBowles, Mrs. ,Cordelia - 11 Bowles, L. S'. ______ 84 Bayles Realty Co. Brown, P. G. ... 2 Lots ..... I Lot Brown, M. D. Jr., Est. I Lot Brown, M D. ....----: 67 Brown, H. W . :----- 43% Cainj Jas. H., Est.— I Lot Call, Walter L . I Lot Carter, F. M. — ...— 2-Lots Carter,- J. L., E st. I Lot Cartwright, T. L. „— I Lot Clementj B. C. :& - C. A., Est 75 A I Lot Clement,* K. M. -.----. I Lot Cobbler, Mrs. E. L. __ 21% Cornatzer, H. P. ....-----.322 -Crawfordj'J. G . I Lot •Daniel, J. S................. 2 Lots Daniel &. Ijames -— I Lot Daniel, Annie L ., I Lot Donovant, H. J., Est 7 Feezofa, Miss Frances ....180 Foster, Mrs. S. A .----' I’ Lot i Foster, H. Clinton 64 Grant, .0. S .............35 Green,: J.,*B. ---------AS Griffin, E. L. .....---------13% Hall, A. E . -----:-------10 ' Harris; Mrs, Kate C. - I Lot ■ Harris, Amanda D. — I Lot Heatlimanj Mrs.* Mary 2 Lots.* HeUard1 G. C. ...'. l.L ot Heplfer; Mrs. C. B. — I Lot Hearn, W. M. — -— I Lot Hinkle.Vance & Co. 7 Lots* Holman, G. B .. — —— 17% ' Holman, G. B. and _ Maud Gaither ----- 70% Holton, J. L .I L o t Howard, D.'C. —--------2 Lots Howard, W, T .-----1-- »1 —.Hunt; E. E., Est. — 2 Lots .- Jones, Cartner & : *>,•I * Evans'.____4 Lots Jones & Walker —«— I Lot Jones, E. M. — I L ot’ K e rr.F ..----------.-^— -80 Kiabronoh, P. B. I Lot KoonfejJ.H I-Lot Kurfees, Z. C. ------—I®® .. Lanier, Mrsl D. G. — I Lot Livengood, Milton —-* . ~? MeClamroch, Mrs. S., Est 68 McCulloh, V V. ...— 3 Lots McGuire, Mrs. HattiB ~ 8* , McDaniel, Mrs. J. L. ._. 6 McMahan, Mrs. Martha 47 Martin, -T.'W . I-Lot Martin, Mrs. W. F. —5=* , Mcrbney, J. K. — ~,- I Lot Meroney,W. R., Est IL o t ^Mbbrfe J.-F. %™. 2 Lots'(Depot St.)_5.50 ,Nichols, Mrs. Manuo —Ji6 19-99•Peacock; Mrs. W. H. — 69 ,PenryjlvMrs. Laura- -Al%. PbpeJJohn D. .— r~ r yJ C Sain, J. F., Est. '. w~ 39 , Seaford,:. 0,- A . — I® Amt $15.56 21.87 2.8) 13.055.34 23.28 .91 23.37 33.26 5.64 8.20 40.81 9.41 10.04 30.81 16.33 5.95 90.00 8.24 9.11 8.94 6.92 6.92 •71.08 8.247.64 . 7.43 6.19 4.04 4.37 23.26 7.88 4.57 5.43 '..•■A ll .2.49 ~6.i 10.59 35.52 -i5il>4 11.33 6.43 32.31 4.60 22.77 2.18 6.56 4.45 . 1.55 ' 38.36 5.00 10.04 16.75 8115 25.82 1:76 8.91 3.12 ‘ 8.71 •22.67 17.59 .*•* *:"--* * ■; *.." '•■'. •■* ■. ■'*; *■■*. ; '■L/.'L v Name Acres - Amt. ■“Sparks, Mra. Cora'..__-152 45.48Stevenson, Mrs- Beulah & Blanche Hendrix .1125 26.34Summers,.1 C. S. ___. 12 13.57Swicegood, N. H .____I Lot 8.10Tomlinson, O H ._J I Lot 25.00Vanzant, C. G .___L-I Lot 8.59Walker, R. G."..____I Lot 30.18Walker, G. G. •„____8 Lots .77.99Wall, Mrs. John .„„*_I Lot 3.27Wineeoff, S. J.3 Lots;3.16Zachary, J. W., Est.2 Lots 28.91McGuire, James, Heirs 181A !,Lot 77.04 COLORED Barringer, Luther - I Lot - 1.08Brown, Hannah, Est. -I Lot 3.99Brown, Mary A., Est.I Lot 3.99Brown, Ernest _____-I Lot 2.31Burse, G. B .________- I Lot •6.26 Clement, Geneva___2 Lots 1.28Clark, Bettie _______I ILot '3.11•Clement, Frances ___I ' Lot 6.26Clement, F rank..........I Lot 5.12 Clement, Rachelik____I Lot 6.26Clement, Geneva____2 Lots 1.23Clement, Giles'....__„ i%3.51Clementj Geo. ____- 4%2.97Cox, A. P. ...............-- 25%6.26Day, Willis"________I Lot 2.87 •Dilliard, A lfred_____I Lot ,8.06Dulinj Elizabeth ____I Lot 8.15Foster, James, Est. .r • ■I Lot 5.61Foster, Robert .l.L ot 4.99Foster, R. M. _____3 Lots 15.46Foster, T iU _43 1.17 Furches, Freelove___I Lot 4.02Gaither, JuU a______2 Lots 9.87Gaither, I. L. _______I Lot 5.66Gaither, Elijah ..____._ 7 5.28Gaither, Rosa A. & Esther _..._____. I Lot 6^6Garrett, Sarah Jane, E st.___:..... I Lot I 1.45Gorrell, N ora _______I Lot 6.26 Gibson, Sophia _____I Lot 3.45 -Harris, Daska ______. I Lot 3.45Hamlin, s. Lee'_____2 Lots 6.53 Hanes, Amos, Est. ... I Lot 5.70 Hanes, Spencer, Est.2 Lots 7.39 Hill, Martha -—5 A.2 Lots 12.97Holeman, Lrila ,____•2 Lots 1.23 Huston; Frank, Est. „- I Lot 5.13Ijames, Elijah, Est,„ I Lot 3.45 Johnson, Wilkie D. _. I Lot 3.99Kimbrough, Dinah . I Lot 4.66Nash,'Mary V. ____. I Lot 76.12 Malbne, Will __. I Lot 444 Meroney, Henry W .... I Lot .2.81 Meroney, Cora C. _—- 1.90 Neely, Mary —____. I Lot >6.27 Pettigrew, W."A........• IL o t 15.12 Rose, Charles, Est. ..2 Lots V1.34 Scott, F. M .______.... 76%16.63Scott, N. A. -____;...— I 12.31 Scott, L izzie___:__.._ I .79Smoot, J. A. ..I Lot .6.07 VanEaton, Simon . I Lot -2.49 Woodruff, H enry___. .1 Lot • 1.70 SHADY GROVE TOWNSHIP; •Name Acres Amt. Atlantic, Joint Stock Land Bank ____— 10*1.54 Barber, C. L. _____.... 7%11.59 Barneycastle, C. M ._18 3.99 Beauchamp, Mrs. J. S.2 9 ■7.81 Branson, M. L...........--: 6%5.59 Carter, G. A. ■__:__... 75 18.88 Carter, Mrs. Annie ...... 24% -2.30 Cline, Mrs. B ottio _I 1.24 Cornatzer, J. S. .-—.... 29%9.46 Cornatzer, Mrs. Z. C.46% A I L. 20.19 .Cornatzer, Mrs. M. M „ 65%38.54 Cornatzer1-R. C.—.™....... 63 12.09 Cornatzer, W. A; ____....24%13.26 Crews, Mrs. J. L .__. I Lot 3.75 Fry, H. G. —--------— 91 27.98 Hall, C. W. _______.... 84 32.67 Hartman, E. M., Est. -118%32.79 Hendrix, Milton G. _.. 13618-100 23.38 Hendrix, Mrs.- TV. A....3% A. I L 14.17 Howard, Mrs. Sallie „.. 30 5.90 Howard, Mrs. J., R.1 24% -10.97 Jones, Mrs. O. F. _.... 42 1497 Jones, W .’J. — —I—--121% ' 26.36 Kimbrough, P. R. ___.... I 5.14 IfeDaniel, G. H. -----„ 7% .1.67 March, Mrs. O. M......__ I 10.67 ICarklandj L. O............ 77 30.00 ; Massey, Miss Ida —... 27%9.57 Massey, C. S. --------....105%16.18 Milton, W. E ._____.._ 27 13.70 Miller, Martin ____i 1.17 Milton, Mrs. Minnie ..-- 7% •1.75 Mock, Mrs. Fannie —.„ . I 9.68 Myers, W. T. —.... 10%6.89 Myers, G» V. --------,... 63%i5.99 Naylor, F. A. ____-„ . 50.9.17 N. C. Midland R. R. „ . 9 8-10'2.96 Orrell, Miss Annie „..... 27 -9.87 Orrell, J. E., Est. _-.115. :15.90 Potts, E. J. —— 17 •8.49 Potts, G. A........--Ar-: I Lot -12.63 Potts, Lonnie _____.... 1%I 2.91 Potts, Eugene --------.... 1%7.07 Ratledge, J. H., Est.- I Lot * 6.89 Robertson, Mrs. Odelia 3%'2.66 Robertson, G. S..----.. 8 6A9 Robertson, H. D.— 6 4.95 Tucker, Z. V .------—.... ’ 6 -2.30 , Wallfer," L. P. --------.„ .8 % '.6.92 > Ward, Mrs. Dora —__ 3 J0.66 Wood, A. C. ____—. I Lot 15.04 Zimmerman, J. G .____ 48 13:95 ' COLORED Duljn, Lily ---------------- I Lot '2.30 Flint, MaOe _____—.... I Lot 3.11 Foster, Emma _.._ 5 1.32 Glasscock, Alice, Est._ 14 3.45 Hairston, Henry, Est .4 1.96 Johnson, T.'G. —;------__ 12 6.25 Motley, Fannie--------„ I Lot .85 Peebles, Clifton -------U- 4 9.77 Peebles,“^Charlie-------'8 2.64 Worth, Rebecca ’.—•■- I Lot ..94 CHARLES C. SRlOpTt Sheriff Davie County, I I 'I NOTICE! v Hunting, .Fishing and Traripera Licenses on sale now. Resident County License $1.10, Rea State Hunting $2-i0. Res. Coun ty Trappers, State Trappers $3.10, Combi- nation ResT State Hunting*, agd Fishing $3.10r License Agents, L. :M. Tutterow. John LeGrand, I. G. Roberts1-R. H. Nedy. John Harding. W. Pl Walker Jake Doutbit. Pari) Foster. A. L. Shntt. N. H. Bennett. J. M. Livengood, N. L. Cobble, Johu Riden-. hourandA.B.Hendrix. j ,.,OpenSeason—Deer(MaieJOct. 1st. to Jan. 1st, Mink. Muskrat. Otiw Nov. 4»:. ta- Feb. 15th. Opbssnm, Ctwm (Set. 1st- to Feb. 1st. i QsaiLRabbittThariksgivingDay to Feb. IStb. Turkey TbankagivingDay to Feb 'lst. Squirrel Sept. 15th to Jan. l5tb. NO Open Season on PHEASANTS and. DOE DEER. (Keep this copy Tor /your guide,)* - ":: :,*:, • A. E. HENDRIX. *...... ,-..-a.:- *""" Game Protector, W l i i S f i l i p i i i i a a i ? # tlp i« fS:.-*v“W;.>. • *:-.f* •-■-•Ts':!^;' • v'--.^rt:^ ';>^/^‘:v:^'''.--V-:- v -' -4-:"^--^---V :-'. :r-'v-?'V;:-.-^:^;;.•.-.r:$*:■&&&:.--y^.-'-**',-,.. •. :-.-^ ~-;y■-*.■■• r .^ -..._.-v.v fH E DAV IE fiB d tiffi, M dO K SV llA E , it. & AUGtlsf » . t9^ :v /• SAT-IS -FY. Something that pleases, gives satisfaction; something that just suits. For example, you are pleased with a dress. As applied to cigarettes, it means one that is( MILD—that is not harsh or bitter; one that TASTES just right. t 6 6 6 MALMtl4 ID 3 di*tUQUIb-TABLETS f H I Fk n SALVE-NOSE '''j LUS DR0PS TOMIC ad Ux‘A11Ve Ttim im tim m iin iirniiimj^T 8 BEST IN RADIOS ‘ YOUNG RADIO CO. MOCKSVILLE, N C BEST IN SUPPLIES P . A N D E R s ffj dentist 1 ' Anderson Buildinif Mocksville, N. C. Office 50 - Phone - Residence ""WHij 0 193J, Liggett it Mybis Tobacco Co. C h e s te rfie ld . . . t h e c i g a r e tt e t h a t 's M T L D E R ^ C h e s te rfie ld . . . t h e c i g a r e tt e t h a t T A S T E S B E T T E R Administrator’s Notice,] Having qualified as Administrat3r of Mary Jones. deceased, Dotice» hereby given to all persons holdw claims against the estate of sail) ceased to present the same to tie undersigned on or before the 2ith day of June, 1936, or this notice^ be plead in bar of recover;. AU persons indebted to said estate win please cat) and settle without delav This the 24ih day of June, 1935.' Gi F. CORXAZTEK,Admr. of Mary Jones, decs'd Ar. T. GRANT, Atty. Administrator’s Notice. Having qualified asadminisiratoroftbt estate of Gaitbei Wood, deceased, late oi Davie County, Noith Carolina, notice)) hereby given alt persons having claims a- gainst the said estate, to present them U the undersigned on or before Julj It. BK; i or this notice will be plead in bat of tktit I recovery. AU persons indebted to saides. tate, are requested to mate iraraedian pay men t. This July 15,1935. M. BRANSON. Admt. Gaitber Wood, Dtc’l,B. C. BROCK, Atty. A Bargain In Shoes. Dr. H. B. Shields, of Carthage, is fond of' relating the story of the old gentleman who is possessed of considerable wordly goods, and, as is usually the case, of a thrifty dis position also. He is a constant source of distraction to his wife and children because of his habit of buy ing cheap clothing that looks none too well. . Observing that he needed new shoes they . decided to buy him a really good pair, paying $8 for them. But they knew he would never wear thenj if he learned they paid only $3 for the shbes. . He was w;ell pleased with them, and putting on the next morning he went over, next ,door to call on a friend, an old crony of congenial temperament. An hour later he re turned barefooted. “Why, father!" exclaimed his hor rified daughter. "What has hap pened? Where are your shbes?” - ‘‘Don’t you worry about those shoes,” he replied, with a knowing grin. VJohn liked ’em so wejl he lie. offered me $4 for ’em. .Here’s the $3 you Daid for ’em and (chuck ling .over his .Bargain) I’ll just -keep the profit.” In Memory Qf Motherv She was a wonderful mother, and oh so dear,-next to God-there is do otbef we boldso near.-.; She was not veiy old just 79, aud' her Isferwas like-gold, this mother of mine. Though hOr last few years was a little sad,*he would smile through-tears and seem so glad, To the war she gave a pair of/twins, both crossed the waves and helped to win. Just one came home, and sad was Bhe, in the Lind's heavely home at rest is he. There is still another his name is Vance, the youngestbrother he too went to camp. At home he would stay when war was over, in his usual way her griefs be bore. She was so sweet, loving and kind, a 1 grand lady .to meet,' thjs mother of mine. Stie now at rest with Him above, ’ for •he did her best through the Master's love ; .MRS. MOLUE POWELL. Fisher. IiL Judge Griibb Is A ' ; -Democrat . judge William I., Grubb, the arch -foe .of the NeW Deal alphabet, hav- .. ingruled agaihst the NRA1 the TVA and the AAAV- is a Citfcinnati-bom Or Talkative, Maybe—' I have beard of several making cider for *'vinegar.’' . Let’s not sample it too often to see if it’s ready for pickles or somebody may get “sick.”—Monroe Journa^. Tbe population of the earth has baen estimated at 7,748.00 0,0 0 0 . .Neighbor: ' “So your son got bis B. A^and M, A ?” ProndDay: “Yes, indeed, but his P. A., still supports him.” Notice of Sale. Under and by virtue of authority conferred in me by Deed of Trust executed by Cary W. Hepler and C1 V. Hepler, his wife, dated the 8th dav of Januarv, 1929, and recorded in Book 23 of Mortgages, page 105, in the office of Register of Deeds of Davie county/ North Carolina, R. M. McClamroch. Substituted Trustee, will, at 12 o’clock noon, on the 31st day of August, 1935, at the court house door of Davie county, in Mocksville. North Carolina, sell at public auction for cash, to the high est bidder, the'following lands, to- wit, lying and being in Mocksville township. Davie county, North Car olina, and more particularly describ ed as follows: Lying on the West side of the road leading from Mocksville to Salisbury new highway, being two lots. Nos. 50 and 51, in BIockrB. Clement.Crest land, according to a map recordedin .Book 23. page 428, Registefof Deeds office, Davie County, North Carolina. This sale is made on account of de fault in. the pay ment of the indebted ness secured by the said Deed of Trust, and is subject to all taxes and assessments against the . said property whether now due or to become due. This the 31st day of July. 1935. R. M McCLAMROCH, Substituted Trustee. Richmond county enjoys its best prospects for bountiful crops since 1927, reports the county agent. Land posters for sale. Notice Tc Creditors! Having qualified as Administratorof tbe estate of W. S. Guffy deceased., notice is hereby given Io all persons bolding claims against the estate of said deceased to pre sent the same, properly verified , to the !-undersigned, Cleveland. North Carolina' Route 2, on or before the 9th day of July, 1963 or this notice will be pleaded in bar of recovery. AU persons indebted to said estate wiii please call and make proper settlement. This the 9th dayofjuly 1935. - J. R. GUFFY. Adm’r. of W. S. Guffy. decs’d. By A. T. GRANT, Attv. ... '-. NOTICE! Having qualified as Administratrix of the estate of George Hendrix decs'd. no tice is hereby given to all persons bolding claims against the estate of said deceased to present the same, properly verified, to the undersigned on or before the 28th day of June, 1936, or this notice will be plead- ed in bar of any recovery. AU persons indebted to said estate please call on the undersigned and make prompt settlement ■ This the 28th day of June, 1935. • BEULAH APPERSON, Ad.urx. of George Hendrix, Decs'd. By A. T. GRANT, Atty. ^Pfl^»nim iiiiim iiitnim »»nm m nm uiim m H IIIHHlllllll;l»lll)iiiiiiiiiimmmii I CAMPBELL - W ALKER FUNERAL HOME AMBULANCE EMBALMERS Telephone 48 Main Street Nekt. To Methodist Church I Administrators Notice. Notice is; hereby giventhat the undersigned has qualified as admin istrator of J. Ar Hegel deceased. AU persons having'claims against tbe estate of the said deceased, will pre- sent them to the undersigned on or before the 29th day of June, 1936, or this notice will be pleaded in bar tf their recovery. AU persona indebted to said estate will..please make imrnediate settlement. This 29th day of June, 1935. • W.T. S. MYERSpAdministrator : of J. A. Hege,.deceased./ •'"" ROBERT SI McNEILL, Attorney. North Carolina I In, Superior Court. Before Davie County T M. A. Hartman, C. S. C. M. C. Cain. O. L. Harkey, et al vsM. Ci Powler, Louise Fowler, Nellie Ollive (Nellie Olliver), Clyde Austin „.et al. Notice of Publication. The defendants, Louise Fowler, Nellie Olive (Nellie Olliver), and Clyde-Austin, above named, will take notice that an action or special proceeding entitled as' above has been, commenced in the Superior Court of Davie County, North Caro lina, asking for a sale for partition of the lands of R L. Cain,- deceased, located in Davie and Onsiow- coun ties, said action being for the parti tioh of said xIands by sale thereof for division: And Said defendants will further take"notice . -that they and each of them are required to appekr at the office of the Clerk of the Superior Court of Davie Countyi North I !-Carolinajit the court house in ,Mpcks- 1 ^ M A. Hartman,"daysiafter the- ... , . £ ______, _______ 1935,it.being.gree. He was,admitted to-the-tar the last day'of- publication of this! . t ie following year (in Cincinnati)- notice, and answer or demur to. the' and- practiced there and Sn Birm-' complaint or, petition of .the plain- 1 inghaiq until 1909 when be wss tiffs; or tfte plaintiffs will apply to!| named U. S. District Judge for the Court for; the relief demanded N jrthern Alabama.: He was atn >m- in the complaint. 'This the. 30th day' -her of President Hoover’s Law £nvof-JuJy,l935. ; ' : ^ , i - fcrc ment Committ' e, although-' a - ; '.V.; M- A1.HARTMAN,;— ■-•-*- — - = v Clerk of, Superipf .Court." Travel anywhere . . any on the SOUT HER N for AFareForEveryPurse . . . . ! I I - |2 PER MILE IJc ONE WAY and ROUND TRIPJCOACH TICKETS ‘ •Per Mile . . ... . for Each Mile Traveled. * 2c ROCJND TRIP TICKETS—Return Limit . 15. ;dDaysFer Mile . . ' . for Each Mile Traveled. „ - * 2ic ROUND TRIP TICKETS—Return Limit. 6 MonthsPer Mile .' . . for Each Mile Traveled. * 3c • V ONE WAY TICKETS ' - ■ Per Mile . . . for Each Mile Traveled * Good in Sleeping and Parlor Cars on payment of - proper charges for space occupied. No surcharge., Economize by leaving your Automobile at home and using the Southern Excellent Dining Car Service BeComfortabIe in the Safety of Train Travel. ..R, Hv GRAHAM, Div. Pass. Agent . . . Charlotte, N. C. Southern Railway System, e I s T h e O l d e s t , M o s t DAVIE CAFE “On The Square” . Mocksville, N. C, . NextTo PostofBce And Just Asileiiable " • Reguiar Meats .• . ■ I . .. , ggc Ice Cream, Soft Drinks, Short Orders, Every Hour, - - P.. K. M A N O S , Prop... d r . p. h : M As q n D e n tis t S A'NFO R D b u il d in g Phone IJO,.Mpcksville,.N. ■ The Price Is Only .0 0 P e r Y e a r . Send A Year's Subscription To Your Ji Relatives Who live In Distant Cbupties Or States. They Will Appreciate A Weekly News Letter From Their Old Home County A Features Will Not Find In Any Paper In This County. VOLUMN XXXVJ NEWS OF LI What Wat rfappenin?| Tbe Day* of AtttomolT Hosel (Davie Record, AiT J. D. Casey wenl Thursday. i Miss Mary Nell I Farmington, spent Winston. f. L. Sheek make to Daaville-Iast weel Miss Bonnie Brow week in Statesville, Miss Evelyn Shephei Miss Velma Martii for Buie’s Creek, teach this year. Mrs. J. P. CloaninJ son, of Wiuston, sj town with home foil Mrs. E. H. Pass, C., is spending son town with her son, Miss Annie Allisoa several days with Elizabeth Crews, at Dr. and Mrs. I. w l turned Thursday froJ where they carried tlf for an operation. F. A. Foster attend ’ Ing of tbe North Cs Order, which wss he last week. Miss Lina Ivey, of guest of Miss Marie . Miss Muir IBooe, College, spent the w Miss Mary Stockton. Mr. and Mrs. Ja7 and Mrs. T. P. D Minnie Walker and of Calahaln, made an I Charlotte Friday. J. C. Dwiggins been operating a gen Kappa, have closed on ness there and moved) Mocksville and Cente Three of the county broke dirt yesterday 1 ville • Mocksville - WiI aided highway.—Statl mark. T. ,H. Redmon, of I was in town Thursdai home from a business] esville Winston. C. C. Sanford SotL sold tbree-or four For| since our last issue, not yet. - R- P. McSwaio1 spent Saturday in tl hands with old friendi Suu Bros, circus wi| Mocksville on Sept. Mrs. Will Allison., returned home Friday, in* a week with relatfl Mrs. H. C. Sprinklj ren, of Spencer, reta Priday after spendinj with Mr. and Mrs. S. Mr. and Mrs E- L. ■ daughters, Misses Jaul IV Dorothy, went to. N e/ nrday evening, wherl meet their daughter, who is expected to Europe today. Theyl otne tomorrow or Euos Smith, of Far T 1 serious accidd “Jght. Mis horse ran m* throwing him oul W^nd Brujsing his fad . '*ses Gladys and lL !aura Kipibrougl grove, are the guests I ’ in North Mock loff 1SS Alma 0sbor« SmTth G?endinff a weI P o i ewithbeH We| k « Cleveland and intoto AHison' o fSta , - n a few days Iasl S h ^ mber of Doviei^ e v ille day-on the ex| S iP liS S S ffS B ® malaria COLDS_ first dav •tonic m i Laxative Its I t IN RAD IOS Ng r a d io Co SCKSVILLE, N C IN SU PPL IE S P. ANDERS^ !d e n t is t Iderson Buildme Slocksville, N. C. I - Phone - Residence 37 . I tr a to r 's N oticeJ lualified as Administratap I nes- deceased, noticed I 1V t h PerSOns hoWiDK list the estate of said Z!resent the same to £ 5P on or before the »i7k b 1936. or this notice win H recovery sn jIebted to said estate wM settle without delayS-4th day of June, 1935 I GiF.CORXAZTiiK Jx0A ttyry J °DeS’ deC5’d' istrator’s Notice.] IaIified as administrator ot the Ither Wood, deceased, late of I Iy. North Carolina, notice is I J all persons having claims a- j Sid estate, to present them ta I ped on or before July 16.1936; b will be plead in bar of tbeit I 111 persons indebted to said es-1 guested to make immediate' Rbis July 15, 193S. M. BRANSON. Admr. 1 Gaither Wood, Dec'd,, Atty. K tatm tm nm m om m a LRAL HOME EMBALMERS It Church G S t, o s t P a p e r i u n t y . I Only e a r * ItionTo Your In Distant |TheyWiU cly News Iome County ’CORD I fF e a tu r e s |ind In Any County. Postal ftficfeipff §M6W dRCULA^iON fjjfc LARCfeSf IN THE COUNTY; TiMEY OONjT LIE: "HERE SHALL THE Press. THE PEOPLE’S RIGHTS MAINTAIN:UNAWED BY INFLUENCE AND UNBRIBED BY GAIN.” VOLUMN XXXVII MOCgSVILLE. NORTH CAROLINA, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, Ti KUM BER 6 Home-Coming at Center M. E. Church.NEWS OF LONG AGO. VVhat Was Happening In Davie Before TheDayi of Automobile* and Rolled Hose. (Davie Record. Aug. 2 6 , 1914 ) j, D. Casey went to Charlotte Thursday. Miss Mary Nell Hartman, of Farmington, spent Tuesday in Winstoa. I L. Sheek make a business trip to Daaville last week, Miss Bonnie Brown is spending a Week in Statesville, the guest of Miss Evelyn Shepherd. Miss Velma Martin left Monday for Buie's Creek-, where she will teach this year. Mrs. J. P. Cloaninger ahd little son, of Winston, spent Friday in town with home folks. Mrs. E. H. Pass, of McCall, S. C., is spending some time near lown with her son, M. D. Pass. Miss Annie Allison is spending several days with Misses Mary Elizabeth Crews, at Walkertown. Dr. and Mrs. T. W. Rodwell re turned Thursday from Greensboro, where they carried their little son (or an operation. F. A. Foster attended the meet ing of the North Carolina Junior Order, which was held at Durham last week. Miss Lina Ivey, of Lenoir, is the guest of Miss Marie Allison. Miss Muir . Booe, of Davidson College, spent the week-end with Miss Mary Stockton. V Mr. and Mrs. Jay Ratledge', Mr. and Mrs. T. P. Dwiggins, Mrs; Minnie Walker and Holt ’ Barney; ofCalahaln, made an auto trip, to Charlotte Friday. J. C. Dwiggins & Co., who-have been operating a general store at Kappa, have closed out their busi ness there and moved their stock to Mocksville and Center. Three of the county’s road forces broke dirt yesterday on the States ville- Mocksville - Winstou Federal aided highway.—Statesville Land mark. T. H. Redmon, of Farmington, was in town Thursday on his way home from a business trip to Moor- esville Winston. C. C. Sanford Sons Co., have sold three or tour Ford automobiles since our last issue, and the end- is not yet. R- P. McSwain, of Salisbury, spent Saturday in town shaking Iwnds with old friends. Sun Bros, circus will exhibit in Mockiville on Sept. 16th. Mrs. Will Allison, of Cleveland, tetUrned home Friday after spend- hf! a week with relatives here. Mrs. H. C Sprinkle and child- 'en' of Spencer, returned home Friday after spending two weeks with Mr. and Mrs. S. M. rs u Mr. and Mrs E- L. Gaither and aughters, Misses Jane Haden and Dorothy, went to. New York Sat Urday evening, where they will mWttheir daughter, Miss Sarah, *ho is expected to arrive from turOpe today, honii Commandments Congress Costly To The The Carolina Motor Club has is sued ten commandments that are designed to-promote safety in driv ing. With the hope-that they may lengthen, the stay of some of us on this terristial ball,' we pass them oh to our readers,with the highest re commendation. ‘‘Thou halt drive thy car on the right hand side of the road with no ] object before thee closer than feet. rs. Should there be any one in this broad land of ours who doesn’t be lieve it gets hot in Wtishington all he has to do is ask his Congressman In the past, Congress has nearly al- was dosed up shop along about the first of June when - it was just be ginning to get warm. Thus they were able to spend the hot summer 5 0 . months back home in the shade or I at famous watering places or wher- Thou shall sound thy horn and. ever they chose. This year, however make sure that the vehicle operator President RooseVeIt kept the boys in front hears the warning signal and girls on the Hill so busy they The Annual Home-Coming and Qid Folks Singing wrU be- held at Center Methodist church, 4 miles west ot MocksVille,' on Sunday, SepI tember 1st. Everybody is invited to attend this big annual' event. . They will return “e tomorrow or Friday. ,^nos Smith, of Farmington, met a serious accident Saturday ’8 t. Iiis Ij0rse ran aWay WjtJj “• throwing him out of. the bug SSr and bruising his face very badly, isses Gladys and Ethe1 Naylor Laura Kimbrough, of Smith 0, 7 ’ are the Riiests of Miss Elva e , tn North Mocksville. IolJ ss Alma Osborne, of Char- Smith1^ spending a week or tw ° at^hGrove with her father.j.H. Mrs- H enry H arris- 6f 4 at ’a SP? * feW days ^thisj- J* Cleveland and Statesville! in Wn A!US0“' of Statesville, was “ a few days last, week' , AsheviiIaber °f Dovieites went to T«esd?~e 0n the eicu rsiP ^ I #oay. Knox Offers Platform of 1932. Hampton Beach, Nv H.—Draw ing upon the 1932 Democratic plat form for bis material, Colonel Frank Knox1 possible Republican presi dential candidate-iu 1936, outlined a party platform which he declared represented ‘‘the utter' repudiation by. Roos>velt and his new deal ad ministration of sacred promises.” Presenting the planks in ,answer to President Roosevelt’s “reiterated demand for a substitute program,’’ the ChiiJago and'Manchester, N.. H., newspaper publisher recommended-, for adoption by his.party, a ntimoer of planks “taken^ literally, from the Democratic platform of 1932 .” “They represent princiries upon which all-those opposed to the radi calism of President Roosevelt' can support the Republican Party . . .,” be declared.' Colonel Knox, in an address pre pared for delivery before the annual outing of the Rockingham County Republican Club, suggested that the following planks be included in the next Republican platform: ‘1.-Au immediate and drastic re- duction of governmental, expendi tures., . " 2. Maintenance ot the national credit by a federal budget annually balanced. , 3 . A sound currency to be pre served at all hazards. 4 . Unemployment and old-age' insurance, under- state laws. 5 . Strict and Impartial enforce ment of the anti trust laws to pre vent monopoly and unfair trade practices. 6 . Opposition to the unsound policy of restricting' agricultural production.” Colonel Knox said he not only rec ommended those principles for adop tion by his party, but he urged “the precise language in which I have read them.” “This is important,” he said “be cause they are taken literally from the Democratic platform of 19^2. : “They represent principles upon which all those opposed.to the radi calism of President Roosevelt can support the Republican Party and they represent, in every single in stance, the utter repudiation Ropsevelt and his new deal admin-J Not So CarefnL It is very probable that a lynch" ing was avoided at Yanceyville a few nights ago simply because the sus . pact had been released from jail be cause there was not -sufficient evi dence ou which to hold him. Had! this good stroke not. come to him: ahead of the arrival of the mob he would no dotibt be a dead man today.’ The story is that the man had^ been arrested oh suspicion that he was the negro alleged to have slap-: ped a white woman near a mill in- Burlington. The wvo-m-aif-''wiis' brought to look him over and de clared she co.uld hot identify him as the man, so be was turned out of jail. But just in time, for in'the dead of night a mob of white men with handkerchiefs tied across their faces beseiged the jail and would not accept the jailer’s word that the man they sought was not there un til he permitted ;a * ‘committee” to go through the jail and satisfy them selves. - ■ ' Suppose the prisoner’s, innocence had not been established in lawful manner when it was! It is not likely that a -mob bent on lynching, a per son for 3 simple assault on a female Would have gone to. much trouble to.establish guilt or ihnocence before carrying out their" desire. However, the incident might Well be a warning to any negro male' who might be moved by an urge to slap a white woman He might get a rope around his neck -for his pains, or, worse still, his action might put one afound the neck of some in. nocent negro. Mobsare notso care ful.—The Dispatch. Old-Fashioned Things That Are Good; “We.‘are informed.” says the Chicago News1 “That the Constitu tion of the United States, a product of horse-and.buggy days, is old- fashioned anff interferes"with a cer tain gentleman’s ambitions and that something must be done about it or— - “Breadand butter is old-fashioned Cake and wine, the Ten Command ments* .Greek architecture, sympho nies, all old fashioned; old and- mel low. sustaining and inspiring; tried and found not wanting. “Should we then peevishly discard or tinkers with the master products Rojjocv=iL _ _. Jlie 1 of other ages on the plea that they lstratiou _ P . , . ... , are old-fashioned or might it not be basis of which he procured his ele^' wiger to hol(j fashioned or might it tion.... .-.x-i I not be wiser to = hold fast to that . “Out ot the calloused indifferenee ■ jB ourB by right and pass it on of the Roosevelt administration to u^egi^d to coming generations? its p le d g e s to the public. we;can andj “A'fter aiiv the sturdy oak has a must construct a program of eet* ’ ^ay of outliving th^rn^t vopiferous- nomic fundamentals and provide woodpecker.” " convincing evidence of our - sin cerity.” ->•' • '' r broad; A total pf 3 7 5 ,000 feet of Sales jumped' months,' of Al^HarfSflags have Too per: cent1 in recent report^ nowthetrade before attempting to pass. “ T housbalt respect the rights of others and show courtesy to thy fal low m otorist w ith all thy ability. “Thou shalt not stop or turn without Executing a hand signal in keeping with thy intentions. ~ "'Thoushaltnotdrive thy vehicle into a moving lane of traffic unless it can be tdone without endangering thyself or others. “Thou shalt question and deter mine the right understanding on any doubtful motor vehicle laws or rules of tbe,road, “Thou shalt not allow a minor Io operate thy vehicle or allow thv vehicle to be operated by a careless or irresponsible person. ■ “Thou shalt determine that thy vehicle is in good mechanical con dition before operating this-vehicle. “Thou shalt not drive at a high, dangerous rate of speed, pass on curves or blows of hilis unless the ypadway is clearly visible five? hun aired'feet. ■ — - - - - “Thou shalt have no other object before thee than to create safety for thyself arid others in all of thy driv ing habits. New Day On the Farm. (From an Illinois Subscriber) Little Boy Blue, come blow your horn, There’s a government agent count- ■ ing your corn, Another one is lecturing the old red sow Onthenumberpf pigs’she can have and how. Pa’s gone to town to find out what He can do next month with the old- meadow lot. AuntMameisin Washington, drag ging down pay, From the PDQ or-the AAA. The hired man quit when the work didn’t please Andgotajobtrimming government trees. They’ll be telling you sooa, if you don! t take^ care, Where you can live and what you can wear. How much you must pay for your pants and shoes, So lhis is no time to be taking a snooze. LittleBoy Bluei may be buried deep Underred tape,'but he’s not asleep Pinehurst To Have Li- quor.' ■ .< - Authorities 0 f Pinehurst. th e winter resort in - Moore county, . an nounce plans to open a liquor store in that city in time for the influx ^ of hotel guests and-cottagers for. the winter season. Well over 50 per cent of the quali fied qoters of Mineral Springs, town ship, they said, have signed a peti tion: for the opening of the Btore.'.-. Under the Pasquotank law. two townships of Moore county -.'were authorized to open. stores upon- the petition of a majority of the yoters without going through the formality of anelection. ' . . K * Itlie presumed that a IiqUor stbre. will also be opened a t Southern Pinesj as .that bit? was given the same privilege by the last Legisture as Pinehurst in the matter of bdo^e seiiiag. just couldn’t leave when it got hot, no matten how. much they desired to. And as long, hard. session con tinued and the heat became .more torrid Congress became more irri table. “The Hell You Say.” “I am always happy, when I .can do this conscientiously” said .. Gov- ernor Ehringhaus. Thursday^hen he signed the document commut ing to life imprisonment the death sentence improsed on Wili Carter, young. Charlotte negro who ‘went to a man’s place of business,. rob bed the store and when the owner resisted killed him. - Murder, de liberate. premediated and wilful if there ever was such a murder, yet yet.our Governoris ‘’happy” ivfhen he can annual the findings k>f i2 good and true men-jurors, the 'Su perior court judge and be a .law unto .<himself. No wonder . Char- lotle people are incensed at-this action of the Governor but. oh1, it made him so *I “happy Union Re- publican. v;>; TL I M nyuj-HiL-mir. wenc so rar as to declare lnere Is iVo Such Animal that membero-of Congress. particuL ^Relief:.^trikbrshavebreakfo ved'^on lawn, says Kansas city arly those over.58 years/old after their grueiing years, were in “no position to legislate wisely or. sen sibly.” If we consider the merits of some of the legislation turned out a lot of us are inclined to feel that way toward Congress, whether it be winter spring or fall. The truth of the matter is that Congress has been hot in several ways. Demo crats and Republicans alike have suffered from the intense beat, which on many days has gone above 96 on several days was unofficially record ed as 106 in the Bhad e. Many of the memberB have been hot under the collar more than once during the long battle for New Deal legislation. havebeenJio& ^jerjtbeicollar more than] once the long battle for New Deal legislation. They .,have been angry too because they, could not go home to mend political fencep, loaf and fish. Is it any wonder, 'then, that Congress has occasionally kicked over the traces? Speaking of.the long session, it has been costly to the taxpayers in more ways than one. For just one little example let .us consider-the flags which fly from the four staffs or poles over the Capitol. Accord ing to a lieutenant of the Capital Guard the life of a good flag on one of these poles is less than 30.. day?. But the flags over the east and west entrances to the Capitol fly night and day. Those over the House and -Senate wings fly continuously while' Congress adjourns. Incidentally, they are the only flags in America which by right are permitted to ~ fly after sundown.-' The one "at the White House is not .given that dis tinction. It conies down every even ing and is raised each morning, when the President is at the White HouBe. When be is away it stays down. Sincis the flags bn the Capitol fly con- tinuosly the wind and rain and sun play havoc with them. They are costly, too And because of the pro longed session seven sets of ^ flags have been worn out since- Congress convened in January.—Ex. Ladies! Ladies! It is hard to decide w hether some of the women out in Dallas, Texas, :are exem plifying the old -supposed, scientific adage th at the fem ale of the species is the deadlier, or w hetb e n h e 1936 T exas C entennial. ex position isheing given a bit of strong advance ballyhoo. A nyhow , i t •looks like women-'iii Dallas can be ‘‘he-men” when they get “ bet” up over som ething, as witness the -fol lowing press dispatch of recent date from the Texas city: v \ Fou'r women w ere stripped naked and then spanked here today by StriWng women garm ent w orkers in. riots in front of two dress .m anu facturing plants. - - F o u r piolicemeh arid twb - women jggceinjured, 'r; V v : - ^ "-F orty' policemen, called to the plants two blocks apart, arrested 2 7 wom en and three- men.v. - •--- Policeman P. D. Hale was bitten on the arm ; and Policeman F.' T. Alexander was severely kicked.. - _ ,:V ,Tfce ;wm^ People are missing the chance of a Iifetimeiftheydo not take advant age of the free money that Washing ton is offering. TheObserver does not savr-that. STATE DIRECTOR GEORGE CQAN of the Works Progress. Administra tion says it. .-,.I MR. COAN may" sincerely believe it. The Observer doesn’t. - H Of course. if Mr. CoanfS precise' were defensible, his deduction would--- hold water and all of us WouidLbe found chirping our assent thereto. But there is no such thing as FREE MONEY. . Washington does not have it and will, because money ^dogs .not come - jJ?feshnp;qf.aih;-.:atehemiBt-<nor i the labatory of-fciendSis magicfans. Money is. created ' bir' man’s con- s.tructive toil in combination ’With some service to the public. - And the onlv money that’ Washing ton ever gets its bands on is money thus created and TAKEN FROM THE CREATORS OF IT THROUGH THE HAND OF TAXATION- These mountains of millions being spent for this, that and the other , must be replaced: that is. unless .it is - the intention of those in control to change our monetary policies and by some system of infl ition bring about ivirtual repudiation of the bonds being issued to provide money being spent. ;... * It would be ungracious to lay such a_charge against'them.• of course, out there is, nevertheless, the peril —always the peril while' an unbal anced budget prevails of being forced into inflation even againbt the will of those in political authority. Mr. Coan may: be merely utifor- tuuate in his phrasing, but no poor selection of terminology should: be allowed to go unchallenged it. it creates the popular -illusion 'that - there is Free'Money Available, i . The hand-out from Washington to States, cities, towns and counties and villages and isolated chartered listricts for public works is partially at least a grant.” Forty five per cent of it is given sich local Jinits of Government as wish to provide on..their own initia tive the remaining 55 per-cent which is apparently Given Away must'be paid back by the people of the -en tire Onited States some day. Let’s get that definitely straight and keep-it straight.—Charlotte :0 b- - server. 1 ? ? 'J -i fit-: ■ ' l i t . F l : . Oar own idea is that Congressman sbiUtfibtofbank.altbpngh;oc<^on- CWaynesville Mountaineer) *Soda” Banks found he could make a dollar a day from his job with; relief without doing any work according to the testimony^given by his mother in law in court Jiere Tuesday. ' . :r. Banks, who was on trial in'a Hqucr case,' bad' a job at $2 a day with re lief, so bis mother iu law said,: but later found a man willing to d^the same'work for a.'dollar -a day^. so “Soda” up and made the tn&e— collecting $2 for the day's work and giving the man doing the work half of it. ' ' = --,-I I; I ■v ~■?" f f i t D A fiE fei^ORD, M a ^ jv f iA i, & & AUGPSfT ^; t^g THE DAVIE RECORD. C. FRANK STROUD - • Editor. Member National Farm Grange. TELEPHONE Entered at the PostofSce in Mocks* Tillel N. C., as Second-class Mail matter. March 3.1903. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: ONE YEAR. IN ADVANCE - $ I OO SIX MONTHS. IN ADVANCE - * SO Only a little more than a month until the big Davie county fair. Get ready to attend this big event. Twenty million people depending oh Federal • relief and breakfast bacon selling at 45 cents a pound. Will the working man vote for a continuance of such conditions? Dr. Ralph McDonald, of Winston* Salem, has announced his candidacy for governor of North Carolina, on the democratic ticket next year. This makes about five'or six hungry boys who are wanting this job. Dr. McDonald was leader of the anti sales tax bloc in the last session of the North Carolina legislature. He will no doubt get thousands of votes in the June primary, but with the democratic machine behind Sandy Graham and Clyde Hoey, we don’t see how the Doctor can hope to be nominated. He has a good platform, but so did Franklin Roosevelt. Of course Mr. Roose velt threw his platform in the waste basket after he was elected, with the exception of the whisky plank. : The country hasn’t fully recover ed from the shock caused by the untimely death of Will Rogers and Wilev Post, which occurred two weeks ago in far away Alaska. It doesn’t seem possible that Will will no more be beard over the radio, and that his daily bits of humor will never again be read by his millions of friends throughout the world. We didn’t know Will personally, but still we admire him and his .rug ged style. A picture with Rogers on the screen meant that we would be there, even if we bad to borrow maney to purchase a ticket. His radio talks were always enjoyed. No one person in the world will be missed as much as Will Rogers. His body was laid to rest in Los Angeles, California, last Thursday, and thousands of his admirers, from millipnaires to heggars, paused to pay tribute to the memory of this Oklahoma cowboy who counted everybody he knew as his friend. Peace to his ashes. , ing Next Tuesday. Od Tuesday Septembet 3, a t 2 M p. m., at the Conrt House, there wilt be a meet ing to discuss the soil conservation pro gram and to form the Soil Conservation Association tor Davie County. C.C. C. Camps which are located in ad joining counties may be used in this pro grain as they, work in radius of 25 miles irrespective of county lines. It will be necessary for us to have an Association organized and this is one of the import ant phases of tbe meeting. Persons who are interested in the operation of a Soil Conservation program are invited to .at tend. ~ . : Fork News Notes. : The revival meeting which has been in progress since 3rd Sunday, will continue through this week, Dt. J. M. Haymore, is delivering.fine messages. Mrs. W. H. Mason, who had tbe mis fortune to suffer a broken arm, and other injuries in a fall, is getting along nicely. Ronald, two-year-old son of Mt. and Mrs. Frank BurtonTwas rushed to hospital Monday night for an operation for getting something out of bis windpipe, was brought home Wednesday, and is recover- iog nicely. Dr. L. L. Anderson, of Stoneville; was a pleasant visitor here Frida; afternoon. Rev. and'Mrs.' J. R. Church, of Winston- Salem, visited Mr. and Mrs. Frank Burton last week, and attended Friday evening service at Fulton church. Tbe revival closed at Fulton last Sun day at the eleved o’clock service, at which' time fifteen new members were received into the church. The services were well attended throughout the week, and every one enjoyed the fine gospel messages, wUch were so earnestly delivered by Sevs Howardand H. E. Jones. ■ T in. 3. C Smith, has' returned Twin* a week's stay with ' relatives near Chutch- land. ' Miss Jacqueline Livengood, spent a week recently, at Denton, with Miss Vlyaa Rathburo Gertrude Miller. 9 9 pound con stable of Lima1 Ohto, has arres ed 575 men. ' ~ WINSTON-SALEM TO BACCO MARKET W ijl O p e n O c t I . W ith F o u r ' S a le s D a ily . Eight Warehouse. Are to be Operated This Year And Will Be Prepared to Handle the Biggect Breaks. In just a little over a month—Octo' ber I, to be exact—tobacco ware house bells in Winston-Salem, "The Greatest Market of Them All,” will peal forth their message of golden dollars for golden leaf and another season of profit and benefit for grow ers of the Piedmont section will be underway. There's every indication of a good season ahead and the Winston-Salem market was never better prepared to serve the growers. Eight warehouses are operating this year, with a total floor space sufficient to take care of tremend ous breaks; The presence of four sets of buyers from the opening belt means that sales are going to move along: with the greatest possible ex pediency consistent with careful con sideration of each pile of tobacco offered. Tobacco growers will be interest ed in the personnel of the Winston- Salem market this season. The list of houses and their operators in cludes: Brown’s: Claude B, Strickland and J. A. Gwyn. Glenn's: John W. Glenn and H. B. Motley, Auctioneer. Gorrell’s: M. R. Gass. Liberty: Frank P. Davis Pepper's: T. 0. Pepper and F. D. Pepper. Piedmont: Bill Thomas, Bud Thomas and Jesse B. Glenn. Planter’s: R. A. George and 'W. H. Sharp; Lee Hopper and Bob Hous ton, Auctioneers. Taylor’s: Paul . Taylor, Everett Matthews and John M. Taylor. ■ Those men are Well known to to bacco growers, whose utmost confi dence they enjoy and in whose in terest they have worked unceasingly many years. They are proud that Winston-Salem’s warehouses a r e home-owned and exort every offort to get the top price for each pound. James T. Booth, widely known to bacconist on th e Winston-Salem market a long time, is supervisor of Winston-Salem’s location, in the very center of the Piedmont section, is advantageous, in that it minimizes the grower's journey to market arid makes it possible for him to pick his selling time and get home without delay. Not only the grower, but also his entire family, have been considered in this season's plans. Winston-Sa lem merchants, heartily co-operating with the tobacco market, are better prepared than ever before to serve the Twin City's neighbors. Stocks, bought carefully and . at the right prices, are complete and visitors will find these establishments ready to serve them. They areassured cor dial welcomes. For those growers and their fami lies who make the trips to 'market holidays, Winston-Salem has plenty of entertainment. The * theatreB have lined up ..top-notch programs for the fall and winter seasons and a variety of other;entertainment is offered throughout the city. Field contacts during recent weeks indicate that Winston Salem will con tinue as the Piedmont’s most popular tobacco market and all activities now are pointed towards the opening on TnesdaylOctoberl. Winston-Salem, with its hugh tobacco manufacturing industries and other tobacco activi ties, is the tobacco center of 'the world and is in better position than any other market to serve the grower (Advertisement) Redland News. Mrs. Albert Howard who is a. pa tient at Long's Sanatorium. States* ville, is getting along nicely,-her friends 'Will be glad to know. Mrs. Clyde Allen and little babe, of Mbcksville spent a few days the past week with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Tom Sofiey, Miss Lorene-Dunn spent, the past week in.Winston-Salem the guest of Miss Erma Mae Smith. V Born to Mr. and Mrs.^leiiii^leii on Aug. 22nd, S fine sdn?.;.Tj>omas Wilson. ‘i ■ Miss Marv NeiVSmith who has been confined to her room for . several week3-is improving, .we. are glad .to note. 1 Little Bobbie-Sofley, of ,Mocksville' apentjhursday nightwithhis grahd- parents, Mr. and Mrs Tom Sofiey. Court In Session. The August term of Davie Su perior court convened here Mbn- day with Judge Don Phillips, of Rockingham, on the bench, and Attorney Mack Brown, of North Wilkesboro, prosecuting in the ab sence of Solicitor John R. Jones, who recently underwent an opera tion No cases of importance are to come up at this court, C. E. FaircIott, of Advance, is foreman of the grand jury. It is thought the court will finish its business to day or tomorrow. A fairly large crowd was present Monday. Junioir Order Elects Officers. Wilmington, Aug 21.—In one of the most closely contested elections held in recent years, E. L. Gavin, of SanforH was elected vice council or of the state council of the Junior Order at today’s session ot the 4 5 th annual convention. Hiselection overshadowed all the other contests. As the closing fea ture of the convention, Monroe Adams of Statesville, new councilor with tbe members of his corps of officers elected today, were inducted into office with 0. B Hopkins of Alexandria Va., deputy national councilor, in charge Many .matters of business con fronted the final sessions today. Chief in interest was the creation of a student loan fund of $1,000 for worthy graduates of the Lexington JuniorOrderorphanage who are de sirous of continuing their quest for an education. The fund will be loaned, at legal rate of interest, to be repaid with tbe entry of tbe stu dents aided by it into business. Miss Spillman Honored. Mr. and Mrs. Emory Gough enter tained a number of girls and boys Saturday night at her home, honor ing Miss Frances SpiUman. Games were played on the lawn and in the house and the hostess as sisted by Miss FrancesSpillman the honoree invited them out on tbe lawn where the chicken stew was served to more than forty guests. Farmington News. Mr. and Mr9. T. M. Mauney, of Kanna polis spent Friday with Mrs. Mauney’s father, L. B. Armswortby. John David Furches spent the week-end with homefolks. Norman Britt, of Winston Salem was the guest of Edd Johnson last week Miss Marjorie Gregory spent Friday in Winston Salem. Miss Martha Reece Allen has accepted a position Winston-SalemlIn tbe office P, H. Hanes Co. Miss Martha Farches accompanied her brother, J. F. Furches to Plymouth, N. C., Saturday. They will return Monday bring ing Mrs. Furches with them. George Johnson, Jr., of Macon, Ga., spent last week with Miss Vada Johnson. J. Rav Graham, Burke and Henry Furches wiil attend the Coaching School at U. N. C., Chapel Hill. The Baptist Sunday school was very fortunate to have J. Hampton Rich to con duct the opening exercise at tbe church Sunday morning. Misses Virginia Furehes is spending this week in Winston-Salem as the guest ol her sister Mrs. Ray Parker. Mr. and Mrs Joe Biake, of Tyro, N. C., are spending some time with Mr. Blake's lather, H. L. Blake. Learn Beauty Culture In One Of The South’s Finest Schools Graduates Qualified For Superior ^ Positions. Complete Course. Highest Rating. Write For Free Literature. Marshall School O f Beauty Culture 406 N. Spruce WinstonSalem, N.C. ininiiiiiniiiBiiinimmiiM KmimniHH- Kill TCe Weevil For A SmailI Investmeut You Can Give Your Small Graiu Complete Protection Against Weevils and Worms. - Ask Us For V v. Information and Prices. Let Us. Serve You .. ' LeGiand’s Pharm acy t On The Square Phone 21 Mocksville, N. C. .. . t b e best w a y to m ake a p erfect u n io n o f tw o p ie c e s o f m eta l is by w e ld in g th e m to g e th e r . §®j|gpg|l*S . . . and the best w ay to get a m ore pleasing flavor and a better taste in a cigarette is by welding together the different types o f tobacco . . . That Is just what we do in making CHESTERHELD Cigarettes—the three types of mild ripe home*grown to baccos, that is tobaccos grown in this country, are welded together. Then they are welded with aromatic Turkish. When these tobaccos are welded together you get a combined flavor which is entirely different from any one type of tobacco. It is this welding of the right amounts of the right kind of tobac cos that makes CHESTERFIELD a milder and better-tasting cigarette. © 1935, tiGGrrr & Myiu Tobacco Co, C h e s te r f ie ld ... th e c ig a r e tte th a t's M IL D E R C h e s te r f ie ld ... th e c ig a r e tte th a t T A S T E S B E T T E R Liither Allen, of hear Mocksville got a sentence of not less than one nor more than two years, after he entered a conditional plea of guilty of involuntary manslaughter grow ing out of the death of Joe Lash in the village of Huntsville last March. Allen was driving a car which struck Lash, killing him instantly. The case was tried at Yadkiu court last week. Notice of Sale of Land For faxes For The Y ear' 1934 as Provided By Acts 1927 and Amendments Theretp ’ Under requirements of act 1927 and subsequent amendments thereto, the un dersigned will, on MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 2,1935 at 12 o'clock Noon in front of the court bouse door in Mocksvilie1 N. C., sell foi unpaid taxes due the CouAty of Davie foi the year 1924, the following laads as sei out below under township sub heads tb< acreafte and amouot of tax being showr opposite each name inwhicb the tax k listed. These taxes may be paid on or befort sale date, by adding accrued cost and an) penalties that may attach'.■ CALAHALN t o w n s h ip Name Acres Amt. Barksdale, B.W . __93% $13.18 Bosch, Mrs- Mary1 EBt. 9. 3.07 Campbell, Mrs. MoUie - 67 14.44 Campbell, D. .T. ...____63 8.64 Oleary,' W. A. —-----803% . 43.6EDwiggins, Mrs. Selplua 52 r 9.74 Efira, P. A , Est __129% 26.80 Elftrdj S. B. 52 8.1: Felker, Dewey _____17 5.87 Gaither, J. B. .....______70% 26.84 Gaither, W. L. 1)9 “ 14.18 Gaither, B. F. .....— 59 ■! 8.81 Godby, J. E. -------.. 62 . 15.-25 IjameB, Mrs. Atuiie __115 30.18Martin, Mrs. W ill____75 . 14.04 MisenlieimerJ G; W. 11 2.40Richardson, D. L.......... 92 10.1E Stroud, David _______30 5.6C Tayse, Carrie B , ... 16% 3 ^ 3 Tomlinson, C. H . 68 23.76 Tutterow, Mrs. M. B. Est. 8% 214Tickers, J. P. — 3% ^ 3e Williams, Edna _____ 41 7 55 COLORED Clampett, J. W, ____ 7 %Qorrell1 Nora ___164Holleman, H. H. g ^ tu w w w tm BH IuilllIIinnTjqfl "0S 't W-" - Houpe, Lee -----------76% Nicholson, J. H. '____36 Studeyant, Richard I 11.Wood,, Amanda ___ 1 .OTARK^y^HE-,TOWNSHIP ■•..Kmm • 'Acres Southern Sailway Co ■ Adams, <3. H. _____7noAnderson, J. P. • ■ ■ -y> . Anderson, John , • 44 V. Anderson,. S. A. 52 Baity, Mrs. Clete ^__2 ~Paity1 D. - N .__... . • 77 - Beck, Mis. J. A-----------65 Boger, J. W alter 45 Brookslurej J. 0. ____3 1 'e t. ^ 2.6S 40.66 .6.38 11.92 18.92 4.6? 2.0? Amt. $4,572.7;' 17.62 5.64 11.3? 8.04 280 35 62 9.4S 10.35 Name Acres Brown, P. G ._________13 Crews, A. H. ________10 Danner, Mrs. W. T . 9% Eaton, B. AT. ________ S Eaton, D. R ._________52% George, Mrs- M ary 81 Graves, J D. &‘0. A. _ 3‘J Gunter, Paul ....______40 Hanes, Mrs. M. E . 117 Hicks, R. M. ......______' 80 Hutchins, Mrs. J. A . 52 Jordan, H. V. ________41% Jordan, Mrs. A. D ..___29 Joynerj B. G. ....__...... 40 Latham, G. W, ____I... 50 LippaTd, J. L, ______ 78 Martin, TJ- A. _____143 Phillips, J. L. _______ 39 Pierce, P. M. _______ 15% Katledge, W. R. ______25% Eeavis1 W. L. _____ 4 Reavis, W. D. __ 189 Beavis, Mrs, W. D 125 Richardson, T. P . 86 Sain, J. B. _________ 90% Sizemore, J. R. & W ile 104 Smith, E. W. .....______80% Snyder, W. R . __445% Stanley, N. K. ______231% Steelman, Mrs. Dora 424 Stewart, L. M, .:____1 1 % Stokes, R. M. ....______ 70 Tutterow, S. B. & M. E. 172 COLORED Bean, E. C. — _______39 Hanes, Albert, Est. .... 30 ' Naylor, Warner ....'_____14% Patterson, T. C. ____ 7J/> . PULTON TOWNSHIP Name Acres Allen, Andrew W . 81 Anderson, Mrs. M.. M. 110 Barnes, James D. ____16 Beck, Mrs: C. C 16 Burton, R. H. _______ 7 % Burton, L. E. ______66 Burton, Clyde C. __ 7 Burton, Samuel :! I Branson, Mrs. Mary,-Est. 19 Carter, Geo. A .....200 Carter, Ernest _____J.13 Cope, K. L. & M. B. ._.lll- Davis, H. S. _______ 63 ~ Davis, Mrs. H. S . .... 61 Uoby, Manuel G . ....• 9 Fleming, D. J. ___94 Forrest; G. P . 72% "Poster, C. A . ____ 50 : Poster, Mrs. StevjB ........ 76 - Poster, J. H., Heirs ..... 13 ' Pry, Miss Moilie —___I: -21 Pry. S. D ------------21% Garwood, S. E.' ___.145 Garwood, S. D.’________3 Garwood, - A. M. __;__244 Garwood & Williams I Lot Hairston, Poter yf. „..2,718 EIege1 L. M., Heiirs ___ 70 Hendrix, Mrs. -V. V. 24 ' Eesler1 John R., Heirs .4 iLanier, Donald ..._____ 1 Lot Uvengood, J. M. 95% MerreU, Mrs. B. YY__24 Merrell, Harold * Leona 2A " Milton, Mrs. IiEinnie X0 % Minor,. G. W.-: ...___.....103 N. C- Midland By. „... 35 3-10 Pa^j-G nrner B, 1 Lot;Peebles, W- G ._____30 Peebles, W. B.^ Heirs 28 ^ Batledge, Walter Glenn(108Sam, W. A.-.__:_______ 62 Seaford1 W ileyC. 54 steward, E. M ..___1 2% Upchurch, Mrs. Mollie W 87 'Weavil, Howard C ._79 - Williams, P. E. ^ 1 Lot Wood1-J . A . io i Amt.- 4.82 2.29 5.64 4.60 6.65 15.45 5.64 9.03 17.16 14.08 8.15 12.48 7.87 3.04 6.8# 17.45 14.40 6.01 4.00 8.54 6.23 23.54 11.46 13.96 21.48 17.54 17.10 50.96 . 25.98 57.25 2.02 13.18 29.81 6.89 3.225.51 1.8 z Amt. $18.22 38.04 9.12 3.8C 8.14 13.91 5.98 2.865.01 52.6; 28.41 44.3fc 18.25 43.44 4.62 19.05 . 21.8( 13.3C 13171 2.9t . 4.3f 7.3t- 37.01 9.77 lli2£ 5.0( 646.1', 10.65 6.4! 1.7 J 3.41 47.8( "6.4! 6.4f 1.53 22.91 : 9.5L 6.11 IOM 5.0t 26.4( 20.49 -17^)5 . 2 .8! . 27.7$ 11.5Z 6.75 26.6: ^ 6.45 Zimmerman, C. C. ____ 42 7.61 COLORED Hairston, Ada, Heirs - S 5-22 Hairston, S hack 2 1.11 Hairston, Paschal 6 4.87 Hege1 Peyton _______ 8 2J7 Mason, John-H. ______40 17-16 Peebles, James, Est 14 PARMINGTON TOWNSHIP 'Name Acres Allen, Mary A nn 10 Alien,- J.. F. __________25 Allen, Mrs. J. -P ._____12 Alien, Geo. W. ______ 5 Bahnson1 H a l_______I Lot Bailey, B. R. ________ &¥i Beauchamp, Mrs. Jerry 80 Beauchamp, L. W . 292-10 Brame, Leonard R .___100 Bowles, Mrs. J. L .____24 Byerly, 0. S. ______155 Carter, Mrs. Mamie B—130 Cash, Mrs. Sallie, Est. - 27 Clement, B. 'C. ___288 Cook, G. L _______98 Cook, J. C. _________ 8 Cornatzer1 Mrs. B., Est. 20 Dalton Sc Hunt ______ 908-10 Douthit1 E. J., E s t 117 Douthifc1 A. B., E st. 25 ‘Dunn, W. A. ________16% Dunn, Noah, E st._____38 Dunn1Mrs. G. H ._____ 7 Foster, Mrs. Sallie I Poster, Misi E. A . I Poster, Mrs. W. P. .— I Lot Pry, D. E - -______12 Purches1 D. K ._______219 Goforth, S. T ._______ 90 8-10 Gregory, H. 'W. ______24% Gregory, H. C ._______I Ij0t GrifEin, W. G. _______ 38'i GrifEin, J. P., Jr., -----30 Hanes, W. H................ M Hanes, Morgan ---------- ^Vi Hanes, D. C. ________50 Haneline1 W. T. -----35 Hauser, M. h i ....----------22 Hauser, W. H . --------- 4 Hockaday1 C. L. Howard, ErneBt _____17 Vj Soward, Willie I* Hudson, Delia, Est. — 32 James, E. C. _______I32 James, Mrs. E. C . I Lot James, W. P. ----------- James, C. D. _________12’/S James, Mrs. M. E., Est. BI Jones, W. J. ------------ Jones, Bros. _________s‘ '- Cimbrough', C. L. ------ 93„ ,nn McCulloh, Mrs. W. P. - 396-10® McDaniel, A. P .---------f. '1 WcDaniel1 Mrs. Ida J. - -DMeKnight, J. W .--------24 b Montgomery, J. H.......— ™ Myers, W. G. ----------- “8 Potts, J. E. __________J®** Ridenhour1 G. A. “J Riddle, Mrs. Henry------*■* Biddle, W. B---------------J Seats,-P. __________•>?„ Sheek, B. F. —--------1^ h Sheek, Mrs. Gt. V f.-------“ Smith, E a rly ------------— - - — - 3 5 3% 15 Smith, B. L. — Smith, L. A. ------- Smith, Tom I/. ------ Smith, Mrs, G. A. — Snuth, Mrs. Geneva Smith, AIex --------- 3ofley, T. W .-------- Tucker, H. C. Thornboro, C. P . ^ Tmelove, A. G . ^----- on Local Amt $2.77 2.4»3.8? 1.7«2.31 25.99 4.42 15.56 3.75 10.34 11.93 10.31 44.76 15.56 10.16 6J334.91 24.39 5.96 5.90 (.13 IMIBi 1.33 3.45 2.65 5054 35.39 5Ji 6.13 13.59 10 2.4« 1.67 13.81 6.59 3.72 1.35 4.2» Il.*5 , 4.431 I 4.81 36.19 10.« 5.5* 6.1?iM8.93 9.61 24.189.96 14.01 f.ll12.05 31«3.78 7H 1.«! 8.7 7.2« SJ- 26.6 6.21 1M Ja-61 i4J 1.6» ' 2.9» •6.63 18.3' V* 6.*7 17.3» WDX ROG] Greatly Loved Ame Born Nov. 4 ,1879-Died AuJ wjll Rogers, OklahomJ whose homely philosophy en1 to the hearts of millions, Is < wreckage of the plane Inl and Wiley Post, famous • ceeting new adventures where It ^ d fallen abouJ sooth of Point Barrow, Alal ernmost white settlement Ii Thus ended In tragedy thl the ranch band who had mal laugh—probably .the greatest tno'vn comedian of hia daj tepse interest In aviation <f to undertake the hazardous post over the wilds of the For many years he had tr skyways, and In his newspal j,a‘d been one of commer turn's strongest supporters.. jn* should have caused hi! one of fate’s grim Ironies. T Rogers’ career reads almd tlon. He was born at Olld dian' territory, November 4,1 attended the WillIe H asse]/ Neosho, Mo., and also ta Military academy at Boonj short time. From that ginning he rose to become companion of the great world. His stage career began I at the old Hammersteln rl Will Rosers Ia New Iork In 1805. At was purely a routine of 1 and he I? still considered! world’s rope experts. FinI gan to Insert bomely obsel current events into bis a l thuslastlc audiences beggeJ Rogers began to receiJ recognition when he was I Zlesfeld for the Follies anj Frolics in 1914 The eif chewing gum, Ma crooked gl lock of hair which dangled] were known to everyone. I talked to audiences of thl Presidents and cabinet m to a group of ranch hands I the manner of the Oklaho sitting on a corral fence an log on the weather and th the nation. It was through bis wri ever, that he was best L loved. His daily newspal was read by mtlllous, and? colamn carried by the natif dallies and also syndicated! by Western Newspaper Crf ,‘s obserrations Into the I American homes. N om attl he might be, or what al Pressing he always took tl Pare his column himself, r Picture might be In the 1 expenses of hundreds of <■ Mnutegoing on, but Kogersl Ws newspaper readers. l l ana Mpre to some cornel Md whUe directors fumel J ^ n r ued' he turned of nT Pe0ple today realizi Rogers’ writings. Am oi % PhIio.! wt re R°eerlsm4 ^ihf r K0n pr0hlbiIPtolT7, Cowboy Philosol IVW Conference, 1919; f tett ‘ ,Langl1 IlUteI tters of a Self-Made J l„e Su^1tdeiLt* There’s]“ 6 Suit m Russia. f Htelr3P w ltinga were unlI derlvin humw there! L a nia!8 c“mm°n-sense th al r : ^ew thaa ea close t0 sa^r People of Ame3Comments-Often height th “ ore wisaI thoBgh hta f PageS by aI his acne was worj cornm enormous he n l WlTfia touc^ To the f jS what Ws to ecame aln! t In the “Just a tradenJark. I flight, h !” ® he feft ol Waa * V T c01rre3PondJ 80We of^A V pend the ISWannin askaa old elS t un^ rtes-ci«ionhr0r ?ndtos JbOJhonrt j d Pl0I>eer h i \Vil| Jfn And becal Sever 2 as tN« IreS^d SUCCess beyoI ftOgMe! 10 a ‘8h better becaJ13 almost 1 bronSht a Vll sturdy today— t h l 1Oto th e to w bo forS e I8113 their ^eSj 111611 slowI life. “eaded attJ Wh6n t h « ^ WtU £eel a IltoSera1 „ ®icb uP the!S C01l>ment is no IoJ C 'S 'l ed flavor Irom any |he right af tobac- i a milder t>£R BETTER 42 2 6 8 . 40 14iEst. — ___toN TOWNSHIP 7.68 5.22 1.11 4.87 2.97 17.16 3.28 I Lot 29 2-10 im ie B..-130 Se, Est. 27 „..288 C — I.... 30 12 % " E., Est. 31 ... 49 ... 97% "f,"” - 93h F .. 39 6-100 j / ’ ... 59% Is. Ida J. - 25 2 Geneva. P. - Amt $2.77 5.22 2.4» 3.87 I.78 2.31 25.39 4.42 15.56 3.75 10.34 II.93 10.31 44.76 15.56 10.16 6.13 34.91 24.39 5.96 5.80 6.13 1.94 4.84 I.33 3.45 2:65 50.94 35.39 5.95 6.1313.59 II.25 2.40 1.67 13.87 6.59 3.72 I.38 4.20 11-85 4.43 t ] 4.84 36.19 10.04 5.58 6.174.84 8.93 9.81 24.189.86 14.01 7.U12.06 31.« 3.1«7.24 1.6? 8.78 7.28 8.42 26.61 6.217.84 15.61 . 4.48 1.6» 2.9# 2.49 5.63 18.3? II.82 6.0? 17.30 ^ rILL R O G ER S rreatly Loved A m erican Bora Nov. 4,1S79—Died Aug. 16. 1935 AO Roger* Oklahoma cowboy " hnniel? philosophy endeared Wm ?e“ ls o? millions, is dead. The W !v,le of the plane In which he j \Vilev Post, famous flier, were .I „ new adventures was found E °it hod full™ about 15 miles . Poip£ Barrow, Alaska, north- ““iL t white settlement In America. efTt cn'icJ in tragedy the career of „ “ndi hand who had made millions !,' ^probably the greatest and best £& , comedian of his day. His In- ™ Interest In aviation caused him nflMtaUe the hazardous flight with I t fer tho wilds of the Far North. ™ nianv vears he had traveled the i.-™-ivs,’nad in his newspaper column Ta been one of commercial avla- t l ’s strongest supporters. That fly- L should have caused his death Is » of fate’s srrlni Ironies. Rogers’ career reads almost like Ac- „„„ ° He was horn at Ollogah In In- Snn territory, November 4, 1S79. He Attended the' Willie Hassell school at vco«lio, Jio.. and also the Kemper Jniitarv academy at BoonvIlle for a Tort time. From that humble be- etonlB" Se rose to become the Intimate Joopnnioa of the great men of the fforld.Bis stage career began In vaudeville at the old Hammerstein roof garden J S i P Will Rogers. In Kew Iork In 190a. At first his act ms purely a routine of rope tricks, mil be Is still considered one of the world’s rope esperts. Finally he be gin to Insert homely observations on ciM events Into his act, and en thusiastic audiences begged for more. Eogsri began to receive national ret's;s!iion when he was engaged by HffteId for the Follies and the Night Mcs In 1914. The ever present chewing gum, his crooked grin, and the lock of hair which dangled In his eyes were known to everyone. Whether he talked to audiences of thousands, to fresldenta and cabinet ministers, or to a group of ranch hands he still had the manner of the Oklahoma cowboy Bitting on a corral fence and comment ing on the weather and the affairs of the nation. it was through his writings, how ever, that he was best known and loved. His daily newspaper feature iras read by millious, and his -weekly column carried by the nation’s largest dailies and also syndicated to weeklies t>J Western Newspaper Union carried hia observations into the majority of American homes. No matter how busy hs mlgbt be, or what affairs were pressing he always took time to pre pare his column himself. A motion Picture might be In the making, with Reuses of hundreds of dollars each ffiiMtegoiflj on, but Eogers never failed ™ newspaper readers. Each day ha. wHild retire to some corner of the set, ^ while directors fumed and pro- Mera wailed, he turned out his regu- Iar Btlnt. ftw people today realize the extent Bogers' writings. Among the books ^rote were RogerIsms-The Cow- J Philosopher on Prohibition; Roger- ' The Cowboy Philosopher on the B-Un0ollference' 1 9 1 9 Rogerlsms— i .. "e Laugh At; Illiterate Digest; Bill'8 01 a Self-Made Diplomat to t. ' resMent, and There’s Not a Bath- “E Suit In Russia. Ihpii3 ,writinO3 were unique. Under j , cloa6 °f humor there was an un- ■ a nf comrnon'sense that came from Iv ^emValseti close t0 the 3()il* He sain, peoPle of America and his comments—often only a few lines Weijhf1 carrie^ more wisdom and more thomi Ltllan PaSea by another. Al- u -. i3 £ame was world-wide, and 'Come enormous he never lost the touch. To the end he was Is sth r ers' aad hla Une “All I know csm„ >1 rea(i In newspapers” be- “ ®e almost a trademark. %ht*. ^ ore he !eft on the fatal Was ’ I tolfl correspondents that he tome t0 sBend the winter with Swann- AIaska's old sourdoughs— Will adrsni,116 Etorles> hearing their tales of clatlnn ^ s~ and finding In their asso- hovhnnrf j old Pioneer humor of his Wm n ^n(i because he was Jost J geta wouId have found It nevw , cotertainiUg as though he had «st dtea°““d succeSS beyond his wild- UQgersrican l8Ubetter because °t WUl 13 ZlnlfiJ , brmiSllt a viewpoint that et»rdv r.o ?st tQday—that of those 11110 the w? Wl10 forge<3 their way and thf,u ,,e3t’ their sjOw. dry humor life, .,.n a r d headed attitude toward when ,K'0mj .wiil feel a personal loss lloSeta1 (,IlmplclJ uP t t e paper and mment la no longer there. RECORD, MOCKSVILLE, N. C. MAKING CHERRY PIES REAL ART There’s a Trick to Turning Out a Good One. .By EDITH M. BARBER tfO A N she make a cherry pie, BlUy- Boy, Billy-Boyr So goes the old song, with Its answer, “She can make a' cherry pie In the twinkle of an eye." Evidently this was consid ered a test of the bride-to-be as far as her Housekeeping abilities were con cerned. Even today when we are served with a really good cherry pie It Is usually at the end of a satisfying meal where everything else Is well cooked. First of all the pastry must be rich and flaky. There are Jnst one or two tricks to pastry making. The proportion of fat to flour must be right In general, one-third as much lard or hardened vegetable fat as flour. Usually it is best to cut the fat Into the flour with a knife. Perhaps you are saying to yourself, “Well, my mother always mixed pastry with her hands, and it was simply grand.” Tm sure It was. But If your hands are as warm as mine you will do better If you will use a knife, or nflybe two. It Bhould not be cut as flae, however, as It Is for biscuits be cause the large particles of fat make a nice flaky crust Now you are ready to add the water, wiiich should be very cold. Make a hole In the mixture at one side and sflr In a tablespoonful of water until you have a stiff ball of dough at that point Then begin to add water, at snsther point When you have three balis of dough, take your hands and pot them together with the extra flour left In the bowl. When the dough Is smaoth, put It In the refrigerator for i t least an hour to chill and then It will be easy to roll. Divide the dongh Into two parts and you are ready to make your pie and roll lightly Into a round a Uttle larger than your pan. Line the pan with one sheet, pressing It Into the pan and cover the bottom with flour- and sugar mixed together, one tablespoonful of each. Cover with a layer of cherries, sprinkle liberally with sugar and con tinue until your fruit is piled a little higher than the depth of the pan. Cov er with the other layer of pastry and presp the edges together. Cut the over lapping pastry evenly. With a fork pres* the two layers around the edge of the pan or bind the dampened edge with a thin strip of pastry. You may now get rolls of parchment paper whleh are designed especially for this purpose. Cut slits In the top of the pie to let out the steam which forms as the fruit cooks. Use a very hot oven, 450 degrees Fn for the first 15 minutes of baking and then lower to 850 degrees for about SO minutes long er. You may use this same method for aU fruit pies which should be slrupy, not starchy as Is sometimes the case when too much flour Is put with the fruit In all of these cherry recipes we make use of the sour cherries. The large sweet cherries are often put Into tart shells over which a cherry glf>ze may be poured. Steamed Cherry Pudding 2 cups cherries % cup butter “I ctip sugar _ 2 eggs 1% cups flour 8 teaspoons baking powder 1 cup milk Look over cherries and cut In half and p it Cream butter, add sugar slowly and cream together until light Add beaten eggs. Add flour which has been sifted with the baking powder alternately with .the milk. Add the cherries mixed with a UttIe of the flour. Put Into greased mold, cover and steam three hours. Serve hot with hard sauce. Cherry Dumplings 2 pounds cherries 2-3 cup water I cup granulated sugar I cup unseasoned mashed potatoes I cup flour % teaspoon, salt Vi cup melted shortening 1 egg slightly beaten Wash and stem the cherries, place In a covered kettle with the water and simmer covered 25 minutes, stir ring occasionally, to prevent sticking and to bring the pits to the top. Skim out the pits and stir In the sugar. Meanwhile combine the mashed pota toes, flour, salt and melted shortening. Drop from a teaspoon on top of the hot cherry mixture for 15 minutes. Serve dumplings with the hot sauce. - Pastry 1V4 cups flour H teaspoon salt % cup fat Cold water ’ SIft together the flour and salt. Out In the fat with two case knives. For a . large quantity, a. .wooden bowl and chopping knife mpy be used. When Anei add at one side of the bowl one tablespoonful of cold water and stir In as much of the flour and fat as the water will take up. Continue this un til you have four or five balls of.dough and some dry flour left In the bowL Press together with your fingers. If all the dry flour is not taken up, add a little more w ater.. CHlU 'and roll. Cherry Pie 8 cups cherries. 1% cups sugar 2 tablespoons flour ; Stone cherries, mix with the_ sugar and flour and bake between crusts or bake In one crust, In a hot oven, 450 degrees F., for ten minutes. Lower temperature to 350- degrees and ban about 25 minutes. -e BeU SrmUc»t«^—JWSServt®* T h e H o u s e h o l d By LYDIA LE BARON WALKER TpH E woman who does her own Iaun- dry work can save herself effort In many little ways which are sometimes overlooked". If at a summer camp, or by the sea, or In the country, the bed Unens can be ussd rough-dried. The term scarcely applies to the neatly folded and weU-smoothed linens when they are done with the Idea of no Iron ing. We might well caU them smooth-- dried, rather than rough-dried. In or der to give them the smooth finish, the following meth ods should be fol lowed : Shake the sheets, pUlow cases, and towels w e ll.a fte r wringing them, as 'this immediately lessens the creases. Hang them on the line so that the wind direction Is against the surface, n o t striking the pieces from the side, which makes ,the material blow In folds and not out straight Put sheets over the line so that half falls each side of It bringing the crease straight along the middle, which would be the very place It would come if the sheet were Ironed. An Imperative necessity Is to keep the sheet stretched its fuU width or Iengtbt according to how It Is doubled over the line. This does not mean that It should be pulled taut across the line, but that it 'falls without folds over the line for the breezes and the sun -to dry the material unwrinkled. PiUow CaseB and Towila Hang pillow cases hems down, and with the other end straight along the clothes line. Then the wind wUl blow them smooth, or the sun wUl cause the evaporation of " the water from un creased surfaces. Hang towels straight with one edge along the clothes line, so they will dry evenly. When It Is time to take the clothes down, let no . wrinkles or folds get Into them except In the folds desired. Fold the sheets as they are taken down. If two do this It Is easier, but one can do it successfully by folding the sheet In half again while It Is on the line, and then throwing it over the line and folding It In half again that way. The rest _of the - folding Is- easy... EeepHSie wide hem on the outside. When the clothes are In the house, lay each sheet fiat and folded, on the table, and smooth it with the palms outspread. Lay away, flat and sfhooth, and no Ironing, which Is hot work, will be required. Fold towels and pillow cases as you take them from the line and smooth them as described before laying them on the shelves. It takes a few mo ments to take Io the wash as described and only a few moments more to palm- press them. I have done It many time3 at my summer place and know whereof I speak. Vacation Clothes When you go on your vacation be careful not to let the weather Just prior to your starting off Influence you In your choice of a wardrobe. Be pre pared with proper clothes for different weather. There Is sure to be a change, and you want to look weU and suit ably dressed aU the time. There are many styles of rainy day togs that are Ught In weight, Inexpen sive In price, and becoming. There are rain coats and capes, and eVen rubber skirts to drape over frocks, and capes to go with them for complete protection. Be sure to pack one warm- frock. Not only is It uncomfortable to be Chilly, but a person looks far from the best when too thinly dad. Cold shows In the countenance. There Is a pinched look that betrays that chilly feeling, and everyone wiU be commiserating you either vocaUy- or silently. And who wants that? Look warm and cheerful, and you will InstIU an ele ment of pleasure by your very appear ance, and thus add a note of popu larity to yourself. Take along sheer costumes for hot weather, and look as cool as you can. It Is pleasant to see some one who looks crisp and cool when weather Is sweltering. Even at seashore and mountain resorts, there are occasional such days. Be ready for them. © BeU syndicate.—WNn service. Vgmiflliiiig Precaution The formation of blisters on a var nished surface may be due t<T under lying spots of grease, sap or moisture, to excessive heat or to direct exposure to the sun during the process of dry ing. To avoid the possibility of such a mishap be sure the surfaces to be varnished'are dean, grease-free and absolutely dry—al3o that there Is no direct sunlight and that the tempera ture Is weU below.the gay “nineties." Preparation, for Paintiag Jane Stewart DavIs In fetter Homes and Gardens advises the home, crafts man to be sure that porch or garden furniture Is thoroughly clean before be ginning to' paint Soap and water can be used- If all the soap is removed— any soap ISfton the furniture dam ages the finish. Water containing a Uttie ammonia- Is very easily rinsed. 6rease: can be removed with gasolini or turpentine without difficulty. Sleep Is M a tte r o f C hoice, Som e M ay G o W ith o u t It Mr. MacCarthy, the baker of Kin- sale, Irish Free State, who baked aU night and hunted.aU day, going -without sleep, refused to teU how h* succeeded In doing without tired nature’s sweet restorer. As a young man he decided that too much time was lost in sleeping, and he cut down his own hours abed “until he was able to forego slumber entirely.” Mt. MacCarthy Uved to be seventy- slxi or six years on borrowed time. Mt. Edison, while engaged In tasks that kept his interest keyed up, had a habit, by some of his associates considered bad, of Ignoring sleep, and he had no patience with stay- abeds. Mr. Edison Uved 84 years. To prefer hunting to sleep was Mr. MacCarthy's privilege; to choose the drafting room and the bench-to the bedchamber, Mr. Edison’s. It is the privilege of others to prefer to give to sleep the six hours to which Coke subscribed; Indeed, true Uber- als will tolerate a greater UberaUty. Bnt let It be sleep, not the restless ness of vain tossings, the fitful snatches of reUef from vain regrets and haunting fears so many know and dread. There Is StiU defense for the phUosopher who echoes Cervan tes’ tribute to sleep, and takes his -stand with the first of that trio’ im mortalized In the deathless lines: “ To bed, to bed,’ said Sleepy Head: •Let’s stop a while,’ said Slow; ‘Put on the pot’ said Greedy Gut let’s sup before we go.’” Accepting a Job A woman whose dignified and .re served husband was among the un employed but who, Uke Mr. Micaw- ber, was expecting something to turn up momentarily, was advised by him each time he left home for the day, that If an offer for any sort of a position at aU should come for him to ^ire an acceptance with speed. And when at long last the wire did come from Washington the wife was so thoroughly imbued with thrift that, she couldn't bear to Bend only a one-word answer Uke “Yes” or "Accept” to the "WiU you accept?” etc., message, so she sent the fol lowing: wYes thank you ever so much love and kisses.”—'Miss Ann Thorpe, In the Kansas City Star. O ften Fine clothes do not make the wom an, but they sometimes break the husband. STRIKE U P THE B A N D A N D G IV E IT A H A N D — T THE FLA V O R’S G L O R -I-O U S JO IN IN THE C H O R -I-O U S IT’S G O T EVERYTHING IT 'S THE CEREAL K IN G O n C E you taste Grape-Nuts Flakes, you’ll cheer tool And it not only has a delidous flavor, but it’s nourishing. One dishful, with milk or cream, contains more varied nourish ment than many a hearty meal. Try it— your grocer has itl Product of General Foods.' B l a k e m a k e s a F r e s h S t a r t . OH1W ea,,. IE fs QUIT! I DON'T FE£L Y BREAtf u? LIKE PLAYING GAME ANYWAY/ I 'VS GOT A TfiRRiBte Hf-ADACHS / NO! NO! THAT'S MOTTHE CLDB I WAKIT / t ISTHM- I GO BACK TO THE CLUB H0US£...V0U'K61H£ I W oao1S W SST CAPPV! WHyi CftDDV.. TM 'SUO VIM T o m tT r ie BOVi HS DlPM'r DO AMYtHlWS WRONS / sw eo.j GRSAT wORKI VOU CERTAWW MADS KiM FBEL UKe A dlAMPJOM HrfWiTJ IWNBS THAT WiaTfACH HEKTo KBSP quieff mmm I I'M 50RRV VDU FEE BADW...B0T VOU WON'T P££L ANV 8£TT6£ UNTiLVOU GIVE UP C0FF6£... ASTrig DOCTOR SAID! Rats/ who JB m m m OF COFFgfi ..HARMlNd A SROWN MAH? BUT tOO NiOW SOOme coF&e-uems ...ANDIHE DOCIOR SAID SVAteHINeiO POSTUM WOOLO HetP/ Voo M m r w it ! CVRSSSI SIVMlgo ASAW I CANT STAV ►HERE IPM 'S SWITCHING It) POStUM OH1ALLRieHT I w iu m rr;ro prows m to o c R x s DON’T KWOW IT ALL.' j wav do ■rnese Slav VOUNS flips Baieve such CRftCKPCfT Trtgotaes* rGeS1MlSSBlAMe, 90UR FfiTtiSR SlXS HAS CHANGED/ l’P RAlHgR Q \m FdR HIM TriAN AMV yes...?itfC 6 HS SWItt HfO t& FISSiyM HfrHAS FEtTANO ACteDtiKejfl DlFFaJENT MAlJ1 MEMBER OF THE CUiB! Z O O M S L fitfe R “Ialwaysthoughtthla talk about coffee being harmful applied only to children!’* “ Oh, no. D addy... many adults, too, find that the caffein in cof fee can upset nerve*, cause indigestion, or prevent sound sleep P’• • • If you suspect that coffee disagrees with you ...try Postum for 30 days. Posfiua contains 220 caffein. It'a simply whole wheat and bran, roasted slightly sweetened. It's easy to make, and costs less than half a cent a cap. It’s delidous, too. . . and may prove a real help* A product of General Foods. FREEI Lettu send yon your first week’s supply of Postum free! Simply oaafl the coupon. Genbxal Foods, Battle Grade, Mich. w. m. u.~«-i h i Sead me, without obligation^ *gcck*a supply of Postom* City. 1 . - j . StaffFUlin completely—print name and address Tbis offer expires July 1,1936 I .•J ! •« RECORD, M nrK SV ILLE, N. C. B R IS B A N E THIS WEEK Nobody Vfas Frozen One Strike Subsides The Em peror Has Lions 1,000,000 Tiny Pigs . Several have written to this column offering to let themselves be* “frozen stiff and then re turned to life” In the interest of sci ence, as suggested by a Los' Angeles chemist, B. S. Wil lard. They will be sorry to hear that the American Med ical association calls Mr. Willard’s alleged freezing "a vicious hoax.” It accuses Wil lard of freezing a dead monkey and then substituting a A rth u r B risbane |[ve oaei supposed to have been frozen and thawed out. Doctor Pishbein, editor of the Amer ican Medical Association Journal, says anybody frozen stiff would surely die. It was an Interesting yam while it lasted. New York’s strike of union men against President RoosevelL General Johnson and the WAP (“Works Prog ress administration”) seems tempo rarily to have collapsed. Mr. Meany, New York labor leader, said all union men would go out and stay out and nonunion men would follow. The news Is that the nonunion men did not fol low, and the union men went back Io work. Bobert Moses of the park depart ment, who employs 2J.000 workers ou park projects, reports only 110 de serters. An interesting photograph from Addis Ababa shows two servants of the Ethiopian emperor, riding on lions, one female, one male, In the palace garden. The emperor's lions are trained In this fashion for use as “watch dogs.” You can easily be lieve that intruders “keep out” For war purposes, however, lions are not particularly valuable. Tear gas and deadly poisonous gas would dis courage the lions, as they would men, and lions cannot Jump as high as an airplane. - In Chicago’s stockyards half the bog pens are closed, prices are soaring, men have lost jobs, all for lack of hogs to push around and butcher. The yards are suffering. And only a little while ago an ear- test government, determined to help the farmer and promote prosperity, was butchering tens of thousands of “farrow sows" to get rid of them be fore their little pigs could be born. “Too many little pigs will make too many big pigs,” said the government. You can imagine the ghosts of s' mil lion pigs floating over the stockyards, squeaking in their baby voices, “We told you so.” War talk continues. Mussolini an nounces* a new air - weapon “over whelmingly powerful,” but does not say what Ir la. Plain TNT and poison gas are powerful enough. Hitler, announcing that his country Is “ready to meet any outside peril,” adds: “No power on earth can attack cs.” That seems a little overconfident. A prosaic financial telegram suggests that the public debt of Germany has been increased by 20,000,000,000 marks. Tbatmightrepresentaninterlor enemy of considerable proportions. TTnde Sam, with all his spending, makes a little, something for himself. His money-issuing privileges, paper dollars worth about 5Q cents, and silver coins containing less than half their value in silver, have given the treasury a profit of about $3,000,000,- 000. And at this moment it does not ap pear to have hurt anybody. Who un derstands money? Stocks are better, prices higher, In London and In Wall Street The Lon don Daily Mail says: “A stock ex change boom seems to do more, for world trade than anything. The rea son is that it gives confidence every where.” . Strange and powerful is “confi dence.” You cannot see it, feel it weigh it but you can easily destroy it Dovely woman, led by Paris fash ion designers, is still trying to find out what she really wants. Universal Service dispatches from Paris describe “dresses as transparent as lace cur tains from the knee down; skin-tight ivenlug gowns with cut-out designs as big as elm leaves from under the arms to the hip-line. Cape coats of white fur, slit wide open on both sides.” One gown is made entirely of "plaited gold braid." . When will women kettle down final!? to some one style, as men have done? Interesting items In taxation news For instance, government will collect income tax on “public relief.” I r your generous Uncle Sam gives yon $94 a month, the amount that unions now spurn, He will take back $13.12 in In come tax. That seems like giving your little boy a stick of candy and.biting off the end of it. © Klne Features 8yndicat& In«,, .WNU Service. - ’ . ~ - ; N ew s R eview o f C urrent E vents th e W orld O ver ■ ■' ' \ LoBty Committees Quarrel Over Magnate Hopson—Presi dent Sighs Social Security Act—Tri-Power Confer* ence on Italo-Ethiopian Question. By EDWARD W. PICKARD© Western Newspaper Union. W ILL ROGERS, famous actor and humorist, and Wiley Post, one of the best'known fliers in the world, crashed to their death in a plane while flying from Fairbanks to Point Bar row, Alaska. The two men, close friends, had been enjoying an aerial vacation trip In the North, and Post Intended later to fly to^sta. News of the fatal accident was sent to Seattle by SergL Stanley R. Morgan, signal corps operator at Point Barrow. He said he had recovered the bodies from the wreckage. RIVALS In the matter of publicity, the house and senate committees on.the activities of lobbyists got into a tangle that certainly didn’t enhance their dignity. How ard C. Hopson, the long sought head nt the Associated Gas and Electric Utilities system, permitted the emissary of the house committee to find him, and Senator Hugo Black flew into a rage L JjB t and had his committee Ig1 ’SllS threaten Hopson with * * k *9™ contempt proceedingsH. C. Hopson unless appeared be fore IL Chairman O’Connor of the house body was angered by this an.l declared: “Hopson Is in my custody. I’ve got him. Nobody else has got him. Nobody else is going to get him.” The elusive, chunky utilities mag nate told the house committee about his various companies and related the saga of his travels while he was be ing soughL But he politely refused toan- swer questions concerning the sources and amount of his income. He testi fied that he “believed” .the Associated Gas system had spent “eight or nine hundred thousand dollars” in opposi tion to the Wbeeler-Rayburn utility control bill. . “That’s just a small fraction of the. $300,000,000 equity In our companies which would be destroyed if the bill becomes law and remains law,” he de clared. . To one question by Cox of Georgia Hopson replied: “I resent that in quiry. No gentleman would have asked iL” Whereupon Cox threat ened. to kick him out of the room un less he withdrew the answer, and Hop son mildly withdrew IL O’Connor introduced In the house a resolution that severely slatnmed the senate, butMt dropped when word came that Senator Black would wait to take Hopson after O’Connor’s bunch was through with him. However, it gave opportunity for a ridiculous quarrel between the New Yorker and Uankin of Texas. Late In the day Hopson calmly walked into Black’s committee room and asked: “Is some one here look ing for me?” Black and his committee then questioned the utilities man for. an‘hour or two and got mighty, little out of him except smooth sarcasm that made the chairman quite furioua -At that time both Hopson and his attor ney had been served with contempt citation. GOV. MARTIN L. DAVEY of Ohio has “pulled' a fast one” on the Republicans in behalf of the Demo cratic party. The G. 0. P. leaders were demanding a state-wide by-elec tion- In Ohio to fill the vacancy cre ated by the death of Representative- at-Large Charles V. Truax, believing the result would demonstrate, even more clearly than did the Rhode Is land election, the waning strength of the administration. But Governor Da- vey went to Washington and consult ed with President Roosevelt and then announced that he would not call and could not be' compelled to call a spe cial congressional election until next year. His declared reason was the cosL not fear of party defeaL Court action to force the calling of the elec tion has been started but Davey says there is no restriction of his discre tion In fixing the time" of the election. SURROUNDED, by a group of not- a'bles and in the glare of photog raphers’ flashlights, President Roose velt put. bis signature on the social security act,, of which he said: “If the senate and house of representa tives In this long and arduous session had done nothing more than.pass this bill- the session would be regarded as historic for all time.” Among those who were present were Senator Robert F. Wagner of- New York and Representative John Lewis 'of Maryland, who jointly drafted.the bill; Secretary of Labor Frances Per kins, who had a hand in its making, and Senators. Pat Harrison, William King and Edward P. Costigan. In a talk intended for reproduction on the sound screens of the country, the President said: “This social security measure gives at least some protection to 30,000,000 of our citizens who will reap direct benefits through unemployment com pensation, through old age pensions and through increased services for the protection of children and the preven tion of-ill health. - “We can never insure 100 per cent. Baron Alois! of the population against 100 per cent of the hazards and vicissitudes of life but we have tried to frame a law which will give some measure of pro tection to the average citizen and to his family against the loss of a job and against poverty-ridden old age. “This law, too, represents a corner stone In a structure which Is being built but is by no means complete—a structure intended to lessen the force of possible future depressions, to act as a protection to future administra tions of the government against the necessity of going deeply into debt to furnish relief to the needy—a law to flatten out the peaks and valleys of de flation and of inflation—in other words a law that will take care of human needs and at the same time provide for the United States an economic struc ture of vastly greater soundness.” , CAPT. ANTHONY EDEN of Eng land, Premier Pierre Laval of France and Baron Pompet Alois! of Italy met in Paris, as arranged, to see if they couldn’t de- p, , vise a way to avert the ' Italo-Ethiopian war, * due to begin In Sep tember. Eden had a plan all prepared and after outlining it to Laval he laid it be fore Baron Aloisi. The latter, of course, had no power to assent but was compelled to submit the proposals to Premier Mussolini. That Il Duce would accept it without change was considered unlikely, but it formed a basis for discussion. According to the best -information, the Eden plan embraced these chief points: 1. Important economic concessions for Italy in Ethiopia. 2. A proposal that Italy be. given the right to colonize and exploit rich, sparsely, Inhabited portions of the Ethiopian uplands probably under Ia League of Nations mandate as is pro vided for former German colonies in article XXlI of the League of Na tions covenant. 3. The offer of an outlet direct to the sea for Ethiopia, as a measure of compensation for its concessions. It was understood in Paris that Mnssolini still demanded what would amount to a mandate over Ethiopia so that he would have political as well as economic control over the coun try. This Great Britain does not like, and France is rather on the fence. The British insist, that In any case there must be an immediate show down. One correspondent said if Great Britain adhered to the policy at which Edeh hinted In his conversa tion with Laval, it would mean either dissolution of the League of Nations or else collective sanctions against Mussolini, involving the risk of a Eu ropean war. OBODY liked the new tax bill -*• ’ that congress was working on, and the senate finance committee had hard work making up its mind as to the form it would recom mend. First it altered almost every provision of the bill passed by the bouse and changed it from a “soak the rich” measure to one which would so a k practically every one. This was done by low ering personal income tax exemptions and Sen9Tn, Bnnnh startirlS the surtax in- Senator Borah creaseg at ^ i000 Jn. stead of $50,000. The latter feature was proposed by Senator La Follette and was adopted to keep him In line. Also, the inheritance taxes which President Roosevelt had hsked for were eliminated. Protests against increasing the taxes on little incomes came immediately, from senators, representatives'and the country at large. Senators Borah of Idaho and Norris of Nebraska were among the “independents” who ex pressed their disapproval. Mr. Borah especially was . vocal in opposition. “Families with these small incomes are now paying more'than their pro portionate share of taxes and at the same time are facing higher prices for food, clothes, fuel and rents,” he said. So the committee suddenly reversed itself abruptly,' rejected the La Fol- lette plan by a vote of 8 to 7, The bill which, the committee re ported was passed by the senate by a vote of 37 to 22. It contains new pro visions to compensate for those elimi nated from the house bill and the-es timated revenue is only $1,000,000 less. This is divrfled in the sdnate bill as follows: ... G raduated' corporation In -” com e tax % 60,000,000Corporation excess , profits and capital stock taxes 65,000,000 Intercorporate dividend taxes 39,000.000 Increased estate taxes w ith • . • related g ift t a x e s ........ 100,000,000 Increased surtaxes on In- coraes In excess -ot Js* 51,000,000 *.......... 5,000,000 T otal ..............••••*5209,000,000Tbe bill tbus more-closely follows the demands of : President Roosevelt than the house , measure. ■'IFTY commissioners representing J the Methodist Ekilscopal church, the Methodist Episcopal church, South, and the Methodist Protestant church have been In session in Evanston, HI, and have agreed upon a form of union that is to be submitted to the general conferences of the three churches and, if ratified by them, to all the annual conferences. The new organization, it was agreed; would be called the United Methodist church and would consist of six jurisdictional or regional conferences. FARMERS who believe that their individual rights are being en croached upon by the administration’s agricultural policies are offered a chance to get together by the organi zation and, incorporation in Chicago of the Farmers’ independent Council of America. Dan D. CasemenL a farmer of Manhattan, Kan., is president of the body. Stanley F. Morse, South Caroline farmer and consulting agri culturist, is executive vice president and Chris J. AbbotL Nebraska stock man and farmer, and Clyde O. Patter son, Illinois Jersey breeder, were in corporators. Dr. Charles W, BurketL agricultural authority of New York and formerly director of the Kansas agricultural experiment station, and L. G. Tolies, farmer and past master of the Connecticut State Grange, are other vice presidents of the council, and Dr. E, V. Wilcox, representative of the Country Gentleman, District of Columbia, is secretary-treasurer; Fred L. Crawford, Michigan congress man and farm owner; E. BL DorsetL farmer and past master Pennsylvania State Grange, and Kurt Greenwald1 farm manager and agricultur-U engi neer, New York, are directors. “To me there is but one issue, whether we are going to have a con stitutional government or have a dicta torial regime," said Charles E. Col lins, Colorado cattleman and president of the American National Live Stock association, regional vice president of the new organization. SECRETARY of Agriculture Wallace has changed his mind about the re duction of wheat acreage for 1936. In stead of asking the farmers for a cut of 15 per cent, as was announced recently, the figure is now placed at 5 per cenL Wallace told report ers that the change was decided, upou after the government’s Aii- gust I survey of crop conditions indicated that total wheat pro duction this year would amount to only 608,000,000. bushels as Sec y Wailaee compared with domestic requirements of 635,000,000 bushels. The step was taken, he asserted, to assure ample supplies for domestic consumers. He said that it was ex pected to place the country In a “strengthened position” in the export markeL He added the change in pol icy will not result in any marked re duction in benefit payment'to farmers. He did not say what the exact reduc tions In the payments would amount to. AAA officials estimated that approx imately 52,000,000- acres would be placed under contract this year. They asserted that the government is given “adequate powers” to deal with the situation if a bumper wheat harvest should result In 1936. W HEN the President’s social se curity bill was finally enacted in to law, the senate adopting the confer ence report already agreed to by the house, probably many thousands of men and women al'.. over the country began figuring on the pensions they would receive under'its terms. It is unlikely that one in a thousand has any clear idea of how the new pro- giam’s pension system will work, so we reprint here S neat summary pre pared by the Associated Press show ing its operation as applied to “Bill Jones”:. “Suppose young Bill is twenty when the law goes into effect and makes an average monthly salary of $100 until he is sixty-five. .He will get a monthly pension, until his death, of $53.75. . “In detaU. here is what will happen to him: “In the'calendar years 1937, 1M8, and 1939 he will pay a salary tax of I per cenL or a tatal of $36 for the three years. In 1940, 1941, 1942 he will pay 1% per cent, or $34. In 1943, 1944, and 1945 the tax will be 2 per cenL or $72. In 1946, 1947, and 1948 the tax will be 2% per centi or $90. From 1949 to 1981, Inclusive, the tax will be 3 per cenL or a total of $1,188. “Thus, In 45 years, Bill Jones will have paid in $1,440. All the time his employer will have been matching'his tax payments, so the total paid to the federal treasury will be $2,880. "At sixty-five Bill Jones can expect to live perhaps 10 years more If he does, he will get back $6,450. ' “When Bill Jones dies this is what will happen:-. “His average animal salary will be multiplied by the number of years he paid taxes. In other words, If he dies after he has paid taxes for 45 years $1,200 will be multiplied by 45—giving •a total .Of $54,000. Arbitrarily the bill stipulates that Bill. Jones’ estate shall cfonn 8% Per Cent of thaL or$J,890—less any amount he received in pensions before be died. ai Mnj ^n6s dIf before he 8ets back $1,890 in pensions, what he actuallv dedUCtea from-$l,890 and the remainder paid to his heirs. If he «y!nnU“tU he Sets 'back all Of “ he 1Tf and more hiz heirs get nothing.If Jones should . die Jbefore he mtttted ^ ty'*76' bls beirs wou?d be-ntttled to a payment of 3U per cent l n p a £ ” W8geS 0D whlcb taxeI had Washington g'cDigeSfeSi N a t i o n a l T o p i c s I n t e r p r e t e d B y W I L L I A M B R U C K A R T : national'press bldg.- /■■■ Washington,-d. c..;; Washington.—While -two congres sional committees have been seeking newspaper publicity L e g isla tio n , for themselves In In h b ie a promoting lnvestiga- LOpOtes of Jggislatiye lobbies, the Federal Trade Commission has quietly taken the position that "legislative activities” on the part of Individuals or business Interests are not bo bad. Strangely enough, the commission heretofore has been la beled as rather radical but In this in stance it has taken a much more con servative view of efforts of private citizens to protect themselves than have the . members of congress. The commission made known its po sition in only one case, but the under standing is that It represents a view of a majority of the commission mem bers and that In all probability there will not be much fuss or furore .again respecting the efforts of private citi zens to engage the attention of their elected legislators when their pocket- books are in danger. No such attitude is In evidence at the CapltoL Certainly, no such evi dence has been given by Alabama’s Senator Black and his senate investi gating committee. The house investi gating committee, under the chairman ship of John J. O’Conner of New York, has not been quite so ferocious but it has not overlooked opportunities to get on the front page of newspapers when ever possible. The two congressional investigations have come to be regarded by Washing ton correspondents largely as farcical. I reported to you some weeks ago that the probable result of the congression al lnvestigaiions would be the smear ing of many men of wealth and the exposing of any shortcomings of cor porations on which the committees could lay their hands. That has been the result to date and the outlook has not been changed. As far as anyone can see now, neither committee is go ing to adduce any evidence or testi mony that will Be helpful in the fram ing of legislation—that is the basis upon which congressional investiga tions proceed and it is the only basis in law they have for such inquiries, In support of the assertion that there is much publicity soughL one needs only to reflect on the circum stance of those two committees en gaged- in a battle to obtain the testi mony of Howard C. Hopson, the big shot of the Associated Gas and Elec tric company. Mr. Hopson has been sought to give testimony respecting his company’s lobbying activities and was -looked upon by the chairman of each committee as a star witness-^a star because he is one of the biggest men in the utilities field and therefore good headline material. We here in Washington saw the spectacle of subpoena bearers from each committee chasing ■■ through the streets In a race to hotels where Mr. Hopson was reported seen. The elusive Mr. Hopson was not discovered In any of the three hotels where rumor said he' was quartered. Then rumor got busy again and a process server raced wildly over the Virginia roads to the nearby estate of Attorney Patrick J. Hurley, who was secretary of war In President Hoover’s administration and who has served as attorney here for the Associated Gas and Electric com pany at times pasL It turned out that Mr. Hopson was not at the Hurley home and the faithful process server was forced to return empty handed. . * • * But to get back to the Federal Trade Commission. Its position may yet be I*,. regarded as deter-ueiicate mlnable only on the Question merit of an Individ- . ual case or circum stance. That Is to say the commission probably has not condoned sharp prac tices In the felationships between pri vate business and official agencies. The action of the commission in this' instance was with reference to a mo tion of counsel for the International Association of ice Cream Manufac turers. The attorneys asked that the commission strike out of the complaint against the association three para graphs which chargedf association offi cers and members with attempting to urge legislation and local ordinances In bad faith.” That question, of course, is very delicate. It presents a collateral questlob as to whether when an individual seeks legislation of a protective character for his own lnter- ests^ or legislation that will aid him In his business, he has done so “In bad faith,” Undoubtedly, there may be times when bad faith could be p ro / tions. Since the commission has sluS. a willingness to consider the «1;. ishitioo issue Phase of the situation to manT quar: Sensusn to h ^ w 0' 1 f°Und “ «* coa' sensus to be that protection of prou- made^ S i ^ c8tal0sed 88 effort OnfTTt^ les3' ^ Politicians at the f w T a different attitude and they do not hesitate to follow through any scent tho„ uJroaSn In such cases, the authuritJ ■- j i statute and that statute i» othtf form and widely <l'str* n f t,norwi® words, individuals hate a to know what the law i» pad | excuse for violations on '^ cutite« V .r.-V '.'-'V .--'V , any scent they obtain of ihfn«no« •os so significant I s t t at the “ 0^ 'V V -iVL.-.-/--.."- ... *'"'.Vv -V V5- -V to know what the law is - ^ ctiii, -ecutife *the case, however, wun >•* Jfhite | ders. They a r e issued .row ^ l6i House and copies are ' ,illiirj|y, Iflil Department of State. O . ., .,ts- get no further publicity • utle qppof age man In the street Iu tunity to know what tli. o]> © Wester” Sewsh»Pe jter f jlE FEA TH ER H I ^gfluT jF tlL sceMEPY sion deals with Uterally thouss»e individual businesses Lch vear has Jurisdiction to order eUminU,U of unfair trade practices and to T f 01 just plain cheating In private tmV* Therefore, the commission mar beS to have a vital influence on the i and businesses of those who** im Uons may be characterized "as and Important only in small coml? ties, as well as on the great / of eaPital and national trade asaj F IN N E Y O F T H E « VUIisiuer the risin, individuals to foster tlieir own tf.! eats, some observers believe that I prestige will be enhanced and that may find In the future that the m mission wiU be a popular goveraJ!!‘ al unit rather than one which busii« looks upon with fear. ® • » * Throughout the Roosevelt admi*. tration we have observed almost its Orders - done this, that or the other thing % execuUve order.” In the rush of V. IaUon designed to help us over thn emergency in 1933, executive Otde3 came thick and fast. No one thought a great deal about them. It was on. usual for them to emerge from Um White House in such numbers but I believe it was the general desire to forget the precedent that was being established, numerically at least, Ia the issuing of executive’orders becausa of the acute conditions In the country. Subsequently, attention was called officially to the great number of these orders and that they had the force and effect of law. It was the more Mpor. tant because the Supreme court of the United States called attention to the facts. The court digressed far enough in a weighty opinion which it rendered to suggest that it was impossible for the average individual to know what these executive orders contained; what inhibitions or prohibitions were pre scribed and what rights, if any, a CM- zen bad left. The American Liberty league, which is addressing itself consistently Io analysis of governmental affairs, In forms me that between March 4, liffll and the end of July, 1935, Mr. Bow- velt issued more than one tbcusat two hundred and fifty executive ordea The league offices also say that this Is a greater total than the number ot execuUve orders issued over the pre ceding IQ years. Some fifty new agencies and addi tional branches of existing agencies or departments have been created by the simple expedient of an executive ader. These new agencies have embarked upon all sorts ot projects never era discussed at the time of the enactment I of the law under which they were b sued. * * * In addition, to the executive orders,I is claimed that something like twenty thousand administfl- ! Orders Upon tive orders havetea Orders is s ,,e d offlclaL'!Tarious agencici whose sole legal basis for their acB was an executive order signed by the PresidenL “The examples of executive ord« | which have been cited show cleanf usurpation of legislative power, league commented In a statement sued the other day. “By no Strctc"* the Imagination can many of these ders be regarded merety as nmisttw acts in execution of laws enact the congress. Policies are ^nr- which under the principles oi d racy should be passed upon by the gress, members of which retlecJ „ varying viewpoints of citizeDS 0 « ferent areas and schools of ® ' So long as the judgment of the, membership of the congress is P to important questions a bala .be maintained in the public lute Is contrary to our scheme of g ^ I ment to place supreme powe* I hands of a single In d iv ,...-ms I been done i n European couutn® L parliamentary bodies have bee I entities. Encroachment by tne g i tive upon legislative PrcrOfatltVl6e violation of the letter or ercJ1 ts intent of the Constitution, s ^ autocracy and despotism. • versive of popular governmen ^ So long as executive order ^ ministrative regulations i& them involve only admimstr ^ tices, there is seldom much P ^J[t. terest in them. Always, a (j(e j ment of legislation, the il ^ f. thepra- agencies designed to carry o ^ MESCAL IKE , Vl>A5 AtLLl f'x-erret^eK." ^TO VOU^ TOLUKJ. KJKStJ “REG’LAR FELL! T a u t. Ji ivirj p o a w -Tto — -=ePGd-WT o T W lS l ROOM ; f Dl S’M A T T E R P O I "Se S u e e J ISemJ To EAT T-He/~nT4e| T e e l o v Vouk ) M A-TsT L r Our Pet Pee . . - T H E D A V I E R E C O R D , M o c k s v i l l e , N . C t A u g . 2 8 , 1 9 3 5 . An Earthquake Strikes OLD HIGH PRICES HERE T h e w o r d p r o f i t h a s b e e n d i v o r c e d a n d f o r g o t t e n . M a k e m o n e y n o l o n g e r e x i s t s i n o u r m i n d s . N o n e e d t o t e l l y o u a b o u t t h i s s t o r e y o u k n o w t h e m , t h e j o y f u l a w a k e n i n g o f t h e . l o w p r i c e s t h a t w i l l m e e t y o u f a c e t o f a c e w i l l p r o v e t o y o u t h i s f a c t W e m a i n t a i n o u r h i g h s t a n d a r d o f d o i n g b u s i n e s s , a n d w i l l b e h e r e t o g r e e t y o u . A m a g n a t e o f v a l u e s t h a t t h i n k i n g p e o p l e c a n n o t w i t h s t a n d . P r i c e s w i t h t h e t r u e r i n g . o f h o n e s t - t o - g o o d n e s s s a v i n g s . FOR SALE —8 Y oung M ares, broke for work a t my home. Will have s car load of young m ares betw een Sept. 5th and 15th. See m e if you need a good young m are. 15c Red Devil Lye, can IOc ISc P rince A lbert/Sm oking l!bbacco IOc $2.-95 F lat Crepe Dresses $1.68 F adier G eorge Sheeting 8c JUBt received 100 pairs Full Fashioned, first Quality Silk Hose 39c. Also received 10 dozen new P rin t Dresses, $100 value, now 67c IP iy R u b b erR o o fin g $1-15 2 Ply R ubber Roofing $1.59 3 Ply Rubber.Roofing $194 Scythe Snaths $119 Standard K e r o s e n e I gallon 10c C ia a t Y o u r E y e O n T h e s e S P E C IA L S ! Crackers, Ib IOc 5c package Salt 3c Flour, 98 lbs $2 95 Feed $175 Cotton Seed Meal _ $165 V inegar, per gallon 19c V inegar. I gal. ju g W hite House ' 48c Coffee, bulk 9c Kenney Coffee, Ib H e Pink Salmon lie Pcrk and Beans. I lb. can Se 50—$20 to $30 Suits Closing O ut a t $7 SO 25—$15 Suits going a t $5.00 100 Dresses; now 67c W ork Pants 79c and up I Rack Shoes $2.00 to $3.50 value 97c AU $4 and $5 Ladies' Shoes $2.47 Now is the tim e to buy your Shoes and Clothing. C m e look them over. Ihavehundredsof Bargains 15c F ast Color P rints now 10c yd. C a l l A n d S e e l i e W e C a n S a v e Y o u M o n e y Brooms 40c V alue 25c 1000 yardB 20c Dress P rints 15c Galoshes 59c Play Cloth, yd ... IOc Men’s Socks 8c SilkU ndies 19c Lanterns 69c Chairs 97c Horse CoIIarB 97c Plow Casting i Price $89.50 value. M assey-Harris Mowing Machine $79.00 W ork Shirts 38c Overall Pants 79c Blue Bell Overadls 97c B e Surf T hat You A ttend This Great H eart O f T he Season Sale A gain Before It Closes. J. Frank Hendrix " B A R G A I N S A L W A Y S ” M G C K S V I L L E , N . C . mmmm •tmrnsm RECORD, MOCKSVILLE. N. C. ftartrn-niQi •1th Uterally thousands usinesses each year ! tion to order elim|n"at Ue practices and to evil leating |„ p r i v a t e ^ Ile commission mav h e ? f ital influence on the ] S ies of those whose oner! le characterized as Sat only in small Coam^ ,1 as on the great maSses Jd national trade associa Ithe commission has sho^ b to consider the rights,, to foster their own , observers believe that i 3 ' be enhanced and that Z the future that the co0! be a popular government I i r than one which busine« [with fear. a : • * * [it the Roosevelt ndminls. ave observed almost daily announcements that e the President h'j - do»e this, that or the other thing «by der.” In the rush of Iegis. ned to help us over the [in 1933, executive orders and fast. No one thought I about them. It was un hem to emerge from the e In such numbers but I ras the general desire to precedent that was being numerically at least, la f executive orders because conditions in the country, fitly, attention was called [the great number of these fhat they had the force and It was the more IriSpor- the Supreme court of the Jes called attention to the court digressed far enough 7 opinion which it rendered Jthat it was impossible for individual to know what Itive orders contained; what I or prohibitions were pre- what rights, If any, a citt- Ift Hcan Liberty league, which Jng itself consistently to governmental affairs, in hat between March 4,1933, of July, 1935, Mr. Roose- more than one themand and fifty executive orders, offices also say that this Sr total than the number of orders issued over the pre- gears. Jty new agencies and add!- Iches of existing agencies or is have been created by the Jdient of an executive order. agencies have embarked | arts of projects never even |t the time of the enactment | under which they were is- bn to the executive orders, t Ithat something like twenty j thousand administra- | Jp o n tive orders have been ™ „ issued by officials of various agencies s legal basis for their acts Iecutive order signed by the Ies of executive orders ien cited show clearly a legislative power, tne nted in a statement Is- dav. “By no stretch of n can many of these “J I ed merely as minister™ ;ion of laws enacted ML Policies are :he principles of defflW1 passed upon Iy tbc ctheJ :s of which reflect oints of citizens of dit and schools of thocL jj . judgment of the enb« : he congress is aPP^ iuestions a balance wl in the public interest our scheme of 6 ingm^individ0^ as w sl •oachment by (n I islative prerogatives, Je letter or even of ' Constitution, I despotism. It I ,ular government. ^ executive ordei ^ der I ■emulations issueo only cdministrative, Pr*^ I seldom much P ^ u. Always, “; cjstrative ation, the ad ~ rh.ned to carry on ^ 1J s legislation issM ns interpretin= hat 5 to be remembered . the author* » 4 hat statute is m P otllcr ely distributed. ^ ,jy uals have an oPP«‘ „„ : the la " * /" s^ i s V Iations Of it. uve or- ,ever, with e. ^ hite re issued from the jpies are hien , ttiey f State. Ordin- - ^ er. ' IfSSrfw-X* 1 th E Fe a t h e r h e A D s By Oritorae The Other Side9 Wutm XNwm —-THlMK I’LL TAKE A*VJALK To THE TOP OF THAT LITTLE H lL t V —-So Tbu Jion1T SEEM I b THiMK t h is is a MEftf BEAUTIFUL SRo t 2 I G uE SS FAm i Li A R iT f breeds CbMTEMPT /T ; IP TOUMS HAP ALL THIS FAftM SC-ENEftT To WORK — AMP PAT TAVES OM— AMO HAO THE BEACH SCSHEftT ALL CLUTTEftEO UP VJlTH SMART ClTV FbLKS— VJHAT VJOULO ToU THiNK OF IT Q W AL-MOW— I WOULDN'T" SA f THET- mifulW ®°Trf ^SAintFiiU ScetfeRy ISSsMERALLy THEu WORKSHOP Otr TH6 MATlVE OF THE FORCE By Ted O'LougMinO By WcvUm HtWNHf UilO A Bad Sign o iVe c a lle d p e r Th’ AWBERLAMCE— Ol'LL HELP ' fE 2 OVER T fH lS SHTsP Ol SEEM TH' SOISN FALL OH Y E Z - BUT S e z "doh'T g o in t h e r e wow-f e z g o t A LAW SOOT— BUT DOHT Go LOOKIN' ________ F E R T ftU B B L E - , •KSUJIifS^? f _ — . : HFCbd I LIVE HERE- THAT’S M i S lS H / r l r WHIN fEZ EXTlMD A HELPIM' HAND Be CAREFUU We z don’t GiT A COLD M iT fe H j it c o m e s —I'LL BE ALL RIGHT HELP ME IMSlDE A ^ A nNCBT Midsummer Night’s Dreamm e s c a l ike By S. L. HUNTLEY A M ' w e VWENJT O U T A n j E T GlLL t m ‘ <5l O ' T i Kj C A n j SDOvjnj six vajinjD^'lLS FOUR. MftvIL BOXES , AKA1 A. CORnj CRI© ' Y UH‘KLH-1, wEftw , TMET D1Dnj-T A W iO O M T T O N JO T M ISJ WIT W ftS J E S T N^ULEV BftTES :ft-Mft\yisJ' ft BftD OREftis-"! P ft, U>WftT ! VOftS ftLL TM I v-_ VOUR DREftMEDVEftU : W A S A SlLLV <SOft"'-»- n U W o74- 1924. by S. L. Huntley. Trade MarK Beit. U. S. Pat. Ofiire)tCoDVNRht Holding His Average11REGlAR FELLERS TOO - WOULDN WAMT ME. TO B E LftTe TWlCE-T ft OftY WOOLOJft TELL JtMtvMS.• -YOU F L Y IK e DOOftK T o OOKtEr JlM T v u E ROOM ! »i The Asoclated Newspapers B y C . M . P A Y N ESiMATIER P O P — No Vitamins Today, Thanks T Icem eM U E .^ ITAKlN $ ^'PfiEL UlS ) *1£e_ IM -Pee iiiwrnriiiiij! TsO1P ? mi A-HtmV Liwe t4 e m i 0) The Bell Syndicate Inc > MI The Picture Book By GLUYAS WILLIAMS Our Pet Peeve ByM. G-KETTNER LET Mt HWE THt 816 OMt UMOER there 15 PRWUCfP IMHEPIhTaT WWfltTo .MOTHEft TAKES HIMWlTH MWffi MW PH»S" « W T * 1 „UFO WHILE CAlUNS Olt Tb.KEEPHlM QUIEf * * 7 ° K Wat SHE TlEfiSE Tta HlHHEft WHILE FBlENP K1MOtriEft? .M t,UM WA VERSATiONTb IOOK AT PICTURE ANP INFORM HIM ITS AliSER ( SIhRo QtilEf AHOOROER ASKS Wia MOWER TEll CLlMBIIfe MOTHER 9FCI0ES IN ATTEMPTING TO 6 &T RESTORED AT LAST _ HlM WE STbSlgS ITiSTiMETbfiO HOMf (T FAllS OTF CHAIR (Copyright by The Bell Syndicate. Inw) Shirtwaist Froek Simple and Chic PATTERN 2212 0 VJ 0I ,-O110T.. , X S Tc 'o O .o s o O »o”O-,. .Y >\C *9v * Ou ft « * *OOo OOoc t sOAO C »‘ .‘ o It seems that girls will be girls this season—even In the field of sports I And most welcome, too, is the return to femininity In clothes. That flattering quality is most often achieved1 through the softness of gathers (as you see In this yoke) or easy freedom of Une (like the pleated sleeve with its casual air I) Bnt every Important tailored detail Is retained making the shirtwaist frock so universally becoming I See how trim the collar—how neat the front closing—how Simple the pocket! Make yours of sport silk or cotton. Pattern 2212 Is available In sizes 14, 16, IS, 20, 32, 34, 36, 38, 40 and 42. Size 16 takes 3%. yards 36 Inch fabric. Illustrated step-by-step sew ing instructions included. SEND FIFTEEN CENTS (ISc) Itt coins or stamps (coins preferred) for this pattern. Write plainly name, address and, style number. BE SDBB TO STATE SIZE. Address orders to the Sewing Cir cle Pattern Department, 243 West Seventeenth Street New York City. IN GOOD CONSCIENCE “What are yon going to say when the congress meets?” “I am going to avoid the complica tions of world economics,” answered Senator Sorghum, “and concentrate on a notorious matter of plain fact and simple justice—votes for Wash ington, D. C.” ■1 . .<#} Distribution 11 ^Jl “Do yon favor lotteries?” “No,” answered Senator Sorghum. “They are a means of distributing wealth.” “But they don’t change the finan cial system. Those who take the rake-off stUl bold the advantage,” Physical Effect “What makes you speak at the top of your voice?” ■ “In order,” said Senator Sorghum, “to remind folks of the loftiness of my Ideals.” Sounds Polite “How much Is 5 q plus 6 q?” “Ten q.” “You’re welcome.” MEAL I J i I ■ I jH H| IiH H ■HUES1HHi % r T h e L u c k y L a w r e n c e s R E C O R D , M O C K S Y l^ L E , N - C- By KATHLEEN NORRIS CopyrIgrht by Kathleen NorrIt WNTT Service CHAPTER XII —24— Afterward they went upstairs, through the familiar halls and past the familiar doors, to talfc desultorily, in consequentially, of anything and every thing. When a wail from the kitchen took Gail down there again on flying feet, Ariel, bare-headed and looking young, small, and tired again, came too, and then Lily, Phil, and the boys came in and there was a babel and con fusion in which somehow Gail and Ariel managed a cup of tea. When Gail went upstairs after din ner, supposedly to superintend the lit tle boys’ retiring, it was to be noted that she remained there some addi tional moments. When she came down she wore her newest gown, a simple, thin black velvet gown that left her slender brown arms bare and fell away in a long line from the straight col umn of her throat and the curve of her young breast At the throat there was golden old lace, her mother's lace, and Gail wore tonight her mother's old cameo ring. The tawny locks that had been bobbed three years ago were longer now and gathered In a cluster of curls at the nape of her neck. Gail rarely Bhowed any color, but tonight there was a subdued sparkle and shine about her; her wide sweet mouth was burn ing scarlet, her sapphire eyes starry. Phil, Lily, Sam, Ariel—they all sat in the room that had once been the lesser drawing room but that now had been changed into a living room. The fireplace was opened, and logs crackled there. The boys’ blocks and books were stored on the shelves, and a ring of comfortable shabby old chairs circled the hearth. Lily only listened tonight. She was a good deal older than Ariel, but she seemed a little afraid of her. Gall was rather silent, too. She sat, slender, thought ful, and tawny-headed, at Phil’s knee on a cushion. Her square shoulders rested against her brother, her square fingers were locked, her eyes thought ful, and her full underllp slightly bit ten. Sam drafted for tomorrow after noon’s Challenge the announcement that would tnke all Clippersvllle by surprise. Little Ariel Lawrence,,Mrs. Vance Murchison. Ariel, listening, cor recting, appeared the least concerned of the five. There was a step at the side door, a gust of rain-sweet air penetrated to the sitting room. Gall had known this must come.- She did not stir, except to raise her eyes to Dick Stebblns as be came in. Phil did most of the talking. Dick talked, too, to Lily—to all of them ex cept Gall. To her he did not speak di rectly until the clock struck ten and she got to her feet “Ariel, you must go to bed. Ton must be dead. Come on I” "Are you coming back, Gail!” said Dlck then, with a glance. “I think not We’ll be talking,” Gail said, with a smile,' “all night” “Tomorrow I’ll have to hang around the hospital In the hope of seeing poor Willoughby.” “If he died, Dick,” Phil asked, "would that kind of throw the monkey wrench Into your plans?” “Well, in a way. There are two or three other propositions I could follow up,” Dlck answered, unruffled. He was the old Dick, and he was a new Dick, too. A-quiet big man, very sure of himself. His manner, his voice were more authoritative than they had been. He had not worn a big belted coat three years ago, nor jammed big gloves into Its pockets. “Willoughby is doing the London work for his eastern firm,” he said. “And there was some talk of my going with him.” “If you didn’t, might you practice here, Dick?” This was Gall. "I don’t think so—not In Cllppers- vllle,” he answered decidedly. “Interna tional law, you know . . . “Seen ‘Caravan’?” he demanded ab ruptly, looking at Gall. “You mean the big musical comedy?" “Yep.” “No, I haven’t It’s playing In Oak land tomorrow.” “I noticed that," said Dick. “Want to go up?" .v. They were all looking on, suddenly nwukened, suddenly aware of the situ- atloa But she could not see anything but the lean, homely kindly face that was smiling—just the hint of a smile— at her. “I’d love it I" she said. * * . * . * * . • • The great news rocked Clippersville breakfast tables the next morning, and Gail, walking to the library In the de- llcious autumn freshness after the rain, was assailed on all Bides. “The. family knew she was married,” Gall said, over and over again, hoping that this waB not stretching the truth to the breaking point “But they were both so young—and Van bad no pros pects—and then that unfortunate busi ness of the bankruptcy came.” But Ariel’s marriage was In second place for her. She was thinking all the while that It was almost , nine o’clock, and that In eight hours pick Stebbins was coming to the house to take her off for dinner and the theater In Oak land, 35 miles away. She did not have to wait so long to see him. At about ten o’clock he walked into the library and came up to the desk. Gall saw his hulking fig ure In the entrance arcade,'and her heart turned over completely, and the hand that was resting on her desk blotter trembled. When he stood before her she reached both hands across the high desk. “Disk, we couldn’t say much before Lily last night She’s not to know ev erything. But how are we going to thank you for standing by Ariel, for saving her?” “Why, that was all right!” he said, laughing a little awkwardly, flushing warmly. “Ariel’s only a child still, Dick; she can’t appreciate It But Phil and I do —I do, from the bottom of my heart!" “I guess you know why I did it,” he wanted to say. “I guess you know I was glad to do It!” was what she heard. “That doesn’t make it any less!” she told him. “It’s a nice town to get back to,” he said, after awhile. “On a morning like this, with everything washed fresh and cool, there’s something awfully friendly about It." “And how’s poor Mr. Willoughby?” “Not so good.” “lira Cantor,’- Gail said seriously, “told me that he had been told by the finest New York doctors that he would simply have to stop drinking and eat ing the way he was.” Dick listened respectfully to this and other Clippersville revelations. He had all his old simple, keen Interest In Gail’s point of view;.he was espe cially concerned and amused over heb reports of Lily and Ariel. “They don’t like each other?” “Well, they’re polite. But they have nothing In common I” ‘No,” he conceded, deeply struck, “I suppose not “But Lily makes Phil happy?” he asked anxiously, more than once. “Oh, utterlyl He’s mad about her.” “And that’s a cute baby I” Dick said, In satisfaction. The autumn sun shone, and only the occasional fall of a yellow leaf through the crystal air indicated that the month was October and not May. The hills were transparent blue gauze, all about the canyon and the dam, when the Lawrences took their lunch up there on a hot clear Sunday afternoon. Dlck Put His Big Arms About Her and Crushed Her Against His Heart. Gall and Dick walked up the creek bed alone, after the meal. Both their faces were flushed and damp when they sat down presently on a great fallen red wood, up In the sweet shadowy woods, and smiled at each other. “Gall," said Dlck then, “do you know that you have grown to be the most beautiful woman In the world?” Her blue eyes deepened oddly, like summer water touched by cloud shadow. “If you say so—” she stammered, finding her voice with difficulty. Neither one could seem to speak again. Dick stood up, and after a sec ond Gail got to her feet, too, and' turned as If she would have gone back down the trail. “I guess you know what I’ve come back for, Gall,” Dick said then. “You’ve always been the only woman in the world for me. But to come back and find you—what you’ve grown to be— with all the town—every one—more or less-In love with you—" - He stopped, for Gall had come up close to him and was holding out her hands. DIck put his big arms about her, and crushed her against his heart, and they kissed each other. It was half an hour after that first, deep kiss that shouts from the deserted party at the dam brought them back down the trail. Their hands were linked as they followed the rushing stream back; it was four o’clock on an October afternoon, the sun was al ready sinking.- Hot light poured through the thin ning foliage, and lay graciously among the red, twisted madrone branches, and on the shafts of the redwoods. The birds were all still now, but bees went by like bullets, and here and there brlght-wlnged flies buzzed In weaving columns in the sun. ' “And all that time—all. that time, Dick, you cared?" “Yep. But I dldn’.t know It "was go ing to be all that time,” he said hon estly. “It-—sort of—went on, from day- to day.” ■ “I knew I cored,” the girl said seri ously. _- Suddenly the two stopped on the rough trail and smiled at each other. •This an seems like a dream," Dick confessed. Sun-browned, her tawny hair In a little disorder, her blue eyes bright 3he stood looking up at him withont speaking—her man, the man who was to take care of her, stand by her. and love her, all her days, “Dick, after all these years—after all the other girls—it’s so strange to think of myself as engaged!” “It’s strange to me to think that, at la3t—” He stopped on a brief, odd lit tle laugh. “That at last I’ve gotten Lawrence!” Dick finished It boy,ehly. “It's all so strange,” Gall mused, her fingers clinging to his, the glory and beauty of the autumn woods about them. “I'll be Mrs. Bichard Stebbins'” She said. “Gosh!" the big man said, smiling down at her, small and square and tawny-headed, 'flushed with walking, radiant in this exquisite hour of ful fillment “It’s all come out like a story,” Gall decided contentedly. She jerked her head, with a sudden little touch of self-consciousness, toward the unseen picnickers. “They know,” she said, with an abashed grin. “I don’t know why they know,” Dick answered, surprised. “Oh, they do! But let’s have It— ours, for just a little while,” the girl pleaded. “Let’s not tell them today, anyway.” “You’re the boss,” Dick agreed, as they went on. The others were making preparations for departure. It was four o'clock. Gail gave no sign as she began to help gather sweaters and cups; Dick said nothing. But Lily shot Phil a significant glance, accompanied by a brief nod, and Phil went up at once to his sister and caught her by the arm and turned her about Gall’s innocent inquiring glance changed guiltily, and she laughed, the rare hot color spreading over her face. In another second Phil had given a great shout^and Gall was laughing and crying In his arms, and Lily, leaping over her amazed children, had run to embrace Dick wildly. After that every one laughed and shouted. It was Ariel who was the most surprised; entirely taken aback. “But Dick Stebbins, Gail,” she said later, In a faintly complaining tone, in the privacy of their own room. “He— after all, his father was our father’s— well, foreman! Employee!” "Ariel, you little fool!” Gail an swered with a joyous laugh. She was too happy to quarreL “Well, after all, birth does count,” Ariel said discontentedly. But Gall was too much absorbed In her own thoughts to hear her. •If Mr. Willoughby lived, then Dlck would duly depart with him In a few weeks’ time, and Instead of following up the London offer would establish himself somewhere In the .EasL pos sibly in Washington;' - - If bis superior died, Dick would go east at once, and follow the same course. In either case he and Gall would be married In—say eight months. “Call It a year. It’s safer, Dick.” .' “Eight months. Maybe six.” “That would be April or May I” “April or May.” He came soberly Into the library, ten days after the picnic, to tell her, that old Willoughby had quietly slipped away. G.ail’s face paled a little. “So It’s no London?" “No London." “After all your work, Dick!” “Oh, that I It’ll come In, somehow, some day.” “But It does mean a fresh start?” “In a way It does. But the thing I mind is leaving you.” “No help for it!” she said gallantly. “I suppose not” “I have something, you know,” she said hopefully, after a pause. “Phil Is fixing It all up now. Ariel wants money, and Sam and I would as soon wait. So It looks as If we might get the ranch, he and L and he says he’d like to live there and farm 4t, and put •out twenty acres of table berries. If he does, even though it might be some time . . 7 And then there’s The Bells of Saint Giles!” she added, In increas ing hope. Dlck laughed. . ' “It’ll all work out,” he said, follow ing the laugh with a faint .frown. “But—it isn’t Just what I wanted to offer you, my darling.” The last word fluttered her senses, and she laughed excitedly. ‘‘Besides, there may be a miracle I” she said. Dick looked Into the honest, shining, loving blue eyes so near his own, and lightly touched the. square, capable hand. “You’re the miracle I” be said. The phrase was destined to become a household word. For It was but a few days later that Dlck came to the Lawrence house to dinner, late, and handed a telegram to Gall across tile rice muffins and the old blue milk pitcher and the glass bowl of pink Oci tober roses. “Read It aloud.” Dazedly, she obeyed. It was signed "George G. Leavitt” “We would be glad If you could arrange to take Paul Willoughby’s place, assuming full responsibility for London office. Can offer you assistant if desired." , “Dick!” She swallowed hard, “What does it mean?" “It means being picked out of the ranks, and handed a field -marshal's commission I” Dlck said in a voice .that shook. - 7 . ■_ “Congratulations I” Phll - said,- his handsome Lawrence face one glow ot pride and satisfaction. . “But Dick—Dick—can . you,” Gall stammered. “I mean—are yon- sure? Without—without—’-’ TO BB CONTINUED. Let Onr Motto Be g o o d health BY DR. LLOYD ARNOLO Professor of Baaeriolosy Preyeottve MedjdneyUnwersicy ofCollege of Medicine- A WORD FOR THE PLUMP Both overweight and underweight conditions are hazardous to health. But styles for wom en have placed a premium on, under weight The slen der, boyish figure Is a girl with less fle s h th a n sh e should have to be normaL It Is en couraging to note that the New York Hairdressers’ a n d Cosmetologists’ as sociation, with five thousand members, has come out for the plump-girls as against the thin ones. They place more weight on graceful curves than on sharp angles. The well-nourished damsel of today should be proud of her health. For radiant glowing skin goes with a plump, rounded body. Painters, sculptors, courtiers and grekt lovers have always given the plump girl the best ol it The esteem for slenderness has been only faddlsm, Just an evanescent idea. Long ears, protruding lips and other fetish customs are confined! only to local areas. Plump girls are more normal than slender, skinny ones. They can think better because they are healthier. Cleopatra, Yenus of Milo, Fatima were all plump ladies, even bordering on overweight The charmers of the Sultan were buxom women; the Renaissance portrayed convex and not concave figures as their Ideal of feminine beauty. In the early nineties in this country the plump LUlian Russell type was in great demand. And Mae West—she may be the style of tomorrow. The anemic, slender, underweight girl wUl develop into a plump young woman if she eats the proper food. Directly after birth the first major bat tle every little girl baby has to solve is to keep her Internal heat regulated and constant. She conquers this with in 24 hours, then she has another criti cal problem; namely, to keep her blood! pressure normal and constant A lit tle gland on top of each kidney takes care of this—the adrenal or super adrenal glands. Thenshqhassevenor eight years of smooth sailing. Con tagious diseases are all that bother her at this'time. But when she reaches nine years of age she begins to change. She grows faster; she becomes more active In bCr movements. She is preparing her self-for womanhood. When she In eleven or twelve years old, she Is taller than her brother at the same age. She now develops rapidly. She puts oh weight, angles become curves, fat is deposited around‘breast and hips; she blooms out like a morning flower In springtime. She becomes a woman almost overnight If she stays slender and boyish with concave angles, she is not developing along normal lines. It Is just as natural for a girl to be come plump when she grows into young womanhood as it is for a flower to bloom when it is mature. Authorities on public health have al ways been apprehensive about the slender faddlsm among young women. Young women can keep slender .only by modified starvation methods. They eat little other than dried bran-llke breakfast foods, moistened with skimmed milk and swallowed with the aid of coffee or tea; they religi ously eut out fats and sweets, and subsist for the 'rest of the day mainly on salads. Their Idea is to keep the neutraly Immature, puberty figure of childhood. And nature never meant a girlish figure to be a childish form. Head colds, heavy feelings in head ana’ back, and mental sluggishness with a constipation of ideas and thoughts are common among under-- nourished young people. An angular, concave, linear-figured, underfed young woman may well be an Incubator cul tivating and propagating vr lous kinds of germs. • , Young mothers with- plump figures have plenty of vitality-giving vitamins and othOT necessary substances stored In their bodies for the growth ahd nourishment of their babies. Under nourished,-skinny youhg mothers are at a disadvantage; they have less reserve stored up_for their Infants. There wUl be fewer disabilities. among young mothers if they eat what they should and eat until hunger is satisfied. Eat ing will make them plump, but that is normaL and they will be much health ier and very much happier. The style-makers talk of fuller skirts far the 1935-35 winter season. That is good news from the health standpoint Tight skirts make' women think too much of reducing. When they see bread or potatoes on the table, butter, .ice cream, whipped cream, all foods they should have, they shake their heads. More ample clothes will make them less conscious of curves when they look into their mirrors; And, if you notice, the girls pictured on the magazine covers and In bill- board advertisements now definitely have curves So do the girls chosen to advertise swim - suits. The attain ment- of curves means the buying of more food, which will make'the farm ers happier. And more cloth is re quired . to cover curves, which will make the: weaving mills busier:' Who knows but that the new style In plump, ness is the factor that will lead us out of the depression? Certainly it wlH make for healthier young womanhood.© Weatern Newspaper Unloa, IMPROVED UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL SUNDAY I CHOOL L e s s o n Br BSTC, P. Bt PITZWATEB. D, ICembor o t PoettItft- Moody BIbU . Tnstftnte ot Chicago.Ow Western Newspaper Union. Lesson for Septem ber I PAUL THE APOSTLE LESSON TEXT—A cts 20:33,35; P h i- IIppians 4:4-1«. GOLDEN TEX T—In all th in g s I gavs you an exam ple, th a t so laboring ye o u g h t to "help--the w eak.—A cts 20:35. PRIM ARY T O P IO -A H appy W orker fo r Jesu s. JtIN IO R TOPIC—P au l a Good SoM ier fo r Jesu s. ___IN TERM ED IA TE AND SENIOR TO P IC—H ow to F ind H appiness In Work. YOUNG PEO PLE AND ADULT TO P IC—The C hurch and th e Toiler. The explanatory title given by the lesson committee, “Paul (A Worker With Hand and Brain),” is unsatisfac tory. His pursuit of a trade was inci dental, as well as working with his brain. He was In deed and In truth the apostle of Jesus Christ and his en tire person was dominated by his pas sion to serve his Lord. 1. His Birth (Acts 22:3; Ct PhiL 3:17). He was bora In Tarsus of pure He brew stock. He could with lawful pride boast of a godly ancestry. • II. His Home Training (PbiL 3:5). His parents were pious people and carefully reared him according to Jew ish standards. Most religious leaders spring out of such homes, as for ex ample, Moses, Samuel, and Timothy. Stern principles of Integrity were in culcated In him, thus giving him strength of character to impress the world. III. His Education (Acts 22:3). L His patriotism. He was brought up to love his nation. He prondly af firmed, “I am a Jew.” Paul was a na tionalist of the true type. 2. A love for the Bible. The Scrip- tnres were to him the very Word of God. What was found written there in was the final word for him. Loss of love for the Bible and implicit faith therein Is a tragedy. 3. Zealous for God. He says, “I was zealous toward God.” The word “zeal ous” literally means “to bolL” It means that his life was inflamed with passion for God. 4. He was conscientious. His su preme aim was to have a conscience void of offense. Conformity to the dic tates of conscience is demanded. It is the law of life for every man, but because of the blight of sin the con; science needs to be taught by the Word of God. : 5.'He had a trade. Every Jewish •boy, regardless of his father’s wealth, was taught a trade. It was a saying among them that he who failed to teach his son a trade taught him to SteaL IV. His Conversion (Acts 22:6-10). I On the way‘to Damascus (v. SL He was filled with hatred of Christ and was on his way to'Damascus with authority to bring to Jerusalem to be punished such Christians, men and women, as might be found. 2. A light from heaven (w . 6-9). As this light burned through the sky he feU to the ground. Accompanying the light was a voice saying, “SauL SauL why persecutest thou me?” In response to his inquiry as to who was speaking, the Lord declared that I t was Jesus of-Nazareth whom-he was persecuting. 3 An honest inquiry- (v. 10). This Is shown by his declaration of his wiil- Ingness to do what the Lord willed. The Lord, therefore, instructed him to go to Damascus where fuller light would be given M m. V. Paul’s. Philosophy of Life (PhiL 4:4-13). What men do and say expresses their philosophy of life. In order to induce right living, there must be created right thinking, for truly, “As a man thinketh In his heart, so Is he.” L Unceasing joy In the Lord (v. 4). The one who knows the Lord Jesus Christ as a personal Saviour and who knows that In the providence of God all things' work together for' good to them who love God, cannot help but persistently rejoice In spite of person al circumstances. 2. Be careful for nothing (v 6). The word “careful’’ means “concern which leads to distraction.” This does not mean that such a one will be hazard ous in his Uvlng or falLln the ex®, else of common sense. He will nof be disposed to depend upon himself but cast himself:upon his Lord for everything. : 6, .Think on right things (v. 8) The one who thinks on truth will be true- the one who thinks on honesty will be honest; the one who thinks on lovehave love'flowing from his per son. Things honorable and of eood b7S^rn8tt,e peopie &mony with hlf, Lorfi will be content” whatever circumstances he m aT ie . Health “The first wealth la health quv sotnnf f.^spW ted. and canno't aero cesslties.”- S o n 0U>fir mena But J F d of SeIf-ConTrol But take my word for it This n the . time to see the. world <» „ day. clothes, and without ^un' without P r tc e - - E x lK y Week?* Supply of PostumSead the uffer made by th* Company In .another part o* t'-i, ^ per. TLeywilI send a fnllw^iX Ps* ply Of health giving Postaa fr £ anyone who writes for It-A ir Cat Ukex to TraxeI Tommy, a cat which E2Vp3 headquarters In the reatanren; of tr, station In Carlisle, England, iik=,, travel on trains. ' alotaL BILIOUSNESS LET HIM BE FREE FROM WORMS W henever you decide to free your child from Worm3 or Tapeworm, get the medicin, that will drive them out with one single dose. Dr.Peery's'DEAD SHOT Vermifu;., oOc a bottle fit dni^ffista W clsbttA PIH Co* IOO Cold St., 2«.Y. Otyi Quick, Pleasant Successful Elimination Let’s be frank—there’s only oco way for your body to rid Itself of the waste material that causes ad* ity, gas, headaches, bloated feelingo and a dozen other discomforti Your Intestines must function an! the way to make them more quick, ly, pleasantly, successfully, without griping or harsh Irritants is to ches a Milnesia Wafer thoroughly, In ae cordance with directions on the bottle or tin, then swallow. Milnesia Wafers, pure milk ol magnesia In tablet form, each eqnia alent to a tablespoon of liquid milk of magnesia, correct acidity, bad breath, flatulence, at their source and enable you to have the quick, pleasant, successful elimination so necessary to abundant health. Milnesla Wafers come In bottlo at 35c and 60c or In convenient tins at 20c. Recommended by thousands of physicians. AU good druggists carry them. Start using these pleas ant tasting effective wafers today. Watch.Your Kidneys/ Be Sure They Properly • Cleanse the Blood WOUR Itidneys are constantly filter- I ing waste matter from the blood stream. But kidneys sometimes log in their work—do not act as nature Intended—fail to remove impurities that poison the system when retained. Then you may suffer nagging back ache, dizziness, scanty or too frequent urination, getting up at night, swollen limbs; feel nervous, miserable— Don’t delay! Use Doan's Pilh- Doan’s are especially for poorly Itmfr Uoning kidneys. They are recommended by grateful users the country over. Get them from any druggist. DOANS PILLS S to p Chills a n d Fever! RidYoarSystem of Malaria! Slivering with chills one mom burning with fever the next—that son of the effect" of Malaria. Unless checlea, the AlawgqA TvfU do serious harm to your health. Malaria, a blood inferiion, cats for two things. First, destroying the m- fection in the blood. Second, bunding up the blood to overcome the effectsO the disease and to fortify agam. atGrovetS TastsJess Chffl Tonic supply both these effects. I t contaim tastd® quinine, which kills the infection in Mood, and bon, w h i c h em rcte ni builds op the blood. Chills aad leva soon stop and you ere restored to^ f . and comfort. For half a century, Gjot Tastdess Chffl Tonic has been surei rdte for Malaria. It is just as useful, too.ru general tonic for old and young. Pteuan to take and absolutely harmless. Mj* give children. Get a bottle at any store. Now two sizes—50c and ? i-* $1 size contains times as much as 50e size and gives you 259° mon your money. VNU- 7 34-35 MOSQUITOES I n j e c t P o i s o n Mosquitoes live on human « ’ Before she can however, tiie mosquito tiiia Itbyinjecting aP^f^ou;, mosquitoes e n n o y .J, QfinlI spread serious disease cPic'?' flier, take chances. KiU moiqui J SfMus with' FLY-TOX — proved M by 10 ,0 00 ta b . Aeeeptitoeubstifa1*69*** ,' ; - 7''''75::7 7 7 7 7 r ^ T C i r S t t e T o J n a v ie C ou n ty N ew sp l Tttrs cbarles Spurgeon nascent last week with ^ S n e 1Tfa. S ? S and around town. pnSS8SSS* WUhs Ws1Stroud, at Brevard. Miss Aubie Pearl Tatum i” i left Wednesday f< days visit with friends at P Attorneys A. T. Grant Brewster Grant spent sevel L i week attending SuperJ at Yadkinville-, Misses Evangeline and L Pardne, of Wallburg, N. L stso fM r. and Mrs. D.l due the past week. I Charles Walters retun last week from an 8-day Si; tripto W ashington,.Balu other places of interest. Miss Ella Mae Tutterj h o l d s a position in W ashini spent test week with her! Mr. and Mrs. D. G. I on R- I- Prof. and Mrs. G. O. rented rooms in the R. Gg house on Maple aventj= Boosc is a member of tne high school faculty. Next Sunday is home-c^ at Center Methodist chul old-time singing is also a P the day. The public is gu dial invitation to be presa Mr. and Mrs. Roy Calll W. L- Call, and Mrs Sallil returned last week froJ visit to Mr. Call’s dangfi Melvin Gillespie, at Brev Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Si children spent Wednesday lives at Hickory. Theyl companied by Mr. J. F. | Hickory, who has been three weeks with relativ around MocksviIIe. Master, Bobbie I j ames | ed a nmuher of his friend iog the past week ho sixth birthday. Gamesl ed on the lawn from 4 to after which ice cream I were served. Every onfl ing Bobbie many more : occasions. A truck load of 4-H numbering 25, spent a last Tuesday in Mocksv were on their way from ( on the Atlantic, to the ! Sky, where they will sp taking in mountain young fellows seemed tij the time of their- lives. Masonic lodges of Farmington, LewisvillJ ville. Cycle. Yadkinvi] Cove, Harmony and /em, will meet in the Tv day, September 2. in : ering, jt was announc this time the grand grand lodge officers ficial visit. Rev. C. H. W itakerJ Ils home in- Winston Tuesday. HewasiforI a resident of .Mocksvilll tor of Bethel and a nut P. churches in Whitaker had many ■ Who were saddened byl his death. Surviving | three daughters and t( good man has gone to I NOTICE - To. all the junior Order Cq member that does notl stand the New Nation! gard to payment of Dl insurance of. members! tact some officer of tore Sept. ist, 1935. too bad. S C. STONESTRI Miss Jetta MillhollaJ Mass., spent the Iiur parents Mr. and I Millholland, a t Cool mmpmpanied Mr. and] Wellman, to Danvilll day, and left Va., Mc ton, Mass. There Party of friends whol ^ S . s. Evangahnef IfoVa Scotia,' and -c P?mts.- Theparty':, K n- faY way of Queb1 m-a car, and be back| ^ pt- tot. Miss MiliI “0st of relatives a ] sh?L w,ho wtll fae pU State Cn back t0' p ly o f Posfunx FW t ar made by the p1 “ bother part of th t^ !? ten d a full week-8 ®*- giving Postum freo ?" T itesfor It-A dv * :ea to Travel :at which mates hi, ,1 the restaurant of «. psle, England, Utes ^ fBE BAVie M ortfe-m aawm s. e . Au.6 t f s f 28 . t5 ss l e t h im B E F R E E F R O M W O R M S pr you decide to free 'd from W orms or _n, get the medicine !drive them out with |s dose. SH O T VermifcgH UeI Ot drtanjlsts or , 100 Gola I t, K.Y, Cltji Pleasant i! Elimination ank—there’s only one body to rid Itself of Ierial that causes acid' Aches, bloated feeling, a other discomforts, nes must function an/ Jake them move qulck- successfnlly, withont sh irritants is to chew afer thoroughly, In ao J directions on the bob- In swallow, i ’afers, pare milk of! tablet form, each equlv- Jilespoon of liquid milk correct acidity, bad fence, at their source bu to have the quick bessful elimination so abundant health. |afers come In bottlo : or In convenient tins ^mended by thousands AU good druggists Start using these pleas- IfiectiTe wafers today. .1 They Properly - anse the Blood Bneys are constantly filter- c matter from the blood Iridneys sometimes lag in (-do not act as nature in- Jl to remove impurities that Bystem when retained. JTmay suffer nagging back less, scanty or too frequent Tatting up at night, swollen I nervous, miserable— IeIayI Use Doan’s Pills, especially for poorly funo- fineys. They are recom- I grateful users the country hem from any druggist. NlPILtS C h illi F ev er! 'ystem of Malariai th r-hiils one mement and ever the nest—that a one ’ Malaria. Unless checked» do serious harm to your a blood infection, calls First, destroying the m- blood. Second, £uddmg 1 overcome the e®?d* ® to fortify a g a n st further s Chill Tonic supplies ■acts. It contains tasteteS J w u the infection in the Ion, which enriches M I blood. Chills and feverIyou are restored to ted* Io r half a century, GrovesI Tonic has been sure rebel I is just as useful, to o ^Lr old and young. Pkasan fsolutely harmless.Safeto !Get a bottle at any *«6 bo sizes—SOc and SI- C VA times as much Mtne |iv « you 2S% more for 34—Su IooJ- lood/ : first Thus Fife*/be*6ii DAVIE RECORD,THE C irculation C ounty N e w s p a p e r Sirs. son spo»i vtt Danville. \ a ; AROUND tow n . Charles Spurgeon Ander Iastweek with relatives Pbillip Clement £ d!ngand around town of Raleigh is several days with home prank Stroud. Jr.. spent_ several ilavs Iast week with his brother, Harry Stroud, at Brevard. MissAnniePearlTatum, of Te- l left Wednesday for a few ^fvTsit with friends at Asheville. A T. Grant and son R S er Grant spent several days Tst ^ek attending Superior court JlYadkinviIle- S i Hi and h fr, D. L. Par- due the past week. Charles Walters returned home lastweek from an 8-day sight-seeing trip to Washington,Baltimore and ^'places of interest. Mi« Ella Mae Tutterow1 who folds a position inWashington City, spent last week with .............—her parents G. Tutterow,jrjr. and Mrs, onK-1' Prnf and Mrs. G. 0 . Boose have JroornsintheR - G. Walker Luse on Maple avenue. Prof. Booseisatnember of the Mocksville ligb school faculty. Next Sunday is home-coming day JtCeoter Methodist church. The old-time singing is also a feature of jbeday. The public is given a cor dial invitation to be present. Mt.and Mrs. Roy Call and babe, W-L-Call, and Mrs Sallie Spencer, returned last week from a short visit to Mr-Call’s daughter, Mrs. Melvin Gillespie, at Brevard. Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Stroud and children spent Wednesday with rela tives at Hickory. They w ere'ac companied by Mr. J. F, Click, of Hickory, who has been spending three weeks with relatives in and around Mocksville. Master Bobbie Ijames jentertain- edaninuber of his friends one even ing the past week honoring his sixth birthday. Games were play ed on the lawn from 4 to 6 o’clock, alter which ice cream and cake were served. Every one left wish ing Bobbie many more such happy occasions. A truck load of 4-H club boys, numbering 25, spent a short while last Tuesday in Mocksville. They were on tbeir way from Gates county on the Atlantic, to the Land of the Sky, where they will spend a week taking in mountain scenery. The young fellows seemed to be having the time of their lives. Masonic lodges of Mocksville, Farmington, Lewisville, Keruers- ville, Cycle. Yadkinville, Walnut Cove, Harmony and Winston Sal- , em, wilt meet in the Twin City Mon day, September 2. in annual gath sting, it was announced Friday. At this time the grand master and Stand lodge officers pay their of ficial visit. Rev. C. H. Witaker,. 74,' died at Ib home in Winston-Salem last Tuesday. He was for several years 1 resident of Mocksville, being pas tor of Bethel and a number of other *• P. churches in Davie. Mr. Whitaker had many friends here woo were saddened by the news of hs death. Surviving is the widow tee daughters and two sons. A Jood man has gone to his reward. NOTICE — To all members of toe Junior Order Council. Any ®cmber that does not fully under aland the New National Law in re Eard to payment of Dues, also the insurance of members, please con act some officer of the lodge be are Sept, Jsti Igj5i 0r it will be wo bad. s- C. STONESTREF.T, F. S. MissJettaMillholland, of Boston, ass., spent the past week with Parents Mr. and Mrs. H.. L.l illbolland, a t Cooleemee. She Accompanied Mr. and Mrs. V. W. oilman, to Danville, Va., Sun- «V, and left Va.. Monday for Bos- oo, Mass. There she will join Patty of friends who will sail on ,P 8. S. Evangaline Thursday for ^va Scotia, and other Northern ^ e party expects to re .JP v way 0f Quebec and Ontana 1 oar, and be back in Boston by ^cpt- ist. Miss MillhollandTias a jjS. telatives and friends in sheV!e wJ0 will be pleased to know State back t0 the °ld North Miss Mary Ada Douthlt, of Ad-! vaaceR. 1 is visiting Miss Theolene Ward. - - Buck Allison, of Wilmington SsPent Sunday and Monday in town with relatiyes and friends. Misses Louise.and Janet Ander son, of Winston Salem are visiting their grandparents Mr. and Mrs. R. S Powell. Mrs, R. E Perry and children Marv Ann and Kay Of .Kannapolis who have been visiting relatives here have returned home. At The Princess Theatre Friday and Saturday “ The Informer.” Not W estyn but plenty action. Monday and Tuesday, laughs for every one. Wheeler and Woosley in “ Nit Wits.” The friends of Braxton Booe, of near Holman’s will be sorry to learn that he is'seriously ill with heart trouble. AU hope for him an early recovery. Mrs. H. B. Ward and daughters Misses Theoleue and Margaret and Miss Caro'yn Wagner of Cooleemee spent last week with relatives in Kannapolis AIvis Cheshire underwent a tonsil operation at the offices of Drs. W. C. and L. P. Martin last week. He is getting along nicely, and will be able to return to work in a few days. Twenty young people— 12 girls and 8 boys—were baptized into the fellowship of Eaton’s Baptist church Sunday morning as a result of the meeting held there last week by the pastor, assisted by Rev. Hoyle Love of High Point. Misses Emily, Georgia and Ber nice Powell and Haywood Powell attended the wedding ot Miss Martha Pauline Leonaed daughter, of Mr. and .Mrs. J ' Paul Leonard, and Charles Smoot Johnson, which was solemnized at The First Bap tist church Statesville Friday even ing at 8:30 o’clock. _ Tbe editor and family, and Mrs. E- W; Griffin, of Kings Mountain, yisited the model farm of Whit. .Graham,, near Mt, JJlta. one day re cent I v. Mr. Graham is one of North Carolina’s Master farmers. He has a fine family, consisting of Mrs. Graham, four daughters and nine sons. Eight of the 1 sons are farming with or near their father’s farm Mr. Graham is a big dairy man, and is milking about 3 0 C0WS. Thjs year he produced 800 Dusbeis of oats on 9 acres of ground,_ It was a privilege to visit this beauti ful country home, and to talk with this interesting family. . ■ ' Sunday School Conven tion. : The Shady Grove Sunday School convention will be held at Elbaville. M. P. church on Thursday, Sept. 5th, beginning at 10 oMoek in the morning. An interesting program Jtsa been arranged, and the ptiblicis given a cordial invitation to_be pre sent. " Mocksville School. High School i E. C. Staton,.Principal J- W, Davis, Ag. Teacher R- F. Johnston Miss Jessica McKee G. 0. Boose C. R. Crenshaw Miss Vivian Hilton Elementary Miss Elizabeth Naylor MissSallieHunter Miss Garnet RoOertson Miss Clayton Brown Miss Freida Farthing Miss Lucile Walker ilrs. Ti. N Anderson Miss Elizabeth Lollar Miss RuTh Angell Miss Margaret Bell ~ Miss Mary "Ward Stonestreei visited Miss Mary Ada Douthit last week. “OUR DAILY BREADm In Purchasing Your Food Supplies From Day To Day YouFindThatFLOURIsTheMost Important Item .On Your List. So Much Depends Upon The Selection Of Your Family Flour. Don’t Be Misled By Prices. CHEAP FLOUR IS ALWAYS EXPENSIVE. Money Is Never Wasted In Buying GOOD FLOUR, s k F 0 x ” MOCKSVILLE’S BEST - OVER-THE-TOP FLOUR Try One Sack And Be Convinced Of It’s Quality. Horn-JoHnstone Co. Phone, 3 Mocksville, N. C. ITS I m I D-s u Sale of Land For Taxes (C ontinued From .P age 2) Name Acres Tnvette, S. A ._____..150 Wagoner, P. A................ 88% ' Walker, S. P. _______ 3% Walker, Boy G . 37 Walker; S. W. __:....: 3%Walker, K. P, ___...... I % Walker, E. W. ...”____61% Ward,; Mrs. J. L. „ 35 Williams,; Herbert W. _ 11Williard, J. S. :___ 96 Wiliiard, Sandy .....__ 1% Wiseman, Tom ______ 7 . - Wood, Mrs. Lizzie ___ 111 Walker, Will L 32 Johnson, L. H- _____ 80% - Smith, Mrs. Ada, E str- 5 COLORED Bailey, Clialnius .... 4 ' ... Bowman, Peter, Est. .... 2 Brown, John ________ 5 Crews, J o h n ___4% Cuthcrell, Tom ___ 5. Dismuek, Jane I. - 20 Dulin, B. A. _______ 7 “ Dulin, J J. ___ :..... 12 Dulin, A. B. .___.50 Eaton, L a u ra _____18% Eaton, Jordan, E st. 40 Eaton, W- H- • —____~ 31Eaton, S. B. ..._________90% '. Hamlin, Lee ......... 3 Hairston; Ida Hanes, Rufus, Est......... Holderberry, Tom _ Johnson, John A. __._ Lyons, James, E st.___ March, Lucy ... I_ Morgan, 'L. H. _______ McMahan, Nelson ___ Sutzer, Laura ____,__ Smith, Wiley ________ Smith, Ja k e , .___ Whorton, John ......___ Wisemari, Tom 18% 11%-I 1% 56 2% -I 4 I 29 5 1%15% 7 7 5 23 - 37 13% 1% 2% 76 ER SHOWING Of Charming-Styled Furnitnre Of Rich, Luxuries Beauty Two And Three Piece Creations That Really Are Exquisite - - - As Restful As They Are Beautiful. Deeply cushioned in the modern manner with gracefully-curved “loungy” pillow backs and low side arms. Their Very Luxury And ComfortJust “Stands Out!” m Williams, Louis ____ Williams, Bettle -___ Williams, Lonnie __ Williams, B. W., Est. ; Williams, Bell, Est. . Young, Crawford^___ Tomlin, Charlie ___ Eaton, Jordan H . JERUSALEM TOWNSHIP Name AcresAlexander, Joe A........... 56 Apperson, Mrs. Beulah 117% Apperson, George I 49 Benson, H. H. _____ 3 Lots Bessent, Mrs. Bessie 29 Bessent,.S. R.................. 47 BJackweider, S. A ._ I Lot Cook, D. S.................... 2 Lots Cook, S. B ...... 24 Cook, J. H . I Lot Crawford, J. G. J_____I LotCreason, J. S ..... 20 Creason, C..T., Est......-IOl Crotts, C. H. & Co., 132 ■ Crump, Mrs. S. B. ___1356-10 Daniel, J. S . 50 A. 2 Lots Daniel, Mrs, T. C. 40% Davis, I. C I— 50 Deadmon, G. H. ...------ I Lot Ev.erhardt, W. D. ------- 12 Foard, Mrs. M. & L. — 77 Foard, W. G ___ 15 Foster, Mrs. Kate L. -154. Gibson, Geo. E. . I Lot Granger, J. M. ..._____ 20 Gregory,- R. C. —-— ._ I Lot Griffin, J. D .......4 Lots Hendrix, G.. M. —30 Ar I Lot Hendrix, T M. I-----------209% Lefler, Mrs. M. L. -.— 73 McCombs, C. H. A . 70 McCulloh, J. G. ------- 91 McCulloh, Mrs. C. C 50% McSwain, F. G...............2 Lots Miller, R. L 37 A 2 Lots Pack, J. C 1...........125 'Bedwine, 0. T. — 2 Lots Bidenhour, Mrs. Mollie I Lot Salisbury Motor Co. — 7% Smith, B. C.................. I Lot Smith, J. L. ----------„...198 Stewart, Z...............I 1% I Stewart, C. W. -------- 5% Styled In The Finest The Word We Should Use Is “Stunning!” So elegantly is each piece constructed , .Tso beautiful the graining and match ing of the woods. As for design you couldn’t want a bedroom suite of tier, restful-looking lines than They’re Really Impressive- pret- these. Dining Room Suites, Unoleums, Rugs, End Tables, Odd Chairs, CabinetsY Stoves, Beds, Mattresses and Springs. C C. Sanford Sons Co. “Everything For Everybody” Mocksville, N. C. Summersett, T. W., Jr., 27 85-100. Summersettj T. W., Sr., 50 7-10 Williams, Mrs. Abbie .. 33. Williams, J. A I Lot Wilson, A. B —— -.104 Winecoff, Geo. P. I Lot - Mock, Thoa. U. -------- 26 Peebles, Ed............-——- H 7-10 COLORED Clement, H. C. ....... I Lot Clement, W. C. -------- 2 Lots Clement, Sallie D I Lot Fowler, Jim — ..—...... I Lot Hairston, Robt................ I Lot Johnson, Charlie ... I Lot Miller,' Henry — I Dot Rosseau, W. G -...— 2 Lots ! Woodruff, Gaston— - I Lot MOCKSVILLE TOWNSHIP Name Acres Angell, C. J. —----- d Lots Angell, Mrs C.‘ J* *— 2 Lots Bowles, Mrs. Cordelia ..1 1 Bowles, L. S. -------- 54 Bayles Realty Co. — 2 Lots Brown, P. G. J Jl0J•Brown, M. D. Jr., Est. I Lot Brown, M. D. .—------- 67 Brown, H. W. ----------- f3% Cain, Jas. H., Est I Lot Call, Walter L. — — I Lot Carter, F. M. ----------- 2 Lots Carter, J. L., Est. .-—. I Lot Cartwright, T. L. ----- I Lot Clement, B. C. C: A., Est. Clement, K. M.......—— Cobbler, Mrs. K. L. Cornatzer, H. P........- Crawford, J. G..........- Daniel, J- S................... Daniel & Ijames — Daniel, Annm L......... Donovant, H. J., Est. Feezor, Miss Frances Foster, Mrs. S. A........ Foster, H. Cbnton ... Grant, C. S. —: Green, J- B. Griffin, E. L. Hall, A. E. Amt. 26.35 22.07 5.10 12.33 1.35 4.41 15.3! 8.6! 6.88 14.6! .7! 7.4c2.5! 4.5« -8.0'. 3.6 1.7. 1.7 2.6!3.7. , 1.5 5.6. 2.0. 6.0’ 14.0 3.7 8.4' 11.6 17.3 1.7 5.0 4.8 1.1Y 17.13 .90 1.17 7.39 1.63 2.48 2.34 5.01 3.75 7.51 2.12 3.51 8.52 8.75 2.59 3.15 3.72 9.11 Amt. $23.68 28.86 15.26 4.26 6.94 23.51 .88 2.60 3.37 17.83 12.62 4.7127.548.99 35.37 7.34 12.24 16.68 5.97 11.68 17.61 5.01 45.9! 12.65 20.66 . 3.47 3.19 7.64 ■ 53.77 61.63 29.83 28.74 20.90 14.53 29.04 31.44 .73 8.97 2.77 2.98 41.14 2.8110.53 6.17 21.06 10.19 6.89 24.21 2.5916.54 3.69 Name Acres Amt.Jones, Cartner & - E vans____:___4 Lots 4.60 Jones & W alker___I Lot 22.7T Jones, E; M, __I Lot 2.18Knnr F.30 6.56 Kimbrou^i1P. B .___I Lot 4.45Koontz, J. H.-_______I Lot 1.55Knrfees, Z. C .______159’38.36Lanier, Mrs. D. G. _I Lot -5.00 Livengood, Milton__!.’Lot 10.04 McClamrochj Mrs. S., Est’68 16.75McCulloh, V'-V. ___3 Lots 8.15 McGuire, Mrs. Hattie - 84 25.82McDaniel, Mrs. J. LV 6 1.76 McMahan, Mrs. Martha .47 8.91Martin, J. W. _____ I Lot 3.12Martin, Mrs. W. F . - 24 8.71 Meroney, J. K.............. I Lot 22.67 Meroney, W. E., Est - I .Lot 17.59 . Moore, J. F 2 Lots (Depot St.) 5.50 Niehols,_Mrs. Mamie 114 Peacock, Mrs. W. H. 60 Penry, Mrs. Laura .......41% Pope, John D......—__ 76 Sain, J. F., Est. _____ 39 Seaford, C. A. ______ 10 Seaford, C. W.,Est.........103 Seaford,’ C. H. & C. A. 38% Sheek, Mrs. G. W — I Lot - Shields, E. L.................. 26 Smith, A. V ....... 7 Lots Smith,-B. I .________ I Lot Sparks, Mrs. Cora —152 Stevenson, Mrs.,_ Beulah & Blanche Hendrix „125 Summers, C. S. -______12 Swicegood, N. H.......... I Lot Tomlinson, C H. ___ I 1Lot Vanzant, C. G ___ I Lot Walker, R. G. — I Lot 19.99 14.19 4.39 z-18.44 7.22 5.46 •37.68 10.99 10.23 5.59 2.49 .10.04 45,48 26.34 13.57 8.10 .25.00 8.59 ■ 30.18 '77.99 3.27 •‘3.16 28.91 Walker, -G. G. ___.. 8 Lots Wall, Mrs.’ John I LotWinecoff, S. J . ___ 3 Lots Zachary, J. W., Est. 2 Lots McGuire, James, Heirs 181A I Lot 77.04 COLOBED,' Barringer, Luther __ I Lot Brown, Hannah, Est. „ I Lot Brown, Mary A., Est. I Lot Brown, Ernest ______I Lot Burse, G. B ______ I Lot Clement, Geneva 2 Lots Clark, Bettie ___...__ I Lot Clement, Frances ___ I ,Lot Clementl-Frank I Lot- Clement, Rachel ____ LLot Clement, Geneva — 2 Cots Clement, Giles —........... 4% Clement, Geo. .............. 4% Cox, A. P ;.......... 25% Day, W illis ; I Lot Dilliard, Alfred —..... Dulin, Elizabeth ........ Foster, James, Est. ..Foster, Robert I Lot ... I Lot .... I Lot ... I Lot .. 3 Lots 43 I.Lot - 2 -Lots .... I Lot 7 1.08 13.99 3.99 2.31 6.26 1.28 3.11 6.26 5.12 16.26 1.23 3.51 ”2.97 -6.26 2.87 ■ !8.06 '8.15 5.61 •'4.90 15.46 '1.17 ■■!■4.02 '9.87 5.66 5.28 1.47 1.66 6J 2 . 2.37 3.75 2.53 2.86 12.06 1.17 75 A I Lot - I Lot L. — 21% . ...322 I Lot „„... 2 Lots : I Lot I Lot . 7 .180 I Lot — I 64 - 35 „ 43 : 13% 10 Harris, Mrs! Kate C. - I Lot Harris, Amanda D I LotHeathman, Mrs. Mary % Lots Hellard, G C - -- I Bot Hepler1 Mrs C B — I Lot 'TTparii - W- M. — I. iS d e Vance & Co 7 Lots -Holman, G. B. —----- HV* Holman9 G. B. and Maud Gaither ----- 70% Holton, J L - - I-Lot Howard, D. 0. — —- ? Lots Howard, W ,. T. ------51 . Huht, E. E , Est. — 2 Lota Am t $15.56 21.8» 2.81 13.05 5.34 23.28 .9123.37 33.26 5.64 8.20 40.81 9.41 10.04 30.81 16.33 5.95 90.00 • 8.24 9.11 8.94 6.92 6.92 71.08 8.24 7.64 7.43 6.19 4.04 4.37 23.26 7.88 4.57 5.43 3.11 2.49 6.89 10.59 35.52 16.04 /11.331 643 32.31 Foster, B. M. Foster,- Till ........... Furehes, Freelove .. Gaither, Julia ..... Gaither, I. L . . Gaither, Elijah Gaither, Rosa A. & Esther — ______ I Lot 6.26 Garrett, Sarah Jane, Est I Lot ; 1.45 Gorrell, N ora____—. I Lot 6.26 Gibson, Sophia __ I’ Lot 3.45 Harris, Daska ____— I: Lot .3.45 Hainlin, S. Lee -----... 2 Lots ,6.53 Hanes, Amos, Est.. .... I Lot >5.70 Hanes, Spencer, Est. 2 Dots 7.39 — Hill, Martha -..-.5 A. 2 Lots 12.97 Holeman, Lula - I v2 Lots .1.23 Huston, Frank, Est. I Lot 15.13 Ijames, Elijah, Est, - I Lot ' 3.45 Johnson, Wilkie .D I Lot ’ 3.99 Kimbrough, Dinah __ I Lot -4.66 Nash, Mary V. _____ I Lot 76.12 Meroney, Henry W I Lot 2.S1 Neely, Mary ----- I Lot 6.27 Pettigrew, W. A I Lot 5.12 Rose, Charles, Est. - 2 Lots 1.34 Scott, N. A. i ___ I 2.31 Scott, Lizzie I I , -I® Smoot, J. A. ' / * I Lot ;6.07 VanEaton, Simon ___ I Lot. ' 2.49 Woodruff, H enry I Lot . 1.70 SHADY GBOVE TOWNSHIP Name Acres Amt. Atlantic Joint Stock Land Bank ........... 10 ,1.54 Barber, C. L .’----------- 7% 11.59 Barneycastle1C-M.......... 18 3.99 Beauchamp, Mrs. J. S. 29 7.81 •Branson, M. L. —...... -6% 5.59 Carter, G. A. ----------- 75. .18.88. Carter, Mrs. Annie __ 24% 2.30 Cline,’ Mrs. Bettie ..... I 1.24 Cornatzer, J. S :...... 20% 9.46Cornatzer, Mrs. Z. C. 46%’ A I L. 20.19, Cornatzer, Mrs. M. M. .. 65% 38.54 Cornatzer, E. C,'-------- 63 12.09 Cornatzer, W. A. —----- 24% 13.26 Crews, Mrs. J.. L. .:— I Lot 3.75 Fry, H. G ----------- 91 27.98 Hall, C. W. -------!------ 84 32.67 Hartman, E. M., Est. „118% 32.79 Hendrix, Milton G. — 13318-100.23.38 Hendrii, Mrs. W. A 3% A. I L 14.17- - - ~'t 5.9010.97 1497 26.36 5.14 1.67 10.67 30.009.57 16.18 13.70 1.17 1.75 9.68 6.89 15.99. 9.17 2.96. 9.87 15.90 8.49 12.63 2.91 7.07 6.89 2.66 ' 6.89 4.95 ,2.30 6.92 10.66 15.04 13.95- 9 8-10 27. 115: . 17: Howard, - Mrs. Sallie — 30’ Howard, Mrs. J. R. 24% Jones, Mrs. O. F 42 Jones, W. J. ___—.— 121%Kimbrough, P. R . I McDaniel, G-sH- ------- 7% March, Mrs. O. M. ----- I Marklantl, L. O. --------- 77 Miss Ida — 27% Massey, C. S. -----------105%Milton, W- E. ——-----27 Miller, Martin .— ----- ; L Milton, Mrs. Minnie — 7% Mock, Mrs. Fannie — :1 Myers, W. _T. J.—-— 10%Myers, G. V. :---------- 63% Naylor, F- A. —......... 50 N: C. Midland R. B. Orrell, Miss Annie .. Orrell, J. E., Est. .. Potta, E- J. — -— Potts, G. A. ----------- I Lot Potts, Lonnie — ----- < 1% Potts, Eugene ----------- 1% Batledge, J. H., Est. .- I Lot Bobertson, Mrs. Odelia 3% Robertson, G. S. — - . 8 Robertson, H. D. ....-- O Tucker, Z. V. ----------- 6: WaUer, L. P . — .8% Ward, Mrs. Dora ----- .3 Wood, A- C- -----...— I Lot Zimmerman, J. G............... 48 COLORED Dulin, Lily ——______ I Lot 2.30 Flint, Mace -------------I Lot 3.11 Foster, Emma ----- .--L . -1-®|Glasscock, Alice, . Est. _ IJ 3-45 Hairston, Henry,.-Est. r4 . ,1.96 Johnson, T- G- ------18- ’ -S-25 Motley, Fannie I Lot . .85 Peebles, Clifton ------... 4 9.77 Piebles, Charhe -------—8 2.64 Worth, Rebecca :------I Lot .94 C H A R L E S C . SM O O T , Sheriff Davie County. S IillM is Vi ASi: T. I 'Till I I /f — l i p ! - fifi DAVIE RECOftf), MoCKfiVXlii, if, C. a u g u s t 28 . 1935' U' I i r T h e E v o lv in g B u r e a u c r a c y . The Roosevelt administration has spent billions of dollars to increase employment by reviving industry, bat something like ten millions re main jobless. The bureaucracy at Washington, however, reports larg ing payrolls and increasing employ ment from month to month. In May the federal payroll increas ed by $1,500,000 over April. Some 2,000 were added in .Wa'hington a- lone, for a total of 102,539. Candidate Roosevelt accused his predecessor of piling “bureau on bureau, commission on commission.” It has not occurred to President Roosevelt; apparently, that the sit ting army, maintained by the tax payers, might need reducing.—Ex The Record is $1 per year. N o tic e o f S a le o f L a n d . :;; Under and by virtue of the power bt sale contained in a certain mort gage executed by Mary A. Bosch (Widow), Annie Busch Ijames and husband, M D. Ijames, dated De cember 7,1926,' and recorded in Book 21, Page 107, in the office of Register of Deeds for Davie County, North Carolina, default having been made in the payment of the indebtedness thereby secured, and demand haying been made for sale, the undersigned Mortgagee will sell at public auction to "the highest bidder for cash, at the Courthouse door in MocKsville, N.C., at twelve o’clock noon, on the 14th day of September. 1-935, the following described property, located in Davie County, North Ca rolina. ~ AU of two certain tracts or par cels of land, located, lying and being situated in Calahaln Township, on both sides of State Highway No. 75 leading from Mocksville to States ville, adjoining the lands of Z. N. Anderson, J. _A. Tutterow, Mrs. Eiilie Smoot, Mrs. Tabitha McMa han, Alice C.r Anderson. R. S. Powell, 6. S. Anderson and others,. and bounded as follows: ; First Tract—Beginning at a, stone, J. A. Tutterow’s corner, and runs E. 3 deg. S. 14 87 chains to a stone; thence S. 3 deg. W. 2.07 chains to a stone; thence E. 3 deg. S.. crossing State Highway No. 75, 11.82 chains to a stone, corner of SalIie Smoot and Tabitha McMahan land, thence S. 27 deg. W. 7:50 chains to a stone; thence S. 37 deg. W 3.50 chains to a stone: thence. S. 57 deg. W. 1.50 chains to a.stone; thence S. 45 deg. W. 12.25 chains to a stone; thence .S. 72 deg. W. 5.23 .chains to a stone; thence N. 15 deg. W. 22.12 chains to a stone, Alice C, Anderson’s corner; thence S. 75 deg. W. 3 17 chains to a stone, Alice C. Anderson’s corner; thence S. 15 deg. W. 3.17 chains to a stone, Alice C. Anderson’s corner; thence S. 75 deg. W. 15.78 chains to a stone; thence S. 15 deg.' E. 10.74 Chains to a stone on State Highway No. 75; thence with said Highway No. 75 S. 81 deg. E. 2.50 chains; N. 68 deg. E. 7.50 chains; N. 83 deg. E. 4.06 chains to a stone on South side of said State Highway No. 75; thence S. 4 64 chains to a. stone; thence S. 15 deg. E. ; 10 chains to a stone: in Saliie Smoot’s and Tabitha McMa han; thence S. 75 deg. W. 9.90 chains a stone; thence S. 34 deg. W 5 chains to a stone, thence W. 4 deg. va- riation 14 chains to a stone; thence N. 34 deg. W. 1.85 chains to a stone, Mrs. Annie E .: Anderson’s corner; thence N. 2 deg. E. 9 50 chains to a stone, corner of C. S. Anderson’s - fi acre lot; thence N. -58 deg. E. 7 chains to a stone; thence N. 25 deg. E. 4:66 chains to a stone on South side of State Highway No, 75; thence With said Highway N. 52 deg. W. 8,86 - chains to a stone; thence across said Highway No. 75 N. I chain to a stone, thence N. 86 deg. W, 9.90 chains to a stone, thence N. 2 chains, to said Highway No, 75, thence with said Highway- N. 39 deg. W .7.66 chains to a bridge at the branch; thence up and with said branch N ,-59 deg. E. -3.50 chains; N. 79 deg. E. 3 chains; N. 17 deg. E. 2.50 chains; N 63 deg. E. 2 chains; S; 44 deg. E. 2,50 chains; E. 3 40'chains; thence N. 7 90 chains to a stone in G. S. Anderson’s outside line; thence E. 2 deg. S. 2.50 chains to a stone, thence. N., 7.93 chains to. a. sour- wood; thenw E. ' 2 deg. S. 22 73 chains to a stone; thence S. 5 deg W. 2133 chainstothe BEGINNING, containing 175 acres, more or leas'. : Second Tract—Adjoining the lands of G. S. Anderson and- others, and ^-described as follows; BEGINNING at a stone. Z. N. Anderson's corner, and runs E. 4 deg. S. with said An derson’s line 5.72 chains to a stake or- stone on West side of the Noah’s Ark Road; thence with said road S. .8 deg. W. ir.13 chains to N. C High- way No. 75; thence with said High way W. 4 deg. N._5.40 chains to Z.. . N.. Anderson’s line on the West side of Beaver Creek; thence N. 3 deg. E with Z. N: Anderson’s line 1113 chains to the BEGINNING, contain- tajniner 6.18-acres, more or less.' -SAVE AND EXCEPT 155 acres released by ..the'Greensboro- Joint Stock' Land- Bank on July ■ 27, 1929; .and 25.15 acres released on Decem ber 31,1929. : The purchaser at the sale will be required to make a deposit of five per cent of purchase price. This August 13, 1935.. GREENSBORO JOINT STOCK - ; L A N D B A N K , M ortgagee, J .S D U G A N , A tto rn e y, m u t t SOUD STEa TURRET-TOP FISHER BODY Tm ut KNEE-ACTION COMFORT AND SAFETY There are thousand of kinds of rainbows. Tbey difEer from each other in numEers ofcolors and ar-- rSngement; ; ^ DEALER ADVERTISEMENT like many t h e m o s t THESE FEATURES/ !, a r e f o u n d o n l y i n C H E V R O L E T ^ b a l a n c e d l o w - p r i c e d c a r e v e r -Under and by virtue of authority conferred in'me by Deed of Trust executed by Cary W. Hepler"and . C. V Hepler, his wife, dated the. 8th div of January. 1929, and recorded in Book 23 of Mortgages, page 105, in the office of Register of Deeds of Davie county. North Carolina, R. M. McClamroch, Substituted Trustee, will, at 12 o’clock noon, on the 31st day of August, 1935. at the court house door of Davie county, in Mocksville, Nor h Cirolina, Bell, at public aucti n for cash, to the high est bidder, the following lands, to- wit, lying arid' being in Mocksville township. Davie county,, North Car olina. and more particularly describ ed as follows: : . , Lying oh the West side of the road leading from Mocksville to Salisbury new highway, being two lots. Nos. 50 and 51, in Block B. Clement Crest land, according to a map recorded .in Book 23. page 426, Register of Deeds office, Davie County, North Carolina. ' 'This sale is made on account of de fault in the payment of the indebted ness secured by - the said Deed of Trust, and is,subject to all taxes arid assessments against the said prop- erty-whether now due" or to -become due. ihfs'the 31st day of July, J 935. R. M. McCLAMROCH, ' . Substituted Trustee. the only car in its price range that brings yon either of them! It is also? the only car; in its price 'range that brings .yon a Blue-Flame Vahie-in-HeadEngjme, Shock-Proof Steenttgand many other equally desirable features. _ Be sure to get these vitally important advantages ■ - in your next car,, and get them-at lowest- cost by choosing a new Master De Luxe Chevrolet! CHEVROLET MOTOR COMPANY^ DETROIT, MICHIGAN \ ’>!* / - Compare Chevrolet's low delivered prices and e<jsy G.M.A.C. terms. A GeneroI Motors Value - Solid Sted Turret-Top Body by Fisher—the smartest and safest of -all motor car bodies! And the famous gliding Knee-Action Rule, giving unequalled comfort and safety!' These two features are absolute necessities in.a truly;modem motor car. And the new Master De Luxe Chevrolet, the most finely balanced low-priced car ever built, is t^ACa&te/i Mocksville, N.C. North Carolina I . . _ .Davie Count/ ( In Superior Court M a ry D ism uke. M a yberry. and B e tty D ism uke A lle n vs John Dismuke, Samuel Dismuke, Lillian Dismuke, Lizzie Dismuke, and J. Irving Fulton, Executor of ' the Estate of Adam Dismuke. . N o tic e O f R e - S a l e ! Underand by virtueof authority conferred upon the undersigned Commissioner by the terms of a cer tain judgment entered by the Clerk of the Superior Court of Davie County, on the 27th day of May, 1935, and pursuant; to’an order of re% sale entered on the %17th day of August, 1935. by the said-Clerk of the Superior Court, the undersigned will offer for re-sale, at the Court house door of Didvie County, in the city of Mocksville,: on September 3, 1935, at 12:30 o’clockp. m., the fol lowing described property.' to-wit: “Adjoining the land of Caleb Bow den on the North (now? Lou Smith and Alice Spillman); Luckett -Etchi- son on the East (now B.-..W. Allen); Albert Phelps on.the South *(now John Long) and Mary Ann Beachainp on the West (now C. M. Foster.) con taining 25 acres,.more or less.” ' The' above described- projperty is located in Farmington - Township, fronting on the hard surface road IeadingJtpm Mocksville,- to Winston- Salem/ V' ■-. ■ Bidding to start' at $443.30. This'August 17.1935. ARCHIE ELLEDGE^ Commissioner. Elledge & Wells, Attorneys. ' I North Carolina I In Superior Court; Before Davie Coupty I M. A. Hartman, C. S. C. M. C. Cain, O; L. Harkey, et’al vs .-v M. C. Fowler, Louise: Fowler, Nellie , Ollive (Nellie Olliver), Clyde ' Austin, et al. N o tic e o f P u b li c a ti o n . The defendants,' Louise Fowler, Nellie Dlive (Nellie Olliver), arid Clyde 'Austin, above natned. will take notice that anaction or special proceeding entitled as -above has been . commenced in the -Superior Court' of Davie County, North Caro lina, asking for a sale fbr partition of-the lands of R L. Cain, deceased, located in Davie and pnsiow coun ties, said action being:Jor the parti > N o tic e T o C r e d ito r s ! Having qualified as Administratordf tbe estate ofl.w. S. GuffjTdeceased notice is hereby given to all :persons holding claims aitainBt the estate of said deceased to present the 8am e. properly -verified.' to the undersigned; Cleveland, North-- Carolma' Route 2, on or before the 9th day of July, 1936 or this notice will be pleaded m bar of recovery. AU persons indebted to said estate will please call: and make proper settlement.: ThiB the 9th day of July 1935.J. R. GUFFY. Adm’r. of W. S. Guffy, decs’d. Bf ArjPr GRANT, Attv. , tion of said lands by sale thereof for division:' And said- defendants - will farther take notice that they and each of them are required to appear atthe office of the Clerk of the Su-. perior Court of Davie County ,'North Carolina.at the court house in Mocks ville, N. C., before-M. A .: Hartman, C. S. C.,- within,ten days after the 28th day of August, 1935, it being the last day of 'publication of this notice, and answer or demur to the complaint or petition of the plain tiffs, or tbe plaintiffs will: apply, to the Court for -the relief -demanded in! the' complaint. ■ -This: the 3&th day of July, 1935. - M. A. HARTMAN, . Clerk .of Superior. Court. Land posters for sale. Travel7 anyivlieye . . on the SOU TH EItNsfof I A Fare For. Every Purse PER MILE . He - QNEWAY and ROUND.TRIP COACH TICKETS Per Mile ; . for Each Mile Traveled. ■ * 2c ROUND TRIP TlCKETS-Return-Limit 15 Days Fet Mile- : . ' . .. tqr Each Mile Traveled.:. ; * 2Jc - ROUND TRIP TICKETS—Return Limit 6 Months ^ Per Mile . . . for Each Mile Traveled. . j. - * 3c ONE WAY TICKETS ' ' ' - ' r . Per.Mile . for Each Mile Traveled * Good in Sleeping and Parlor Cars on-payment of proper- -. charges for space occupied. No surcharge. Eeoaomiza by leaving your Automobile at homeand using the Southern . Excellent Dining Car .Service -• Be Comfortable in the Safety of Train Travel. .' ' R1 H. GRAHAM; Div.Pass. Agent . Charlotte, N. C: Southern Railway System 6 6 6 LtQUID-TABLETS SALVE-NOSE DROPS MALARU COLDS first dav TONic and LAXA1ive ..... ® BEST IN RADIOS ® YOUNG RADIO CO MOCKSVILLE, N. C . BEST IN SUPPLIES' . R. P. ANDERSON dentist Anderson Building Mocksville, N. C. Office 50 - Phone - ResiiJeni A d m i n i s t r a t o r ’s [Notice is hereby given- that the undersigned has qualified as -admin istrator of J. A. Hege, deceased. AU persons having claims against the es tate of the said deceased, will pre sent them to the undersigned on or before the 29th day of June. 1936, or this notice will be pleaded in bar cf their recovery. .All persons indebt ed to said, estate will please make immediate settlement. This 29th day of June, 1935." -W. T. S. MYERS, Administrator > ■ of J. A. Hege, deceased. ROBERT S. MCNEILL. Attorney. IimtriiJlCe 37 Administrator’s Notice, Having qualified as Admini,t„, of Mary Jones.- deceased, not ;! hereby given to all persons J L claims against the estate of said ? ceased to present the same tn ti undersigned on or before the day of June, 1936, or this n S 6 S be plead m bar of recovery i persons indebted to said estate wi please caH ana settle without deb This the 24th day of June, 193.5 ' gj f- corsazteh, 4 . t. G p i ^ a r t o " " Administrator’s Notice. Having qualified as administrator of the estate of Gaither Wood, deceased, Iate 0| Davie County. North Carolina, notice is hereby given all P5ranns having claims a- gainst the said estate, to present them tj tbe undersigned on or before Jnly 161938 or this notice will be plead in bar af'tbdt recovery. AU persons indebted to said es tate, are requested to make immediate payment. This July 15, 1935. . .. M. BRANSON, Adrar. Gaither Wood, Dec’d;B. C. BROCK, Atty. T V j" '" '....... CAMPBELL - WALKER FUNERAL HOME !a m b u l a n c e embalmers Telephone 48 Main Street Next To Methodist Church M o s t N O T I C E ! Having qualified, as Administratrix of the estate.of George Hendnx deca'd. notice is hereby given ta. all persons -holding. claims against.the eBtate of sald deceased ' to present tlfe same, properly »erified, to the undersigned on or before^the 28th day of June. 1936. or this notice will be pleaded in bar of. any recovery. i. . > • AU persons indebted to said estate please call.on the. undersigned and make prompt settlement.• This the 28th day-of Jane, 1935. - - . - ' BEULAH APPERSON, .1 Admix ofrGeorgeiHendnz, Decs d.~ By A. T.'GRANT, Atty. - - ' ' DAVIE CAFE “On The Square” Mocksville, N. C, Next To PostofBce And Just As Reliable Regular Meals ..... 35c Ice Cream, Soft Drinks,.Short Orders; Every Hour. • R K. MANOS, Prop. _ DR. P. H. MASOIil Dentist S ATli-F O R D BUILDING PEone HO _’^Mocksville, N In Davie County. T he Price Is Only $ 1 .0 0 _ P e r Y e a r . Send A Year’s Subscription To Your Relatives Who Live In Distant ' Counties. Or States. They Will AppreciateAWeeklyNews Letter From Their Old Home County TH E D A V IE RECORD - Carries A Nutnber Of Features That You Will Not Find In Any Other Paper In Jhis County. i i i p SgJtfSm sm m COLUMN X X X V IIj N E W S O F L O l What w«. Happening In The Day* o! AatomobiIl Hose. (Davie Record, Sepl F. Caudell, of S | in to«vn Friday. Mrs. G. E. Horn re nesday from a visit toj Statesville. j. G- Booe, of Cand day for Wake Forej will enter school. B. F. Stouestreet rel day from a short visit[ at Winston. Mrs Ross Mills, Mr. and Mrs C. AJ W iuston, spent, last wj with relatives. . Mrs. R- G. Mason of Spencer, spent town with relatives an Miss Adelaide H l texlngton, spent last! the guest of Miss Mari Editor J. F. ClicJ daughter Willie, o f: Saturday and Sunday| Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Mrs. J. T. Baity 1<] for Asheville, Mars points In Western will be away three wl • : Kimbrough SbeekJ playing ball in South! on the Raetord teq home Thursday. . Rev. and Mrs. aod cbildren are vis! at Bryson City. T b | some time. -"The Siuth 'Y adEiI Siciation convenes Roads, six miles west I next Thursday. A will atteud from ti church. M. ]. Hendricks ai of near Farmington, f day from Raleigh, wl tended the Farmers’! Convention. Miss Flossie Ma Sunday from a few I Buie’s Creek. SheT her sister, Miss VelJ teach art at Buie’s this year. A delightful caml Boone’s Cave, on tb J was enjoyed oy Mil Clara Woodward, La Esther and Ivey Hol Ruth Rodwell, and| Woodward and Clat During the electri| day lightning struct F. M. Johnson’s resl molished it, togethef porch. None of th injured by the shocll Rev. Mr Lee, a I Brazil, Mrs. Lee and several days here guests of Mrs. S. will spend several I United States befoil Brazil. Mr. and Mrs E. L daughters, Misses jl Dorothy, have retu/ vork where they I Miss Sarah Gaitherl Monday from a t| with a party from J J- F. Dwire, I1 Fla., and Miss Cora A ugusta, th is c o u n | Jn m a rra ig e a t th l • bride’s p a rents, M rl than F o ste r, a t 11 J m o rning . R ev. p | “ is c ity , p e rto rm e l cerem ony. Mr. a { le ft im m e d ia te ly a fl loJ- a b rid a l tr ip to I w h ich th e y w ill Jacksonville. : Z . N - A n d I ... t- e E m b ro id e rI home T h u rs d a y afl SSos cak e and ic i : Vbose present w e i S arah M il *U th Booe1 M a ry T £ o,0 n - L iu a Iv e y J C lem ent, and at visitors.